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RNS Number : 7404A  HarbourVest Global Priv. Equity Ltd  26 May 2023

 

 

 

26 May 2023

 

 

RESULTS FOR THE 12 MONTHS ENDED 31 JANUARY 2023

 

Resilient NAV per share performance in a challenging period, with continued
outperformance of public markets

 

HarbourVest Global Private Equity Limited ("HVPE" or the "Company"), a FTSE
250 investment company with global exposure to private companies, managed by
HarbourVest Partners, today announces its audited results for the 12 months
ended 31 January 2023.

 

Highlights - Year to 31 January 2023

 

Resilient net asset value ("NAV") per share, demonstrating benefits of
well-diversified portfolio

·    NAV per share fell 1.2% to $48.52 (31 January 2022: $49.11) vs FTSE
All-World Total Return ("FTSE AW TR") Index fall of 7.3%.

·    Gains across infrastructure and real assets, credit, and small to
mid-cap buyouts partially offset declines in venture and growth equity, and
large buyouts, highlighting the benefits of diversification.

·    Analysis across a large proportion of portfolio exits in the period
showed a weighted average uplift to pre-transaction carrying value of 31%.(1)

 

NAV per share outperformance of public markets continues

·    Outperformance of the FTSE AW TR Index of 6.1% over the financial
year, and 5.7% annualised over the past ten years.

·    Absolute NAV per share return of 289% over the ten years to 31
January 2023.

 

PERFORMANCE AS AT 31 JANUARY 2023

                                                                     1y    3y   5y    10y   Since inception (2007)
 NAV per share ($)(2)                                                -1%   76%  126%  289%  385%
 Share price total return ($)                                        -27%  12%  53%   208%  166%
 Share price total return (GBP)                                      -20%  20%  77%   296%  339%
 FTSE AW total return ($)                                            -7%   24%  34%   133%  133%

 Annualised NAV per share outperformance vs FTSE AW TR Index ($)(3)  6%    13%  12%   6%    5%

 

 1  As at 31 January 2023. This analysis represents a subset of the
transactions and does not represent the portfolio as a whole. For 2023, the
analysis covers 85% of the total value of the transactions. Additionally, it
does not reflect management fees, carried interest and other expenses of the
HarbourVest funds or the underlying managers, which will reduce returns.

2 Final audited NAV per share figures used (not January monthly estimates).

3 '%' here refers to percentage point outperformance.

 

Net investor over the period

·    A net $56 million cash invested (2022: net $320 million cash
received).

o  Total of $532 million cash distributions received (2022: $835 million).

o  Total of $588 million capital calls paid (2022: $515 million).

·    Buybacks totalling $18.8 million (£17.0 million) completed during
the year.

 

Balance sheet remains strong

·    $198 million of cash on the balance sheet at 31 January 2023 (2022:
$284 million)

·    Credit facility increased by $100 million to $800 million in August
2022, with new lender added to syndicate.

·    New commitments of $940 million over period (2022: $1.4 billion) with
total investment pipeline of $2.8 billion (2022: $2.4 billion) at financial
year end.

·    Latest balance sheet update can be found in the Monthly Update for 30
April 2023
(https://www.hvpe.com/media/sximtboy/30-april-2023-monthly-update.pdf) .

 

New share buyback launched

·    The Board and Investment Manager recently conducted a review of the
case for share buybacks using its established framework.

·    Following this, the Board will conduct another share buyback and
intends to repurchase $25 million of shares.

·    The Board's core presumption continues to be that, in normal
conditions, reinvesting capital into new private markets opportunities, should
provide a better outcome for shareholders over the long term.

Ed Warner, Chair of HVPE, said:

"HVPE delivered resilient NAV performance during another extraordinary year in
the markets, testament to our well-diversified portfolio and the quality of
our managers who use their expertise to navigate their portfolio companies
through more challenging times.

 

"Investment really is a long-term process. HVPE is investing in illiquid
private assets, which take time and patience. We have a track record of
materially outperforming public markets through the cycle, and over the last
ten years have delivered an annualised NAV per share return 5.7% above the
FTSE All World Total Return Index.

 

"The Board is conscious of the challenges that lie ahead, yet remains
optimistic as we believe private markets will yet again demonstrate their
adaptability and thrive. We are confident in our reported NAV and believe that
over time the portfolio will once again prove its quality, and investors in
turn will be rewarded by the Company's long-term results."

Annual Report and Accounts

To view the Company's Annual Report and Accounts please visit HVPE's result
centre: https://www.hvpe.com/shareholders/results-centre/
(https://www.hvpe.com/shareholders/results-centre/) . Page number references
in this announcement refer to pages in this report. The Annual Report and
Accounts will also shortly be available on the National Storage Mechanism,
here:
https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism
(https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism) .

Annual General Meeting ("AGM")

HVPE's AGM will be held in Guernsey at 1:00PM BST on 19 July 2023. Formal
notice will be sent to registered shareholders in the coming weeks. We hope
that all registered shareholders will exercise their votes by proxy.

 

Capital Markets Morning

In advance of the formal AGM, HVPE will hold a hybrid (in-person/virtual)
Capital Markets Session on the morning of 22 June 2023 from 9:00AM BST.
Shareholders should contact Amelia Bissett at hvpe_events@harbourvest.com
(mailto:hvpe_events@harbourvest.com) should they wish to attend.

 

 

 

 

Annual Results Presentation

HVPE will publish a new presentation on its website to supplement the
publication of the Annual Results for the 12 months ended 31 January 2023. The
presentation will be available to view and download from www.hvpe.com at
11:00AM BST today.

 

- ENDS -

 

LEI: 213800NBWV6WWV8TOL46

 

Enquiries:

 Shareholders
 Richard Hickman         Tel: +44 (0)20 7399 9847    rhickman@harbourvest.com (mailto:rhickman@harbourvest.com)
 Charlotte Edgar         Tel: +44 (0)20 7399 9826    cedgar@harbourvest.com (mailto:cedgar@harbourvest.com)

 Media
 HarbourVest Partners
 Lily Cabianca           Tel: +44 (0)20 7151 4261    lcabianca@harbourvest.com (mailto:lcabianca@harbourvest.com)

 MHP
 Charlie Barker /        Tel: +44 (0)20 3128 8540    HVPE@mhpgroup.com (mailto:HVPE@mhpgroup.com)

 Robert Collett-Creedy

 

 

Notes to Editors:

 

About HVPE:

HarbourVest Global Private Equity Limited ("HVPE" or the "Company") is a
Guernsey-incorporated, closed-end investment company which is listed on the
Main Market of the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250
index. HVPE is designed to offer shareholders long-term capital appreciation
by investing in a private equity portfolio diversified by geography, stage of
investment, vintage year, and industry. The Company invests in and alongside
HarbourVest-managed funds which focus on primary fund commitments, secondary
investments and direct co-investments in operating companies. HVPE's
investment manager is HarbourVest Advisers L.P., an affiliate of HarbourVest
Partners, LLC, an independent, global private markets asset manager with 40
years of experience.

 

About HarbourVest Partners, LLC:

HarbourVest is an independent, global private markets firm with 40 years of
experience and more than $106 billion of assets under management as of
December 31, 2022. Our interwoven platform provides clients access to global
primary funds, secondary transactions, direct co-investments, real assets and
infrastructure, and private credit. Our strengths extend across strategies,
enabled by our team of more than 1,000 employees, including more than 215
investment professionals across Asia, Europe, and the Americas. Across our
private markets platform, our team has committed more than $55 billion to
newly-formed funds, completed over $46 billion in secondary purchases, and
invested over $33 billion in directly operating companies. We partner
strategically and plan our offerings innovatively to provide our clients with
access, insight, and global opportunities.

 

This announcement is for information purposes only and does not constitute or
form part of any offer to issue or sell, or the solicitation of an offer to
acquire, purchase or subscribe for, any securities in any jurisdiction and
should not be relied upon in connection with any decision to subscribe for or
acquire any Shares.  In particular, this announcement does not constitute or
form part of any offer to issue or sell, or the solicitation of an offer to
acquire, purchase or subscribe for, any securities in the United States or to
US Persons (as defined in Regulation S under the US Securities Act of 1933, as
amended ("US Persons")).  Neither this announcement nor any copy of it may be
taken, released, published or distributed, directly or indirectly to US
Persons or in or into the United States (including its territories and
possessions), Canada, Australia or Japan, or any jurisdiction where such
action would be unlawful. Accordingly, recipients represent that they are able
to receive this announcement without contravention of any applicable legal or
regulatory restrictions in the jurisdiction in which they reside or conduct
business. No recipient may distribute, or make available, this announcement
(directly or indirectly) to any other person. Recipients of this announcement
should inform themselves about and observe any applicable legal requirements
in their jurisdictions.

 

The Shares have not been and will not be registered under the US Securities
Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities Act") or with any securities
regulatory authority of any state or other jurisdiction of the United States
and, accordingly, may not be offered, sold, resold, transferred, delivered or
distributed, directly or indirectly, within the United States or to US
Persons.  In addition, the Company is not registered under the US Investment
Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "Investment Company Act") and
shareholders of the Company will not have the protections of that act.  There
will be no public offer of the Shares in the United States or to US Persons.

 

This announcement has been prepared by the Company and its investment manager,
HarbourVest Advisers L.P. (the "Investment Manager"). No liability whatsoever
(whether in negligence or otherwise) arising directly or indirectly from the
use of this announcement is accepted and no representation, warranty or
undertaking, express or implied, is or will be made by the Company, the
Investment Manager or any of their respective directors, officers, employees,
advisers, representatives or other agents ("Agents") for any information or
any of the opinions contained herein or for any errors, omissions or
misstatements. None of the Investment Manager nor any of their respective
Agents makes or has been authorised to make any representation or warranties
(express or implied) in relation to the Company or as to the truth, accuracy
or completeness of this announcement, or any other written or oral statement
provided. In particular, no representation or warranty is given as to the
achievement or reasonableness of, and no reliance should be placed on any
projections, targets, estimates or forecasts contained in this announcement
and nothing in this announcement is or should be relied on as a promise or
representation as to the future.

 

Epidemics, Pandemics and Other Health Risks - Many countries have
experienced infectious illnesses in recent decades, including swine flu, avian
influenza, SARS and 2019-nCoV (the "Coronavirus"). In December 2019, an
initial outbreak of the Coronavirus was reported in Hubei, China. Since then,
a large and growing number of cases have been confirmed around the world. The
Coronavirus outbreak has resulted in numerous deaths and the imposition of
both local and more widespread "work from home" and other quarantine measures,
border closures and other travel restrictions causing social unrest and
commercial disruption on a global scale. The World Health Organization has
declared the Coronavirus outbreak a pandemic. The ongoing spread of the
Coronavirus has had and will continue to have a material adverse impact on
local economies in the affected jurisdictions and also on the global economy
as cross-border commercial activity and market sentiment are increasingly
impacted by the outbreak and government and other measures seeking to contain
its spread. In addition to these developments having potentially adverse
consequences for underlying portfolio investments of the HarbourVest funds
and the value of the investments therein, the operations of HVPE, the
Investment Manager, and HVPE's portfolio of HarbourVest funds have been, and
could continue to be, adversely impacted, including through quarantine
measures and travel restrictions imposed on personnel or service providers
based around the world, and any related health issues of such personnel or
service providers. Any of the foregoing events could materially and
adversely affect the Investment Manager's ability to source, manage and
divest its investments and its ability to fulfil its investment objectives.
Similar consequences could arise with respect to other comparable infectious
diseases.

 

Other than as required by applicable laws, the Company gives no undertaking to
update this announcement or any additional information, or to correct any
inaccuracies in it which may become apparent and the distribution of this
announcement. The information contained in this announcement is given at the
date of its publication and is subject to updating, revision and amendment.
The contents of this announcement have not been approved by any competent
regulatory or supervisory authority.

 

This announcement includes statements that are, or may be deemed to be,
"forward looking statements".  These forward looking statements can be
identified by the use of forward looking terminology, including the terms
"believes", "projects", "estimates", "anticipates", "expects", "intends",
"plans", "goal", "target", "aim", "may", "will", "would", "could", "should" or
"continue" or, in each case, their negative or other variations or comparable
terminology. These forward looking statements include all matters that are not
historical facts and include statements regarding the intentions, beliefs or
current expectations of the Company.  By their nature, forward looking
statements involve risks and uncertainties because they relate to events and
depend on circumstances that may or may not occur in the future and may be
beyond the Company's ability to control or predict. Forward looking statements
are not guarantees of future performance.   More detailed information on the
potential factors which could affect the financial results of the Company is
contained in the Company's public filings and reports.

 

All investments are subject to risk. Past performance is no guarantee of
future returns. Prospective investors are advised to seek expert legal,
financial, tax and other professional advice before making any investment
decision. The value of investments may fluctuate. Results achieved in the past
are no guarantee of future results.

 

This announcement is issued by the Company, whose registered address is BNP
Paribas House, St Julian's Avenue, St Peter Port, Guernsey, GY1 1WA

 

© 2023 HarbourVest Global Private Equity Limited. All rights reserved.

 

 

Chair's statement

 

Dear Shareholder

This has been another extraordinary year in the markets. The war in Ukraine,
intensifying geopolitical tensions, sharply higher inflation and interest
rates, and the recent crisis in sections of the banking sector have all
contributed to greater uncertainty, knocking investor confidence. In spite of
tentative signs of renewed optimism, and so a more positive trajectory in
stock market indices since the start of 2023, many risks remain. While HVPE
delivered resilient NAV performance throughout the financial year, its share
price has been negatively impacted by the broader market conditions,
compounded by negative sentiment surrounding our specific sector, as I discuss
in more detail below. As always, we extend our thanks to all shareholders who
have continued to hold the Company's shares, as well as those who have joined
its register during the year. We are very grateful for your support.

 

The Board is hopeful that the pessimism undermining markets will dissipate
this year and that the wide discount to NAV that HVPE's shares currently trade
at will start to unwind as conditions normalise. We have the utmost conviction
in our diversified strategy, and in our Investment Manager, HarbourVest
Partners, who we believe is well placed to steer the portfolio through these
more challenging times. HarbourVest is deeply engaged with the managers with
which it invests, typically taking seats on the advisory boards of their
funds. This provides an additional layer of governance and oversight, and
these strong relationships help to ensure that HVPE continues to benefit from
exposure to hard-to-access funds. The result is a carefully selected,
well-diversified portfolio of high-quality private companies, positioned to
deliver continued outperformance of public markets and positive results for
HVPE's shareholders over the long term.

 

Financial Performance

HVPE's NAV per share remained resilient over the financial year, experiencing
a marginal decline of 1.2%. This compares favourably with the FTSE All-World
Total Return Index which saw a decline of 7.3% over the same period. We are
aware that some investors in the wider market hold concerns around private
company valuations, but we stay close to the Investment Manager and share its
belief that such views are very largely misplaced. Private market valuations
did not keep pace as public markets rose in 2020 and through 2021, and hence
have been less impacted by falls in 2022. We see no indication of a systemic
problem, and while the valuation process in private markets will always
involve a degree of subjectivity, we believe that the vast majority of
managers in this sphere adopt an appropriate level of rigour and conservatism.
For more detail on valuations, please see page 38 of the Investment Manager's
report.

 

Over the financial year, gains across infrastructure, real assets and credit,
and small to mid-cap buyouts were offset by declines in the venture and growth
equity and large buyouts, driving the overall modest NAV per share decline.
HVPE continues to benefit from sales of underlying company investments at a
premium to their carrying value in the portfolio, demonstrating the inherent
conservatism in the calculation of its NAV.

 

As always, I urge shareholders to look at the long-term performance of HVPE.
NAV per share has grown at a compound annual growth rate of 14.6% for the last
ten years and over the same period shareholders have experienced a total gain
of 296%. It might be a truism, but investment really is a long-term process.
HVPE is investing in illiquid private assets, which takes time and patience,
but we have a track record of materially outperforming public markets through
the cycle. To date we have succeeded, delivering a NAV per share return
premium of 5.7% per annum above the FTSE All-World Total Return Index over the
last ten years.

 

Share Price and Discount

I am disappointed that I am unable to report similar resilience in HVPE's
shares. Our share price, along with those of many peers, does not reflect the
Company's fundamentals, driven by market sentiment which seems particularly
negative in our sector. The Board remains hugely frustrated at the resulting
extreme discount to NAV at which the shares have traded more recently, and we
remain focused on finding ways to improve the experience for loyal
shareholders. It is clear there is no silver bullet, but the Board has
continued to assess the best course of action. I can assure you, we are not
complacent and a number of options have been discussed. Following a recent
review, I am pleased to announce that the Board intends to repurchase up to
$25 million of the Company's shares. While this is a capital allocation
decision, and so we do not expect this action to narrow the discount by
itself, we hope that it does demonstrate the Board's confidence in HVPE's
reported NAV and the outlook for the portfolio in the years ahead.

 

Company Activity

 

Balance Sheet, Capital Allocation and Portfolio Cash Flows

Careful management is critical for any closed-ended investment company holding
illiquid assets. We pride ourselves on diligent oversight and prudent
management of the balance sheet to ensure its strength and allow for optimum
capital allocation. The Investment Manager conducts rigorous modelling and
stress-testing, as outlined on page 18. In the summer of 2022, as reported on
page four of the Company's Semi-Annual Report and Accounts, the Board and
Investment Manager conducted a review of the case for share buybacks using its
established framework based on a number of criteria. As a result, in September
2022, HVPE bought back 757,864 shares for cancellation at an average price of
£22.40 per share for a total consideration of £17.0 million ($18.8 million).
This exercise added $0.24 to NAV per share. The Board's core presumption is
that in normal conditions, reinvesting capital into new private market
opportunities, rather than buying back shares, should provide a better outcome
for our shareholders over the long term. However, it appreciates there are
times when repurchasing shares represents an attractive investment and makes
sense from a capital allocation perspective.

 

Over the financial year, calls and distributions were robust, totalling $588
million and $532 million respectively. This meant HVPE was a net investor by
$56 million, contributing to a reduction in the cash balance. As at 31 January
2023, HVPE had $198 million of cash on the balance sheet, down from the $284
million at the end of the prior financial year, and the Company's $800 million
credit facility remained undrawn.

 

In January 2023, following the formal receipt of notices from the lenders, the
credit facility reverted to a conventional fixed-term arrangement, having
previously featured an evergreen term. The $400 million commitment from main
lender Credit Suisse AG London Branch, and the $300 million from Mitsubishi
UFJ Trust Banking Corporation, acting through its New York Branch, will expire
on 12 January 2028. The remaining $100 million from The Guardians of New
Zealand Superannuation will expire on 15 August 2027. The Investment Manager
has already embarked on a project to explore the credit market to ensure that
HVPE is well-placed to extend this long-duration facility well in advance of
the expiry date. After the period end, as a prudent measure when the crisis in
the banking sector emerged, we drew down $200 million on the credit facility.

 

Stakeholder Engagement

The Board remains committed to effective engagement with its stakeholders.
Several processes are ingrained into Board operations to ensure this is
carried out. We outline our activity on pages 24 to 27. I am pleased that a
return to normality post-pandemic has allowed us to reinstate a higher level
of in-person interactions - both in terms of engagement with the Investment
Manager and external industry experts, as well as with our shareholders. Last
year also saw a return to an in-person, hybrid Capital Markets event hosted at
the offices of our then recently appointed joint broker, Peel Hunt. We look
forward to holding a similar event this year, as detailed below.

 

Board and Succession Planning

We believe effective succession planning is key to the success of the Board.
In the period under review, and as reported last year, we were pleased to
appoint Anulika Ajufo as an Independent Non-Executive Director, as detailed on
page 91. Alan Hodson stepped down in July 2022, as trailed in last year's
Annual Report and Accounts.

 

Peter Wilson, one of our non-independent Directors, will be stepping down from
the Board at the July 2023 Annual General Meeting ("AGM"). We would like to
thank Peter for his great commitment and deep insights over the last nine
years. After careful consideration, including discussion with the HVPE Board,
HarbourVest Partners has decided not to appoint a replacement non-independent
director.

 

Focus on Environmental, Social, and Governance ("ESG")

The Board remains committed to the highest standards of corporate governance
and to improving HVPE's social and environmental impacts to the extent that it
can, in close collaboration with HarbourVest Partners. We have continued to
receive regular updates from the Investment Manager in this regard over the
year, and remain encouraged by the positive progress made. We are pleased to
include an expanded ESG section from the Investment Manager on pages 44 to
51.

 

Brand and Messaging

I am pleased to announce the new "HVPE" logo and fresh design for the Company.
We have been working on enhancing the brand to create a distinct and modern
look that we hope will resonate with investors. Alongside this, we intend to
provide more information about the Company and insight into its portfolio as
we move forward. Post-year end, we moved to publishing a list of the top 25
companies on a monthly basis on the HVPE website. Investors looking for more
information and videos on HVPE, as well as insights from HarbourVest, should
visit the dedicated News and Views section on the website at www.hvpe.com. We
believe that trying to simplify the Company's proposition, as well as educate
prospective investors, will yield a better understanding of the business and
encourage further investment.

 

Annual General Meeting and Capital Markets Morning

HVPE's AGM will be held in Guernsey at 1.00p.m. BST on 19 July 2023. Formal
notice will be sent to registered shareholders in the coming weeks. We hope
that all registered shareholders will exercise their votes in person or by
proxy. Except for Peter Wilson, who will be stepping down at this AGM, all
Directors will submit themselves for re-election. As in prior years, in
advance of the formal AGM, HVPE will hold a Capital Markets event for
shareholders. This will take place in the morning of 22 June 2023 from 9.00AM
BST, and will assume a hybrid (in-person and virtual) format. Shareholders
should contact Amelia Bissett at hvpe_events@harbourvest.com should they wish
to attend.

 

Company Prospects and Outlook

The Board is conscious of the challenges that lie ahead, yet remains
optimistic that HVPE's diversified portfolio is well positioned. While today's
macroeconomic backdrop may feel uncharted, much of this has been seen before,
and experienced by HarbourVest and by private markets professionals. Sceptics
may predict a reckoning for the industry - essentially calling time on
thousands of businesses - but we believe, as demonstrated by recent history,
that private markets will again demonstrate they are capable of adapting and
thriving in these times.

 

The asset class is not immune to the difficulties posed by an adverse
macroeconomic environment, and we are mindful that operating performance could
start to come under pressure in some businesses. The key for HVPE is to
continue to back those managers who can use their expertise to drive and
support their portfolio companies through more challenging times, whilst
capitalising on attractive investment opportunities as they arise.

 

Your Board remains dedicated to strong corporate governance and the diligent
oversight of HVPE on behalf of its shareholders. We are confident in our
reported NAV and believe that over time the portfolio will continue to prove
its quality and investors in turn will be rewarded by the Company's long-term
results.

 

Ed Warner
Chair

25 May 2023

 

 

 

Principal risks and uncertainties

 

Risk Factors and Internal Controls

The Board is responsible for the Company's risk management and internal
control systems, and actively monitors the risks faced by the Company, taking
steps to mitigate and minimise these where possible. Further details on the
Board's governance and oversight can be found on pages 78 to 99.

 

Risk Appetite

The Board's investment risk appetite is to follow an over-commitment policy
that allows balanced, regular investment through economic and investment
cycles whilst ensuring that it has access to sufficient funding for any
potential negative cash flow situations, including under an Extreme Downside
scenario. At the same time, the funding available to the Company by way of
cash balances and lending facilities is managed to ensure that its cost, by
way of interest, facility fees, or cash drag, is reasonable. When considering
other risks, the Board's risk appetite is to balance the potential impact and
likelihood of each risk with the cost of any additional control and mitigation
measures. In doing so, as a baseline, the Board will seek to follow best
practice and remain compliant with all applicable laws, rules, and
regulations.

 

Risk Management

As recommended by the Audit and Risk Committee (see the report on the
activities of that Committee on pages 93 to 95), the Directors have adopted a
risk management framework to govern how the Board identifies existing and
emerging risks, determines risk appetite, identifies mitigation and controls,
assesses, monitors and measures risk, and reports on risks.

 

The Board reviews risks at least twice a year and receives deep-dive reports
on specific risks as recommended by the Audit and Risk Committee. The Board
divides identified risks into those which have a higher probability and a
significant potential impact on performance, strategy, reputation, or
operations, and those which are less material and are monitored on a
watchlist. The Board also conducts an annual exercise to identify new or
emerging risks.

 

In considering material risks, the Board identified those which should be
categorised as principal risks, which are those where the combination of
probability and impact was assessed as being most significant and which the
Board therefore considers could seriously affect the performance, future
prospects, or reputation of the Company. These principal risks are described
below and include all those previously identified by the Board, together with
an additional risk relating to valuation which was classified as a principal
risk just after the year end in February 2023. The commentary below seeks to
capture recent developments to give an up-to-date sense of the risks faced by
the Company.

 

 Principal                                                                       Description and Potential Impact                                                 Mitigation and Management                                                        Commentary
 Risk
 Balance Sheet Risks                                                             The Company's balance sheet strategy and its policy for the utilisation of       The size and term of the Company's credit facility has historically mitigated    Increased risk

                                                                               leverage are described on page 83. The Company continues to maintain an          this risk. The Board has put a monitoring programme in place, determined with

 Risks to the Company's balance sheet resulting from its over-commitment         over-commitment strategy and may draw on its credit facility to bridge periods   reference to portfolio models, in order to mitigate against the requirement to   As described in last year's Financial Statements, after strong growth in 2021,
 strategy, borrowing arrangements, and policy for the use of leverage.           of negative cash flow when capital calls on investments are greater than         sell assets at a discount during any periods of NAV decline. The monitoring      the Board had authorised an increase in commitments in 2022 but, given the

                                                                               distributions. The level of potential borrowing available under the credit       programme also considers the level of borrowing at the HarbourVest fund level    uncertain economic backdrop, the Board has been cautious about the pacing of
                                                                                 facility could be negatively affected by a declining NAV. In a period of         which is factored into the credit facility loan-to-value ratio covenants. Both   those new commitments.
                                                                                 declining NAV, reduced realisations, and rapid substantial capital calls, the    the Board and the Investment Manager will continue to monitor these metrics

                                                                                 Company's net leverage ratio could increase beyond an appropriate level,         actively and will take appropriate action as required, such as                   As explained on page 17, in January 2023 the providers of the credit facility
                                                                                 resulting in a need to sell assets. A reduction in the availability or
                                                                                gave notice, effectively changing the facility from an evergreen term to a
                                                                                 utilisation of borrowing at the HarbourVest fund level, or accelerated           pausing further commitments, to attempt to mitigate these risks.                 fixed term, with $100 million expiring in August 2027 and the remaining $700
                                                                                 repayment thereof, could result in an increase in capital calls to a level in
                                                                                million of the facility expiring in January 2028.
                                                                                 excess of the modelled scenarios. Specific factors affecting one or more         Please also see the Going Concern and Viability Statement on pages 87 and 88

                                                                                 lenders of the Company's credit facility may also restrict HVPE's capacity to    for information on the scenarios that are considered by the Board.               Post-period end, in March 2023, Credit Suisse, which contributes $400 million
                                                                                 borrow, and may impact the ability for the credit facility to be renewed on                                                                                       of the $800 million facility, faced questions about its financial strength,
                                                                                 attractive terms.                                                                                                                                                 which resulted in the Swiss National Bank stepping in with support and
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   ultimately to the acquisition of Credit Suisse by UBS Group AG ("UBS").

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   A planned review of the credit facility has therefore been accelerated. The
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Company has drawn down $200 million from the facility as a contingency for
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   shorter-term negative cash flow scenarios.
 Popularity of Listed Private Equity Sector                                      Investor sentiment may change towards the Listed Private Equity sector for a     Private equity as an asset class, and the Company in particular, have            Increased risk

                                                                               number of reasons, resulting in a widening of the Company's share price          performed strongly over recent years. The Company has demonstrated the value

 The risk that investor sentiment may change towards the listed private equity   discount relative to its NAV per share. HVPE's discount is currently much        of investing through the perceived investment cycle.                             Discounts across the listed private equity sector have widened during the year
 sector as a whole.                                                              wider than its historical average. This may be because of perceptions of the
                                                                                as investors have felt that private market valuations have lagged falls in the
                                                                                 position of the market in the private equity cycle, perceptions about the cost   HVPE continues to make the case for private market investment. While the         public markets. Investors were waiting to see how private market valuations
                                                                                 of private equity investing, or due to investors making their own judgements     public markets are increasingly dominated by large, mature businesses, we        adjusted, particularly for Q4 which on the whole are audited numbers.
                                                                                 regarding current valuations given reporting lags.                               believe that HVPE's portfolio will continue to benefit from the presence of

                                                                                                                                                                  younger, faster-growing companies choosing to stay private for longer.           Since the year end, sentiment in the sector has been further damaged by events

                                                                                in the banking sector. Despite measures taken to protect deposits, it remains
                                                                                                                                                                  The Company supports increased transparency regarding industry fees and costs    to be seen what the long-term impact will be on the private equity ecosystem,
                                                                                                                                                                  and has reflected that in its own reporting through its Key Information          particularly for venture capital.
                                                                                                                                                                  Document.
 Valuation(1)                                                                    Where there is uncertainty and distrust regarding valuations, investors may      Both the Investment Manager and General Partners of underlying funds value       Increased risk

                                                                               make their own judgements which could feed through to the rating of the          investments in accordance with industry practices and accounting standards.

 The risk that market instability leads to continuing uncertainty in private     Company's shares. Consequently, this would increase the discount that the        Valuations are audited annually. When the Company reports its monthly NAV it     Through the latter half of 2022 and post-year end, there has been increasing
 asset valuations based on listed comparables, together with general market      shares trade at relative to NAV per share.                                       discloses the date of the underlying valuations.                                 market scepticism regarding private equity valuations and the share price
 scepticism about the likely movement in valuations.
                                                                                discount to NAV per share has widened.
                                                                                                                                                                  The Audit and Risk Committee receives reports on the control environment of

                                                                                                                                                                  the Investment Manager, including that relating to valuations. This is further   The HVPE discount has been wider than some peers because of a perception that
                                                                                                                                                                  explained in the report of the Audit and Risk Committee starting on page 93.     HVPE is more exposed to venture stage investments where there are greater
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   valuation questions. The Company has issued more granular data since the
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   publication of the Semi-Annual Report and Accounts 2022 to show the
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   look-through exposure to the venture stage, distinct from the growth stage
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   exposure, which can be seen in this report as shown on page 58.
 Public Market Risks                                                             The Company makes venture capital and buyout investments in companies where      The Company's                                                                    Heightened but stable during the year.

                                                                               operating performance is affected by the broader economic environment within

 The risk of a decline in global public markets or a deterioration in the        the countries in which those companies carry out business. While these           exposure to individual public markets is partially mitigated by the              Increased since year end.
 economic environment.                                                           companies are generally privately owned, their valuations are, in most cases,    geographical and sector diversification of the portfolio. In previous

                                                                                 influenced by public market comparables. In addition, at 31 January 2023,        downturns private market valuations have not been impacted as much as public     Due to increasing inflation and interest rates during the year, partly due to
                                                                                 approximately 7% of the Company's portfolio was made up of publicly traded       markets and there has been a dampened effect on volatility.                      the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, public markets remained volatile.
                                                                                 securities whose values increase or decrease in response to market movements.

                                                                                 When global public markets decline or the economic situation deteriorates, the                                                                                    Post-year end there was further market volatility, with several banks
                                                                                 Company's NAV is usually negatively affected.                                                                                                                     revealing particular problems in parts of the banking sector in the higher
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   interest rate environment.
 Performance of HarbourVest                                                      The Company is dependent on its Investment Manager and HarbourVest's             HarbourVest has a long-term track record in managing its investment portfolios   Stable

                                                                               investment professionals. With the exception of 16 secondary co-investments,     with stability within its investment teams and consistent investment

 The risk posed by the Company's dependence on its Investment Manager.           all of the Company's assets, save for cash balances and short-term liquid        processes. The performance of HarbourVest is monitored by the Management         Investment performance during the year suffered in absolute terms given the
                                                                                 investments, are invested in HarbourVest funds. Significant reliance is placed   Engagement and Service Provider Committee as detailed on page 96. The            economic backdrop but performance relative to peers remained strong.
                                                                                 by the Company on HarbourVest's control environment.                             HarbourVest control environment is assessed by the Audit and Risk Committee as

                                                                                                                                                                  detailed on pages 93 to 95.                                                      No material matters of concern regarding the HarbourVest control environment
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   arose during the year.
 Trading Liquidity and Price                                                     Any ongoing discount to NAV per share that is materially different from the      The Company's shares trade on the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange,      Increased risk

                                                                               Company's peer group has the potential to damage the Company's reputation and    which generally provides good liquidity and accessibility to a wide range of

 The risk that an insufficient number of shares in the Company are traded,       to cause shareholder dissatisfaction.                                            potential shareholders. In addition, the Board continues to monitor the          Liquidity in the shares, measured by mean daily trading volume, is an
 widening the discount of the share price relative to the NAV per share.
                                                                                discount to NAV per share.                                                       important KPI. The mean has decreased during the period, as shown on page 14.
                                                                                 During periods of short-term market stress, supply and demand for shares can

                                                                                 be impacted. If demand decreases or supply increases disproportionately, the     The Board has overseen the allocation of additional investor relations           The proportion of the share register that is held by substantial shareholders
                                                                                 bid/offer spread could widen, resulting in less attractive pricing for           resource in recent years and the Company has attracted new shareholders.         (more than 5% of voting rights) increased during the financial year from 19%
                                                                                 investors seeking to buy or sell shares in the short term.                       Through its own activities, and those of the Investment Manager, the Board       at 31 January 2022 to 23% at 31 January 2023 (see details on page 84) - with

                                                                                seeks to drive improved liquidity over the medium to long term by promoting      the latest figure at 28 April 2023 standing at 18%. Additionally, the
                                                                                 Also, in the event that a substantial shareholder chooses to exit the share      the Company's shares to a broad range of prospective investors.                  proportion held by individual private investors increased from 14% to 16%
                                                                                 register, this may have an effect on the Company's share price and                                                                                                during the financial year under review.
                                                                                 consequently the discount to NAV per share.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   However, notwithstanding these positive developments, the share price discount
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   to NAV per share has remained high due to the factors noted above regarding
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   the popularity of the listed private equity sector and valuations.
 ESG Risk                                                                        The Company is exposed to the impact of a mismanagement or failure to            HVPE has established                                                             Increased risk

                                                                               recognise potential ESG issues at portfolio company level, industry level,

 The risk that the Company or the Investment Manager fails to respond            service provider, and Board level, which could damage the reputation and         its own policy in relation to ESG. This includes close oversight of service      See pages 44 to 51 for a description of the Investment Manager's developments
 appropriately to the increasing global focus on Environmental, Social and       standing of the Company and ultimately affect its investment performance.        providers and particularly of the Investment Manager. The Investment Manager     regarding ESG in the year.
 Governance issues.                                                                                                                                               has ESG policies in place and actively engages with underlying managers to

                                                                                                                                                                  assess

                                                                                                                                                                  their ESG credentials. The Board will continue its close oversight of these      This is an area of increasing focus for investors and regulators.
                                                                                                                                                                  processes to assess whether they are adequate and continue to develop in
                                                                                                                                                                  accordance with regulation and best practice.

 

(1) This was formally classified as a Principal Risk following the year end.

 

Investment Manager's Review

 

Introduction

In this section, Richard Hickman, Managing Director, HVPE, who is responsible
for the day-to-day management of the Company, reflects on the financial year
and shares his outlook. Richard joined HarbourVest in 2014 and has a total of
17 years' experience in the listed private equity sector.

 

Introduction

The 12 months to 31 January 2023 saw a confluence of events sufficient to
challenge even the most seasoned investor. Whilst initially there was a
tailwind in terms of the ending of pandemic-related restrictions and a return
to 'normal', multiple headwinds soon emerged in the form of a tragic new war,
rising inflation and interest rates, and a stock market sell-off. Events in
the banking sector post-period end have complicated matters further, creating
heightened concern over the impact of further interest rate increases. It is
therefore important to remind our stakeholders that a diversified global
portfolio is a key strength of HVPE's in times like this. HarbourVest
Partners, has witnessed multiple periods of economic dislocation over its
40-year history, and its carefully considered approach to portfolio
construction reflects the lessons learned over that time. Furthermore, in
recent years a more sophisticated level of quantitative analysis has been
brought to bear on the investment and portfolio management processes, leading
to greater insight into the source of returns historically and hence, we
believe, greater potential for outperformance going forward. Historic evidence
suggests that the cost of missing good vintages outweighs the cost of being
invested during low-performing vintages(1), further highlighting the
importance of staying the course and investing consistently, even through
adverse market conditions. This can be a challenge for investors
psychologically when markets are volatile and investor sentiment is negative,
and HVPE is certainly not immune from near-term shocks, but we do believe that
long-term, consistent investing is the best approach to optimising returns
through the cycle.

 

Private Markets Industry(2)

Private markets activity in 2022 slowed from the record-breaking pace of 2021,
reverting to more typical historical long-term averages.

 

Exits trended downwards year-on-year by both volume and value, as GPs opted to
hold onto investments rather than sell into an uncertain market at lower
valuations. Despite this, of the exits that did occur in 2022, the median
value was still greater than the pre-COVID norm. This resilience stems largely
from sponsor-to-sponsor exits, which made up 45% of US PE exit value, up from
the ten-year average of 39% amid a virtually non-existent IPO market.

 

It was a challenging period for fundraising globally, but particularly in
Europe where volumes more than halved in 2022 versus 2021, with the region
posting its smallest total since 2014. This is due, in large part, to
investors facing uncertainty arising from geopolitical tensions, a spike in
energy costs, higher general inflation and monetary tightening, and thus
opting to wait before committing more capital. Allocation issues also would
have likely impacted this, owing to the "denominator effect", whereby declines
in public markets have led private holdings to make up a larger proportion of
LPs' portfolios.

 

New deal activity remained resilient throughout 2022, in particular in the
first half of the calendar year. The worsening macroeconomic environment lent
itself to larger numbers of smaller deals, with take-privates a growing trend
as GPs seized the opportunity to acquire public companies at lower valuations.
As central banks continued to raise interest rates in the battle against
inflation, this had a number of knock-on effects, including greater
uncertainty in the outlook for many businesses, but also opportunity for our
experienced private markets managers with a history of navigating previous
crises over the last several decades.

 

Impact of Rising Interest Rates

The post-2008 period of ultra-low interest rates had to come to an end at some
point, but the speed of rate rises over the past 12 months must have taken
even the most pessimistic commentator by surprise. This has had wide-reaching
impacts - not least on investor confidence - and ultimately triggered a crisis
in parts of the banking sector which, fortunately, for the most part appears
to have been contained thus far.

 

The combined effects of high inflation and rising rates have undoubtedly been
felt by some of the underlying portfolio companies, but so far there has been
an impressive degree of resilience, both in terms of operational performance
and continued value growth in large parts of the portfolio. This resilience
demonstrates the prowess of our investment managers and quality of the
underlying portfolio. As noted in the Investment Manager's report in the
Annual Report and Accounts 2022, for some time, a key area of focus for
HarbourVest and many underlying GPs when evaluating prospective new investee
companies has been their ability to maintain pricing power whilst securing
their supply chains against potential shocks. Base case return projections
have generally been evaluated on the assumption of a declining valuation
multiple during the hold period, and in the majority of buyout investments,
debt packages have incorporated at least a partial hedge against rising
interest rates. Furthermore, analysis conducted by an industry analyst has
shown that increases in interest rates of the order of 300-400 basis points,
consistent with the rise in base rates so far, have only a limited impact on
the overall return multiple achieved in a typical buyout deal, all else being
equal(3).

 

Another impact is on the credit markets which will have a knock-on effect on
the portfolio, via investee company debt packages and also the credit lines
used by GPs to manage cash flows for their investors. While credit
availability has begun to tighten, we have seen the emergence of an increasing
number of non-traditional lenders supplementing the market. As a reminder,
HVPE's exposure to debt at the portfolio company level tends to be lower than
might be expected given its relatively modest exposure (19%) to larger
buyouts. At the partnership level, we may see more capital calls and/or fewer
distributions as managers begin to reduce the utilisation of subscription
lines, and the same could apply at the HarbourVest fund level, so we are
mindful that cash flows could be impacted adversely. We note, however, that in
the latter case, HarbourVest works with a broadly diversified group of
financial institutions to provide bank account services and credit facilities
for its fund programmes, so the risk of a sudden reduction in credit
availability across the platform is limited.

 

1          Research from HarbourVest Partners, 2020.

2          "Pitchbook 2022 Annual US PE Breakdown" and "Pitchbook
2022 Annual European PE Breakdown", January 2023.

3          Jefferies, March 2023.

 

Valuations

In light of the wide-ranging movements of public equity markets more recently,
many investors have been surprised by the relatively modest value reductions
in HVPE's portfolio and those of some peers in the listed private equity
sector and beyond. We should recall that private market valuations have
historically been less volatile than public markets both on the upside and
downside(1). Private valuations were not, in most cases, written up in line
with the peaks seen in public markets in 2021, and therefore should not be
expected to suffer to the same degree on the downside. A strict, consistent
valuation methodology and audit process through the HVPE structure should give
shareholders comfort in the validity of our published NAV, whilst our
well-diversified portfolio continues to provide resilience in challenging
markets.

 

Any remaining valuation scepticism might be allayed by noting that maturing
portfolio investments are still being realised at a premium to carrying value.
HVPE's weighted average uplift to pre-transaction carrying value for a large
sample of transactions over the period was 31%. Others across the industry
also report similar positive uplift figures(2). This sustains a long-run trend
whereby private markets managers have achieved successful exits in a variety
of market environments.

 

Outlook(3)

HVPE remains focused on optimising its portfolio in accordance with the
Strategic Asset Allocation targets. The Board and Investment Manager made no
changes to the targets in the year under review, consistent with its view that
in times of volatility it is important to maintain a consistent long-term
outlook. On a geographical basis, we continue to believe that private markets
in the US are well-positioned to provide strong returns in the years ahead,
and that the potential for further penetration of private capital in Europe
continues to grow. Meanwhile, concerns over China should not dampen optimism
around wider growth opportunities in Asia overall, and HVPE remains committed
to allocating 20% of its capital to the region on a rolling five-year basis
(currently 15% at 31 January 2023). From an investment stage perspective,
Buyouts remain our largest allocation as we believe that high-quality managers
in this space will continue to innovate and adapt in the years ahead,
maintaining the potential for premium returns. The Venture and Growth Equity
segment, while less fashionable than it was 12 months ago, nevertheless
continues to nurture high-quality, profitable businesses, some of which could
become the S&P 500 titans of tomorrow. Mezzanine, Infrastructure and Real
Assets - a segment providing a yield while benefiting from floating rates and
other inflation-hedging properties - remains a key component of our portfolio,
comprising 9% currently against a target of 10%. As well as its relative
stability and low correlation to other parts of the portfolio, the segment is
supported by long-term, secular tailwinds such as the energy transition and
digitisation. This may help explain why infrastructure and natural resources
set a new fundraising record in 2022(4), firmly against the trend of other
sectors facing broader macroeconomic headwinds over the past year.

 

The outlook today is uncertain on a number of fronts. Long-term trends may
have been broken, or they may simply have taken a pause. Either way, HVPE's
portfolio is well-positioned to capture the opportunities that will, no doubt,
arise across the global private markets as businesses and investors adapt to a
rapidly changing environment. This is where HVPE's considered allocation to
three overarching investment strategies is particularly important. Primary
fund of funds, the bedrock of HVPE's portfolio construction, call capital over
a multi-year timeframe, backing high-quality managers as they identify
attractive new investments across a broad swathe of the market. Meanwhile, the
secondary and direct co-investment strategies are able to take a more
opportunistic approach, deploying capital using innovative structures to help
manage risk while capturing upside. HVPE's portfolio is dynamic and constantly
evolving as legions of expert managers work tirelessly to optimise returns for
investors. The Company has delivered strong returns for many years, and it is
our firm belief that it can continue to do so in the years ahead.

1          Numis, January 2023

2          Various peers, including but not limited to, Apax Global
Alpha, Pantheon International, ICG Enterprise Trust, HG Capital Trust and RIT
Capital all announced exit transactions at an uplift to carrying value over
2022 and 2023.

3          "Pitchbook Q2 2022 US PE Breakdown," July 2022

4          "McKinsey Global Private Markets Review 2023," March 2023.

 

Richard Hickman
Managing Director

 

 

Investment Manager's report

 

NAV per Share - 12 Months to 31 January 2023

HVPE's NAV per share declined by 1.2% in the 12 months to 31 January 2023,
ending the financial year at $48.52. Meanwhile, the FTSE AW TR Index (in US
dollars), fell by 7.3% in the same period.

 

Over longer timeframes, HVPE's NAV per share return has been very strong. The
31 January 2023 figure of $48.52 is more than double the NAV per share figure
reported five years earlier (31 January 2018: $21.46) and almost quadruple the
respective figure ten years earlier (31 January 2013: $12.46). As a reminder,
these figures are net of all fees and costs.

 

HVPE remains well diversified by sector, as demonstrated by the analysis on
page 41. We believe that diversification is essential to achieving
consistently strong returns from a private markets portfolio. As at 31 January
2023, no single company represented more than 2.4% of the Investment Portfolio
value (31 January 2022: 1.7%), helping to mitigate company-specific risk. The
top 100 companies in the portfolio represented 29% of total value (31 January
2022: 32%), while the top 1,000 companies represented 81% (31 January 2022:
84%).

 

In percentage terms, the Secondary portfolio was the best-performing strategy,
delivering value growth of 5.8% over the 12 months. Geographically, all
regions declined to some extent with the exception of Asia, which grew 1.0%
over the reporting period. In terms of stage, Mezzanine and Infrastructure
& Real Assets was the strongest performer, growing 11.6% over the 12
months ended 31 January 2023. Buyouts also grew, recording a 3.2% gain, but
both of these were wholly offset by a reduction in the value of the Venture
& Growth Equity stage assets (-11.8%). More information on the drivers can
be found on pages 58.

 

As at 31 January 2023, HVPE held investments in 61 HarbourVest funds and 16
secondary co-investments(5) (compared with 57 and 16, respectively, at 31
January 2022). Of these, the largest fund contributors to NAV per share
movement in absolute terms during the 12 months to 31 January 2023 are
described below:

 

·    Fund X Venture, a US-focused venture fund of funds, was the largest
(negative) contributor over the reporting period, reducing NAV per share by
$0.62. With a vintage year of 2015, this fund is in its growth phase. This
decrease came predominantly from unrealised losses over the period.

·    Fund IX Venture, a US-focused venture fund of funds, was the
second-largest contributor over the reporting period, reducing NAV per share
by $0.31. With a vintage year of 2011, this fund is in its mature phase. This
decrease came predominantly from unrealised losses over the period.

·    Fund XI Buyout, a US-focused buyout fund of funds, was next in
absolute terms, and was a positive contributor by adding $0.31 to NAV per
share. With a vintage year of 2018, this fund is in its growth phase. This
increase came predominantly from realised gains over the period.

·    HarbourVest Infrastructure Income Partnership, a global
infrastructure and real assets fund, contributed positively to NAV per share,
adding $0.29 over the reporting period. This increase came predominantly from
realised gains.

·    Co-Investment IV, a global direct co-investment fund, was next
largest in absolute terms, reducing NAV per share by $0.27. With a vintage
year of 2016, this fund is in its growth phase. This decrease came
predominantly from unrealised losses over the period.

 

All of the remaining HarbourVest funds in the portfolio combined contributed
to an aggregate $0.56 increase to HVPE's NAV per share over the period.

 

5          These include four Secondary Overflow III investments, 11
Secondary Overflow IV investments, and Conversus, referred to as "HVPE
Charlotte Co-Investment L.P." in the Audited Consolidated Schedule of
Investments.

 

Portfolio Cash Flows and Balance Sheet

In the 12 months to 31 January 2023, HVPE received cash distributions of $532
million (12 months to 31 January 2022: $835 million) while funding capital
calls of $588 million for new investments (12 months to 31 January 2022: $515
million). The result was net negative cash flow of $56 million over the
reporting period, with HVPE's cash balance decreasing marginally from $284
million as at 31 January 2022 to $198 million as at 31 January 2023.

 

Distributions were driven in large part by particularly strong months in March
and December 2022, during which combined cash proceeds of $220 million were
received, largely from the Primary funds. This contributed over 41% of the
total distributions over the period.

 

A meaningful portion of the July 2022 cash distributions ($53 million, or 80%)
came from the redemption of part of HVPE's interest in Adelaide, the
HVPE-seeded global infrastructure and real assets vehicle, as a result of its
planned conversion into a permanent capital vehicle. In line with the approved
base case plan from 2018, HVPE exercised its right to redeem 50% of its
original commitment, while rolling the remainder into the new vehicle. Due to
the strong performance of this vehicle, the realisation was made at a premium
to the value of HVPE's original investment. More distributions are expected
from this partial redemption in the coming months, with a further $18 million
received post-period end in February 2023. As communicated at the time, HVPE
has begun to receive a share of management fee revenue from the new vehicle in
return for having backed Adelaide as the first seed investor.

 

The largest HarbourVest fund capital calls and distributions over the
reporting period are set out in the tables below. The top ten HarbourVest fund
calls in aggregate accounted for $424 million (72%) of the total calls, and
came from a broad mix of funds. The majority of total calls by value (74%)
were into primary opportunities. The top ten HarbourVest fund distributions
totalled $286 million, or 54% of the total proceeds received in the period.
Distributions by value were split between primary investments (70%) and
secondary investments (23%), with the remainder coming from direct
co-investments.

 

The HarbourVest fund-level borrowing as at 31 January 2023 is reported in
Managing the balance sheet on pages 16 to 19.

 

Top Five HarbourVest Fund Calls

 HarbourVest Fund Name  Vintage Year  Description                                 Called amount
 HIPEP IX               2020          International multi-strategy fund of funds  $82m
 Fund XI Buyout         2018          US-focused buyout fund of funds             $74m
 2021 Global            2021          Global multi-strategy fund of funds         $46m
 Fund XI Venture        2018          US-focused venture fund of funds            $38m
 Fund XII Buyout        2021          US-focused buyout fund of funds             $37m

 

 

 

 

 

Top Five HarbourVest Fund Distributions

 HarbourVest Fund Name  Vintage Year  Description                                 Called amount
 Adelaide               2018          Global infrastructure and real assets fund  $54m
 Fund X Buyout          2015          US-focused buyout fund of funds             $36m
 Fund XI Buyout         2018          US-focused buyout fund of funds             $33m
 2015 Global            2015          Global multi-strategy fund of funds         $31m
 HIPEP VII              2014          International multi-strategy fund of funds  $29m

 

Portfolio Companies

During the period the ten largest individual company realisations generated
total distributions of $81.4 million, accounting for approximately 15% of all
proceeds received. Of these ten companies, four were in HVPE's top 100
portfolio companies at 31 January 2022.

 

Further details are provided on these four below (ordered by size of
distribution). The top ten distributions by value are listed on page 60:

 

·    Hermetic Solutions (WCI-HSG HoldCo), a firm supplying
highly-engineered components for aerospace and defence, was HVPE's largest
distribution in the reporting period, generating proceeds of $17.3 million
following the acquisition by Qnnect announced in November 2022. It was HVPE's
44th largest company at 31 January 2022.

·    Ssangyong C&E Co. Ltd. (formerly Ssangyong Cement Industrial
Co.), an integrated cement manufacturer and distributor, was HVPE's 20th
largest company at 31 January 2022. Hahn & Co. raised a single asset
acquisition fund to acquire Ssangyong C&E from its Fund II and LP
co-investors. Following this sale to the single asset acquisition fund, HVPE
received proceeds of $11 million, making it HVPE's second-largest distribution
in the financial year.

·    Information Resources, Inc., a firm providing market information
solutions, analytics, and consulting services, and HVPE's 29th largest
portfolio company at 31 January 2022, generated proceeds of $7.9 million for
HVPE following the sale to Hellman & Friedman as announced in April 2022.

·    Medius AB, HVPE's 58th largest company at 31 January 2022 and a
company that engages in the development of purchase-to-pay and invoice
automation software solutions, generated HVPE proceeds of $6.1 million from
the sale of a minority interest to Advent International as announced in March
2022.

 

M&A Transactions and IPOs

During the 12 months ended 31 January 2023, there were a total of 327 known
Merger & Acquisition ("M&A") transactions and IPOs. This represents a
significant drop from the high number seen in the 12 months to 31 January
2022, which reflected the strong rebound in transactions post COVID-19.

 

Approximately 94% (307) of these transactions were M&A (trade sales or
sponsor-to-sponsor) transactions, with the remaining 6% (20) being IPOs. It is
important to note that IPOs tend to represent a relatively small proportion of
exits for HVPE even in normal circumstances, consistent with wider industry
trends.

 

Of HVPE's total 327 known M&A transactions and IPOs, 51% (166) related to
buyout-backed companies and 41% (133) to venture-backed companies. The
remainder (28, or 8%) related to mezzanine and infrastructure and real assets
companies. Over the period, the weighted average uplift to pre-transaction
carrying value for a large sample of transactions was 31%(1).

 

The top five M&A transactions during the period (by contribution to HVPE
NAV per share) are listed below. The IPOs during the period were not material
contributors to NAV per share and have therefore not been itemised in this
report.

 

Top Five M&A transactions

(by contribution to HVPE NAV per share(2))

 Viroclinics Biosciences  Buyout  Medical & Biotech           +$0.10
 Information Resources    Buyout  Tech & Software             +$0.05
 Dynapower Holdings       Buyout  Energy & Cleantech          +$0.04
 Techmer PM               Buyout  Industrial & Transport      +$0.04
 Captive Resources        Buyout  Financial                   +$0.04

 

1              These figures represent the weighted average
percentage uplift to carrying value of 78 individual company M&A and IPO
transactions during the year ended 31 January 2023. This analysis takes each
company's value (whether realised or unrealised) at 31 January 2023 and
compares it to the carrying value prior to announcement of the transaction.
This analysis represents 85% of the total value of transactions in the year
ended 31 January 2023 and does not represent the portfolio as a whole.
Additionally, it does not reflect management fees, carried interest, and other
expenses of the HarbourVest funds or the underlying managers, which will
reduce returns. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future
returns.

2              As measured since the announcement of the
transaction or IPO filing

 

Top Five IPOs

Note there were no material IPOs that contributed more than +$0.01 to NAV per
share.

Company Activity

 

New Fund Commitments

In the 12 months ended 31 January 2023, HVPE made total commitments of $940
million across eight HarbourVest funds and one secondary co-investment (12
months to 31 January 2022: $1.4 billion). Total unfunded commitments were $2.8
billion as at 31 January 2023, representing a net increase of $349 million
from 31 January 2022 ($2.5 billion).

 

Of the total capital committed in the period, the largest commitment ($250
million or 27%) was made to a US-focused buyout fund of funds. As buyouts
currently stands at 57% of the portfolio, over a rolling five-year period,
this commitment brings us closer to the target Strategic Asset Allocation for
buyouts of 60%. A complete list of the commitments can be found on page 54.
These remain in line with the Company's Strategic Asset Allocation targets and
reflect the Investment Manager's and Board's current perspective on the most
appropriate portfolio composition required to optimise long-term NAV growth
for shareholders.

Share Buybacks

On 21 September 2022, HVPE announced it had begun purchasing its own shares
for cancellation. In the 12 months ended 31 January 2023, our joint brokers
Jefferies and Peel Hunt between them bought back 757,864 shares for
cancellation (0.9% of shares outstanding at the time of purchase) at an
average price of £22.40 per share for a total value of £17.0 million ($18.8
million). This exercise added $0.24 to NAV per share.

 

As noted in the 2022 Annual Report and Accounts, the Investment Manager
conducts regular reviews of the case for share buybacks from a capital
allocation perspective, using an established framework based on a number of
criteria as referred to on page 24 of the Company's 2022 Annual Report and
Accounts, available at www.hvpe.com/shareholders/reports-presentations/reports
(http://www.hvpe.com/shareholders/reports-presentations/reports) . When HVPE's
share price moved to an exceptionally wide discount to net asset value over
the summer months of 2022, a review was again conducted. As on this occasion
all the criteria were satisfied, we decided that repurchasing the Company's
shares at this exceptional discount represented an attractive investment and
an appropriate allocation of capital. A sale of tail-end positions within
HVPE's portfolio provided incremental cash flow, ahead of original projections
for 2022. The excess proceeds from this non-routine transaction provided
meaningful capital for share buybacks while helping to ensure that HVPE's
liquidity position remains robust against the backdrop of an increasingly
changeable macroeconomic environment.

 

As at 31 January 2023, the total number of shares in issue was 79,104,622
shares, a decrease of 757,864 from the 79,862,486 shares in issue at 31
January 2022.

 

After a further review of share buybacks post-period end, all criteria in
HVPE's framework were satisfied and the Board intends to conduct a second
share buyback to repurchase up to $25 million of the Company's shares. In more
normal conditions, it remains our core presumption that reinvesting capital
into new private markets opportunities, rather than buying back shares, should
provide a better outcome for our shareholders over the long term.

 

Strategic Asset Allocation

The Company's SAA targets are reviewed annually and, in December 2022, the
HVPE Board decided that these targets should remain unchanged. The current
targets can be seen in the pie charts on pages 40 and 41. The next review is
scheduled to take place in November 2023.

 

Credit Facility

On 16 August 2022, HVPE announced a $100 million increase to its credit
facility, from $700 million to $800 million. The additional $100 million was
arranged by Credit Suisse and is being provided by The Guardians of New
Zealand Superannuation, as previously described on page 17.

 

Since January 2019, the Facility featured an evergreen term, with lenders
bound by a rolling minimum notice period of five years. As announced on 20
January 2023, following the formal receipt of notices, the Facility reverted
to a conventional fixed-term arrangement from an evergreen term. The $400
million commitment from main lender Credit Suisse, and the $300 million
commitment from Mitsubishi, acting through its New York Branch, will expire on
12 January 2028. The remaining $100 million from The Guardians of New Zealand
Superannuation will expire on 15 August 2027.

 

More details can be found in Managing the balance sheet on pages 16 to 19.

 

 

Recent events

 

New Commitments Since 31 January 2023

Between 1 February 2023 and 25 May 2023, one new commitment was made to a
HarbourVest fund.

 HarbourVest      Month Committed  Commitment

Fund
($m)
 Dover Street XI  March            $25
 Total                             $25

 

HVPE Estimated NAV at 30 April 2023

HVPE releases an estimated NAV on a monthly basis. These reports are available
on the Company's website, generally within 20 calendar days of the month end.

 

On 19 May 2023, HVPE published an estimated NAV per share at 30 April 2023 of
$48.38 (£38.52), a decrease of $0.14 (0.3%) from the final 31 January 2023
NAV (US Generally Accepted Accounting Principles ("GAAP")) figure of $48.52.
This latest NAV per share is based on a valuation breakdown of: 7% as at 30
April 2023 (reflecting the public company holdings in the portfolio) and 93%
actual 31 December 2022. Consistent with previous estimated NAV reports,
valuations are also adjusted for foreign exchange movements, cash flows, and
any known material events to 30 April 2023.

 

The Investment Pipeline of unfunded commitments decreased marginally from
$2.80 billion at 31 January 2023 to $2.68 billion at 30 April 2023, based on
the new commitments, capital funded, and taking foreign exchange movements
into account.

 

HVPE's cash and equivalents increased from $198 million at 31 January 2023 to
$313 million at 30 April 2023. As at the same date, the Facility was $200
million drawn.

 

HVPE's look-through exposure to borrowing at the HarbourVest fund level
increased by $10 million, from $517 million at 31 January 2023 to $527 million
at 30 April 2023. The latest balance sheet ratios can be found in the
factsheet on the HVPE website: www.hvpe.com.

 

Share Buybacks

Post-period end, the Board has announced its intention to repurchase up to $25
million of the Company's shares. This is a capital allocation decision and is
not anticipated to narrow the discount by itself.

 

Credit Facility

Post-period end in March 2023, HVPE initiated a draw of $200 million on the
Facility. This was a prudent measure in light of events in the banking sector
and to ensure that HVPE had sufficient liquid resources to meet its near-term
obligations. The cash was received on 18 April 2023.

Share Price Since 31 January 2023

 

Share Price Since 31 January 2023

HVPE's share price has declined slightly since 31 January 2023, driven by
rising interest rates, high inflation, and valuation scepticism of private
assets after the fall in public markets, alongside continued wider
macroeconomic concerns. The closing price of £21.85 on 19 May 2023 represents
a fall of 1.1% since the period end.

 

The market capitalisation of the Company as at 19 May 2023 was £1.7 billion
and, as of the same date, HVPE was ranked 77th in the FTSE 250 (20 May 2022:
81st).

 

Market perspectives and outlook

 

Market Perspectives from HarbourVest Partners

 

Peter Wilson

Managing Director, HarbourVest

 

John Toomey

Managing Director, HarbourVest

 

Macro uncertainty and geopolitical challenges impacted global markets starting
in early 2022, introducing downside pressures not experienced by investors for
more than a decade.

 

Exits and overall liquidity across private markets were negatively impacted in
2022. A deceleration of IPO market activity from Q2 onwards, as well as
ongoing volatility in public markets, added greater uncertainty around deal
making, capital deployment, and valuations. Private markets showed resilience
despite the groundswell of turbulence and a more circumspect approach by
investors and GPs, with rising dry powder and overall private capital AUM
falling only modestly from 2021's record setting high(1).

 

A balancing act continues in 2023 with global central banks looking to
carefully manage inflation, but not at the expense of financial stability.
Recent turmoil in the banking sector shows the system remains under stress and
Q1 2023 data reflects a more cautious approach, and a slower investment and
realisation pace settling in with investors and GPs alike. That said, we
continue to see value creation opportunities, particularly in secondary
strategies and across sectors such as healthcare, technology, and impact
strategies focused on energy transition.

 

(1) PitchBook, data as of 31 December 2022.

 

Outlook Across HarbourVest Strategies

 

Primary

 

Carolina Espinal

Managing Director, HarbourVest

 

The fundraising environment in 2023 is more challenging than it has been in
recent years and investors have become more discriminating of opportunities in
the more volatile environment. Following a record year in 2021, the second
half of 2022 saw a marked slowdown in liquidity events, and IPO markets have
remained largely closed through the first quarter of 2023. The volume of exits
- even with managers increasingly exploring alternative sources of liquidity
through GP-led solutions - have consequently slowed distributions back to
investors. The absence of significant positive cash flows coupled with more
unpredictable public markets has slowed the pace of commitment for many
investors from their higher stride of the past few years.

 

Given the more constrained pacing in the first quarter of 2023, fundraising
timelines are also being extended and some managers targeting 2023 raises are
facing decisions to push out their processes until 2024. While investment
activity remained muted in early 2023, there are signs that the bid-ask spread
for buyouts of private companies is narrowing as valuation expectations settle
into the ongoing market conditions and private debt offerings step in to
fulfil the necessary financing required for deals. Global venture activity
remains slower than its historic fast pace, but activity continues, albeit
with more emphasis by investors being placed on sustainable growth
characteristics.

 

Looking ahead, many private equity managers remain well positioned to navigate
current macro conditions. Despite the turbulence, there are several positives,
including a clear increase in dedicated impact strategies in response to the
rising urgency of energy transition, along with new entrants in the
seed/early-stage venture space that support longer-term secular trends around
digitisation and consolidation.

 

Secondary

 

David Atterbury

Managing Director, HarbourVest

 

As public market volatility increased over the course of 2022, traditional
paths to liquidity for sponsor-backed assets, such IPOs and M&A, decreased
significantly. Rapidly rising interest rates and the corresponding increase
in the cost of financing, along with the liquidity options for sponsor-backed
exits markedly degraded. The result is that GP-led deals and other structured
continuation vehicles have remained highly attractive, representing an exit
option that allows GPs to extend the ownership of some of their best assets
while providing liquidity to existing LPs. This also creates an attractive
dynamic for new investors who are able to gain access to highly calibrated,
trophy assets of top managers.

 

The broader macroeconomic landscape and rerating of markets has also created
allocation challenges for large investors in the asset class with declining
public market valuations leading to many investors facing the denominator
effect and a need to sell their positions to (1) reduce their overall PE
exposure or (2) free up capacity to continue committing to their core GPs.

 

Furthermore, with the market on the buyside remaining undercapitalised in
light of the volume of assets available for sale, what was previously a
seller's market tipped to the buyer's advantage in 2022 and continues in 2023.
Thus, market dynamics are creating a very compelling story across the spectrum
of secondary transactions as valuations reset and secondary buyers take
advantage of lower pricing spurred by market uncertainty.

 

Direct Co-investment

 

Craig MacDonald

Managing Director, HarbourVest

 

As companies evaluate their options for 2023, we anticipate that geopolitical
tensions and tough macro conditions will continue squeezing the IPO window.
The denominator effect will continue weighing on many private markets'
investors, illustrated by the number of delayed and below-target fundraises in
2022 and early 2023.

 

We expect a greater volume of co-invest opportunities coming to market from
GPs that are unable to facilitate a traditional public market exit, taking the
form of traditional majority deals or inviting co-investors to lead minority
preferred equity/recaps. Tightening debt markets will likely correlate to more
co-investment opportunities as previously available debt financing becomes
more costly and creates increased equitisation of capital structures.

 

Finally, public to private transactions will continue to be an area of focus
for GPs taking advantage of lower valuations. This will not only increase the
total quantum of co-investment capital demanded by GPs, but also the size of
co-investment capital demanded for each deal. This trend will benefit large
well-capitalised funds able to write large equity checks, and we believe a
higher-cost debt environment will further emphasise a "flight to quality"
where the strongest business models will enjoy superior pricing and terms.

 

Infrastructure and Real Assets

 

Kevin Warn-Schindel

Managing Director, HarbourVest

 

Climate and decarbonisation remains a key theme in 2023 supported by a vibrant
and expanding landscape of new energy transition opportunities, including
renewable power, battery storage, electric vehicle infrastructure, and new
technologies like carbon capture and hydrogen. As data and reporting get more
tangible and well defined, opportunities are also expanding in decarbonising
existing infrastructure assets or repurposing assets for the low-carbon
economy (for example transporting hydrogen via gas pipelines).

 

Many core infrastructure assets, comprised of regulated utilities and other
essential services, often have direct inflation linkage built into their
revenue streams, whereby achieving a degree of inflation pass-through in their
tariffs. Likewise, some toll roads or social infrastructure projects have
CPI-linked revenues, while many power-generation projects, like wind and
solar, come with contracted power purchase price agreements that have
inflation protection written into the contracts.

 

With inflation hitting a 30-year high in 2022 and central banks continuing to
thread the inflation/recession needle by raising rates in 2023, investors will
continue to lean into the inflation linkage associated with the above assets.
Core infrastructure portfolios, diversified by geography and infrastructure,
can provide investors protection against inflation while also offering
resiliency in a recessionary environment.

 

Credit

 

Peter Lipson

Managing Director, HarbourVest

 

Despite persistent public market volatility, 2022 deal volumes across private
credit ended the year only 16% behind 2021's record levels(1). Looking ahead,
we anticipate 2023 will be an exciting time to deploy capital in the private
credit markets due to several trends having taken shape.

 

Higher all-in yields have been supported across the private credit landscape
through the first quarter of 2023 by increases in base rates, wider credit
spreads, and higher original issue discount (OID) fees. This should continue
as new senior direct lending deals and junior credit opportunities both
provide a meaningful yield advantage. Capital structures also are improving
with less leverage, more covenants, better call protections and tighter
documents than a year prior. While default rates remain low, borrower-free
cash flow is getting tighter as base rates increase, and they may increase
moderately in 2023 driving performance dispersion across managers to widen.
Finally, as credit continues tightening, direct lending should continue to
displace the syndicated loan market, with GPs favouring the speed,
flexibility, and certainty of execution in the direct lending market over the
syndicated market.

 

Resilient sectors should dominate direct lending moving through 2023,
providing perceived yield and safety in the face of ongoing and uncertain
macroeconomic risks. The market continues focusing on less cyclical
industries, including healthcare, business services and technology, which held
the 1-2-3 spots from a sector volume perspective in 2022.

 

1 Source: Refinitiv, as of February 2023.

 

Governance

 

Board of Directors

 

Edmond ("Ed") Warner

Chair, Independent

Non-Executive Director, appointed August 2019

 

Key relevant skills:

·    Leadership skills

·    Investment strategist

·    Extensive financial services experience

 

Ed Warner has extensive financial services experience from years spent in
senior positions at several investment banks and financial institutions,
including IFX Group, Old Mutual Plc, NatWest Markets, and Dresdner Kleinwort
Benson. He has considerable Plc experience and has chaired the boards at a
range of prominent organisations. He is also currently independent chair of
the online derivatives exchange LMAX, and of JLEN, a listed environmental
infrastructure investment fund.

 

Prior chair roles include Air Partner Plc, the BlackRock Energy and Resources
Income Trust, Grant Thornton UK LLP, Standard Life Private Equity Trust, and
Panmure Gordon & Co.

 

Committees:

Chair of the Nomination, and Inside Information Committees and Member of the
Management Engagement and Service Provider, and Remuneration Committees.

 

Anulika Ajufo

Independent Non-Executive Director, appointed May 2022

 

Key relevant skills:

·    Extensive private equity investment experience

·    Experience in investment strategy development and execution

·    Strong background in ESG

 

Anulika manages a portfolio of investments across EMEA and is the Founder of
the Sequoia Platform, a leading educational not for profit focused on social
mobility in the United Kingdom. She recently stood down as Chair of the Board
of Governors at University of East London.

 

Anulika has extensive investment experience and believes in investing for
good. Having worked at some of the leading financial institutions, Lehman
Brothers and Goldman Sachs in investment banking, and private equity with The
Carlyle Group and Soros Fund, Anulika has developed an impressive investment
track record. She has led the development of greenfield impact investment
structures in emerging markets and developed inclusive investment strategies
for development finance institutions (DFIs), corporations, and foundations.

Committees:

Member of the Audit and Risk, Remuneration, Nomination, and Management
Engagement and Service Provider Committees.

 

Francesca Barnes

Senior Independent Non-Executive Director, appointed April 2017

 

Key relevant skills:

·    Extensive private equity investment experience

·    Ten years' governance experience on public and private company boards

·    Risk management experience

 

Francesca Barnes is a Non-Executive Director of NatWest Holdings Limited, and
a number of NatWest Group's other ring-fenced bank boards, as well as Capvis
private equity. She is a member of the University of Southampton council and
has been Chair of Trustees for Penny Brohn UK and Chair of Governors for two
secondary schools. Francesca spent 16 years at UBS AG. For the latter seven of
these she served as Global Head of Private Equity, following on from senior
positions in restructuring and loan portfolio management. Prior to this, she
spent 11 years with Chase Manhattan UK and US, in roles spanning commodity
finance, financial institutions, and private equity.

 

Committees:

Chair of the Remuneration Committee and Member of the Audit and Risk,
Management Engagement and Service Provider, and Nomination Committees.

 

Following the 2022 AGM, Ms Barnes took on the roles of Senior Independent
Director and Chair of the Remuneration Committee. Ms Barnes stood down as
Chair of the MESPC but remains a Member of that Committee.

 

Elizabeth ("Libby") Burne

Independent Non-Executive Director, appointed March 2021

 

Key relevant skills:

·    Chartered certified accountant

·    Extensive audit and risk management experience

·    Over 20 years' experience of working with Guernsey regulated, listed,
and closed-ended investment structures

 

Libby Burne has spent her career working within the financial services sector.
She is a Non-Executive Director of Bluefield Solar Income Fund Limited (FTSE
250) as well as a number of unlisted venture capital, private equity, real
estate and insurance structures. Prior to becoming a Non-Executive Director
Libby was an audit director at PwC in the Channel Islands and, previously, PwC
Australia. Libby is a Fellow of the Association of Chartered Certified
Accountants, holds a degree in Applied Accounting, and is a Guernsey resident,
as such bringing recent and relevant financial and sector experience.

 

Committees:

Chair of the Management Engagement and Service Provider Committee, and Member
of the Audit and Risk, Remuneration, and Nomination Committees.

 

Ms Burne took on the role of Chair of the MESPC following the 2022 AGM.

 

 

 

 

Carolina Espinal

Non-Executive Director, appointed July 2019

 

Key relevant skills:

·    19 years' private equity investment experience

·    Responsibility for strategy and business development of European and
global primary businesses

·    Lead Director for ESG factors

 

Carolina Espinal joined HarbourVest in 2004 to focus on partnership
investments in Europe and other emerging markets and became a Managing
Director in 2015. Carolina focuses on managing European venture capital and
buyout partnership investments and has collaborated with the secondary and
co-investment groups on several investment opportunities. As a HarbourVest
executive she currently serves on the advisory boards of funds managed by
Synova, Inflexion, and Advent International.

 

Her previous experience includes two years as a financial analyst with the
Merrill Lynch Energy and Power M&A team in Houston.

 

Carolina graduated from Rice University with a BA in Managerial Studies,
Policy Studies, and Economics in 2000. She received an MSc in Finance from the
London Business School in 2003.

 

Committees:

None (as a HarbourVest executive)

 

Steven Wilderspin

Independent Non-Executive Director, appointed May 2018

 

Key relevant skills:

·    Chartered accountant, qualified in audit

·    Extensive governance experience on public and private company boards

 

Steven Wilderspin has more than 15 years' experience as a Non-Executive
Director on the boards of private structures and listed investment companies.

 

Steven, a qualified Chartered Accountant, has provided independent
directorship services since 2007. He has served on a number of private equity,
property, and hedge fund boards as well as commercial companies. Steven
currently serves as the Chair of the risk committee of Blackstone Loan
Financing Limited, Chairman of the audit and risk committee of GCP
Infrastructure Investments Limited, and non-executive director of Phoenix
Spree Deutschland Ltd. In 2017 Steven stepped down from the Board of 3i
Infrastructure Plc, where he was Chairman of the audit and risk committee,
after ten years' service. From 2001 until 2007, Steven was a Director of fund
administrator Maples Finance Jersey Limited, where he was responsible for fund
and securitisation structures. He originally qualified with PwC in London.
Steven has recent and relevant financial and sector experience.

 

Committees:

Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee, and Member of the Inside Information,
Nomination, Remuneration, and Management Engagement and Service Provider
Committees.

 

 

 

 

Peter Wilson

Non-Executive Director, appointed May 2013

 

Key relevant skills:

·    Member of HarbourVest's two-person Executive Management Committee
("EMC"), including responsibility for HarbourVest's corporate strategy

·    25 years' private equity industry knowledge and experience

 

Peter Wilson joined HarbourVest's London team in 1996 and is one of two
members of the Firm's Executive Management Committee, which serves as
HarbourVest's CEO. He previously led secondary investment activity in Europe
and has served on the advisory committees for partnerships managed by Baring
Vostok Capital Partners, CVC Capital Partners, Holtzbrinck Ventures, and Index
Venture Management. He also served as Founding Chair of the Board of Trustees
of City Year UK Limited.

 

Prior to joining the firm, he spent three years working for the European Bank
for Reconstruction and Development, where he originated and managed two
regional venture capital funds in Russia. Peter also spent two years at the
Monitor Company, a strategy consulting firm based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

 

He received a BA (with honours) from McGill University in 1985 and an MBA from
Harvard Business School in 1990. Peter speaks German and French.

 

Committees:

None (as a HarbourVest executive)

 

 

Directors' report

 

Annual Report and Audited Consolidated Financial Statements

The Directors present their report and the Audited Consolidated Financial
Statements (the "Financial Statements" or "Accounts") for the year ended 31
January 2023.

 

A description of important events and principal activities which have occurred
during the financial year and their impact on the performance of the Company,
as shown in the Financial Statements, is provided in the Strategic Report,
beginning with the Chair's Statement on pages 4 to 7.

 

A description of the emerging and principal risks and uncertainties facing the
Company, together with an indication of the Company's likely future
development and the important events that have occurred since the end of the
financial year, is also provided in the Strategic Report and referenced in the
notes to the Financial Statements. Combined, all sections in this document
constitute the "Annual Report".

 

Corporate Summary

The Company is a closed-ended investment company incorporated in Guernsey on
18 October 2007 with an unlimited life. The Company currently has one class of
shares (the "Ordinary Shares"), and these shares are admitted to trading on
the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange.

 

With effect from 10 December 2018, the Company introduced an additional US
dollar market quotation which operates alongside the Company's existing
sterling quotation, allowing shares to be traded in either currency.

 

 

Investment Objective and Investment Policy

The Company's investment objective is to generate superior shareholder returns
through long-term capital appreciation by investing primarily in a diversified
portfolio of private equity investments. The Company may also make investments
in private market assets other than private equity where it identifies
attractive opportunities.

 

The Company seeks to achieve its investment objective primarily by investing
in investment funds managed by HarbourVest, which invests in or alongside
third-party managed investment funds ("HarbourVest Funds"). HarbourVest Funds
are broadly of three types: (i) "Primary HarbourVest Funds", which make
limited partner commitments to underlying private market funds prior to final
closing; (ii) "Secondary HarbourVest Funds", which make purchases of private
market assets by acquiring positions in existing private market funds or by
acquiring portfolios of investments made by such private market funds; and
(iii) "Direct HarbourVest Funds", which invest into operating companies,
projects, or assets alongside other investors.

 

In addition, the Company may, on an opportunistic basis, make investments
(generally at the same time and on substantially the same terms) alongside
HarbourVest Funds ("Co-investments") and in closed-ended listed private equity
funds not managed by HarbourVest ("Third-Party Funds").

 

Co-investments made by the Company may, inter alia, include investments in
transactions structured by other HarbourVest vehicles including, but not
limited to, commitments to private market funds or operating companies in
which other HarbourVest funds have invested.

 

Cash at any time not held in such longer-term investments will, pending such
investment, be held in cash, cash equivalents, money market instruments,
government securities, asset-backed securities, and other investment-grade
securities and interests in any private equity vehicle that is listed or
traded on any securities exchange ('Temporary Investments").

 

The Company uses an over-commitment strategy in order to remain as fully
invested as possible. To achieve this objective, the Company has undrawn
capital commitments to HarbourVest Funds and Co-investments which exceed its
liquid funding resources but uses its best endeavours to maintain capital
resources which, together with anticipated cash flows, will be sufficient to
enable the Company to satisfy such commitments as they are called.

 

Diversification and Investment Guidelines

The Company will, by investing in a range of HarbourVest Funds,
Co-investments, and Third-Party Funds, seek to achieve portfolio
diversification in terms of:

·    geography: providing exposure to assets in the US, Europe, Asia, and
other markets;

·    stage of investment: providing exposure to investments at different
stages of development such as early stage, balanced and late stage venture
capital, small and middle-market businesses or projects, large capitalisation
investments, mezzanine investments, and special situations such as
restructuring of funds or distressed debt;

·    strategy: providing exposure to primary, secondary, and direct
co-investment strategies;

·    vintage year: providing exposure to investments made across many
years; and

·    industry: with investments exposed, directly or indirectly, to a
large number of different companies across a broad array of industries.

In addition, the Company will observe the following investment restrictions:

·    With the exception, at any time, of not more than one HarbourVest
Fund or Co-investment to which up to 40% of the Company's Gross Assets (see
page 140 for the definition) may be committed or in which up to 40% of the
Company's Gross Assets may be invested, no more than 20% of the Company's
Gross Assets will be invested in or committed at any time to a single
HarbourVest Fund or Co-investment.

·    No more than 10% of the Company's Gross Assets will be invested (in
aggregate) in Third-Party Funds.

·    The Investment Manager will use its reasonable endeavours to ensure
that no more than 20% of the Company's Gross Assets, at the time of making the
commitment, will be committed to or invested in, directly or indirectly,
whether by way of a Co-investment or through a HarbourVest Fund, (a) any
single ultimate underlying investment, or (b) one or more collective
investment undertakings which may each invest more than 20% of the Company's
Gross Assets in other collective investment undertakings (ignoring, for these
purposes, appreciations, and depreciations in the value of assets,
fluctuations in exchange rates, and other circumstances affecting every holder
of the relevant asset).

·    Any commitment to a single Co-investment which exceeds 5% of the
Company's NAV (calculated at the time of making such commitment) shall require
prior Board approval, provided however that no commitment shall be made to any
single Co-investment which, at the time of making such commitment, represents
more than 10% (or, in the case of a Co-investment that is an investment into
an entity which is not itself a collective investment undertaking (a "Direct
Investment"), 5% of the aggregate of: (a) the Company's NAV at the time of the
commitment; and (b) undrawn amounts available to the Company under any credit
facilities.

·    The Company will not, without the prior approval of the Board,
acquire any interest in any HarbourVest Fund from a third party in a secondary
transaction for a purchase price that:

(i)   exceeds 5% of the Company's NAV; or

(ii)  is greater than 105% of the most recently reported NAV of such interest
(adjusted for contributions made to and distributions made by such HarbourVest
Fund since such date).

 

Save for cash awaiting investment which may be invested in Temporary
Investments, the Company will invest only in HarbourVest Funds (either by
subscribing for an interest during the initial offering period of the relevant
fund or by acquiring such an interest in a secondary transaction), in
Co-investments or in Third-party Funds.

 

Company's Right to Invest in HarbourVest Funds

Pursuant to contractual arrangements with HarbourVest, the Company has the
right to invest in each new HarbourVest Fund, subject to the following
conditions:

·    Unless the Board agrees otherwise, no capital commitment to any
HarbourVest Fund may, at the time of making the commitment, represent more
than 35% or less than 5% of the aggregate total capital commitments to such
HarbourVest Fund from all its investors.

·    Unless HarbourVest agrees otherwise, the Company shall not have a
right to make an investment in, or a commitment to, any HarbourVest Fund to
which ten or fewer investors (investors who are associates being treated as
one investor for these purposes) make commitments.

 

Leverage

The Company does not intend to have on its balance sheet aggregate leverage
outstanding at Company level for investment purposes at any time in excess of
20% of the Company's NAV. The Company may use additional borrowings for cash
management purposes, or in the event of a material downturn. These borrowings
could be for extended periods of time depending on market conditions.

 

Principal Risks and Uncertainties

The principal risks the Board has reviewed are disclosed on pages 28 to 33 of
the Strategic Report.

 

Results and Dividend

The results for the financial year ended 31 January 2023 are set out in the
Consolidated Statements of Operations within the Financial Statements on page
110. In accordance with the investment objective of the Company to generate
superior shareholder returns through long-term capital appreciation, the
Directors did not declare any dividends during the year under review and the
Directors do not recommend the payment of dividends as at the date of this
report.

 

Directors

The Directors as shown on pages 80 and 81 all held office throughout the
entire reporting period, except for Ms Ajufo who was appointed with effect
from 19 May 2022. All Directors listed were in place at the date of signature
of this Annual Report. Ms Espinal and Mr Wilson are Managing Directors of
HarbourVest Partners (UK) Limited, a subsidiary of HarbourVest Partners, LLC.
All Directors, other than Ms Espinal and Mr Wilson, are considered to be
independent. Ms Barnes is the Senior Independent Director ('SID'). Further
details of the Board composition can be found on pages 90 and 91.

 

Mr Wilson will retire as a Director at the Company's Annual General Meeting on
19 July 2023. After careful consideration, including discussion with the HVPE
Board, HarbourVest Partners has decided not to appoint a replacement
non-independent director.

 

Alan Hodson retired as Senior Independent Director on 20 July 2022. He had
been Chair of the Remuneration Committee and a Member of the Audit and Risk,
Management Engagement and Service Provider, and Nomination Committees.

 

Save as disclosed in this Annual Report, the Company is not aware of any other
potential conflicts of interest between any duty owed to it by any of the
Directors and their respective private interests.

 

Directors' Interests in Shares

                    31 January 2023  31 January 2022
 Anulika Ajufo      -(1)             -
 Francesca Barnes   4,200            4,200
 Libby Burne        786              786(2)
 Carolina Espinal   4,732(3)         3,391
 Ed Warner          8,000            3,000
 Steven Wilderspin  1,300            1,300
 Peter Wilson       25,200(4)        25,200

 

1    Ms Ajufo was appointed as a Director with effect from 19 May 2022.

2    Ms Burne was appointed as a Director with effect from 1 March 2021 at
which point she held 786 shares.

3    Of the total shares held, 3,732 shares were split equally (1,244 each)
between Ms Espinal's three children, with Ms Espinal holding 1,000 shares.

4    Of the total shares held, 200 were held by Mr Wilson's father, with Mr
Wilson holding 25,000.

 

Post-period end, and as announced on 15 March 2023, Anulika Ajufo bought 958
shares at an average price of £20.86538 per share.

 

Substantial Shareholders

The table that follows shows the interests of major shareholders based on the
best available information provided by the analysis of the Company's share
register, also incorporating any disclosures provided to the Company in
accordance with Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rule 5 in the period
under review and up to 25 May 2023.

 

                                                    % of Voting Rights  % of Voting Rights

31 January 2023

                                                                        28 April 2023
 M&G Investment Management                          7.27                7.38
 Evelyn Partners (formerly Smith & Williamson)      5.58                5.56
 Quilter Cheviot                                    5.33                5.13
 Lothian Pension Fund (City of Edinburgh Council)   5.26                <5.00(5)
 Total                                              23.44               18.07

 

5    Please note that at 28 April 2023, Lothian Pension Fund (City of
Edinburgh Council) was below the 5% of voting rights threshold to be
classified as a substantial shareholder, and has therefore not been included
in the total.

 

Corporate Governance

The Board recognises the importance of sound corporate governance and follows
best practice requirements wherever possible. The Company complies with the
AIC Code published in February 2019, which is endorsed by the Financial
Reporting Council ("FRC"). A Statement of Compliance with the AIC Code is
provided on page 99 and further details about how our Corporate Governance
framework operates can be found throughout this Governance Report.

 

Corporate Responsibility

The Board considers the ongoing interests of stakeholders and investors
through open and regular dialogue with the Investment Manager. The Board
receives regular updates outlining regulatory and statutory developments and
responds as appropriate.

 

Approach to ESG

The Board recognises the critical importance of ESG considerations to many
investors. It acknowledges that ESG issues can present both opportunities and
threats to long-term investment performance, and is committed to responsible
and sustainable investing. The Board also believes that HVPE will benefit from
the continued evolution of HarbourVest's ESG practices and standards.

 

The Board is aware that as an investment company, its approach to ESG matters
is materially informed by the strategy of the Investment Manager and
accordingly the Board is committed to ensuring that it has appointed an
Investment Manager that applies the highest standards of ESG practice, and has
the skill and vision to respond to ongoing developments. It is confident that
in HarbourVest it has such an Investment Manager.

 

The Board is reliant on the Investment Manager's screening processes,
controls, and priorities to address ESG matters within the investment
portfolio in both the selection and oversight of investments. The Board
believes that engagement with management of investee companies and funds is an
effective way of driving meaningful change and takes considerable comfort from
the extent of the Investment Manager's activity in this area, which is
described on pages 44 to 51.

 

The Board receives regular updates from the Investment Manager on the
development and implementation of its ESG policies and processes, and the
Board will continue to monitor those closely. These updates include
information on the levels of engagement with investee companies and ESG issues
in respect of their monitoring and selection of holdings in the Company's
portfolio. This provides a valuable opportunity for the Board to confirm and
challenge the Investment Manager to demonstrate that it is continuing to apply
the highest standards of ESG practice across its investments and operations.

 

The Board recognises that the Investment Manager has been a signatory to the
UN Principles for Responsible Investment ("PRI") since 2013, that it is
committed to considering the potential impact that its investment and
operational decisions could have, and that it encourages the GPs with which it
invests to adopt the PRI. With regard to environmental and climate
disclosures, the Investment Manager reports annually on its progress through
its ESG report (https://viewpoints.harbourvest.com/esg-annual-report/) in line
with the recommendations of the TCFD. The Board has noted that the Investment
Manager is a CarbonNeutral® company in accordance with The CarbonNeutral
Protocol, a leading framework for carbon neutrality. The Investment Manager's
offsetting programme delivers finance to emission reduction projects,
supporting the transition to a low carbon economy. Finally, the Board reviews
the Investment Manager's approach to promoting diversity, social
responsibility, and projects to combat social exclusion and enhance
opportunities. It also examines how the Investment Manager incorporates the
values and the standards that it expects from its investee companies in the
management of its own business. The Board has noted that the Investment
Manager published its inaugural Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Report in
October 2022 which sets out its approach in these key areas.

 

The Board is committed to incorporating ESG oversight across the Company's
outsourced providers and within its own operations. The Board is responsible
for determining the Company's ESG Policy, reviewing reporting from the
Investment Manager on the integration of ESG into its investment process,
reviewing reporting on the ESG risks and impacts associated with the Company's
investments, and for approving ESG-related statements made on the Company's
behalf. Ms Espinal has been designated as the lead HVPE Director responsible
for promoting and facilitating closer monitoring and further development in
this area for the Company. However, this is a matter of great significance and
as such ESG matters are one of those formally reserved for consideration by
the entire Board and ESG-related matters are included as one of the Company's
key risks on page 32.

 

As an investment company with no direct employees, the core of the Company's
ESG initiatives is derived from its oversight of its service providers, most
importantly the Investment Manager. However, the Board also considers the
application of ESG standards to its own activities as an Investment Company,
including the following:

·    Carbon Footprint: The Board initiated a project to calculate its own
carbon footprint and achieved CarbonNeutral status on 1 July 2021.

·    Relations with Stakeholders: The Board has extended its interaction
with its shareholders and other stakeholders to include a consideration of ESG
matters. The Board has noted the benefits of broader shareholder
participation, facilitated by virtual shareholder events, and is continuing to
offer remote access where possible.

·    Diversity and Inclusion: The Board's approach to diversity and
inclusion is set out on page 92 and is reflected in the activities of the
Nomination Committee. Four of the six Directors who are being proposed for
re-election at the AGM are female, which, at 67%, is a figure well above the
level recommended in the Hampton-Alexander Review. While the Board does not
have a diversity target in mind, given the range of factors that this term
necessarily covers, two of the six Directors being proposed for re-election at
the AGM are from an ethnic minority background as demonstrated in the table
set out on page 92. The Board will continue to consider all factors, including
diversity, in its recruitment processes.

·    Position on Modern Slavery: The Board recognises the importance of
the issues which the UK Modern Slavery Act 2015 is designed to address. It has
expanded its oversight of outsourced providers, including the Investment
Manager, to include questions relating to their policies to combat Modern
Slavery. As Chair, Ed Warner assumes direct oversight of the Company's
statements and its response to the issue of modern slavery. A description of
the Board's approach to this subject is set out on the Company's website.

 

Significant Votes Against Policy

The Directors have adopted a policy whereby, should 20% or more of votes be
cast against a recommendation made by the Board for a resolution, the Company
shall:

·    explain, when announcing voting results, what actions it intends to
take to consult shareholders in order to understand the reasons behind the
result;

·    no later than six months after the shareholder meeting publish an
update on the views received from shareholders and actions taken; and

·    provide a final summary in the Annual Report and, if applicable, in
the explanatory notes to resolutions at the next shareholder meeting state
what impact the feedback has had on the decisions the Board has taken and any
actions or resolutions proposed.

 

No significant votes were received against any Board-recommended resolution at
the 2022 AGM.

 

Anti-bribery Policy

The Directors have undertaken to operate the business in an honest and ethical
manner, and accordingly take a zero-tolerance approach to bribery and
corruption, including the facilitation of corporate tax evasion. The key
components of this approach are implemented as follows:

·    The Board is committed to acting professionally, fairly, and with
integrity in all its business dealings and relationships.

·    The Company implements and enforces effective procedures to counter
bribery.

·    The Company requires all its service providers and advisers to adopt
equivalent or similar principles.

 

Disclosures Required Under LR 9.8.4R

The Financial Conduct Authority's Listing Rule 9.8.4R requires that the
Company includes certain information relating to arrangements made between a
controlling shareholder and the Company, waivers of Directors' fees, and
long-term incentive schemes in force. The Directors confirm that there are no
disclosures to be made in this regard.

 

Investment Manager

A description of how the Company has invested its assets, including a
quantitative analysis, may be found on pages 2 to 77, with further information
disclosed in the Notes to the Financial Statements on pages 117 to 123. The
Board has considered the appointment of the Investment Manager and, in the
opinion of the Directors, the continuing appointment of the Investment Manager
on the terms agreed is in the interests of its shareholders as a whole.

 

In considering this appointment, the Board has reviewed the past performance
of the Investment Manager, the engagement of the Investment Manager with
shareholders and the Board, and the strategic plan presented to the Board by
the Investment Manager.

 

The Investment Manager is HarbourVest Advisers L.P., and its principal duties
as stated in the Investment Management Agreement are as follows:

·    to manage the assets of the Company in accordance with the investment
policy of the Company (subject always to the overall supervision and direction
of the Board, and subject to any restrictions contained in any prospectuses
published by the Company);

·    to assist the Company with shareholder liaison; and

·    to monitor compliance with the Investment Policy on a regular basis.

 

The Investment Manager is entitled to nominate up to two Board representatives
for election by shareholders at the Company's AGM. The IMA, which was amended
and restated on 30 July 2019, and again on 31 January 2023, may be terminated
by either party by giving 12 months' notice. In the event of termination
within ten years and three months of the date of the listing on the Main
Market, the Company would be required to pay a contribution, which would have
been $2.3 million at 31 January 2023 and $2.1 million as at 30 April 2023, as
reimbursement of the Investment Manager's remaining unamortised IPO costs. In
addition, the Company would be required to pay a fee to the Investment Manager
equal to the aggregate of the management fees for the underlying investments
payable over the course of the 12-month period preceding the effective date of
such termination.

 

The Investment Manager is not entitled to any direct remuneration from the
Company in respect of any asset of the Company, instead deriving its revenue
from the management fees and carried interest payable by the Company on its
investments in underlying HarbourVest Funds. However, the Investment Manager
is entitled to reimbursement of expenses occurred in the performance of its
duties. With effect from 1 February 2022, rather than the direct reimbursement
of all its expenses, the Investment Manager has charged the Company a fixed
fee (the "Fixed Fee") for the services of the employees substantially
dedicated to the Company's affairs and for assistance provided by other
employees of the Investment Manager with respect to certain administrative
functions relating to the Company. The Fixed Fee will be increased each
financial year on the basis of the average percentage change in the Investment
Manager's firm-wide compensation budget for the succeeding year. The Fixed Fee
arrangement will be reviewed in February 2024.

 

The fixed fee payable to the Investment Manager for the reimbursement of
expenses in respect of the year ended 31 January 2023 was $2.0 million. The
amount payable to the Investment Manager in respect to the reimbursement of
costs and expenses for the year ended 31 January 2022 was $2.6 million.
Further details are given in Note 3 to the Financial Statements.

 

Delegation of Responsibilities

Under the IMA, the Board has delegated to the Investment Manager substantial
authority for carrying out the day-to-day management and operations of the
Company, including making specific investment decisions, subject at all times
to the control of, and review by, the Board. In particular, the IMA provides
that the Board and the Investment Manager shall agree a strategy mandate which
sets out a rolling five-year plan for the Company. The Board is responsible
for the overall leadership of the Company and the setting of its values and
standards. This includes setting the investment and business strategy, and
ongoing review of the Company's investment objective and investment policy,
along with recommending to shareholders the approval of alterations thereto.
Matters reserved for the Board include areas such as the Board and Committee
membership, including the review and authorisation of any conflicts of
interest arising. Areas such as approval of the raising of new capital, major
financing facilities, and approval of contracts that are not in the ordinary
course of business are also reserved for the Board, together with any
governance and regulatory requirements. Any changes in relation to the capital
structure of the Company, including the allotment and issuance of shares, are
the responsibility of the Board. As noted on pages 84 to 85, the Board has
reserved the determination of the Company's ESG Policy and the approval of
ESG-related statements and disclosures made on behalf of the Company to
itself.

 

Share Repurchase Programme

At the 2022 AGM, held on 20 July 2022, the Directors sought and were granted
authority to repurchase 11,971,386 Ordinary Shares (being equal to 14.99% of
the aggregate number of Ordinary Shares in issue at the date of the AGM) for
cancellation, or to be held as treasury shares. This authority will expire at
the forthcoming AGM. The Directors intend to seek annual renewal of this
authority from shareholders.

 

Under the policy adopted in November 2021 and communicated in the 2022 Annual
Report and Accounts, the Board has established a set of key criteria, which is
regularly reviewed, and against which the Board considers the appropriateness
or otherwise of implementing share buybacks. As announced on 21 September
2022, the Board conducted such a review and concluded that repurchasing the
Company's shares at the prevailing exceptionally wide discount to NAV
represented an attractive investment opportunity. One of the key factors in
reaching this conclusion was that the Company received excess proceeds from
the sale of tail-end positions which provided additional cash flow ahead of
original 2022 projections. The Board therefore instigated a limited programme
of share repurchases that commenced on 20 September 2022. Between 20 September
2022 and 29 September 2022, the Company repurchased 757,864 shares at an
average price of £22.40 for a gross consideration of £17.0 million. In
addition, the Company paid its brokers, Peel Hunt and Jefferies, commission
totalling £12,408. The Board continues to monitor the investment opportunity
offered by repurchasing the Company's shares according to the policy that it
has established.

 

Introduction to the Going Concern and Viability Statement

Since the inception of HVPE, the Directors have relied upon model scenarios to
manage the Company's liquidity requirements and balance sheet risk more
generally. This modelling allows the Directors to evaluate whether the Company
is a going concern and provides evidence to support the Directors' Viability
Statement in the Company's Annual Report and Accounts. While the modelling
process has been refined over the years, it has provided a consistent approach
through which the Directors have been able to provide a firm assessment, as
demonstrated through the Global Financial Crisis and COVID-19 pandemic.

 

Historically the Directors have assessed four scenarios - Optimistic, Base,
Low and Extreme Downside - presented by the Investment Manager. As more fully
explained in the Investment Manager's report above, during the period under
review and subsequent to the period end, the challenging macroeconomic and
geopolitical environment has resulted in increasing inflation, increasing
interest rates, volatility and decline in public markets and subdued activity
in private markets. The Company's cash flows have been tracking between the
Base and Low scenarios considered at the start of the year. This covers a
relatively short amount of time and is not indicative, yet, as to which
scenario will be more appropriate.

 

In considering Going Concern for the required one-year period for these 2023
Annual Report and Accounts, the Directors therefore primarily focused on two
model scenarios: the Base and the Extreme Downside. These have been used to
form the basis of the Going Concern and Viability statements as provided
below. The credit facility provides an additional source of capital to HVPE
which helps to underpin the existing and future commitments of the Company, as
noted in the Chair's statement on pages 4 to 7. As the balance sheet and new
commitments of the Company continue to grow, the credit facility was increased
by $100 million during the reporting period to align with the ongoing growth
strategy and risk management practices of the Company. Along with the model
scenarios discussed above, the available credit facility provides further
support in the Board's assessment of going concern and viability.

 

Going Concern Statement

In accordance with the AIC Code of Corporate Governance and US GAAP, the Board
has performed a robust assessment of principal risks (refer to pages 28 to 33
for an update on the principal risks of the Company) along with the assessment
of whether the Company will remain a going concern through the period ending
30 June 2024 which covers the 12 months from the signing of the financial
statements and whether it believes that the principal risks of the Company
will remain as identified on pages 28 to 33 of this report over the going
concern assessment period.

 

The Board considered model scenarios assuming varying degrees of impact on the
portfolio over the period ending 30 June 2024. The Board primarily focused on
the Base Case and the Extreme Downside Case as noted above. The Base Case was
considered a plausible scenario given the current economic environment, as the
Investment Manager included slower portfolio growth and a slowdown of
distributions in the assumptions of the Base Case for 2023. While the Base
Case was the primary focus of the Board in assessing the going concern of the
Company, the Extreme Downside Case was also considered and was designed to
specifically stress the balance sheet with multiple worst case scenarios all
playing out to 30 June 2024: 1) a credit crisis resulting in all of the
fund-level bridging leverage being called at once as the underlying
HarbourVest fund credit facilities could not be renewed ($481.5 million in
unexpected capital called), 2) despite this credit crisis capital calls are
still being received at levels experienced over the last five years (i.e. no
material decline in the level of capital calls as seen during the GFC), 3)
material asset value declines similar to what was experienced during the GFC,
and 4) distribution levels falling to levels lower than what was experienced
during the GFC. The Board does not believe the Extreme Downside Case is a
likely scenario but factors this into the going concern assessment.

 

The results of these model scenarios showed that the Company would be able to
withstand the impact of these scenarios occurring to 30 June 2024, through the
use of existing resources (cash and available credit facility) and projected
portfolio distributions. Based on this assessment, the Directors conclude that
the working capital of the Company is sufficient for its current requirements
and the Company will be able to continue in operation at least through 30 June
2024, which covers the next 12-month period from the signing of the Annual
Report and Accounts, and substantial doubts do not exist as to HVPE's ability
to continue in operation over this period.

 

Viability Statement

Pursuant to the UK Corporate Governance Code 2018 and the AIC Code, the Board
has assessed the viability of the Company over the period from 31 January 2023
to 31 December 2027, which aligns with the timing of the Investment Manager's
current five-year model scenarios. Whilst the Board has no reason to believe
that the Company will not be viable over a longer period, it has chosen this
period as this aligns with the Board's strategic horizon and within the
expiration of the majority of the Company's credit facility which is used to
support the over-commitment strategy ($100 million provided by NZ Super
expires on 15 August 2027, the remaining $700 million expires immediately
after 31 December 2027 on 12 January 2028).

 

The Company's investment objective is to generate superior shareholder returns
through long-term capital appreciation by investing primarily in a diversified
portfolio of private equity investments. The majority of the Company's
investments are in HarbourVest-managed private equity fund of funds, which
have fund lives of 10-14 years.

 

While the Company's investment lifecycle spans a time period of ten years or
more, the Board currently focuses on a time period extending through to 31
December 2027 when considering the strategic planning of the Company. The
strategic planning focuses on building a portfolio of long-term assets through
capital allocation into a set of rolling five-year calendar year-end portfolio
construction targets defined by investment stage, geography, and strategy.
This rolling five-year process allows the Board a medium-term view of
potential portfolio growth, projected cash flow, and potential future
commitments under various economic scenarios.

 

As part of its strategic planning, the Board considered model scenarios
assuming varying degrees of impact on the portfolio.  The Board primarily
focused on two scenarios, the Base and Extreme Downside, the latter of which
is a worst-case scenario that assumes large NAV declines and a material
reduction in realisations from the underlying investment portfolio. Based on a
review of the existing liquidity resources of the Company and the model
scenarios noted above, the Board concluded that the Company's cash balance and
available credit facility would be sufficient to cover capital requirements
under even the Extreme Downside scenario, although noting that a balance of
$435.1 million is projected to remain outstanding as of 31 December 2027. HVPE
would need to take some action to raise additional liquidity given the current
term of the facility. This could include the renewal or replacement of the
existing credit facility or taking other actions available to the Company to
raise additional capital.  Considering the options available to raise
additional capital, and the results of this modelling, the Directors believe
that the Company would be viable in the face of these scenarios occurring over
the period ending 31 December 2027.

 

Statement of Directors' Responsibilities in Respect of the Financial
Statements

The Directors are required to prepare Financial Statements for each financial
year which give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial
position, and profit or loss of the Company in accordance with US GAAP at the
end of the financial year, and of the gain or loss for that period. In
preparing those Financial Statements, the Directors are required to:

 

·    select suitable accounting policies and apply them consistently;

·    make judgements and estimates that are reasonable and prudent;

·    state whether applicable accounting standards have been followed
subject to any material departures disclosed and explained in the Financial
Statements; 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 proper accounting records which
disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the
Company and enable them to ensure that the Financial Statements have been
properly prepared in accordance with The Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008. 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 responsible for ensuring that the Annual Report and
Financial Statements include the information required by the Listing Rules and
the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the Financial Conduct
Authority (together "the Rules"). They are also responsible for ensuring that
the Company complies with the provisions of the Rules which, with regard to
corporate governance, require the Company to disclose how it has applied the
principles, and complied with the provisions, of the corporate governance code
applicable to the Company.

 

Disclosure of Information to the Auditor

So far as each of the Directors is aware, there is no relevant audit
information of which the Company's auditor is unaware, and each has taken all
the steps they ought to have taken as a Director to make themselves aware of
any relevant audit information and to establish that the Company's auditor is
aware of that information.

 

Responsibility Statement

The Board of Directors, as identified on pages 80 and 81, jointly and
severally confirm that, to the best of their knowledge:

·    the Financial Statements, prepared in accordance with US GAAP, give a
true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position, and profits
of the Company and its undertakings;

·    this report includes a fair review of the development and performance
of the business and the position of the Company and the undertakings included
in the consolidation taken as a whole, together with a description of the
principal risks and uncertainties that they face; and

·    the Annual Report and Financial Statements taken as a whole are fair,
balanced, and understandable, and provide the information necessary for
shareholders to assess the Company and its undertakings' position,
performance, business model, and strategy.

 

Signed on behalf of the Board by:

 

Ed Warner

Chair

25 May 2023

 

Board structure and committees

The activities of the Company are overseen by the Board, which comprises a
majority of independent Directors. The Board meets at least four times a year,
and between these scheduled meetings there is regular contact between
Directors, the Investment Manager, the Administrator, and the Company
Secretary, including a formal strategy meeting and Board update calls.

 

The Board aims to run the Company in a manner which is consistent with its
belief in honesty, transparency, and accountability. This is reflected in the
way in which Board meetings are conducted, during which the Chair promotes and
facilitates a culture of open and constructive debate on each topic,
encouraging input from all Directors and advisors to ensure a wide exchange of
well-informed views. The Directors believe that good governance means
effective management of the affairs of the Company and meaningful engagement
with investors. The Board is committed to maintaining high standards of
financial reporting, transparency, and business integrity.

 

Board of Directors

 Audit and Risk Committee                                                    Inside Information Committee                                                  Management Engagement and Service Provider Committee                              Nomination Committee                                                              Remuneration Committee
 Role                                                                        Role                                                                          Role                                                                              Role                                                                              Role

 To ensure that the Company maintains high standards of risk management,     To consider any developments                                                  To review the Company's Investment Manager and service providers to ensure        To agree the method and oversee the process for the selection and recruitment     To determine the
 integrity, financial reporting, and internal controls.
which may require                                                            that a good value service of satisfactory quality is delivered, and to manage     of new Directors and to nominate candidates for approval by the Board.
policy for Directors' remuneration, set the remuneration of the Chair of the

an immediate announcement by virtue of being price-sensitive information.    the appointment process of new or replacement service providers.
                                                                                 Board, and make recommendations to the Board for Directors' remuneration
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               levels.
 Members                                                                     Members                                                                       Members                                                                           Members                                                                           Members

 Chaired by:                                                                 Chaired by:                                                                   Chaired by:                                                                       Chaired by:                                                                       Chaired by:

Steven Wilderspin
Ed Warner
Libby Burne
Ed Warner
Francesca Barnes

 Anulika Ajufo Francesca Barnes                                              Steven Wilderspin                                                             Anulika Ajufo                                                                     Anulika Ajufo                                                                     Anulika Ajufo

Libby Burne

                                                                                                                                                           Francesca Barnes                                                                  Francesca Barnes                                                                  Libby Burne

                                                                                                                                                           Ed Warner                                                                         Libby Burne                                                                       Ed Warner

                                                                                                                                                           Steven Wilderspin                                                                 Steven Wilderspin                                                                 Steven Wilderspin

 

Board and Committee Meetings with Director Attendance

The table below sets out the Directors' attendance at the Board and Committee
meetings held during the financial year ended 31 January 2023:

 

 Director           Scheduled          Audit and Risk Committee Meetings  Inside                           Management Engagement and Service Provider Committee Meetings  Nomination Committee  Remuneration Committee

Board  Meetings
Information Committee Meetings
Meetings
Meeting
 Anulika Ajufo(1)   7 of 8             6 of 8                             n/a                              2 of 2                                                         1 of 2                1 of 1
 Francesca Barnes   8 of 8             8 of 8                             n/a                              2 of 2                                                         2 of 2                1 of 1
 Libby Burne        8 of 8             8 of 8                             n/a                              2 of 2                                                         2 of 2                1 of 1
 Carolina Espinal   8 of 8             n/a                                n/a                              n/a                                                            n/a                   n/a
 Alan Hodson(2)     4 of 8             3 of 8                             n/a                              1 of 2                                                         1 of 2                n/a
 Ed Warner          8 of 8             n/a                                2 of 2                           2 of 2                                                         2 of 2                1 of 1
 Steven Wilderspin  8 of 8             8 of 8                             2 of 2                           2 of 2                                                         2 of 2                1 of 1
 Peter Wilson       7 of 8             n/a                                n/a                              n/a                                                            n/a                   n/a

 

1          Anulika Ajufo was appointed to the Board on 19 May 2022
and so was only eligible to attend meetings following that date. Ms Ajufo
attended all meetings which she was eligible to attend following her
appointment.

2          Alan Hodson retired at the AGM in July 2022 and thus was
only eligible to attend meetings prior to that date. He attended all meetings
which he was eligible to attend prior to his retirement.

 

The Directors are kept fully informed of investment and financial controls and
other matters that are relevant to the business of the Company. Such
information is brought to the attention of the Board by the Investment
Manager, the Administrator, and the Company Secretary in their regular reports
to the Board. The Directors also have access where necessary, in the
furtherance of their duties, to professional advice at the expense of the
Company. Further details of the Board Committees can be found on page 90 and
their terms of reference are available on the Company's website:
www.hvpe.com/shareholders/corporate-governance
(http://www.hvpe.com/shareholders/corporate-governance) .

 

All Directors received notice of the meetings, the agenda, and supporting
documents and were able to comment on the matters to be raised at the proposed
meeting. During each meeting, the Chair promoted and facilitated open,
constructive debate on each topic, encouraging input from all Directors. As
well as the formal scheduled strategy meeting, the Board also received
detailed information from the Investment Manager via update calls with
particular reference to the impact on the Company of external developments. In
addition to the above meetings, ad-hoc Board and Committee meetings can be
convened at short notice and, as they only require a quorum of two Directors,
there is a possibility of lower attendance than for the scheduled meetings. If
any Director is unable to attend a meeting, they receive the papers and have
the opportunity to discuss them with the Chair. During the financial year,
there were four ad-hoc Board meetings with a quorum at each.

 

At each scheduled Board meeting, amongst other items, the Directors review and
discuss the Investment Manager's report, HVPE's financial position, drivers of
performance, how HVPE has performed, the commitment plan, and the corporate
broking report (which includes an update on the Company's peer group).
Marketing and investor relations are covered in detail at two Board meetings,
and at a higher level at the remaining meetings. Each meeting ends with a
discussion between the Independent Directors for which no representative of
the Investment Manager is present.

 

Responsibilities

The Board has adopted formal responsibilities for the Chair and the Senior
Independent Director, as well as a schedule of matters reserved for the Board.
All of these documents are available on the Company's website:
www.hvpe.com/shareholders/corporate-governance
(http://www.hvpe.com/shareholders/corporate-governance) .

 

Board Composition

Together, the members of the Board possess a balance of skills, experience,
and length of service, which the Directors believe is appropriate. Succession
planning remains an ongoing process, designed to bring effective and smooth
transition between Director appointments and to avoid undue disruption. This
ensures that the Board is well-balanced through the appointment of new
Directors with the necessary skills and experience. The Board's careful
consideration of its composition and the ongoing refreshment process led to
the addition of Anulika Ajufo in May 2022. Further details on the selection
and appointment process can be found in the Nomination Committee report on
page 97.

 

All Directors are subject to annual re-election by shareholders. When a new
Director is appointed to the Board, they participate in a structured induction
process comprising of a series of meetings with the Chair of the Board and
Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee, key individuals within the Investment
Manager, and other service providers. Directors must be able to demonstrate
commitment to the Company, and ensure that they have sufficient time to fulfil
their roles effectively. Therefore, in accordance with the Board's established
protocol on the management of potential conflicts, if a Director wishes to
undertake additional external appointments, approval is sought from the Chair
in order to confirm that the Director will be able to continue to dedicate
sufficient time to carry out their duties as a Director of the Company, in
addition to assessing any potential conflicts of interest and independence
issues. In the case of any potential appointment for the Chair, the relevant
assessment is conducted by the Senior Independent Director.

 

Tenure Policy

When considering its composition, the Board is strongly committed to striking
the correct balance between the benefits of continuity, experience, and
knowledge and those that come from the introduction of Directors with
diversity of perspectives and skills. The Board has adopted a Tenure Policy
confirming its intention that each independent Director will retire at the AGM
immediately following the completion of their ninth year on the Board.

 

It is acknowledged that there could be unusual circumstances in which a short
extension of that time period could be appropriate. In that event, a
comprehensive explanation of the circumstances would be provided to
stakeholders.

As representatives of the Investment Manager, Carolina Espinal, who was
appointed to the Board in July 2019, and Peter Wilson, who was appointed in
May 2013, are outside the scope of this policy. The independent Directors
believe their contributions to the Board have offered considerable value to
shareholders and that following the retirement of Mr Wilson at the forthcoming
AGM, Ms Espinal will continue to offer that value.

 

Board and Committees Evaluation

The Board undertakes a formal annual evaluation of its performance. This
includes the Chair carrying out an individual review with each Director of
their respective performance and contribution, and the Senior Independent
Director leading an annual evaluation of the performance of the Chair.

 

An externally facilitated Board evaluation occurs every three years and, in
2022, the Board engaged Board Alpha to conduct the appropriate evaluation.
After a thorough process, Board Alpha raised no substantive issues but
recommended that a number of minor actions should be taken, which were
implemented by the Board during the financial year ended 31 January 2023.
Board Alpha had conducted previous Board evaluations for the Company but
otherwise has no connection to the Company or its Directors.

 

Policy on Diversity and Inclusion

The Board has adopted its Policy on Diversity and Inclusion to ensure that the
benefits of diversity are a significant consideration in all recruitment.

 

The Board and Nomination Committee actively consider the diversity of the
Board when considering future appointments. The Board currently consists of
four women and three men and as such exceeds the Hampton-Alexander Review
target for 33% female representation on FTSE 350 company boards. Of three
senior Board positions the Chair is male, the Senior Independent Director is
female and the Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee is male. The Company has
no employees. The Board has also achieved the level of ethnic diversity
targeted by the Parker Review, with two of the six Directors seeking
re-election at the AGM being from an ethnic minority background.

 

The Board also recognises that diversity includes racial, socio-economic, and
other factors such as physical ability, and that different backgrounds and
experiences can bring real value to the Company in terms of decision-making.
The Board does not have any specific diversity targets in mind, given the
range of factors that this term necessarily covers, and its main priority will
always be to appoint the most appropriate candidate for any role.

 

The Company has met the targets on board diversity set out in the Financial
Conduct Authority's Listing Rule 9.8.6R (9) as demonstrated in the tables set
out below. The Company has collected the data for the following two tables by
making due enquiry of the Directors.

 

                                  Number of board members  Percentage     Number of senior positions on the board (CEO, CFO, SID and chair)(1)

of the board
 Men                              3                        43%            2
 Women                            4                        57%            1
 Not specified/prefer not to say  0                        0%             0

 

                                                                 Number of board members  Percentage     Number of senior positions on the board (CEO, CFO, SID and chair)(1)

of the board
 White British or other White (including minority white groups)  5                        72%            3
 Mixed/Multiple Ethnic Groups                                    0                        0              0
 Asian/Asian British                                             0                        0              0
 Black/African/Caribbean/                                        1                        14%            0

 Black British
 Other ethnic group, including Arab                              1                        14%            0
 Not specified/prefer not to say                                 0                        0              0

 

1          Tables reflect data as at 25 May 2023. As an investment
company, HVPE does not have a CEO. These roles defined by the guidance are not
specifically tailored for investment companies. In this table we have
interpreted "CFO" as "Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee".

 

 

 

Audit and Risk Committee

 

About the Committee

The Audit and Risk Committee members are outlined on page 90. Ms Barnes, Mr
Hodson (who served until 20 July 2022) and Ms Ajufo (who served from 19 May
2022) each held senior banking and finance roles for a number of years as
described in their biographies. Ms Burne is a former auditor with 20 years'
experience. Mr Wilderspin is a qualified Chartered Accountant and has over 15
years' experience as an Executive and Non-Executive Director on a number of
private and listed fund boards as well as commercial companies. Members of the
Committee are deemed by the Board to have recent and relevant financial and
sector experience.

 

The Audit and Risk Committee is responsible for the review of the Company's
accounting policies, periodic Financial Statements and auditor engagement. The
Committee is also responsible for making appropriate recommendations to the
Board, including that the Financial Statements are fair, balanced, and
understandable, and ensuring that the Company complies to the best of its
ability with applicable laws and regulations and adheres to the tenet of
generally accepted codes of conduct. The Committee is also responsible for
overseeing the Company's risk management framework and regulatory compliance.

 

All of the Company's management and administration functions are delegated to
independent third parties or the Investment Manager and it is therefore felt
that it would not be practical or cost effective for the Company to have its
own internal audit facility. This matter is reviewed annually. The Audit and
Risk Committee does have the power to commission third-party assurance work as
it sees fit, but did not do so in the year under review.

 

Activities of the Committee

 

Audit and Risk Committee Meetings

In the financial year ended 31 January 2023, the Audit and Risk Committee met
eight times. A summary of Director attendance is included in the "Board and
Committee Meetings with Director Attendance" section on page 91. In these
meetings, the Committee considered the following matters:

 

Auditor Tenure

The Audit and Risk Committee reviewed the effectiveness of the external audit
process during the year, including audit quality, objectivity (level of
challenge and professional scepticism), and independence, using a detailed
questionnaire developed internally from guidance issued by the main accounting
firms and the FRC. This included discussions with the Company's auditor (Ernst
& Young LLP), Investment Manager and Company Secretary to review how well
the previous year's audit had gone. The main conclusion from this review was
that the audit has been of high quality and robust in nature. The Committee
concluded that Ernst & Young LLP's appointment as the Company's auditor
should be continued.

 

The Company's auditor has been engaged by the Company since 2007 and was
re-engaged following a competitive tender process in May 2017. The partner
responsible for the audit, Richard Le Tissier, commenced his role for the year
ended 31 January 2022 audit. The Company's auditor performed the audit of the
Company's Financial Statements, prepared in accordance with applicable law, US
GAAP, and audited under both relevant US Generally Accepted Auditing Standards
("US GAAS") and International Standards on Auditing (UK). The audit approach
remained substantially unchanged relative to the prior year.

 

Auditor Independence

The Audit and Risk Committee understands the importance of auditor
independence, and, during the year, the Committee reviewed the independence
and objectivity of the Company's auditor. The Committee received a report from
the external auditor describing its independence, controls, and current
practices to safeguard and maintain auditor independence. Other than fees paid
for conducting a review of the Interim Financial Statements, there were no
other non-audit fees paid to the auditor by the Company. The Committee has
adopted a non-audit services policy that complies with the Revised Ethical
Standard 2019 issued by the UK FRC which determines those services that the
auditor is prohibited from providing to the Company and those services that
the auditor may conduct. The policy includes a cap on the cost of any
non-audit services provided by the auditor at 70% of the average of the
previous three years' audit fees.

 

In all cases the Committee reviews the potential engagement of the auditor in
advance to ensure that the auditor is the most appropriate party to deliver
the proposed services and to put in place safeguards, where appropriate, to
manage any threats to auditor independence.

 

Terms of Engagement

The Audit and Risk Committee reviewed the audit scope and fee proposal set out
by the auditor in its audit planning. The auditor requested an increase in
fees for 2023 for a number of reasons, including an increase in their cost
base in a competitive market for talent, an increase in regulatory
requirements, and growth in the number of underlying funds that the Company
invests in. This was discussed by the Committee which also noted general audit
market and inflationary fee pressure. The Committee considered the auditor's
proposals to alleviate the time pressure in the final stages of the audit by
conducting controls work earlier in the process. This allows the auditor to
utilise the SOC I Report of HarbourVest Partners to a greater degree in
circumstances when the audit of the underlying funds' financial statements for
31 December 2022 is incomplete at the time of issuance of the Company's annual
report. The Committee recommended to the Board the total fee for audit and
interim review work of £295,490 for 2023, a 10% increase on the fees for
2022.

 

Internal Controls

The internal control systems (including those relating to cyber security) are
designed to meet the Company's particular needs and the risks to which it is
exposed. Accordingly, the internal control systems are designed to manage
rather than eliminate the risk of failure to achieve business objectives and
by their nature can only provide reasonable and not absolute assurance against
misstatement and loss. The Company places reliance on the control environment
of its service providers, including its independent Administrator and the
Investment Manager. In order to satisfy itself that the controls in place at
the Investment Manager are adequate, the Audit and Risk Committee has reviewed
the Private Equity Fund Administration Report on Controls Placed in Operation
and Tests of Operating Effectiveness ("Type II SOC I Report") for the period
from 1 October 2021 to 30 September 2022 (a bridging letter covers the period
1 October 2022 to 31 January 2023), detailing the controls environment in
place at the Investment Manager, as well as ISAE 3402 Reports on Fund
Administration, Global and Local Custody Services, Securities Lending
Services, and Listed Derivatives Clearing Services for the period 1 October
2021 to 30 September 2022 detailing the controls environment in place at the
Administrator and Company Secretary. In both of these reports there were minor
findings, but the Committee is satisfied that the identified weaknesses were
not material to the affairs of the Company, and that the respective service
providers had taken action to improve controls in the identified areas. In
addition, during the year, the Management Engagement and Service Provider
Committee conducted a detailed review of the performance of the Company's
service providers, including the Investment Manager and Administrator.

 

The Investment Manager's Type II SOC I Report describes the internal controls
in the HarbourVest Accounting group, which is responsible for maintaining the
Company's accounting records and the production of the Accounts contained in
the Company's Financial Statements. The main features of the controls are:
clearly documented valuation policies; detailed review of financial reporting
from underlying limited partnerships and investee companies; detailed
reconciliation of capital accounts in underlying limited partnerships; monthly
reconciliation of bank accounts; and a multi-layered review of financial
reporting to ensure compliance with accounting standards and other reporting
obligations.

 

Risk Management

The Audit and Risk Committee reviewed the Company's risk management framework
during the year, and confirmed it was satisfied that it was appropriate for
the Company's requirements. Further details of the principal risks and
uncertainties facing the Company are given on pages 28 to 33. This is in
accordance with relevant best practice as detailed in the FRC's guidance on
Risk Management, Internal Control, and Related Financial and Business
Reporting.

 

The Audit and Risk Committee is responsible for the overall risk framework,
for mapping each risk through the framework, and for conducting specific risk
reviews; the Board is responsible for setting risk appetite, identifying and
assessing risks in terms of potential impact and likelihood, and considered
emerging and topical risks.

 

Financial Risks

The Company is funded from equity balances, comprising issued Ordinary Share
capital, as detailed in Note 1 to the Financial Statements, and retained
earnings. The Company has access to borrowings pursuant to the credit facility
of up to $800 million. As at 31 January 2023, the credit facility remained
undrawn. However, post-period end, $200 million was drawn down. Although the
Company's currency exposure is currently not hedged, the Company's stance on
hedging is kept under review by the Audit and Risk Committee.

 

The Investment Manager and the Directors ensure that all investment activity
is performed in accordance with the investment guidelines. The Company's
investment activities expose it to various types of risks that are associated
with the financial instruments and markets in which it invests. Risk is
inherent in the Company's activities, and is managed through a process of
ongoing identification, measurement, and monitoring. The financial risks to
which the Company is exposed include market risk, liquidity risk, and cash
flow risk.

 

Regulatory Compliance

The Audit and Risk Committee has engaged with the Administrator's compliance
team to ensure that the Company fulfils its regulatory obligations. A
Compliance Monitoring Plan is in place and is regularly reviewed by the
Committee.

 

Audited Financial Statements, Significant Judgements and Reporting Matters

As part of the 31 January 2023 year-end audit, the Audit and Risk Committee
reviewed and discussed the most relevant issues for the Company, most notably
the risk of misstatement or manipulation of the valuation of its investments
in underlying HarbourVest funds, the ongoing impact of the invasion of Ukraine
by Russia, and the consequent macroeconomic waves breaking around the world,
specifically with regard to the Board's statements on going concern and
viability.

 

The greatest element of judgement by the Investment Manager in the valuation
process is the roll forward of 31 December 2022 NAV's to the Company's
year-end of 31 January 2023. This is a focus for the auditor as outlined on
page 104 and is specifically addressed in discussions with the Committee prior
to approval of the Financial Statements.

 

The Audit and Risk Committee remains satisfied that the valuation techniques
used are accurate and appropriate for the Company's investments and consistent
with the requirements of US GAAP. The Audit and Risk Committee ensures that
the Board is kept regularly informed of relevant updates or changes to US GAAP
that impact the Company, including but not limited to valuation principles.

 

Fair, Balanced, and Understandable

As a result of the work performed, the Audit and Risk Committee has concluded
that the Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 January 2023 are
fair, balanced and understandable, and provide the information necessary for
shareholders to assess the Company's position and performance, business model,
and strategy. It has reported on these findings to the Board.

 

Corporate Governance

The Audit and Risk Committee continues to monitor the Board's assessment of
the Company's compliance with the AIC Code of Corporate Governance for
Investment Companies (the 2019 edition).

 

Governance and Effectiveness

The Committee conducted a review of its activities against its constitution
and terms of reference in respect of the year under review and concluded that
all requisite activities had been undertaken. Minor amendments to the terms of
reference were proposed and approved.

 

Other Matters

During the year, the Committee conducted a deep-dive review of the Company's
structure and tax position, and commissioned a cyber security review of key
service providers. Matters arising are being followed up with the relevant
service providers.

 

In presenting this report, I have set out for the Company's shareholders the
key areas that the Audit and Risk Committee focuses on. If any shareholders
would like any further information about how the Audit and Risk Committee
operates and its review process, I, or any of the other members of the Audit
and Risk Committee would be pleased to meet them to discuss this.

 

Steven Wilderspin

Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee

25 May 2023

 

Management Engagement and Service Provider Committee

 

About the Committee

The MESPC was established on 24 November 2015 and is currently chaired by Ms
Burne. Ms Barnes chaired the Committee until 21 July 2022. The members, all of
whom are independent Directors, are outlined on page 90. The other Directors
of the Company may attend by invitation of the Committee.

 

The MESPC held two meetings in the year under review and all members of the
Committee attended the meetings.

Activities of the Committee

In the course of the year under review, the MESPC conducted a review of the
Company's service providers to ensure the safe and accurate management and
administration of the Company's affairs and business under terms which were
competitive and reasonable for the shareholders.

 

Investment Manager Review

The annual Investment Manager review was undertaken in July 2022. As part of
this review, the Board received presentations from the Investment Committee,
as well as various operational teams and the senior management of the
Investment Manager regarding investment strategy, as well as ESG, valuations,
and manager selection processes and other matters relating to the Company's
affairs. Following this review, the Board discussed its conclusions with the
Investment Manager. The Board and MESPC Committee are satisfied with the
performance of the Investment Manager with respect to investment returns and
the overall level of service provided to the Company. The Board as a whole
undertook visits to the Investment Manager's offices in Boston and London
during the financial year.

 

In accordance with its terms of reference, the MESPC carried out a formal
review of the Investment Management Agreement during the financial year and
that review concluded with the signing of an amended and restated Investment
Management Agreement on 31 January 2023. Amendments to the IMA included
re-designating the Rolling Coverage Ratio as the Medium-term Coverage Ratio.
The MCR (formerly the RCR) was introduced as a measure of the Company's
ability to cover its medium-term obligations. While the formula for its
calculation remains unchanged the methodology has been refined to exclude the
cash flow associated with projected future commitments and focus only on the
projected cash flow of existing commitments. Other amendments include
incorporation of the Fixed Fee side letter setting out the terms on which the
Investment Manager is reimbursed for expenses incurred in the provision of its
services as described on page 86, as well as the introduction of a $10,000
materiality limit for legal fees over which Board approval must be sought.

 

MESPC Review

The MESPC met in December 2022 and conducted a detailed review of the
performance of all the Company's key service providers for the year to January
2023 against the following criteria:

 

·    scope of service;

·    key personnel;

·    key results achieved for the Company;

·    fees charged to the Company;

·    breaches and errors in the year under review;

·    ESG policies and initiatives;

·    anti-slavery policies;

·    anti-bribery controls;

·    cyber security and IT controls environment; and

·    General Data Protection Regulation ("GDPR") compliance.

 

The MESPC conducted interviews with the Company's most critical service
providers as part of its review and in order to strengthen and deepen the
purposeful engagement between the Company and its stakeholders.

 

 

 

 

Governance and Effectiveness

In December 2022, the MESPC conducted a review of its activities against its
constitution and terms of reference in respect of the year under review and
concluded that it had satisfactorily complied with all of its terms of
reference.

 

Nomination Committee

 

About the Committee

The Nomination Committee was established on 24 November 2015 and is chaired by
Mr Warner, Chair of the Company. Its members are outlined on page 90.

 

There were two scheduled meetings held during the year. All members attended
both meetings. The mandate of the Nomination Committee is to consider issues
related to the identification and appointment of Directors to the Board.

 

Activities of the Committee

 

Changes to Board Composition

In accordance with the approach to succession planning outlined below and as
reported in the 2022 Annual Report and Accounts, Anulika Ajufo was appointed
as a Director with effect from 19 May 2022. Ms Ajufo was subsequently elected
by shareholders at the 2022 AGM. Ms Ajufo's appointment completed the latest
phase of Board refreshment.

 

Approach to Succession Planning

As was reported in the 2022 Annual Report and Accounts, Ms Ajufo was appointed
on the recommendation of the Committee following a detailed and competitive
process facilitated by a third-party recruitment firm, Odgers Berndtson. At
its second meeting of the financial year the Committee considered the Board's
range of skills, and agreed that there was no immediate need to recruit
another Director.

 

Odgers Berndtson has no connections to the Company or its Directors.

 

Governance and Effectiveness

During the year, the Nomination Committee conducted a review of its activities
against its constitution and terms of reference in respect of the year under
review and concluded that it had satisfactorily complied with all of its terms
of reference.

 

Remuneration Committee

 

About the Committee

The Remuneration Committee was established on 23 March 2021 and is chaired by
the Senior Independent Director of the Company, Ms Barnes. The members are
listed on page 90. The other Directors of the Company may attend by invitation
of the Committee.

 

The Remuneration Committee has delegated responsibility for determining the
policy for Directors' remuneration and setting the remuneration of the Chair
of the Board. The Committee also makes recommendations to the Board for the
Directors' remuneration levels which shall be determined in accordance with
the Company's Articles of Association. Remuneration will not include
performance-related elements.

 

There was one scheduled meeting held during the year. All members attended the
meeting. The Committee approved the remuneration for the Chair and agreed to
recommend to the Board measured increases in the fees paid to the independent
Directors and to the Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee. The
recommendations were subsequently approved by the Board and the revised fees
took effect from 1 February 2023. It was confirmed that non-Independent
Directors do not receive any remuneration.

 

Governance and Effectiveness

During the year, the Remuneration Committee conducted a review of its
activities against its constitution and terms of reference in respect of the
year under review and concluded that it had satisfactorily complied with all
of its terms of reference.

 

Inside Information Committee

 

About the Committee

The Committee was formed on 12 July 2016 to consider information which may
need to be made public in order for the Company to comply with its obligations
under the UK Market Abuse Regulation. It met twice during the year and issued
two flash NAV per share updates as a result of the respective meetings. The
Committee is chaired by Mr Warner.

 

Directors' remuneration report

 

An ordinary resolution for the approval of this Directors' Remuneration Report
will be put to shareholders at the forthcoming AGM to be held on 19 July 2023.

 

There are no long-term incentive schemes provided by the Company and no
performance fees are paid to Directors. Directors affiliated to HarbourVest do
not receive any fees.

 

No Director has a service contract with the Company; however, each Director is
appointed by a letter of appointment which sets out the terms of the
appointment.

 

Directors are remunerated in the form of fees, payable quarterly in arrears to
the Director personally. The table below details the fees paid to each
Director of the Company for the years ended 31 January 2022 and 31 January
2023. The Company's Articles limit the aggregate fees payable to Directors to
a maximum of £550,000 per annum. Following the recommendation of the
Remuneration Committee, the Board approved incremental increases in the fees
paid to the Independent Directors to take effect from 1 February 2023. In
approving these increases the Board was acting on its intention to prefer
measured annual, incremental increases rather than intermittent corrections.

 

Under the Company's Articles, Directors are entitled to additional ad-hoc
remuneration for project work outside of the scope of their ordinary duties.
No such payments were made in the year ended 31 January 2023.

 

 Director             Role                                    Fees Paid for the 12 Months ended 31 January 2023    Fees Paid for the 12 Months Ended 31 January 2022
 Anulika Ajufo        Independent Director                    £40,217                                              n/a(1)
 Francesca Barnes     Senior Independent Director             £59,661(2)                                           £54,000
 Libby Burne          Chair of MESPC, Independent Director    £58,434(3)                                           £45,150
 Carolina Espinal     Director                                Nil                                                  Nil
 Alan Hodson          Independent Director                    £27,756(4)                                           £54,000
 Andrew Moore         Independent Director                    Nil                                                  £30,082(5)
 Ed Warner            Chair, Independent Director             £106,605                                             £100,000
 Steven Wilderspin    Chair of ARC, Independent Director      £68,246                                              £64,000
 Peter Wilson         Director                                Nil                                                  Nil

 

1      Ms Ajufo was appointed with effect from 19 May 2022.

2      Ms Barnes was appointed Senior Independent Director with effect
from 20 July 2022.

3      Ms Burne was appointed Chair of the MESPC with effect from 21 July
2022.

4      Mr Hodson retired from the Board and as Senior Independent
Director at the AGM on 20 July 2022.

5      Mr Moore retired from the Board on 22 July 2021.

 

 Role                                               Annual Fee to 31 January 2022  Annual Fee to 31 January 2023  Annual Fee from 1 February 2023
 Chair of the Board                                 £100,000                       £107,000                       £109,000
 Non-Executive Director                             £54,000                        £57,000                        £58,000
 Premium for Senior Independent Director            £0                             £3,000                         £3,000
 Premium for Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee  £10,000                        £11,500                        £12,000
 Premium for Chair of MESPC                         £0                             £3,000                         £3,000

 

Ed Warner
Chair

25 May 2023

 

Steven Wilderspin

Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee

 

Statement of Compliance with the AIC Code of Corporate Governance

The Directors place a large degree of importance on ensuring that high
standards of corporate governance are maintained, and aim to comply to the
greatest extent possible with the provisions of the AIC Code published in
2019.

 

The Board has considered the principles and provisions of the AIC Code. The
AIC Code addresses all the principles and provisions set out in the 2018 UK
Corporate Governance Code (the "UK Code"), as well as setting out additional
provisions on issues that are of specific relevance to the Company. The AIC
Code has been endorsed by the Financial Reporting Council and the Guernsey
Financial Services Commission ("GFSC"). By reporting against the AIC Code, the
Company is meeting its obligations under the UK Code, the GFSC Finance Sector
Code of Corporate Governance, as amended in November 2021, and the associated
disclosure requirements set out under paragraph 9.8.6R of the Financial
Conduct Authority's Listing Rules. The Board considers that reporting against
the principles and provisions of the AIC Code provides more relevant
information to stakeholders. The AIC Code is available on the AIC website:
www.theaic.co.uk (http://www.theaic.co.uk) .

 

The Company complied with all the principles and provisions of the AIC Code
during the year ended 31 January 2023 except for a difference relating to the
duties of the Nomination Committee. Details of this difference, which
constitutes an ongoing exception to one of the principles of the AIC Code, are
set out below:

 

The Duties of the Nomination Committee

As set out on page 97, the Board has established a Nomination Committee, but
has chosen to limit its remit to focus purely on the identification and
nomination of Board candidates to fill Independent Director Board vacancies as
and when they arise. Other matters relating to the structure, size, and
composition of the Board, and plans in respect of tenure and succession for
Independent Directors form part of the matters reserved for the entire Board.
By reserving those matters for the Board, the Company does not comply with
provision 7.2 22 of the AIC Code. The Directors believe that their
deliberations in relation to these matters benefit from the input from all the
Directors, including those appointed by HarbourVest.

 

Set out below is where stakeholders can find further information within the
Annual Report about how the Company has complied with the various principles
and provisions of the AIC Code.

 

1. Board Leadership and Purpose

 Purpose                 On page 82
 Strategy                On pages 82 to 89
 Values and culture      On page 90
 Shareholder engagement  On pages 24 to 27
 Stakeholder engagement  On pages 24 to 27

 

2. Division of Responsibilities

 Director independence              On page 83
 Board meetings                     On page 91
 Relations with Investment Manager  On page 86
 Management Engagement Committee    On page 96

3. Composition, Succession, and Evaluation

 Nomination Committee              On page 97
 Director re-election              On pages 91 and 92
 Use of an external search agency  Approach to Succession Planning on page 97
 Board evaluation                  Board and Committees Evaluation on page 92

4. Audit, Risk, and Internal Control

 Audit and Risk Committee                      On pages 93 to 95
 Emerging and principal risks                  On pages 28 to 33
 Risk management and internal control systems  On page 94
 Going concern statement                       On pages 87 to 88
 Viability statement                           On page 88

 

 

5. Remuneration

 Directors' remuneration report  On page 98

 

Independent Auditor's Report

to the Members of HarbourVest Global Private Equity Limited

 

Opinion

We have audited the consolidated financial statements (the "Consolidated
Financial Statements") of HarbourVest Global Private Equity Limited (the
"Company") and its subsidiaries (together the "Group") for the year ended 31
January 2023 which comprise the Consolidated Statements of Assets and
Liabilities, the Consolidated Statements of Operations, the Consolidated
Statements of Changes in Net Assets, the Consolidated Statements of Cash
Flows, the Consolidated Schedule of Investments, and the related notes 1 to
12, including a summary of significant accounting policies. The financial
reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable
law and United States Generally Accepted Accounting Principles ("US GAAP").

 

In our opinion, the Financial Statements:

·    give a true and fair view of the state of the Group's affairs as at
31 January 2023 and of its loss for the year then ended;

·    have been properly prepared in accordance with US GAAP; and

·    have been properly prepared in accordance with the requirements of
the Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008.

 

Basis for Opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing
(UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those
standards are further described in the Auditor's responsibilities for the
audit of the financial statements section of our report. We believe that the
audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a
basis for our opinion.

 

Independence

We are independent of the Group and Company in accordance with the ethical
requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements,
including the UK FRC's Ethical Standard as applied to listed public interest
entities, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in
accordance with these requirements.

 

The non-audit services prohibited by the FRC's Ethical Standard were not
provided to the Group or Company and we remain independent of the Group and
Company in conducting the audit.

 

Conclusions Relating to Going Concern

In auditing the Consolidated Financial Statements, we have concluded that the
Directors' use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation of
the Consolidated Financial Statements is appropriate. Our evaluation of the
Directors' assessment of the Group's and Company's ability to continue to
adopt the going concern basis of accounting included:

 

·    We discussed with the Directors their assessment of going concern,
which included four scenario analysis models, including the 'Base Case' and
'Extreme Downside' scenarios, the 'Base Case' being considered by the
Directors to be the most likely scenario;

·    We ascertained that the going concern assessment covered a period up
until 30 June 2024 from the date of approval of the Financial Statements;

·    We reviewed the arithmetical accuracy of the 'Base Case' and 'Extreme
Downside' scenario models;

·    For the 'Base Case' scenario we reviewed the working capital
documentation which supports the Directors' assessment of going concern;

·    We considered the estimation uncertainty of the prior year's most
likely scenario by comparing it to the Group's actual performance to date,
discussed the material movements with the Board and the Investment Manager,
and obtained the required supporting documentation;

·    For the 'Extreme Downside' scenario we challenged the sensitivities
and assumptions used in the forecast through reverse stress testing to
understand how severe the downside scenario would have to be to result in the
elimination of liquidity headroom or a covenant breach;

·    We held discussions with the Audit Committee and Investment Manager
to determine whether, in their opinion, there is any material uncertainty
regarding the Group's ability to pay liabilities and commitments as they fall
due. Through these discussions we considered and challenged the options
available to the Group if it were in a stressed scenario. These options
included but were not limited to the use of credit facilities and sales in the
secondary market;

·    We assessed whether the commitments made to underlying investments
cast significant doubt over the going concern status of the Group and compared
the historical calls made by underlying investments as a % of the total
commitments made, including a discussion with the Investment Manager regarding
the possibility for uncalled commitments to be called;

·    We confirmed available credit facility balances to understand the
potential impact of the leverage in the underlying funds;

·    Recalculating the forecast debt covenants on external loans to
validate compliance within the going concern period;

·    We considered whether the Directors' assessment of going concern as
included in the Annual Report is appropriate and consistent with the
disclosure in the viability statement; and

·    We evaluated the disclosures made in the Annual Report and
Consolidated Financial Statements regarding going concern to ascertain that
they are in accordance with US GAAP and have complied with, or explained
reasons for non-compliance, with all the AIC Code of Corporate Governance
provisions.

 

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material
uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or
collectively, may cast significant doubt on the Group's and Company's ability
to continue as a going concern over a period from the date of approval of the
Financial Statements up until 30 June 2024.

 

In relation to the Group's reporting on how they have applied the UK Corporate
Governance Code, we have nothing material to add or draw attention to in
relation to the Directors' Statement in the financial statements about whether
the Directors considered it appropriate to adopt the going concern basis of
accounting.

 

Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the Directors with respect to
going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report. However,
because not all future events or conditions can be predicted, this statement
is not a guarantee as to the company's ability to continue as a going concern.

 

 

 

Overview of Our Audit Approach

 Key audit matters  Risk of misstatement or manipulation of the valuation of the Group's
                    investments in the underlying Primary or Secondary HarbourVest funds, together
                    the "HarbourVest investment funds".
 Materiality        Overall materiality of $76.8m which represents 2% of Net Assets.

 

An Overview of the Scope of Our Audit

 

Tailoring the Scope

Our assessment of audit risk, our evaluation of materiality and our allocation
of performance materiality determine our audit scope for each company within
the Group. This enables us to form an opinion on the Consolidated Financial
Statements. We take into account size, risk profile, the organisation of the
Group and effectiveness of group wide controls and changes in the business
environment, when assessing the level of work to be performed.

 

The audit was led from Guernsey and utilised audit team members from the
Boston office of Ernst & Young LLP in the US. We operated as an integrated
audit team across the two jurisdictions, and we performed audit procedures and
responded to the risk identified as described below.

 

The Group comprises the Company and its five wholly owned subsidiaries as
explained in note 2 to the Group Financial Statements. The Company, each
subsidiary and the consolidation are subject to full scope audit procedures.
Other than the investments which the Company holds directly, the subsidiaries
own the investments, which are set out in the Consolidated Schedule of
Investments, and on which we performed our work on valuation.

 

Climate Change

Stakeholders are increasingly interested in how climate change will impact
HarbourVest Global Private Equity Limited. The Group has determined that the
most significant future impacts from climate change on their operations will
be from the investments made by the underlying partnerships in which they are
invested. These are explained on pages 44 to 51 in Purposeful growth
(Environmental, Social, and Governance) and on pages 32 and 33 in the
principal risks and uncertainties, which form part of the "Other information,"
rather than the audited Consolidated Financial Statements. Our procedures on
these unaudited disclosures therefore consisted solely of considering whether
they are materially inconsistent with the Consolidated Financial Statements or
our knowledge obtained in the course of the audit or otherwise appear to be
materially misstated, in line with our responsibilities on "Other
information".

 

Our audit effort in considering climate change was focussed on the adequacy of
the Group's disclosures in the financial statements as set out in Note 2 and
the conclusion that there was not a material impact on the recognition and
separate measurement considerations of the assets and liabilities of the Group
as at 31 January 2023.

 

Based on our work we have not identified the impact of climate change on the
financial statements to be a key audit matter or to impact a key audit matter.

 

Key Audit Matters

Key audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgement, were
of most significance in our audit of the Consolidated Financial Statements of
the current period and include the most significant assessed risks of material
misstatement (whether or not due to fraud) that we identified. These matters
included those which had the greatest effect on the overall audit strategy,
the allocation of resources in the audit; and directing the efforts of the
engagement team. These matters were addressed in the context of our audit of
the financial statements as a whole, and in our opinion thereon, and we do not
provide a separate opinion on these matters.

 

 Risk                                                                            Our Response to the Risk                                                         Key Observations Communicated to the Audit and Risk Committee
 Misstatement or manipulation of the valuation of the Group's investments in     Our response comprised the performance of the following procedures:              We reported to the Audit and Risk Committee that we did not identify any
 the underlying Primary or Secondary HarbourVest funds, together the
                                                                                instances of the use of inappropriate methodologies and that the valuation of
 "HarbourVest investment funds" ($3,616 million; 2022 $3,633 million).           ·    Confirmed and documented our understanding of the Group's processes,        the Group's investments in the HarbourVest investment funds were not

                                                                               controls and methodologies for valuing investments held by the Group in the      materially misstated.
                                                                                 HarbourVest investment funds, including the use of the practical expedient as

                                                                               set out in Accounting Standard Codification (ASC) Topic 820 Fair Value
 Refer to the Accounting policies and Note 4 of the Financial Statements.        Measurement ("ASC 820") by performing our walkthrough processes and evaluating

                                                                               the implementation and design effectiveness of controls;

                                                                               ·    We also utilised the System and Organisation Controls 1 Report for
 There is a risk that the valuation of the Group's investments at 31 January     Private Equity Fund Administration Report on Controls Placed in Operation and
 2023, which comprise 94.3% (2022: 92.6%) of net assets is materially            Tests of Operating Effectiveness ("SOC 1 report") of HarbourVest Partner LLC
 misstated.                                                                      to confirm our understanding of the production on the NAVs of the HarbourVest

                                                                               investment funds;
 The valuation of the investments is the principal driver of the Group's net

 asset value and hence incorrect valuations would have a significant impact on   ·    Agreed 96.8% by value of the individual net asset values of each
 the net asset value and performance of the Group.                               HarbourVest investment fund to its underlying audited Net Asset Value (NAV) in

                                                                               the corresponding financial statements as at 31 December 2022 which, prior to
                                                                                 adjustments, formed the basis for the Group's carrying amount as at 31 January
                                                                                 2023;

                                                                                 ·    For 3.1% of the remaining 3.2% by value of the individual net asset
                                                                                 values of each HarbourVest investment fund we agreed the underlying unaudited
                                                                                 NAV as at 31 December 2022 which, prior to adjustments, formed the basis for
                                                                                 the Group's carrying amount as at 31 January 2023. In addition to the roll
                                                                                 forward to 31 January 2023 procedures described below we:

                                                                                 ·    confirmed that the HarbourVest investment fund was subject to the
                                                                                 same processes for determining the NAV as set out in the SOC 1 report; and

                                                                                 ·    obtained and reviewed the Limited Partnership Agreement of the
                                                                                 HarbourVest investment fund and ensured the NAV is prepared on a basis which
                                                                                 would allow the application of the practical expedient under ASC 820.

                                                                                 ·    We obtained a schedule of all adjustments made to those audited and
                                                                                 unaudited NAVs between 1 January 2023 and 31 January 2023, and:

                                                                                 ·    On a sample basis verified contributions and distributions made
                                                                                 to/from the HarbourVest investment funds to supporting bank statements;

                                                                                 ·    Recalculated a sample of accrued management fees in the HarbourVest
                                                                                 investment funds based on the terms of the signed management agreements and
                                                                                 agreed terms to relevant supporting documents;

                                                                                 ·    Verified foreign exchange rate changes to independent third-party
                                                                                 sources, and their application to any HarbourVest investment funds denominated
                                                                                 in foreign currencies;

                                                                                 ·    Considered whether there were changes in market conditions during the
                                                                                 period from 1 January 2023 to 31 January 2023 that could have had a material
                                                                                 impact when applied to the key sensitive inputs to the valuations of the
                                                                                 direct investments of the HarbourVest investment funds;

                                                                                 ·    Considered whether there were changes in market conditions during the
                                                                                 period from 1 January 2023 to 31 January 2023 that could have had a material
                                                                                 impact when applied to the marketable securities held by the HarbourVest
                                                                                 investment funds;

                                                                                 ·    Independently sourced third-party prices and verified fair value
                                                                                 changes on publicly traded securities held in the HarbourVest investment
                                                                                 funds; and

                                                                                 ·    Through enquiry determined that there were no post-closing
                                                                                 adjustments since 31 December 2022 or other material changes to the NAV
                                                                                 subsequent to the HarbourVest investment funds' finalized financial reporting
                                                                                 process.

                                                                                 ·    We assessed the fairness, accuracy and completeness of the
                                                                                 disclosures in the Consolidated Financial Statements.

Our Application of Materiality

We apply the concept of materiality in planning and performing the audit, in
evaluating the effect of identified misstatements on the audit and in forming
our audit opinion.

 

Materiality

The magnitude of an omission or misstatement that, individually or in the
aggregate, could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of
the users of the financial statements. Materiality provides a basis for
determining the nature and extent of our audit procedures.

 

We determined materiality for the Group to be $76.8 million (2022: $78.4
million), which is 2% (2022: 2%) of net assets. We believe that net assets
provides us with a basis for determining the nature, timing and extent of risk
assessment procedures, identifying and assessing the risk of material
misstatement and determining the nature, timing and extent of further audit
procedures. We used the net assets as a basis for determining planning
materiality because the Group's primary performance measures for internal and
external reporting are based on net assets as we consider it is the measure
most relevant to the stakeholders of the Group.

 

We calculated materiality during the planning stage of the audit and during
the course of our audit we reassessed initial materiality based on 31 January
2023 net assets.

 

Performance Materiality

The application of materiality at the individual account or balance level. It
is set at an amount to reduce to an appropriately low level the probability
that the aggregate of uncorrected and undetected misstatements exceeds
materiality.

 

On the basis of our risk assessments, together with our assessment of the
Group's overall control environment, our judgement was that performance
materiality was 75% (2022: 75%) of our planning materiality, namely $57.6m
(2022: $58.8m). Our objective in adopting this approach was to ensure that
total uncorrected and undetected audit differences in the Financial Statements
did not exceed our materiality level. We have set performance materiality at
this percentage given that there is no history of material misstatements, the
likelihood of misstatement in the future is deemed low, we have a strong
understanding of the control environment, there were no changes in
circumstances (such as a change in accounting personnel or events out of the
normal course of business) and it is not a close monitored audit, and hence we
consider 75% to be reasonable.

 

Reporting Threshold

An amount below which identified misstatements are considered as being clearly
trivial.

 

We agreed with the Audit Committee that we would report to them all
uncorrected audit differences in excess of $3.8m (2022: $3.9m), which is set
at 5% of planning materiality, as well as differences below that threshold
that, in our view, warranted reporting on qualitative grounds.

 

We evaluate any uncorrected misstatements against both the quantitative
measures of materiality discussed above and in light of other relevant
qualitative considerations in forming our opinion.

 

Other Information

The other information comprises the information included in the annual report,
other than the Consolidated Financial Statements and our auditor's report
thereon. The directors are responsible for the other information contained
within the annual report.

 

Our opinion on the Consolidated Financial Statements does not cover the other
information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in this
report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.

 

Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider
whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the Consolidated
Financial Statements or our knowledge obtained in the course of the audit or
otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material
inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to
determine whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in the
Consolidated Financial Statements themselves. If, based on the work we have
performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of the other
information, we are required to report that fact.

 

We have nothing to report in this regard.

 

Matters on Which We Are Required To Report by Exception

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to
which The Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008 requires us to report to you if, in
our opinion:

·    proper accounting records have not been kept by the Company; or

·    the Financial Statements are not in agreement with the Company's
accounting records and returns; or

·    we have not received all the information and explanations we require
for our audit.

 

Corporate Governance Statement

We have reviewed the Directors' statement in relation to going concern,
longer-term viability and that part of the Corporate Governance Statement
relating to the Group's compliance with the provisions of the UK Corporate
Governance Code specified for our review by the listing rules.

 

Based on the work undertaken as part of our audit, we have concluded that each
of the following elements of the Corporate Governance Statement is materially
consistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained during the
audit:

 

·    Directors' statement with regards to the appropriateness of adopting
the going concern basis of accounting and any material uncertainties
identified set out on pages 87 to 88;

·    Directors' explanation as to its assessment of the company's
prospects, the period this assessment covers and why the period is appropriate
set out on pages 87 to 88;

·    Director's statement on whether it has a reasonable expectation that
the Group will be able to continue in operation and meets its liabilities set
out on pages 87 to 88;

·    Directors' statement on fair, balanced and understandable set out on
page 95;

·    Board's confirmation that it has carried out a robust assessment of
the emerging and principal risks set out on pages 28 to 33;

·    The section of the annual report that describes the review of
effectiveness of risk management and internal control systems set out on page
94; and

·    The section describing the work of the audit committee set out on
pages 93 to 95.

 

Responsibilities of Directors

As explained more fully in the Statement of Directors' Responsibilities set
out on page 88, the Directors are responsible for the preparation of the
Consolidated Financial Statements and for being satisfied that they give a
true and fair view, and for such internal control as the Directors determine
is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free
from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

 

In preparing the Consolidated Financial Statements, the Directors are
responsible for assessing the Group's and the Company's ability to continue as
a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern
and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the Directors either
intend to liquidate the Group or the Company or to cease operations, or have
no realistic alternative but to do so.

 

Auditor's Responsibilities for the Audit of the Financial Statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
Consolidated Financial Statements as a whole are free from material
misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor's report
that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance,
but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK)
will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can
arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in
the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic
decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.

 

Explanation as to what extent the audit was considered capable of detecting
irregularities, including fraud

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of non-compliance with laws and
regulations. We design procedures in line with our responsibilities, outlined
above, to detect irregularities, including fraud. The risk of not detecting a
material misstatement due to fraud is higher than the risk of not detecting
one resulting from error, as fraud may involve deliberate concealment by, for
example, forgery or intentional misrepresentations, or through collusion. The
extent to which our procedures are capable of detecting irregularities,
including fraud is detailed below.

 

However, the primary responsibility for the prevention and detection of fraud
rests with both those charged with governance of the company and management.

 

·    We obtained an understanding of the legal and regulatory frameworks
that are applicable to the company and determined that the most significant
are;

o  Financial Conduct Authority ("FCA") Listing Rules;

o  Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules ("DTR") of the FCA;

o  The 2018 UK Corporate Governance Code;

o  The 2019 AIC Code of Corporate Governance;

o  The Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008, as amended.

 

·    We understood how Group is complying with those frameworks by:

o  Discussing the processes and procedures used by the Directors, the
Investment Manager, the Company Secretary and Administrator to ensure
compliance with the relevant frameworks;

o  Inspecting the Group's relevant documented policies, processes and
procedures; and

o  Reviewing internal reports that evidence compliance testing.

 

·    We assessed the susceptibility of the Group's Consolidated Financial
Statements to material misstatement, including how fraud might occur by;

o  Identifying misstatement or manipulation of the valuation of the Group's
investments in the HarbourVest funds and undertaking the audit procedures set
out in the Key Audit Matters section above;

o  Obtaining an understanding of entity-level controls and considering the
influence of the control environment;

o  Obtaining management's assessment of fraud risks including an
understanding of the nature, extent and frequency of such assessment
documented in the HVPE Risk Review;

o  Making inquiries with those charged with governance as to how they
exercise oversight of management's processes for identifying and responding to
fraud risks and the controls established by management to mitigate
specifically those risks the entity has identified, or that otherwise help to
prevent, deter and detect fraud;

o  Making inquiries with management and those charged with governance
regarding how they identify related parties including circumstances related to
the existence of a related party with dominant influence; and

o  Making inquiries with management and those charged with governance
regarding their knowledge of any actual or suspected fraud or allegations of
fraudulent financial reporting affecting the Group.

 

·    Based on this understanding we designed our audit procedures to
identify non-compliance with such laws and regulations. Our procedures
involved:

o  Having discussions with those charged with governance, the Investment
Manager, the Company Secretary and Administrator to obtain an understanding of
how instances of non-compliance with relevant laws and regulations are
identified;

o  Reviewing Board minutes and internal compliance reporting;

o  Inspecting correspondence with regulators;

o  Reviewing the Consolidated Financial Statements to check that they comply
with the reporting requirements of the Group;

o  Obtaining relevant written representations from the Board of Directors;
and

o  Performing journal entry testing.

 

A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial
statements is located on the Financial Reporting Council's website at
https://www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities. This description forms part
of our auditor's report.

 

 

Other Matters We are Required to Address

·    Following the recommendation from the audit committee we were
appointed by the Company on 2 November 2007 to audit the financial statements
for the year ending 31 January 2008 and subsequent financial periods. The
period of total uninterrupted engagement including previous renewals and
reappointments is 16 years, covering the years ended 31 January 2008 to 31
January 2023.

·    The audit opinion is consistent with the additional report to the
Audit and Risk Committee.

 

Use of Our Report

This report is made solely to the Company's members, as a body, in accordance
with Section 262 of The Companies (Guernsey) Law 2008.  Our audit work has
been undertaken so that we might state to the Company's members those matters
we are required to state to them in an auditor's report and for no other
purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume
responsibility to anyone other than the Company and the Company's members as a
body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have
formed.

 

Richard Geoffrey Le Tissier

For and on behalf of Ernst & Young LLP

Guernsey

25 May 2023

 

Notes:

1.   The maintenance and integrity of the Company's website is the sole
responsibility of the Directors; the work carried out by the auditors does not
involve consideration of these matters and, accordingly, the auditor accepts
no responsibility for any changes that may have occurred to the Financial
Statements since they were initially presented on the website.

2.   Legislation in Guernsey governing the preparation and dissemination of
Financial Statements may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

 

 

Report of Independent Auditors

To the Directors of HarbourVest Global Private Equity Limited

 

Opinion

We have audited the Consolidated Financial Statements of HarbourVest Global
Private Equity Limited (the "Company") and its subsidiaries (together the
"Group"), which comprise the Consolidated Statements of Assets and
Liabilities, including the Consolidated Schedules of Investments, as of 31
January 2023 and 2022, and the related Consolidated Statements of Operations,
the Consolidated Statements of Changes in Net Assets, the Consolidated
Statements of Cash Flows for the years then ended, and the related notes 1 to
12 (collectively referred to as the "financial statements").

 

In our opinion, the accompanying financial statements present fairly, in all
material respects, the financial position of the Group at 31 January 2023 and
2022, and the results of its operations, changes in its net assets and its
cash flows for the year then ended in accordance with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States of America.

 

Basis for Opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with auditing standards generally
accepted in the United States of America (GAAS). Our responsibilities under
those standards are further described in the Auditor's Responsibilities for
the Audit of the Financial Statements section of our report. We are required
to be independent of the Group and to meet our other ethical responsibilities
in accordance with the relevant ethical requirements relating to our audit. We
believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate
to provide a basis for our audit opinion.

 

Responsibilities of Management for the Financial Statements

Management is responsible for the preparation and fair presentation of the
financial statements in accordance with accounting principles generally
accepted in the United States of America, and for the design, implementation,
and maintenance of internal control relevant to the preparation and fair
presentation of financial statements that are free of material misstatement,
whether due to fraud or error.

 

In preparing the financial statements, management is required to evaluate
whether there are conditions or events, considered in the aggregate, that
raise substantial doubt about the Group's ability to continue as a going
concern for one year after the date that the financial statements are
available to be issued.

 

Auditor's Responsibilities for the Audit of the Financial Statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements as a whole are free of material misstatement, whether due to fraud
or error, and to issue an auditor's report that includes our opinion.
Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance but is not absolute
assurance and therefore is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in
accordance with GAAS will always detect a material misstatement when it
exists. The risk of not detecting a material misstatement resulting from fraud
is higher than for one resulting from error, as fraud may involve collusion,
forgery, intentional omissions, misrepresentations, or the override of
internal control. Misstatements are considered material if there is a
substantial likelihood that, individually or in the aggregate, they would
influence the judgment made by a reasonable user based on the financial
statements.

 

In performing an audit in accordance with GAAS, we:

·    Exercise professional judgment and maintain professional skepticism
throughout the audit.

·    Identify and assess the risks of material misstatement of the
financial statements, whether due to fraud or error, and design and perform
audit procedures responsive to those risks. Such procedures include examining,
on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the
financial statements.

·    Obtain an understanding of internal control relevant to the audit in
order to design audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances,
but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the
Group's internal control. Accordingly, no such opinion is expressed.

·    Evaluate the appropriateness of accounting policies used and the
reasonableness of significant accounting estimates made by management, as well
as evaluate the overall presentation of the financial statements.

·    Conclude whether, in our judgment, there are conditions or events,
considered in the aggregate, that raise substantial doubt about the Group's
ability to continue as a going concern for a reasonable period of time.

 

We are required to communicate with those charged with governance regarding,
among other matters, the planned scope and timing of the audit, significant
audit findings, and certain internal control-related matters that we
identified during the audit.

 

Other Information

Management is responsible for the other information. The other information
comprises the Strategic Report, Governance, and Other Information but does not
include the financial statements and our auditor's report thereon. Our opinion
on the financial statements does not cover the other information, and we do
not express an opinion or any form of assurance thereon.

 

In connection with our audit of the financial statements, our responsibility
is to read the other information and consider whether a material inconsistency
exists between the other information and the financial statements, or the
other information otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If, based on
the work performed, we conclude that an uncorrected material misstatement of
the other information exists, we are required to describe it in our report.

 

Ernst & Young LLP

Guernsey, Channel Islands

25 May 2023

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Financial Statements

Consolidated Statements of Assets and Liabilities

At 31 January 2023 and 2022

 

 In US Dollars                                                                   2023                2022

                                                                                 (in thousands*)     (in thousands*)
 Assets
 Investments (Note 4)                                                            3,616,330           3,633,361
 Cash and equivalents                                                            197,523             284,023
 Other assets                                                                    25,652              7,865
 Total assets                                                                    3,839,505           3,925,249
 Liabilities
 Accounts payable and accrued expenses                                           1,441               3,280
 Accounts payable to HarbourVest Advisers L.P. (Note 9)                          138                 36
 Total liabilities                                                               1,579               3,316
 Commitments (Note 5)
 Net assets                                                                      $3,837,926          $3,921,933
 Net assets consist of
 Shares, unlimited shares authorised, 79,104,622 and 79,862,486 shares issued    3,837,926           3,921,933
 and outstanding at 31 January 2023 and 31 January 2022 respectively, no par
 value
 Net assets                                                                      $3,837,926          $3,921,933
 Net asset value per share                                                       $48.52              $49.11

 

* Except net asset value per share

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

 

The Financial Statements on pages 109 to 123 were approved by the Board on 25
May 2023 and were signed on its behalf by:

 

Ed Warner

Chair

 

Steven Wilderspin

Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Consolidated Statements of Operations

For the Years Ended 31 January 2023 and 2022

 

 In US Dollars                                                            2023               2022

                                                                          (in thousands)     (in thousands)
 Realised and unrealised (losses) gains on investments
 Net realised gain on investments                                         236,752            586,396
 Net change in unrealised appreciation and depreciation on investments    (291,301)          477,401
 Net (loss) gain on investments                                           (54,549)           1,063,797
 Investment income
 Interest and dividends from cash and equivalents                         3,622              13
 Other income                                                             71                 -
 Expenses
 Non-utilisation fees (Note 6)                                            7,078              5,346
 Financing expenses                                                       2,455              1,679
 Investment services (Note 3)                                             2,021              2,612
 Professional fees                                                        975                720
 Directors' fees and expenses (Note 9)                                    526                498
 Management fees (Note 3)                                                 384                757
 Marketing expenses                                                       288                316
 Tax expenses                                                             7                  8
 Interest expense (Note 6)                                                -                  1,885
 Other expenses                                                           633                567
 Total expenses                                                           14,367             14,388
 Net investment loss                                                      (10,674)           (14,375)
 Net (decrease) increase in net assets resulting from operations          ($65,223)          $1,049,422

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Consolidated Statements of Changes in Net Assets

For the Years Ended 31 January 2023 and 2022

 In US Dollars                                                              2023               2022

                                                                            (in thousands)     (in thousands)
 (Decrease) increase in net assets from operations
 Net realised gain on investments                                           236,752            586,396
 Net change in unrealised appreciation and depreciation on investments      (291,301)          477,401
 Net investment loss                                                        (10,674)           (14,375)
 Net (decrease) increase in net assets resulting from operations            (65,223)           1,049,422
 Capital Share Transactions
 Share Repurchase                                                           (18,784)           -
 Net decrease in net assets from capital share transactions                 (18,784)           -
 Total (decrease) increase in net assets                                    (84,007)           1,049,422
 Net assets at beginning of year                                            3,921,933          2,872,511
 Net assets at end of year                                                  $3,837,926         $3,921,933

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

 

 

 

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

For the Years Ended 31 January 2023 and 2022

 In US Dollars                                                                    2023               2022

                                                                                  (in thousands)     (in thousands)
 Cash flows from operating activities
 Net (decrease) increase in net assets resulting from operations                  (65,223)           1,049,422
 Adjustments to reconcile net (decrease) increase in net assets resulting from
 operations to net cash (used in) provided by operating activities:
 Net realised gain on investments                                                 (236,752)          (586,396)
 Net change in unrealised appreciation and depreciation on investments            291,301            (477,401)
 Contributions to private equity investments                                      (704,903)          (514,938)
 Distributions from private equity investments                                    649,012            834,552
 Other                                                                            (1,151)            368
 Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities                              (67,716)           305,607
 Cash flows from financing activities
 Proceeds from borrowing on the credit facility                                   -                  80,000
 Repayments in respect of the credit facility                                     -                  (200,000)
 Share Repurchase                                                                 (18,784)           -
 Net cash used in financing activities                                            (18,784)           (120,000)
 Net change in cash and equivalents                                               (86,500)           185,607
 Cash and equivalents at beginning of year                                        284,023            98,416
 Cash and equivalents at end of year                                              $197,523           $284,023
 Supplemental disclosure of non- cash activities
 Distribution-in-kind from HarbourVest Adelaide Feeder L.P. (Note                 $117,233
 10)
 Contribution-in-kind to HarbourVest Infrastructure Income Delaware Parallel      ($117,233)
 Partnership L.P. (Note 10)

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

 

 

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

At 31 January 2023

 In US Dollars
 US Funds                                                                      Unfunded Commitment                                     Amount                                              Distributions Received                         Fair Value           Fair Value as a % of Net Assets

                                                                               (in thousands)                                          Invested*                                           (in thousands)                                 (in thousands)

                                                                                                                                       (in thousands)
 HarbourVest Partners V-Partnership Fund L.P.                                                       2,220                                                46,709                                              45,924                       816                  0.0
 HarbourVest Partners VI-Direct Fund L.P.                                                           1,313                                                46,722                                              40,882                       260                  0.0
 HarbourVest Partners VI-Partnership Fund L.P.                                                      5,175                                              204,623                                             237,227                        503                  0.0
 HarbourVest Partners VII-Venture Partnership Fund L.P.(†)                                          2,319                                              135,290                                             204,163                        2,132                0.1
 HarbourVest Partners VII-Buyout Partnership Fund L.P. (†)                                          3,850                                                74,417                                            103,486                        187                  0.0
 HarbourVest Partners VIII-Cayman Mezzanine and Distressed Debt Fund L.P.      2,000                                                   48,202                                              61,472                                         2,466                0.1
 HarbourVest Partners VIII-Cayman Buyout Fund L.P.                                                  7,500                                                245,259                                           404,137                        21,860               0.6
 HarbourVest Partners VIII-Cayman Venture Fund L.P.                                                 1,000                                                49,192                                              88,651                       15,883               0.4
 HarbourVest Partners 2007 Cayman Direct Fund L.P.                                                  2,250                                              97,877                                              160,808                        4,946                0.1
 HarbourVest Partners IX-Cayman Buyout Fund L.P.                                                 10,473                                                60,808                                                84,303                       49,417               1.3
 HarbourVest Partners IX-Cayman Credit Opportunities Fund L.P.                                      1,875                                                10,674                                              11,337                       6,807                0.2
 HarbourVest Partners IX-Cayman Venture Fund L.P.                                                   3,500                              66,826                                                              124,117                        94,932               2.5
 HarbourVest Partners 2013 Cayman Direct Fund L.P.                                                  3,229                              97,131                                                              148,459                        51,604               1.3
 HarbourVest Partners Cayman Cleantech Fund II L.P.                                                    900                             19,156                                                                16,143                       18,984               0.5
 HarbourVest Partners X Buyout Feeder Fund L.P.                                                  42,840                                209,188                                                             154,487                        219,696              5.7
 HarbourVest Partners X Venture Feeder Fund L.P.                                                    6,290                              141,764                                                               91,859                       278,980              7.3
 HarbourVest Partners Mezzanine Income Fund L.P.                                                    8,155                              42,067                                                                62,671                       18,132               0.5
 HarbourVest Partners XI Buyout Feeder Fund L.P.                                               129,500                                 220,500                                                               70,642                       277,494              7.2
 HarbourVest Partners XI Micro Buyout Feeder Fund L.P.                                           19,955                                45,045                                                                18,490                       55,692               1.5
 HarbourVest Partners XI Venture Feeder Fund L.P.                                                33,250                                156,786                                                               38,522                       221,358              5.8
 HarbourVest Adelaide Feeder L.P.                                                                   6,000                                              144,000                             176,644                                        1,320                0.0
 HarbourVest Partners XII Buyout Feeder Fund L.P.                                              457,875                                                   37,125                            -                                              42,754               1.1
 HarbourVest Partners XII Micro Buyout Feeder Fund L.P.                                          78,400                                                     1,600                          -                                              1,102                0.0
 HarbourVest Partners XII Venture Feeder Fund L.P.                                             122,175                                                   12,825                            -                                              13,122               0.3
 HarbourVest Partners XII Venture AIF SCSp                                     102,350                                                 12,725                                              -                                              13,463               0.4
 Harbourvest Infrastructure Income Delaware Parallel Partnership               -                                                       117,233                                             18,373                                         119,638              3.1
 Total US Funds                                                                1,054,393                                               2,343,743                                           2,362,798                                      1,533,549            40.0

 

 International/Global Funds                                                       Unfunded Commitment                                               Amount                                               Distributions Received                                            Fair Value           Fair Value as a % of Net Assets

                                                                                  (in thousands)                                                    Invested*                                            (in thousands)                                                    (in thousands)

                                                                                                                                                    (in thousands)
 HarbourVest International Private Equity Partners III-Partnership Fund L.P.                           3,450                                                        147,729                                              148,440                                           395                  0.0
 HIPEP V-2007 Cayman European Buyout Companion Fund L.P.(§)                                            1,546                                                          63,880                                               84,434                                          665                  0.0
 Dover Street VII Cayman L.P.                                                                      4,250                                                              83,504                                             117,756                                           775                  0.0
 HIPEP VI-Cayman Partnership Fund L.P.(**)                                                             5,432                                                        117,845                                              163,073                                           73,196               1.9
 HIPEP VI-Cayman Asia Pacific Fund L.P.                                                                2,500                                                          47,687                                               55,840                                          26,154               0.7
 HIPEP VI-Cayman Emerging Markets Fund L.P.                                                                   -                                                       30,059                                               12,151                                          24,542               0.6
 Dover Street VIII Cayman L.P.                                                                      14,400                                                          165,724                                              255,442                                           21,677               0.6
 HVPE Charlotte Co-Investment L.P.                                                                            -                                                       93,894                                             161,228                                           1,979                0.1
 HarbourVest Global Annual Private Equity Fund L.P.                                                 11,300                                                            88,701                                             128,959                                           79,433               2.1
 HIPEP VII Partnership Feeder Fund L.P.                                                             14,688                                                          110,313                                                94,516                                          137,579              3.6
 HIPEP VII Asia Pacific Feeder Fund L.P.                                                               1,950                                                          28,050                                               18,269                                          34,051               0.9
 HIPEP VII Emerging Markets Feeder Fund L.P.                                                           2,600                                                          17,400                                                  7,385                                        21,462               0.6
 HIPEP VII Europe Feeder Fund L.P. .(††)                                                               9,411                                                          61,749                                               62,637                                          75,215               2.0
 HarbourVest Canada Parallel Growth Fund L.P.(‡‡)                                                      5,056                                                          19,224                                               12,427                                          30,321               0.8
 HarbourVest 2015 Global Fund L.P.                                                                     8,500                                                          91,517                                             106,979                                           81,507               2.1
 HarbourVest 2016 Global AIF L.P.                                                                   23,000                                                            77,026                                               76,508                                          77,869               2.0
 HarbourVest Partners Co-Investment IV AIF L.P.                                                        7,000                                                          93,000                                               85,330                                          86,145               2.2
 Dover Street IX Cayman L.P.                                                                        13,000                                                            87,000                                               88,613                                          63,361               1.7
 HarbourVest Real Assets III Feeder L.P.                                                               3,750                                                          46,250                                                  9,121                                        52,457               1.4
 HarbourVest 2017 Global AIF L.P.                                                                   27,500                                                            72,521                                               53,510                                          81,961               2.1
 HIPEP VIII Partnership AIF L.P.                                                                    49,725                                                          120,275                                                28,926                                          154,277              4.0
 Secondary Overflow Fund III L.P.                                                                   24,214                                                            68,876                                               66,304                                          68,707               1.8
 HarbourVest Asia Pacific VIII AIF Fund L.P.                                                           8,250                                                          41,756                                                  8,000                                        50,108               1.3
 HarbourVest 2018 Global Feeder Fund L.P.                                                           15,400                                                            54,600                                               18,850                                          75,203               2.0
 HarbourVest Partners Co-Investment V Feeder Fund L.P.                                              22,500                                                            77,548                                               15,940                                          123,382              3.2
 HarbourVest Real Assets IV Feeder L.P.                                                             22,000                                                            28,000                                                  4,167                                        35,278               0.9
 HarbourVest 2019 Global Feeder Fund L.P.                                                           36,000                                                            64,007                                               13,621                                          87,489               2.3
 HarbourVest Credit Opportunities Fund II L.P.                                                         2,500                                                          47,500                                                  2,710                                        50,745               1.3
 Dover Street X Feeder Fund L.P.                                                                    55,125                                                            94,893                                               32,646                                          115,696              3.0
 Secondary Overflow Fund IV L.P.                                                                    57,573                                                            71,833                                               24,776                                          78,578               2.1
 HIPEP IX Feeder Fund L.P.                                                                        388,000                                                             97,008                                                  7,095                                        120,489              3.1
 HarbourVest 2020 Global Feeder Fund L.P.                                                           16,000                                                            34,001                                                  3,513                                        39,054               1.0
 HarbourVest Partners Co-Investment VI Feeder Fund L.P.                                             93,750                                                            31,256                                                         -                                     31,562               0.8
 HarbourVest Asia Pacific 5 Feeder Fund L.P.                                                      291,000                                                                9,000                                                       -                                     7,756                0.2
 HarbourVest 2021 Global Feeder Fund L.P.                                                         111,350                                                             58,701                                                     987                                       63,411               1.7
 HarbourVest 2022 Global Feeder Fund L.P.                                         97,000                                                            3,000                                                -                                                                 4,323                0.1
 Dover Street XI Feeder Fund L.P.                                                 225,000                                                           -                                                    -                                                                 5,979                0.2
 HarbourVest Credit Opportunities III Feeder Fund L.P.                            75,000                                                            -                                                    -                                                                 -                    -
 Total International/Global Funds                                                 1,749,720                                                         2,445,329                                            1,970,152                                                         2,082,782            54.3
 Total Investments                                                                2,804,113                                                         4,789,072                                            4,332,950                                                         3,616,330            94.3

 

*           Includes purchase of limited partner interests for shares
and cash at the time of HVPE's IPO.

†          Includes ownership interests in HarbourVest Partners
VII-Cayman Partnership entities.

§          Fund denominated in euros. Commitment amount is
€47,450,000.

**         Fund denominated in euros. Commitment amount is
€100,000,000.

††        Fund denominated in euros. Commitment amount is
€63,000,000.

‡‡        Fund denominated in Canadian dollars. Commitment amount
is C$32,000,000.

 

As of 31 January 2023, the cost basis of partnership investments is
$2,304,772,000.

 

Totals and subtotals may not recalculate due to rounding.

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

 

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

At 31 January 2022

 

 In US Dollars
 US Funds                                                                      Unfunded Commitment      Amount                Distributions Received      Fair Value           Fair Value

as a % of
                                                                               (in thousands)           Invested*             (in thousands)              (in thousands)
Net Assets

                                                                                                        (in thousands)
 HarbourVest Partners V-Partnership Fund L.P.                                  2,220                    46,709                45,924                      915                  0.0
 HarbourVest Partners VI-Direct Fund L.P.                                      1,313                    46,722                38,405                      3,705                0.1
 HarbourVest Partners VI-Partnership Fund L.P.                                 5,175                    204,623               237,227                     786                  0.0
 HarbourVest Partners VII-Venture Partnership Fund L.P. (†)                    2,319                    135,290               203,839                     3,673                0.1
 HarbourVest Partners VII-Buyout Partnership Fund L.P.(†)                      3,850                    74,417                103,486                     184                  0.0
 HarbourVest Partners VIII-Cayman Mezzanine and Distressed Debt Fund L.P.      2,000                    48,202                60,766                      4,080                0.1
 HarbourVest Partners VIII-Cayman Buyout Fund L.P.                             7,500                    245,259               392,851                     33,469               0.9
 HarbourVest Partners VIII-Cayman Venture Fund L.P.                            1,000                    49,192                84,940                      24,875               0.6
 HarbourVest Partners 2007 Cayman Direct Fund L.P.                             2,250                    97,877                160,808                     5,257                0.1
 HarbourVest Partners IX-Cayman Buyout Fund L.P.                               10,473                   60,808                73,709                      61,575               1.6
 HarbourVest Partners IX-Cayman Credit Opportunities Fund L.P.                 2,500                    10,049                9,245                       7,690                0.2
 HarbourVest Partners IX-Cayman Venture Fund L.P.                              3,500                    66,826                114,259                     130,115              3.3
 HarbourVest Partners 2013 Cayman Direct Fund L.P.                             3,229                    97,131                139,036                     65,939               1.7
 HarbourVest Partners Cayman Cleantech Fund II L.P.                            2,000                    18,056                11,083                      26,972               0.7
 HarbourVest Partners X Buyout Feeder Fund L.P.                                65,520                   186,508               118,114                     224,411              5.7
 HarbourVest Partners X Venture Feeder Fund L.P.                               10,730                   137,324               76,438                      338,753              8.6
 HarbourVest Partners Mezzanine Income Fund L.P.                               8,155                    42,067                61,619                      15,931               0.4
 HarbourVest Partners XI Buyout Feeder Fund L.P.                               203,000                  147,000               37,599                      213,870              5.5
 HarbourVest Partners XI Micro Buyout Feeder Fund L.P.                         38,025                   26,975                8,556                       38,292               1.0
 HarbourVest Partners XI Venture Feeder Fund L.P.                              71,250                   118,786               20,538                      211,899              5.4
 HarbourVest Adelaide Feeder L.P.                                              6,000                    144,000               5,339                       174,714              4.5
 HarbourVest Partners XII Buyout Feeder Fund L.P.                              245,000                  -                     -                           984                  0.0
 HarbourVest Partners XII Micro Buyout Feeder Fund L.P.                        45,000                   -                     -                           4                    0.0
 HarbourVest Partners XII Venture Feeder Fund L.P.                             135,000                  -                     -                           890                  0.0
 Total US Funds                                                                877,008                  2,003,821             2,003,781                   1,588,985            40.5

 

 

 International/Global Funds                                                       Unfunded Commitment      Amount               Distributions Received      Fair Value           Fair Value as a % of Net Assets

                                                                                  (in thousands)           Invested*            (in thousands)              (in thousands)

                                                                                                           (in thousands)
 HarbourVest International Private Equity Partners III-Partnership Fund L.P.      3,450                    147,729              148,440                     457                  0.0
 HarbourVest International Private Equity Partners IV-Direct Fund L.P.            -                        61,452               53,436                      1,635                0.0
 HIPEP V-2007 Cayman European Buyout Companion Fund L.P.(§)                       1,599                    63,880               84,434                      715                  0.0
 Dover Street VII Cayman L.P.                                                     4,250                    95,586               132,298                     3,195                0.1
 HIPEP VI-Cayman Partnership Fund L.P.(**)                                        5,618                    117,845              144,955                     100,544              2.6
 HIPEP VI-Cayman Asia Pacific Fund L.P.                                           2,500                    47,687               50,367                      34,028               0.9
 HIPEP VI-Cayman Emerging Markets Fund L.P.                                       -                        30,059               10,713                      33,221               0.8
 HVPE Avalon Co-Investment L.P.                                                   -                        85,135               124,574                     -                    -
 Dover Street VIII Cayman L.P.                                                    14,400                   165,724              244,188                     34,995               0.9
 HVPE Charlotte Co-Investment L.P.                                                -                        93,894               154,205                     8,485                0.2
 HarbourVest Global Annual Private Equity Fund L.P.                               11,300                   88,701               107,487                     110,988              2.8
 HIPEP VII Partnership Feeder Fund L.P.                                           19,063                   105,938              65,503                      171,243              4.4
 HIPEP VII Asia Pacific Feeder Fund L.P.                                          2,100                    27,900               13,111                      40,662               1.0
 HIPEP VII Emerging Markets Feeder Fund L.P.                                      3,000                    17,000               6,245                       23,625               0.6
 HIPEP VII Europe Feeder Fund L.P.(††)                                            12,034                   59,661               43,554                      96,083               2.4
 HarbourVest Canada Parallel Growth Fund L.P.(‡‡)                                 6,650                    17,957               10,765                      34,991               0.9
 HarbourVest 2015 Global Fund L.P.                                                15,000                   85,017               75,574                      112,362              2.9
 HarbourVest 2016 Global AIF L.P.                                                 24,000                   76,026               51,143                      104,956              2.7
 HarbourVest Partners Co-Investment IV AIF L.P.                                   7,000                    93,000               82,102                      108,069              2.8
 Dover Street IX Cayman L.P.                                                      17,000                   83,000               71,318                      78,623               2.0
 HarbourVest Real Assets III Feeder L.P.                                          3,750                    46,250               6,642                       47,889               1.2
 HarbourVest 2017 Global AIF L.P.                                                 28,500                   71,521               39,881                      98,300               2.5
 HIPEP VIII Partnership AIF L.P.                                                  85,425                   84,575               16,964                      128,778              3.3
 Secondary Overflow Fund III L.P.                                                 27,025                   67,735               57,423                      77,769               2.0
 HarbourVest Asia Pacific VIII AIF Fund L.P.                                      13,750                   36,256               4,275                       46,613               1.2
 HarbourVest 2018 Global Feeder Fund L.P.                                         24,500                   45,500               8,442                       71,101               1.8
 HarbourVest Partners Co-Investment V Feeder Fund L.P.                            22,500                   77,548               5,192                       125,936              3.2
 HarbourVest Real Assets IV Feeder L.P.                                           38,250                   11,750               463                         16,204               0.4
 HarbourVest 2019 Global Feeder Fund L.P.                                         49,000                   51,007               7,717                       78,060               2.0
 HarbourVest Credit Opportunities Fund II L.P.                                    28,500                   21,500               1,134                       23,786               0.6
 Dover Street X Feeder Fund L.P.                                                  87,000                   63,018               17,592                      89,841               2.3
 Secondary Overflow Fund IV L.P.                                                  52,792                   52,055               16,700                      63,675               1.6
 HIPEP IX Feeder Fund L.P.                                                        470,450                  14,558               -                           37,440               1.0
 HarbourVest 2020 Global Feeder Fund L.P.                                         30,250                   19,751               1,342                       26,175               0.7
 HarbourVest Partners Co-Investment VI Feeder Fund L.P.                           100,000                  -                    -                           107                  0.0
 HarbourVest Asia Pacific 5 Feeder Fund L.P.                                      210,000                  -                    -                           (1,166)              (0.0)
 HarbourVest 2021 Global Feeder Fund L.P.                                         157,250                  12,801               -                           14,990               0.4
 Total International/Global Funds                                                 1,577,906                2,239,018            1,858,181                   2,044,376            52.1
 Total Investments                                                                $2,454,914               $4,242,839           $3,861,962                  $3,633,361           92.6

 

*           Includes purchase of limited partner interests for shares
and cash at the time of HVPE's IPO.

†          Includes ownership interests in HarbourVest Partners
VII-Cayman Partnership entities.

§          Fund denominated in euros. Commitment amount is
€47,450,000.

**         Fund denominated in euros. Commitment amount is
€100,000,000.

††        Fund denominated in euros. Commitment amount is
€63,000,000.

‡‡        Fund denominated in Canadian dollars. Commitment amount
is C$32,000,000.

 

As of 31 January 2022, the cost basis of partnership investments is
$2,030,502,000.

 

Totals and subtotals may not recalculate due to rounding.

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

 

 

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

 

Note 1 Company Organisation and Investment Objective

HarbourVest Global Private Equity Limited (the "Company" or "HVPE") is a
closed-ended investment company registered with the Registrar of Companies in
Guernsey under The Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008. The Company's registered
office is BNP Paribas House, St Julian's Avenue, St Peter Port, Guernsey GY1
1WA.

 

The Company was incorporated and registered in Guernsey on 18 October 2007.
HVPE is designed to offer shareholders long-term capital appreciation by
investing in a diversified portfolio of private equity investments. The
Company invests in private equity through private equity funds and may make
co-investments or other opportunistic investments. The Company is managed by
HarbourVest Advisers L.P. (the "Investment Manager"), an affiliate of
HarbourVest Partners, LLC ("HarbourVest"), a private equity fund-of-funds
manager. The Company is intended to invest in and alongside existing and
newly-formed HarbourVest funds. HarbourVest is a global private equity fund of
funds manager and typically invests capital in primary partnerships, secondary
investments, and direct investments across vintage years, geographies,
industries, and strategies.

 

Operations of the Company commenced on 6 December 2007, following the initial
global offering of the Class A Ordinary Shares.

 

Share Capital

At 31 January 2023, the Company's 79,104,622 shares continued to be listed on
the London Stock Exchange under the symbol "HVPE". The shares are entitled to
the income and increases and decreases in the net asset value ("NAV") of the
Company, and to any dividends declared and paid, and have full voting rights.
Dividends may be declared by the Board of Directors and paid from available
assets subject to the Directors being satisfied that the Company will,
immediately after payment of the dividend, satisfy the statutory solvency test
prescribed by The Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008.  The company repurchased
757,864 shares (0.9% of shares outstanding at time of purchase) during the
year ended 31 January 2023.

 

Dividends would be paid to shareholders pro rata to their shareholdings.

 

The shareholders must approve any amendment to the Memorandum and Articles of
Incorporation. The approval of 75% of the shares is required in respect of any
changes that are administrative in nature, any material change from the
investment strategy and/or investment objective of the Company, or any
material change to the terms of the Investment Management Agreement.

 

There is no minimum statutory capital requirement under Guernsey law.

 

 

 

 

Investment Manager, Company Secretary, and Administrator

The Directors have delegated certain day-to-day operations of the Company to
the Investment Manager and the Company Secretary and Administrator, under
advice of the Directors, pursuant to service agreements with those parties,
within the context of the strategy set by the Board. The Investment Manager is
responsible for, among other things, selecting, acquiring, and disposing of
the Company's investments, carrying out financing, cash management, and risk
management activities, providing investment advisory services, including with
respect to HVPE's investment policies and procedures, and arranging for
personnel and support staff of the Investment Manager to assist in the
administrative and executive functions of the Company.

 

Directors

The Directors are responsible for the determination of the investment policy
of the Company on the advice of the Investment Manager and have overall
responsibility for the Company's activities. This includes the periodic review
of the Investment Manager's compliance with the Company's investment policies
and procedures, and the approval of certain investments. A majority of
Directors must be independent Directors and not affiliated with HarbourVest or
any affiliate of HarbourVest.

 

Note 2 Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

The following accounting policies have been applied consistently in dealing
with items which are considered material in relation to the Company's
consolidated financial statements ("Financial Statements").

 

Basis of Preparation

The Company maintains an overcommitment strategy in an attempt to remain fully
invested over time (refer to Note 5 on page 121 for further details on
unfunded commitments). HarbourVest prepares forecasts and predictions to
provide assurance that the Company has sufficient resources to meet its
ongoing requirements.

 

As part of this process the Investment Manager has created four revised model
scenarios with varying degrees of decline in investment value and investment
distributions, with the worst being an Extreme Downside scenario representing
an impact to the portfolio that is worse than that expected during the GFC.
All four models verified that the Company has enough resources to meet the
Company's upcoming financial obligations. However, in all circumstances HVPE
can take steps to limit or mitigate the impact on the Consolidated Statements
of Assets and Liabilities, namely drawing on the credit facility, pausing new
commitments, raising additional credit or capital, and selling assets to
increase liquidity and reduce outstanding commitments. As a result, the
Company's Financial Statements have been prepared on a going concern basis.

 

Basis of Presentation

The Financial Statements include the accounts of HarbourVest Global Private
Equity Limited and its five wholly owned subsidiaries: HVGPE - Domestic A
L.P., HVGPE - Domestic B L.P., HVGPE - Domestic C L.P., HVGPE - International
A L.P., and HVGPE - International B L.P. (together "the undertakings"). Each
of the subsidiaries is a Cayman Islands limited partnership formed to
facilitate the purchase of certain investments. All intercompany accounts and
transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

 

Method of Accounting

The Financial Statements are prepared in conformity with US generally accepted
accounting principles ("US GAAP"), The Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008, and the
Principal Documents. Under applicable rules of Guernsey law implementing the
EU Transparency Directive, the Company is allowed to prepare its financial
statements in accordance with US GAAP instead of International Financial
Reporting Standards ("IFRS").

 

The Company is an investment company following the accounting and reporting
guidance of the Financial Accounting Standards Boards ("FASB") Accounting
Standards Codification ("ASC") Topic 946 - Financial Services - Investment
Companies.

 

Estimates

The preparation of the Financial Statements in conformity with US GAAP
requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts
reported in the Financial Statements and accompanying notes. Actual results
could differ from those estimates.

 

Investments

Investments are stated at fair value in accordance with the Company's
investment valuation policy. The Board has concluded specifically that climate
change, including physical and transition risks, does not have a material
impact on the recognition and separate measurement considerations of the
assets and liabilities of the Group in the financial statements as at 31
January 2023, but recognises that climate change may have an effect on the
investments held in the underlying partnerships. The inputs used to determine
fair value include financial statements provided by the investment
partnerships which typically include fair market value capital account
balances. In reviewing the underlying financial statements and capital account
balances, the Company considers compliance with ASC Topic 820 - Fair Value
Measurement, the currency in which the investment is denominated, and other
information deemed appropriate.

 

The fair value of the Company's investments is primarily based on the most
recently reported NAV provided by the underlying Investment Manager as a
practical expedient under ASC Topic 820. This fair value is then adjusted for
known investment operating expenses and subsequent transactions, including
investments, realisations, changes in foreign currency exchange rates, and
changes in value of private and public securities. This valuation does not
necessarily reflect amounts that might ultimately be realised from the
investment and the difference can be material.

 

Securities for which a public market does exist are valued by the Company at
quoted market prices at the year-end date. Generally, the partnership
investments have a defined term and cannot be transferred without the consent
of the GP of the limited partnership in which the investment has been made.

 

Foreign Currency Transactions

The currency in which the Company operates is US dollars, which is also the
presentation currency. Transactions denominated in foreign currencies are
recorded in the local currency at the exchange rate in effect at the
transaction dates. Foreign currency investments, investment commitments, cash
and equivalents, and other assets and liabilities are translated at the rates
in effect at the year-end date. Foreign currency translation gains and losses
are included in realised and unrealised gains (losses) on investments as
incurred. The Company does not segregate that portion of realised or
unrealised gains and losses attributable to foreign currency translation on
investments.

 

Cash and Equivalents

The Company considers all highly liquid investments with an original maturity
of three months or less to be cash equivalents. The carrying amount included
in the Consolidated Statements of Assets and Liabilities for cash and
equivalents approximates their fair value. The Company maintains bank accounts
denominated in US dollars, in euros, and in pounds sterling. The Company may
invest excess cash balances in highly liquid instruments such as certificates
of deposit, sovereign debt obligations of certain countries, and money market
funds that are highly rated by the credit rating agencies.

 

The associated credit risk of the cash and equivalents is monitored by the
Board and the Investment Manager on a regular basis. The Board has authorised
the Investment Manager to manage the cash balances on a daily basis according
to the terms set out in the treasury policies created by the Board.

 

Investment Income

Investment income includes interest from cash and equivalents, dividends, and
interest received from certain investments due to subsequent fund closings.
Dividends are recorded when they are declared, and interest is recorded when
earned.

 

Operating Expenses

Operating expenses include amounts directly incurred by the Company as part of
its operations, and do not include amounts incurred from the operations of the
investment entities.

 

Net Realised Gains and Losses on Investments

For investments in private equity funds, the Company records its share of
realised gains and losses as reported by the Investment Manager including
fund-level related expenses and management fees, and is net of any carry
allocation. Realised gains and losses are calculated as the difference between
proceeds received and the related cost of the investment.

 

Net Change in Unrealised Appreciation and Depreciation on Investments

For investments in private equity funds, the Company records its share of
change in unrealised gains and losses as reported by the Investment Manager as
an increase or decrease in unrealised appreciation or depreciation of
investments and is net of any carry allocation. When an investment is
realised, the related unrealised appreciation or depreciation is recognised as
realised.

 

Income Taxes

The Company is registered in Guernsey as a tax exempt company. The States of
Guernsey Income Tax Authority has granted the Company exemption from Guernsey
income tax under the provision of the Income Tax (Exempt Bodies) (Guernsey)
Ordinance 1989 and the Company will be charged an annual exemption fee of
£1,200 included as other expenses in the Consolidated Statements of
Operations. Income may be subject to withholding taxes imposed by the US or
other countries, which will impact the Company's effective tax rate.

 

Investments made in entities that generate US source income may subject the
Company to certain US federal and state income tax consequences. A US
withholding tax at the rate of 30% may be applied on the distributive share of
any US source dividends and interest (subject to certain exemptions) and
certain other income that is received directly or through one or more entities
treated as either partnerships or disregarded entities for US federal income
tax purposes. Furthermore, investments made in entities that generate income
that is effectively connected with a US trade or business may also subject the
Company to certain US federal and state income tax consequences. The US
requires withholding on effectively connected income for corporate partners at
the rate of 21%. In addition, the Company may also be subject to a branch
profits tax which can be imposed at a rate of up to 30% of any after-tax,
effectively connected income associated with a US trade or business. However,
no amounts have been accrued.

 

The Company accounts for income taxes under the provisions of ASC Topic 740 -
Income Taxes. This standard establishes consistent thresholds as it relates to
accounting for income taxes. It defines the threshold for recognising the
benefits of tax-return positions in the financial statements as
"more-likely-than-not" to be sustained by the taxing authority and requires
measurement of a tax position meeting the more-likely-than-not criterion,
based on the largest benefit that is more than 50% likely to be realised. For
the year ended 31 January 2023, the Investment Manager has analysed the
Company's inventory of tax positions taken with respect to all applicable
income tax issues for all open tax years (in each respective jurisdiction),
and has concluded that no provision for income tax is required in the
Company's Financial Statements.

 

Shareholders in certain jurisdictions may have individual tax consequences
from ownership of the Company's shares. The Company has not included the
impact of these tax consequences on the shareholders in these Financial
Statements.

 

Market and Other Risk Factors

The Company's investments are subject to various risk factors including market
price, credit, interest rate, liquidity, and currency risk. Investments are
based primarily in the US, Europe, and Asia Pacific, and thus have
concentrations in such regions. The Company's investments are also subject to
the risks associated with investing in leveraged buyout and venture capital
transactions that are illiquid and non-publicly traded. Such investments are
inherently more sensitive to declines in revenues and to increases in expenses
that may occur due to general downward swings in the world economy or other
risk factors including increasingly intense competition, rapid changes in
technology, changes in federal, state and foreign regulations, and limited
capital investments.

 

The Company is subject to credit and liquidity risk to the extent any
financial institution with which it conducts business is unable to fulfil
contracted obligations on its behalf. Management monitors the financial
condition of those financial institutions and does not anticipate any losses
from these counterparties.

 

Note 3 Material Agreements and Related Fees

 

Administrative Agreement

The Company has retained BNP Paribas S.A., Guernsey Branch ("BNP") as Company
Secretary and Administrator. Fees for these services are paid as invoiced by
BNP and include an administration fee of £50,000 per annum, a secretarial fee
of £60,000 per annum, a compliance services fee of £15,000 per annum, ad-hoc
service fees, and reimbursable expenses. During the years ended 31 January
2023 and 2022, fees of $157,000 and $184,000, respectively, were incurred to
BNP and are included as other expenses in the Consolidated Statements of
Operations.

 

Registrar

The Company has retained Link Asset Services (formerly "Capita") as share
registrar. Fees for this service include a base fee of £15,500, plus other
miscellaneous expenses. During the years ended 31 January 2023 and 2022,
registrar fees of $19,000 and $25,000, respectively, were incurred and are
included as other expenses in the Consolidated Statements of Operations.

 

Independent Auditor's Fees

For the years ended 31 January 2023 and 2022, auditor fees of $363,000 and
$340,000 were accrued, respectively, and are included in professional fees in
the Consolidated Statements of Operations. The 31 January 2023 figure includes
$269,000 relating to the 31 January 2023 annual audit fee and a credit of
$17,000 relating to the prior financial year's audit fee. The 31 January 2022
figure includes $257,000 relating to the 31 January 2022 annual audit fee and
$3,000 relating to the prior financial year's audit fee. In addition, the 31
January 2023 and 2022 figures include fees of $111,000 and $80,000,
respectively, for audit-related services due to the Auditor, Ernst & Young
LLP, conducting a review of the Interim Financial Statements for each period
end.

 

Investment Management Agreement

The Company has retained HarbourVest Advisers L.P. as the Investment Manager.
The Investment Manager is reimbursed for costs and expenses incurred on behalf
of the Company in connection with the management and operation of the Company.
During the years ended 31 January 2023 and 2022, reimbursements for services
provided by the Investment Manager were $2,021,000 and $2,612,000,
respectively. As of 1 February 2022, the Investment Manager is reimbursed on a
fixed fee basis rather than an hourly basis. The Investment Manager does not
directly charge HVPE management fees or performance fees other than with
respect to parallel investments. However, as an investor in the HarbourVest
funds, HVPE is charged the same management fees and is subject to the same
performance allocations as other investors in such HarbourVest funds.

 

During the years ended 31 January 2023 and 2022, HVPE had one parallel
investment: HarbourVest Structured Solutions II, L.P. (via HVPE Charlotte
Co-Investment L.P.). Management fees paid for the parallel investment made by
the Company were consistent with the fees charged by the funds alongside which
the parallel investment was made during the years ended 31 January 2023 and
2022.

 

Management fees included in the Consolidated Statements of Operations are
shown in the table below:

 

                        2023               2022

                        (in thousands)     (in thousands)
 HVPE Charlotte         $384               $757

Co-Investment L.P.

 

For the years ended 31 January 2023 and 2022, management fees on the HVPE
Charlotte Co-Investment L.P. investment were calculated based on a weighted
average effective annual rate of 0.44% and 0.89% respectively, on capital
originally committed (0.44% and 0.87% respectively, on committed capital net
of management fee offsets) to the parallel investment.

 

Note 4 Investments

In accordance with the authoritative guidance on fair value measurements and
disclosures under generally accepted accounting principles in the US, the
Company discloses the fair value of its investments in a hierarchy that
prioritises the inputs to valuation techniques used to measure the fair value.
The hierarchy gives the highest priority to unadjusted quoted prices in active
markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1 measurements) and the
lowest priority to unobservable inputs (Level 3 measurements). The guidance
establishes three levels of the fair value hierarchy as follows:

·    Level 1 - Inputs that reflect unadjusted quoted prices in active
markets for identical assets or liabilities that the Company has the ability
to access at the measurement date;

·    Level 2 - Inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the
asset or liability either directly or indirectly, including inputs in markets
that are not considered to be active; and

·    Level 3 - Inputs that are unobservable.

 

Level 3 investments include limited partnership interests in HarbourVest funds
which report under US generally accepted accounting principles. Inputs used to
determine fair value are primarily based on the most recently reported NAV
provided by the underlying investment manager as a practical expedient under
ASC Topic 820. The fair value is then adjusted for known investment operating
expenses and subsequent transactions, including investments, realisations,
changes in foreign currency exchange rates, and changes in value of private
and public securities.

 

Income derived from investments in HarbourVest funds is recorded using the
equity pick-up method. Under the equity pick-up-method of accounting, the
Company's proportionate share of the net income (loss) and net realised gains
(losses), as reported by the HarbourVest funds, is reflected in the
Consolidated Statements of Operations as net realised gain (loss) on
investments. The Company's proportionate share of the aggregate increase or
decrease in unrealised appreciation or depreciation, as reported by the
HarbourVest funds, is reflected in the Consolidated Statements of Operations
as net change in unrealised appreciation on investments.

 

Because of the inherent uncertainty of these valuations, the estimated fair
value may differ significantly from the value that would have been used had a
ready market for this security existed, and the difference could be material.

 

During the years ended 31 January 2023 and 2022, the Company made
contributions of $704,903,000 and $514,938,000, respectively, to Level 3
investments and received distributions of $649,012,000 and $834,552,000,
respectively, from Level 3 investments. Please refer to Note 10 for further
detail on the non-cash activity during the year. As of 31 January 2023,
$3,616,330,000 of the Company's investments are classified as Level 3. As of
31 January 2022, $3,633,361,000 of the Company's investments were classified
as Level 3.

 

Note 5 Commitments

As of 31 January 2023, the Company had unfunded investment commitments to
other limited partnerships of $2,804,113,000 which are payable upon notice by
the partnerships to which the commitments have been made. As of 31 January
2022, the Company had unfunded investment commitments to other limited
partnerships of $2,454,914,000.

 

The Investment Manager is not entitled to any direct remuneration (save
expenses incurred in the performance of its duties) from the Company, instead
deriving its fees from the management fees and carried interest payable by the
Company on its investments in underlying HarbourVest Funds. The Investment
Management Agreement (the "IMA"), which was amended and restated on 30 July
2019, and again on 31 January 2023, may be terminated by either party by
giving 12 months' notice. In the event of termination within ten years and
three months of the date of the listing on the Main Market on 9 September
2015, the Company would be required to pay a contribution, which would have
been $2.3 million at 31 January 2023 and $3.1 million at 31 January 2022, as
reimbursement of the Investment Manager's remaining unamortised IPO costs. In
addition, the Company would be required to pay a fee equal to the aggregate of
the management fees for the underlying investments payable over the course of
the 12-month period preceding the effective date of such termination to the
Investment Manager.

 

Note 6 Debt Facility

As of 31 January 2023, the Company had an agreement with Mitsubishi UFJ Trust
and Banking Corporation, New York Branch ("MUFG") Credit Suisse AG, London
Branch ("Credit Suisse"), and The Guardians of New Zealand Superannuation as
manager and administrator of the New Zealand Superannuation Fund ("New Zealand
Super") for the provision of a multi-currency revolving credit facility (the
"Facility") with a termination date no earlier than January 2026, subject to
usual covenants. The MUFG commitment was $300 million. On 20 December 2021,
the Credit Suisse commitment was increased from $300 million to $400 million.
On 15 August 2022 the commitment was further increased by $100 million through
New Zealand Super as lender.

 

Amounts borrowed against the Facility accrue interest at an aggregate rate of
Term SOFR/SONIA/EURIBOR, a margin, and, under certain circumstances, a
mandatory minimum cost. The Facility is secured by the private equity
investments and cash and equivalents of the Company, as defined in the
agreement. Availability of funds under the Facility and interim repayments of
amounts borrowed are subject to certain loan-to-value ratios (which factor in
borrowing on the Facility and fund-level borrowing) and portfolio diversity
tests applied to the Investment Portfolio of the Company. At 31 January 2023
and 31 January 2022, there was no debt outstanding against the Facility. For
the years ended 31 January 2023 and 2022, interest of $0 and $1,885,000,
respectively, was incurred and is included as other expenses in the
Consolidated Statements of Operations. Included in other assets at 31 January
2023 and 31 January 2022 are deferred financing costs of $6,950,000 and
$7,357,000, respectively, related to refinancing the Facility. The deferred
financing costs are amortised on the terms of the Facility. The Company is
required to pay a non-utilisation fee of 100 basis points per annum for the
Credit Suisse commitment and 90 basis points per annum for the MUFG
commitment. For the years ended 31 January 2023 and 2022, $7,078,000 and
$5,346,000, respectively, in non-utilisation fees have been incurred.

 

 

Note 7 Financial Highlights

For the Years Ended 31 January 2023 and 2022

 In US Dollars                                       2023       2022
 Shares
 Per share operating performance:
 Net asset value, beginning of period                $49.11     $35.97
 Net realised and unrealised (losses) gains          (0.70)     13.32
 Net investment loss                                 (0.13)     (0.18)
 Total from investment operations                    (0.83)     13.14
 Net increase from repurchase of Class A shares      0.24       -
 Net asset value, end of period                      $48.52     $49.11
 Market value, end of period                         $27.10*    $37.30*
 Total return at net asset value                     (1.2)%     36.5%
 Total return at market value                        (27.3)%    46.0%
 Ratios to average net assets
 Expenses(†)                                         0.37%      0.42%
 Net investment loss                                 (0.28)%    (0.42)%

 

*           Represents the US dollar-denominated share price.

†          Does not include operating expenses of underlying
investments.

 

 

Note 8 Publication and Calculation of Net Asset Value

The net asset value of the Company is equal to the value of its total assets
less its total liabilities. The NAV per share is calculated by dividing the
net asset value by the number of shares in issue on that day. The Company
publishes the NAV per share of the shares as calculated, monthly in arrears,
at each month end, generally within 20 days.

 

 

Note 9 Related Party Transactions

Other amounts payable to HarbourVest Advisers L.P. of $138,000 and $36,000
represent expenses of the Company incurred in the ordinary course of business,
which have been paid by and are reimbursable to HarbourVest Advisers L.P. at
31 January 2023 and 2022, respectively.

 

Other income relates to income received from a revenue sharing agreement
entered into with the HarbourVest Infrastructure Income Delaware Parallel
Partnership ("HIIP") investment. Through such agreement, the Company is
entitled to 10% of the management fee revenue received by HarbourVest from
HIIP, provided that HarbourVest remains as HIIP's exclusive investment
manager.

 

Board-related expenses, primarily compensation, of $526,000 and $498,000 were
incurred during the years ended 31 January 2023 and 2022, respectively.

 

Note 10 Investment Transaction

On 1 July  2022, HarbourVest Infrastructure Income Delaware Parallel
Partnership L.P. and its related entities ("HIIP") exercised their contractual
right to purchase the portfolio assets of HarbourVest Adelaide L.P.
("Adelaide") in accordance with the Adelaide limited partnership agreement. As
consideration for the portfolio assets, partners of Adelaide and its feeder
funds could elect between the continuation option (which would result in them
receiving ordinary HIIP units) and the liquidity option (which would result in
them receiving partial cash consideration with the remainder of the
consideration in the form of HIIP liquidity units).

 

The Company elected to participate 50% in the continuation option and 50% in
the liquidity option. As such, as of 1 July 2022 the Company received a cash
distribution of $52,903,685, a distribution in kind of $32,164,540 worth of
HIIP liquidity units, and a distribution in kind of $85,068,225 worth of
ordinary HIIP units.

 

Note 11 Indemnifications

 

General Indemnifications

In the normal course of business, the Company may enter into contracts that
contain a variety of representations and warranties and which provide for
general indemnifications. The Company's maximum exposure under these
arrangements is unknown, as this would involve future claims that may be made
against the Company that have not yet occurred. Based on the prior experience
of the Investment Manager, the Company expects the risk of loss under these
indemnifications to be remote.

 

Investment Manager Indemnifications

Consistent with standard business practices in the normal course of business,
the Company has provided general indemnifications to the Investment Manager,
any affiliate of the Investment Manager and any person acting on behalf of the
Investment Manager or such affiliate when they act in good faith, in the best
interest of the Company. The Company is unable to develop an estimate of the
maximum potential amount of future payments that could potentially result from
any hypothetical future claim but expects the risk of having to make any
payments under these general business indemnifications to be remote.

 

 

Directors' and Officers' Indemnifications

The Company's Articles of Incorporation provide that the Directors, managers
or other officers of the Company shall be fully indemnified by the Company
from and against all actions, expenses, and liabilities which they may incur
by reason of any contract entered into or any act in or about the execution of
their offices, except such (if any) as they shall incur by or through their
own negligence, default, breach of duty, or breach of trust, respectively.

 

Note 12 Subsequent Events

In the preparation of the Financial Statements, the Company has evaluated the
effects, if any, of events occurring after 31 January 2023 to 25 May 2023, the
date that the Financial Statements were signed.

 

On 10 March 2023, the Company committed an additional $25 million to Dover
Street XI Feeder Fund L.P.

 

Post-period end in March 2023, HVPE initiated a draw of $200 million on the
Facility. The cash was received on 18 April 2023.

 

There were no other events or material transactions subsequent to 31 January
2023 that required recognition or disclosure in the Consolidated Financial
Statements.

 

 

Disclosures

 

Investments

The companies represented within this report are provided for illustrative
purposes only, as example portfolio holdings. There are over 14,000 individual
companies in the HVPE portfolio, with no one company comprising more than 2.4%
of the entire portfolio.

 

The deal summaries, General Partners (managers), and/or companies shown within
the report are intended for illustrative purposes only. While they may
represent an actual investment or relationship in the HVPE portfolio, there is
no guarantee they will remain in the portfolio in the future.

 

Past performance is no guarantee of future returns.

 

Forward-looking Statements

This report contains certain forward-looking statements. Forward-looking
statements relate to expectations, beliefs, projections, future plans and
strategies, anticipated events or trends, and similar expressions concerning
matters that are not historical facts. In some cases, forward-looking
statements can be identified by terms such as "anticipate", "believe",
"could", "estimate", "expect", "intend", "may", "plan", "potential", "should",
"will", and "would", or the negative of those terms, or other comparable
terminology. The forward-looking statements are based on the Investment
Manager's and/or the Directors' beliefs, assumptions, and expectations of
future performance and market developments, taking into account all
information currently available. These beliefs, assumptions, and expectations
can change as a result of many possible events or factors, not all of which
are known or are within the Investment Manager's and/or the Directors'
control. If a change occurs, the Company's business, financial condition,
liquidity, and results of operations may vary materially from those expressed
in forward-looking statements.

 

By their nature, forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks
and uncertainties because they relate to events, and depend on circumstances,
that may or may not occur in the future. Forward-looking statements are not
guarantees of future performance. Any forward-looking statements are only made
as at the date of this document, and the Investment Manager and/or the
Directors neither intends nor assumes any obligation to update forward-looking
statements set forth in this document whether as a result of new information,
future events, or otherwise, except as required by law or other applicable
regulation.

 

In light of these risks, uncertainties, and assumptions, the events described
by any such forward-looking statements might not occur. The Investment Manager
and/or the Directors qualifies any and all of its forward-looking statements
by these cautionary factors.

 

Please keep this cautionary note in mind while reading this report.

 

Some of the factors that could cause actual results to vary from those
expressed in forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to:

·    the factors described in this report;

·    the rate at which HVPE deploys its capital in investments and
achieves expected rates of return;

·    HarbourVest's ability to execute its investment strategy, including
through the identification of a sufficient number of appropriate investments;

·    the ability of third-party managers of funds in which the HarbourVest
funds are invested and of funds in which the Company may invest through
parallel investments to execute their own strategies and achieve intended
returns;

·    the continuation of the Investment Manager as manager of the
Company's investments, the continued affiliation with HarbourVest of its key
investment professionals, and the continued willingness of HarbourVest to
sponsor the formation of and capital raising by, and to manage, new private
equity funds;

·    HVPE's financial condition and liquidity, including its ability to
access or obtain new sources of financing at attractive rates in order to fund
short-term liquidity needs in accordance with the investment strategy and
commitment policy;

·    changes in the values of, or returns on, investments that the Company
makes;

·    changes in financial markets, interest rates, or industry, general
economic, or political conditions; and

·    the general volatility of the capital markets and the market price
of HVPE's shares.

 

Publication and Calculation of Net Asset Value

The NAV of the Company is equal to the value of its total assets less its
total liabilities. The NAV per share is calculated by dividing the NAV of the
Company by the number of shares in issue. The Company intends to publish the
estimated NAV per share as calculated, monthly in arrears, as at each month
end, generally within 20 days.

 

Regulatory Information

HVPE is required to comply with the Listing Rules, Disclosure Guidance and
Transparency Rules of the Financial Conduct Authority in the United Kingdom
(the "LDGT Rules"). It is also authorised by the Guernsey Financial Services
Commission as an authorised closed-end investment scheme under the Protection
of Investors (Bailiwick of Guernsey) Law, 2020, as amended (the "POI Law").
HVPE is subject to certain ongoing requirements under the LDGT Rules and the
POI Law and certain rules promulgated thereunder relating to the disclosure of
certain information to investors, including the publication of annual and
half-yearly financial reports.

 

 

 

 

 

Valuation Policy

 

Valuations Represent Fair Value Under US GAAP

HVPE's 31 January 2023 NAV is based on the 31 December 2022 NAV of each
HarbourVest fund and Conversus, adjusted for changes in the value of public
securities, foreign currency, known material events, cash flows, and operating
expenses during January 2023. The valuation of each HarbourVest fund is
presented on a fair value basis in accordance with US generally accepted
accounting principles ("US GAAP"). See Note 4 in the Notes to the Financial
Statements on page 120.

 

The Investment Manager typically obtains financial information from 90% or
more of the underlying investments for each of HVPE's HarbourVest funds to
calculate the NAV. For each fund, the accounting team reconciles investments,
distributions, and unrealised/realised gains and losses to the Financial
Statements. The team also reviews underlying partnership valuation policies.

 

Management of Foreign Currency Exposure

The Investment Portfolio includes three euro-denominated HarbourVest funds and
a Canadian dollar-denominated fund.

·    14% of underlying partnership holdings are denominated in euros. The
euro-denominated Investment Pipeline is €15.1 million.

·    2% of underlying partnership holdings are denominated in sterling.
There is no sterling-denominated Investment Pipeline.

·    1% of underlying partnership holdings are denominated in Australian
dollars. There is no Australian dollar-denominated Investment Pipeline.

·    0.4% of underlying partnership holdings are denominated in Canadian
dollars. The Canadian dollar-denominated Investment Pipeline is C$6.7 million.

·    0.2% of underlying partnership holdings are denominated in Swiss
francs. There is no Swiss franc-denominated Investment Pipeline.

 

HVPE has exposure to foreign currency movement through foreign
currency-denominated assets within the Investment Portfolio and through its
Investment Pipeline of unfunded commitments, which are long term in nature.
The Company's most significant currency exposure is to euros. The Company does
not actively use derivatives or other products to hedge the currency exposure.

 

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.   END  FR SELEDIEDSEDI

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