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RNS Number : 7959C Petershill Partners PLC 31 March 2025
Petershill Partners
Operated by Goldman Sachs Assets Management
2024 PRELIMINARY RESULTS
For the year ended 31 December 2024
A STRONG YEAR OF STRATEGIC PROGRESS AND FINANCIAL DELIVERY
• Good performance with 11% growth in Partner Distributable Earnings to $323m,
and continued asset raising momentum.
• Completed four acquisitions totaling $205m and three disposals generating
nominal consideration of $575m during 2024.
• Total capital return during 2024 of $563m(1), including 2024 interim dividend
payment of $54m, 2024 proposed final dividend of $114m, special dividend
payments of $287m, tender offer of $103m(2) and $6m buyback.
• Subsequent to the year end, completed a further acquisition and disposal, and
the announcement of a $151m special dividend.
Key Highlights
• Higher Adjusted Profit After Tax(3) of $216m for the year ended 31 December
2024 (2023: $200m).
• Adjusted EBIT(3) of $293m (2023: $284m) with Adjusted EBIT margin(3) of 88%
(2023: 89%) and Adjusted EPS(3) of 19.7 cents (2023: 17.6 cents).
• IFRS Profit After Tax of $832m (2023: $321m) and IFRS EPS of 75.8 cents (2023:
28.4 cents).
• Completed four acquisitions during 2024, totaling $205m including the
acquisition of a stake in Kennedy Lewis Investment Management and additional
interests in three existing Partner-firms.
• During 2024, the aggregate nominal consideration due from sales of stakes in
Partner-firms amounted to $575m relative to the carrying value of assets
disposed at the transaction dates of $483m, a premium of approximately 19% to
the last reported carrying value.
• The Board has proposed a final dividend of 10.5 cents per share taking the
full year dividend for 2024 to 15.5 cents per share (2023: 15.0 cents).
• The Board has announced a special dividend of 14.0 cents per share, equivalent
to $151m, reflecting the return to shareholders of the majority of the net
gain on the sale of the stake in General Catalyst announced on 16 January
2025.
• Partner Distributable Earnings (DE)(4) of $323m, up 11% (2023: $292m).
• Partner Fee Related Earnings (FRE)(4) of $225m, up 11% (2023: $203m).
Pro-forma 2024 FRE, adjusted for disposals amounted to $186m(5).
- Net management fees(4) were 10% higher year-over-year
- Partner FRE Margin(4) of 58% (2023: 58%)
• Partner Realised Performance Revenues (PRE)(4) of $73m, up 33% (2023: $55m).
PRE as a percentage of Partner Revenues(4) of 15% (2023: 13%).
• Partner Private Markets Accrued Carried Interest at $702m, 14% higher
year-on-year (31 December 2023: $615m).
10 Partner-firm AuM growth and $32bn gross fee eligible assets raised in 2024
exceeding guidance range of $20 - 25bn.
• Aggregate Partner-firm AuM(4) of $337bn and Aggregate Fee-paying AuM(4) of
$238bn, up 11% and 8%, respectively year-over-year.
• $8bn of fee eligible assets at 31 December 2024 are expected to turn on and
generate revenues in future periods.
• Strong capital return and efficient Balance Sheet.
• Investments at fair value were $5.8bn, an increase of 11% vs. the prior year
end (2023: $5.3bn).
• Cash and investments in money market funds totaling $23m as at 31 December
2024 (31 December 2023: $305m), reduction predominately reflects the capital
return during the period.
• Free cash flow(3) conversion at 82% (2023: 99%).
• Book value per share(3) of 471 cents (2023: 431 cents).
Ali Raissi-Dehkordy and Robert Hamilton Kelly, Co-Heads of Goldman Sachs
Petershill Group commented:
"In 2024 there was positive momentum across the business, and we delivered
successfully on our financial and strategic goals. We are pleased with our
Partner-firms asset raising meeting or exceeding our guidance for three
consecutive years, against three years of lower industry asset raising.
Underlying financial performance from our Partner-firms improved with double
digit growth in Partner Distributable Earnings. We successfully executed on a
number of value enhancing acquisitions, including Kennedy Lewis Investment
Management, increasing our exposure to the attractive private credit space and
in 2025 we acquired a stake in Frazier Healthcare Partners, a specialist
mid-market private equity firm. Strategic disposals during the year generated
nominal consideration of $575m, representing a premium of 19% to the carrying
value of the stakes disposed. Including the General Catalyst disposal post
year end, the premium achieved on disposals relative to the last reported
carrying value was around 40%, clearly demonstrating the impact of our
valuation creation model at Petershill Partners. Our portfolio of
Partner-firms remains strong and focused on private market firms, with the
carrying value of our Partner-firms up 11%. Whilst the economic and
geopolitical environment remains uncertain, our robust capital raising and
dynamic approach to capital allocation underpins our confidence in our
strategy and generating strong returns for shareholders."
1. Totals may not add due to rounding.
2. Total excludes capitalised costs of $3.4m.
3. Financial measure defined as Alternative Performance Measure, or ("APM").
Further information on APMs on page 53.
4. Partner-firm key operating metric. Refer to the glossary on page 50 for
additional information.
5. Pro-forma 2024 FRE adjusted for the impact of the disposal of LMR, partial
disposals of Accel-KKR ("AKKR") and the sale of the majority of the stake in
General Catalyst.
2025 Guidance
• $20 - $25bn organic fee-eligible AuM raise and realisations of $5 - $10bn in
fee-paying AuM.
• $180 - $210m full year Partner FRE. 2024 pro-forma FRE of $186m(1).
• PRE of 15% - 30% of total Partner Revenues.
• Acquisitions in 2025 expected to be above the medium-term range of $100 -
$300m per annum.
• 85% - 90% Company Adjusted EBIT margin.
Subsequent Events
• As previously announced, subsequent to the year end the Company completed a
sale of the majority of its stake in General Catalyst. The sale arises from a
capital restructuring being undertaken by General Catalyst and external
investors. The total nominal consideration of $726m represents a 62% premium
to the $447m last reported carrying value prior to the disposal, of the
interests being sold. The $5.8bn fair value of investments as at 31 December
2024 reflects the revaluation of General Catalyst to the exit value. The Board
intends to retain the majority of the net proceeds for redeployment into new
investments. The $207m of the principal amount relating to the first tranche
of the loan notes has been received. The Board has approved a special dividend
of 14.0 cents (USD) per share, equivalent to $151m, reflecting the return to
shareholders of the majority of the net gain on the disposal after taxes and
fees. The special dividend is payable on 9 May 2025 to shareholders on the
register as at close of business on 11 April 2025, with ex-dividend date of 10
April 2025.
• On 14 March 2025, the Company acquired a stake in Frazier Healthcare Partners
for $330m of which $16m was funded at close with $314m deferred, primarily
occurring in 2026 and 2027. Frazier is a healthcare specialist private equity
firm with $5.5bn of AuM.
Final Dividend
The Board has proposed a final dividend payment of 10.5 cents (USD) per share,
payable on 13 June 2025 to shareholders on the register as at close of
business on 9 May 2025, with ex-dividend date of 8 May 2025. The total
dividend per Ordinary Share for 2024 is 15.5 cents up 3% from 2023, in line
with the progressive dividend policy. Shareholders should note that the
default payment currency is USD, however, shareholders can elect to have their
dividends paid in either GBP or EUR. The last day for currency elections to be
registered is 23 May 2025. Currency elections should be submitted via
CREST(2) in the usual manner.
Special Dividend
The Board has approved a special dividend payment of 14.0 cents (USD) per
share, payable on 9 May 2025 to shareholders on the register as at close of
business on 11 April 2025, with ex-dividend date of 10 April 2025.
Shareholders should note that the default payment currency is USD, however,
shareholders can elect to have their dividends paid in either GBP or EUR. The
last day for currency elections to be registered is 25 April 2025. Currency
elections should be submitted via CREST(2) in the usual manner.
1. Pro-forma 2024 FRE adjusted for the impact of the disposal of LMR, partial
disposals of AKKR and the sale of the majority of the stake in General
Catalyst.
2. CREST: Certificates Registry for Electronic Share Transfer - electronic system
for holding securities.
MANAGEMENT RESULTS
Year ended Year ended
31 December 2024
31 December 2023
$m $m
Income
Partner Fee-Related Earnings¹ 224.7 203.0
Partner Realised Performance Revenues¹ 72.9 54.7
Partner Realised Investment Income¹ 25.2 34.4
Total Partner Distributable Earnings 322.8 292.1
Interest income 9.5 27.3
Total Income² 332.3 319.4
Operating costs
Board of Directors' fees and expenses (1.7) (1.7)
Operator charge (24.2) (21.9)
Profit sharing charge (1.5) (0.1)
Other operating expenses³ (11.7) (11.3)
Total operating costs (39.1) (35.0)
Adjusted Earnings before interest and tax (EBIT)² 293.2 284.4
Finance income 2.4 -
Finance cost (36.7) (37.1)
Adjusted Earnings before tax (EBT)² 258.9 247.3
Tax and tax related expenses² (42.7) (47.7)
Adjusted profit after tax² 216.2 199.6
Reconciliation of Adjusted profit after tax to IFRS profit for the year after
tax
Adjusted profit after tax² 216.2 199.6
• Movement in financial assets and liabilities held at fair value⁴ 873.6 220.6
• Divestment fee expense (152.5) (50.5)
• Transaction costs⁵ (6.2) -
• Non-recurring operating (expense)/credit⁶ (0.5) 1.2
• Change in liability for Tax Receivables Agreement (7.8) (21.5)
• Adjustment for Tax and tax related expenses⁷ (90.4) (28.3)
IFRS profit for the year after tax 832.4 321.1
1. Partner-firm key operating metrics and IFRS. Refer to the glossary on pages 50
to 52 for additional information.
2. Financial measure defined as Alternative Performance Measure, or ("APM").
Further information on pages 53 to 56.
3. 2024 amount excludes transaction costs of $6.2 million and non-recurring
expenses of $0.5 million. 2023 amount excludes $1.2 million VAT reclaim.
4. Includes $837.6 million (31 December 2023: $227.0 million) relating to
unrealised gain on fair value of current and non-current investments held at
year end, $29.1 million (31 December 2023: $nil) relating to year-to-date
realised gain on fair value of investments disposed of during the year and
$6.9 million (2023: loss of $6.4 million) relating to net unrealised gain on
the fair value of contingent consideration at fair value through profit or
loss.
5. 2024 amount includes deal transaction costs of $6.2 million related to
acquisitions and disposals.
6. 2024 amount includes non-recurring operating expense of $0.5 million. 2023
amount includes $1.2 million VAT reclaim.
7. Includes deferred tax expense related to movement in financial assets and
liabilities held at fair value.
KEY PARTNER-FIRM METRICS
Petershill Partners Operating Metrics
31 December
2024 2023 Δ
Aggregate Partner-firm AuM ($bn) 337 304 11%
Aggregate Fee-paying Partner-firm AuM ($bn) 238 221 8%
Ownership Weighted Partner-firm AuM ($bn) 40 37 8%
Ownership Weighted Fee-paying Partner-firm AuM ($bn) 29 28 4%
Partner Blended Net Management Fee Rate (%) 1.34% 1.31% +3 bps
Implied Blended Partner-firm FRE Ownership (%) 12.4% 13.3% -90 bps
Partner Net Management and Advisory Fees ($m) 386 350 10%
Management Fees ($m) 395 356 11%
Fee Offsets ($m) (17) (18) (6)%
Transaction and Advisory Fees ($m) 8 12 (33)%
Partner Fee-Related Expenses ($m) (161) (147) 10%
Partner FRE ($m) 225 203 11%
Partner Realised Performance Revenues (PRE) ($m) 73 55 33%
Partner Realised Investment Income ($m) 25 34 (26)%
Partner Distributable Earnings ($m) 323 292 11%
Partner FRE Margin (%) 58% 58% - pts
Partner Distributable Earnings Margin (%) 67% 67% - pts
Partner Realised PRE as a percentage of Partner Revenue (%) 15% 13% +2 pts
Partner Realised PRE over Average Aggregate Performance Fee Eligible (bps) 2.6 bps 2.0 bps +0.6 bps
Partner-firm AuM(1)
Additional Metrics:
Partner Private Markets Accrued Carried Interest ($m) 702 615 14%
Investment Capital ($m) 274 423 (35)%
1. Realised Performance Fee Revenues for the period divided by the Average
Aggregate Performance Fee Eligible Partner-firm AuM. The Average Aggregate
Performance Fee Eligible Partner-firm AuM represents the average of the
beginning and ending period stated.
DETAILS OF RESULTS PRESENTATION
There will be a call for investors and analysts at 9.00am GMT today, 31 March
2025, hosted by Ali Raissi-Dehkordy, Robert Hamilton Kelly and Gurjit Kambo to
discuss these results, followed by a Q&A session.
All interested parties are invited to participate via telephone or the audio
webcast. Please click here
(https://event.webcasts.com/viewer/portal.jsp?ei=1509448&tp_key=4ccdad6376)
to access the webcast.
Conference Call Information:
Domestic: +44 (0) 330-165-3657
Domestic Freephone: 0800 279 6843
International: +1-929-477-0366
International Freephone: 888-245-0918
Conference ID: 6929513
All participants are asked to dial in approximately 10-15 minutes prior to the
call, referencing "Petershill Partners" when prompted.
Replay Information:
An archived replay of the call will be available on the webcast link.
Please direct any questions regarding obtaining access to the conference call
to Petershill Partners Investor Relations, via e-mail,
at PHP-Investor-Relations@gs.com
Analyst / Investor enquiries:
Gurjit Kambo +44 (0) 207 051 2564
Media enquiries:
Brunswick Group phll@brunswickgroup.com
Simone Selzer +44 (0) 207 404 5959
ABOUT PETERSHILL PARTNERS
Petershill Partners plc (the "Company" or "Petershill Partners") and its
Subsidiaries (the "Group") is a diversified, global alternatives investment
group focused on private equity and other private capital strategies. Through
our economic interests in alternative asset management firms
("Partner-firms"), we provide investors with exposure to the growth and
profitability of the alternative asset management industry. The Company
completed its initial acquisition of the portfolio of Partner-firms on 28
September 2021 and was admitted to listing and trading on the London Stock
Exchange on 1 October 2021 (ticker: PHLL). The Company is operated by Goldman
Sachs Asset Management ("Goldman Sachs" or the "Operator") and is governed by
a diverse and fully independent Board of Directors (the "Board").
Through our Partner-firms, we have exposure to $337 billion of Aggregate
Partner-firm AuM as of 31 December 2024, comprising a diverse set of more than
200 long-term private equity and other private capital funds where capital is
typically locked in over a multi-year horizon. These underlying funds generate
recurring management fees and the opportunity for meaningful profit
participation over the typical 9+ years lifecycles of such funds. We believe
our approach is aligned with the founders and managers of our Partner-firms
and, as a result, allows the Company to participate in these income streams in
a way that aims to provide high-margin, diversified and stable cash flows for
our shareholders.
For more information, visit https://www.petershillpartners.com/homepage.html.
Information on the website is not incorporated by reference into this press
release and is provided merely for convenience.
CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT
Dear Shareholders
2024 was an active and productive year for your Company. Underlying
performance from our Partner-firms improved and we completed a number of value
creating acquisitions and disposals. The Board also undertook a number of
capital management actions including a share buyback, a tender offer and the
distribution of two special dividends. As a result, the market has begun to
better reflect the value of the business and the total shareholder return was
strong.
This was against a backdrop of a good year for global equity markets with the
US, where the majority of our businesses invest, leading the way - the
S&P500 ended the year up 23%. The headline number, however, masks the fact
that stock market index growth was concentrated in a few names and both stock
and bond markets experienced periods of heightened volatility as a result of
geopolitical events that took place throughout the year. Periodic bouts of
uncertainty around the timing and depth of interest rate cuts in major
developed markets also weighed on sentiment. Against this improving, but still
challenging backdrop, private markets asset-raising at the industry level
contracted for a third successive year coming in 21% lower year-on-year. It is
encouraging to note that, despite the volatile environment, our Partner-firms
exceeded the aggregate guidance we set a year ago, raising $32 billion of new
fee-eligible AuM (assets under management) during the year.
High-quality Partner-firms
This is the third consecutive year that our asset-raising guidance has either
been met or exceeded. In all, 16 different firms contributed to the overall
figure this year. We view this as testament to the quality of the alternative
asset management companies we invest in, the benefits of having a portfolio of
GP stakes that is diversified across asset class, strategy and vintage and our
focus on specialist middle-market managers, an area we believe enjoys a long
runway of growth.
The quality of our Partner-firms can also be seen in Petershill Partners' own
financial performance for the year. Fee-Related Earnings (FRE) are up 11%
driven by 10% growth in Partner Net Management and Advisory Fees, in-line with
10% cost growth at our Partner-firms. FRE accounts for 70% of our overall
income with the remainder primarily generated from Partner Realised
Performance Revenues (PRE). Here too, we are reporting growth of 33% for the
year, driven partly by improving activity levels as the year progressed.
Overall, we are reporting an 11% increase in our Partner Distributable
Earnings for the year.
The pick-up in activity levels seen across our Partner-firms is mirrored by
Petershill Partners' own experience. In 2023, we did not conclude a single
acquisition or divestment. By contrast, 2024 saw the Company complete four
acquisitions at a total cost of $205 million, along with three divestments for
a total consideration of $575 million, a 19% premium to the $483 million
carrying value at the transaction dates. This reflected sales at significantly
higher earnings multiples than the company trades on, and also in excess of
our carrying valuation multiples.
In terms of acquisitions made, we increased our interest in three existing
Partner-firm investments via a secondary transaction from a financial investor
executed at a discount to our carrying value. We also added a new Partner-firm
to our portfolio after we acquired a stake in private credit manager Kennedy
Lewis Investment Management, which operates in the private credit space, a
segment which is growing rapidly.
As for disposals, we sold a partial interest in Accel-KKR ("AKKR") followed by
a further sale of mainly investment capital in the same manager. In addition,
we disposed of our stake in LMR Partners ("LMR"), an absolute return manager.
All the above activity was in line with our strategy of focusing on
high-quality management fee-centric earnings.
Subsequent to the year end we announced the sale of the substantial majority
of our interest in General Catalyst for a consideration of $726 million,
representing a premium to its last reported carrying value of 62%. In
addition, on the 14 March 2025, the Company acquired a stake for $330 million
in Frazier Healthcare Partners, a specialist mid-market private equity firm
with $5.5 billion in AuM.
Stewards of capital
As a Board, we take our role as stewards of Shareholder capital seriously. In
line with this, we are focused on optimising capital efficiency. So, as well
as funding the $205 million spent on the above acquisitions, the operating
cashflows and proceeds raised from the various sales enabled us to return a
total of $563 million to Shareholders through a combination of a tender offer,
special dividends, a buyback programme and our progressive dividend policy. We
approved all these steps over the course of the year because, in our view,
they represented efficient uses of capital. Subsequent to year end the Board
announced a special dividend of $151 million representing the majority of the
profit realised on the General Catalyst sale. The balance of the proceeds from
that transaction will be retained for redeployment into new investments.
The tender offer serves as an example of how our focus on capital efficiency
works in practice. During the first quarter of the year, we believed the
Petershill Partners share price, which was regularly trading at a 45-50%
discount to net asset value, represented a compelling investment opportunity.
We therefore completed a tender offer of $103 million to Shareholders at a
price of 214p per Ordinary Share, a 15% premium to the previous day's closing
price of 186p. Petershill's share price went on to finish the year at 248p,
16% higher than the tender offer price, highlighting how the exercise was not
only significantly value accretive but also an effective use of the Company's
capital. We will continue to review and undertake other actions designed to
continue to narrow the discount to net asset value at which the Company's
shares trade.
The careful stewardship of your capital can also be seen in the year end
carrying value of the Company's investments, which increased by 11% over the
year. The increase in the value of our investments was a result of higher
multiples on comparable listed businesses which in turn was in response to
rising markets and a reduction in the cost of capital and the revaluation of
the stake in General Catalyst to the exit value.
The disposals also illustrate the value creation within our investment model.
In the 2025 disposal of General Catalyst, the blended cost of capital implied
in our holding value of GC at the time of the transaction was approximately
17%, compared to the implied blended cost of capital on exit of approximately
11%, which implies a higher exit multiple relative to entry multiple. At the
time we underwrite new deals, the typical implied blended cost of capital is
approximately 15-20%, and projected returns are predicated on growth and
cashflow and not multiple expansion. The outcomes have shown the approach to
underwriting to be conservative.
Aside from the return of capital to Shareholders, there have been no other
changes to the capital structure of the Company. Our fixed-rate debt remains
relatively low cost and long term with a maturity range of between 4 and 17
years. Based on the solid free cash flow that continues to be generated by our
Partner-firms, we have been able to increase our dividends for the year. The
Board approved an interim dividend of 5.0 cents per share and is recommending
a final dividend of 10.5 cents per share, bringing the full-year payout to
15.5 cents per share, an increase of 3% compared to 2023's 15.0 cents per
share. We have therefore maintained our track record of raising our regular
annual payout in each of the years since our IPO. During this year we were
also able to return 26.5 cents per share to investors in the form of two
special dividends bringing total capital return from dividends in respect of
2024 to 42.0 cents per share, equivalent to approximately 33 pence per share.
Subsequent to the year end, the Board announced a special dividend of 14.0
cents per share, relating to the 2025 General Catalyst disposal.
During the year, we held 11 Board meetings and 3 Board sub-committee meetings,
supplemented by 12 meetings of Board Committees, covering Audit and Risk,
Remuneration, Nomination and Management Engagement. As a Board, we make
ourselves available to meet with our Shareholders both via direct engagement
and the investor relations activities of the Operator and our brokers. Board
members also attend the Operator's annual meeting for limited partners in its
private funds which invest in GP stakes. This provides an opportunity to
engage with the end investors which collectively own the majority of the
Company through funds managed by Goldman Sachs Asset Management. As part of
the Board's continued engagement with the Company's Partner-firms, we met with
a number of our Partner-firms during the year. In addition, 2024 saw 402
engagements between the Operator and Partner-firms via the Operator's GP
services platform. The support and services provided by the platform are
focused on unlocking value and growing returns.
Outlook
The year under review has seen significant progress made at the portfolio and
corporate level. Whilst the higher level of economic and market uncertainty
may impact industry deal volumes, we believe our business is well-positioned
to capitalise on GP-stakes opportunities. In our view, the market is starting
to recognise the value creation opportunity that acquiring stakes in
alternative asset managers presents, as well as the Company's focus on capital
efficiency. Despite the volatility in markets in Q1, we hope to deliver
attractive risk-adjusted returns in the long term.
THE OPERATOR'S REPORT
The Company's purpose is to provide investors with access to the growth of the
alternative asset management industry via a diversified portfolio of minority
interests in private asset management companies. The Company earns a share of
management fees generated by over 200 funds managed by 20+ Partner-firms
operating across the alternative assets space. The Company's overall income is
diversified by asset class, strategy, sector and vintage and is largely stable
and recurring.
To assist readers, we refer throughout this section to adjusted measures which
the Company considers to be Alternative Performance Measures or APMs and
Operating Metrics. APMs are non-IFRS measures that analyse our performance,
using a variety of measures that are not specifically defined under IFRS;
while Operating Metrics are non-IFRS measures that are based on the
performance of the Partner-firms which are not related to the Company's
financial statements.
APMs and Operating Metrics are used by the Directors and the Operator to
analyse the business and financial performance, track the Company's progress,
and help develop long-term strategic plans and they also reflect more closely
the cash flow of the Company. The Directors believe that these APMs and
Operating Metrics are useful to investors, analysts and other interested
parties as supplemental measures of performance and liquidity.
Definitions of APMs and Operating Metrics, along with reconciliations to the
relevant IFRS measures for APMs, where appropriate, can be found in the
Glossary of Key Operating Metrics on pages 50 to 52 and Alternative
Performance Measures on pages 53 to 56.
The IFRS and APM basis numbers discussed and presented below include changes
in fair value of investments, and it should be noted that, while permitted, it
is not the Company's core strategy to exit or realise these investments.
Therefore, management results are also presented, excluding the change in
investments at fair value through profit and loss and related divestment fee.
Company Performance
The Company's income increased in 2024 as earnings generated by our
Partner-firms grew over the course of the year. Partner-firm FRE and PRE
increased 11% and 33% respectively over the prior year, while Partner Realised
Investment Income decreased 26% in 2024, resulting in an overall increase in
Partner Distributable Earnings of 11% over the prior year. Fund-raising by
Partner-firms continued to be robust despite a challenging environment. The
$32 billion fee-eligible AuM raised in 2024 is attributable to the high
quality of our Partner-firms and the diversification of our portfolio.
Aggregate Partner-firm AuM grew 11% and Aggregate Fee-paying AuM grew 8% for
the year. Ownership weighted AuM increased 8% year-over-year to $40 billion
and Fee-paying ownership-weighted AuM increased 4% year-over-year to $29
billion.
The Company's results for 2024 cover the period from 1 January 2024 through
31 December 2024 and are presented with comparative data
for 2023.
The Company's revenue model is comprised of three types of income from
Partner-firms: management fee income, performance fee income and investment
income. Of these three, management fee income in particular provides stable,
recurring profits. FRE Margin was flat at 58% (2023: 58%), the management fee
income for the year was $225 million (2023: $203 million), performance fee
income $73 million (2023: $55 million), and investment income $25 million
(2023: $34 million).
The IFRS Profit and total comprehensive income for the year after tax was $832
million (2023: profit of $321 million) equating to an Earnings Per Share (EPS)
of 75.8 cents (2023: 28.4 cents). This includes an increase in financial
assets and liabilities held at fair value of $874 million (2023: $221 million
increase), a divestment fee expense of $153 million (2023: $51 million),
non-recurring operating expenses of $1 million (2023: $1 million credit),
transaction costs of $6 million (2023: $nil), change in liability for Tax
Receivables Agreement of $8 million (2023: $22 million), an increase in
deferred tax of $120 million (2023: $53 million increase) and excludes an
expected payment towards the Tax Receivables Agreement of $30 million (2023:
$24 million).
The Company's Adjusted Profit after tax(1) was $216 million (2023: $200
million). The Company's Adjusted EBIT(1) for the year was $293 million (2023:
$284 million), resulting in an Adjusted EBIT margin(1) of 88% (2023: 89%).
The Company's results continue to highlight Petershill Partners' key
characteristics as a business with significant growth of durable capital,
delivering stable and recurring revenues with a highly efficient Adjusted EBIT
margin and significant cash flow.
Dividends
Petershill Partners has set a progressive dividend policy which will reflect
earnings growth over time. The Board reviews the distributable reserves
periodically, including consideration of any material changes since the most
recent audited financial statements, ahead of proposing any dividend. The
interim dividend is set to one-third of the prior year's annual dividend
amount, and the final dividend proposed is set to reach the target for the
year. Shareholders will be given the opportunity to approve the final dividend
for the year at the Company's Annual General Meeting.
During the year ended 31 December 2024, the Company paid a final dividend with
respect of the year ended 31 December 2023 of 10.1 cents per share, an interim
dividend in respect of the year ended 31 December 2024 of 5.0 cents per share
and two special dividends in relation to the disposals of LMR Partners and
Accel-KKR LLC of 9.0 cents per share and 17.5 cents per share respectively.
Based on the financial results for the year, the Board has proposed a final
dividend of 10.5 cents per Ordinary Share to be approved by Shareholders at
the AGM on 22 May 2025. This dividend, when combined with the interim dividend
declared of 5.0 cents per Ordinary Share, totals 15.5 cents per Ordinary Share
for 2024.
The Board has approved a special dividend payment of 14.0 cents (USD) per
share payable on 13 June 2025 to shareholders on the register as at close of
business on 9 May 2025, with ex-dividend date of 8 May 2025.
Given our financials are primarily driven by USD denominated economics
(management fees and USD denominated funds, and performance fees and balance
sheet income on USD denominated funds), our dividends are proposed and paid in
USD. However, Shareholders have the option to elect for payment in either GBP
or EUR.
Investments at Fair Value through Profit or Loss
2024 2023
$m $m
At beginning of year 5,255 4,959
Investments (includes new, follow on, and prior commitments, net of disposals) (310) 69
Change in investments at fair value through profit and loss 867 227
At end of year 5,812 5,255
The fair value of the Company's investments in Partner-firms at 31 December
2024 was $5,812 million (31 December 2023: $5,255 million). The fair value of
the Company's investments in Partner-firms is determined using both earnings
multiples and discounted cash flow techniques, which are common industry
approaches. In valuing the investments, key assumptions include estimates of
future AuM growth, expected management and performance fee margins, expected
current and future underlying fund returns and timing of realisations.
There was an increase in the fair value of investments through profit and loss
of $867 million (2023: $227 million increase) for the year ended 31 December
2024. The increase in fair value was predominantly due to a decrease in the
weighted average discount rate used to value private markets fee-related
earnings and private markets performance fee-related earnings to 11.9% and
24.1% in 2024 from 13.0% and 25.2% in 2023 respectively, as a result of lower
risk premiums for individual managers driven by de-risked cash flow
projections, an increase in valuations multiples of comparable businesses and
the uplift in relation to the fair valuation of General Catalyst to exit
price. Refer to Note 4, Investments at fair value through profit or loss,
beginning on page 30 for additional details.
1. Financial measure defined as Alternative Performance Measure, or ("APM").
Further information on pages 53 to 56.
The fair valuation uplift was offset by the impact of net investment activity.
During the year ended 31 December 2024, the Company made an acquisition in
Kennedy Lewis Investment Management and additional investments in three other
existing Partner-firms, disposed fully of its holdings of FORT Investment
Management and LMR Partners LLP and disposed partially its holdings in
Accel-KKR LLC.
See Note 4 in the Notes to the consolidated financial statements on page 30
for additional information.
Cash and Investments in Money Market Funds
The Company's balance sheet continues to be strong and well-capitalised. On 14
December 2023, the Company entered into a fixed term deposit of $150 million,
which matured on 15 March 2024. At 31 December 2024 the Company had $15
million in cash and cash equivalents (2023: $243 million) and $9 million
invested in money market funds (31 December 2023: $62 million) with an AAA
credit rating. The reduction in cash and cash equivalents was mainly the
result of dividends declared and paid, tender offer, and the acquisitions
during the year.
Borrowing
The Company has $500 million of long-term, unsecured debt with an effective
interest rate of 6.2% and a range of maturities between 7 and 20 years. This
debt was issued in 2022 and the proceeds were used to retire $350 million of
notes outstanding at the time.
On 6 January 2023, the Company entered into a $100 million revolving credit
facility with a term of three years. The Company is subject to a fee on the
drawn and undrawn amounts. The rate for any drawn amount is based on reference
rate plus a spread. The interest rate on the revolving credit facility is
subject to changes in market interest rates. In 2024, the Company did not draw
down on the revolving credit facility. Any interest expense incurred is
included in finance cost.
Deferred Payment Obligations
Certain investments in Partner-firms are purchased with deferred payment
terms. These deferred payment obligations represent amounts payable by the
Company at various dates in the future. When the Company enters into deferred
payment obligations, a portion of the purchase price is recognised as finance
cost through the settlement of the payables under the effective interest
method. The interest rate used is based on the reasonable borrowing rate for
the Company at the time of the transaction. At 31 December 2024, the Company
has recorded deferred payment obligations of $88 million (31 December 2023:
$52 million). In 2024, $6 million was included in finance costs (2023: $6
million), which was associated with deferred payment obligations.
Deferred Consideration Receivable
Certain investments in Partner-firms have been sold in the year ended 31
December 2024 with deferred payment terms. This deferred consideration
represent amounts owed to the Company at various dates in the future. When the
Company enters into a deferred consideration agreement, a portion of the sale
price is recognised as finance income through the settlement of the
receivables under the effective interest method. The interest rate used is
based on the reasonable borrowing rate for the Company at the time of the
transaction. At 31 December 2024, the Company has recorded deferred
consideration receivable of $152 million (31 December 2023: $nil). In 2024,
the Company earned finance income including $2 million (2023: $nil) arising
from deferred consideration receivable.
Contingent assets and liabilities at fair value through profit or loss
When certain investments in Partner-firms are purchased or sold, it is
probable that the Company may have to pay or receive additional consideration
based on the underlying terms of the purchase or sale agreement respectively.
As a result of investment activity, the Company has recorded a contingent
liability of $8 million (31 December 2023: $6 million) representing a portion
of the total consideration payable which is probable in connection with its
purchase of investments in certain Partner-firms, based on the Partner-firms'
ability to raise capital or meet certain revenue thresholds as defined in the
relevant investment agreement. In addition, the Company has recorded a
contingent asset of $96 million (31 December 2023: $nil) representing a
portion of the total consideration receivable which is probable in connection
with its sale of investments in certain Partner-firms.
Tax Receivables Agreement
The Company entered into a Tax Receivables Agreement as part of the Initial
Acquisition on 28 September 2021. The agreement provides for the payment of
75% of cash tax savings, if any, in US federal, state and local income tax
that the Company actually realises. The cash tax savings are defined as the
difference between the taxes actually due, and the taxes due had there been no
step-up in tax basis from the Initial Acquisition. The Company expects these
payments to arise over a period of 15 to 20 years from 31 December 2024. The
value of these estimated payments at 31 December 2024 is $159 million (31
December 2023: $175 million) assuming an 18% discount rate and using the
Company's most recent projections relating to the estimated timing of the
payments. The expected payment for 2024 related to the Tax Receivables
Agreement is approximately $30 million (2023: $24 million). Refer to Note 3 in
the Notes to the consolidated financial statements on page 28 for additional
information.
Operating Expenses
Operating expenses were $198 million (2023: $84 million). Included in the
operating expenses for 2024 was a $153 million expense (2023: $51 million)
related to the fee payable on the divestment of investments and $6 million
(2023: $nil) related to transaction costs during the year. The accrual is
calculated and charged to the income statement based on the fair value of the
Company's investment in Partner-firms at the balance sheet date. Divestment
fees only become payable once gains are realised.
The Operator is entitled to such divestment fee calculated at 20% of the
realised profit on the exit of an investment. Although the Company does not
intend to exit all of its investments, an accrual is reflected representing an
amount that would be payable if the Company were to exit all of its
investments at carrying value. At 31 December 2024, the fee payable on
divestment of investments was $247 million (31 December 2023: $95 million). No
payment was made in 2023 or 2024.
The Operator is entitled to a fee (Operator charge) of 7.5% of Income from
investments in Partner-firms. The Operator charge for the year was $24 million
(2023: $22 million).
The Operator is entitled to a Profit Sharing Charge on a quarterly basis. The
Profit-Sharing Charge is equal to 20% of total income from investments in
Partner-firms, as defined under IFRS, from new investments made post
admission, in the relevant quarter and only after a two-year ownership period
from the date on which the investment is closed, and subject to the relevant
investment achieving an investment return of at least 6.0%. The Profit Sharing
Charge for the year was $2 million (2023: $0.1 million).
The Directors' fees for the year were $1.7 million (2023: $1.7 million). Fees
paid to Directors for the year are unchanged in local currency.
The Adjusted EBIT margin(1) for 2024 was 88% (2023: 89%) reflecting the
relatively low cost to operate the Company.
Finance Cost
The finance cost for the year ended 31 December 2024 was $37 million (2023:
$37 million). Included in the finance cost for 2024 is an amount
of $28 million (2023: $28 million) of interest associated with the $500
long-term, unsecured debt and $6 million (2023: $6 million) of imputed
interest relating to deferred payment obligations. Refer to Note 10 on page 39
in the Notes to the consolidated financial statements for further breakdown.
Tax Expense
The Company's tax charges are comprised primarily of certain taxes in the
United States (where the 2024 federal corporate tax rate was 21.0% and state
and local taxes may vary) as well as certain taxes in the United Kingdom
(where the 2024 corporate tax rate was 25.0%). Accordingly, the effective tax
rate payable by the Company may vary from year to year based on the geographic
mix and nature of the income earned by the Company. Notably, a substantial
amount of income derived from Management fee income will be subject to United
States federal corporate tax as well as applicable state and local taxes.
Income derived from Performance fee income and Investment income may be
subject to taxes in the jurisdiction in which the investment in the
Partner-firm is held, including the United Kingdom.
As a result of the above considerations, as well as the items discussed above
under "Tax Receivables Agreement", the Company calculates tax and tax related
expenses(1) and its Adjusted tax and tax related expense rate(1) by combining
the estimated payment under the Tax Receivables Agreement and the current tax.
Current tax expenses comprise obligations to tax authorities related to
current period reporting. Deferred tax expenses arise with respect to
temporary differences between carrying amounts of assets and liabilities and
their tax bases.
Analysis of Tax
2024 2023
$m $m
Analysis of tax on profit
Current tax 13.1 23.5
Deferred taxation 120.0 52.5
Tax expense 133.1 76.0
The tax expense does not include the related expected payments under the Tax
Receivables Agreement for the current year. The expected payment under the Tax
Receivables Agreement for the year ended 31 December 2024 was $30 million
(2023: $24 million).
The tax and tax related expenses(1) for the year, which considers both the
current tax and the expected payment under the Tax Receivables Agreement
("TRA") were $43 million (2023: $48 million) and the adjusted tax and tax
related expense rate(1) was 16.5% (2023: 19.3%). These amounts represent
current taxes payable in addition to any expected payments under the Tax
Receivables Agreement for the year and exclude deferred taxes.
Capital
As at 31 December 2024, the Company's issued share capital comprised of
1,081,708,167 Ordinary Shares (31 December 2023: 1,122,202,824). During the
year ended 31 December 2024, the Company undertook a tender offer and share
buyback programme, purchasing an aggregate 40.5 million shares at an average
price of 214p per share.
Total Shareholders' funds was $5,100 million at 31 December 2024 (31 December
2023: $4,834 million). As at 31 December 2024, there were retained earnings of
$3,399 million (31 December 2023: $3,133 million). Retained earnings included
the change in fair value of investments for the year of $867 million (2023:
$227 million).
In 2024, the Company paid dividends totalling $454 million and bought back
Ordinary Shares via the tender offer and buyback programme totalling $113
million, including transaction costs.
Approximately 80% of Petershill Partners shares are held by long-dated private
funds managed by Goldman Sachs Asset Management. Goldman Sachs Asset
Management is the manager of these shares and exercises discretion over how
and when they could be sold in the future, on behalf of the investors in those
funds.
1. Financial measure defined as Alternative Performance Measure, or ("APM").
Further information on pages 53 to 56.
PARTNER-FIRM PERFORMANCE
For the year ended 31 December 2024
(CONTINUING OPERATOR'S REPORT)
Key Operating Metrics
We provide significant detail on our Partner-firms in our key Operating
Metrics as this gives investors insight into the revenues and revenue model of
the Company.
In 2024, fundraising continued across the Company's Partner-firms with
Aggregate Fee-paying Partner-firm AuM growing 8% year-on-year to $238 billion.
Ownership weighted AuM grew 8% to $40 billion (2023: $37 billion). Strong
aggregate Partner-firm AuM and Aggregate Fee-paying AuM growth are the basis
for future earnings development and highlight the positive operating dynamics
and pricing power of our Partner-firms. This growth has translated into
recurring, and high-quality earnings from our Partner-firms, with full year
Partner Distributable Earnings of $323 million, despite the challenging
environment.
Petershill Partners is not reliant on any one firm, track record or brand. Our
approach is to invest in a range of high-quality, high-performing alternative
asset management firms, who manage a diverse range of funds, giving the
Company stable, high-quality, recurring earnings.
The total AuM at year end comprised over 200 funds, spanning private equity,
absolute return and other private capital funds, with an average life cycle of
9+ years. That means capital is locked in for an average duration of 9+ years,
generating recurring management fees and the opportunity for meaningful profit
participation throughout this time. We believe our long-term approach
differentiates us and provides for enhanced alignment with the key principals
at each Partner-firm and, as a result, allows the Company to participate in
their income streams in a way that provides high-margin, diversified and
stable cash flows for our Shareholders.
Partner Fee-Related Earnings (FRE)
Partner FRE, drawn from management fees, increased 11% year-over-year to $225
million (2023: $203 million), primarily reflecting continued growth in
Aggregate AuM. Partner Fee-Related Expenses were $161 million in 2024, up from
$147 million in 2023. The higher costs were due to Partner-firm fundraising
and team expansions, although the Partner FRE margin was flat year-over-year
at 58% (2023: 58%).
Transaction and advisory fees were $8 million in 2024 compared to $12 million
in the prior year. The lower transaction and advisory fees reflected the
subdued transaction environment that impacted global markets in 2024. In 2024,
the Partner Blended Net Management Fee Rate was 1.34% (2023: 1.31%).
Partner Realised Performance Revenues (PRE)
PRE, which represents direct participation in the upside performance of
Partner-firms' funds and products, increased year-over-year to $73 million for
2024 (2023: $55 million) as we saw the realisation environment picking up in
the year. Performance of the absolute return strategies was lower compared to
the prior year, driven by our increasing focus on private market alternative
asset firms. $8 million was attributable to the absolute return strategy in
2024 (2023: $10 million). 15% of total Partner Revenue in 2024 was derived
from PRE (2023: 13%).
Partner-firms manage a variety of performance fee-eligible funds at different
stages of their life cycle. Due to this diversification, the Company
anticipates that Realised Performance Revenues will be earned regularly from a
wide range of funds going forward, with a range of 20-30% of total Partner
Revenues over the medium term, assuming market conditions and environment are
broadly supportive.
Partner Private Markets Accrued Carried Interest was $702 million at 31
December 2024, compared to $615 million at 31 December 2023.
Partner Realised Investment Income
As an owner in the Partner-firms, the Company shares in a percentage of the
investment and balance sheet income of the Partner-firms and realises this
through a number of direct positions in the funds of underlying Partner-firms,
known as Realised Investment Income. This totalled $25 million in 2024,
compared to $34 million in 2023, the decrease is partly driven by the sale of
stake in AKKR consisting of the entirety of its balance sheet investment
capital.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (UNAUDITED)
For the year ended 31 December 2024
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
Note $m $m
Income
Income from investments in Partner-firms derived from: 2(x)
Management fee income 224.7 203.0
Performance fee income 72.9 54.7
Investment income 25.2 34.4
Total income from investments in Partner-firms 322.8 292.1
Interest income from investments in money market funds 2(x) 7.7 24.7
Interest income from other assets 2(x) 1.8 2.6
Total interest income 9.5 27.3
Total income 332.3 319.4
Movement in financial assets and liabilities held at fair value
Change in investments at fair value through profit or loss 2(vi), 4 866.7 227.0
Change in contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 2(vi), 4 6.9 (6.4)
Total movement in financial assets and liabilities held at fair value 873.6 220.6
Expenses 2(xi)
Board of Directors' fees and expenses (1.7) (1.7)
Operator charge 6, 20 (24.2) (21.9)
Profit sharing charge 6, 20 (1.5) (0.1)
Divestment fee expense 6, 20 (152.5) (50.5)
Other operating expenses (18.4) (10.1)
Total expenses (198.3) (84.3)
Operating profit for the year 1,007.6 455.7
Finance income/(expense)
Finance income 4 2.4 -
Finance cost 10 (36.7) (37.1)
Change in liability for Tax Receivables Agreement 2(v), 3 (7.8) (21.5)
Total finance income/(expense) (42.1) (58.6)
Profit for the year before tax 965.5 397.1
Tax expense 8 (133.1) (76.0)
Profit for the year after tax 832.4 321.1
Profit and total comprehensive income for the year 832.4 321.1
Profit and total comprehensive income attributable to:
Equity holders of the Company 832.4 321.1
Earnings per share
Basic and diluted earnings per share (cents) 11 75.81 28.38
The accompanying notes on pages 18 to 49 form an integral part of these
financial statements.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT
OF FINANCIAL POSITION (UNAUDITED)
As at 31 December 2024
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
Note(s) $m $m
Non-current assets
Investments at fair value through profit or loss 2(vi), 3, 4 5,085.8 5,254.7
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 2(vi), 3, 4 65.1 -
5,150.9 5,254.7
Current assets
Investments at fair value through profit or loss 2(vi), 3, 4 726.2 -
Investments in money market funds at fair value through profit or loss 4 8.9 62.3
Cash and cash equivalents 2(xii), 5 14.5 242.9
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 2(vi), 3, 4 30.7 -
Deferred consideration receivable 2(vi), 4 152.8 -
Trade and other receivables 12 165.6 127.4
1,098.7 432.6
Total assets 6,249.6 5,687.3
Non-current liabilities
Unsecured Notes payable 13, 14 494.4 493.8
Deferred payment obligations 2(vi), 4 32.5 7.3
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement 2(v), 3 129.4 150.5
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 2(vi), 3, 4 - 3.9
Deferred tax liability 9 128.2 8.2
Fee payable on divestment of investments 6, 20 247.3 94.8
1,031.8 758.5
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables 7.2 6.9
Deferred payment obligations 2(vi), 4 55.3 44.6
Interest payable 14 10.0 10.0
Operator charge payable 6, 20 7.0 6.6
Profit sharing charge payable 6, 20 0.6 0.1
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 2(vi), 3, 4 8.1 2.5
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement 2(v), 3 29.6 24.2
117.8 94.9
Total liabilities 1,149.6 853.4
Net assets 5,100.0 4,833.9
Equity
Share capital 2(ix), 15 10.8 11.2
Share premium 2(ix), 15 - -
Other reserve 2(ix), 15 1,689.6 1,689.6
Capital redemption reserve 2(ix), 15 0.9 0.5
Retained earnings 16 3,398.7 3,132.6
Total Shareholders' funds 5,100.0 4,833.9
Number of Ordinary Shares in issue at year end 15 1,081,708,167 1,122,202,824
Net assets per share (cents) 17 471.48 430.75
The accompanying notes on pages 18 to 49 form an integral part of these
financial statements.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY (UNAUDITED)
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Share Share Other Capital redemption reserve Retained earnings Total
capital
premium
reserve
Note $m $m $m $m $m $m
Opening net assets attributable to Shareholders 11.2 - 1,689.6 0.5 3,132.6 4,833.9
at 1 January 2024
Repurchase and cancellation of Ordinary Shares 15 (0.4) - - 0.4 (112.5) (112.5)
Dividends paid 18 - - - - (453.8) (453.8)
Profit and total comprehensive income for the year - - - - 832.4 832.4
Closing net assets attributable to Shareholders 10.8 - 1,689.6 0.9 3,398.7 5,100.0
at 31 December 2024
For the year ended 31 December 2023
Share Share Other Capital redemption reserve (Accumulated Total
capital
premium
reserve losses)/
Retained
earnings
Note $m $m $m $m $m $m
Opening net assets attributable to Shareholders 11.4 3,346.7 1,689.6 0.3 (328.7) 4,719.3
at 1 January 2023
Repurchase and cancellation of Ordinary Shares 15 (0.2) - - 0.2 (26.3) (26.3)
Share premium cancellation 15 - (3,346.7) - - 3,346.7 -
Dividends paid 18 - - - - (180.2) (180.2)
Profit and total comprehensive income for the year - - - - 321.1 321.1
Closing net assets attributable to Shareholders 11.2 - 1,689.6 0.5 3,132.6 4,833.9
at 31 December 2023
The accompanying notes on pages 18 to 49 form an integral part of these
financial statements.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS (UNAUDITED)
For the year ended 31 December 2024
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
Note $m $m
Cash flows from operating activities
Profit for the year before tax 965.5 397.1
Adjustments to reconcile operating profit for the year to net cash flows from
operating activities:
Reinvestment of income from investments in Partner-firms (2.2) (57.0)
Movement in investments at fair value through profit and loss 4 (866.7) (228.8)
Movement in trade and other receivables (49.0) 14.6
Movement in trade and other payables 0.8 (2.8)
Movement in fee payable on divestment of investments 6 152.5 50.5
Movement in operator charge payable 6 0.4 (14.4)
Movement in profit sharing charge payable 6 0.5 0.1
Movement in contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 4 (6.9) 6.4
Finance income (2.4) -
Finance expense 44.5 58.6
Purchase of investments in money market funds 4 (1,258.0) (781.4)
Sale of investments in money market funds 4 1,319.0 1,227.1
Reinvested interest income from investments in money market funds 4 (7.6) (24.6)
Taxes paid (10.1) (28.2)
Net cash flows from operating activities 280.3 617.2
Cash flows from investing activities
Purchase of investments at fair value through profit or loss (154.7) (204.2)
Disposal of investments at fair value through profit or loss 265.8 -
Net cash flows from investing activities 111.1 (204.2)
Cash flows from financing activities
Dividends paid 18 (453.8) (180.2)
Interest expense payments (28.3) (28.3)
Repayment of share capital 15 (113.3) (25.4)
Payment under Tax Receivables Agreement 20 (24.4) (33.8)
Net cash flows from financing activities (619.8) (267.7)
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents during the year (228.4) 145.3
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the year 242.9 97.6
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year 14.5 242.9
Non-cash investing activities
In kind distribution of investments at fair value through profit or loss 6.1 0.2
The accompanying notes on pages 18 to 49 form an integral part of these
financial statements.
NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED)
For the year ended 31 December 2024
1. General information
Petershill Partners plc (the "Company") is a company limited by shares,
incorporated and registered in England and Wales whose shares are publicly
traded on the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange. The consolidated
financial statements of Petershill Partners plc for the year ended 31 December
2024 comprise the Company, its subsidiaries and its indirect subsidiaries
together referred to as the "Group".
The Company was incorporated and registered in England and Wales under the UK
Companies Act 2006 (as amended) as a private company limited by shares under
the name Delta Epsilon Limited on 24 March 2021 with the registered number
13289144. On 12 August 2021, the Company was re-registered as a public limited
company as Delta Epsilon plc, and on 2 September 2021, the Company was renamed
Petershill Partners plc.
2. Basis of preparation, material accounting policies and other explanatory
information
i. Basis of preparation
The consolidated financial statements of the Group have been prepared and
approved by the Board of Directors in accordance with UK- adopted
International Accounting Standards ("IFRS") and with the requirements of the
Companies Act 2006 as applicable to companies reporting under those standards.
The financial statements are presented to the nearest million United States
Dollar ($m), the functional and presentational currency of the Company.
These preliminary results for the year ended 31 December 2024 are unaudited
and do not constitute statutory accounts within the meaning of Section 435 of
the Companies Act 2006. Statutory accounts for the year ended 31 December 2024
have not yet been delivered to the Registrar of Companies.
The consolidated financial statements have been prepared on a going concern
basis under the historical cost convention, as modified by the revaluation of
financial assets and liabilities at fair value through profit or loss. The
preparation of the financial statements requires estimates and assumptions to
be made that may affect the amounts reported in the financial statements and
accompanying notes. Actual amounts could differ from the estimates included in
the financial statements herein. The preparation of the consolidated financial
statements in conformity with IFRS requires the use of certain critical
accounting estimates. It also requires judgement to be exercised in the
process of applying the accounting policies. The areas involving a higher
degree of judgement or complexity, or areas where assumptions and estimates
are significant to the consolidated financial statements, are disclosed in
Note 3.
Refer to Note 2(xiv) for discussion on new and amended standards and
interpretations that are applicable to the Company and the Group.
The principal accounting policies are set out below.
ii. Segmental reporting
The Operator serves as the Group's alternative investment fund manager for
purposes of the UK AIFMR and EU AIFMD, which pursuant to the Operator
Agreement has delegated its portfolio management functions to the Investment
Manager, which has further delegated the provision of portfolio management
services to the Investment Advisor. The Investment Advisor, acting as the
chief operating decision-maker, is responsible for allocating resources and
assessing performance of the operating segments. The key measure of
performance used by the Investment Advisor to assess the Group's performance
and to allocate resources is the Group's income from investments in
Partner-firms.
The Group is engaged in holding interests in and investing into Partner-firms
for the purpose of generating revenues derived from the share of management
fees, performance fees and investment income. The management of the Group,
including assessment of performance, budgets and liquidity is managed for the
portfolio as a whole and not by discrete segments. Hence, the Board, as
recommended by the Investment Advisor, has concluded that the Group is
organised into one main operating segment.
The Group derives 88% (2023: 85%) of its income from North America and the
remaining 12% (2023: 15%) from Europe for the year ended 31 December 2024. 94%
(31 December 2023: 91%) of the Group's fair value of investments are located
in North America and the remaining 6% (31 December 2023: 9%) are located in
Europe as at 31 December 2024.
iii. Functional currency and foreign currency transactions
The Board of Directors has determined that the functional currency of the
Company and its subsidiaries is United States Dollar (US$), as this is the
currency of the primary economic environment in which the Company and its
subsidiaries operates and is the currency of the majority of the Group's
Investments in Partner-firms. If indicators of the primary economic
environment are mixed, then management uses its judgement to determine the
functional currency that most closely represents the economic effect of the
underlying transactions, events and conditions. Although the Company is listed
in the UK, the Group's investments are mostly held in the USA and transactions
are mostly denominated in US$. Expenses (including the Operator charge,
Divestment fee and Profit sharing charge) are denominated and paid mostly in
US$.
Transactions in currencies other than US$ during the period, including income
and expenses, are translated into US$ at the rate of exchange prevailing on
the date of the transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in
currencies other than US$ are retranslated at the functional currency rate of
exchange ruling at the reporting date. Non-monetary items that are measured in
terms of historical cost in a currency other than US$ are translated using the
exchange rates as at the dates of the initial transaction. Non-monetary items
measured at fair value in a currency other than US$ are translated using the
exchange rates at the date when the fair value was determined.
Foreign currency translation gains and losses on financial instruments
classified at fair value through profit or loss are included in the
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income as part of the change in fair
value of investments at fair value through profit or loss. Exchange
differences on other financial instruments are included in the Statement of
Comprehensive Income as Foreign exchange gain/(loss). Gains and losses on
foreign exchange during the year were immaterial and have been included under
Other operating expenses in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income.
iv. Financial instruments
i. Classification
Financial assets are classified based on the business model for managing those
financial assets and the contractual cash flow characteristics of the
financial assets.
All investments have been classified as financial assets at fair value through
profit or loss as they are managed, and performance is evaluated on a fair
value basis. The primary focus is on fair value information and the use of
that information to assess the assets' performance and to make decisions.
Investments which meet the classification and presentation requirements of
IFRS 5 - Non-Current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations, taking
into account post balance sheet events consistent with IAS 10 - Events after
the Reporting Period, are classified and presented as current assets in the
Consolidated Statement of Financial Position.
Financial assets classified as receivables are carried at amortised cost less
expected credit losses ("ECL").
ii. Impairment
The Group has adopted the general approach to measuring the loss allowance as
required by IFRS 9 - Financials Instruments. A 12-month ECL is recognised for
all financial assets within Stage 1 of the Group's impairment model and
lifetime ECL for all other financial assets and is deducted from the gross
carrying value of the receivables. ECL is determined as a product of Loss
Given Default ("LGD"), Probability of Default ("PD"), and Exposure at Default
("EAD"), discounted at an effective interest rate.
The methodology is structured around three core steps: i) Risk
differentiation, ii) Risk quantification, and iii) whether there has been a
significant increase in credit risk since origination and/or exposures are
considered to be credit impaired. In implementing this methodology,
Partner-firms are distinguished for riskiness by leveraging key risk
indicators through a comprehensive credit risk review framework.
Risk differentiation
1. The Partner-firms' liquidity position, indebtedness and ability to generate
future cash flows are considered the key risk indicators, with weights
assigned to each indicator that is informed by experience. A higher weight is
attributed to the Liquidity Indicator on the basis that it is considered to be
a strong reflection of a firm's ability to meet immediate cash obligations.
The latter driver of "Cashflow adequacy Indicator" relies on the
Partner-firm's ability to generate cash and incorporates forward-looking
information.
2. The overall score for each Partner-firm is estimated by combining the risk
indicator weights with the values for each selected risk indicator.
Risk quantification
1. The median risk score serves as the benchmark for quantifying risk across all
Partner-firms.
2. This benchmark is a "BBB" rating, which is classified as an investment grade
by S&P and indicates an adequate capacity to meet financial commitments
but is also susceptible to adverse economic conditions.
3. The median risk score obtained is compared to the scores of all other
Partner-firms, resulting in Partner-firms with lower comparative risk being
rated as "A", and those with higher comparative risk as "BB".
Once the ratings are assigned using the above two steps, the scores are
calibrated to a corresponding PD rate. The PDs are informed by using average
cumulative default rates for US corporates from S&P publicly available
data. To recognise the increased risk on absolute return Partner-firms which
are considered to be volatile, a nominal increase is applied to the PD rates.
A LGD value is applied for exposures in all stages, albeit where considered
appropriate the LGD for Stage 3 exposures will be adjusted to reflect the
specific circumstances of the exposure. The LGD rate is consistent with the
Basel II framework for corporates, sovereigns, and banks on senior
subordinate claims.
Significant increase in credit risk
The Group assesses whether a significant increase in credit risk has occurred
for an exposure through a comprehensive credit risk assessment framework. This
framework employs both qualitative and quantitative indicators which includes
days past due, review and reconciliation of aged receivables and periodic
review of financials and cashflow data with Partner-firms. In addition, the
Group considers that there has been a significant increase in credit risk when
contractual payments are more than 30 days past due.
Credit impaired exposure
The Group considers a financial asset in default when contractual payments are
90 days past due unless there is sufficient evidence from comprehensive credit
risk assessment which suggests otherwise.
The Group applies the following stages when considering credit exposure:
• Stage 1 includes financial instruments that have not had a significant
increase in credit risk since initial recognition or that have low credit risk
at the reporting date;
• Stage 2 includes financial instruments that have had a significant increase in
credit risk since initial recognition (unless they have low credit risk at the
reporting date) but that do not have objective evidence of impairment; and
• Stage 3 includes financial assets that have objective evidence of impairment
at the reporting date.
The Group also considers a financial asset to be in default when the
comprehensive credit risk assessment indicates that the Group is unlikely to
receive the outstanding contractual amounts in full ("Stage 3").
The calculated ECL is detailed in Note 19.
iii. Write-off policy
The Group writes off financial assets, in whole or in part, when it has
concluded that the amount is uncollectable and has therefore deemed that there
is no reasonable expectation of recovery. The Group may seek to recover
amounts it is legally owed in full, but which have been wholly or partially
written off due to no reasonable expectation of full recovery.
iv. Recognition and derecognition
Financial assets and financial liabilities are initially recorded at their
transaction price, (which is representative of fair value), plus transaction
costs that are directly attributable to their acquisition or issue other than
those classified as at fair value through profit or loss in which case
transaction costs are recognised directly in profit or loss, and then measured
at fair value subsequent to initial recognition. Gains and losses arising from
changes in financial assets and financial liabilities at fair value through
profit or loss are presented in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income in the period in which they arise. Assets and liabilities, other than
those at fair value through profit or loss, are measured at amortised cost.
Realised gains and losses are recognised upon sale or disposal of investments.
Unrealised gains and losses from financial assets and liabilities at
fair value through profit or loss are included in the change in fair value of
investments through profit or loss in the Consolidated Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
Financial assets are derecognised when the rights to receive cash flows have
expired or substantially all risks and rewards of ownership have transferred.
Financial liabilities are derecognised when the obligation specific in the
contract is cancelled or expires.
The carrying amounts of assets comprised of cash and cash equivalents,
deferred consideration receivable and trade and other receivables are held at
amortised cost.
The carrying amounts of liabilities comprised of Unsecured Notes payable,
Deferred payment obligations, Fee payable on divestment of investments,
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement, Interest payable, Profit sharing
charge payable, Operator charge payable and Trade and other payables are held
at amortised cost. The carrying value of assets and liabilities, except
Unsecured Notes payable and the liability for Tax Receivables Agreement held
at amortised cost, listed here approximates fair value as these do not contain
any significant financing components. The fair value of the Unsecured Notes
payable is estimated at $478.7 million based on interest rates as at 31
December 2024 (31 December 2023: $467.0 million). The fair value of the
liability for Tax Receivables Agreement is estimated at $154.1 million (31
December 2023: $166.6 million).
v. Material accounting policies and other explanatory information
i. Notes payable and interest expense
Unsecured Notes payable are initially recognised at fair value. After initial
recognition, these are subsequently measured at amortised cost using the
effective interest method; any difference between the proceeds (net of
transaction costs) and the redemption value is recognised in the Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income over the period of the loans or borrowings
using the effective interest method.
Fees paid on the establishment of loan facilities are recognised as
transaction costs of the loan to the extent that it is probable that some or
all of the facility will be drawn down. In this case, the fee is deferred
until the draw down occurs. To the extent that there is no evidence that it is
probable that some or all of the facility will be drawdown, the fee is
capitalised as a prepayment for liquidity services and amortised over the
period of the facility to which it relates.
Borrowing costs including interest expense are recognised in the period in
which they are incurred using the effective interest method.
ii. Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement
The Group's initial acquisition of the Partner-firms from the Petershill Funds
increased the tax basis, for US tax purposes, of the acquired assets, as
compared with their pre-acquisition tax basis. This increase in tax basis is
expected to increase the amortisation of such assets in the hands of
Petershill Partners, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company, and
therefore reduce the amount of US tax that the Group would otherwise be
required to pay in the future. This increase in tax basis may also decrease a
taxable gain (or increase taxable loss) on future dispositions of certain
assets to the extent this tax basis is allocated to those assets.
As part consideration for the Initial Transaction, Petershill Partners, Inc.
entered into a Tax Receivables Agreement (the "Tax Receivables Agreement" or
"TRA") with certain Petershill Funds and their subsidiaries, which will
require Petershill Partners, Inc. to pay 75% of the amount of cash tax
savings, if any, in US federal, state and local income tax that Petershill
Partners, Inc. realises. The computation of the tax savings is based on the
actual US federal tax savings realised on the tax returns of Petershill
Partners, Inc. over the amount that would have been paid if the increase in
tax basis had not occurred. State and local income tax savings are based on
the assumption that the state and local tax rate is 6% of the reduction in
federal taxable income due to the increased tax basis. In addition, any such
savings that Petershill Partners, Inc. realises as a result of the tax
benefits associated with the increases in tax basis that arise due to payments
under the Tax Receivables Agreement, are assumed to result in additional
increases in tax basis that will result in future tax benefits. The Group
expects that, as a result of the size of the increases in the tax basis of the
investments described above, the payments that it will be required to make
under the Tax Receivables Agreement may be substantial. The majority of these
incremental payments are expected to arise over the next 15 years.
The Group has estimated the future tax savings payable under the TRA based on
information that has been provided by the underlying Partner-firms as to the
amount of the step-up in tax basis and future expected amortisation. To the
extent that a step-up did not result in a future amortisation deduction it has
been assumed that no tax benefit will be payable under the TRA agreement. In
addition, the Group has assumed that any amortisation will result in an
immediate tax benefit in the year of the amortisation. As at 31 December 2024,
the Group has recorded a liability of $159.0 million (31 December 2023:
$174.7 million), representing the Operator's best estimate of the amounts
currently expected to be owed to certain of the Petershill Funds and certain
of their subsidiaries under the Tax Receivables Agreement. The liability that
is recorded is associated with the expected future tax benefits related to the
aggregate step-up in tax basis.
The Liability for the TRA was initially recognised at fair value of the
expected liability. Any changes to the carrying value of the expected
liability are recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income
at each reporting date. Refer to Note 3 for detailed discussion of the TRA.
The payable is subsequently carried at amortised cost based on assumptions
discussed below and may be adjusted. These assumptions are based on the
Operator's judgement and information provided by the Partner-firms. The
Operator has estimated the step-up tax basis of the acquired assets based on
tax information provided by the Partner-firms, and to the extent amortisable
projected the amortisation of the step-up tax basis to occur over 15 years,
applied an effective interest rate of 18% (31 December 2023: 18%) and utilised
the current effective tax rate of Petershill Partners, Inc. in calculating the
future tax benefits and resulting payments under the TRA.
In addition, the TRA provides for the payment on the TRA to become due on the
original due date of the US federal income tax return and an interest that is
payable on the final payment from the due date of the return until actual
payment is made. The interest is recognised as a Finance cost in the
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income at each reporting date.
vi. Investments held at fair value through profit or loss
Investments are designated upon initial recognition as held at fair value
through profit or loss. Gains or losses resulting from the movement in fair
value are recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income at
each valuation point.
Financial assets are recognised/derecognised at the date of the
purchase/disposal. Investments are initially recognised at fair value, which
is the total fair value of upfront consideration and deferred consideration
and approximates cost. Transaction costs are recognised in the Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income as incurred.
The Group measures its investments at fair value. Fair value is defined as the
price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability
(i.e. the exit price) in an orderly transaction between market participants at
the measurement date. In the absence of quoted market prices, fair value is
determined by the Operator. Due to the inherent uncertainties of valuation,
these estimated fair values may differ significantly from the values that
would have been realised had a readily available market for these investments
existed, and these differences could be material.
The Operator is responsible for the implementation and maintenance of internal
controls and procedures related to the valuation of the Group's investments.
Valuations are prepared in accordance with the Operator's valuation policy and
subject to verification procedures. A third-party valuation advisor is engaged
to assist in the preparation of the valuation proposals including certain
market data driven assumptions. The valuation proposals are reviewed by the
Operator's functionally independent Valuation Oversight Group ("VOG").
Periodically, VOG presents the valuation proposals and their independent price
verification review results to the Operator's valuation committee ("Valuation
Committee") which convenes to approve and oversee the application of valuation
policies and review fair value estimates for the investments. Subsequently,
the Operator reports the valuation results to the Board of Directors.
Per the valuation policy, the Operator initially values the Group's
investments based on their purchase price and thereafter values them using
valuation methods that it determines, in its sole discretion. The Operator
uses a number of different valuation techniques, including the market
approach, which applies a multiple to current operating income of
Partner-firms and the income approach, which applies discounted cash flow
techniques based upon estimated future cash flows and discount rates. Since
observable prices are generally not available for such investments, the
Operator considers all available market evidence in determining fair value.
Certain investments are valued at the most recent Net Asset Value per unit or
capital account information available and the Operator considers such value to
be an appropriate measure of fair value. Further information about investments
held at fair value through profit and loss is included in Note 4.
Deferred payment obligations
Certain financial assets are purchased under various contracts containing
deferred payment terms. These deferred payment obligations are initially
recorded on the contractual purchase date with a discount being imputed for an
effective interest rate that will be the equivalent rate of interest due on
borrowings and subsequently carried at amortised cost.
Any difference between the initially recorded deferred payment obligations and
the final contractual liability payable is recognised in the Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income as a finance cost over the period of the
deferred payment obligation using the effective interest method.
Deferred consideration receivable
Certain financial assets are disposed under various contracts containing
deferred payment terms. This deferred consideration receivable is initially
recorded on the contractual disposal date with a discount being imputed for an
effective interest rate that will be the equivalent rate of interest earned on
lending and subsequently carried at amortised cost less ECL.
Any difference between the initially recorded deferred consideration
receivable and the financial contractual payment is recognised in the
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income as a finance income over the
period of the deferred consideration receivables using the effective interest
rate method.
Contingent consideration
Certain financial assets are purchased and sold under various contracts
containing contingent payment terms. These contingent payment obligations are
initially recorded at fair value on the contractual purchase date, subject to
probability of payment and time value of money, with a discount being imputed
for an effective interest rate that will be the equivalent date of interest
due on borrowings or lending and subsequently carried at fair value. Any
change in fair value is recorded as a change in contingent consideration at
fair value through profit or loss in the Consolidated Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
The fair value of contingent consideration obligations represents the present
value of the future expected payments and receipts based on an assessment of
the likelihood of those payments and receipts against their contractual
thresholds. The Operator uses a number of different valuation techniques, at
its discretion, but primarily relies on the income approach which applies
discounted cash flow techniques based on the estimated future payments and
discount rates. Further information about contingent consideration is included
in Note 4.
Offsetting financial instruments
Financial assets and liabilities are offset and the net amount is reported in
the Consolidated Statement of Financial Position when there is a legally
enforceable right to offset the recognised amounts and there is an intention
to settle on a net basis or realise the asset and settle the liability
simultaneously. The legally enforceable right must not be contingent on future
events, and it must be enforceable in the normal course of business and in the
event of default, insolvency or bankruptcy of the Group or the counterparty.
vii. Dividends
Dividends payable are recognised as distributions in the financial statements
when the dividend is approved by Shareholders or when paid.
viii. Related parties
Parties are considered to be related if one party has the ability to control
the other party or exercise significant influence over the other party in
making financial or operational decisions. Enterprises and individuals that
directly, or indirectly through one or more intermediary, control, or are
controlled by, or under common control with, the Group, including subsidiaries
and fellow subsidiaries, are related parties of the Group. This includes its
key management personnel, including directors and officers of the Operator,
other affiliated entities of the Operator and the Petershill Funds. In
considering related party relationships, attention is directed to the
substance of the relationship and not merely the legal form.
ix. Share capital
Financial instruments issued by the Company are treated as equity if the
holder has only a residual interest in the assets of the Company after the
deduction of all liabilities. The Company's Ordinary Shares are classified as
equity instruments.
For the issue of each Ordinary Share for cash, $0.01 has been recognised in
Share capital and the remaining cash amount received has been recognised in
Share premium and Other reserve. For the issue of each Ordinary Share issued
to Petershill Funds in exchange for financial assets and liabilities, $0.01
has been recognised in Share capital and the remaining amount recognised in
Share premium, and Other reserve such that the aggregate of the amount
recognised in Share capital, Share premium and Other reserve is equal to the
fair value of the financial assets and liabilities transferred to the Group.
Under Section 612 of the Companies Act, where an issuing company has secured
at least 90% equity holding of another company in return for shares of the
issuing company, then merger relief shall be applied requiring the premium,
with respect to the shares issued, to be recorded to Other reserve as merger
relief. The acquisition of Petershill Partners Ltd by the Company fell under
the ambit of Section 612 of the Companies Act and hence merger relief was
applied to the excess over the nominal value of shares.
The Company's Shareholders approved the cancellation of the amount standing to
the credit of the Company's share premium account in full (the "Reduction of
Capital") at its Annual General Meeting held on 24 May 2023. A formal approval
of the same was obtained on 20 June 2023 by His Majesty's High Court in
England (the "Court"). Accordingly, the Reduction of Capital has become
effective and has created additional distributable reserves of approximately
$3,346.7 million. Accordingly, the amounts standing to the credit of the share
premium account have been transferred to Retained earnings. Refer to Note 15
for more information.
Incremental costs directly attributable to the issue of new shares ("Share
issue costs") are shown as a deduction against proceeds from Share premium.
Incremental costs include those incurred in connection with the placing and
admission which include fees payable under a placing agreement, legal costs
and any other applicable expenses.
The cost of repurchasing Ordinary Shares including the related stamp duty and
transactions costs is charged to Retained earnings and dealt with in the
Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity. Share repurchase transactions are
accounted for on a trade date basis. The nominal value of Ordinary Share
capital repurchased and cancelled is transferred out of Share capital and into
the Capital redemption reserve.
x. Income from Investments in Partner-firms and interest income
Cumulative income and returns from Financial assets at fair value through
profit or loss is made up of the Income from Investments in Partner-firms
which comprises the current year income (including accruals where applicable)
and the changes in fair value on financial assets at fair value through profit
or loss which comprises the fair value changes of the future returns of the
Investments in Partner-firms.
Income from Investments in money market funds and other assets is accounted
for on an accrual basis. Income from Investments in Partner-firms is generally
recognised when the rights to receive payment from the Financial assets at
fair value through profit or loss have been established, and comprises three
underlying components, as follows:
I. Income from Investments in Partner-firms derived from Management fee income
("FRE") is based on the net management fees earned by the underlying
Partner-firms and is reported in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income. This comprises the portion of the income in respect of the
Partner-firms' management fees that is due to the Group for each relevant
current period. This arises from the investments held to earn a share of the
underlying investee's management fee revenue.
Typically, the investments entitle the Group to a set percentage share of the
net management fee revenue earned by the underlying Partner-firm. Depending on
the nature of the operations of the underlying Partner-firm, income arising
will be accounted for on an accrual basis only when the right to receive
payment has been established under the terms of the agreement with the
Partner-firms.
II. Income from Investments in Partner-firms derived from Performance fee income
("PRE") is based on the realised performance fees earned by the underlying
Partner-firms and is reported in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income. This comprises the portion of the income in respect of the
Partner-firms' performance fees. Typically, these investments entitle the
Group to a set percentage share of the performance fee revenue earned by the
underlying investee. Depending on the nature of the operations of the
underlying Partner-firm, income arising will be accounted for on an accrual
basis only when the right to receive payment has been established under the
terms of the agreement with the
Partner-firms.
III. Income from Investments in Partner-firms derived from Investment Income is
based on the investment income earned by the underlying Partner-firms and is
reported in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income. This comprises
the portion of the income in respect of the Partner-firms' realised gains and
losses or any distributed income from the investments held on Partner-firms'
balance sheets. Investment income arising will be accounted for on an accrual
basis only when the right to receive payment has been established under the
terms of the agreement with the Partner-firms.
Gains or losses resulting from the movement in fair value of the Group's
investments held at fair value through profit or loss are recognised in the
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income at each valuation point.
xi. Expenses
Expenses are accounted for on an accruals basis. Share issue costs of the
Company directly attributable to the issue and listing of shares are charged
to the share premium account.
Operator charges, profit sharing charges, professional fees, divestment fees
and other expenses incurred are recognised on an accruals basis and expensed
to the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income. Certain professional
fees are transaction costs incurred to structure a deal to acquire or dispose
of investments designated as financial assets at fair value through profit or
loss. These transaction costs, when incurred, are immediately recognised in
the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income as an expense.
xii. Cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents include cash in hand, deposits held at call with
banks, other short-term investments in an active market with original
maturities of three months or less, and bank overdrafts.
xiii. Taxation
Income tax comprises current tax and deferred tax and is recognised in the
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income except to the extent that it
relates to items recognised directly in equity, in which case it is recognised
in Equity.
The current income tax payable on profits is recognised as an expense based on
the applicable tax laws in each jurisdiction in the period in which profits
arise, calculated using tax rates enacted or substantively enacted by the
balance sheet date. Deferred tax is recognised on temporary differences
between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for accounting and tax
purposes. A deferred income tax asset or liability is recognised for each
temporary difference, except for temporary differences subject to initial
recognition exemption and earnings related to subsidiaries where the temporary
differences will not reverse in the foreseeable future and the Group has the
ability to control the timing of their reversal. Deferred tax assets and
liabilities are determined based on the tax rates that are expected to be in
effect in the period that the asset is expected to be realised or the
liability is settled, based on tax rates and tax laws that have been enacted
or substantively enacted by the balance sheet date.
Current tax assets and liabilities are offset when they are levied by the same
taxation authority on either the same taxable entity or within the same tax
reporting group (which intends to settle on a net basis), and when there is a
legal right to offset. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are offset when the
same conditions are satisfied.
Deferred income tax assets are recognised to the extent it is probable that
the benefits associated with these assets will be realised. The determination
as to if it is probable that a deferred income tax asset will be recognisable
is dependent on a number of factors including the expectations of future
taxable income in the period the deferred income tax asset is realised.
Further, in certain jurisdictions the character of the loss or deduction as
either ordinary or capital may impact the ability to offset future income. As
such, significant judgements may be required in determining the Group's
ability to realise the future tax assets.
The Group is subject to income tax laws in various jurisdictions where it
operates, and the complex tax laws are potentially subject to different
interpretations by the Company and the relevant taxation authorities.
Judgements may be required in the interpretation of the relevant tax laws and
in assessing the probability of acceptance of tax positions. A tax reserve
related to uncertainty over income taxes is recognised when a payment to tax
authorities is considered probable.
xiv. New and amended standards and interpretations
Accounting standards and interpretations have been published and will be
mandatory for the Group's and Company's accounting periods beginning on or
after 1 January 2024 or later periods. The following are the new or amended
accounting standards or interpretations applicable to the Group and the
Company.
• Disclosure of Accounting Policies - Amendments to IAS 1 and IFRS Practice
Statement 2 - Non-current Liabilities with Covenants (issued October 2022 and
effective for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2024); and
• Amendments to IAS 1 - Classification of Liabilities as Current or Non-current
(issued January 2020 and effective for annual periods beginning on or after 1
January 2024).
These amendments have been adopted and the impact of these amendments to the
Group and the Company is not material.
Certain amendments to accounting standards have been published that are not
mandatory for 31 December 2024 reporting periods and have not been early
adopted by the Group and the Company. These amendments are not expected to
have a material impact on the entity in the current or future reporting
periods and on foreseeable future transactions.
• Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7 - Classification and Measurement of Financial
Instruments (issued May 2024 and effective for annual periods beginning on or
after 1 January 2026);
• IFRS 18 - Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements (issued April
2024 and effective for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2027);
and
• Annual Improvements to IFRS Accounting Standards - Volume 11- IFRS 10, IFRS 9,
IFRS 1, IAS 7 and IFRS 7 (issued July 2024 and effective for annual periods
beginning on or after 1 January 2026).
xv. Assessment of investment entity
The Board of Directors has determined that the Company and its subsidiaries
are not an investment entity and therefore the Company's financial statements
have been prepared on a consolidated basis, as required by IFRS 10 -
Consolidated Financial Statements.
The Board of Directors has assessed if the Company and its subsidiaries
satisfy the three essential criteria to be regarded as an investment entity as
defined in IFRS 10, IFRS 12 - Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities and
IAS 27 - Consolidated and Separate Financial Statements. The three essential
criteria are such that the entity must:
1. obtain funds from one or more investors for the purpose of providing these
investors with professional investment management services;
2. commit to its investors that its business purpose is to invest its funds
solely for returns from capital appreciation, investment income or both; and
3. measure and evaluate the performance of substantially all of its investments
on a fair value basis.
Also as set out in IFRS 10, further consideration should be given to the
typical characteristics of an Investment Entity, which are that:
• it should have more than one investment, to diversify the risk portfolio and
maximise returns;
• it should have multiple investors, who pool their funds to maximise investment
opportunities;
• it should have investors that are not related parties of the entity; and
• it should have ownership interests in the form of equity or similar interests.
B85F of IFRS 10 that deals with exit strategies, stipulates that an entity's
investment plans also provide evidence of its business purpose. One feature
that differentiates an investment entity from other entities is that an
investment entity does not plan to hold its investments indefinitely; it holds
them for a limited period. Given equity investments and non-financial asset
investments have the potential to be held indefinitely, an investment entity
shall have an exit strategy documenting how the entity plans to realise
capital appreciation from substantially all of its equity investments and
non-financial asset investments.
The Company and its subsidiaries hold their investments primarily for income
generation purposes and do not have plans to realise capital appreciation from
substantially all of the investments in Partner-firms and non-financial assets
in the normal course of operations. The Company and its subsidiaries do not
have an exit strategy as defined by IFRS 10 and therefore do not meet one of
the essential criteria to be treated as an investment entity.
Accordingly, the Company has not applied the provisions of Para 31 of IFRS 10
that requires an investment company to measure its investment in subsidiaries
at fair value through profit or loss. Instead, the Company consolidates the
subsidiaries that it controls as discussed in the next section.
xvi. Basis of consolidation of subsidiaries
IFRS 10 requires a parent to consolidate its subsidiaries that it controls.
Consolidation of the subsidiaries shall begin from the date the parent obtains
control of the subsidiaries and ceases when the parent loses control of the
subsidiaries. A parent controls the subsidiaries when the parent is exposed,
or has rights, to variable returns from its involvement with the subsidiaries
and has the ability to affect those returns through its power over the
subsidiaries.
The Company consolidates its subsidiaries to the extent it is exposed, or has
rights, to variable returns from its involvement with the subsidiaries and has
the ability to affect those returns through its power over the subsidiaries.
The consolidated financial statements of the Group include the results of the
Company and its wholly owned subsidiaries listed below.
Name of Subsidiary Registered office Purpose Interest as at Interest as at
31 December 31 December
2024 2023
Held directly
Petershill Partners Ltd¹ One Nexus Way Camana Bay, KY1-9005, Investment holding company 100% 100%
Cayman Islands
Petershill Partners II Ltd¹ One Nexus Way Camana Bay, KY1-9005, Investment holding company 100% 100%
Cayman Islands
Petershill Partners, Inc.¹ 251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington, DE 19808, United States of America Investment holding company 100% 100%
Petershill Partners II, Inc.¹ ³ 251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington, DE 19808, United States of America Investment holding company 100% -
Held indirectly
PHP DE 1 LP² ³ 251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington, DE 19808, United States of America Investment holding company 100% -
PHP DE 2 LP² ³ 251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington, DE 19808, United States of America Investment holding company 100% -
PHP C1 LP² ³ One Nexus Way Camana Bay, KY1-9005, Cayman Islands Investment holding company 100% -
PHP C2 LP² ³ One Nexus Way Camana Bay, KY1-9005, Cayman Islands Investment holding company 100% -
Petershill Partners GP Sub I 251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington, DE 19808, United States of America Investment holding company 100% 100%
Series LLC⁴
Petershill Partners GP Sub II 251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington, DE 19808, United States of America Investment holding company 100% 100%
Series LLC⁴
Petershill Partners GP Sub III Series LLC⁴ 251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington, DE 19808, United States of America Investment holding company 100% 100%
Petershill Partners GP Sub IV Series LLC⁴ 251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington, DE 19808, United States of America Investment holding company 100% 100%
PHP Aggregator GP Ltd⁵ One Nexus Way Camana Bay, KY1-9005, Cayman Islands General Partner of Cayman domiciled Petershill holding companies 100% 100%
Cook Holdings Series LLC⁶ 251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington, DE 19808, United States of America Investment holding company 100% 100%
Knight Holdings Series LLC⁶ 251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington, DE 19808, United States of America Investment holding company 100% 100%
Lyndhurst Holdings LP⁶ One Nexus Way, Camana Bay, KY1-9005 Cayman Islands Investment holding company 100% 100%
Plum Holdings LP⁶ One Nexus Way, Camana Bay, KY1-9005 Cayman Islands Investment holding company 100% 100%
Peasy Holdings LP⁶ One Nexus Way, Camana Bay, KY1-9005 Cayman Islands Investment holding company 100% 100%
1. Referred to as Petershill Subsidiaries.
2. Referred to as Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries.
3. Acquired by the Group on 1 January 2024.
4. Held through the Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries and referred to as
Petershill Blockers.
5. Held through Petershill Partners Ltd.
6. Held through the Petershill Blockers and the Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries
and referred to as Petershill holding companies.
I. Consolidation of Petershill Subsidiaries and Petershill Blockers
The Company wholly owns the issued interests of the Petershill Subsidiaries
and is able to exercise control and power over the Petershill Subsidiaries.
Petershill Partners Ltd wholly owns the shares of the Petershill Blockers
listed above indirectly through the respective Petershill Splitter
Subsidiaries. The financial statements of the Petershill Subsidiaries and
Petershill Blockers are consolidated in preparing the financial statements of
the Group.
II. Consolidation of Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries
On 1 January 2024, new subsidiaries (the "Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries")
were introduced into the Group structure to enable employees of the Operator
to be direct beneficiaries of a portion of the Profit Sharing Charge and
Divestment Fee (if any) payable by the Group to the Operator. This was done to
align the interests in the incentives of the Group, the Operator and the
employees of the Operator. There is no change to the amount or timing of any
Profit Sharing Charge or Divestment Fee payable by the Group under the
original Operator Agreement. Furthermore, this arrangement is not expected to
give rise to any material tax consequences for the Group and all initial and
ongoing costs of implementing this arrangement are borne by the Operator.
Effective from 1 January 2024, each of the Petershill Subsidiaries entered
into a Contribution Agreement with the appropriate Petershill Splitter
Subsidiary whereby the Petershill Subsidiaries transferred all of their
investments, including their interest in the Petershill Blockers and
Petershill holding companies, to the Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries in
return for interest in the Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries at the carrying
value on the same date (the "Restructure"). The Petershill Splitter
Subsidiaries are substantially owned by the respective Petershill Subsidiaries
and are fully consolidated into the Group's net asset value. The remainder of
the Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries are owned by the respective special
limited partners (the "Special Limited Partners"). The Special Limited
Partners are invested in the Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries to share a
portion of the Profit Sharing Charge and the Divestment Fee along with the
Operator and do not have any other economic interest in the Petershill
Splitter Subsidiaries (refer to Notes 6 and 20). The transaction is not
considered to be a business combination due to the nature of involving
entities under common control, which falls outside of the scope of IFRS 3.
III. Consolidation of Petershill holding companies
The Company has consolidated its investment in series and classes of assets
that it wholly owns and controls in the Petershill holding companies. Such
assets and liabilities are ring-fenced from the overall legal entity and
treated as a silo in line with IFRS 10. Specified assets of the series or
class are the only source of payment for specified liabilities in that series
or class. Holders of other series or class do not have rights or obligations
related to the specified assets or to residual cash flows from those assets.
Silos that are not directly or indirectly controlled by the Company are not
considered to be Subsidiaries and are accordingly not consolidated.
The Petershill Subsidiaries, Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries, Petershill
Blockers and Petershill holding companies are collectively referred to as
the Subsidiaries.
IV. Accounting for investments in Partner-firms
The Group's investments in Partner-firms are in the nature of non-controlling
stakes that do not give rise to control or significant influence over the
investees. The Group has assessed and concluded that the provisions contained
in IAS 28 and IFRS 9 relating to joint control or accounting for associates
are not applicable.
V. Elimination of intra-group balances and transactions
Intra-group balances and any unrealised gains arising from intra-group
transactions are eliminated in preparing the consolidated financial
statements. Unrealised losses are eliminated unless the costs cannot be
recovered. The financial results of Subsidiaries that are included in the
consolidated financial statements are included from the date that control
commences until the date that control ceases.
xvii. Going Concern
In accordance with the Companies Act 2006, the Board of Directors has a
responsibility to evaluate whether the Group has adequate resources to
continue its operational existence for the foreseeable future and at least for
the 12 months following the issuance of the financial statements.
The Board of Directors has made an assessment of going concern, which takes
into account the current performance and the Group's outlook, including future
projections of profitability and cash flows as well as a downside scenario
using information that is available as of the date of these financial
statements, and the Group's access to the revolving credit facility and its
debt arrangements.
An analysis regarding settlement of liabilities within 12 months after the
report date (current) and more than 12 months after the reporting date
(non-current) is presented in Note 19.
After making reasonable inquiries and assessing all data relating to the
Group's liquidity, the Board has concluded that the Group will be able to
continue in operation and meet its liabilities as they fall due, for the 12
months from the date of signing the financial statements. For these reasons,
the Company has adopted a going concern basis in preparing the financial
statements.
xviii. Climate change
Climate change and other ESG-related issues may affect the Partner-firms in a
variety of ways. The impacts can include items such as fundraising demand,
which may have either headwinds or tailwinds depending on the strategy of the
fund. The diversity of investments in Partner-firms, and related underlying
funds, mitigates the risk to the Group if any, that climate change may have on
any one underlying investment made by a Partner-firm.
In preparing the financial statements, the Operator considers the impact of
climate change in the valuation of investments, insofar as they are reasonably
able. For the years ended 31 December 2024 and 2023, in determining the fair
value of the investments in Partner-firms, based on inputs provided by the
third-party valuation advisor and discussions with Partner-firms, the Operator
concluded that the impact of climate change to valuations is not material at
this time and hence did not use climate change as an input for valuations.
3. Critical accounting judgements, estimates and assumptions
The preparation of the financial statements requires the Board to make
judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the application of
accounting policies and the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income
and expenses.
Estimates and judgements are continually evaluated and are based on Board
experience and other factors, including expectations of future events that are
believed to be reasonable under the circumstances.
Judgements
Information about judgements made in applying accounting policies that have
the most significant effect on the amounts recognised in the financial
statements is included in the following note:
Assessment as an investment entity
The Board of Directors has determined that the Company and its Subsidiaries
are not an investment entity and therefore the Company's financial statements
have been prepared on a consolidated basis, as required by IFRS 10
"Consolidated Financial Statements".
The Board of Directors has determined that the Company and its Subsidiaries do
not have an exit strategy as required by IFRS 10 and fail to meet one of the
essential criteria to be treated as an Investment Entity. The Company and its
Subsidiaries hold their investments primarily for income generation purposes
and do not have plans to realise capital appreciation from substantially all
of its investments in Partner-firms and non-financial assets in the normal
course of operations. Refer to Note 2(xv) for detailed discussion.
Estimates and assumptions
The Group makes estimates and assumptions, which are reviewed by the Board of
Directors, that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities in the
future. Estimates and assumptions are regularly evaluated and are based on
historical experience and other factors, including expectations of future
events that are believed to be reasonable under the circumstances.
Fair value of investments not quoted in an active market
The Group was formed with the objective of investing in Partner-firms. The
targeted Partner-firms are typically well-established multi-billion-dollar
alternative investment firms with a track record of strong performance and
meaningful cash flow generation and are well-positioned to develop their
platform across future fund and product offerings.
The Group participates in the management fee income, performance fee income
and investment income earned by the Partner-firms.
The investments in Partner-firms held by the Group are not quoted or traded in
an active market and as such their fair values are determined using valuation
techniques, primarily earnings multiples, discounted cash flows and recent
comparable transactions. The fair values of certain Partner-firms are fair
valued with the assistance of a third-party valuation advisor engaged by the
Operator.
The models used to determine fair values, which are individually bespoke and
have individual assumptions applied to them, are the responsibility of the
Operator and are validated and periodically reviewed by appropriately skilled
and functionally independent teams within the Operator. In valuing the
investments, key assumptions include estimates around future fundraise timing
and sizes, expected management and performance fee rates and margins of the
Partner-firms, expected current and future fund returns and timing of
realisations. These assumptions are driven by factors including data provided
by the Partner-firms, guidance provided by management of each Partner-firm,
benchmarking analysis of related market data points, and other qualitative and
quantitative factors assessed by the Operator for each period.
The inputs in the earnings multiple models include observable data, such as
earnings multiples of companies comparable to the relevant Partner-firms, and
unobservable data, such as forecast earnings for the Partner-firms and
unobservable adjustments, such as those made to multiples. In discounted cash
flow models, unobservable inputs are the projected cash flows of the relevant
Partner-firms and the risk premium for liquidity and credit risk that are
incorporated into the discount rate. The discount rates used for valuing
investments are determined based on historical returns for other entities
operating in the same industry for which market returns are observable.
Fair value of contingent consideration
The fair value of contingent consideration obligations is assessed leveraging
the inputs, assumptions and estimates used for the corresponding Partner-firm
valuations. These can include estimates around future fundraise timing and
sizes, expected management and performance fee rates and margins of the
Partner-firms, expected current and future fund returns and timing of
realisations. The models include estimates of probabilities of the likelihood
of those contingent payments and receipts against their contractual thresholds
and milestones. The Operator uses a number of different valuation techniques,
at its discretion, but primarily relies on the income approach which applies
discounted cash flow techniques based on the estimated future payments and
discount rates. Discount rates are determined based on the risk profile of the
potential future payments which can be based on the returns applied to the
same Partner-firm valuations or an effective interest rate on similar
borrowings.
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement
This estimate assumes that Petershill Partners, Inc. utilises the deductions
arising from the increase in tax basis and any interest imputed with respect
to its payment obligations under the Tax Receivables Agreement based on
projections of its taxable income, and that there would be no future changes
to the 21% US statutory federal tax rate. To the extent that the stepped-up
tax basis is amortisable the Group has projected the amortisation of the
step-up tax basis to occur over 15 years. To the extent that the step-up tax
basis is not amortisable, the realisation of a benefit is outside of the
Group's control and would only occur if the Partner-firm disposes of or
otherwise realises a taxable gain or loss on the sale of the asset, and
therefore the Group has estimated there would be no tax benefit in computing
the payment obligation under the Tax Receivables Agreement with respect to
that stepped-up tax basis. The Group applied a discount rate of 18%.
It should be noted that in certain circumstances if Petershill Partners, Inc.
disposes of an underlying investment, it is possible that Petershill Partners,
Inc. will not be obligated to make payments under the Tax Receivables
Agreement. The likelihood of such an event has been considered in estimating
the amount of the liability under the Tax Receivables Agreement.
The Group is not aware of any issue that would cause the taxing authorities to
challenge a tax basis increase. However, the applicable Petershill Funds and
their Subsidiaries will not reimburse Petershill Partners, Inc. for any
payments previously made under the Tax Receivables Agreement if the related
tax benefits that it claims arising from such increase, are successfully
challenged by the applicable taxing authorities. As a result, in certain
circumstances, payments under the Tax Receivables Agreement could be in excess
of the relevant cash tax savings derived from the Tax Receivables Agreement.
In arriving at the liability for Tax Receivables Agreement, the Operator has
assumed the applicable US federal and state combined tax rate to be 25.7% (31
December 2023: 25.7%) and considers the same as a significant estimate used in
accruing the liability. For every change in tax rate by 5%, the liability for
Tax Receivables Agreement would change by $32.2 million (31 December 2023:
$36.8 million).
As indicated above, the Operator has projected both the current and future
taxable income of Petershill Partners, Inc. that would be available to utilise
the deductions arising from the increase in tax basis and any interest imputed
with respect to the payment obligations under the Tax Receivables Agreement.
However, if the final tax returns filed for the year do not result in
sufficient current taxable income to fully utilise the deductions as
projected, there would be a reduction in the amount actually paid under the
Tax Receivables Agreement. The reductions in payment obligations as a result
of insufficient current taxable income will ultimately be paid in future years
if taxable income exceeds the amount that is offset by the amortisation of the
stepped-up tax basis in that year. The Operator expects the Group to have
sufficient taxable income available in future years based on its best estimate
of income projections available at 31 December 2024 to fully utilise the
deductions arising from the increase in tax basis and any interest imputed
with respect to the payment obligations under the Tax Receivables Agreement.
As at 31 December 2024, the carrying value of the liability for Tax
Receivables Agreement was reported at amortised cost at a value of
$159.0 million (31 December 2023: $174.7 million). The fair value of the
liability for Tax Receivables Agreement is estimated at $154.1 million (31
December 2023: $166.6 million). The fair value of the liability for Tax
Receivables Agreement would be classified as Level 3 in the fair value
hierarchy due to the use of unobservable inputs. A 3.0% increase/decrease in
the underlying discount rate would result in a decrease/increase in fair value
of approximately $15.9 million and $19.7 million respectively (31 December
2023: $21.0 million and $25.1 million respectively). The discount rate was
determined based on the cost of capital adjusted for risks related to the
potential elimination of the payments due to possible future disposal of the
underlying investments.
4. Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
Investments at fair value through profit or loss
The Group's investments include investments in Partner-firms, which hold a
diversified portfolio of investments in private equity, absolute return,
private credit and private real assets. This includes both current and
non-current investments.
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Opening balance 5,254.7 4,958.9
Additions¹ 192.1 66.8
Disposals (507.6) -
In kind distribution of Investments in Partner-firms 6.1 0.2
Other movements - 1.8
Change in investments at fair value through profit or loss² 866.7 227.0
Closing balance 5,812.0 5,254.7
1. Of the above, $85.1 million (31 December 2023: $nil) relates to consideration
payable on a deferred basis, -$4.1 million relates to returns of dividend
reinvestments (31 December 2023: $57.0 million relates to dividend
reinvestments) and $111.1 million (31 December 2023: $9.8 million) relates
to consideration payable on an upfront basis.
2. Of the above, an amount of $837.6 million (31 December 2023: $227.0 million)
relates to unrealised gain on fair value of current and non-current
investments held at year end and $29.1 million (31 December 2023: $nil)
relates to year-to-date realised gain on fair value of investments disposed of
during the year.
On 15 January 2025, the Group closed on the sale of a portion of one of its
investments in Partner-firms, which was originally acquired by the Group in
2021, for a total consideration of $726.2 million. As at 31 December 2024, the
portion of the investment sold is classified as held for sale and recorded as
a current asset, at its fair value of $726.2 million, within Investments at
fair value through profit or loss in the Consolidated Statement of Financial
Position. Refer to Note 2(iv) for more details on the Group's policy.
Fair value measurements
IFRS 13 requires disclosure of fair value measurement by level. The level of
fair value hierarchy within the financial assets or financial liabilities is
determined on the basis of the lowest level input that is significant to the
fair value measurement. Financial assets and financial liabilities are
classified in their entirety into only one of the following three levels:
• Level 1 - quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or
liabilities;
• Level 2 - inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are
observable for the assets or liabilities, either directly (i.e. as prices) or
indirectly (i.e. derived from prices); and
• Level 3 - inputs for assets or liabilities that are not based on observable
market data (unobservable inputs).
The determination of what constitutes "observable" requires significant
judgement by the Group. The Board of Directors considers observable data to be
market data that is readily available, regularly distributed or updated,
reliable and verifiable, not proprietary, and provided by independent sources
that are actively involved in the relevant market.
The following tables analyse within the fair value hierarchy the assets and
liabilities (by class) measured at fair value:
31 December 2024 Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
$m $m $m $m
Assets
Investments in money market funds at fair value through profit or loss - 8.9 - 8.9
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (current and - - 95.8 95.8
non-current)
Investments at fair value through profit or loss (current and non-current) 2.1 - 5,809.9 5,812.0
Liabilities
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (current and - - (8.1) (8.1)
non-current)
31 December 2023 Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
$m $m $m $m
Assets
Investment in money market funds at fair value through profit or loss - 62.3 - 62.3
Investments at fair value through profit or loss 0.2 - 5,254.5 5,254.7
Liabilities
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (current and - - (6.4) (6.4)
non-current)
The fair value of investments in money market funds is based on the daily
published net asset value of each fund and is therefore considered Level 2.
Investments in listed stocks are classified as Level 1. Due to the nature of
the investments in Partner-firms, they are always expected to be classified as
Level 3. The fair value of contingent consideration is determined based on a
combination of unobservable inputs, including discounted cash flow models,
probability-weighted scenarios, and the Operator's assessment of performance
targets. Given the reliance on significant judgement and estimation, the fair
value can be classified as Level 3. However, if observable market data
significantly influences the valuation, it may be classified as Level 2.
There have been no transfers between levels during the year. Any transfers
between the levels would be accounted for on the last day of each financial
year.
Sensitivity analysis to significant changes in unobservable inputs within
Level 3 hierarchy
Key assumptions including the timing and size of future fund raises by
Partner-firms, future performance of funds managed by the Partner-firms, the
timing of exits of investments managed by Partner-firms and margins of the
Partner-firms are estimates made by the Operator and are not certain. The
choice of discount rate or market multiple is somewhat correlated to the
assumptions made above. The discount rates and multiples are therefore
considered to be the significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value
measurement categorised within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. These,
together with a quantitative sensitivity analysis as at 31 December 2024 and
31 December 2023, are as shown below:
Level 3 investments Market value as of Significant Range of Weighted average Reasonable Valuation sensitivity
31 December 2024 unobservable inputs significant shift ⁴
by valuation technique ¹ unobservable
inputs as of
31 December 2024
Investments in Management Companies: Market Approach: -/+ - +
Private Markets
$1,398.1 Profit Multiple - FRE² 12.0x - 24.0x 16.1x 1.0x ($89.6) $89.6
$258.4 Asset Based Multiple 1.0x 1.0x 10.0% ($25.8) $25.8
Income Approach:
$1,463.3 Terminal Multiple - FRE² 5.4x - 19.0x 15.4x 0.7x ($37.1) $38.8
Discount Rate - FRE 8.0% - 18.4% 11.9% 1.0% ($100.6) $112.3
$1,617.6 Terminal Multiple - PRE³ 3.6x - 10.5x 6.6x 0.8x ($28.0) $28.5
Discount Rate - PRE 13.0% - 34.0% 24.1% 2.0% ($110.7) $127.4
Investments in Management Companies: Market Approach: -/+ - +
Absolute Return
$115.1 Profit Multiple - FRE² 7.9x 7.9x 1.7x ($24.9) $24.9
$14.0 Profit Multiple - PRE³ 4.4x 4.4x 2.0x ($6.4) $6.4
$15.8 Asset Based Multiple 1.0x 1.0x 10.0% ($1.6) $1.6
Income Approach:
$170.0 Terminal Multiple - FRE² 5.7x - 7.4x 7.3x 1.1x ($13.1) $17.1
Discount Rate - FRE 13.5% - 17.6% 13.7% 2.0% ($13.2) $17.4
$31.4 Terminal Multiple - PRE³ 3.4x - 4.1x 4.0x 0.6x ($2.8) $3.6
Discount Rate - PRE 24.2% - 29.8% 24.9% 3.6% ($2.4) $3.2
The above table excludes an amount of $726.2 million as at 31 December 2024 in
relation to Level 3 investments, for which the Operator did not have
significant estimation uncertainty.
Level 3 investments Market value as of Significant Range of Weighted average Reasonable Valuation sensitivity
31 December 2023 unobservable inputs significant unobservable shift ⁴
by valuation technique ¹ inputs as of
31 December 2023
Investments in Management Companies: Private Markets Market Approach: -/+ - +
$1,201.9 Profit Multiple - FRE² 10.0x - 23.5x 14.5x 1.0x ($87.3) $87.4
$405.6 Asset Based Multiple 1.0x 1.0x 10.0% ($40.6) $40.6
Income Approach:
$1,670.3 Terminal Multiple - FRE² 4.7x - 17.5x 13.2x 0.7x ($42.0) $43.4
Discount Rate - FRE 8.0% - 21.4% 13.0% 1.0% ($110.1) $122.3
$1,460.9 Terminal Multiple - PRE³ 2.7x - 10.0x 5.5x 0.8x ($32.9) $34.1
Discount Rate - PRE 13.0% - 37.0% 25.2% 2.0% ($107.0) $123.6
Investments in Management Companies: Absolute Return Market Approach: -/+ - +
$135.2 Profit Multiple - FRE² 8.2x 8.2x 1.6x ($10.1) $10.1
$82.8 Profit Multiple - PRE³ 4.5x - 5.0x 4.7x 2.0x ($14.2) $14.2
$17.5 Asset Based Multiple 1.0x 1.0x 10.0% ($1.7) $1.7
Income Approach:
$178.1 Terminal Multiple - FRE² 6.1x - 7.5x 7.4x 1.1x ($13.2) $17.4
Discount Rate - FRE 13.3% - 16.4% 13.6% 2.0% ($13.2) $17.4
$102.0 Terminal Multiple - PRE³ 3.3x - 5.3x 4.5x 0.7x ($7.6) $10.1
Discount Rate - PRE 19.0% - 30.3% 22.9% 3.4% ($7.5) $10.1
1. The fair value of any one instrument may be determined using multiple
valuation techniques. For example, market comparable and discounted cash flows
may be used together to determine fair value. Therefore, the Level 3 balance
encompasses both of these techniques.
2. The range consists of multiples on management fee-related earnings ("FRE") and
may represent historical or forward-looking multiples.
3. The range consists of multiples on performance-related earnings ("PRE") and
may represent historical or forward-looking multiples.
4. The increase or decrease in the unobservable inputs may not be shifted
negatively and positively by an equal amount. For the asset categories that
have different reasonable possible shifts, the above table discloses the
weighted average of the respective negative and positive shift.
As the Group's investments are generally not publicly quoted, valuations
require meaningful judgement to establish a range of values and the ultimate
value at which an investment is realised may differ from its most recent
valuation and the difference may be significant.
The below is a reconciliation of Level 3 assets held at fair value through
profit or loss:
Level 3 Instrument For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Assets
Opening balance 5,254.5 4,958.9
Additions¹ 192.1 66.8
Disposals (503.9) -
Other movements - 1.8
Change in investments at fair value through profit or loss² 867.2 227.0
5,809.9 5,254.5
1. Of the above, $85.1 million (31 December 2023: $nil) relates to consideration
payable on a deferred basis, -$4.1 million relates to returns of dividend
reinvestments (31 December 2023: $57.0 million relates to dividend
reinvestments) and $111.1 million (31 December 2023: $9.8 million) relates
to consideration payable on an upfront basis.
2. Of the above, an amount of $837.9 million (31 December 2023: $227.0 million)
relates to unrealised gain on fair value of current and non-current
investments held at year end and $29.3 million (31 December 2023: $nil)
relates to year-to-date realised gain on fair value of investments disposed of
during the year.
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss
In addition to above, the Group has $95.8 million (31 December 2023: $nil) of
Level 3 assets and $8.1 million (31 December 2023: $6.4 million) of Level 3
liabilities as at 31 December 2024. The assets represent a portion of the
total consideration which is probable under contingent consideration
agreements in connection with its sale of investments in certain
Partner-firms, wherein the Group may receive additional consideration based on
the underlying terms of the sale agreement. The liabilities represent a
portion of the total consideration which is probable under the contingent
consideration agreements in connection with its investments in certain
Partner-firms wherein the Group may have to pay additional consideration based
on the underlying Partner-firms' ability to raise capital or meet certain
revenue thresholds as defined in the relevant investment agreement. For the
year ended 31 December 2024, the Group recorded a net fair value gain of $6.9
million (2023: loss of $6.4 million) on contingent consideration in the
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income, comprising of $8.6 million
increase (2023: $nil) in contingent consideration assets and $1.7 million
increase (2023: $6.4 million increase) in contingent consideration
liabilities.
As at 31 December 2024, an increase/decrease in the underlying discount rate
of 2.9% (31 December 2023: n/a) would result in a decrease/increase in the
fair value of contingent consideration assets of -$4.3 million/+$5.0 million
(31 December 2023: n/a) respectively.
As at 31 December 2024, an increase/decrease in the underlying discount rate
of 1.9% (31 December 2023: 1.0%) would result in a decrease/increase in the
fair value of the contingent consideration liabilities of -$0.1 million/+$0.1
million (31 December 2023: -$0.04 million/+$0.02 million) respectively.
Deferred consideration receivable
The Group has $152.8 million (31 December 2023: $nil) of deferred
consideration receivable recorded in the Consolidated Statement of Financial
Position as at 31 December 2024 and the carrying amount is imputed at an
effective interest rate of 7.0% (31 December 2023: n/a). The assets represent
a portion of the total consideration which is due to the Group on a deferred
basis in connection with its sales of investments in certain Partner-firms.
The assets are held at amortised cost. During the year ended 31 December 2024,
the Group recorded $2.4 million (2023: $nil) of finance income in the
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income in relation to the accretion of
the assets.
As at 31 December 2024, an increase/decrease in the underlying discount rate
of 1.0% would result in a decrease/increase in the carrying amount of deferred
consideration receivable of -$0.7 million/+$0.7 million (31 December 2023:
n/a) respectively
Deferred payment obligations
The Group has $87.8 million (31 December 2023: $51.9 million) of deferred
payment obligations recorded in the Consolidated Statement of Financial
Position as at 31 December 2024 and the carrying amount is imputed at an
effective interest rate of 3.2% (31 December 2023: 2.4%). These liabilities
represent a portion of the total consideration which is due from the Group on
a deferred basis in connection with its purchases of investments in certain
Partner-firms wherein the Group is required to pay additional consideration on
an agreed future date. The liabilities are held at amortised cost. During the
year ended 31 December 2024, the Group recorded $6.1 million (2023:
$6.0 million) of finance cost in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income in relation to the amortisation of the liabilities.
As at 31 December 2024, an increase/decrease in the underlying discount rate
of 1.0% would result in a decrease/increase in the carrying amount of deferred
payment obligations of -$0.6 million/+$0.6 million (31 December 2023: -$0.5
million/+$0.5 million) respectively
Investments in money market funds
The Group invests its overnight cash balance in money market funds
representing a collective investment scheme promoted by an affiliate of the
Operator. As at 31 December 2024, the money market funds were AAA (31 December
2023: AAA) rated. These investments are redeemable at short notice and have
been classified as debt investments. As at 31 December 2024, the Group held
investments in money market funds of $8.9 million (31 December 2023:
$62.3 million) and during the year ended 31 December 2024 earned interest of
$7.7 million (2023: $24.7 million).
5. Cash and cash equivalents
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Cash at bank 14.5 92.9
Fixed term deposit - 150.0
14.5 242.9
On 14 December 2023, the Company entered into a fixed term deposit of $150.0
million, which matured on 15 March 2024. Interest was earned on the fixed term
deposit at a rate of 5.4% per annum. During the year ended 31 December 2024,
the Company earned $1.7 million (2023: $0.4 million) of interest which is
included in Interest income from other assets in the Consolidated Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
6. Operator charges
On 1 January 2024, the Special Limited Partners contributed to each of the
Petershill Splitter Subsidiaries as part of the Restructure (see Note 2) in
return for a share in the Profit Sharing Charge and Divestment Fee previously
due solely to the Operator. The total fees due to the paid by the Group did
not change as a result.
Recurring Operating Charges
Under the Operator Agreement, the Operator is entitled to Recurring Operating
Charges on a quarterly basis, such Recurring Operating Charges consisting of,
in aggregate, 7.5% of the Group's relevant income from investments, as defined
under IFRS, for the relevant quarter. For the year ended 31 December 2024, the
income attributable to assets owned by the Group on which Recurring Operating
Charges was earned amounted to $322.8 million (2023: $292.1 million).
Amounts recorded as Recurring Operating Charges during the year ended 31
December 2024 were $24.2 million (2023: $21.9 million), of which
$7.0 million (31 December 2023: $6.6 million) was outstanding as at 31
December 2024. These amounts will be paid in accordance with the terms of the
Operator Agreement.
Profit Sharing Charge
The Operator and Special Limited Partners are entitled to a profit sharing
charge (the "Profit Sharing Charge") on a quarterly basis in arrears, which in
aggregate shall be an amount equal to 20% of the total dividend income from
each new investment ("New Investment") made by the Group after the Admission
in the relevant fiscal quarter (net of any Recurring Operating Charges in
respect of such New Investment), beginning in the ninth fiscal quarter from
the date on which the New Investment closed and subject to such New Investment
having achieved a return of 6% per annum calculated using the total invested
capital funded to the pertinent date. These amounts will be paid in accordance
with the terms of the Operator Agreement.
The aggregate of the Recurring Operating Charges and the Profit Sharing Charge
is capped at 15% of the Group's income from investments in Partner-firms for
the relevant quarter excluding any Divestment Fee payable for such quarter.
Amounts recorded as Profit Sharing Charge during the year ended 31 December
2024 were $0.6 million and $0.9 million (2023: $0.1 million and $nil) to
the Operator and Special Limited Partners respectively, and an amount of
$0.3 million and $0.3 million (31 December 2023: $0.1 million and $nil) was
outstanding to the Operator and Special Limited Partners as at 31 December
2024 respectively. These amounts will be paid in accordance with the terms of
the Operator Agreement.
Divestment Fee
The Operator and Special Limited Partners are entitled to a divestment fee
("Divestment Fee") calculated at 20% of the total Divestment Profit in the
relevant quarter in relation to the Group's investments. Divestment Profit
refers to the cash flows realised from the sale or divestment of assets
calculated as the sale price minus the contribution value of such asset,
excluding any dividend income received over the holding period and on which
the Group has already paid Recurring Operating Charges and, in the case of New
Investments, Profit Sharing Charge.
Although the Group does not have an exit strategy for its investments, it may
be subject to exits or realisations at underlying Partner-firms and as such an
accrual is reflected in the accounts representing an amount that would be
payable if the Group were to exit all of its investments at the fair value
reflected in these financial statements. As at 31 December 2024, an amount of
$247.3 million (31 December 2023: $94.8 million), of which $119.5 million and
$127.8 million would be due to the Operator and Special Limited Partners
respectively (31 December 2023: $94.8 million and $nil), has been accrued
towards fee payable on divestment of investments, of which $1.2 million
(2023: $nil) related to disposals during the year ended 31 December 2024 and
will be paid in accordance with the terms of the Operator Agreement.
7. Audit fees
Other operating expenses include fees payable to the Group's Auditors and its
affiliates, which can be analysed as follows:
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Fees to the Company's Auditors¹
for audit of the statutory financial statements of £1.1million (2023: 1.4 1.2
£0.9million)²
for audit-related assurance services of £0.1million (2023: £0.1million) 0.1 0.1
1.5 1.3
1. All fees are excluding VAT.
2. The audit fee of £1.1 million for the year ended 31 December 2024 includes an
amount of £54 thousand (excluding VAT) or £65 thousand (including VAT)
relating to additional billing for the 2023 audit.
For the year ended 31 December 2024, the Company's Auditors were paid £0.1
million (2023: £0.1 million) in relation to its review of the Group's
condensed interim consolidated financial statements and the same is included
under audit-related assurance services.
8. Tax
The Group's income tax expense can be analysed as follows:
Amounts recognised in profit and loss For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Current tax expense:
Adjustments for current tax of prior periods 0.9 12.7
Tax charge at standard US corporation tax rate 1.9 1.3
Tax charge at standard UK corporation tax rate 4.9 9.5
Withholding tax 5.4 -
Total current tax expense 13.1 23.5
Deferred tax expense:
Origination and reversal of temporary differences 152.0 65.3
Adjustments for deferred tax of prior periods (12.2) 5.9
Movements in unrecognised tax benefits (19.3) (16.7)
Other 1.8 -
Effect of changes in tax rates (2.3) (2.0)
Total deferred tax expense 120.0 52.5
Total income tax expense 133.1 76.0
The differences in the effective tax rate for the period and the standard rate
of corporation tax in the UK at 25.0% (2023: 23.5%) are as follows:
Reconciliation of effective tax rate US UK Other For the year ended %
$m
$m
31 December 2024
$m $m
Profit/(loss) before tax 654.1 834.2 (522.8) 965.5
Tax charge/(credit) at standard UK corporation tax rate 163.5 208.6 (130.7) 241.4 25.0%
Foreign rate differential (26.2) - (76.8) (103.0) (10.7%)
Intra-group dividend income not taxable - (65.9) 65.9 - -%
US tax expense related to PLC income 0.5 - - 0.5 0.1%
State and Local taxes 14.2 - - 14.2 1.5%
Adjustments for prior periods 4.1 (1.1) - 3.0 0.3%
Tax on partnership profits - 3.9 - 3.9 0.4%
Other 1.8 - 5.3 7.1 0.7%
Deferred tax adjustment, net of Initial Recognition Exemption ("IRE") (14.7) - - (14.7) (1.5%)
Movements in unrecognised deferred tax (19.3) (141.6) 141.6 (19.3) (2.0%)
Total income tax expense 123.9 3.9 5.3 133.1 13.8%
Reconciliation of effective tax rate US jurisdiction For the year ended %
31 December 2024
$m
Profit before tax 654.1
Total tax at the standard local country corporation tax rate 137.3 21.0%
US tax expense related to PLC income 0.5 0.1%
State and Local taxes 14.2 2.2%
Adjustments for prior periods (US Tax) 4.1 0.6%
Other 1.8 0.3%
Deferred tax adjustment, net of IRE (14.7) (2.2%)
Movements in unrecognised deferred tax (19.3) (3.0%)
Total income tax expense 123.9 19.0%
Reconciliation of effective tax rate US UK Other For the year ended %
$m $m $m 31 December 2023
$m
Profit/(loss) before tax 207.7 328.5 (139.1) 397.1
Tax charge at standard UK corporation tax rate 48.8 77.3 (32.7) 93.4 23.5%
Foreign rate differential (5.2) - (28.6) (33.8) (8.5%)
Intra-group dividend income not taxable 10.5 (23.5) 13.0 - -%
US tax expense related to PLC income 1.3 - - 1.3 0.3%
State and Local taxes 9.3 - - 9.3 2.3%
Adjustments for prior periods 6.3 12.1 - 18.4 4.6%
Tax on partnership profits - 4.1 - 4.1 1.0%
Movements in unrecognised deferred tax (16.7) (48.3) 48.3 (16.7) (4.2%)
Total income tax expense 54.3 21.7 - 76.0 19.0%
Reconciliation of effective tax rate US jurisdiction For the year ended %
31 December 2023
$m
Profit before tax 207.7
Total tax at the standard local country corporation tax rate 43.6 21.0%
Intra-group dividend income not taxable 10.5 5.1%
US tax expense related to PLC income 1.3 0.6%
State and Local taxes 9.3 4.5%
Adjustments for prior periods (US Tax) 6.3 3.0%
Movements in unrecognised deferred tax (16.7) (8.0%)
Total income tax expense 54.3 26.2%
The tax disclosures for the years ended 31 December 2024 and 31 December 2023
have been updated such that the tax impact of items which are eliminated on
consolidation (being intercompany dividends and gains/losses on subsidiary
investments) is offset in the tax reconciliation. There is no change in the
tax expense in either year.
The Investments in Partner-firms were a purchase of assets for income tax
purposes. Due to differences in the computation of the purchase price of the
Partner-firms as well as the impact of the Tax Receivables Agreement,
temporary differences arose on the acquisition. Due to initial recognition
exception under paragraphs 15 and 24 of IAS 12 - Income Taxes no deferred tax
is recognised in respect of these original temporary differences.
The UK statutory corporation tax rate increased from 19% to 25% with effect
from 1 April 2023. The UK statutory rate for the year ended 31 December 2024
is therefore 25.00% (2023: blended rate of 23.54%). Deferred tax assets and
liabilities in the UK as at 31 December 2024 have been calculated based on the
25% rate (31 December 2023: 25%). Deferred tax assets and liabilities in the
US as at 31 December 2024 have been calculated based on the US federal
statutory rate of 21% (31 December 2023: 21%) and estimated effective state
tax rate of 2.93% (31 December 2023: 5.48%).
In 2023, the Finance (No. 2) Act 2023 enacted certain provisions of the
G20-Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Global
Anti-Base Erosion Model Rules (Pillar Two), including a Domestic Minimum
Top-up Tax and Income Inclusion rule. This legislation seeks to ensure that UK
headquartered multinational enterprises pay a minimum tax rate of 15% on UK
and overseas profits arising after 31 December 2023. The legislation applies
for a period to groups with revenues in excess of €750 million in at least
two of the previous four periods. The Group is not within the scope of Pillar
Two in the year ended 31 December 2024. The application of Pillar Two to the
Group shall continue to be closely monitored.
9. Deferred tax liability
Movement in deferred tax balances
Net balance Recognised in Recognised in Foreign Net balance 31 December 2024 Deferred tax assets Deferred tax liabilities
1 January 2024 profit or loss OCI/equity exchange $m $m $m
$m $m $m $m
Investment in Partner-firms (70.4) (150.0) - - (220.4) - (220.4)
Tax Receivables Agreement 23.6 2.9 - - 26.5 26.5 -
Deferred payment obligations (0.1) 0.1 - - - - -
Divestment fee 16.6 23.0 - - 39.6 39.6 -
Other 6.9 3.3 - - 10.2 10.2 -
Losses 15.2 (0.9) - - 14.3 14.3 -
Capital loss - 1.6 - - 1.6 1.6 -
(8.2) (120.0) - - (128.2) 92.2 (220.4)
Net balance Recognised in Recognised in Foreign exchange Net balance 31 December 2023 Deferred tax assets Deferred tax liabilities
1 January 2023 profit or loss OCI/equity $m $m $m $m
$m $m $m
Investment in Partner-firms 18.4 (88.8) - - (70.4) - (70.4)
Tax Receivables Agreement 17.3 6.3 - - 23.6 23.6 -
Deferred payment obligations (0.6) 0.5 - - (0.1) - (0.1)
Divestment fee 7.1 9.5 - - 16.6 16.6 -
Other 0.8 6.1 - - 6.9 6.9 -
Losses 1.0 14.2 - - 15.2 15.2 -
44.0 (52.2) - - (8.2) 62.3 (70.5)
After considering jurisdictional netting, the deferred tax balances shown
above are presented on a net basis on the Consolidated Statement of
Financial Position.
The gross deferred tax asset as at 31 December 2024 was $92.2 million (31
December 2023: $62.3 million). As at 31 December 2024, it is expected that
$30.7 million (31 December 2023: $7.6 million) of the deferred tax asset
will be recovered within the next 12 months and the remaining $61.5 million
(31 December 2023: $54.7 million) of the deferred tax asset will be recovered
after 12 months.
Losses carried forward as at 31 December 2024 will expire as follows:
US UK Total
$m $m $m
2025 - - -
2026 and onwards - - -
Unlimited 63.8 - 63.8
63.8 - 63.8
Losses carried forward as at 31 December 2023 will expire as follows:
US UK Total
$m $m $m
2024 - - -
2025 and onwards - - -
Unlimited 58.0 - 58.0
58.0 - 58.0
Unrecognised deductible temporary differences and unused tax losses
Deferred tax liabilities/assets have not been recognised in respect of the
following items:
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
(Taxable)/deductible temporary differences (UK) - no expiration (75.2) 66.4
Deductible temporary differences (US) subject to initial recognition exception 10.4 35.4
(64.8) 101.8
Unrecognised taxable temporary differences associated with investments and
interests in Partner-firms
The Investments in Partner-firms were a purchase of assets for income tax
purposes. Due to differences in the computation of the purchase price of the
Investments in Partner-firms as well as the impact of the Tax Receivables
Agreement, temporary differences arose on the acquisition. Under the Initial
Recognition Exemption under paragraphs 15 and 23 of IAS 12, these temporary
differences were not recognised at the time of the original purchase.
Consequently, as the unrecognised temporary differences reverse there will be
no net impact to tax expense in the financial statements.
Further, to the extent that the Group has recognised unrealised losses with
respect to the investments and interests in Partner-firms, such losses may
result in a deferred tax asset to the extent that the unrealised losses are
not currently deductible for income tax purposes. To the extent the recovery
of these deferred tax assets will only result in future losses that may offset
a future capital gain, the Group has not recognised the associated deferred
tax assets unless it is probable that there will be sufficient income of the
appropriate character in the future to utilise the associated tax benefits. As
of 31 December 2024, the amount recognised is $1.6 million related to capital
losses that are expected to offset capital gains arising from future
disposals.
Uncertainty over income tax treatments
The Group has not identified any reserves related to uncertainty over income
tax treatments as of 31 December 2024 or 31 December 2023.
10. Finance cost
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Interest on Unsecured Notes 28.3 28.3
Interest on Deferred payment obligations 6.1 6.0
Commitment fees 0.4 0.4
Borrowing cost amortisation 0.6 0.6
Other finance charges 1.3 1.8
36.7 37.1
11. Earnings per share
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
Profit attributable to equity holders of the Company ($m) 832.4 321.1
Weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue 1,098,004,286 1,131,506,310
Basic and diluted earnings per share from continuing operations in the year 75.81 28.38
(cents)
The weighted average number of shares for the year ended 31 December 2024 and
31 December 2023 is calculated on a time weighted basis based on the timing of
issue and redemption of Ordinary Shares. There are no dilutive shares in
issue.
12. Trade and other receivables
31 December 31 December
2024 2023
$m $m
Amounts receivable from Investments 147.6 105.9
Tax recoverable 12.5 10.4
Prepayments 1.3 1.9
Other receivables 4.2 9.2
165.6 127.4
13. Unsecured Notes payable
On 24 August 2022, Petershill Partners, Inc. issued US private placement
senior unsecured notes (the "Unsecured Notes") to a group of institutional
investors. The Unsecured Notes issued by Petershill Partners, Inc. are
guaranteed by the Company.
The Unsecured Notes are comprised of five tranches:
Unsecured Notes Notional (US$) Tenor (years) Maturity Fixed Coupon
Series A 125,000,000 7 2029 5.51%
Series B 175,000,000 10 2032 5.54%
Series C 80,000,000 12 2034 5.69%
Series D 80,000,000 15 2037 5.84%
Series E 40,000,000 20 2042 6.14%
Petershill Partners, Inc. may be subject to pay a Make-Whole Amount (as
contained in the Note Purchase Agreement) contingent upon certain principal
repayment, prepayment or redemption of the Unsecured Notes in accordance with
the provisions of the Note Purchase Agreement. Absent an intent by the Group
to prepay the Unsecured Notes, no accrual for such Make-Whole Amount has been
made as at 31 December 2024 or 31 December 2023.
In accordance with the Note Purchase Agreement, the Petershill Partners, Inc.
is subject to various financial and non-financial covenants. The two financial
covenants that the Petershill Partners, Inc. must adhere to are 1) the
leverage ratio shall not exceed 4:1 and 2) the AuM shall not be less than the
required minimum AUM amount (as defined in the Note Purchase Agreement). The
Operator monitors the covenant requirements on at least a six-monthly basis.
There have been no breaches of these covenants during the year.
As at 31 December 2024, the outstanding amount of the Unsecured Notes was
$500.0 million (31 December 2023: $500.0 million). The carrying value of the
Unsecured Notes was reported at amortised cost and was net of unamortised debt
issuance costs of $5.6 million (31 December 2023: $6.2 million) in an amount
of $494.4 million (31 December 2023: $493.8 million). For the year ended 31
December 2024, the effective interest rate on the Unsecured Notes was 6.2% per
annum (2023: 6.2% per annum).
As of 31 December 2024, the fair value of the Unsecured Notes payable is
estimated at $478.7 million (31 December 2023: $467.0 million) calculated
based on discounted cash flows using the discount rate of 6.4% at 31 December
2024 and 6.6% at 31 December 2023 respectively. The Unsecured Notes payable
would be classified as Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy due to the use of
unobservable inputs, including the Group's own credit risk. A 3.0%
increase/decrease in the underlying discount rate would result in a movement
in fair value of approximately -$82.2 million / +$107.4 million respectively
(31 December 2023: -$87.0 million/+$113.6 million) or -17.2%/+22.4% (31
December 2023: -18.6%/+24.3%).
14. Net Debt Reconciliation
31 December 31 December
2024 2023
$m $m
Unsecured Notes payable 494.4 493.8
Interest payable 10.0 10.0
504.4 503.8
Liabilities from financing activities for the year ended 31 December 2024
Unsecured Notes Payable Interest
$m Payable
$m
Net debt at 1 January 2024 493.8 10.0
Repayment of interest - (28.3)
Interest expense - 28.3
Borrowing costs amortised 0.6 -
Net debt as at 31 December 2024 494.4 10.0
Liabilities from financing activities for the year ended 31 December 2023
Unsecured Notes Payable Interest
$m Payable
$m
Net debt at 1 January 2023 493.2 10.0
Repayment of interest - (28.3)
Interest expense - 28.3
Borrowing costs amortised 0.6 -
Net debt as at 31 December 2023 493.8 10.0
15. Share capital and other reserve
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Date Issued and fully paid Number of Share Share Other Capital redemption Total
Shares Issued capital premium reserve reserve $m
$m $m $m $m
Shares at 1,122,202,824 11.2 - 1,689.6 0.5 1,701.3
1 January 2024
Repurchase of Ordinary Shares - $0.01 (40,494,657) (0.4) - - 0.4 -
Closing balance as at 31 December 2024 1,081,708,167 10.8 - 1,689.6 0.9 1,701.3
For the year ended 31 December 2023
Date Issued and fully paid Number of Share Share Other Capital redemption Total
Shares Issued capital premium reserve reserve $m
$m $m $m $m
Shares at 1,135,399,597 11.4 3,346.7 1,689.6 0.3 5,048.0
1 January 2023
Share premium cancellation - - (3,346.7) - - (3,346.7)
Repurchase of Ordinary Shares - $0.01 (13,196,773) (0.2) - - 0.2 -
Closing balance as at 31 December 2023 1,122,202,824 11.2 - 1,689.6 0.5 1,701.3
On 17 May 2023, the Company commenced a share buyback programme of up to $50
million. During the year ended 31 December 2024, the Group repurchased and
cancelled 2,623,705 Ordinary Shares (2023: 13,196,773) as part of its buyback
programme for a total consideration of $5.8 million (2023: $26.3 million)
including transaction costs. The programme was subsequently terminated on 11
April 2024.
The Company's Shareholders approved the cancellation of the amount standing to
the credit of the Company's share premium account in full (the "Reduction of
Capital") at its Annual General Meeting held on 24 May 2023. A formal approval
of the same was obtained on 20 June 2023 from His Majesty's High Court in
England (the "Court"), Accordingly, the Reduction of Capital became effective
which created additional distributable reserves of approximately $3,346.7
million and the amounts standing to the credit of the share premium account
have been transferred to Retained earnings.
On 23 April 2024, the Company proposed a tender of up to $100 million of
Ordinary Shares. On 31 May 2024, the tender offer closed and 37,870,952
Ordinary Shares were purchased and cancelled for a total consideration of
$106.7 million, including transaction costs.
As at 31 December 2024, the Company's issued share capital comprised
1,081,708,167 of Ordinary Shares (31 December 2023: 1,122,202,824) of $0.01
each. Ordinary Shareholders are entitled to all dividends paid by the Company.
The Company does not have a limited amount of authorised capital.
16. Retained earnings
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Opening balance 3,132.6 (328.7)
Profit and total comprehensive income in the year 832.4 321.1
Dividends paid (453.8) (180.2)
Repurchase of Ordinary Shares (112.5) (26.3)
Share premium cancellation - 3,346.7
Closing balance 3,398.7 3,132.6
17. Net assets per share
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
Net Assets ($m) 5,100.0 4,833.9
Number of Ordinary Shares issued 1,081,708,167 1,122,202,824
Net assets per share (cents) 471.48 430.75
18. Dividends declared and paid
For the year ended 31 December 2024
Dividends declared and paid Paid on Dividend Total dividend
per share $m
cents
Final dividend with respect to the year ended 31 December 2023 14 June 2024 10.1 113.1
Interim dividend with respect to the year ended 31 December 2024 31 October 2024 5.0 54.1
Special dividend with respect to the year ended 31 December 2024¹ 31 October 2024 9.0 97.3
Special dividend with respect to the year ended 31 December 2024¹ 20 December 2024 17.5 189.3
Total 41.6 453.8
1. Special dividends relate to the distribution of proceeds from investment
activity.
For the year ended 31 December 2023
Dividends declared and paid Paid on Dividend Total dividend
per share $m
cents
Final dividend with respect to the year ended 31 December 2022 13 June 2023 11.0 124.9
Interim dividend with respect to the year ended 31 December 2023 27 October 2023 4.9 55.3
Total 15.9 180.2
19. Financial risk management
Financial risk management objectives
The Group's investing activities expose it to various types of risks that are
associated with the Partner-firms. The Group makes the investments with the
goal of generating returns in accordance with its Acquisition Strategy and
Investment Policy.
The most important types of financial risks to which the Group is exposed are
market risk (including price, interest rate and foreign currency risk),
liquidity risk and credit risk. The Board of Directors has delegated portfolio
management and risk management responsibilities to the Operator. Accordingly,
the Operator has overall responsibility for the determination of the Group's
risk management and sets policy to manage that risk at an acceptable level to
achieve those objectives. The policy and process for measuring and mitigating
each of the main risks are described below.
31 December 31 December
2024 2023
$m $m
Financial assets
Non-current assets:
Investments at fair value through profit or loss 5,085.8 5,254.7
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 65.1 -
Current financial assets:
Investments at fair value through profit or loss 726.2 -
Investments in money market funds at fair value through profit or loss 8.9 62.3
Cash and cash equivalents 14.5 242.9
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 30.7 -
Deferred consideration receivable 152.8 -
Trade and other receivables (excluding prepayments) 164.3 125.5
Financial liabilities
Non-current liabilities:
Unsecured Notes payable (494.4) (493.8)
Deferred payment obligations (32.5) (7.3)
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement (129.4) (150.5)
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss - (3.9)
Fee payable on divestment of Investments (247.3) (94.8)
Current liabilities:
Trade and other payables (7.2) (6.9)
Deferred payment obligations (55.3) (44.6)
Interest payable (10.0) (10.0)
Operator charge payable (7.0) (6.6)
Profit sharing charge payable (0.6) (0.1)
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (8.1) (2.5)
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement (29.6) (24.2)
Categories of financial instruments
Capital risk management
The Group manages its capital to ensure that it will be able to continue as a
going concern while maximising the returns to Shareholders. The Board of
Directors approves the level of dividend distributions to Shareholders. The
Group may purchase its own shares within the limits defined by the Board of
Directors subject to restrictions imposed by applicable laws.
The capital structure of the Group consists of issued share capital, retained
earnings and other reserves as stated in the Consolidated Statement of
Financial Position.
Market risk
Market risk includes price risk, foreign currency risk and interest rate risk.
a) Price risk
The majority of the Group's investments are held in Partner-firms which
presents a potential risk of loss of capital to the Group. Price risk arises
from changes in fair value of the investments in Partner-firms held by the
Group. As discussed in Note 3, the fair value of these investments is
determined using valuation techniques including earnings multiples, discounted
cash flows and recent comparable transactions. In valuing the investments, key
assumptions include estimates around future fundraise timing and sizes,
expected management and performance fee rates and margins of the
Partner-firms, expected current and future fund returns and timing of
realisations. Periodically, the Valuation Oversight Group of the Operator
presents the valuation proposals and their independent price verification
review results to the Operator's Valuation Committee which convenes to approve
and oversee the application of valuation policies, and review fair value
estimates for the investments. Subsequently, the Operator reports the
valuation results to the Board of Directors. As new information surfaces on
these key assumptions, the valuation techniques may be adjusted causing the
fair value of these investments to change.
As at 31 December 2024, the fair value of investments was $5,812.0 million
(31 December 2023: $5,254.7 million). As presented in the Sensitivity
analysis to significant changes in unobservable inputs table, the valuation of
the non-current investments could vary from -$456.2 million to +$496.6 million
(31 December 2023: -$487.4 million to +$532.4 million) depending on the
valuation techniques used while keeping the key assumptions constant.
The Group is exposed to a variety of risks which may have an impact on the
carrying value of the Group's investments. The Group's risk factors are set
out below:
i. Not actively traded
The majority of the Group's investments are held in Partner-firms. These
investments are not generally traded in an active market but are indirectly
exposed to market price risk arising from uncertainties about future values of
the investments held. The Group investments vary as to industry sub-sector,
geographic distribution of operations and size, all of which may impact the
susceptibility of their valuation to uncertainty.
Although the investments are in the same industry, this risk is managed
through careful selection of investments within the specified limits of the
investment policy. The investments are monitored on a regular basis by the
Operator.
ii. Concentration
The Group invests in the alternative asset sector, with a focus on investments
in asset managers with asset classes such as private equity, private credit,
private real assets and absolute return strategies. Concentration risk may
relate to a subsector, relative size of an investment and geography. The Group
is exposed to geographic concentration risk from its investments in the asset
management sector as detailed in Note 2(ii) of these financial statements and
page 18 of the Preliminary Results.
The Board of Directors and the Operator monitor the concentration of the
investments on a quarterly basis to ensure compliance with the investment
policy.
For the year ended 31 December 2024, the Group received a maximum of 17.9%
(2023: 18.5%) of its total income from investments in Partner-firms from one
single Partner-firm.
b) Foreign currency risk
The Group transacts in currencies other than US$. Consequently, the Group is
exposed to risks that the exchange rate of its currency relative to other
foreign currencies may change in a manner that has an adverse effect on the
value of that portion of the Group's assets or liabilities denominated in
currencies other than the US$. Any exposure to foreign currency risk at the
underlying investment level is captured within price risk.
The following table sets out, in US$, the Group's total exposure to foreign
currency risk and the net exposure to foreign currencies of the monetary
assets and liabilities:
As at 31 December 2024 US$ CAD$ GBP£ Total
$m $m $m $m
Non-current assets
Investments at fair value through profit or loss 4,979.1 106.0 0.7 5,085.8
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 65.1 - - 65.1
Total non-current assets 5,044.2 106.0 0.7 5,150.9
Current assets
Investments at fair value through profit or loss 726.2 - - 726.2
Investments in money market funds at fair value through profit or loss 8.9 - - 8.9
Cash and cash equivalents 14.3 - 0.2 14.5
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 30.7 - - 30.7
Deferred consideration receivable 152.8 - - 152.8
Trade and other receivables (excluding prepayments) 158.2 5.6 0.5 164.3
Total current assets 1,091.1 5.6 0.7 1,097.4
Non-current liabilities
Unsecured Notes payable (494.4) - - (494.4)
Deferred payment obligations (32.5) - - (32.5)
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement (129.4) - - (129.4)
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss - - - -
Fee payable on divestment of investments (247.3) - - (247.3)
Total non-current liabilities (903.6) - - (903.6)
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables (5.1) - (2.1) (7.2)
Deferred payment obligations (55.3) - - (55.3)
Interest payable (10.0) - - (10.0)
Operator charge payable (7.0) - - (7.0)
Profit sharing charge payable (0.6) - - (0.6)
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (8.1) - - (8.1)
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement (29.6) - - (29.6)
Total current liabilities (115.7) - (2.1) (117.8)
As at 31 December 2023 US$ CAD$ GBP£ Total
$m $m $m $m
Non-current assets
Investments at fair value through profit or loss 5,149.2 102.9 2.6 5,254.7
Total non-current assets 5,149.2 102.9 2.6 5,254.7
Current assets
Investments at fair value through profit or loss - - - -
Investments in money market funds at fair value through profit or loss 62.3 - - 62.3
Cash and cash equivalents 241.1 - 1.8 242.9
Trade and other receivables (excluding prepayments) 123.1 - 2.4 125.5
Total current assets 426.5 - 4.2 430.7
Non-current liabilities
Unsecured Notes payable (493.8) - - (493.8)
Deferred payment obligations (7.3) - - (7.3)
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement (150.5) - - (150.5)
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (3.9) - - (3.9)
Fee payable on divestment of investments (94.8) - - (94.8)
Total non-current liabilities (750.3) - - (750.3)
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables (4.7) - (2.2) (6.9)
Deferred payment obligations (44.6) - - (44.6)
Interest payable (10.0) - - (10.0)
Operator charge payable (6.6) - - (6.6)
Profit sharing charge payable (0.1) - - (0.1)
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (2.5) - - (2.5)
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement (24.2) - - (24.2)
Total current liabilities (92.7) - (2.2) (94.9)
The Board of Directors does not consider that the foreign currency exchange
risk at the balance sheet date is material and therefore sensitivity analysis
for the foreign currency risk has not been provided.
c) Interest rate risk
The Group's exposure to interest rate risk relates to the Group's cash and
cash equivalents and money market investments. The Group is subject to risk
due to fluctuations in the prevailing levels of market interest rates. Any
excess cash and cash equivalents are invested at short-term market interest
rates. As at the date of the Consolidated Statement of Financial Position, the
majority of the Group's cash and cash equivalents were held in interest
bearing fixed deposit accounts. The Group is not exposed to interest rate risk
on debt due to fixed interest arrangements in place.
The Group's investment in money market funds is variable and is subject to
fluctuations. Any exposure to interest rate risk at the underlying investment
level is captured within price risk. An increase of 100 basis points, based on
the closing balance sheet position over a 12-month period, would lead to an
approximate increase in total profit before tax of $0.1 million (31 December
2023: $0.6 million) for the Group.
In addition, the Group has indirect exposure to interest rates through changes
to the financial performance and the valuation of investments in Partner-firms
caused by rate fluctuations.
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group will encounter difficulty in meeting
its obligations associated with its financial liabilities that are settled by
delivering cash or another financial asset.
The Group's policy and the Operator's approach to managing liquidity is to
ensure, as far as possible, that it will always have sufficient liquidity to
meet its liabilities when due, under both normal and stress conditions,
including estimated redemption of shares, without incurring unacceptable
losses or risking damage to the Company's reputation.
The Group's financial assets include investments in Partner-firms which are
generally illiquid. As a result, the Group may not be able to liquidate its
investments in time to meet its liquidity requirements. The Operator has a
liquidity management policy which is designed to enable it to monitor the
liquidity risk of the Group. The systems and procedures employed by the
Operator in this regard allow it to apply various tools and arrangements
necessary to respond appropriately to liquidity concerns. As part of the
policy, the Operator prepares estimates of projected cash flows of the Group
from its investment in Partner-firms, and evaluates them against the projected
expenses, investment opportunities and potential distributions to the
Company's Shareholders. Any surplus liquidity, as it arises, is invested into
money market funds. As at 31 December 2024 and 31 December 2023, the Group had
an undrawn $100 million revolving credit facility to manage the liquidity
requirements.
The Operator updates the Board of Directors on its findings on a regular basis
and highlights any risks from a liquidity management perspective.
The following tables detail the Group's expected maturity for its financial
assets (excluding equity) and liabilities together with the contractual
undiscounted cash flow amounts:
As at 31 December 2024 Less than 1 year 1-5 years 5+ years Total
$m $m $m $m
Assets
Investments at fair value through profit and loss 726.2 1 (#_ftn1) - 5,085.8 5,812.0
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss 32.2 95.0 - 127.2
Deferred consideration receivable 155.1 - - 155.1
Investments in money market funds at fair value through profit and loss 8.9 - - 8.9
Cash and cash equivalents 14.5 - - 14.5
Trade and other receivables (excluding prepayments) 164.3 - - 164.3
Liabilities
Trade and other payables (7.2) - - (7.2)
Unsecured Notes payable (28.3) (235.8) (489.2) (753.3)
Operator charge payable (7.0) - - (7.0)
Profit sharing charge payable (0.6) - - (0.6)
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (8.1) - - (8.1)
Deferred payment obligations (56.5) (35.8) - (92.3)
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement (29.6) (126.1) (320.8) (476.5)
Fee payable on divestment of investments - (95.4) (151.9) (247.3)
1. $726.2 million represents the held for sale classification as at 31 December
2024 related to the sale of the majority of the Group's stake in General
Catalyst on 15 January 2025 (see Note 22).
As at 31 December 2023 Less than 1 year 1-5 years 5+ years Total
$m $m $m $m
Assets
Investments at fair value through profit and loss - - 5,254.7 5,254.7
Investments in money market funds at fair value through profit and loss 63.2 - - 63.2
Cash and cash equivalents 243.9 - - 243.9
Trade and other receivables (excluding prepayments) 125.5 - - 125.5
Liabilities
Trade and other payables (6.9) - - (6.9)
Unsecured Notes payable (28.3) (113.1) (640.2) (781.6)
Operator charge payable (6.6) - - (6.6)
Profit sharing charge payable (0.1) - - (0.1)
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (2.5) (3.9) - (6.4)
Deferred payment obligations (44.6) (7.3) - (51.9)
Liability for Tax Receivables Agreement (24.2) (137.0) (393.3) (554.5)
Fee payable on divestment of investments - - (94.8) (94.8)
Credit risk
Credit risk is the risk that a counterparty to a financial instrument will
fail to discharge an obligation or commitment that it has entered into with
the Group, resulting in financial loss to the Group. Credit risk arises in the
ordinary course of our business from deferred consideration and other
receivables arising from disposals of investments in Partner-firms; from
income receivable from Partner-firms; from investments of surplus liquidity as
it arises from time to time in money market funds; and also from derivative
financial assets and cash and cash equivalents. The Group's policy over credit
risk is to minimise its exposure to counterparties with perceived higher risk
of default by dealing only with counterparties that meet the credit standards
set out in the Company's prospectus. Further information of the Group's policy
is detailed in Note 2(iv).
As at 31 December 2024, the Group has income receivables of $148.0 million
(31 December 2023: $101.9 million), which is included within amounts
receivable from Investments in Note 12, and deferred consideration receivable
of $152.8 million (31 December 2023: $nil). Of the total outstanding
receivables, 1.9% (31 December 2023: 2.2%) is classified as Stage 2 and 98.1%
(31 December 2023: 97.7%) is classified as Stage 1. The counterparty ratings,
where available, ranged from A to BBB in respect of both years. The calculated
ECL as at 31 December 2024 is $0.4 million (31 December 2023: $0.1 million).
Credit risk is monitored on an ongoing basis by the Operator in accordance
with the procedures and policies in place. The table below details the Group's
exposure to credit risk:
31 December 2024 31 December
2023
$m $m
Interest bearing
Investments in money market funds at fair value through profit or loss 8.9 62.3
Cash and cash equivalents 14.5 242.9
Non-interest bearing
Deferred consideration receivable (current and non-current) 152.8 -
Trade and other receivables (excluding prepayments) 164.3 125.5
The table below shows the cash and money market deposit balances and the
credit rating for each counterparty:
Location Rating 31 December 31 December
2024 2023
$m $m
Counterparty
State Street Bank and Trust Company USA A-1+ 14.5 92.9
US$ Treasury Liquid Reserves Fund - Institutional Shares USA AAA 2.5 0.2
Financial SquareSM Government Fund - Institutional Shares USA AAA 6.4 10.5
Financial SquareSM Treasury Instruments Fund - Institutional Shares USA AAA - 51.6
Goldman Sachs Bank USA USA A-1 - 150.0
The Group's maximum exposure to loss of capital at the year end is shown
below:
31 December 31 December
2024 2023
$m $m
Investments at fair value through profit or loss (current and non-current) 5,812.0 5,254.7
Other financial assets (excluding prepayments) 436.3 430.7
20. Related party transactions
Board of Directors
The Company has five Non-Executive Directors. Directors' fees for the year
ended 31 December 2024 amounted to $1.7 million (2023: $1.7 million), of
which $nil (31 December 2023: $nil) was outstanding at year end. Amounts paid
to the Board of Directors as reimbursement of travel and other incidental
expenses during the year amounted to $78 thousand (2023: $32 thousand), of
which, $nil (31 December 2023: $nil) was outstanding at year end.
The Board of Directors held beneficial interests in 1,169,999 (31 December
2023: 1,094,999) Ordinary Shares in the Company.
Money Market Funds
On 31 December 2024, the Group held an investment of $8.9 million (31
December 2023: $62.3 million) in money market funds that are managed by
affiliates of the Operator. During 2024, the Group earned interest income of
$7.7 million (2023: $24.7 million) from investments held in such money
market funds managed by affiliates of the Operator.
Transactions with Petershill Funds
As at 31 December 2024, the Petershill Funds, managed by wholly-owned
subsidiaries of the Goldman Sachs Group acting as the investment manager,
owned approximately 79.5% (31 December 2023: 76.6%) of the Company. As at 31
December 2024, the Group had amounts payable to the Petershill Funds of
$0.8 million (31 December 2023: $0.2 million) and amounts receivable from
the Petershill Funds of $2.3 million (31 December 2023: $6.1 million). These
amounts will be settled in the ordinary course of business.
Tax Receivables Agreement
As discussed in Note 2(v), the Group has entered into a Tax Receivables
Agreement with Petershill Funds, an affiliate of the Operator and the Goldman
Sachs Group, which will require the Group to pay 75% of the amount of cash tax
savings, if any, in US federal, state and local income tax that the Group
realises as a result of the tax benefits associated with this increase in tax
basis. As of 31 December 2024, the carrying value of the liability for Tax
Receivables Agreement was $159.0 million (31 December 2023: $174.7 million).
During the year ended 31 December 2024, principal payments totaling
$23.5 million (2023: $32.5 million) were made in relation to the liability
for Tax Receivables Agreement.
Operator
The Operator is an affiliate and wholly-owned subsidiary of the Goldman Sachs
Group and provides advice to the Group on the origination and completion of
new investments, the management of the portfolio and on realisations, as well
as on funding requirements, subject to approval by the Board of Directors. For
the provision of services under the Operator Agreement, the Operator earns a
Profit Sharing Charge, Recurring Operating Charges and Divestment Fee, as
detailed in Note 6.
The Operator may, in its discretion, pay certain of the Group's fees or
expenses and the Group will reimburse the Operator for the payment of any such
fee or expense. For the year ended 31 December 2024, the Group incurred $0.1
million (2023: $0.1 million) of expenses under this arrangement, of which $nil
(31 December 2023: $0.1 million) was outstanding at year end.
Special Limited Partners
The Special Limited Partners are affiliates of the Goldman Sachs Group and
acts as a special limited partners to the respective Petershill Splitter
Subsidiaries. The Special Limited Partners earns a Profit Sharing Charge and
Divestment Fee, as detailed in Note 6.
Transactions with Goldman Sachs Bank USA
Goldman Sachs Bank USA ("GSBUSA") is an affiliate and wholly owned subsidiary
of the Goldman Sachs Group. On 14 December 2023, the Company placed a fixed
term deposit with GSBUSA for $150.0 million. The fixed term deposit matured on
15 March 2024 and accrued interest at a rate of 5.4% per annum. During the
year ended 31 December 2024, the Company earned interest of $1.7 million
(2023: $0.4 million), which settled at maturity.
21. Ultimate controlling party
The Board of Directors has reviewed the Shareholders of the Company and has
concluded that there is no ultimate controlling party. The Company has a
diversified investor base that does not cede control to any single investor or
a group of investors. Although the Petershill Funds own 79.5% (31 December
2023: 76.6%) of the Company, Goldman Sachs Asset Management and its affiliates
were the beneficial owner of less than 1% of the Ordinary Shares of the
Company as at 31 December 2024.
The Petershill Funds are managed by Goldman Sachs Asset Management and its
affiliates acting as the investment manager of the Petershill Funds. Goldman
Sachs Asset Management and its affiliates act in in their capacity as an agent
for the Equity Shareholders of the Company and such a relationship does not
give rise to controlling ownership.
22. Subsequent events
The Group has evaluated activity through 28 March 2025, the date that the
consolidated financial statements were available to be issued.
On 15 January 2025, the Group closed on the sale of the majority of its stake
in General Catalyst for a total consideration of $726.2 million, in the form
of interest-bearing loan notes. $207.0 million in relation to the first
tranche of the outstanding principal amount of the loan notes was received
before approval of the consolidated financial statements. The remaining $519.2
million outstanding principal amount is due to be repaid over time.
On 14 March 2025, the Group closed on the acquisition of the minority stake
investment in Frazier Healthcare Partners for a total consideration of $330.0
million, in the form of $15.9 million of upfront and $314.1 million of
deferred consideration, due primarily in 2026 and 2027.
On 28 March 2025, the Board of Directors approved a special dividend payment
of 14.0 cents (USD) per share. The record date for the dividend is 11 April
2025 and the payment date is 9 May 2025.
The Group concluded that no other events took place that would require
material adjustments to the amounts recognised in these consolidated
financial statements.
GLOSSARY OF KEY OPERATING METRICS
The Operator and the Directors use key operating metrics to help evaluate
trends, assess the performance of the Partner-firms and the Company, analyse
and test dividends received from the Partner-firms and inform operating,
budgeting and reinvestment decisions. The Directors believe that these
metrics, which present certain operating and other information in respect of
the Partner- firms, provide an enhanced understanding of the underlying
portfolios and performance of the Partner-firms and are therefore essential to
assessing the investments and performance of the Company.
The key operating metrics described in this section are derived from financial
and other information reported to the Operator by the Partner-firms. The
Operator, with the assistance of an independent accounting firm, performs due
diligence procedures on the information provided by the Partner-firms. It
should be noted, however, that these due diligence procedures do not
constitute an audit.
In addition, each Partner-firm may account for and define certain financial
and other information differently from one another. For example, each
Partner-firm may calculate its fee-paying AuM differently, the result of which
being that the inputs of the Company's Aggregate Fee-paying AuM are not
consistently calculated.
Whilst the operating metrics described in this section are similar to those
used by other alternative asset managers, there are no generally accepted
principles governing their calculation, and the criteria upon which these
metrics are based can vary from firm to firm. These metrics, by themselves, do
not provide a sufficient basis to compare the Partner-firms' or the Company's
performance with that of other companies.
None of Partner Distributable Earnings, Partner FRE, Partner Realised
Performance Revenues or Partner Realised Investment Income are measures of or
provide any indication of profits available for the purpose of a distribution
by the Company within the meaning of section 830 of the Companies Act 2006, or
of any Partner-firm in accordance with the equivalent applicable rules.
Aggregate Fee-paying AuM
Aggregate Fee-paying AuM is defined as the portion of Aggregate Partner-firm
AuM for which Partner-firms are entitled to receive management fees, as
reported by the Partner-firms to the Operator. The principal difference
between Aggregate Fee-paying AuM and Aggregate Partner-firm AuM is that
Aggregate Fee-paying AuM typically excludes co-investment on which Partner-
firms generally do not charge fees and, to a lesser extent, fund commitments
in Partner-firm funds (i) on which fees are only earned on investment, rather
than from the point of commitment and (ii) where capital has been raised but
fees have not yet been activated. This may also include legacy assets where
fees are no longer being charged.
The Operator and the Directors consider Aggregate Fee-paying AuM to be a
meaningful measure of the Partner-firms' capital base upon which they earn
management fees and use the measure in assessing the management fee-related
performance of the Partner-firms and to inform operating, budgeting and
reinvestment decisions.
Aggregate Partner-firm AuM
Aggregate Partner-firm AuM is defined as the sum of (a) the net asset value of
the Partner-firms' underlying funds and investment vehicles, and in most cases
includes co-investment vehicles, GP commitments and other non fee-paying
investment vehicles and (b) uncalled commitments from these entities, as
reported by the Partner-firms to the Operator from time to time and aggregated
by the Operator without material adjustment. This is an aggregated figure
across all Partner-firms and includes Partner-firm AuM outside of the
Company's ownership interest in the Partner-firms.
The Operator and the Directors consider Aggregate Partner-firm AuM to be a
meaningful measure of the size, scope and composition of the Partner-firms, as
well as of their capital-raising activities. The Operator uses Aggregate
Partner-firm AuM to inform operating, budgeting and reinvestment decisions.
Aggregate Performance Fee Eligible Partner-firm AuM
The amount of Aggregate Partner-firm AuM that is eligible for performance
fees.
AuM and Associated Data
The data presented in this document for the following key operating metrics
reflects AuM data reported to the Operator on a three-month lag. This
three-month data lag is due to the timing of the financial information
received by the Operator from the Partner-firms, which generally require at
least 90 days following each period end to present final financial information
to the Operator. The key operating metrics reflected on a three-month lag are:
• Aggregate Partner-firm AuM
• Aggregate Fee-paying Partner-firm AuM
• Average Aggregate Fee-paying Partner-firm AuM
• Aggregate Performance Fee Eligible Partner-firm AuM
• Average Aggregate Performance Fee Eligible Partner-firm AuM
• Partner Blended Net Management Fee Rate
• Implied Blended Partner-firm FRE Ownership
• Investment Capital
Implied Blended Partner-firm FRE Ownership
Implied Blended Partner-firm FRE Ownership is defined as the weighted average
of the Company's ownership stake in the Partner-firms' management fee-related
earnings and is calculated based on the contribution of average Aggregate
Fee-paying AuM from Partner-firms in each period. It will therefore be
expected to change to some degree from period to period based on the
contribution to average Aggregate Fee-paying AuM of each Partner-firm, even if
the actual ownership of each underlying Partner-firm does not change. Excludes
new acquisitions where Petershill has not yet started to receive or have only
received partial period amounts of Partner Net Management and Advisory Fees.
The Operator and the Directors consider Implied Blended Partner-firm FRE
Ownership to be a meaningful measure of the composition of the Company's
investments.
Intermediary Entities
Intermediary Entities comprise the following entities - PH Offshore GP
Aggregator, PH Offshore IM Aggregator, PH Onshore GP Aggregator, PH Onshore IM
Aggregator.
Investment Capital
Investment Capital is defined as the sum of the reported value of the balance
sheet investments from the Partner-firms. The Operator and the Directors
consider Investment Capital to be a meaningful measure of the performance of
the Partner-firms' balance sheet investments and potential future Partner
Realised Investment Income. The Operator therefore uses Investment Capital to
assess future expected Partner Realised Investment Income and inform
operating, budgeting and reinvestment decisions.
In respect of Investment Capital, the data may be adjusted for any known
valuation impacts following the reporting date of the information received
from the Partner-firms.
Issuer SPVs
Issuer SPVs comprise the following entities - PH Offshore GP Issuer, PH
Offshore IM Issuer, PH Onshore GP Issuer, PH Onshore IM Issuer.
Ownership weighted AuM
Ownership weighted AuM represents the sum of the Company's ownership stakes in
each Partner-firm's AuM.
Ownership weighted Fee-paying AuM
Ownership weighted Fee-paying AuM represents the sum of the Company's
ownership stakes in each Partner-firm's Fee-paying AuM. Please refer to
Aggregate Fee-paying AuM on page 50.
Partner Blended Net Management Fee Rate
Partner Blended Net Management Fee Rate is defined as Partner Net Management
and Advisory Fees for the period, divided by the average Aggregate Fee-paying
AuM weighted for the Company's ownership interests in each Partner-firm. The
average Aggregate Fee-paying AuM is calculated as the mean of the Aggregate
Fee-paying AuM at the start and the end of the reporting period and excludes
new acquisitions where the Company has not yet started to receive or have only
received partial period amounts of Partner Net Management and Advisory Fees.
The Operator and the Directors consider Partner Blended Net Management Fee
Rate to be a key metric in assessing the Company's overall management
fee-related performance.
Partner Distributable Earnings and Partner Distributable Earnings Margin
Partner Distributable Earnings is defined as the sum of Partner FRE, Partner
Realised Performance Revenues and Partner Realised Investment Income. Partner
Distributable Earnings Margin is defined as Partner Distributable Earnings
divided by the sum of Partner Net Management and Advisory Fees, Partner
Realised Performance Revenues and Partner Realised Investment Income.
The Operator and the Directors consider Partner Distributable Earnings and
Partner Distributable Earnings Margin to be meaningful measures of the overall
performance of the Partner-firms and key performance indicators of the
Company's total income from investments in management companies. The Operator
uses this metric to analyse and test dividends received from the
Partner-firms, as well as to inform operating, budgeting and reinvestment
decisions. These measures reflect any contractual margin protections or
revenue share interests that the Company may have with the Partner-firms,
which means that the Partner Distributable Earnings Margin may differ from the
margins achieved by other Shareholders or partners of the Partner-firms.
Partner Fee-Related Earnings (FRE) and Partner FRE Margin
Partner FRE is defined as Partner Net Management and Advisory Fees, less the
Partner-firms' operating expenses, fixed and bonus compensation, net interest
income/(expense) and taxes (but not performance fee-related expenses)
allocable to the Company's share of Partner Net Management and Advisory Fees,
as reported by the Partner-firms to the Operator, and subject to applicable
contractual margin protections in respect of certain Partner-firms. Partner
FRE Margin is defined as Partner FRE divided by Partner Net Management and
Advisory Fees.
The Operator and the Directors consider Partner FRE and Partner FRE Margin to
be meaningful measures of the management fee-related earnings of the
Partner-firms and key performance indicators of the Company's income from
investments in management companies derived from management fee income. The
Operator uses this metric to analyse and test dividends received from the
Partner-firms, as well as to inform operating, budgeting and reinvestment
decisions.
Partner Net Management and Advisory Fees
Partner Net Management and Advisory Fees is defined as the Company's aggregate
proportionate share of the Partner-firms' net management fees (as reported by
the Partner-firms to the Operator), including monitoring and advisory fees and
less any management fee offsets, payable by the Partner-firms' funds to their
respective Partner-firms for the provision of investment management and
advisory services.
Certain Partner-firms provide transaction and advisory services, as well as
services to monitor ongoing operations of portfolio companies. Management fees
paid to the Partner-firms may be subject to fee offsets, which are reductions
to management fees and are based on a percentage of monitoring fees and
transaction and advisory fees paid by portfolio companies to the
Partner-firms.
The Operator and the Directors consider Partner Net Management and Advisory
Fees to be a meaningful measure of the management fee-related performance of
the Partner-firms, and the Operator uses this metric to analyse and test
income received from the Partner-firms and to inform operating, budgeting and
reinvestment decisions.
Partner Private Markets Accrued Carried Interest
Partner Private Markets Accrued Carried Interest is defined as the Company's
proportionate share of the Partner-firms' balance sheet accrued carry (as
reported by the Partner-firms to the Operator) and represents the Company's
proportionate share of the accumulated balance of unrealised profits from the
Partner-firms' funds.
The Operator and the Company consider Partner Accrued Carried Interest to be a
meaningful measure of the performance of the private markets Partner-firms and
potential future private markets Partner Realised Performance Revenues.
Absolute return performance fees are not accrued and are instead realised
annually. The Operator uses Partner Accrued Carried Interest to assess future
expected carried interest payments and inform operating, budgeting and
reinvestment decisions. This key operating metric reflects data reported to
the Operator on a three-month lag.
Partner Realised Investment Income
Partner Realised Investment Income is defined as the Company's aggregate
proportionate share of Partner-firm earnings resulting from the realised gains
and losses, or any distributed income, from the investments held on
Partner-firms' balance sheets, as reported by the Partner-firms to the
Operator. Partner Realised Investment Income is also realised by the Company
through a limited number of direct stakes in certain Partner-firms' funds.
Realised Investment Income includes income that has been realised but not yet
paid, as well as amounts that are realised and either fully or partially
reinvested.
The Company's share of the Partner-firms' investment and balance sheet income
will be lower than its share of the Partner-firms' management fee-related
earnings because the Company's ownership stake in the Partner-firms'
investment and balance sheet income is lower than its ownership stake in the
Partner- firms' management fee-related earnings.
The Operator and the Directors consider Partner Realised Investment Income to
be a meaningful measure of the investment performance of certain assets held
by the Partner-firms and key performance indicator of the Company's income
from investments in management companies derived from investment income. The
Operator uses this metric to analyse and test dividends received from the
Partner-firms, as well as to inform operating, budgeting and reinvestment
decisions.
Partner Realised Performance Revenues
Partner Realised Performance Revenues is defined as the Company's aggregate
proportionate share of the Partner-firms' realised carried interest
allocations and incentive fees payable by the Partner-firms' funds to their
respective Partner-firms, less any realised performance fee-related expenses
of the Partner-firms allocable to the Company's share of performance
fee-related revenues, as reported by the Partner-firms to the Operator.
The Company's share of the Partner-firms' performance fee-related earnings
will be lower than its share of the Partner-firms' management fee-related
earnings because the Company's ownership stake in the Partner-firms'
performance fee-related earnings is lower than its ownership stake in the
Partner-firms' management fee-related earnings.
The Operator and the Directors consider Partner Realised Performance Revenues
to be a meaningful measure of the performance fee-related earnings of the
Partner-firms and key performance indicator of the Company's income from
investments in management companies derived from performance fee income. The
Operator uses this metric to analyse and test dividends received from the
Partner-firms, as well as to inform operating, budgeting and reinvestment
decisions.
Partner Revenues
Partner Revenues is defined as the sum of Partner Net Management and Advisory
Fees, Partner Realised Performance Revenues and Partner Realised Investment
Income.
The Operator and the Directors consider Partner Revenues to be a meaningful
measure of the overall performance of the Partner-firms. The Operator uses
this metric to inform operating, budgeting and reinvestment decisions.
Petershill Funds
The Petershill Funds refers to the following entities: Petershill II L.P. and
Petershill II Offshore L.P., Petershill Private Equity L.P., Petershill
Private Equity Offshore L.P., Vintage VII L.P. and related entities and
certain co-investment vehicles.
Weighted Average Capital Duration
Weighted Average Capital Duration is a key measure of the long-term, locked-up
capital of Aggregate Fee-paying Partner-firm AuM. It is defined as the average
life of the underlying Partner-firm funds weighted based on Fee-paying AuM.
ALTERNATIVE PERFORMANCE MEASURES ("APMS")
The APM basis, which presents the financial information on a non IFRS basis,
excluding the impact of the assets, liabilities, income, investment gain and
finance cost which do not affect Shareholder returns, aids Shareholders in
assessing their investment in the Company. There is one additional APM called
Total Shareholder Return, provided as part of the capital management case
study for 2024. This is a one-off APM for the year ended 31 December 2024.
The IFRS and APM basis numbers discussed and presented below include
significant "unrealised" and non-cash items that include unrealised change in
fair value of investments, and it should be noted that while permitted, it is
not the Company's core strategy to exit or realise these investments.
Therefore, management results are also presented excluding the change in fair
value of investments at fair value through profit and loss and the related
divestment fee.
APMs are used by the Directors and the Operator to analyse the business and
financial performance, track the Company's progress, and help develop
long-term strategic plans and they also reflect more closely the cash flow of
the Company. The Directors believe that these APMs are used by investors,
analysts and other interested parties as supplemental measures of performance
and liquidity.
Net cash position at end of year
Cash and cash equivalents plus investments in money market funds and deferred
consideration receivable less deferred payment obligations, long-term debt and
contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (net).
31 December 31 December
2024 2023
$m $m
Cash and cash equivalents 14.5 242.9
Investments in money market funds at fair value through profit or loss 8.9 62.3
Deferred consideration receivable 152.8 -
Deferred payment obligations (87.8) (51.9)
Unsecured Notes payable (gross) (500.0) (500.0)
Contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss (net) 87.7 (6.4)
Net cash position at end of year (323.9) (253.1)
Free cash flow conversion
Free cash flow conversion is calculated as Free cash flow as a percent of the
Adjusted EBIT. The Free cash flow is calculated as the net cash flows from
operating activities adjusted for Purchase of investments in money market
funds, Sale of investments in money market funds, Reinvestment of income from
investments in Partner-firms and money market funds and Taxes paid.
31 December 31 December
2024 2023
$m $m
Net cash inflows from operating activities 280.3 617.2
Purchase of investments in money market funds 1,258.0 781.4
Sale of investments in money market funds (1,319.0) (1,227.1)
Reinvestment of income from investments in Partner-firms 2.2 57.0
Reinvestment of interest income from investments in money market funds 7.6 24.6
Taxes paid 10.1 28.2
Free cash flow 239.2 281.3
Adjusted EBIT 293.2 284.4
Free cash flow conversion 81.6% 98.9%
Book value
Total Shareholders' funds.
31 December 31 December
2024 2023
$m $m
Total Shareholders' funds 5,100.0 4,833.9
Book value per share
Total Shareholders' funds divided by the number of Ordinary Shares in issue at
year end.
31 December 31 December
2024 2023
Total Shareholders' funds ($m) 5,100.0 4,833.9
Number of Ordinary Shares in issue at year end 1,081,708,167 1,122,202,824
Book value per share (cents) 471.48 430.75
Adjusted Earnings Before Interest and Tax ("EBIT")
Sum of total income and expenses excluding transaction costs and non-recurring
operating expense/(credit) before net finance result and before income taxes,
change in investments at fair value through profit or loss, change in
contingent consideration at fair value through profit or loss and divestment
fee expense.
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Total income 332.3 319.4
Board of Directors' fees and expenses (1.7) (1.7)
Operator charge (24.2) (21.9)
Profit sharing charge (1.5) (0.1)
Other operating expenses (18.4) (10.1)
Transaction costs 6.2 -
Non-recurring operating expense/(credit) 0.5 (1.2)
Adjusted Earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) 293.2 284.4
Adjusted EBIT margin
Adjusted EBIT divided by total income.
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Total income 332.3 319.4
Adjusted EBIT 293.2 284.4
Adjusted EBIT margin 88.2% 89.0%
Adjusted Earnings Before Tax ("EBT")
Sum of total income and expenses excluding divestment fee expense, income
taxes, change in liability for Tax Receivables Agreement, change in
investments at fair value through profit or loss, change in contingent
consideration at fair value through profit or loss, transaction costs and
non-recurring operating expense/(credit).
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Total income 332.3 319.4
Board of Directors' fees and expenses (1.7) (1.7)
Operator charge (24.2) (21.9)
Profit sharing charge (1.5) (0.1)
Other operating expenses (18.4) (10.1)
Finance income 2.4 -
Finance cost (36.7) (37.1)
Transaction costs 6.2 -
Non-recurring operating expense/(credit) 0.5 (1.2)
Adjusted Earnings before tax (EBT) 258.9 247.3
Tax and tax related expenses
The current tax plus the actual/expected payment under the Tax Receivables
Agreement for the current year.
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Current tax (13.1) (23.5)
Expected payment under the Tax Receivables Agreement (29.6) (24.2)
Tax and tax related expenses (42.7) (47.7)
Adjusted tax and tax related expense rate
The Tax and tax related expenses divided by the Adjusted EBT.
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Tax and related expenses 42.7 47.7
Adjusted Earnings before tax (EBT) 258.9 247.3
Adjusted tax and tax related expense rate 16.5% 19.3%
Adjusted Profit After Tax
Sum of total income and expense excluding divestment fee expense, income
taxes, change in liability for Tax Receivables Agreement, change in
investments at fair value through profit or loss, change in contingent
consideration at fair value through profit or loss, transaction costs and
non-recurring operating expense/(credit) and including tax and related
expenses under the Tax Receivables Agreement.
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
$m $m
Total income 332.3 319.4
Board of Directors' fees and expenses (1.7) (1.7)
Operator charge (24.2) (21.9)
Profit sharing charge (1.5) (0.1)
Other operating expenses (18.4) (10.1)
Finance income 2.4 -
Finance cost (36.7) (37.1)
Transaction costs 6.2 -
Non-recurring operating expense/(credit) 0.5 (1.2)
Tax and tax related expenses (42.7) (47.7)
Adjusted profit after tax 216.2 199.6
Adjusted Earnings Per Share ("EPS")
Adjusted profit after tax divided by weighted average number of Ordinary
Shares in issue.
For the year ended For the year ended
31 December 2024 31 December 2023
Adjusted profit after tax ($m) 216.2 199.6
Weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue 1,098,004,286 1,131,506,310
Adjusted Earnings per share (EPS) (cents) 19.69 17.64
Total Shareholder Return ("TSR")
Sum of closing share price, dividends paid and reinvestment of dividends
divided by opening share price. This is a non-recurring APM.
For the year ended
31 December 2024
pence per share
Closing share price 248.0
Dividends paid 32.4
Reinvestment of dividends 6.0
Adjusted closing share price 286.4
Opening share price 169.6
Total Shareholder Return 68.9%
This results announcement has been prepared solely to provide additional
information to shareholders and meets the relevant requirements of the
Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the Financial Conduct Authority.
The results announcement should not be relied on by any other party or for any
other purpose. Whilst the Company aims to provide a diversified investment
approach, diversification does not protect an investor from market risk and
does not ensure a profit.
These written materials are not an offer of securities for sale in the United
States. Securities may not be offered or sold in the United States absent
registration under the US Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or an exemption
therefrom. The issuer has not and does not intend to register any securities
under the US Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and does not intend to offer
any securities to the public in the United States. Any securities of
Petershill Partners plc referred to herein have not been and will not be
registered under the US Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and may
not be offered or sold in the United States or to "U.S. persons" (as defined
in Regulation S under the US Securities Act of 1933, as amended) other than to
"qualified purchasers" as defined in the US Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended. No money, securities or other consideration from any person inside
the United States is being solicited and, if sent in response to the
information contained in these written materials, will not be accepted.
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
This press release may contain forward-looking statements that involve
substantial risks and uncertainties. You can identify these statements by the
use of forward-looking terminology such as "may," "will," "should," "expect,"
"anticipate," "project," "target," "estimate," "intend," "continue," or
"believe" or the negatives thereof or other variations thereon or comparable
terminology. You should read statements that contain these words carefully
because they discuss our plans, strategies, prospects and expectations
concerning the business, operating results, financial condition and other
similar matters. These statements represent the Company's belief regarding
future events that, by their nature, are uncertain and outside of the
Company's control. There are likely to be events in the future, however, that
we are not able to predict accurately or control. Any forward-looking
statement made by us in this press release is based upon information known to
the Company on the date of this press release and speaks only as of such date.
Accordingly, no assurance can be given that any particular expectation will be
met and readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward looking
statements. Additionally, forward looking statements regarding past trends or
activities should not be taken as a representation that such trends or
activities will continue in the future. Other than in accordance with its
legal or regulatory obligations (including under the UK Listing Rules and the
Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the Financial Conduct
Authority), the Company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise
any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future
events or otherwise.
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