Picture of Henderson European Focus Trust logo

HEFT Henderson European Focus Trust News Story

0.000.00%
gb flag iconLast trade - 00:00
FinancialsConservativeMid Cap

REG - Henderson Euro Focus - Half-year Report

For best results when printing this announcement, please click on link below:
http://newsfile.refinitiv.com/getnewsfile/v1/story?guid=urn:newsml:reuters.com:20230522:nRSV2404Aa&default-theme=true

RNS Number : 2404A  Henderson European Focus Trust PLC  22 May 2023

JANUS HENDERSON FUND MANAGEMENT UK LIMITED

 

LEGAL ENTITY IDENITIFIER: 213800GS89AL1DK3IN50

 

HENDERSON EUROPEAN FOCUS TRUST PLC (the "Company")

Unaudited results for the half-year ended 31 March 2023

This announcement contains regulated information

 

Investment objective

The Company seeks to maximise total return (a combination of income and
capital growth) from a portfolio of stocks listed in Europe.

 

Performance highlights

 ·             Net asset value ("NAV") per share total return(1) rose by 22.8%, outperforming
               the benchmark(2) return by 1.1%
 ·             Share price total return(3) rose by 28.3%
 ·             Interim dividend of 1.30p per share declared, +8.3% on the prior year (2022:
               1.20p)

 

Total return performance to 31 March 2023

                                   6 months  1 year  3 years  5 years  10 years

                                   %         %       %        %        %
 NAV(1)                            22.8      10.8    64.0     55.2     173.9
 Benchmark index(2)                21.7      8.7     56.2     47.4     137.4
 AIC Europe sector NAV(4)          22.3      7.1     54.7     51.3     159.0
 Share price(3)                    28.3      11.0    73.3     42.2     170.2
 AIC Europe sector share price(4)  25.7      5.3     56.2     45.6     155.3
 IA OEIC Europe sector(5)          21.7      6.6     55.2     39.2     125.0

 

Financial highlights

                                                                                                                                                                   At 31 March 2023  At 30 September 2022

                                                                                                                                                                   (unaudited)       (audited)
 Shareholders' funds
 Net assets                                                                                                                                                        £377.6m           £314.4m
 NAV per ordinary share                                                                                                                                            177.47p           147.67p
 Share price                                                                                                                                                       159.00p           127.0p
 Gearing at period end(6)                                                                                                                                          6.8%              1.9%

 

                                         Half-year ended  Year ended

                                         31 March 2023    30 September 2022

                                         (unaudited)      (audited)
 Total return to equity shareholders
 Revenue return after taxation (£'000)   2,426            10,913
 Capital return after taxation (£'000)   68,696           (58,341)
 Total return (£'000)                    71,122           (47,428)
 Total return per ordinary share
 Revenue                                 1.14p            5.11p
 Capital                                 32.28p           (27.32p)
 Total return                            33.42p           (22.21p)

 

1 Net asset value ("NAV") total return per ordinary share (with dividends
reinvested)

2 FTSE World Europe ex UK Index on a total return basis in sterling terms

3 Share price total return (with dividends reinvested) using mid-market
closing price

4 Average for the Association of Investment Companies ("AIC") Europe sector of
seven companies

5 Investment Association ("IA") open-ended investment company ("OEIC") Europe
ex UK Equity sector average NAV, comprising 149 OEICs at 31 March 2023

6 Net gearing, as defined in the alternative performance measures in the
Annual Report for the year ended 30 September 2022

Sources: Morningstar Direct, Refinitiv Datastream and Janus Henderson

 

INTERIM MANAGEMENT STATEMENT

CHAIR'S STATEMENT

We are living through an era in which each half-yearly update seemingly
warrants a dedicated volume in the economic history books.  The Company's
financial year end of 30 September 2022 coincided with a trough in European
equity markets. Since then, as our Fund Managers suggested (or hoped) would be
the case, European share prices have recovered. Why? Because they simply
became too cheap, judging by historical precedents and economies have proven
more robust than expected. Whilst the ongoing war in Ukraine continued to have
a major impact on supply shortages, higher food and energy prices, the mild
weather over the winter proved a blessing. For many companies and households -
more so for those on the Continent than here in the UK - the outcome in terms
of pressure on revenues and margins or general 'cost of living' has been less
pronounced than feared.

 

Moreover, the unthinkable has happened, at least in the eyes of the
professional investors who allocate assets across global equity markets:
Europe has outperformed the US, and by some margin. On a common currency
basis, the European index has seen a good 20% outperformance compared with the
S&P500, Dow Jones and the technology-heavy Nasdaq. That is not to say the
trend - if we dare to tempt fate by labelling it such - has not been tested.
The US Federal Reserve had to act quickly to avert contagion from a very
specific banking crisis at Silicon Valley Bank in California, but not before
banks globally came under the spotlight. Unfortunately, it highlighted the
ongoing travails at Credit Suisse in Switzerland, requiring the Swiss National
Bank to find a domestic solution in the guise of UBS and prompting a flight to
quality in European banking shares. Somewhat surprisingly, however, equity
markets shrugged it off relatively quickly to recoup these short-term losses,
ending the period with healthy double-digit increases.

 

Performance

In the six months to 31 March 2023, the Company's NAV total return per
ordinary share rose by 22.8%, outperforming the Company's benchmark, the FTSE
World Europe ex UK index by 1.1%. Our NAV performance was just above both the
average of our closed-ended peers in the AIC Europe sector (+22.3%) and also
above that of the IA OEIC Europe ex UK sector average (+21.7%).

 

The Company's share price total return saw a greater rise of 28.3%, mostly due
to a narrowing of the discount at which the shares trade relative to the
underlying NAV from 14.0% as at 30 September 2022 to 10.4% at 31 March 2023.

 

The existence of such a level of discount to NAV, given the strength of our
performance track record, is rather confounding but seems to be a trait of our
high-performing Europe sector where the average discount was 10.9% at the end
of March 2023.  It is a source of frustration and discussion for the Board.
Buybacks have been - and will be - used judiciously to manage liquidity, but
we would much rather encourage new shareholders onto the register now that
European markets may be coming into vogue, than shrink the assets of the
Company.

 

Dividend

I am pleased to announce that the Company will pay an increased interim
dividend of 1.30p per ordinary share on 27 June 2023 to shareholders on the
register on 2 June 2023; this compares to 1.20p for the six months ending 31
March 2022.  Note that as for last year, this reflects an element of
rebalancing between the interim and final dividend payments and should not be
taken as a proxy for the full-year dividend increase.  The shares will be
quoted ex-dividend on 1 June 2023.

Loan notes and gearing

Net gearing was at 6.8% at 31 March 2023 (vs 1.9% at 30 September 2022),
having approached 11% during the period, with our Fund Managers holding some
cash on a short-term tactical basis if they anticipate better buying
opportunities ahead. Use of leverage made a small positive contribution to NAV
performance in this six-month period. Net gearing is 7.0% at 18 May 2023, and
as you will see from the Fund Managers' Report, is expected to be further
deployed in a considered manner over time.

Board changes

As indicated in the 2022 Annual Report, Eliza Dungworth will retire from the
Board with effect from 31 May 2023. I would like to thank Eliza for her many
years of service and wise counsel on the Company's affairs, and particularly
for her skilful and incisive chairmanship of the Audit and Risk Committee. In
line with our long-term succession planning, the Board is currently engaged in
a recruitment exercise.  Meanwhile, I am pleased to announce that Robin
Archibald will be assuming the role of Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee,
in addition to his current role as Senior Independent Director, from 1 June
2023.

Outlook

The swift recovery has not been without its nuances. At the time of writing,
the market is in the throes of a 'defensives vs cyclicals' tug of war, as
markets struggle to contend with a potential recession. We are cognisant of
the near-term risks to our 'quality cyclicals', but we must not take our eye
off the long-term opportunities for those with the luxury of long-term capital
to deploy --- 'global champions' that live in Europe. This includes companies
which are highly competent in providing tangible goods and services which have
taken on renewed strategic importance in an increasingly multi-polar world:
clean-energy generation, onshore digital automated factories, smart
infrastructure, and their myriad components and raw materials. These are
companies and investment opportunities which, critically, in the eyes of our
valuation-conscious Fund Managers, come at reasonable valuations.  As they
elucidate in their commentary, if the last decade was about owning
'asset-light', the next will be 'asset-heavy'. Mean reversion is alive and
well.

 

 

Vicky Hastings

Chair of the Board

22 May 2023

 

 

Fund Managers' Report

Even by recent historical standards, the half year ending 31 March 2023 was
eventful. While the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and the fire sale of
Credit Suisse grabbed the headlines, there were a number of other significant
developments, including: 1) the emergence of a 'bull market' (say it quietly)
in European equities, which, at the time of writing, remains intact despite
the banking sector wobble; 2) a surprise OPEC oil supply cut which provided
further proof, if any were needed, that the era of US hegemony is over and
with it a 30 plus year project of ever greater globalisation; and 3) the
entrance into public consciousness, via ChatGPT, of the profound potential of
artificial intelligence ("AI") to transform society and the economic
activities which underpin it. These paradigm shifts - of a macroeconomic,
geopolitical and technological nature - guarantee that the coming decade will
not look like the last one. They also guarantee that winners and losers will
abound. It remains our firm conviction that Europe will have its fair share of
winners and we are resolutely focused on finding them and backing them.

Performance

From the close of our last financial year at the end of September 2022 until
31 March 2023, the total return NAV increased by 22.8%, 1.1% ahead of the
benchmark. On a one-year basis, NAV total return increased by 10.8%, 2.1%
ahead of the benchmark gain of 8.7%. Whether we have underperformed, or in
this case, outperformed the benchmark during the period under review, we
always advise caution; markets can be erratic over short periods.
Short-termism drives much of the trading activity by market participants who
are doing something very different to deploying your long-term capital.
Companies rapidly find themselves in and out of favour from one week to the
next, often with no news. Fundamentally, however, companies need longer than
this to deliver value to equity holders. Therefore, we ascribe higher value to
our performance figures, over three years and beyond, which are in good shape.

Key contributors over the half-year included our semiconductor exposure (BE
Semiconductor, ASM International, STMicroelectronics), Holcim and Kion, with
the latter recovering from a particularly punishing end to the last financial
year following a profit warning. That said, it remains a top-ten contributor
over three years. Our semiconductor, materials and cyclicals exposures were
major recipients of capital when we concluded that Europe had become too cheap
in September 2022 and we were thus rewarded.

Key detractors included Dutch insurer ASR Nederland - part of the collateral
damage of the 'banking crisis' - along with UPM-Kymmene and our oil exposures
(Shell and Aker BP), which trailed an emergent European bull market intent on
rewarding the prior year's laggards and duly punishing the leaders.

Activity

We added the world's biggest and most profitable brewer, Belgium-listed
Anheuser-Busch Inbev ("AB Inbev"), attracted to the organic growth and
debt-reduction strategy of its new CEO. The company has a long history of
being an over-indebted industry consolidator, which fostered a reputation for
brand-neglect with investors. Moreover, the inflationary backdrop and
corresponding end of the free-money era does not just have implications for
over-hyped tech valuations; in the brewing industry it significantly
undermines the competitive position of those thousands of low-margin 'craft'
entrants, which were lavished with easy funding over the last 10 to 15 years
and which smartly exploited the complacent brand strategies of the majors.
With many small breweries now falling by the wayside and those that do cling
on forced to rapidly raise prices in order to maintain any sort of margin, the
brewing industry is a tangible example of our 'Big is beautiful' sub-thesis
(which pertains to the tangible implications of the change in the price of
money). AB Inbev, which boasts an industry-leading gross margin of 55% even
after facing a commodity price squeeze, can simply raise prices more slowly
than craft players and regain market share. Correspondingly we exited
Carlsberg, which remains a leading company in a clearly attractive industry.
But, having been a long-term contributor to the Company and following the exit
of the management team which led us to invest in the stock over five years
ago, we felt now was the right time to recycle capital into the opportunity
taking shape at AB Inbev.

Siemens was another notable addition to the Company, complementing our
existing position in Schneider Electric. Both are global champions at the
heart of a number of the next decade's mega-themes, including the onshoring of
supply chains, electrification, digitalisation and automation. As already
mentioned, the pace of investment by corporates big and small in optimising
their operations has really struck us over recent months. Our own meetings
with management teams offered up some illuminating examples. Premier Foods, a
UK food producer, is allocating one third of its capital investment into 'cost
out' activities - automation projects with payback periods now as low as 2.5
years given the rising labour and energy costs which they help to mitigate.
Marks and Spencer, that charmingly inert stalwart of the UK high street, has
'near-shored' manufacturing of certain garments to Eastern Europe, away from
China, in order to improve supply chain resilience and also to enable it to be
more reactive to customer trends. As the world re-tools and re-calibrates, a
more streamlined and focused Siemens - now with 'only' around 300 thousand
employees compared to the half-a-million-strong blob of bureaucratic
complexity that we avoided for years - is set to be a critical enabler.

Elsewhere we returned to Adidas, another great franchise, but one which was in
urgent need of the fresh wind of management change. This has duly arrived in
the form of Bjorn Gulden, former CEO of Puma. We exited Amadeus IT, the
airline booking system software provider, as we chose to concentrate our
'travel recovery' exposure on aerospace names such as Airbus and Safran.

Outlook

At the time of writing the market is moving to price recession. Stocks with
defensive qualities such as food, beverages and healthcare are back in vogue,
while those of a more cyclical nature - such as chemicals, materials and
certain industrials - are given short shrift. You can, as always, expect us to
navigate the short-term tumult to the best of our abilities, while firmly
remaining focused on the profound long-term opportunities for the long-term
capital that we deploy on your behalf. Our net gearing intentions are
consistent with this: careful in the near term, but with the expectation that
we will further deploy over time to maximise value for shareholders.

At the risk of testing our readers' patience with repetition, it remains our
view that we are unlikely to return to the madness of the free-money era, that
inflation is likely to linger for longer, and that interest rates are more
likely to plateau than to pivot. As a result, we believe that valuation - the
price you pay for an asset - will regain its rightful place as the cornerstone
of one's investment framework. It is worth reflecting for a moment on just how
financially absurd recent history has been. The total value of negative
yielding bonds (yes, you pay the borrower to take your money…) peaked at 18
trillion dollars in 2020. The amount as of today is negligible. The withdrawal
of silly money has seismic consequences for the investment regime, but it will
take time to fully bear out.

Moreover, given the multi-polar geopolitical shifts now undoubtedly taking
place, we believe tangible goods - the energy, infrastructure and supply
chains that underpin a society's security and resilience - are to be desired
over the many intangible winners of the last decade - think software,
technology and other often over-hyped 'asset-light' business models. On this
basis Europe, which has now outperformed the US over the last six months by
over 20%, screens rather attractively; valuations are reasonable and the
region - often dismissed as the 'museum continent' - actually excels at
'making stuff'. It is home to global champions whose competencies include
renewable energy infrastructure, semiconductor manufacturing equipment, the
provision of digital automated factories, not to mention the vast and varied
skills, materials and components which they draw upon. It is no longer novel
to suggest that the Western world is urgently moving to rebuild its strategic
resilience, but what is still underappreciated by the market, in our opinion,
is the speed with which these new long-duration capital investment cycles are
emerging. A major takeaway from the full-year 2022 results season was the
number of companies: 1) highlighting a tangible benefit to their orderbooks
from these trends; and 2) taking action to improve their own supply-chain
resilience through the onshoring of manufacturing activities, or the
investment into automation.

 

'Asset-light' was a posterchild of the last decade, courtesy of monetary
abundance, non-existent inflation and a still largely unipolar world order.
'Asset-heavy' will have renewed significance in the next. In this realm,
Europe has winners.

 

 

Tom O'Hara and John Bennett

Fund Managers

22 May 2023

Investment portfolio at 31 March 2023

 Company                            Sector                                     Country of listing  Valuation  % of portfolio

                                                                                                   £'000
 Novo-Nordisk                       Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology          Denmark             21,683     5.4
 Shell                              Oil, Gas and Coal                          United Kingdom      19,724     4.9
 UPM-Kymmene                        Industrial Materials                       Finland             18,998     4.7
 TotalEnergies                      Oil, Gas and Coal                          France              15,741     3.9
 LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton   Personal Goods                             France              15,693     3.9
 STMicroelectronics                 Technology Hardware and Equipment          Switzerland         15,027     3.7
 Saint-Gobain                       Construction and Materials                 France              14,573     3.6
 BP                                 Oil, Gas and Coal                          United Kingdom      14,174     3.5
 BE Semiconductor                   Technology Hardware and Equipment          Netherlands         13,902     3.5
 ASR Nederland                      Non-life Insurance                         Netherlands         13,558     3.4
 10 largest                                                                                        163,073    40.5

 Safran                             Aerospace and Defence                      France              12,954     3.2
 Airbus                             Aerospace and Defence                      France              12,534     3.1
 Adidas                             Personal Goods                             Germany             11,452     2.8
 Hugo Boss                          Personal Goods                             Germany             10,898     2.7
 Holcim                             Construction and Materials                 Switzerland         10,825     2.7
 Schneider Electric                 Electronic and Electrical Equipment        France              10,815     2.7
 Linde                              Chemicals                                  Germany             9,985      2.5
 Solvay                             Chemicals                                  Belgium             9,686      2.4
 Arkema                             Chemicals                                  France              9,498      2.4
 Siemens                            General Industrials                        Germany             9,488      2.4
 20 largest                                                                                        271,208    67.4

 Nordea Bank                        Banks                                      Finland             9,068      2.2
 Koninklijke Ahold Delhaize         Personal Care, Drug and Grocery Stores     Netherlands         8,898      2.2
 Euronext                           Investment Banking and Brokerage Services  Netherlands         8,604      2.1
 ASM International                  Technology Hardware and Equipment          Netherlands         8,537      2.1
 Aker BP                            Oil, Gas and Coal                          Norway              7,745      1.9
 Sandvik                            Industrial Engineering                     Sweden              7,586      1.9
 L'Oréal                            Personal Goods                             France              7,524      1.9
 Deutsche Boerse                    Investment Banking and Brokerage Services  Germany             7,455      1.8
 Sanofi                             Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology          France              7,151      1.8
 Metso Outotec                      Industrial Engineering                     Finland             6,885      1.7
 30 largest                                                                                        350,661    87.0

 Interpump                          Industrial Engineering                     Italy               6,605      1.6
 Universal Music                    Media                                      France              5,905      1.5
 BNP Paribas                        Banks                                      France              5,894      1.5
 Anheuser-Busch InBev               Beverages                                  Belgium             5,699      1.4
 Siemens Healthineers               Medical Equipment and Services             Germany             5,107      1.3
 UCB                                Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology          Belgium             4,977      1.2
 Essilor Luxottica                  Medical Equipment and Services             France              4,839      1.2
 Unicredit                          Banks                                      Italy               3,817      0.9
 ING                                Banks                                      Netherlands         3,749      0.9
 Grifols                            Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology          Spain               3,726      0.9
 40 largest                                                                                        400,979    99.4

 Danone                             Food Producers                             France              2,233      0.6

 Total investments at fair value                                                                   403,212    100.0

 

Country of listing (as a percentage of the portfolio excluding cash)

 

               31 March 2023  31 March 2022

               %              %
 France        31.1           25.2

 Netherlands   17.9           17.9

 Germany       13.5           13.1

 Finland       8.7            8.3

 UK            8.4             -

 Denmark       5.4            7.0

 Belgium       5.0            2.9

 Switzerland   2.7            12.2

 Italy         2.6            1.6

 Norway        1.9            2.7

 Sweden        1.9            5.1

 Spain         0.9            4.0
               100.0          100.0

 

 

Sector exposure (as a percentage of the portfolio excluding cash)

 

                         31 March 2023  31 March 2022

                         %              %
 Industrials             22.9           16.8
 Energy                  14.2           5.7
 Financials              12.9           14.2
 Consumer discretionary  12.7           12.5
 Basic materials         12.0           12.9
 Health care             11.8           16.2
 Technology              9.3            8.0
 Consumer staples        4.2            13.7
                         100.0          100.0

 

 

Principal Risks and Uncertainties

The principal risks and uncertainties associated with the Company's business
can be divided into the following main areas:

 

·    Market

·    Investment performance

·    Business strategy and market rating

·    Gearing

·    Operational

·    Regulatory and reporting

 

Information on these risks and how they are managed is given in the Annual
Report for the year ended 30 September 2022. In the view of the Board, with
the rising interest-rate environment clearly noted, these principal risks and
uncertainties at the year-end remain and are as applicable to the remaining
six months of the financial year as they were to the six months under review.

 

 

Related-Party Transactions

The Company's transactions with related parties in the period under review
were with the directors and the Manager, Janus Henderson. There have been no
material transactions between the Company and its directors during the period
other than amounts paid to them in respect of remuneration and expenses, for
which there were no outstanding amounts payable at the period end.

 

In relation to the provision of services by the Manager, other than fees
payable by the Company in the ordinary course of business and the facilitation
of marketing activities with third parties, there have been no material
transactions with the Manager affecting the financial position of the Company
during the period under review.

 

 

Statement of Directors' Responsibilities

The directors (as listed in note 14) confirm that, to the best of their
knowledge:

 

 (a)  the condensed financial statements for the half-year ended 31 March 2023 have
      been prepared in accordance with FRS 104 Interim Financial Reporting, and give
      a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit
      or loss of the Company;

 (b)  the Interim Management Report and condensed financial statements include a
      fair review of the information required by Disclosure Guidance and
      Transparency Rule 4.2.7R (indication of important events during the first six
      months and description of principal risks and uncertainties for the remaining
      six months of the year); and

 (c)  the Interim Management Report includes a fair review of the information
      required by the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rule 4.2.8R (disclosure
      of related-party transactions and changes therein).

 

 

 

 

On behalf of the Board

Vicky Hastings

Chair of the Board

22 May 2023

 

 

 

CONDENSED INCOME STATEMENT

 

                                                                            (Unaudited)                                                        (Unaudited)                                                        (Audited)

                                                                            Half-year ended                                                    Half-year ended                                                    Year ended

                                                                            31 March 2023                                                      31 March 2022                                                      30 September 2022
                                                                            Revenue return £'000   Capital return £'000   Total return £'000   Revenue return £'000   Capital return £'000   Total return £'000   Revenue return £'000   Capital return £'000   Total return £'000

 Gains/(losses)  on investments held at fair value through profit or loss   -                      70,132                 70,132               -                      (15,878)               (15,878)             -                      (55,148)               (55,148)

 Exchange losses on currency transactions                                   -                      (361)                  (361)                -                      (164)                  (164)                -                      (1,142)                (1,142)

 Income from investments (note 2)                                           3,195                  -                      3,195                4,565                  -                      4,565                12,529                 -                      12,529

 Other income                                                               55                     -                      55                   1                      -                      1                    25                     -                      25
 Gross revenue and capital gains/(losses)                                   3,250                  69,771                 73,021               4,566                  (16,042)               (11,476)             12,554                 (56,290)               (43,736)

 Management fees (note 7)                                                   (290)                  (870)                  (1,160)              (290)                  (871)                  (1,161)              (548)                  (1,642)                (2,190)
 Other fees and expenses                                                    (331)                  -                      (331)                (321)                  -                      (321)                (561)                  -                      (561)
 Net return/(loss) before finance costs and taxation                        2,629                  68,901                 71,530               3,955                  (16,913)               (12,958)             11,445                 (57,932)               (46,487)

 Finance costs                                                              (68)                   (205)                  (273)                (33)                   (86)                   (119)                38                     (272)                  (234)
 Net return/(loss) before taxation                                          2,561                  68,696                 71,257               3,922                  (16,999)               (13,077)             11,483                 (58,204)               (46,721)

 Taxation on net return                                                     (135)                  -                      (135)                (245)                  -                      (245)                (570)                  (137)                  (707)
 Net return/(loss) after taxation                                           2,426                  68,696                 71,122               3,677                  (16,999)               (13,322)             10,913                 (58,341)               (47,428)
 Return/(loss) per ordinary share (note 3)                                  1.14p                  32.28p                 33.42p               1.72p                  (7.96p)                (6.24p)              5.11p                  (27.32p)               (22.21p)

 

 

The total columns of this statement represent the Income Statement of the
Company prepared in accordance with FRS 104.

 

The revenue return and capital return columns are supplementary to this and
are prepared under guidance published by the Association of Investment
Companies.

 

All revenue and capital items in the above statement derive from continuing
operations. The Company had no recognised gains or losses other than those
disclosed in the Income Statement and the Statement of Changes in
Equity.

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the condensed financial
statements.

 

 

 

CONDENSED Statement of Changes in Equity

 

 Half-year ended 31 March 2023                                                                  Revenue reserve  Other reserves £'000   Total

                                         Called-up

 
£'000
shareholders' funds £'000
 (Unaudited)                               share       Share                  Capital reserve

capital

£'000

           premium account
                                           £'000

                                                       £'000
 At 30 September 2022                      10,819      41,995                 151,154           13,840           96,611                 314,419
 Net return after taxation                 -           -                      68,696            2,426            -                      71,122
 Ordinary dividend paid                    -           -                      -                 (7,766)          -                      (7,766)
 Buyback of ordinary shares for treasury   -           -                      (183)             -                -                      (183)
 At 31 March 2023                          10,819      41,995                 219,667           8,500            96,611                 377,592

 Half-year ended 31 March 2022                                                                  Revenue reserve  Other reserves £'000   Total

(Unaudited)                              Called-up

 
£'000
shareholders' funds £'000
                                           share       Share                  Capital reserve

capital

£'000

           premium account
                                           £'000

                                                       £'000
 At 30 September 2021                      10,819      41,995                 210,819           10,492           96,611                 370,736
 Net return after taxation                 -           -                      (16,999)          3,677            -                      (13,322)
 Ordinary dividend paid                    -           -                      -                 (5,019)          -                      (5,019)
 Costs relating to sub-division of shares  -           -                      (17)              -                -                      (17)
 Buyback of ordinary shares for treasury   -           -                      (427)             -                -                      (427)
 At 31 March 2022                          10,819      41,995                 193,376           9,150            96,611                 351,951

 Year ended 30 September 2022 (Audited)    Called-up   Share premium account  Capital reserve   Revenue reserve  Other                  Total
                                           share
                      £'000
£'000

shareholders'

capital    £'000                                                     reserves £'000

                                                                                            funds £'000
                                           £'000
 At 30 September 2021                      10,819      41,995                 210,819           10,492           96,611                 370,736
 Net return after taxation                 -           -                      (58,341)          10,913           -                      (47,428)
 Ordinary dividend paid                    -           -                      -                 (7,565)          -                      (7,565)
 Buyback of ordinary shares for treasury   -           -                      (1,324)           -                -                      (1,324)
 At 30 September 2022                      10,819      41,995                 151,154           13,840           96,611                 314,419

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the condensed financial
statements.

 

CONDENSED Statement of Financial Position

 

                                                        (Unaudited)  (Unaudited)  (Audited)

                                                        31 March     31 March     30 September

                                                        2023         2022         2022

                                                        £'000        £'000        £'000
 Fixed assets
 Investments held at fair value through profit or loss  403,212      365,817      320,289

 Current assets
 Debtors                                                11,606       3,866        7,355
 Cash at bank                                           15           14,510       21,272
                                                        11,621       18,376       28,627

 Creditors: amounts falling due within one year         (6,653)      (2,838)      (3,949)

 Net current assets                                     4,968        15,538       24,678

 Total assets less current liabilities                  408,180      381,355      344,967

 Creditors: amounts falling due after one year          (30,588)     (29,404)     (30,548)

 Net assets                                             377,592      351,951      314,419

 Capital and reserves
 Called-up share capital                                10,819       10,819       10,819
 Share premium account                                  41,995       41,995       41,995
 Capital reserve                                        219,667      193,376      151,154
 Revenue reserve                                        8,500        9,150        13,840
 Other reserves (note 5)                                96,611       96,611       96,611

 Total shareholders' funds                              377,592      351,951      314,419

 Net asset value per ordinary share (note 6)            177.47p      164.80p      147.67p

 

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the condensed financial
statements.

 

CONDENSED cash flow statement

                                                                          (Unaudited)       (Unaudited)       (Audited)

                                                                          Half-year ended   Half-year ended   Year ended 30 Sept 2022

                                                                          31 March 2023     31 March 2022     £'000

                                                                          £'000             £'000
 Cash flows from operating activities
 Net return/(loss) before taxation                                        71,257            (13,077)          (46,721)
 Add back: finance costs                                                  273               119               234
 (Gains)/losses on investments held at fair value through profit or loss  (70,132)          15,878            55,148
 Losses on foreign exchange                                               361               164               1,142
 Taxation paid                                                            (118)             (181)             (780)
 Increase in debtors                                                      (824)             (1,339)           (87)
 Increase/(decrease) in creditors                                         122               (97)              (144)
 Net cash inflow from operating activities                                939               1,467             8,792

 Cash flows from investing activities
 Sales of investments held at fair value through profit or loss           163,809           115,341           277,186
 Purchases of investments held at fair value through profit or loss       (179,585)         (115,681)         (273,147)
 Net cash (outflow)/inflow from investing activities                      (15,776)          (340)             4,039

 Cash flows from financing activities
 Buyback of shares for treasury                                           (183)             (427)             (1,324)
 Costs relating to subdivision of shares                                  -                 (17)              -
 Equity dividends paid (net of refund of unclaimed distributions)         (7,766)           (5,019)           (7,565)
 Drawdown/(repayment) of bank overdraft                                   2,095             (10,558)          (10,558)
 Issue of unsecured loan notes                                            -                 29,275            29,275
 Costs relating to issue of unsecured loan notes                          -                 (173)             (173)
 Interest paid                                                            (243)             (35)              (271)
 Net cash (outflow)/inflow from financing activities                      (6,097)           13,046            9,384

 Net (decrease)/increase in cash and equivalents                          (20,934)          14,173            22,215

 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period                         21,272            199               199
 (Losses)/gains on foreign exchange                                       (323)             138               (1,142)

 Cash and cash equivalents at end of period                               15                14,510            21,272

 Comprising:
 Cash at bank                                                             15                14,510            21,272

 

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of the condensed financial
statements.

Notes to the condensed financial statements

 

 1.      Accounting policies

         The condensed set of financial statements has been prepared in accordance

       with: FRS 104, Interim Financial Reporting; FRS 102, the Financial Reporting
         Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland; and the Statement of

       Recommended Practice for "Financial Statements of Investment Trust Companies
         and Venture Capital Trusts", which was updated by the Association of

       Investment Companies in July 2022.

         For the period under review, the Company's accounting policies have not varied
         from those described in the Annual Report for the year ended 30 September
         2022. The condensed set of financial statements has been neither audited nor
         reviewed by the Company's auditor.

 2.      Income from investments
                                                                           (Unaudited)           (Unaudited)           (Audited)

                                                                           Half-year ended       Half-year ended       Year ended

                                                                           31 March              31 March              30 September

                                                                           2023                  2022                  2022

                                                                           £'000                 £'000                 £'000
         Listed investments:
         Overseas dividends                                                2,533                 4,565                 12,181
         UK dividends                                                      662                   -                     348
                                                                           3,195                 4,565                 12,529

 3.      Return/(loss) per ordinary share
                                                                           (Unaudited)           (Unaudited)           (Audited)

                                                                           Half-year ended       Half-year ended       Year ended

                                                                           31 March              31 March              30 September

                                                                           2023                  2022                  2022

                                                                           £'000                 £'000                 £'000
         The return per ordinary share is based on the following figures:
         Net revenue return                                                2,426                 3,677                 10,913
         Net capital return/(loss)                                         68,696                (16,999)              (58,341)
         Net capital return/(loss)                                         71,122                (13,322)              (47,428)

         Weighted average number of ordinary                               212,784,056           213,607,908           213,530,236

         shares in issue for each period

         Revenue return per ordinary share                                 1.14p                 1.72p                 5.11p
         Capital return/(loss) per ordinary share                          32.28p                (7.96p)               (27.32p)
         Total return/(loss)  per ordinary share                           33.42p                (6.24p)               (22.21p)

         The Company has no securities in issue that could dilute the return per
         ordinary share. Therefore, the basic and diluted returns per share are the
         same.

 4.      Called-up share capital
         At 31 March 2023, there were 216,389,910 shares in issue, of which 3,621,788
         were held in treasury.  During the half-year period ended 31 March 2023,
         145,000 shares were repurchased for treasury at a cost of £183,000 (half-year
         ended 31 March 2022: 260,300 at a cost of £427,000, and year ended 30
         September 2022: 912,658 shares at a cost of £1,324,000). No shares have been
         issued or repurchased since 31 March 2023.  As at 18 May 2023, 212,768,122
         shares were entitled to a dividend.

 5.             Other reserves
                                                                        31 March 2023                             31 March 2022               30 Sept 2022

                                                                        £'000                                     £'000                       £'000
                Special distributable reserve                           25,846                                    25,846                      25,846
                Merger reserve                                          61,344                                    61,344                      61,344
                Capital redemption reserve                              9,421                                     9,421                       9,421
                Total                                                   96,611                                    96,611                      96,611

 6.             Net asset value per share - basic and diluted (excluding treasury shares)
                The net asset value per ordinary share is based on the 212,768,122 shares
                (excluding treasury shares) in issue at 31 March 2023 (half year ended 31
                March 2022: 213,565,480 shares; year ended 30 September 2022: 212,913,122
                shares).

 7.             Management fees
                Janus Henderson Fund Management UK Limited ("JHFMUK Ltd") is appointed to act
                as the Company's alternative investment fund manager. JHFMUK Ltd delegates
                investment management services to Janus Henderson Investors UK Limited ("JHIUK
                Ltd"). References to 'Janus Henderson' or the 'Manager' within these results
                refer to the services provided by both JHFMUK Ltd and JHIUK Ltd.

                Management fees are charged in accordance with the terms of the management
                agreement. The Manager receives a fee of 0.65% per annum of net assets up to
                £300m and 0.55% of net assets above £300m. Any holdings in funds managed by
                Janus Henderson are excluded from the calculation of the management fee. There
                is no performance fee.

                Management fees and finance costs are allocated 25% to revenue and 75% to
                capital in the Condensed Income Statement.

 8.             Investments held at fair value through profit or loss
                The table below analyses fair value measurements for investments held at fair
                value through profit or loss. These fair value measurements are categorised
                into different levels in the fair value hierarchy based on the valuation
                techniques used and are defined as follows under FRS 102:

                Level 1:                    the unadjusted quoted price in an active market for identical assets or

                           liabilities that the entity can access at the measurement date.

                Level 2:                    inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable

                           (i.e. developed using market data) for the asset or liability, either directly
                                            or indirectly.

                Level 3:                    inputs are unobservable (i.e. for which market data is unavailable) for the

                           asset or liability.

                Financial assets held at fair value through profit or loss at 31 March 2023         Level 1       Level 2       Level 3                     Total

                                                                                                    £'000         £'000         £'000                       £'000
                Quoted equities                                                                     403,212       -             -                           403,212
                Total                                                                               403,212       -             -                           403,212

                Financial assets held at fair value through profit or loss at 31 March 2022         Level 1       Level 2       Level 3                     Total

                                                                                                    £'000         £'000         £'000                       £'000
                Quoted equities                                                                     365,817       -             -                           365,817
                Total                                                                               365,817       -             -                           365,817

                Financial assets held at fair value through profit or loss at 30 September          Level 1       Level 2       Level 3                     Total
                2022

                                                                                                    £'000         £'000         £'000                       £'000
                Quoted equities                                                                     320,289       -             -                           320,289
                Total                                                                               320,289       -             -                           320,289

     There have been no transfers between levels of fair value hierarchy during the
     period.

     The valuation techniques used by the Company are explained in the accounting
     policies note 1(c) in the Company's Annual Report for the year ended 30
     September 2022.

 9.   Borrowings
      As at 31 March 2023, the Company's bank overdraft included in "Creditors:
      amounts falling due within one year" was £2,095,000 (31 March 2022: £nil; 30
      September 2022: £nil).

                                                                                                                                          On 31
                                                                                                                                          January
                                                                                                                                          2022,
                                                                                                                                          the
                                                                                                                                          Company
                                                                                                                                          issued
                                                                                                                                          €35m
                                                                                                                                          long
                                                                                                                                          term
                                                                                                                                          fixed
                                                                                                                                          -rate
                                                                                                                                          unsecur
                                                                                                                                          ed
                                                                                                                                          loan
                                                                                                                                          notes
                                                                                                                                          in two
                                                                                                                                          tranche
                                                                                                                                          s:
      -   €25m unsecured loan notes maturing on 31 January 2047 with a fixed
      coupon of 1.53%; and
      -   €10m unsecured loan notes maturing on 31 January 2052 with a fixed
      coupon of 1.66%.
      Total proceeds from the issue of the notes were £29,275,000 less £173,000
      issue costs.
      The unsecured loan notes are carried in the Statement of Financial Position at
      par less the issue costs which are amortised over the life of the notes. In
      order to comply with fair value accounting disclosures only, the fair value of
      the unsecured loan notes has been estimated to be £19,918,000 (31 March 2022:
      £26,854,000; 30 September 2022: £20,774,000) and is categorised as Level 3
      in the fair value hierarchy. However, for the purpose of the daily NAV
      announcements, the unsecured loan notes are valued at par in the NAV because
      they are not traded and the directors expect them to be held to maturity and,
      accordingly, the directors have assessed that this is the most appropriate
      value to be applied for this purpose.

 10.  Changes in net debt
      The following table shows the movements during the period of net debt in the
      statement of financial position:
                                                       At 1 October 2022  Cash flows                   Amortisation of issue costs         Foreign exchange movements £'000    At 31 March

                                                       £'000              £'000                         £'000                                                                  2023

                                                                                                                                                                               £'000
                     Financing activities
                     Bank overdraft                    -                  (2,095)                      -                                  -                                    (2,095)
                     Unsecured loan notes              (30,548)           -                            (2)                                (38)                                 (30,588)
                                                       (30,548)           (2,095)                      (2)                                (38)                                 (32,683)
                     Non-financing activities
                     Cash and cash equivalents         21,272             (20,934)                     -                                  (323)                                15
                                                       21,272             (20,934)                     -                                  (323)                                15
                     Total                             (9,276)            (23,029)                     (2)                                (361)                                (32,668)
                                                       At 1 October 2021  Cash flows                   Amortisation of issue costs        Foreign exchange movements £'000     At 31 March

                                                       £'000              £'000                         £'000                                                                  2022

                                                                                                                                                                               £'000
                     Financing activities
                     Bank overdraft                    (10,558)           10,558                       -                                  -                                    -
                     Unsecured loan notes              -                  (29,102)                     -                                  (302)                                (29,404)
                                                       (10,558)           (18,544)                     -                                  (302)                                (29,404)
                     Non-financing activities
                     Cash and cash equivalents         199                14,173                       -                                  138                                  14,510
                                                       199                14,173                       -                                  138                                  14,510
      Total                         (10,359)           (4,371)            -                            (164)                              (14,894)
                                    At 1 October 2021  Cash flows         Amortisation of issue costs  Foreign exchange movements £'000   At 30 Sept

                                    £'000              £'000               £'000                                                          2022

                                                                                                                                          £'000
      Financing activities
      Bank overdraft                (10,558)           10,558             -                            -                                  -
      Unsecured loan notes          -                  (29,102)           (4)                          (1,442)                            (30,548)
                                    (10,558)           (18,544)           (4)                          (1,442)                            (30,548)
      Non-financing activities
      Cash and cash equivalents     199                22,215             -                            (1,142)                            21,272
                                    199                22,215             (4)                          (1,142)                            21,272
      Total                         (10,359)           3,671              (4)                          (2,584)                            (9,276)

 11.  Going concern
      The assets of the Company consist of securities that are readily realisable
      and, accordingly, the directors believe that the Company has adequate
      resources to continue in operational existence for at least twelve months from
      the date of approval of these financial statements. Having assessed these
      factors and the principal risks, as well as considering geopolitical risks and
      macroeconomic factors, the directors consider it appropriate to adopt the
      going concern basis of accounting in preparing these financial statements.

 12.  Dividends
      The directors have declared an interim dividend of 1.30p per ordinary share
      (2022: 1.20p), payable on 27 June 2023 to shareholders who are on the register
      of members on 2 June 2023. The shares will be quoted ex-dividend on 1 June
      2023. Based on the 212,768,122 shares in issue (excluding treasury shares) at
      18 May 2023, the cost of this dividend will be £2,766,000 (2022 interim
      dividend: £2,563,000).

 13.  Comparative information
      The financial information contained in this half-year report does not
      constitute statutory accounts as defined in s434 of the Companies Act 2006.
      The financial information for the half years ended 31 March 2023 and 31 March
      2022 has not been audited nor reviewed by the Company's auditor. The figures
      and financial information for the year ended 30 September 2022 are an extract
      based on the latest published accounts and do not constitute statutory
      accounts for that year. Those accounts have been delivered to the Registrar of
      Companies and included the Independent Auditor's Report which was unqualified
      and did not contain a statement under either s498(2) or s498(3) of the
      Companies Act 2006. A glossary of terms and details of alternative performance
      measures can be found in the Annual Report for the year ended 30 September
      2022.

 14.  General information
      Company status

      Henderson European Focus Trust plc is registered as an investment company in
      England and Wales (no. 00427958), has its registered office at 201
      Bishopsgate, London EC2M 3AE and is listed on the London Stock Exchange.

      SEDOL/ISIN: BLSNGB0/GB00BLSNGB01

      London Stock Exchange ("TIDM") code: HEFT

      Global Intermediary Identification Number ("GIIN"): THMNPN.99999.SL.826

      Legal Entity Identifier ("LEI") number: 213800GS89AL1DK3IN50

      Directors and secretary

      The directors of the Company are Vicky Hastings (Chair), Eliza Dungworth
      (Chair of the Audit and Risk Committee), Robin Archibald (Senior Independent
      Director), Stephen Macklow-Smith and Marco Bianconi. The corporate secretary
      is Janus Henderson Secretarial Services UK Limited.

      Website

      Details of the Company's share price and net asset value, together with
      general information about the Company, monthly factsheets and data, copies of
      announcements, reports and details of general meetings can be found at
      www.hendersoneuropeanfocus.com (http://www.hendersoneuropeanfocus.com) .

 15.  Half-year report
      The half-year report will shortly be available at
      www.hendersoneuropeanfocus.com (http://www.hendersoneuropeanfocus.com) or from
      the Company's registered office. An abbreviated version, the 'Update', will be
      posted to shareholders in June 2023.

                                                Fo
                                                r
                                                fu
                                                rt
                                                he
                                                r
                                                in
                                                fo
                                                rm
                                                at
                                                io
                                                n,
                                                pl
                                                ea
                                                se
                                                co
                                                nt
                                                ac
                                                t:

      Vicky Hastings                            Harriet Hall

      Chair of the Board                        Investment Trust PR Manager

      Henderson European Focus Trust plc        Janus Henderson Investors

      Tel: 020 7818 2220                        Tel: 020 7818 2919

      Dan Howe

      Head of Investment Trusts

      Janus Henderson Investors

      Tel: 020 7818 3349

      Neither the contents of the Company's website nor the contents of any website
      accessible from hyperlinks on the Company's website (or any other website) are
      incorporated into, or form part of, this announcement.

 

This information is provided by RNS, the news service of the London Stock Exchange. RNS is approved by the Financial Conduct Authority to act as a Primary Information Provider in the United Kingdom. Terms and conditions relating to the use and distribution of this information may apply. For further information, please contact
rns@lseg.com (mailto:rns@lseg.com)
 or visit
www.rns.com (http://www.rns.com/)
.

RNS may use your IP address to confirm compliance with the terms and conditions, to analyse how you engage with the information contained in this communication, and to share such analysis on an anonymised basis with others as part of our commercial services. For further information about how RNS and the London Stock Exchange use the personal data you provide us, please see our
Privacy Policy (https://www.lseg.com/privacy-and-cookie-policy)
.   END  IR BSGDUCDDDGXD

Recent news on Henderson European Focus Trust

See all news