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Half-year Report

 

LEI: 549300JZQ39WJPD7U596  

INVESCO SELECT TRUST PLC

HALF-YEARLY FINANCIAL REPORT

SIX MONTHS ENDED 30 NOVEMBER 2023

Unless noted below all page numbers refer to the Half-Yearly Financial Report
on the Company’s website.

 

Investment Objective

The Company’s investment objective is to provide shareholders with a choice
of investment strategies and policies, each intended to generate attractive
risk-adjusted returns.

The Company’s share capital comprises four share classes: UK Equity Shares,
Global Equity Income Shares, Balanced Risk Allocation Shares and Managed
Liquidity Shares, each of which has its own separate portfolio of assets and
attributable liabilities.

Investment Policy

The Company’s Investment Policy, which includes the objectives, policies,
risks and investment limits for the Company and the separate portfolios, is
disclosed in full on pages 44 to 46 of the Company’s 2023 Annual Financial
Report, which is available to view or download from each of the share class
web pages. Within this report, the investment objective of each portfolio is
shown at the start of the applicable Portfolio Manager’s Report.

The Company enables shareholders to adjust their asset allocation to reflect
their views of prevailing market conditions by means of an opportunity to
convert between share classes, free of UK capital gains tax, every three
months.

 

Financial Performance

Cumulative Total Returns(1)(2)

To 30 November 2023

                                                        Six      One      Three     Five     
 UK Equity Share Portfolio                              Months   Year     Years     Years    
 Net Asset Value                                        3.2%     4.7%     30.2%     36.7%    
 Share Price                                            0.7%     –0.2%    12.9%     17.8%    
 FTSE All–Share Index                                   1.6%     1.8%     27.3%     26.8%    
                                                                                             
                                                        Six      One      Three     Five     
 Global Equity Income Share Portfolio                   Months   Year     Years     Years    
 Net Asset Value                                        8.4%     16.8%    52.2%     68.1%    
 Share Price                                            7.0%     12.8%    33.2%     48.4%    
 MSCI World Index (£)                                   6.4%     6.3%     29.3%     62.1%    
                                                                                             
                                                        Six      One      Three     Five     
 Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio               Months   Year     Years     Years    
 Net Asset Value                                        2.7%     –0.8%    0.3%      16.4%    
 Share Price                                            –8.4%    –4.4%    –18.0%    –8.1%    
 Composite Benchmark Index (3)                          5.2%     –5.2%    1.9%      5.9%     
 ICE BoA Merrill Lynch 3 month LIBOR plus 5% per annum  5.1%     9.4%     20.3%     31.8%    
                                                                                             
                                                        Six      One      Three     Five     
 Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio                      Months   Year     Years     Years    
 Net Asset Value                                        2.5%     5.3%     8.6%      12.1%    
 Share Price                                            6.1%     0.6%     –3.4%     –1.4%    

 

Period end Net Asset Value, Share Price and Discount

                           Net Asset  Share                
                           Value      Price    Premium/    
 Share Class               (pence)    (pence)  (Discount)  
 UK Equity                 184.63     157.25   (14.8)%     
 Global Equity Income      284.52     245.00   (13.9)%     
 Balanced Risk Allocation  150.59     117.50   (22.0)%     
 Managed Liquidity         111.29     95.50    (14.2)%     

 

(1) Alternative Performance Measure (APM). See pages 41 to 44 for the
explanation and calculation of APMs. Further details are provided in the
Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures in the Company’s 2023
Annual Financial Report.

(2)  Source: LSEG Data & Analytics.

(3)  With effect from 1 June 2021, the benchmark adopted by the Balanced Risk
Allocation Share Portfolio is comprised of 50% 30-year UK Gilts Index, 25% GBP
hedged MSCI World Index (net) and 25% GBP hedged S&P Goldman Sachs Commodity
Index. Prior to this, the benchmark was ICE BoA Merrill Lynch 3 month LIBOR
plus 5% per annum. Accordingly, both the new and old benchmark are shown.

 

Chairman’s Statement

Introduction

Your Company was launched in 2006 with a multi-share class structure to enable
Shareholders to invest in a wide array of asset classes and to rebalance their
portfolio by allowing them to convert, tax-efficiently between share classes.

Your Company’s share capital comprises four share classes: UK Equity Shares,
Global Equity Income Shares, Balanced Risk Allocation Shares and Managed
Liquidity Shares, each of which has its own separate portfolio of assets and
attributable liabilities.

Your Company’s investment policy is disclosed in full on pages 44 to 46 of
the Company’s 2023 Annual Financial Report.

Performance

In net asset value (NAV) total return terms, with dividends reinvested, the UK
Equity Share Portfolio returned +3.2% over the six months to the end of
November 2023, and +0.7% on the share price, compared with its benchmark, the
FTSE All-Share Index total return of +1.6%. The top contributor to the NAV
outperformance was strong stock selection in the consumer discretionary and
consumer staples sectors. Gearing also contributed positively over the period.
The largest detractor came from holdings in the basic materials sector.

The Global Equity Income Share Portfolio returned +8.4% in NAV terms, and
+7.0% on the share price (both on a total return basis), compared with its
benchmark, the MSCI World Index (£) total return over the period of +6.4%.
The biggest stock contributors to the portfolio’s outperformance were
Rolls-Royce, KKR & Co and Aker BP. Detractors came predominantly from
companies whose revenues are exposed to China.

The Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio returned +2.7% in NAV terms, and
–8.4% on the share price (both on a total return basis). The portfolio’s
benchmark, the Composite Benchmark Index returned +5.2%. Commodities
especially, as well as equities, contributed positively to the portfolio’s
performance, however, the government bond allocation negatively affected the
overall performance of the portfolio, as interest rates were raised across the
globe.

The Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio had a total return of +2.5% based on NAV
and +6.1% based on the share price. The higher interest rate environment
contributed positively to the portfolio’s income yield, although returns
were tempered by the effect of increased yields on capital gains.

The Portfolio Managers provide a detailed overview of their respective
portfolio’s performance during the period including, where applicable,
further information on key contributors and detractors to performance and
their views on the outlook in their reports, which follow on pages 4 to 25.

Gearing

The UK Equity and Global Equity Income Share Portfolios are able to employ
gearing by means of a £40 million bank loan facility. The Portfolio Managers
continue to use this facility tactically and actively, increasing or reducing
the level to take advantage of market opportunities. The gross gearing level
at 30 November 2023 was 10.4% and 0.1% on the UK Equity Share Portfolio and
the Global Equity Income Share Portfolio, respectively.

Dividends

Your Board has declared equal first, second and third quarterly dividends for
the current year for each of the equity share classes. For both the UK Equity
Shares and the Global Equity Income Shares each of these dividends was 1.60p,
making 4.80p declared for the financial year to date.

Your Board recognises that income is an important component of the total
return of these share classes and the ability of companies to make dividend
distributions is closely monitored. As I reported in your Company’s  Annual
Financial Report, for the year ending 31 May 2024, your Board will target at
least maintaining the dividend level from year to year for each of the UK
Equity and Global Equity Income Shares. Depending on the level of income
received in the relevant quarters, the quarterly dividends for each share
class may be enhanced with contributions from capital and your Board has
continued with the policy of a partial augmentation from capital where it was
felt appropriate to do so.

It remains the case that in order to maximise the capital return on the
Balanced Risk Allocation Shares, your Board only intend to declare dividends
on the Balanced Risk Allocation Shares to the extent required, having taken
into account the dividends paid on the other share classes, to maintain your
Company’s status as an investment trust. As set out in the Annual Financial
Report, the Board declared an interim dividend for the current financial year,
of 1.00p per share for the Balanced Risk Allocation Shares and, in expectation
of higher levels of income being received by the portfolio, a special dividend
of 2.00p per share, making a total of 3.00p declared for the financial year to
date.

Again, as set out in the Annual Financial Report, a dividend of 1.00p has been
paid in respect of the current financial year on the Managed Liquidity Shares.
This was paid from retained revenue reserves. Given the income yield quantum
involved it is unlikely that such payments will be more frequent than annually
and may indeed be less frequent.

Discount and Share Buy Backs

Your Company continues to operate a discount control policy for all four share
classes. During the period, the Company bought back 1,168,169 UK Equity Shares
at an average price of 152.9p and 153,963 Global Equity Income Shares at an
average price of 233.8p. Since the end of the period the Company has bought
back a further 270,974 UK Equity Shares at an average price of 158.8p.

Share Class Conversions

Your Company enables Shareholders to adjust their asset allocation to reflect
their views of future market conditions. Shareholders have the opportunity to
convert their holdings of shares into any other class of share, without
incurring any tax charge (under current legislation). The total number of
share class conversions that have occurred over the first two conversion
opportunities resulted in net flows of £1.4 million out of the UK Equity
Share Portfolio; of £1.6 million into the Global Equity Income Share
Portfolio; of £0.2 million out of the Balanced Risk Allocation Share
Portfolio; and £0.1 million into the Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio. In
order to facilitate the Restructuring Proposals, announced on 14 December
2023, the Board has determined to postpone the conversion that would have
taken place in February 2024.

Restructuring Proposals

As described in the announcement of 14 December 2023, your Board has
undertaken a review of your Company and its strategy, with the objective of
broadening the appeal of the Company as well as improving liquidity and
narrowing the discount at which the Company’s shares trade. Consequently,
your Board intends to put forward proposals to the Company’s Shareholders
imminently, to simplify the Company’s corporate structure and to introduce
certain features that we believe will appeal to a broad investor base.

In recent years, your Company has seen a limited take-up of the conversion
opportunities between the existing four share classes. The Balanced Risk
Allocation Class and the Managed Liquidity Class now amount to, in aggregate,
only circa 3.7% of the net assets of your Company as at 5 February 2024.
Further, with demand from investors for larger, more liquid investment
vehicles, your Board believes it could be increasingly challenging to market
separately the Global Share Class and the UK Share Class in their current
forms, with the structure potentially presenting an additional hurdle for
those looking to invest.

Your Board believes that the Global universe offers the broadest set of
investment opportunities for equity investors whilst also providing
diversification benefits for UK investors. Additionally, your Board has
confidence in its award-winning Global Equity Income fund manager, Stephen
Anness, to continue to seek out investment opportunities for the ongoing
benefit of Shareholders. Your Board believes his approach to be rigorous,
differentiated and balanced. Under Stephen’s stewardship the Global Equity
Income Share Portfolio has delivered strong, sector-leading NAV total return
performance over both one and three year periods(1).

Accordingly, your Board has concluded that it would be in the best interests
of Shareholders as a whole to consolidate the UK Equity, Balanced Risk
Allocation and Managed Liquidity share classes into the Global Share Class. As
part of this consolidation your Board will put forward a 15% tender offer on
the UK Equity Share Class. Additionally, given the Balanced Risk Allocation
and Managed Liquidity share classes offer significantly differentiated risk
profiles and asset exposures to the Global Equity Income Share Class, your
Board will provide those two share classes with the opportunity for a full
cash exit through tender offers. The tender offer prices will be based on the
NAVs of the respective share classes less the costs of the proposals,
including those incidental costs of the tender offers, less a 2% discount.

Based on NAVs as at 5 February 2024 and on an assumption that the tender
offers are subscribed in full, the consolidation would result in your Company
having net assets of approximately £182million. As compared with any of your
Company’s current share classes individually, your Board believes this
should increase the appeal to investors and would be expected to have a
beneficial impact on liquidity, and potentially on the discount of the
enlarged Global Equity Income Share Class.

The investment objective and investment policy of the Global Equity Income
Share Class will be retained, reflecting your Board’s confidence in
Stephen’s investment process as well as the strength and depth of his team.
In the recent Citywire Investment Trust Awards 2023, held in November, Stephen
Anness and his team won ‘Best International Income Trust’, which awards
three year NAV growth and shareholder returns, for their best-in-class
risk-adjusted performance(2). Additionally, further recognition of your
manager’s performance came from Kepler Trust Intelligence who awarded the
Global Equity Income Share Class with a ‘Kepler Growth Rating’(2).

In recognition of the increasing importance of dividends to Shareholders in
the current economic environment, your Board intends, subject to Shareholder
approval of the proposals, to enhance the current dividend policy of the
Global Equity Income Share Class, which consists of three equal interim
dividends and a `wrap-up’ fourth interim dividend. The new policy will
involve paying at least 4 per cent. calculated on the unaudited year end NAV,
paid quarterly in equal amounts. The intention would be that these dividends
would predominantly be paid from your Company’s revenues and topped up from
capital reserves as required. Your Board believes that this should provide
both an enhanced dividend compared to current levels on the Global Equity
Income Share Class and, once the relevant NAV is known, a smoother,
predictable income stream for Shareholders.

If the restructuring proposals are approved, your Board intends to put forward
a vote at your Company’s AGM in 2026 for the continuation of your Company. 
If the 2026 continuation vote is passed your Board will put forward a
continuation vote at the AGM in 2031 and, if passed, at each fifth AGM
thereafter.

Your Board also intends to introduce a discount control policy in the enlarged
Global Equity Income Share Class which will seek to maintain the discount at
less than 10%, in normal market conditions.

These proposals will require the approval of Shareholders. Your Board has
received indications of support for the proposals from those Shareholders it
was able to consult through market soundings. Your Company anticipates being
able to publish a circular and notice of meetings in connection with the
proposals imminently.

Outlook

NAV total returns from the period 30 November 2023 to 31 January 2024 versus
each respective benchmark are as follows:

• UK Equity Share Portfolio: 3.0% v 3.1%

• Global Equity Income Share Portfolio: 5.0% v 5.5%

• Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio: 3.3% v 4.6%

• Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio: 1.0% (no benchmark)

The performance of the underlying portfolios and the rating of the individual
share classes continue to be monitored closely by your Board.

As indicated above, I anticipate that the circular and notice of general and
class meetings will shortly be dispatched and made available online to
Shareholders. I encourage Shareholders to attend the meetings and vote their
shares in favour of the proposals, as your Board intend to do so for their
respective shareholdings.

After publication, the Circular will be made available on the Invesco
website.  Additionally, your Board aims to include further supporting
information including an update from the fund manager of the Global Equity
Income Share Portfolio, Stephen Anness.  Please note that any supporting
materials do not replace the Circular which contains all the essential
information relating to the proposal, including the timetable and any actions
requiring your attention.  If you have any questions on this proposal or any
other matter, then do make contact, in the first instance by contacting your
Company Secretary, at james.poole@invesco.com who will co-ordinate a response.
Your Board looks forward to meeting Shareholders at your Company’s upcoming
general and class meetings.

Victoria Muir

Chairman

8 February 2024

(1)    Source: JP Morgan Cazenove Investment Companies Daily Interactive
Statistics as at 30 November 2023.

(2)    Please refer to the respective Company website for further
information and methodology.

 

 

 

UK Equity Share Portfolio Performance Record

Total Return

                           Six Months to 30 November 2023  Year To 31 May 2023  Year to 31 May 2022  Year to 31 May 2021  Year to 31 May 2020  
                           
                           
 Net Asset Value (1)       3.2%                            –2.6%                6.8%                 34.6%                –12.4%               
 Share Price (1)           0.7%                            –4.7%                3.0%                 31.6%                –16.2%               
 FTSE All-Share Index (1)  1.6%                            0.4%                 8.3%                 23.1%                –11.2%               
 Revenue return per share  3.51p                           6.40p                6.00p                3.90p                4.12p                
 Dividends                 3.20p                           7.05p                6.70p                6.65p                6.60p                

(1) Source: LSEG Data & Analytics.

 

UK Equity Share Portfolio Managers’ Report

Q: How did the portfolio perform in the six months under review?

A: The portfolio outperformed its benchmark over the six months to 30
November 2023, with a net asset value return of +3.2%. Over the same period
the FTSE All-Share Index rose +1.6%.The portfolio was ranked 4th out of 21
trusts in the Association of Investment Companies (‘AIC’) UK Equity Income
Sector peer group over this period, 6th over one and three years and 4th over
five years(1), so in the top 25% of comparable peers over each of those
periods.

Over the six-month period the UK equity market was focused on UK inflation
figures which continued to fall. The November print of CPI was 3.9% which
compared with a figure of 8.7% in May 2023. UK interest rates peaked at 5.25%
in August and have remained unchanged since. The Bank of England expects
growth to be flat in the fourth quarter of 2023 into 2024. Comments from the
central bank confirmed that interest rates would need to remain at elevated
levels for some time to ensure that inflation was properly under control
despite the risk of tipping the economy into a mild recession. Most
commentators now expect the first rate cut to be in the third quarter of 2024
but the push and pull of various data, particularly employment and inflation
data, makes it difficult to predict with certainty.

UK wage growth slowed in the three months to September, with the Office for
National Statistics (‘ONS’) data additionally showing that hiring slowed
with vacancies also falling. Additional data from the ONS showed that average
total pay grew at an annual rate of 7.7% in the three months to September in
comparison to a year ago. An easing jobs market combined with falling
inflation in the coming months would further support the cutting of interest
rates.

Meanwhile, UK consumer confidence unexpectedly rose in November according to
research group GfK. The consumer confidence index, a measure of how people
view their personal finances and wider economic prospects, showed signs of
resilience in the economy. This data dampened expectations of interest rate
cuts, which in turn pushed the pound to a 12-week high.

In the Chancellor of the Exchequer’s Autumn Statement, Jeremy Hunt cut
national insurance and extended the business tax relief scheme for retail,
hospitality and leisure businesses, in what he called an ‘Autumn Statement
for growth’. However, the tax burden is still on track to reach a post-war
high by 2028.

Within the FTSE All-Share Index the technology sector, albeit small, has been
the best performing sector overall. Elsewhere, energy stocks in particular
have performed well over the period, whilst basic materials and industrials
also performed strongly. On the flipside the weaker sectors have been
healthcare, telecoms and consumer staples.

Q: What were the key contributors and detractors to performance over the
year?

A: At a sector level six out of eleven of the sectors saw a positive relative
performance versus the benchmark with strong stock selection exhibited in the
consumer discretionary and consumer staples sectors. The largest contribution
to positive performance versus the benchmark over the six-month period was the
portfolio’s overweight to the consumer discretionary sector. Next and RELX
both performed well. A trading update from Next showed strong resilience in
the first half of the year as they increased guidance for the full year for
the third time this year. RELX was a significant contributor to performance
after reporting first half results ahead of expectations and a favourable
outlook for the rest of the year. In the same sector Future also contributed
to relative performance following a strong trading update, reporting that
audience numbers had stabilised. Some of the positive performance was eroded
by the portfolio’s position in non-index stock Young & Co’s Brewery, and
CVS which was weaker following an announcement by the Competition and Markets
Authority that it will do a review of the veterinary care sector. Not holding
gaming stocks Flutter Entertainment and Entain in the portfolio also helped
contribute to positive attribution relative to the benchmark.

XPS Pensions, a UK pensions consultancy, was the biggest contributor within
financials after a well-received interim results report showing continued good
growth.

Industrial stock Ferguson also contributed strongly following fourth quarter
results ahead of expectations leading the company to increase guidance for
2024. Within the same sector defence contractor Babcock International provided
substantial outperformance following an announcement that it had won a new
contract and was in talks regarding a long-term strategic partnership with the
Royal Navy. The share price was further boosted following strong full-year
results, a more promising outlook and an analyst upgrade. The company also
provided a positive trading update later in the period which further
benefitted performance.

Basic Materials was the largest area of detraction for the portfolio. Within
the sector specialist chemicals company Croda International and the
portfolio’s holding in Treatt, the flavour and fragrance manufacturer, were
the largest detractors. Croda International issued a second profits warning in
five months citing customers reducing stock which was piled up during the
pandemic and consumers spending less on their beauty regimes. Treatt suffered
from similar destocking issues. Meanwhile, the portfolio’s holdings in gold
mining stocks Barrick Gold and Newmont were flat over the period as precious
metals saw some weakness over the period following central banks guidance that
further interest rate rises may stay ‘higher for longer’. The decision not
to hold positions in Glencore and Rio Tinto, which performed strongly, also
detracted from relative performance.

The portfolio’s stock selection and overweight position in utilities
detracted from performance. Drax, formerly a coal-fired power station
operator, has already transitioned to using renewable biomass for electricity
generation and is now looking to become carbon negative through new bioenergy
carbon capture and storage (‘BECCS’) projects.  Sentiment was tested by
negative news flow and by comments in the market around working capital
arrangements reported by the company. In our view Drax remains key to helping
the UK achieve its net zero targets through large-scale Power BECCS and its
working capital is appropriately managed and well disclosed.

Health care was a further area of detraction within the portfolio. PureTech
Health fell in the quarter despite half year results noting that drug
development remains on track, and the pipeline continues to build. The share
price remained particularly volatile in the face of challenging macro
conditions for biotechs due to funding pressures, higher interest rates, and a
general risk-off sentiment amongst investors. Smith & Nephew detracted from
performance following first half results coming in lower than expected. There
was a further detractor in the sector from not holding GSK. There was also a
helpful contribution from the portfolio’s underweight in AstraZeneca, a
position which was sold during the period.

                                       30 November 2023  
                   Performance Impact  Portfolio Weight  
 Key Contributors  %                   %                 
 Next              +0.96               5.0               
 AstraZeneca       +0.80               –                 
 XPS Pensions      +0.65               2.0               
 RELX              +0.53               5.6               
 Ferguson          +0.39               3.1               

 

                                          30 November 2023  
                      Performance Impact  Portfolio Weight  
 Key Detractors       %                   %                 
 Drax                 –0.56               2.1               
 CVS                  –0.37               1.1               
 PureTech Health      –0.35               0.7               
 Croda International  –0.34               1.2               
 Phoenix              –0.33               2.3               

Q: How has gearing impacted the performance and what is your strategy going
forward?

A: The use of gearing in the portfolio over the period was helpful to overall
performance. Gearing over the six-month period was in the range of 6% to 8%
before rising to 10% in November. This level is below the limit of 25% set by
the Board.

The level of gearing is under regular review. In the current higher interest
rate environment, the cost of gearing the portfolio is an important
consideration when ascertaining the appropriate level for the portfolio. We
are comfortable that the current level of gearing provides an opportunity to
enhance the portfolio’s returns relative to the FTSE All-Share Index when
considering a wider macro view and the opportunities in the portfolio.

Q: Have your views on inflation changed over the six-month period and have
you altered your approach at all as a result?

A: Our view for some time has been that inflation would remain higher for
longer and that view has not changed over the last six months. Despite
year-on-year inflation figures declining we think that to reach the Bank of
England’s target of 2% from this point will be trickier. Our expectations
are that the first cut to interest rates will likely come in the second half
of 2024. For the businesses in which we invest, this means that the cost of
capital will remain at these higher levels for longer than perhaps expected.
Our focus has been for some time to concentrate on strong businesses with
pricing power and robust balance sheets. We think this prudent and our view in
this regard has not changed.

Q: How has the portfolio evolved over the period and how is it currently
positioned?

A: On a sectoral basis and relative to the FTSE All-Share Index, we remain
over-weight utilities and consumer discretionary stocks. The overweight to
utilities offers an inflation-linked return that is attractive in our view and
is underappreciated by the market. Our exposure to energy has also been
maintained as these companies generate significant free cash flows and make
significant distributions to shareholders. We expect oil prices to be volatile
in the coming months with the geopolitics looking evermore complex and as
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (‘OPEC’) continues to
manage supply. These energy businesses continue to invest in renewables and so
it is also possible that they will benefit from a rerating as they are
rewarded for their increased and continued commitment to invest in low carbon
energy projects. We favour oil over mining, given the drivers for oil (global
demand, OPEC’s role in supply) versus metals and the dependence of the
latter on demand from China. An additional argument in their favour is that
oil producers offer higher free cash flow and distribution yields than miners.
We hold Shell and BP. Their dividend yields are between 3.5% and 4%, but one
must also take into account the number of shares they are buying back, which
enhances overall returns.

We remain under-weight healthcare and consumer staples, the latter we see as
expensive. Within financials we are underweight in general but within banks we
hold sizeable positions in Barclays and Lloyds. Barclays has had its
challenges, but just looking in terms of profitability and returns,
performance is dramatically improved. It has exceeded its financial targets
for the past three years and management are promising a new set of targets and
that has the potential to help kick-start a share price recovery. Within life
assurance we hold Phoenix, Legal & General and Chesnara, which has more
international exposure than the others.

We have a holding in British American Tobacco (‘BAT’). The key attraction
here is its rapidly growing next-generation or Reduce Risk Products
(‘RRP’) business, which is now contributing increasingly to profits and
pointing to a future for BAT beyond tobacco. We cannot ignore the health
hazards of smoking, but they are showing how they can move beyond tobacco. The
dividend yield is now around 9% and continues to grow at the same time as the
company is paying down debt.

We are excited by all these holdings but we also see opportunities elsewhere,
for example among the higher-growth companies in interesting niches where we
can still find attractively priced opportunities. Here we would count
companies like Experian, RELX, Whitbread and recent purchases, Haleon and
London Stock Exchange (‘LSE’). These are all leaders in their respective
industries and have strong track records.

Over the period we removed two holdings from the portfolio. Hays had been sold
due to concerns around the investment case and strategy following a change in
management, and AstraZeneca has been sold following a loss of conviction in
the investment case.

Q: What is your outlook for the next twelve months and beyond? Why invest in
the UK now?

A: Like many other UK equity fund managers, we have been saying for some time
that the UK is cheap and we sincerely believe that this has created an
attractive starting point to make good returns from here. Whilst until
recently this value was concentrated in what are sometimes referred to as
“old economy” stocks and sectors, we have now seen the derating of shares
in many higher growth companies so that attractively valued companies are now
available in many areas of the market as described in the previous section
with regard to portfolio positioning.

In referring to “old economy” stocks we are referring to relatively
mature, lower growth companies that in the absence of compelling growth
investment opportunities can return the bulk of the cash flows they generate
to shareholders via dividends and in many cases share buybacks. The disconnect
between the share prices and the income generated results in a starting yield,
and importantly a yield that can grow, that looks hugely compelling both in
absolute terms and on a risk adjusted basis.

It is not uncommon to be able to purchase a share at a level that suggests the
expected dividends in the next twelve months represent a yield of 6-10%. At
that level, the dividend alone offers a good investment return, and that is
before considering growth in the earnings and cashflows that pay the
dividends. In many cases the per share growth will be enhanced by share
buybacks (which shrink the number of shares and so grow the dividend per
share). Investment cases for the best companies in this cohort certainly do
not rely on any capital growth from a future re-rating of the valuation, but
that would of course enhance returns further. We believe that the total return
potential is compelling both versus history and also against a backdrop of
gilts now paying a fixed yield of around 4%.

Investing always involves the unexpected but potential future bad news seems
already to be priced into many of these shares. It is hard to think of what
that news could be to justify the current valuations across the life
insurance, oil, mining, tobacco and bank sectors. Taking advantage of the
broader market malaise we hold stocks in each of these five areas.

We can also point to multiple examples of UK listed companies that are trading
on lower multiples than their US peer group. The negative sentiment generated
by the UK economy is frustrating. But the UK stockmarket is not a proxy for
the UK economy – 75% of its revenues are derived from overseas. It includes
a large number of fantastic global leaders. At some point investors are going
to realise what they are missing out on.

We are maintaining our focus on companies that are of good quality, with sound
fundamentals and strong cash generation. Careful selection of stocks with
strong liquidity, means we can remain active and maintain a portfolio of our
highest conviction ideas, across a range of sectors. We remain confident in
the long-term prospects of the companies that we own in the UK Equity Share
Portfolio. We further believe that these companies have the potential to
strengthen their competitive positions in the year ahead irrespective of the
economic and market regime that will develop.

 

 

Ciaran Mallon & James Goldstone

Joint Portfolio Managers

8 February 2024

 

UK Equity Share Portfolio List of Investments

AT 30 November 2023

Ordinary shares listed in the UK unless stated otherwise

                                                                                             Market               
                                                                                             Value     % of       
 Company                                          Sector†                                    £’000     Portfolio  
 Shell                                            Oil, Gas And Coal                          8,414     6.2        
 RELX                                             Media                                      7,576     5.6        
 Next                                             Retailers                                  6,802     5.0        
 SSE                                              Electricity                                6,669     4.9        
 BP                                               Oil, Gas and Coal                          6,368     4.7        
 National Grid                                    Gas, Water and Multi-Utilities             5,810     4.3        
 Barrick Gold – US Listed                         Precious Metals and Mining                 4,379     3.2        
 Ferguson                                         Industrial Support Services                4,217     3.1        
 Barclays                                         Banks                                      4,216     3.1        
 Bunzl                                            General Industrials                        3,776     2.8        
 Top Ten Holdings                                                                            58,227    42.9       
 Experian                                         Industrial Support Services                3,755     2.8        
 PRS REIT                                         Real Estate Investment Trusts              3,661     2.8        
 Tesco                                            Personal Care, Drug and Grocery Stores     3,519     2.6        
 Phoenix                                          Life Insurance                             3,102     2.3        
 Legal & General                                  Life Insurance                             3,011     2.2        
 Young & Co’s Brewery – Non-Voting ᴬᴵᴹ            Travel and Leisure                         2,932     2.1        
 Drax                                             Electricity                                2,834     2.1        
 British American Tobacco                         Tobacco                                    2,814     2.0        
 United Utilities                                 Gas, Water and Multi-Utilities             2,747     2.0        
 XPS Pensions                                     Investment Banking and Brokerage Services  2,728     2.0        
 Top Twenty Holdings                                                                         89,330    65.8       
 Ashtead                                          Industrial Transportation                  2,456     1.8        
 Newmont – US Listed                              Precious Metals and Mining                 2,304     1.7        
 Compass                                          Consumer Services                          2,300     1.7        
 Whitbread                                        Travel and Leisure                         2,240     1.6        
 Chemring                                         Aerospace and Defence                      2,129     1.6        
 Coats                                            General Industrials                        2,124     1.6        
 Severn Trent                                     Gas, Water & Multi-Utilities               2,112     1.5        
 JD Sports Fashion                                Retailers                                  2,055     1.5        
 Smith & Nephew                                   Medical Equipment and Services             1,986     1.5        
 Babcock International                            Aerospace and Defence                      1,978     1.5        
 Top Thirty Holdings                                                                         111,014   81.8       
 Sirius Real Estate                               Real Estate Investment Trusts              1,932     1.4        
 Lancashire                                       Non-life Insurance                         1,921     1.4        
 Lloyds                                           Banks                                      1,876     1.4        
 London Stock Exchange                            Finance and Credit Services                1,756     1.3        
 JTC                                              Investment Banking and Brokerage Services  1,750     1.3        
 Cranswick                                        Food Producers                             1,733     1.2        
 Hiscox                                           Non-life Insurance                         1,590     1.2        
 Croda International                              Chemicals                                  1,587     1.2        
 Man                                              Investment Banking and Brokerage Services  1,576     1.1        
 Chesnara                                         Life Insurance                             1,458     1.1        
 Top Forty Holdings                                                                          128,193   94.4       
 CVS ᴬᴵᴹ                                          Consumer Services                          1,295     1.1        
 Nichols ᴬᴵᴹ                                      Beverages                                  1,285     0.9        
 Haleon                                           Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology          1,274     0.9        
 PureTech Health                                  Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology          986       0.7        
 Essentra                                         Industrial Support Services                895       0.7        
 Treatt                                           Chemicals                                  743       0.5        
 Future                                           Media                                      707       0.5        
 Sherborne Investors (Guernsey) C                 Investment Banking and Brokerage Services  389       0.3        
 Total Holdings 48 (2023: 47)                                                                135,767   100.0      

AIM Investments quoted on AIM.

† FTSE Industry Classification Benchmark.

UK Equity Share Portfolio Income Statement

                                                   Six months ended              Six months ended              
                                                   30 November 2023              30 November 2022              
                                                   Revenue   Capital   Total     Revenue   Capital   Total     
                                                   £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     
 Gains/(losses) on investments held at fair value  –         1,565     1,565     –         (8,554)   (8,554)   
 Losses on foreign exchange                        –         (3)       (3)       –         (5)       (5)       
 Income                                            2,772     –         2,772     2,948     –         2,948     
 Investment management fees – note 2               (100)     (233)     (333)     (106)     (246)     (352)     
 Other expenses                                    (181)     (1)       (182)     (248)     (1)       (249)     
 Net return before finance costs and taxation      2,491     1,328     3,819     2,594     (8,806)   (6,212)   
 Finance costs – note 2                            (85)      (197)     (282)     (54)      (126)     (180)     
 Return before taxation                            2,406     1,131     3,537     2,540     (8,932)   (6,392)   
 Tax – note 3                                      (14)      –         (14)      (28)      –         (28)      
 Return after taxation for the financial period    2,392     1,131     3,523     2,512     (8,932)   (6,420)   
 Return per ordinary share – note 4                3.51p     1.65p     5.16p     3.47p     (12.35)p  (8.88)p   

 

Summary of Net Assets

                                                              At           At        
                                                              30 November  31 May    
                                                              2023         2023      
                                                              £’000        £’000     
 Fixed assets                                                 135,767      134,346   
 Current assets                                               892          1,010     
 Creditors falling due within one year, excluding borrowings  (268)        (270)     
 Bank facility                                                (12,850)     (9,650)   
 Net assets                                                   123,541      125,436   
 Net asset value per ordinary share – note 5                  184.63p      182.11p   
 Gearing:                                                                            
 – gross                                                      10.4%        7.7%      
 – net                                                        10.2%        7.5%      

 

Summary of Changes in Net Assets

                                                      Period ended 30 November 2023 £’000     Year ended 31 May 2023 £’000     
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
 Net assets brought forward                           125,436                                 143,374                          
 Shares bought back and held in treasury              (1,795)                                 (6,286)                          
 Share conversions                                    (1,438)                                 (1,995)                          
 Return after taxation for the financial period/year  3,523                                   (4,676)                          
 Dividend paid                                        (2,185)                                 (4,981)                          
 Net assets at the period/year end                    123,541                                 125,436                          

 

 

Global Equity Income Share Portfolio Performance Record

Total Return

                            Six Months to 30 November 2023  Year to 31 May 2023  Year to 31 May 2022  Year to 31 May 2021  Year to 31 May 2020  
                            
                            
 Net Asset Value (1)        8.4%                            9.8%                 9.6%                 35.9%                –6.4%                
 Share Price (1)            7.0%                            4.6%                 4.4%                 32.6%                –6.1%                
 MSCI World Index (£) (1)   6.4%                            3.8%                 7.4%                 22.3%                8.9%                 
 Revenue return per share   2.06p                           5.20p                4.85p                3.95p                5.39p                
 Dividends                  3.20p                           7.20p                7.15p                7.10p                7.05p                

(1) Source: LSEG Data & Analytics.

 

Global Equity Income Share Portfolio Manager’s Report

Q: How has the portfolio performed over the period?

A: Over the last six months, the portfolio returned +8.4%, outperforming its
benchmark, MSCI World Index, which delivered +6.4% over the same period. Over
the twelve-month period from November 2022, the portfolio also outperformed,
achieving +16.8% versus 6.3% for the benchmark. All figures are in £ terms,
total return basis.

                                       30 November 2023 Portfolio Weight %  
                   Performance Impact  
 Key Contributors  %                   
 Rolls-Royce       0.90                2.1                                  
 KKR & Co          0.87                2.8                                  
 Aker BP           0.84                3.3                                  
 Universal Music   0.73                2.2                                  
 Progressive       0.63                3.2                                  

 

                                        30 November 2023 Portfolio Weight %  
                    Performance Impact  
 Key Detractors     %                   
 Royal Unibrew      –1.06               2.4                                  
 AIA                –0.70               3.4                                  
 Reckitt Benckiser  –0.64               2.9                                  
 Link REIT          –0.46               1.2                                  
 Kone               –0.44               —                                    

On the positive side, Rolls-Royce benefitted after raising their profit
outlook, driven by strong performance from its civil aerospace and defence
divisions. Rolls-Royce sits firmly in the third bucket of how we think about
the structure of the portfolio – Dividend Restoration – and we’re
pleased to see the turnaround story taking shape.

Meanwhile, KKR & Co, a private equity group, also rallied off the back of
strong trading results and news that they were increasing their stake in one
of their portfolio companies which was viewed favourably by the markets. Aker
BP, one of the lowest cost producers of oil (and cleanest) was boosted by the
rally in oil prices.

The two other leading performers were examples of high-quality businesses we
felt the market had become overly pessimistic on: Universal Music and
Progressive. Both delivered results that were ahead of expectations and
outperformed.

At the other end, the Hang Seng index has been broadly flat for around a
decade and after another tough year (–10% in USD) it is unsurprising the
majority of our detractors were largely China-exposed companies (Kone, Link
REIT, AIA). We moved to reduce our total China exposure by selling Kone and
have retained AIA and Link REIT.

After a reasonable 2022 (in relative terms) many defensives had a tougher time
as the market became excited about a “soft landing” and more latterly
“no landing” and interest rate cuts. As such, Royal Unibrew and Reckitt
Benckiser were notable underperformers. We have found “defensives” are a
little like insurance – most of the time you don’t need it, but when you
do, you are very glad you have it! The cost of insurance has become cheaper
given the poor relative performance of this cohort.

Q: Has the positioning of the portfolio changed significantly over the
period?

A: To reiterate comments we have made in previous reports, we do not allocate
to particular countries or sectors, rather our portfolio is built from the
bottom up with companies that meet our key investment criteria, namely:

Good Quality: We seek businesses that are strong enough to thrive through the
economic cycle.

Competitively advantaged within their industry, with strong balance sheets and
no obvious Environmental, Social and Governance (‘ESG’) risks. Their
management teams need to have demonstrated capital allocation policies that
have created value for all shareholders.

Cashflow: We view strong free cashflow as the best measure of a company’s
health. It allows the company to pursue opportunities which enhance
shareholder value: investing at attractive rates, paying dividends, buying
back shares or paying down debt.

Price: We need to be able to buy the company at a price that represents a
significant discount to intrinsic value. In short, we want to buy good
companies when they are ‘on sale’.

Some individual names within the portfolio have of course changed. We began a
new position in Azelis during the third quarter, a specialty chemicals
distributor. We continued to add to the position on weakness, and combined
with a rally into year-end, Azelis is now a top 10 holding. Similarly, we used
weakness in the early part of the fourth quarter to add to our position in
Tractor Supply.

Further additions included Analog Devices and Texas Instruments as we felt the
market had become too focused on the challenging short-term outlook for these
two excellent companies. Both companies have excellent long-term prospects, in
our opinion, have strong balance sheets, and generate extremely attractive
free cash flow margins.

We exited our position in Kone the elevator manufacturer. Recent results from
the company have been disappointing and we felt our thesis was not playing out
in the way that we had hoped. We still think the company and industry have
very attractive characteristics, but we had higher conviction elsewhere. Other
notable trims include KKR & Co, this was driven by a degree of profit taking
after extremely strong performance in the shares recently.

                                     Global                             
                                     Equity           MSCI World Index  
                                     Income           
 Portfolio Metric                    Share Portfolio  
 Price/Earnings Ratio (12m forward)  15.6             17.3              
 Dividend Yield (12m forward)        2.6              2.1               
 Free Cashflow Yield                 4.1              4.2               
 Return on Equity                    17.0             14.0              
 Price/Book Value                    3.2              3.0               

Source: Bloomberg, January 2024.

Q: What is your outlook for 2024?

A: The final quarter of the year brought with it a substantial rally in most
risk assets as the Fed surprised market participants with a significant shift
in the outlook for the direction of interest rate policy, i.e., a clear
indication that rates have very likely peaked and are likely to be cut more
aggressively in 2024 than was expected. This shift in rate expectations,
driven by inflation falling faster than expected was very helpful for equity
markets.

Having underperformed markedly as rates rose it was of little surprise to see
the real estate sector led the market as rate expectations fell. As markets
moved to price in a soft landing, technology, industrials and financials were
the other leading sectors. Consumer staples, healthcare and utilities lagged
along with energy.

As we turn the page to 2024 the underperformance of the defensive triumvirate
of consumer staples, healthcare and utilities in the last few months is an
interesting one. With the market now clearly expecting a soft-landing it is
noteworthy that these historically defensive sectors have lagged
significantly, not just in the recent quarter but the last few years.

We have had limited exposure to these sectors in recent years as we felt
valuations were elevated for limited growth. But now with valuations reset, we
are starting to increase the time devoted to these sectors. Whilst they may
not grow as quickly as they have done in the past, several of them are likely
to offer an attractive blend of highly recurring cashflows, attractive
dividends and may serve a role as protection for investors should the
macro-environment turn out to be worse than currently priced in.

We would also highlight the relative attractiveness of small and mid-cap
companies (‘SMID’) relative to their large cap brethren. Whilst the
valuation gap is not what it was in October (SMID has outperformed large cap
since the peak in rates), it is still substantial. We find a number of
companies with market capitalisations in the $3 billion to $20 billion range
that offer an attractive mix of business quality, growth opportunity and
valuation. With less pressure from higher interest rates, we believe this
segment of the market could be an exciting opportunity for investors over the
next few years.

Q: Any final thoughts?

A: The last few years have created very challenging conditions for companies
to operate under. The pandemic, lockdowns, supply chain disruption and
geo-political tension have challenged typical demand patterns of consumption
with several industries operating well above, or indeed well below typical
demand patterns. Rather than one economic cycle, this has driven a breakdown
of typical cross-industry relationships as significant supply/demand
conditions have exacerbated the usual inventory dynamics; this should lead to
opportunities in sectors and individual securities as these patterns
normalise. This should be a good environment for individual stock selection.

 

Stephen Anness

Portfolio Manager

8 February 2024

 

Global Equity Income Share Portfolio List of Investments

AT 30 November 2023

Ordinary shares unless stated otherwise

                                                                                               Market               
                                                                                               Value     % of       
 Company                       Sector†                                         Country         £’000     Portfolio  
 3i                            Financial Services                              United Kingdom  4,015     5.5        
 Microsoft                     Software & Services                             United States   3,410     4.7        
 UnitedHealth                  Health Care Equipment & Services                United States   3,264     4.5        
 American Tower                Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)    United States   3,176     4.4        
 Union Pacific                 Transportation                                  United States   3,021     4.2        
 Azelis                        Capital Goods                                   Belgium         2,886     4.0        
 Broadcom                      Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment        United States   2,676     3.7        
 AIA                           Insurance                                       Hong Kong       2,458     3.4        
 Aker BP                       Energy                                          Norway          2,408     3.3        
 Progressive                   Insurance                                       United States   2,316     3.2        
 Top Ten Holdings                                                                              29,630    40.9       
 Verallia                      Materials                                       France          2,248     3.1        
 Zurich Insurance              Insurance                                       Switzerland     2,129     2.9        
 Texas Instruments             Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment        United States   2,128     2.9        
 Reckitt Benckiser             Household & Personal Products                   United Kingdom  2,060     2.9        
 Tractor Supply                Consumer Discretionary Distribution & Retail    United States   2,030     2.8        
 Infrastrutture                Telecommunication Services                      Italy           2,017     2.8        
 KKR & Co                      Financial Services                              United States   2,015     2.8        
 Samsung Electronics –         Technology Hardware & Equipment                 South Korea     1,849     2.6        
 preference shares                                                                                                  
 Coca-Cola                     Food, Beverage & Tobacco                        United States   1,810     2.5        
 LVMH                          Consumer Durables & Apparel                     France          1,749     2.4        
 Top Twenty Holdings                                                                           49,665    68.6       
 Standard Chartered            Banks                                           United Kingdom  1,727     2.4        
 Royal Unibrew                 Food, Beverage & Tobacco                        Denmark         1,725     2.4        
 Intercontinental Exchange     Financial Services                              United States   1,724     2.4        
 Herc Holdings                 Capital Goods                                   United States   1,664     2.3        
 RELX                          Commercial & Professional Services              United Kingdom  1,645     2.3        
 Universal Music               Media & Entertainment                           Netherlands     1,566     2.2        
 Recordati                     Pharmaceuticals, Biotechnology & Life Sciences  Italy           1,555     2.1        
 Rolls-Royce                   Capital Goods                                   United Kingdom  1,541     2.1        
 Analog Devices                Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment        United States   1,466     2.0        
 Celanese                      Materials                                       United States   1,402     1.9        
 Top Thirty Holdings                                                                           65,680    90.7       
 Kenvue                        Household & Personal Products                   United States   922       1.3        
 Howden Joinery                Capital Goods                                   United Kingdom  888       1.2        
 Danaher                       Pharmaceuticals, Biotechnology & Life Sciences  United States   883       1.2        
 Link REIT                     Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)    Hong Kong       842       1.2        
 Canadian Pacific Kansas City  Transportation                                  Canada          721       1.0        
 Besi                          Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment        Netherlands     683       0.9        
 Home Depot                    Consumer Discretionary Distribution & Retail    United States   490       0.7        
 American Express              Financial Services                              United States   448       0.6        
 CME                           Financial Services                              United States   435       0.6        
 Ferguson                      Capital Goods                                   United Kingdom  349       0.5        
 Top Forty Holdings                                                                            72,341    99.9       
 Accenture – A Shares          Software & Services                             United States   64        0.1        
 Sberbank* – A DR              Banks                                           Russia          –         –          
 Total Holdings 42 (2023: 43)                                                                  72,405    100.0      

ADR American Depositary Receipts – are certificates that represent shares
in the relevant stock and are issued by a US bank. They are denominated and
pay dividends in US dollars.

† MSCI and Standard & Poor’s Global Industry Classification Standard.

* The investment in Sberbank – ADR has been valued at zero as secondary
listings of the depositary receipts on Russian companies have been suspended
from trading.

 

Global Equity Income Share Portfolio Income Statement

                                                 Six months ended              Six months ended              
                                                 30 November 2023              30 November 2022              
                                                 Revenue   Capital   Total     Revenue   Capital   Total     
                                                 £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     
 Gains on investments held at fair value         –         5,192     5,192     –         790       790       
 Gains on foreign exchange                       –         5         5         –         12        12        
 Income                                          754       –         754       702       –         702       
 Investment management fees – note 2             (59)      (138)     (197)     (51)      (121)     (172)     
 Other expenses                                  (95)      (3)       (98)      (83)      (1)       (84)      
 Net return before finance costs and taxation    600       5,056     5,656     568       680       1,248     
 Finance costs – note 2                          (7)       (17)      (24)      (24)      (54)      (78)      
 Return before taxation                          593       5,039     5,632     544       626       1,170     
 Tax – note 3                                    (74)      –         (74)      (84)      –         (84)      
 Return after taxation for the financial period  519       5,039     5,558     460       626       1,086     
 Return per ordinary share – note 4              2.06p     19.97p    22.03p    1.84p     2.51p     4.35p     

 

Summary of Net Assets

                                                              At 30 November 2023 £’000     At 31 May 2023 £’000     
                                                              
                                                              
                                                              
 Fixed assets                                                 72,405                        66,026                   
 Current assets                                               550                           861                      
 Creditors falling due within one year, excluding borrowings  (170)                         (144)                    
 Bank facility                                                (100)                         –                        
 Net assets                                                   72,685                        66,743                   
 Net asset value per ordinary share – note 5                  284.52p                       265.53p                  
 Gearing:                                                                                                            
 – gross                                                      0.1%                          0.0%                     
 – net                                                        0.0%                          –0.8%                    

 

Summary of Changes in Net Assets

                                                      Period ended 30 November 2023 £’000     Year ended 31 May 2023 £’000     
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
 Net assets brought forward                           66,743                                  62,638                           
 Shares bought back and held in treasury              (362)                                   (1,677)                          
 Share conversions                                    1,550                                   1,774                            
 Return after taxation for the financial period/year  5,558                                   5,799                            
 Dividend paid                                        (804)                                   (1,791)                          
 Net assets at the period/year end                    72,685                                  66,743                           

 

Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio Performance Record

Total Return

                                      Six Months to 30 November 2023  Year to 31 May 2023  Year to 31 May 2022  Year to 31 May 2021  Year to 31 May 2020  
                                      
                                      
 Net Asset Value (1)                  2.7%                            –11.4%               0.3%                 25.4%                –3.1%                
 Share Price (1)                      –8.4%                           –14.3%               –5.2%                26.4%                –6.9%                
 Composite Benchmark (2)              5.2%                            –17.1%               –6.1%                16.8%                2.8%                 
 ICE BoA Merrill Lynch 3 month LIBOR                                                                                                                      
 plus 5% per annum (1)                5.1%                            7.5%                 5.1%                 5.1%                 5.9%                 
 Revenue return per share             2.33p                           3.38p                1.05p                –0.17p               –0.02p               
 Dividends                            3.00p                           1.00p                nil                  nil                  nil                  

(1) Source: LSEG Data & Analytics.

(2) With effect from 1 June 2021, the benchmark adopted by the Balanced Risk
Allocation Share Portfolio is comprised of 50% 30-year UK Gilts Index, 25% GBP
hedged MSCI World Index (net) and 25% GBP hedged S&P Goldman Sachs Commodity
Index. Prior to this, the benchmark was ICE BoA Merrill Lynch 3 month LIBOR
plus 5% per annum. Accordingly, both the new and old benchmark are shown.
Source: LSEG Data & Analytics/Bloomberg.

 

Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio Manager’s Report

Q: How has the strategy performed in the period under review?

A: The Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio NAV total return for the six
months to 30 November 2023 was 2.7%. Markets continued their upward trend as
inflation showed signs of cooling and stronger-than-expected economic data
boosted optimism that a soft landing was possible. Central banks continued to
raise interest rates but with easing inflation, market expectations turned to
the possibility that rates have peaked. Policy makers, however, signalled that
they weren’t ready to close the door on future hikes, raising the
possibility that consumer prices, and therefore interest rates, will remain
higher for longer. Against this backdrop, commodities and equities rose while
government bonds declined.

Q: What were the biggest contributors and detractors to performance?

A: Strategic exposure to commodities was the largest contributor to results,
with all four commodity complexes (i.e., agriculture, energy, industrial
metals, precious metals) posting gains. Energy was the top contributor at the
sub-complex level with gains in five of the six exposures, the exception being
natural gas. Energy continues to benefit from rising global demand and tight
supplies driven by production cuts by the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries (‘OPEC’) and Russia, along with refinery maintenance
that is keeping fuel product inventories at low levels. Agriculture
performance was driven by gains in the soy complex, sugar and coffee. Hot
weather and severe drought conditions in key growing regions of the US were
the principal catalyst for higher soybean, soymeal and soybean oil prices.
Precious metals contributed as well, with silver outperforming gold, despite
the yield on the US 10-year Treasury increasing to levels last seen in 2007,
while the US dollar surged in response. Industrial metals delivered more
modest gains for the period, with gains in copper countering losses in
aluminium.

Strategic exposure to global equities contributed to results, with five of the
six equity markets posting gains. US equities were the top contributor to
results with small caps outperforming their large cap counterparts as higher
beta exposures benefitted from growing expectations for interest rate cuts in
2024. European equities also posted gains as economic data suggested that
economic conditions are stabilising. Japanese equities contributed on the back
of strong corporate earnings and the Bank of Japan continuing to maintain its
more accommodative monetary policy relative to the rest of the developed
world. Emerging equities also contributed despite ongoing concerns over
China’s lacklustre economic recovery. UK equities finished flat for the
period due to continued signs of economic distress.

Strategic exposure to government bonds detracted from results, with all six
government bond markets generating losses. US Treasuries were the top
detractor as yields surged on stronger-than-expected US economic data and the
hawkish “higher for longer” stance of the Federal Reserve. German bunds
detracted as the European Central Bank (ECB) hiked rates to their highest
level and signalled it intends to leave rates at elevated levels for a
“sufficiently long duration.” Australian and Canadian government bonds
detracted from results as well as both country’s central banks raised
interest rates over the period. Similarly, UK gilts declined as the Bank of
England maintained its “higher for longer” interest rate approach to
combat inflation.

Q: How did the tactical allocation perform?

A: The portfolio’s tactical allocation produced positive results as gains
from positioning across government bonds overshadowed losses from positioning
across global equities and commodities.

Q: What is your 30-day outlook?

A: Despite rapid interest rate hikes over the course of 2022 and 2023, many
developed economies continue to grow and have only recently begun to show
signs of strain. Investors are now showing optimism that monetary policymakers
have reached the end of their tightening cycles after nearly two years of
battling inflation. However, the ripple effects of past rate hikes continue to
be felt and likely are not completely known yet. Looking forward, investors
will have to consider the balance between the durability of growth and the
stickiness of inflation. Outcomes will likely vary by country — for example,
the US has been the most resilient to the effects of tightening policy and
credit conditions, while growth in the eurozone and the UK is already
flagging. Risks and uncertainty have also remained elevated since the global
pandemic. The Russian invasion of Ukraine, events in the Middle East and
continued tensions over Taiwan have introduced greater uncertainty for global
markets, supply chains and prices. The ongoing conflicts could also trigger
another commodity price shock that negatively impacts growth. Meanwhile, the
rapid tightening of credit conditions across many major economies has raised
fears about potential financial “accidents,” such as the US regional bank
failures that occurred in the first half of 2023.

Against this backdrop, the portfolio started 2024 with increased allocations
to global equities and government bonds, while it slightly reduced its
allocation to commodities. Relative to this positioning February saw increased
allocations to equities and commodities. The allocation to fixed income was
slightly reduced. We will rebalance the portfolio both strategically and
tactically again at the beginning of March as per our usual cadence.. Unlike
more passive or index based strategies, this once a month rebalancing gives
the portfolio more flexibility to position itself according to prevailing
market conditions – all while seeking to maintain better economic
diversification than traditional balanced portfolios.

 

 

Scott Wolle

Portfolio Manager

8 February 2024


Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio List of Investments

AT 30 NOVEMBER 2023

                                                  Market    %          
                                           Yield  value     of         
                                           %      £’000     Portfolio  
 Short Term Investments                                                
 Invesco Liquidity Funds plc – Sterling    5.32   3,363     59.3       
 UK Treasury Bill – 0% 18 Mar 2024         5.62   738       13.0       
 UK Treasury Bill – 0% 07 May 2024         5.35   587       10.4       
 UK Treasury Bill – 0% 29 Apr 2024         5.35   489       8.6        
 UK Treasury Bill – 0% 13 May 2024         5.37   293       5.2        
 UK Treasury Bill – 0% 15 Apr 2024         5.39   196       3.5        
 Total Short Term Investments                     5,666     100.0      
 Hedge Funds (1)                                                       
 Harbinger – Streamline Offshore Fund             –         –          
 Total Hedge Funds                                –         –          
 Total Fixed Asset Investments                    5,666     100.0      

(1) The hedge fund investments are residual holdings of the previous
investment strategy, which are awaiting realisation of underlying investments.
Given lack of availability of recent valuation the market value has been
written-down to zero.

Derivative instruments held in the Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio
are shown on the next page. At the period end all the derivative instruments
held in the Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio were exchange traded
futures contracts. Holdings in futures contracts that are not exchange traded
are permitted as explained in the investment policy disclosed in full on page
45 of the Company’s 2023 Annual Financial Report.

 

Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio List of Derivative Instruments

AT 30 November 2023

                                                                                                                                   Notional      
                                                                                                                         Notional  Exposure      
                                                                                                                         Exposure  as % of       
                                                                                                                         £’000     Net Assets    
 Government Bond Futures:                                                                                                                        
 Australia                                                                                                               1,356     22.5          
 Japan                                                                                                                   1,098     18.2          
 Germany                                                                                                                 1,028     17.0          
 UK                                                                                                                      387       6.4           
 Canada                                                                                                                  70        1.1           
 Total Bond Futures (5)                                                                                                  3,939     65.2          
 Equity Futures:                                                                                                                                 
 Japan                                                                                                                   508       8.4           
 Emerging markets                                                                                                        312       5.2           
 Europe                                                                                                                  227       3.8           
 UK                                                                                                                      224       3.7           
 US small cap                                                                                                            215       3.5           
 US large cap                                                                                                            180       3.0           
 Total Equity Futures (6)                                                                                                1,666     27.6          
 Commodity Futures:                                                                                                                              
 Energy                                                                                                                                          
 Gasoline                                                                                                                144       2.4           
 Brent crude                                                                                                             127       2.1           
 Low sulphur gasoline                                                                                                    127       2.1           
 New York Harbor ultra-low sulphur diesel                                                                                86        1.4           
 WTI crude                                                                                                               60        1.0           
 Agriculture                                                                                                                                     
 Soyabean meal                                                                                                           134       2.2           
 Soyabean                                                                                                                109       1.8           
 Cotton                                                                                                                  95        1.6           
 Sugar                                                                                                                   92        1.5           
 Soyabean oil                                                                                                            74        1.3           
 Industrial Metals                                                                                                                               
 Aluminium                                                                                                               173       2.8           
 Copper                                                                                                                  167       2.8           
 Precious Metals                                                                                                                                 
 Gold                                                                                                                    163       2.7           
 Total Commodity Futures (13)                                                                                            1,551     25.7          
 Total Derivative Instruments (24)                                                                                       7,156     118.5         
                                                                                                                                                 
 Target Annualised Risk:                                                                                                                         
 The targeted annualised risk (volatility of monthly returns) for the portfolio as listed above is analysed as follows:                          
 Asset Class                                                                                                             Risk      Contribution  
 Equities                                                                                                                3.9%      44.4%         
 Commodities                                                                                                             2.8%      32.3%         
 Fixed Income                                                                                                            2.1%      23.3%         
                                                                                                                         8.8%      100.0%        

 

Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio Income Statement

                                                 Six months ended              Six months ended              
                                                 30 November 2023              30 November 2022              
                                                 Revenue   Capital   Total     Revenue   Capital   Total     
                                                 £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     
 Losses on investments held at fair value        –         (1)       (1)       –         (1)       (1)       
 (Losses)/gains on derivative instruments        (3)       58        55        31        (665)     (634)     
 (Losses)/gains on foreign exchange              –         (12)      (12)      –         21        21        
 Income                                          153       –         153       55        –         55        
 Investment management fees - note 2             (7)       (16)      (23)      (7)       (18)      (25)      
 Other expenses                                  (14)      (1)       (15)      (14)      (1)       (15)      
 Return before taxation                          129       28        157       65        (664)     (599)     
 Tax – note 3                                    (32)      32        –         –         –         –         
 Return after taxation for the financial period  97        60        157       65        (664)     (599)     
 Return per ordinary share – note 4              2.33p     1.46p     3.79p     1.55p     (15.80)p  (14.25)p  

 

Summary of Net Assets

                                                                  At           At        
                                                                  30 November  31 May    
                                                                  2023         2023      
                                                                  £’000        £’000     
 Fixed assets                                                     5,666        5,542     
 Derivative assets held at fair value though profit or loss       110          125       
 Current assets                                                   309          735       
 Derivative liabilities held at fair value though profit or loss  (30)         (186)     
 Creditors falling due within one year, excluding borrowings      (17)         (26)      
 Net assets                                                       6,038        6,190     
 Net asset value per ordinary share – note 5                      150.59p      149.56p   
 Notional exposure of derivative instruments as % of net assets   118.5%       147.7%    

 

Summary of Changes in Net Assets

                                                      Period ended 30 November 2023 £’000     Year ended 31 May 2023 £’000     
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
 Net assets brought forward                           6,190                                   7,085                            
 Shares bought back and held in treasury              –                                       (147)                            
 Share conversions                                    (185)                                   122                              
 Return after taxation for the financial period/year  157                                     (829)                            
 Dividend paid                                        (124)                                   (41)                             
 Net assets at the period/year end                    6,038                                   6,190                            

 

Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio Performance Record

Total Return

                           Six Months to 30 November 2023  Year to 31 May 2023  Year to 31 May 2022  Year to 31 May 2021  Year to 31 May 2020  
                           
                           
 Net Asset Value (1)       2.5%                            3.5%                 –0.3%                3.6%                 1.1%                 
 Share Price (1)           6.1%                            –5.2%                –4.0%                0.5%                 1.6%                 
 Revenue return per share  2.14p                           1.06p                –0.02p               1.35p (2)            0.65p                
 Dividends                 1.00p                           1.00p                1.00p                nil                  0.80p                

(1) Source: LSEG Data & Analytics.

(2) Includes a £34,000 (1.40p per share) refund of management fees in
respect of prior year overcharges.

Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio Manager’s Report

Q: How does the portfolio generate returns?

A: The investment objective of the portfolio is to produce an appropriate
level of income return combined with a high degree of security. We aim to
generate returns by investing mainly in sterling-based high quality debt
securities and similar assets but with the flexibility to invest in assets
with a greater weighted average maturity than a money market fund.
Accordingly, the value of the portfolio may rise or fall. The majority of the
portfolio is invested in the iShares – Sterling Ultrashort Bond UCITS ETF.
The ETF invests in Sterling denominated investment grade corporate bonds and
quasi-government bond, aiming to track performance of the Markit iBoxx GBP
Liquid Investment Grade Ultrashort Index. It has a weighted average maturity
of under one year and an effective duration of 0.2 years. We also hold a
portion of the portfolio in the AAA-rated Sterling Liquidity Portfolio of
Invesco Liquidity Funds plc – Sterling to meet short term payment
obligations.

We review the Exchange Traded Fund universe annually and reconfirmed this fund
in December 2023. The ETF delivers a good yield for a low level of credit risk
(average rating AA), while maintaining a low average maturity and
demonstrating good liquidity.

Q: What has the performance of your fund been over the last six months?

A: The Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio NAV total return for the six months
to 30 November 2023 was 2.5%. The portfolio delivered a dividend of around
0.9% income over the period.

Q: What’s the outlook for returns?

A: The fund’s low duration means that the major driver of the portfolio’s
returns from year to year is its income yield. However, over shorter period
changes in interest rate expectations (and hence bond prices) have some
impact.

Financial conditions remain supportive for high quality (AAA, AA and A-rated)
issuers, such as those held by the Managed Liquidity Share  Portfolio.

Over the six months to November 2023 markets priced in a higher path for
interest rates which modestly detracted from capital returns. However, this
reversed in December 2023 as the US Federal Reserve indicated it expected to
cut rates in 2024, and lower-than-expected UK inflation led UK markets to
expect greater rate cuts in the UK too. This had a modest positive effect on
portfolio returns into calendar year end.

Looking further ahead, inflation is likely to remain above central bank
targets in 2024. Discussion is focused on whether central banks will retain
higher interest rates for longer. To the extent interest rates remain at
current levels, this will contribute to the income yield for the Managed
Liquidity Share Portfolio.

We continue to expect the portfolio to deliver low and stable growth in Net
Asset Value above cash deposits.

 

Derek Steeden

Portfolio Manager

8 February 2024

 

Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio List of Investments

AS AT 30 November 2023

                                                 Market               
                                                 Value     % of       
                                                 £’000     Portfolio  
 Invesco Liquidity Funds plc – Sterling          152       9.5        
 iShares – Sterling Ultrashort Bond UCITS ETF    1,442     90.5       
                                                 1,594     100.0      

 

Income Statement

                                                 Six months ended              Six months ended              
                                                 30 November 2023              30 November 2022              
                                                 Revenue   Capital   Total     Revenue   Capital   Total     
                                                 £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     £’000     
 Gains on investments held at fair value         –         9         9         –         9         9         
 Income                                          31        –         31        6         –         6         
 Investment management fees – note 2             (1)       –         (1)       (1)       –         (1)       
 Other expenses                                  (3)       –         (3)       (3)       –         (3)       
 Return before taxation                          27        9         36        2         9         11        
 Tax – note 3                                    –         –         –         –         –         –         
 Return after taxation for the financial period  27        9         36        2         9         11        
 Return per ordinary share – note 4              2.14p     0.69p     2.83p     0.17p     0.67p     0.84p     

 

 

 

 

Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio Summary of Net Assets

                                                              At 30 November 2023 £’000     At 31 May 2023 £’000     
                                                              
                                                              
                                                              
 Fixed assets                                                 1,594                         1,475                    
 Current assets                                               11                            34                       
 Creditors falling due within one year, excluding borrowings  (139)                         (139)                    
 Net assets                                                   1,466                         1,370                    
 Net asset value per ordinary share – note 5                  111.29p                       109.51p                  

 

Summary of Changes in Net Assets

                                                      Period ended 30 November 2023 £’000     Year ended 31 May 2023 £’000     
                                                      
                                                      
                                                      
 Net assets brought forward                           1,370                                   1,324                            
 Shares bought back and held in treasury              –                                       (77)                             
 Share conversions                                    73                                      99                               
 Return after taxation for the financial period/year  36                                      36                               
 Dividend paid                                        (13)                                    (12)                             
 Net assets at the period/year end                    1,466                                   1,370                            

 

Principal Risks and Uncertainties

The Board has carried out a robust assessment of the risks facing the Company,
including those that would threaten its business model, future performance,
solvency and liquidity. As part of this process, the Board conducted a full
review of the Company’s risk control summary and considered new and emerging
risks. These are not necessarily principal risks for the Company at present
but may have the potential to be in the future. In carrying out this
assessment, the Board considered the emerging risks facing the Company
including geopolitical risks such as the ongoing war in Ukraine and conflict
in the Middle East, cyber threats, climate related risks and risks related to
adverse outcomes of corporate projects. The principal risks that follow are
those identified by the Board as the most significant after consideration of
mitigating factors and not intended to cover all the risk categories as shown
in the Internal Controls and Risk Management section on page 69 of the
Company’s 2023 Annual Financial Report. In the view of the Board, these
principal risks and uncertainties are as much applicable to the remaining six
months of the financial year as they were to the six months under review. The
Company continues to operate effectively and to pursue its investment
objectives and resilience of the Company, its Board and its service providers
has been demonstrated throughout the period.

 Category and Principal Risk Description                                                                                                                                   Mitigating Procedures and Controls                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         Risk trend during the period  
 Strategic Risk                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     
 Investment Objectives and Attractiveness to Investors There is no guarantee that the Investment Policy of the Company and of each portfolio will provide the returns      The Board monitors the share registers and the performance of the Company and each portfolio. It has established a structure offering a range of options for investors and has set guidelines to ensure that the Investment Policy of the Company and each portfolio is pursued by the Manager.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            Unchanged                     
 sought by the Company. There can be no guarantee, therefore, that the Company will achieve its investment objectives or that the shares will continue to meet investors’                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           
 needs (for example if the Company fails to adapt to changes in investor demand including in relation to ESG and climate change). As a result the Company may become                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                
 unattractive to investors, leading to decreased demand for its shares and a widening discount.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     
 Market Movements and Portfolio Performance Individual portfolio performance is substantially dependent on the performance of the securities (including derivative         The performance of the Manager is carefully monitored by the Board and the continuation of the Manager’s mandates is reviewed each year. The Board has established guidelines to ensure that the investment policies of each class of share are pursued by the Manager. For a fuller discussion of the economic and market conditions facing the Company and the current and future performance of the different portfolios of the Company, please see both the Chairman’s Statement on pages 2 and 3 and the Portfolio Managers’ Reports starting on pages 4 to 25. The Company has a nil-valued holding in Sberbank, a Russian bank but no other direct investments in Russia or other holdings with significant links to Russia.        Unchanged                     
 instruments) held within the portfolio. The prices of these securities are influenced by many factors including the general health of regional and worldwide economies;                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            
 interest rates; inflation; government policies; industry conditions; political and diplomatic events; tax laws; environmental laws; and by the demand from investors. The                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          
 current conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East continue to have an impact on the global economy, ranging from decreases to the supply (and/or increases to the costs) of                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          
 goods to increases (and increased volatility) in energy and commodity prices and inflation. In addition, the portfolios’ investments are subject to risks arising from                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             
 inflation and rising interest rates. This was driven by the knock-on effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and other geopolitical tensions and uncertainties which have                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 
 impacted global supply chains. These risks represent the potential loss the portfolio might suffer through holding investments in the face of negative market movements.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           
 The Manager strives to maximise the total return from the portfolios, but the investments held are influenced by market conditions and the Board acknowledges the external                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          
 influences on the performance of each portfolio. Further risks specifically applicable to the Balanced Risk Allocation Shares are set out on page 29.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              

 

 Risks Applicable to the Company’s Shares Shares in the Company are designed to be held over the long-term and may not be suitable as short-term investments. There can be The Board has adopted a discount control policy that applies to all share classes and the Board and the Manager monitor the market rating of each share class. While it is the intention of the Directors to pay dividends to holders of the UK Equity, Global Equity Income and Managed Liquidity Shares, this will be affected by the returns achieved by the respective portfolios and the dividend policy adopted by the Board. Accordingly, the amount of dividends paid to shareholders may fluctuate. Any change in the tax or accounting treatment of dividends received or other returns may also affect the level of dividend paid on the shares in future years. The Directors have resolved, in the absence of unforeseen circumstances, to supplement revenue with capital profits in order to pay equity portfolio dividends at levels set by the Board (see pages 46 and 47 of the Company’s 2023 Annual Financial Report).    Unchanged  
 no guarantee that any appreciation in the value of the Company’s shares will occur and investors may not get back the full value of their investments. Owing to the                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                
 potential difference between the mid-market price of the shares and the prices at which they are sold, there is no guarantee that their realisable value will reflect                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              
 their mid-market price.  The market value of a share, as well as being affected by its net asset value (‘NAV’), is also influenced by investor demand, its dividend yield,                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          
 where applicable, and prevailing interest rates, amongst other factors. As such, the market value of a share can fluctuate and may not reflect its underlying NAV. Shares                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          
 may therefore trade at discounts to their NAVs. Past performance of the Company’s shares is not necessarily indicative of future performance.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      
 Viability and Compulsory Conversion of a Class of Share It is possible that through poor performance, market sentiment, or otherwise, lack of demand for one of the       The Board monitors share conversions and portfolio sizes and liaises with the Manager on the continued viability of each share class. The Board has received assurances from the Manager that the size of the portfolio is not critical to the Manager being able to continue to offer its investment management services in respect of any of the Company’s four portfolio strategies. If at any time the Board considers that the listing of any class of share on the Official List is likely to be cancelled and the loss of such listing would mean that the Company would no longer be able to qualify for approval as an investment trust under section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010, the Board may serve written notice on the holders of the relevant shares requiring them to convert their shares into another share class.                                                                                                Unchanged  
 Company’s share classes could result in the relevant portfolio becoming too small to be viable. The continued listing on the Official List of each class of share is                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               
 dependent on at least 25% of the shares in that class being held in public hands. This means that if more than 75% of the shares of any class were held by, inter alia,                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            
 the Directors, persons connected with Directors or persons interested in 5% or more of the relevant shares, the listing of that class of share might be suspended or                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               
 cancelled. The Listing Rules state that the FCA may allow a reasonable period of time for the Company to restore the appropriate percentage if this rule is breached, but                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          
 in the event that the listing of any class of shares were cancelled the Company would lose its investment trust status.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            

 

 Liability of a Portfolio for the Liabilities of Another Portfolio                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            The Directors intend that, in the absence of unforeseen circumstances, each portfolio will effectively operate as if it were a stand-alone company. However, investors    Unchanged  
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              should be aware of the following factors: • As a matter of law, the Company is a single entity. Therefore, in the event that any of the portfolios has insufficient funds            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              or assets to meet all of its liabilities, on a winding-up or otherwise, such a shortfall would become a liability of the other portfolios and would be payable out of the            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              assets of the other portfolios in such proportions as the Board may determine; and • The Companies Act 2006 prohibits the Directors from declaring dividends in                      
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              circumstances where, following the distribution, the Company’s assets would represent less than one and a half times the aggregate of its liabilities or the amount of net            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              assets would be less than the aggregate of its share capital and undistributable reserves. If the Company were to incur material liabilities in the future, a significant            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              fall in the value of the Company’s assets as a whole may affect the Company’s ability to pay dividends on a particular class of share, even though there are distributable            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              profits attributable to the relevant portfolio.                                                                                                                                      
 Gearing Borrowing will amplify the effect on shareholders’ funds of gains and losses on the underlying securities. Whilst the use of borrowings by the Company should enhance the total return on a particular class of share where the return on the underlying securities is rising and exceeds the cost of borrowing, it will have the opposite effect where the underlying return is falling, further reducing the total return on that share class. Similarly, the use of gearing by investment companies or funds in which the Company invests increases the volatility of those investments. The Company has a £40 million 364 day multicurrency revolving credit facility and there is no guarantee that these facilities will be renewed at maturity or on terms acceptable to the Company. If it were not possible to renew these facilities or replace them with one from another lender, the amounts owing by the Company would need to be funded by the sale of securities.     Gearing levels of the different portfolios will change from time to time in accordance with the respective portfolio managers’ assessments of risk and reward. The Manager Unchanged  
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              assesses the exposure to gearing on a regular basis, including the level of borrowings and covenants of the credit facility. The Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              may also be geared (by up to 250%, according to the investment policy set out on page 45 of the Company’s 2023 Annual Financial Report) by means of the derivative                   
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              instruments in which it invests. This is discussed separately below, under the heading: Additional Risks Applicable to Balanced Risk Allocation Shares. The Manager                  
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              assesses the exposure to gearing on a regular basis, including the level of borrowings and covenants of the credit facility.                                                         
 Hedging  Where hedging is used there is a risk that the hedge will not be effective.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         The Company may use derivatives to hedge its exposure to currency or other risks and for the purpose of efficient portfolio management. There may be a correlation between Unchanged  
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              price movements in the underlying securities, currency or index, on the one hand, and price movements in the investments, which are the subject of the hedge, on the other            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              hand. In addition, an active market may not exist for a particular hedging derivative instrument at any particular time.                                                             


 Regulatory and Tax Related The Company is subject to various laws and regulations by virtue of its status as a public limited investment company registered under the Companies Act 2006, its status as an investment trust and its listing on the London Stock Exchange. Loss of investment trust status could lead to the Company being subject to UK Capital Gains Tax on the sale of its investments. A serious breach of other regulatory rules could lead to suspension from the London Stock Exchange, a fine or a qualified Audit Report. Other control failures, either by the Manager or any other of the Company’s service providers, could result in operational or reputational problems, erroneous disclosures or loss of assets through fraud, as well as breaches of regulations.    The Manager reviews the level of compliance with the Corporation Tax Act 2010 and other financial regulatory requirements on a daily basis. All transactions, income and  Unchanged  
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      expenditure are reported to the Board. The Board regularly considers the risks to which the Company is exposed, the measures in place to control them and the potential              
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      for other risks to arise. The Board ensures that satisfactory assurances are received from service providers. The depositary and the Manager’s compliance and internal               
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      audit officers report regularly to the Company’s Audit Committee. The risks and risk management policies and procedures as they relate to the financial assets and                   
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      liabilities of the Company are also detailed in note 17 to the financial statements in the Company’s 2023 Annual Financial Report.                                                   
 Additional Risks Applicable to Balanced Risk Allocation Shares The use of financial derivative instruments, in particular futures, forms part of the investment policy and strategy of the Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio. The degree of leverage inherent in futures trading potentially means that a relatively small price movement in a futures contract may result in an immediate and substantial loss to the portfolio. The portfolio’s ability to use these instruments may be limited by market conditions, regulatory limits and tax considerations. The absence of a liquid market for any particular instrument at any particular time may inhibit the ability of the Manager to liquidate a financial derivative instrument at an advantageous price.                         The Manager actively seeks the most liquid means of obtaining the required exposures. The financial derivative instruments used for the strategy are geared instruments   Unchanged  
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      and the aggregate notional exposure will usually exceed the net asset value of the portfolio. Whilst this could result in greater fluctuations in the net asset value, and            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      consequently the share price, the use of leverage is normally necessary to achieve the target volatility required to meet the return objective. The degree of leverage               
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      inherent in futures trading potentially means that a relatively small price movement in a futures contract may result in an immediate and substantial loss and it would be            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      necessary to increase the collateral held at the clearing broker to cover such loss. This is mitigated by the Company not using financial derivative instruments to create            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      net short positions in any asset class combined with holding cash balances sufficient to meet collateral requirements.                                                               

 

 Third Party Service Providers Risk                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           
 Reliance on Third Party Service Providers The Manager may be exposed to reputational risks. In particular, the Manager may be exposed to the risk that litigation,        Third-party service providers are subject to ongoing monitoring by the Manager and the Company. The Manager reviews the performance of all third-party providers regularly through formal and informal meetings. The Audit Committee reviews regularly the performance and internal controls of the Manager and all third-party providers through audited service organisation control reports, together with updates on information security, the results of which are reported to the Board. The Manager’s business continuity plans are reviewed on an ongoing basis and the Directors are satisfied that the Manager has in place robust plans and infrastructure to minimise the impact on its operations so that the Company can continue to trade, meet regulatory obligations, report and meet shareholder requirements. The Board receives regular update reports from the Manager and third-party service providers on business continuity processes and has been provided with assurance from them all insofar as possible that measures are in place for them to continue to provide contracted services to the Company.    Unchanged  
 misconduct, operational failures, negative publicity and press speculation, whether or not it is valid, will harm its reputation. Any damage to the reputation of the                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        
 Manager could result in potential counterparties and third parties being unwilling to deal with the Manager and by extension the Company. This could have an adverse                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         
 impact on the ability of the Company to successfully pursue its Investment Policy. The Company has no employees and the Board comprises non-executive directors only. The                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    
 Company is therefore reliant upon the performance of third-party service providers for its executive function and service provisions. The Company’s operational structure                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    
 means that all cyber risk (information and physical security) arises at its third-party service providers, including fraud, sabotage or crime against the Company. The                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       
 Company’s operational capability relies upon the ability of its third-party service providers to continue working throughout the disruption caused by a major event such                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     
 as the Covid-19 pandemic. Failure by any service provider to carry out its obligations to the Company in accordance with the terms of its appointment could have a                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           
 materially detrimental impact on the operation of the Company and could affect the ability of the Company to successfully pursue its investment policy. The Company’s main                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    
 service providers, of which the Manager is the principal provider, are listed on page 45. The Manager may be exposed to reputational risks. In particular, the Manager may                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    
 be exposed to the risk that litigation, misconduct, operational failures, negative publicity and press speculation, whether or not it is valid, will harm its reputation.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    
 Damage to the reputation of the Manager could potentially result in counterparties and third parties being unwilling to deal with the Manager and by extension the                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           
 Company, which carries the Manager’s name. This could have an adverse impact on the ability of the Company to pursue its investment policy successfully.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     

 

Governance

 

Going Concern

The financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis. The
Directors consider this to be appropriate as the Company has adequate
resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future,
taken as twelve months from the signing of the financial statements for this
purpose. This conclusion is consistent with the longer term viability
statement on page 53 of the 2023 Annual Financial Report and in reaching it
the Directors took into account the value of net assets; the Company’s
Investment Policy; its risk management policies; the diversified portfolio of
readily realisable securities which can be used to meet funding commitments;
the credit facility and the overdraft which can be used for short-term funding
requirements; the liquidity of the investments which could be used to repay
the credit facility in the event that the facility could not be renewed or
replaced; its revenue; the current economic outlook and the ability of the
Company in the light of these factors to meet all its liabilities and ongoing
expenses.

 

Related Party Transactions

Under United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (UK Accounting
Standards and applicable law), the Company has identified the Directors and
their dependents as related parties. No other related parties have been
identified during the period. No transactions with related parties have taken
place which have materially affected the financial position or the performance
of the Company.

 

Statement of Directors’ Responsibilities

IN RESPECT OF THE PREPARATION OF THE HALF-YEARLY FINANCIAL REPORT

The Directors are responsible for preparing the half-yearly financial report
using accounting policies consistent with applicable law and UK Accounting
Standards.

The Directors confirm that, to the best of their knowledge:

–  the condensed set of financial statements contained within the
half-yearly financial report has been prepared in accordance with the FRC’s
FRS 104 Interim Financial Reporting;

–  the interim management report includes a fair review of the information
required by DTR 4.2.7R and DTR 4.2.8R of the FCA’s Disclosure Guidance and
Transparency Rules; and

–  the interim management report includes a fair review of the information
required on related party transactions.

The half-yearly financial report has not been audited or reviewed by the
Company’s auditor.

Signed on behalf of the Board of Directors.

Victoria Muir

Chairman

8 February 2024

Condensed Income Statement

                                                For the six months ended         For the six months ended         
                                                30 November 2023                 30 November 2022                 
                                                Revenue    Capital    Total      Revenue    Capital    Total      
                                                £’000      £’000      £’000      £’000      £’000      £’000      
 Gains/(losses) on investments                                                                                    
 held at fair value                             –          6,765      6,765      –          (7,756)    (7,756)    
 (Losses)/gains on derivative instruments       (3)        58         55         31         (665)      (634)      
 (Losses)/gains on foreign exchange             –          (10)       (10)       –          28         28         
 Income                                         3,710      –          3,710      3,711      –          3,711      
 Investment management fees – note 2            (167)      (387)      (554)      (165)      (385)      (550)      
 Other expenses                                 (293)      (5)        (298)      (348)      (3)        (351)      
 Net return before finance costs                                                                                  
 and taxation                                   3,247      6,421      9,668      3,229      (8,781)    (5,552)    
 Finance costs – note 2                         (92)       (214)      (306)      (78)       (180)      (258)      
 Return before taxation                         3,155      6,207      9,362      3,151      (8,961)    (5,810)    
 Tax – note 3                                   (120)      32         (88)       (112)      –          (112)      
 Return after taxation for the                                                                                    
 financial period                               3,035      6,239      9,274      3,039      (8,961)    (5,922)    
 Return per ordinary share – note 4                                                                               
 –  UK Equity Share Portfolio                   3.51p      1.65p      5.16p      3.47p      (12.35)p   (8.88)p    
 –  Global Equity Income Share Portfolio        2.06p      19.97p     22.03p     1.84p      2.51p      4.35p      
 –  Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio    2.33p      1.46p      3.79p      1.55p      (15.80)p   (14.25)p   
 –  Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio           2.14p      0.69p      2.83p      0.17p      0.67p      0.84p      

The total columns of this statement represent the Company’s profit and loss
account, prepared in accordance with UK Accounting Standards. The return after
taxation is the total comprehensive income and therefore no additional
statement of other comprehensive income is presented. The supplementary
revenue and capital columns are presented for information purposes in
accordance with the Statement of Recommended Practice issued by the
Association of Investment Companies. All items in the above statement derive
from continuing operations of the Company. No operations were acquired or
discontinued in the period. Income Statements for the different Share classes
are shown on pages 10, 16, 21 and 24 for the UK Equity, Global Equity Income,
Balanced Risk Allocation and Managed Liquidity Share Portfolios respectively.

 

Condensed Statement of Changes in Equity

                                                                   Capital                                   
                                    Share     Share      Special   Redemption  Capital   Revenue             
                                    Capital   Premium    Reserve   Reserve     Reserve   Reserve   Total     
                                    £’000     £’000      £’000     £’000       £’000     £’000     £’000     
 Six months ended 30 November 2023                                                                           
 At 31 May 2023                     1,707     –          137,424   377         60,129    102       199,739   
 Cancellation of deferred shares    –         –          (4)       4           –         –         –         
 Shares bought back and held                                                                                 
 in treasury                        –         –          (2,157)   –           –         –         (2,157)   
 Share conversions                  (3)       –          3         –           –         –         –         
 Return after taxation per the                                                                               
 income statement                   –         –          –         –           6,239     3,035     9,274     
 Dividends paid – note 9            –         –          (285)     —           —         (2,841)   (3,126)   
 At 30 November 2023                1,704     –          134,981   381         66,368    296       203,730   
 Six months ended 30 November 2022                                                                           
 At 31 May 2022                     1,709     122,990    18,935    372         70,414    1         214,421   
 Cancellation of deferred shares    –         –          –         2           (2)       –         –         
 Cancellation of share premium                                                                               
 account (1)                        –         (122,990)  122,990   –           –         –         –         
 Shares bought back and held in                                                                              
 treasury                           –         –          (900)     –           (3,516)   –         (4,416)   
 Share conversions                  (1)       –          1,104     –           (1,103)   –         –         
 Return after taxation per the                                                                               
 income statement                   –         –          –         –           (8,961)   3,039     (5,922)   
 Dividends paid – note 9            –         –          (310)     –           –         (2,641)   (2,951)   
 At 30 November 2022                1,708     –          141,819   374         56,832    399       201,132   

(1) Following class consents and approval of shareholders at the Company’s
Annual General Meeting on 4 October 2022, the Court process to cancel the
share premium accounts of the UK Equity and Balanced Risk Allocation Share
Classes was implemented on 17 November 2022. Following the implementation the
entire share premium account of each of the UK Equity and Balanced Risk
Allocation Share Classes was cancelled, amounting to £121,700,000 and
£1,290,000 respectively. These distributable reserves provide the Company
with flexibility, subject to financial performance, to make future
distributions and/or, subject to shareholder authority, in buying back shares.

 

Condensed Balance Sheet

Registered Number 5916642

AS AT 30 NOVEMBER 2023

                                                                             Global    Balanced                         
                                                                   UK        Equity    Risk        Managed              
                                                                   Equity    Income    Allocation  Liquidity  Total     
                                                                   £’000     £’000     £’000       £’000      £’000     
 Fixed assets                                                                                                           
 Investments held at fair value through profit or loss             135,767   72,405    5,666       1,594      215,432   
 Current assets                                                                                                         
 Derivative assets held at fair value through profit or loss       –         –         110         –          110       
 Debtors                                                           648       426       215         3          1,292     
 Cash and cash equivalents                                         244       124       94          8          470       
                                                                   892       550       419         11         1,872     
 Creditors: amounts falling due within one year                                                                         
 Derivative liabilities held at fair value through profit or loss  —         —         (30)        —          (30)      
 Other creditors                                                   (268)     (170)     (17)        (139)      (594)     
 Bank facility                                                     (12,850)  (100)     —           —          (12,950)  
                                                                   (13,118)  (270)     (47)        (139)      (13,574)  
 Net current (liabilities)/assets                                  (12,226)  280       372         (128)      (11,702)  
 Net assets                                                        123,541   72,685    6,038       1,466      203,730   
 Capital and reserves                                                                                                   
 Share capital                                                     1,066     425       106         107        1,704     
 Special reserve                                                   114,379   17,706    2,078       818        134,981   
 Capital redemption reserve                                        87        81        29          184        381       
 Capital reserve                                                   7,802     54,473    3,773       320        66,368    
 Revenue reserve                                                   207       —         52          37         296       
 Shareholders’ funds                                               123,541   72,685    6,038       1,466      203,730   
 Net asset value per ordinary share – note 5                       184.63p   284.52p   150.59p     111.29p              

 

Condensed Balance Sheet

AS AT 31 MAY 2023

                                                                             Global    Balanced                         
                                                                   UK        Equity    Risk        Managed              
                                                                   Equity    Income    Allocation  Liquidity  Total     
                                                                   £’000     £’000     £’000       £’000      £’000     
 Fixed assets                                                                                                           
 Investments held at fair value through profit or loss             134,346   66,026    5,542       1,475      207,389   
 Current assets                                                                                                         
 Derivative assets held at fair value through profit or loss       –         –         125         –          125       
 Debtors                                                           732       350       460         4          1,546     
 Cash and cash equivalents                                         278       511       275         30         1,094     
                                                                   1,010     861       860         34         2,765     
 Creditors: amounts falling due within one year                                                                         
 Derivative liabilities held at fair value through profit or loss  –         –         (186)       –          (186)     
 Other creditors                                                   (270)     (144)     (26)        (139)      (579)     
 Bank facility                                                     (9,650)   –         –           –          (9,650)   
                                                                   (9,920)   (144)     (212)       (139)      (10,415)  
 Net current (liabilities)/assets                                  (8,910)   717       648         (105)      (7,650)   
 Net assets                                                        125,436   66,743    6,190       1,370      199,739   
 Capital and reserves                                                                                                   
 Share capital                                                     1,074     419       107         107        1,707     
 Special reserve                                                   117,607   16,809    2,263       745        137,424   
 Capital redemption reserve                                        84        81        28          184        377       
 Capital reserve                                                   6,671     49,434    3,713       311        60,129    
 Revenue reserve                                                   –         –         79          23         102       
 Shareholders’ funds                                               125,436   66,743    6,190       1,370      199,739   
 Net asset value per ordinary share – note 5                       182.11p   265.53p   149.56p     109.51p              

 

Condensed Statement of Cash Flows

                                                                                  For the      For the      
                                                                                  six months   six months   
                                                                                  ended        ended        
                                                                                  30 November  30 November  
                                                                                  2023         2022         
                                                                                  £’000        £’000        
 Cash flows from operating activities                                                                       
 Net return before finance costs and taxation                                     9,668        (5,552)      
 Tax on overseas income                                                           (88)         (112)        
 Adjustments for:                                                                                           
 Purchase of investments                                                          (38,147)     (24,088)     
 Sale of investments                                                              36,785       35,057       
 Sale of futures                                                                  (87)         (507)        
                                                                                                            
                                                                                  (1,449)      10,462       
 Scrip dividends                                                                  —            (231)        
 (Gains)/losses on investments                                                    (6,765)      7,756        
 (Gains)/losses on derivatives                                                    (55)         634          
 Decrease in debtors                                                              343          203          
 (Decrease)/increase in creditors                                                 (1)          35           
 Net cash inflow from operating activities                                        1,653        13,195       
 Cash flows from financing activities                                                                       
 Interest paid on bank borrowings                                                 (294)        (258)        
 Increase/(decrease) in bank facility                                             3,300        (5,550)      
 Share buy back costs                                                             (2,157)      (4,559)      
 Equity dividends paid – note 9                                                   (3,126)      (2,951)      
 Net cash outflow from financing activities                                       (2,277)      (13,318)     
 Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents                                        (624)        (123)        
 Cash and cash equivalents at the start of the period                             1,094        947          
 Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the period                               470          824          
 Reconciliation of cash and cash equivalents to the Balance Sheet is as follows:                            
 Cash held at custodian                                                           470          824          
 Cash and cash equivalents                                                        470          824          
 Cash flow from operating activities includes:                                                              
 Interest received                                                                23           8            
 Dividends received                                                               3,641        3,589        

 

Reconciliation of net debt

                                  At 1 June 2023 £’000     Cash Flows £’000     At 30 November 2023 £’000     
                                  
                                  
                                  
 Analysis of changes in net debt                                                                              
 Cash and cash equivalents        1,094                    (624)                470                           
 Bank facility                    (9,650)                  (3,300)              (12,950)                      
 Total                            (8,556)                  (3,924)              (12,480)                      

 

Notes to the Condensed Financial Statements

1. Accounting Policies

The condensed financial statements have been prepared in accordance with
applicable United Kingdom Accounting Standards and applicable law (UK
Generally Accepted Accounting Practice), including FRS 102 The Financial
Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland, FRS 104
Interim Financial Reporting and the Statement of Recommended Practice
Financial Statements of Investment Trust Companies and Venture Capital Trusts,
issued by the Association of Investment Companies in July 2022. The financial
statements are issued on a going concern basis.

The accounting policies applied to these condensed financial statements are
consistent with those applied in the Annual Financial Report for the year
ended 31 May 2023.

2. Management Fees and Finance Costs

Investment management fees and finance costs are charged to the applicable
Portfolio as follows, in accordance with the Board’s expected split of
long-term income and capital returns:

                           Revenue  Capital  
 Portfolio                 Reserve  Reserve  
 UK Equity                 30%      70%      
 Global Equity Income      30%      70%      
 Balanced Risk Allocation  30%      70%      
 Managed Liquidity         100%     –        

The Manager is entitled to a flat annual management fee which is calculated
and payable quarterly. The fee is based on the net assets of each Portfolio,
at the following percentages:

– 0.55% per annum on net assets up to £100 million and 0.50% over £100
million for both UK Equity and Global Equity Income Share Portfolios;

– 0.75% per annum for the Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio; and

– 0.12% per annum for the Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio.

3. Investment Trust Status and Tax

It is the intention of the Directors to conduct the affairs of the Company so
that it satisfies the conditions for approval as an investment trust company.
As such, the Company has not provided any UK corporation tax on any realised
or unrealised capital gains or losses.

The tax charge represents withholding tax suffered on overseas income for the
period.

4. Basic Return per Share

Basic revenue, capital and total return per ordinary share is based on each of
the returns on ordinary activities after taxation as shown by the income
statement for the applicable Share class and on the following number of shares
being the weighted average number of shares in issue throughout the period for
each applicable Share class:

                           Weighted Average                                                      
                           Number Of Shares                                                      
                           Six Months Ended 30 November 2023  Six Months Ended 30 November 2022  
                           
                           
 Share                     
 UK Equity                 68,231,832                         72,322,839                         
 Global Equity Income      25,230,982                         24,951,232                         
 Balanced Risk Allocation  4,158,733                          4,201,998                          
 Managed Liquidity         1,262,789                          1,257,588                          

 

5. Net Asset Values per Ordinary Share

The net asset values per ordinary share were based on the following
Shareholders’ funds and shares (excluding treasury shares) in issue at the
period end:

                                  At 30 November 2023 £’000     At 31 May 2023 £’000     
                                  
                                  
                                  
 Portfolio Shareholders’ Funds                                                           
 UK Equity                        123,541                       125,436                  
 Global Equity Income             72,685                        66,743                   
 Balanced Risk Allocation         6,038                         6,190                    
 Managed Liquidity                1,466                         1,370                    

 

                            Number Of Shares                     
                            At 30 November 2023  At 31 May 2023  
                            
                            
 Portfolio Shares In Issue                                       
 UK Equity                  66,912,787           68,881,153      
 Global Equity Income       25,546,911           25,135,742      
 Balanced Risk Allocation   4,009,751            4,138,995       
 Managed Liquidity          1,317,292            1,251,360       

 

6. Classification Under Fair Value Hierarchy

FRS 102 as amended for fair value hierarchy disclosures sets out three fair
value levels. These are:

Level 1 – fair value based on quoted prices in active markets for identical
assets.

Level 2 – fair values based on valuation techniques using observable inputs
other than quoted prices within level 1.

Level 3 – fair values based on valuation techniques using inputs that are
not based on observable market data.

The fair value hierarchy analysis for investments held at fair value at the
period end is as follows:

                                                                   Global    Balanced               
                                                         UK        Equity    Risk        Managed    
                                                         Equity    Income    Allocation  Liquidity  
 At 30 November 2023                                     £’000     £’000     £’000       £’000      
 Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss:                                             
 Level 1                                                 135,767   72,405    2,303       1,442      
 Level 2                                                 –         –         3,473       152        
 Total for financial assets                              135,767   72,405    5,776       1,594      
 Financial liabilities:                                                                             
 Level 2 – derivatives liabilities held at fair value    –         –         30          –          

 

                                                                   Global    Balanced               
                                                         UK        Equity    Risk        Managed    
                                                         Equity    Income    Allocation  Liquidity  
 At 31 May 2023                                          £’000     £’000     £’000       £’000      
 Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss:                                             
 Level 1                                                 134,346   66,026    2,430       1,345      
 Level 2                                                 –         –         3,232       130        
 Level 3                                                 –         –         5           –          
 Total for financial assets                              134,346   66,026    5,667       1,475      
 Financial liabilities:                                                                             
 Level 2 – derivatives liabilities held at fair value    –         –         186         –          

Level 1 – This is the majority of the Company’s investments and
comprises all quoted investments and Treasury bills.

Level 2 – This comprises liquidity funds held in the Balanced Risk
Allocation and Managed Liquidity Share Portfolios, and any derivative
instruments.

Level 3 – This included the remaining legacy hedge fund investments of the
Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio which were written down to zero
during the period.

 

7. Movements in Share Capital and Share Class Conversions

                                                         Global      Balanced                
                                            UK           Equity      Risk        Managed     
 For the six months ended 30 November 2023  Equity       Income      Allocation  Liquidity   
 Ordinary 1p shares (number)                                                                 
 At 31 May 2023                             68,881,153   25,135,742  4,138,995   1,251,360   
 Shares bought back into treasury           (1,168,169)  (153,963)   –           –           
 Arising on share conversion:                                                                
 August 2023                                (228,495)    108,847     78,597      2,668       
 November 2023                              (571,702)    456,285     (207,841)   63,264      
 At 30 November 2023                        66,912,787   25,546,911  4,009,751   1,317,292   
 Treasury shares (number)                                                                    
 At 31 May 2023                             38,515,775   16,776,159  6,547,218   9,393,678   
 Shares bought back into treasury           1,168,169    153,963     —           —           
 At 30 November 2023                        39,683,944   16,930,122  6,547,218   9,393,678   
 Total shares in issue at 30 November 2023  106,596,731  42,477,033  10,556,969  10,710,970  
 Average buy back price                     152.9p       233.8p      n/a         n/a         

As part of the conversion process, 433,269 deferred shares of 1p each were
created. All deferred shares are cancelled before the period end and so no
deferred shares are in issue at the start or end of the period.

Subsequent to the period end, 270,974 UK Equity Portfolio Shares have been
bought back to treasury at an average price of 158.8p.

8. Share Prices

                            Global   Balanced               
                   UK       Equity   Risk        Managed    
 Period end        Equity   Income   Allocation  Liquidity  
 30 November 2022  165.00p  224.00p  127.00p     96.00p     
 31 May 2023       159.50p  232.00p  131.50p     91.00p     
 30 November 2023  157.25p  245.00p  117.50p     95.50p     

9. Dividends on Ordinary Shares

First quarterly interim dividends for UK Equity, Global Equity Income,
Balanced Risk Allocation and Managed Liquidity shares along with a special
dividend on Balanced Risk Allocation were paid on 15 August 2023. Second
quarterly interim dividends for UK Equity and Global Equity Income were paid
on 15 November 2023:

                           Number of Shares  Dividend Rate (Pence)         
                                             Total                  
 Period end                                  £’000                  
 UK Equity                                                                 
 First interim             68,881,153        1.60                   1,102  
 Second Interim            67,701,484        1.60                   1,083  
                                             3.20                   2,185  
 Global Equity Income                                                      
 First interim             25,135,742        1.60                   402    
 Second Interim            25,127,260        1.60                   402    
                                             3.20                   804    
 Balanced Risk Allocation                                                  
 First interim             4,138,995         1.00                   41     
 Special Dividend          4,138,995         2.00                   83     
                                             3.00                   124    
 Managed Liquidity                                                         
 First interim             1,251,360         1.00                   13     
                                             1.00                   13     

Dividends paid for the six months to 30 November 2023 totalled £3,126,000
(six months to 30 November 2022: £2,951,000).

On 5 December 2023 the Company announced the third quarterly interim dividends
for the year ending 31 May 2024. The dividend declared for UK Equity Shares of
1.60p and Global Equity Income Shares of 1.60p will be paid on 15 February
2024 and they went ex-dividend on 18 January 2024.

10. Status of Half-Yearly Financial Report

The financial information contained in this half-yearly financial report,
which has not been reviewed or audited by the independent auditor, does not
constitute statutory accounts within the meaning of section 434 of the
Companies Act 2006. The financial information for the half years ended 30
November 2023 and 30 November 2022 has not been audited. The figures and
financial information for the year ended 31 May 2023 are extracted and
abridged from the latest audited accounts and do not constitute the statutory
accounts for that year. Those accounts have been delivered to the Registrar of
Companies and include the Independent Auditor’s Report, which was
unqualified and did not include a statement under section 498 of the Companies
Act 2006.

 

By order of the Board

Invesco Asset Management Limited

Company Secretary 

Date: 8 February 2024

 

Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures

(Discount)/Premium

Discount is a measure of the amount by which the mid-market price of an
investment company share is lower than the underlying net asset value (NAV) of
that share. Conversely, Premium is a measure of the amount by which the
mid-market price of an investment company share is higher than the underlying
net asset value of that share. In this half year financial report the discount
is expressed as a percentage of the net asset value per share and is
calculated according to the formula set out below. If the shares are trading
at a premium the result of the below calculation will be positive and if they
are trading at a discount it will be negative.

Gearing

The gearing percentage reflects the amount of borrowings that a company has
invested. This figure indicates the extra amount by which net assets, or
shareholders’ funds, would move if the value of a company’s investments
were to rise or fall. A positive percentage indicates the extent to which net
assets are geared; a nil gearing percentage, or ‘nil’, shows a company is
ungeared. A negative percentage indicates that a company is not fully invested
and is holding net cash as described in the Alternative Performance Measures
section below.

Total Return

Total return is the theoretical return to shareholders that measures the
combined effect of any dividends paid, together with the rise or fall in the
share price or NAV. In this half-yearly financial report these return figures
have been sourced from LSEG Data & Analytics who calculate returns on an
industry comparative basis.

Net Asset Value Total Return

Total return on net asset value per share, with debt at market value, assuming
dividends paid by the Company were reinvested into the shares of the Company
at the NAV per share at the time the shares were quoted ex-dividend.

Share Price Total Return

Total return to shareholders, on a mid-market price basis, assuming all
dividends received were reinvested, without transaction costs, into the shares
of the Company at the time the shares were quoted ex-dividend.

Benchmark Total Return

Total return on the benchmark is on a mid-market value basis, assuming all
dividends received were reinvested, without transaction costs, into the shares
of the underlying companies at the time the shares were quoted ex-dividend.

Notional Exposure

Notional exposure in relation to a future, or other derivative contract, is
the value of the assets referenced by the contract that could alternatively be
held to provide an identical return.

Volatility

Volatility refers to the amount of uncertainty or risk about the size of
changes in a security’s value. It is a statistical measure of the dispersion
of returns for a given security or market index measured by using the standard
deviation or variance of returns from that same security or market index.
Commonly, the higher the volatility, the riskier the security.

Alternative Performance Measures (‘APM’)

An APM is a measure of performance or financial position that is not defined
in applicable accounting standards and cannot be directly derived from the
financial statements. The calculations shown in the corresponding tables are
for the six months ended 30 November 2023 and the year ended 31 May 2023. The
APMs listed here are widely used in reporting within the investment company
sector and consequently aid comparability.

(Discount)/Premium (APM)

                                                        Global   Balanced               
                                               UK       Equity   Risk        Managed    
 30 November 2023           Page               Equity   Income   Allocation  Liquidity  
 Share price                1     a            157.25p  245.00p  117.50p     95.50p     
 Net asset value per share  1     b            184.63p  284.52p  150.59p     111.29p    
 Discount                         c = (a-b)/b  (14.8)%  (13.9)%  (22.0)%     (14.2)%    
 31 May 2023                                                                            
 Share price                39    a            159.50p  232.00p  131.50p     91.00p     
 Net asset value per share  35    b            182.11p  265.53p  149.56p     109.51p    
 Discount                         c = (a-b)/b  (12.4)%  (12.6)%  (12.1)%     (16.9)%    

 

Gross Gearing (APM)

This reflects the amount of gross borrowings in use by a company and takes no
account of any cash balances. It is based on gross borrowings as a percentage
of net assets.

                                            Global    
                                  UK        Equity    
                                  Equity    Income    
 30 November 2023  Page           £’000     £’000     
 Bank facility     34             12,850    100       
 Gross borrowings        a        12,850    100       
 Net asset value   34    b        123,541   72,685    
 Gross gearing           c = a/b  10.4%     0.1%      
 31 May 2023                                          
 Bank facility     35             9,650     –         
 Gross borrowings        a        9,650     –         
 Net asset value   35    b        125,436   66,743    
 Gross gearing           c = a/b  7.7%      nil       

 

Net Gearing or Net Cash (APM)

Net gearing reflects the amount of net borrowings invested, i.e. borrowings
less cash and cash equivalents (incl. investments in money market funds). It
is based on net borrowings as a percentage of net assets. Net cash reflects
the net exposure to cash and cash equivalents, as a percentage of net assets,
after any offset against total borrowings.

                                                          Global    
                                                UK        Equity    
                                                Equity    Income    
 30 November 2023                Page           £’000     £’000     
 Bank facility                   34             12,850    100       
 Less cash and cash equivalents  34             (244)     (124)     
 Net borrowings                        a        12,606    (24)      
 Net asset value                 34    b        123,541   72,685    
 Net gearing                           c = a/b  10.2%     0.0%      
 31 May 2023                                                        
 Bank facility                   35             9,650     –         
 Less cash and cash equivalents  35             (278)     (511)     
 Net borrowings                        a        9,372     (511)     
 Net asset value                 35    b        125,436   66,743    
 Net gearing/(net cash)                c = a/b  7.5%      (0.8)%    

 

Total Return

Net Asset Value Total Return (APM)

                                                                      Global   Balanced               
                                                             UK       Equity   Risk        Managed    
 30 November 2023                             Page           Equity   Income   Allocation  Liquidity  
 As at 30 November 2023                       34             184.63p  284.52p  150.59p     111.29p    
 As at 31 May 2023                            35             182.11p  265.53p  149.56p     109.51p    
 Change in period                                   a        1.4%     7.2%     0.7%        1.6%       
 Impact of dividend reinvestments (1)               b        1.8%     1.2%     2.0%        0.9%       
 Net asset value total return for the period        c = a+b  3.2%     8.4%     2.7%        2.5%       
 31 May 2023                                                                                          
 As at 31 May 2023                            35             182.11p  265.53p  149.56p     109.51p    
 As at 31 May 2022                                           194.35p  249.00p  169.87p     106.92p    
 Change in year                                     a        (6.3)%   6.6%     (12.0)%     2.4%       
 Impact of dividend reinvestments (1)               b        3.7%     3.2%     0.6%        1.1%       
 Net asset value total return for the year          c = a+b  (2.6)%   9.8%     (11.4)%     3.5%       

(1) Total dividends paid during the period for the UK Equity Share Portfolio
of 3.20p (year to 31 May 2023: 7.05p), Global Equity Income Share Portfolio of
3.20p (year to 31 May 2023: 7.20p), Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio
3.00p (year to 31 May 2023: 1.00p) and Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio 1.00p
(year to 31 May 2023: 1.00p), reinvested at the NAV or share price on the
ex-dividend date. A fall in the NAV or share price, subsequent to the
reinvestment date, consequently further reduces the returns and vice versa if
NAV or share price rises.


Share Price Total Return (APM)

Total return to shareholders, on a mid-market price basis, assuming all
dividends received were re-invested, without transaction costs, into the same
class of shares in the Company at the time the shares were quoted ex-dividend.

                                                                  Global   Balanced               
                                                         UK       Equity   Risk        Managed    
 30 November 2023                         Page           Equity   Income   Allocation  Liquidity  
 As at 30 November 2023                   39             157.25p  245.00p  117.50p     95.50p     
 As at 31 May 2023                        39             159.50p  232.00p  131.50p     91.00p     
 Change in period                               a        (1.4)%   5.6%     (10.6)%     4.9%       
 Impact of dividend reinvestments (1)           b        2.1%     1.4%     2.2%        1.2%       
 Share price total return for the period        c = a+b  0.7%     7.0%     (8.4)%      6.1%       
 31 May 2023                              Page                                                    
 As at 31 May 2023                        39             159.50p  232.00p  131.50p     91.00p     
 As at 31 May 2022                                       175.00p  229.00p  154.50p     97.00p     
 Change in year                                 a        (8.9)%   1.3%     (14.9)%     (6.2)%     
 Impact of dividend reinvestments (1)           b        4.2%     3.3%     0.6%        1.0%       
 Share price total return for the year          c = a+b  (4.7)%   4.6%     (14.3)%     (5.2)%     

(1) Total dividends paid during the period for the UK Equity Share Portfolio
of 3.20p (year to May 2023: 7.05p), Global Equity Income Share Portfolio of
3.20p (year to May 2023: 7.20p), Balanced Risk Allocation Share Portfolio
3.00p (year to May 2023: 1.00p) and Managed Liquidity Share Portfolio 1.00p
(year to May 2023: 1.00p), reinvested at the NAV or share price on the
ex-dividend date. A fall in the NAV or share price, subsequent to the
reinvestment date, consequently further reduces the returns and vice versa if
NAV or share price rises.

 

Directors, Investment Manager and Administration

Directors

Victoria Muir (Chairman of the Board and Nomination Committee)

Craig Cleland (Chairman of the Audit Committee)

Davina Curling (Senior Independent Director and Chairman of the

  Management Engagement Committee)

Mark Dampier (Chairman of the Marketing Committee)

Tim Woodhead

All the Directors are, in the opinion of the Board, independent of the
management company.

All Directors are members of the Management Engagement, Nomination and
Marketing Committees.

All Directors, except the Chairman of the Board, are members of the Audit
Committee.

Registered Office and Company Number

Perpetual Park

Perpetual Park Drive

Henley-on-Thames

Oxfordshire

RG9 1HH

Registered in England and Wales Number 05916642

Alternative Investment Fund Manager (Manager)

Invesco Fund Managers Limited

Company Secretary

Invesco Asset Management Limited

Company Secretarial contact: James Poole

020 7543 3559

email: James.Poole@invesco.com

Correspondence Address

43-45 Portman Square

London W1H 6LY

020 3753 1000

email: investmenttrusts@invesco.com

Depositary and Custodian

The Bank of New York Mellon (International) Limited

160 Queen Victoria Street, London EC4V 4LA

Corporate Broker

Winterflood Investment Trusts

The Atrium Building

Cannon Bridge

25 Dowgate Hill

London EC4R 2GA

General Data Protection Regulation

The Company’s privacy notice can be found at
www.invesco.co.uk/investmenttrusts

Invesco Client Services

Invesco has a Client Services Team, available to assist you from 8.30am to
6.00pm Monday to Friday (excluding UK Bank Holidays). Please note no
investment advice can be given. 0800 085 8677.

 www.invesco.co.uk/investmenttrusts

Registrar

Link Group

Central Square

29 Wellington Street

Leeds LS1 4DL

If your shares are held directly, rather than through an ISA, SIP or dealing
platform, and you have queries relating to your shareholding, you should
contact the Registrar on:

0371 664 0300 from the UK, or

+44 371 664 0300 from overseas.

Calls are charged at the standard geographic rate and will vary by provider.
Calls from outside the United Kingdom will be charged at the applicable
international rate. Lines are open from 9.00am to 5.30pm, Monday to Friday
(excluding Public Holidays in England and Wales).

Shareholders holding shares directly can also access their holding details via
Link’s website: www.signalshares.com.

Link Group provide an on-line and telephone share dealing service to existing
shareholders who are not seeking advice on buying or selling. This service is
available at www.linksharedeal.com or 0371 664 0445.

Calls are charged at the standard geographic rate and will vary by provider.

From outside the UK: +44 371 664 0445. Calls from outside the UK will be
charged at the applicable international rate. Lines are open from 8.00am to
4.30pm, Monday to Friday (excluding Public Holidays in England and Wales).

Link Group is the business name of Link Market Services Limited.

Investor Warning

The Company, Invesco and the Registrar would never contact members of the
public to offer services or require any type of upfront payment. If you
suspect you have been approached by fraudsters, please contact the FCA
consumer helpline on 0800 111 6768 and Action Fraud on 0300 123 2040.
Further details for reporting frauds, or attempted frauds, can be found below.

The Association of Investment Companies

The Company is a member of the Association of Investment Companies. Contact
details are as follows:

020 7282 5555

Email: enquiries@theaic.co.uk

Website: www.theaic.co.uk

Website

Information relating to the Company can be found on the Company’s section of
the Manager’s website.

Each share class has a separate web page that can be accessed via the Invesco
investment trusts hub at www.invesco.co.uk/investmenttrusts.

The contents of websites referred to in this document, or accessible from
links within those websites, are not incorporated into, nor do they form part
of, this document.

The Company’s ordinary shares qualify to be considered as a mainstream
investment product suitable for promotion to retail investors.

National Storage Mechanism

A copy of the Half-Yearly Financial Report will be submitted shortly to the
National Storage Mechanism ("NSM") and will be available for inspection at the
NSM, which is situated
at https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism.

 

Hard copies of the Half-Yearly Financial Report will be posted to shareholders
and can be requested from the Company Secretary by email
at investmenttrusts@invesco.com or at the Company’s correspondence
address, 2nd Floor, 43-45 Portman Square, London W1H 6LY.

 

For further information, please contact:

 

James Poole

For and on behalf of Invesco Asset Management Limited

Corporate Secretary to Invesco Select Trust plc

Email: investmenttrusts@invesco.com

 

Will Ellis

Head of Specialist Funds - Invesco

Email: will.ellis@invesco.com

 

Invesco Asset Management Limited

Corporate Company Secretary

8  February 2024

 



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