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Annual Financial Report

24 Feb 2017 07:00

RNS Number : 4518X
Athelney Trust PLC
24 February 2017
 

ATHELNEY TRUST plc

 

FINAL RESULTS

 

Athelney Trust plc, the investor in small companies and junior markets announces its final results for the 12 months ended 31 December 2016.

 

Chairman's Statement and Business Review

 

I announce the results for the year ended 31 December 2016. The salient points are as follows:

 

· The total return, which is the increase in NAV plus the dividend, is 5.7 per cent (31 December 2015: 10.4 per cent)

· Audited Net Asset Value ("NAV") was 251.1p per share (31 December 2015: 245p) an increase of 2.5 per cent.

· Revenue return per ordinary share was 10p (31 December 2015: 9.3p).

· Recommended final dividend of 8.6p per share (2015: 7.9p), an increase of 8.8 per cent.

 

Review of 2016

 

I'd rather take advice from my valet than from the Conservative Party Conference - Arthur Balfour, prime minister 1902-05.

 

The stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient - Warren Buffett.

 

Lack of money is the root of all evil - George Bernard Shaw.

 

The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable - John Kenneth Galbraith, economist.

 

Imagine a time-traveller, landing in the City of London in January 2016, proclaiming that the UK would vote to leave the EU, a presidential candidate who advocated debt renegotiation would be headed for the White House and that Italy would reject the reforms of Prime Minister Matteo Renzi. Surely, the men in white coats would have arrived, bundled him into the back of a van and then disappeared. But the first shock of 2016 was the big sell-off in Chinese stock-markets when a clumsy attempt to calm market nerves in January back-fired spectacularly, sparking world-wide turmoil. The price of oil dropped to its lowest level for 13 years. All this meant that investors slowly worked out that there would have to be more helpful intervention rather than less. And so it came to pass that Japan announced a surprise experiment with interest rates below zero, the Federal Reserve raised rates just once rather than the early forecast of four times, the Bank of England cut the bank rate after the referendum and the European Central Bank turned to new measures such as buying up corporate debt for the first time. Because of the collapse in the British pound after the referendum, depressed sectors in London markets such as miners and oils suddenly perked up and finished the year on a strong note as the Chinese economy started to react positively to yet another economic stimulus having been applied by the government. There was a strong correlation between markets which did comparatively well and the underlying economies where growth and employment statistics were improving.

 

Major markets ended on a strong note, tantalised by the thought that Donald Trump would cut corporate and personal tax rates and spend, spend, spend on infrastructure. New York, Tokyo and London finished with rises of 14.4, 2.9 and 15.2 per cent respectively although Shanghai fell by 10.7 per cent. Amongst lesser markets, Egypt, Argentina and Pakistan rose by 80, 55.4 and 48.4 per cent whereas at the other end of the scale Sweden, Czech Republic and Italy rose by modest percentages of 0.2, 1.2 and 2 respectively.

 

I am indebted to the Private Eye satirical magazine for the full details of the new Police Degree Course:-

 

Introduction: Hello, hello, hello!

 

Lecture: Don't do that again, sonny.

 

Tutorial: Anything that you say will be written down and used against you.

 

Examination: What's all this, then?

 

As far as small companies were concerned, Athelney Trust did not have a good year with a total return (i.e. capital growth plus dividend) of just 5.7 per cent whereas the FTSE Small Companies, Fledgling and AIM All-share all did much better with rises of 11, 15.3 and 15.2 per cent respectively. This under-performance was due to the heavy falls in commercial property shares immediately after the referendum and, although some recovery was experienced later in the year, it was not enough to make up for lost ground on the three indices.

 

Politics is a tough old game isn't it? Imagine having to choose between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump? Or, even better, an election with three candidates: the first is half paralysed with polio, suffers from high blood pressure, anaemia and numerous other serious diseases, has been known to lie, consults an astrologist, cheats on his wife, is a chain-smoker and drinks too many martinis; the second is obese, has already lost three elections, suffers from depression, has had two heart attacks, smokes cigars and in the evening glugs champagne, port, brandy and whisky before taking two sleeping tablets; the third is a decorated war hero, who respects women, loves animals, might drink a beer from time to time and doesn't smoke. Did you reject one and two and go for three? Congratulations, you rejected Roosevelt and Churchill and elected, er, Adolf Hitler.

 

No-one compiles lists of wealth destruction, if they did, it would be fair to say that the fall in the pound after the referendum would rank highly. UK household net worth was valued at £16.5tn in January 2016 but just £14tn today. In dollar terms, value equivalent to the market capitalization of the FTSE 100 Index has been destroyed. Most Britons' wealth is held for paying sterling-denominated bills which, of course, did not leap by 15 per cent in 2016. This highlights a bit of a problem: everything is valued in terms of a currency yet what is a currency really worth? One answer is what it will buy - what Harold Wilson meant when talking about the pound in your pocket.  So now we get round to discussing purchasing power parity (PPP). A silly example: in November, a pound suddenly bought less Toblerone than before. PPP struggles with sharp foreign exchange movements so instead look at supply and demand. Measured by nominal GDP (i.e. without making any adjustment for inflation), 2016 did not see a 15 per cent leap in demand for pounds and the prospect of exit from the EU rather hints at a lower demand for sterling. More than this, sterling's attraction was based on London's deep and liquid financial markets that provide a home for trillions of pounds. Britons could afford fuel, overseas holidays and, yes, Toblerone only because the City kept sterling high. Brexit threatens this: if a strong pound is no longer sustainable, then previous living standards cannot be, either.

 

Aberdeenshire business-owner wins presidential election - The Buchan Observer, Peterhead, Aberdeenshire.

 

Why do companies obsess over quarterly/six-monthly profits and yet fail to invest in the business for the longer-term? Conventional wisdom places the blame squarely on the pursuit of shareholder value which, it is believed, has fuelled short-term thinking and irresponsible behaviour. Wrong! The culprits are executives, investment managers and the business press who think that the objective of shareholder value is to boost the share price by meeting the market's profit expectations. What does managing for shareholder value mean? It means managing for cash flow not earnings per share: it means managing for the long-term not the short-term. It means that managers must control risk carefully when investing capital. Many executives claim that they have no choice but to adopt a short-term approach given that the average holding period is about one year. This reasoning is deeply flawed: what should matter is not portfolio turnover but the time horizons of those who are saving to meet long-term needs. Shareholder value has not failed management: management has failed true shareholder value.

 

The U.K. government's approach to the Brexit negotiations could form a suitable addition to Charles Mackay's book about the South Sea Bubble. It would fit neatly after the section on the prospectus seeking funds for a company for carrying on an undertaking of great advantage, but nobody to know what it is.

 

On the subject of Britain's exit from the EU, we have no doubt all heard the terms hard and soft Brexit to illustrate whether we leave or stay in the single market and/or the customs union but what about a train crash Brexit in which we fail to agree a sensible deal and we simply crash out of the EU with chaotic consequences for trade and diplomatic relations? The problem is that the negotiations are too complicated to complete in the given time. Britain and the EU will have to unpick and then reorder a legal, economic and trading relationship that has been knitted together over the course of more than 40 years. But the two sides will just have two years to achieve and ratify a deal after Britain triggers Article 50, thus giving formal notice that it intends to leave. If there was great goodwill on both sides no doubt that the talks could be accelerated but I believe that there is plenty of ill will on both sides of the Channel. A major flashpoint is likely to be the EU's estimate of Britain's financial liabilities following exit, covering everything from money already pledged to the EU's budget to the pensions of retired bureaucrats: estimates in Brussels indicate a figure of €50bn-€60bn. The right response would be to negotiate that figure down and then have it spread over a large number of years. In reality, however, hard-liners in the Conservative party may be vigorously opposed and the only alternative might be to hand the problem to the European Court of Justice for arbitration. Such a procedure is likely to take a very long time and our membership of the EU may simply lapse with damaging consequences for Europe-wide supply chains, ports would be clogged up with paper-work and financial services firms would lose the passporting rights which are required to do business across the EU. Let us hope that this interpretation is too gloomy but it really is a shame that the coming dispute is so pointless and self-defeating.

 

Donald Trump is New York. Glitz, greed, glamour and an ambition so colossal that it will probably not rest until he rules the world - which one day he just might. Even when he seems to lose, at the last minute he comes out the winner. Could Trump possibly make it to the White House? Of course not, says everyone who knows anything about American politics. It's a bad joke. But then Trump has often done what can't be done and if the White House can take a senile movie star, why not a casino operator? Polly Toynbee, Guardian, 26 May 1988.

 

If devaluation was the springboard to economic success then Britain should have the most successful economy in the world. Alas, as we are all surely aware, one devaluation has followed another. For most of the 1800s, the pound was worth just under $5: the Napoleonic War weakened the pound temporarily as did the US Civil War the dollar, which fell to $10 to the pound at one stage. The financial burdens of the Great War saw sterling fall to $3.66. Despite abandoning the Gold Standard, successive British governments still viewed fixed rates as desirable and so in 1940 the pound was pegged to $4.03 which, on the face of it, looks far too high. $4.03 became $2.80 in 1949. This was maintained until 1971 when currencies were allowed to float freely, since when the rate has drifted even lower due to the higher rate of inflation that we experienced in the UK, which had the effect of debasing the purchasing power of the pound. Inflation is forecast to remain high compared with America so we can expect a further fall in due course, although I happen to feel that the pound has fallen too far and might perk up a touch if we can avoid a train crash Brexit.

 

December. Beloved leader of the Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn, walked out of a karaoke party for Labour MPs where they sang Tony Blair's 1997 election-winning anthem Things Can Only Get Better accompanied by chants of We want Tony!

 

The accord by OPEC members in November will come to symbolise the passing of one of the world's most powerful cartels. After 50 years in control of the oil price, OPEC has submitted to the economic power of a much-changed global market. The agreement to cut production by 1.2m barrels a day raised prices at the time by almost 10 per cent. It is not, however, a deal which is capable of lifting prices to the preferred level of $60 or $70. But will Iran limit its production when it desperately needs increased output to sustain its economy? Will Russia cut production by 300,000 barrels a day? When did Russia last participate in an OPEC quota? Answer: never. Then, there is a surge in production coming from Brazil, Canada and Kazakhstan to add to the present surplus. The US shale business, furthermore, is entirely capable of ramping up production again. For all these reasons, the current deal is inadequate and is likely to fail. Too many of the promises are vague and the incentive to cheat is too high. OPEC has no enforcement mechanism against those who break the agreement, the result being, I believe, that the oil price will fall back later in the year. OPEC as a cartel is on its last legs and everyone will have to get used to the new reality.

 

In the run-up to Athelney Trust's year end, the Dow Jones Index almost reached 20,000. I ignored all the kerfuffle. Most indices are weighted by market capitalisation - the share price multiplied by the number of shares in issue. So, companies with a higher market value get a higher weighting in the index tracking that market. The Dow, on the other hand, weights companies by price not market cap. This is because equity indices were a new concept when Charles Dow constructed it in 1896. Back then, it included 12 companies and adding all the share prices together and dividing by 12 gave the value of the index. Fast forward to today with 30 companies in the index but it really is rather silly that Goldman Sachs is the top share in the index just because its share price is a whopping $238 whereas Apple is only $116. Yet Apple is the larger company by a country mile.

 

In 1920, America put its faith in a businessman-president called Warren Harding, whose slogan was America first!  This meant what it does now: anti-immigrant, nativism, and isolationist. White working-class and rural Americans were defending a supremacy they saw coming under threat and they were responding to the fact that the economic boom of the 1920s did not extend its benefits much beyond the urban middle-class: there was a resurgence in the Ku Klux Klan. Harding's successors, Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover, were also businessmen. Their policies created the conditions for the 1929 crash and the depression: very dark days indeed. The whole world has much to fear from President Trump's threat to tear up trade agreements and impose punitive restrictions on imports. And even if he refrains from starting a trade war, the loose-tongued, fact-lite style he cultivated during the campaign could wreak serious damage: his hyperbole now carries the weight of the American presidency. His victory was enough to chill some financial markets and marks an alarming step away from a liberal, open economy towards more isolationism and less prosperity for us all. And another thing, isn't it rather worrying that he now has access to the nuclear codes yet seemingly can't control his Twitter account?

 

Henry Gatewood, corrupt banker in the classic 1939 movie Stagecoach, wished that the US president was a businessman. America for Americans, he said. Don't let the government meddle with business! Reduce taxes! What the country needs is a businessman for president! So why did it take 77 years? Presumably because of Harding, Coolidge and Hoover………

 

Chancellor Philip Hammond is a worried man. The tax system is getting out of touch with the way Britons live and work, leading to a hole in projected tax revenues from the rapid rise in incorporated small businesses. The shortfall is set to grow to £3.5bn a year by 2020/21 so something must be done to protect the tax base. The chancellor is right to be concerned: there was a 25 per cent rise in such small companies in 2015 alone. Much of this stems from the gig economy in which companies increasingly trade services with others rather than hire employees. But self-employed and small companies pay less tax than employees for exactly the same work. These tax advantages can be shared between those who want to buy services and those who sell them - the 13.8 per cent payroll tax being the most important. Ration your sympathy for chancellors, though, since government decisions have been just as important as changing work practices. National Insurance raised about half income tax revenues in 1979 but now, following a number of stealth increases, it now raises 70 per cent. The rise in personal allowances from £6,475 a year in 2010/11 to £11,500 in 2017/18 along with an additional £5,000 dividend tax allowance provides the opportunity for some couples to extract £26,328 a year free of income tax and national insurance. No-one should be surprised or disappointed that so many wish to incorporate: after all, one by one child benefit, the personal allowance and pension tax relief are all tapered at different levels of income, creating wide bands where the effective rate of tax is 60 per cent. One final thought: the Office of Budget Responsibility thinks that almost half of the £50bn annual increase in income tax revenues he wants to collect by 2020 will come from the 1.5 per cent of taxpayers earning over £150,000 a year. It is exactly this kind of individual that can shift money about. He should not be worried about these tax revenues failing to materialise: he should be scared stiff.

 

Long before Somerset Maugham branded Monaco a sunny place for shady people the tax haven that Philip and Tina Green call home was given an even worse review by brief visitor Karl Marx. The arch critic of capitalism described Monaco in 1882 as a robber's nest.

 

Finally, under this heading, I am pleased to report that in April Athelney Trust raised £407,000 before expenses by placing 174,800 shares at 233.2p. I look forward to welcoming personally the new investors to their first Annual General Meeting in Spring, 2017.

 

Capital Gains

 

During the year the Company realised capital profits before expenses arising on the sale of investments in the sum of £294,251 (31 December 2015: £332,648).

 

Portfolio Review

 

Holdings of Cape, Custodian REIT, Forterra, Lavendon, Ocean Wilsons, Schroder European, Target Healthcare, TP Icap and XL Media were all purchased for the first time. Additional holdings of Air Partner, Andrew Sykes, Begbies Traynor, Epwin, Gattaca, Greencore, KCOM, McColls Retail, Photo-me, Picton Property Income, Trinity Mirror and Vianet were also acquired. Amlin and Stanley Gibbons were sold.  In addition, five holdings were top-sliced to provide capital for the new purchases.

 

Corporate Activity

 

The holdings of Premier Farnell, UK Mail and Wireless were taken over at a capital profit of 41.2, 47.0 and 94.5 percent respectively.

 

Dividend

 

The Board is pleased to recommend an increased annual dividend of 8.6p per ordinary share (2015: 7.9p). This represents an increase of 8.8 per cent over the previous year. Subject to shareholder approval at the Annual General Meeting on 30 March 2017, the dividend will be paid on 6 April 2017 to shareholders on the register on 10 March 2017.

 

For those patient investors who subscribed for Athelney Trust shares in the IPO of 1994, the annual return has now risen to 17.5 per cent net of basic rate tax on the capital originally invested.

 

Update

 

The unaudited NAV at 31 January 2017 was 250.4p whereas the share price on the same day stood at 240.5p. Further updates can be found on www.athelneytrust.co.uk

 

Prospects

 

While 2016 was the year the unlikely became true, investors entered 2017 no better equipped to tell the difference between reality and illusion. Nevertheless, one or two hints are starting to emerge: the global economy has picked up, inflation is rising, central banks are still being helpful and US investors remain committed to the view that President Trump will deliver on tax cuts and infrastructure spending, yet will not upset the apple-cart by starting trade wars or grabbing the nuclear codes. It is right, I think, to be cautiously optimistic but I would be the first to admit that there is much which could go wrong. It is important that Athelney Trust buckles down to the task of identifying good companies, with many of the old-fashioned virtues, capable of steady growth in profitability, out of which would come a rising dividend.

 

 

 

Dr. E C Pohl

Chairman

22 February 2017

 

 

 

Income Statement

For the Year Ended 31 December 2016

For the Year Ended 31 December

 2015

Note

Revenue

Capital

Total

Revenue

Capital

Total

£

£

£

£

£

£

Gains on investments held at fair value

8

-

236,357

236,357

-

391,473

391,473

Income from investments

2

242,157

-

242,157

218,309

-

218,309

Investment Management expenses

3

(5,210)

(46,933)

(52,143)

(5,149)

(46,910)

(52,059)

Other expenses

3

(25,519)

(63,393)

(88,912)

(28,782)

(59,514)

(88,296)

Net return on ordinary

211,428

126,031

337,459

184,378

285,049

469,427

activities before taxation

Taxation

5

-

-

-

-

-

-

Net return on ordinary activities after taxation 6

211,428

126,031

337,459

184,378

285,049

469,427

Net return per ordinary share

6

10p

6p

16p

9.3p

14.4p

23.7p

Dividend per ordinary share paid during the year 7

7.9p

6.7p

 

 

 

The total column of this statement is the profit and loss account for the Company.

All revenue and capital items in the above statement derive from continuing operations.

No operations were acquired or discontinued during the above financial years.

A statement of movements of reserves is given overleaf.

A Statement of Comprehensive Income is not required as all gains and losses of the Company have been reflected in the above Statement.

 

 

 

Statement of Changes in Equity for the Year Ended

31 December 2016

 

 

Called-up

Capital

Capital

Total

Share

Share

reserve

reserve

Revenue

Shareholders'

Capital

Premium

realised

unrealised

reserve

Funds

£

£

£

£

£

£

Balance brought forward at 1 January 2015

495,770

545,281

1,336,934

1,851,828

291,857

4,521,670

Net profits on realisation

of investments

-

-

332,648

-

-

332,648

Increase in unrealised

appreciation

-

-

-

58,825

-

58,825

Expenses allocated to

Capital

-

-

(106,424)

-

-

(106,424)

Profit for the year

-

-

-

-

184,378

184,378

Dividend paid in year

-

-

-

-

(132,866)

(132,866)

Shareholders' Funds at 31 December 2015

495,770

545,281

1,563,158

1,910,653

343,369

4,858,231

 

Balance brought forward at 1 January 2016

495,770

545,281

1,563,158

1,910,653

343,369

4,858,231

Net profits on realisation

of investments

-

-

294,251

-

-

294,251

Decrease in unrealised

appreciation

-

-

-

(57,894)

-

(57,894)

Expenses allocated to

Capital

-

(28,127)

(110,326)

-

-

(138,453)

Profit for the year

-

-

-

-

211,428

211,428

Dividend paid in year

-

-

-

-

(156,663)

(156,663)

Shares issued in the year

43,700

363,933

-

-

-

407,633

Shareholders' Funds at 31 December 2016

539,470

881,087

1,747,083

1,852,759

398,134

5,418,533

 

 

 

Statement of the Financial Position as at

31 December 2016

 

Company Number: 02933559

 

Note

2016

2015

£

£

Fixed assets

Investments held at fair value through profit and loss

8

5,117,268

4,709,749

Current assets

Debtors

9

256,964

124,368

Cash at bank and in hand

59,133

39,493

316,097

163,861

Creditors: amounts falling due within one year

10

(14,832)

(15,379)

Net current assets

301,265

148,482

Total assets less current liabilities

5,418,533

4,858,231

Provisions for liabilities and charges

-

-

Net assets

5,418,533

4,858,231

Capital and reserves

Called up share capital

11

539,470

495,770

Share premium account

881,087

545,281

Other reserves (non distributable)

Capital reserve - realised

1,747,083

1,563,158

Capital reserve - unrealised

1,852,759

1,910,653

Revenue reserve (distributable)

398,134

343,369

Shareholders' funds - all equity

5,418,533

4,858,231

Net Asset Value per share

13

251.1p

245p

 

 

 

Statement of Cash flows for the Year Ended

31 December 2016

 

2016

2015

£

£

Cash flows from operating activities

Net revenue return

211,428

184,378

Adjustment for:

Expenses charged to capital

(110,326)

(106,424)

Decrease in creditors

(547)

(447)

Increase in debtors

(132,596)

(37,122)

Cash (used)/from operations

(32,041)

40,385

Cash flows from investing activities

Purchase of investments

(741,319)

(755,023)

Proceeds from sales of investments

570,157

868,860

Net cash from investing activities

(171,162)

113,837

Financing activities

Share issue

379,506

-

Net cash from financing activities

379,506

-

Equity dividends paid

(156,663)

(132,866)

Net increase in cash

19,640

21,356

Cash at the beginning of the year

39,493

18,137

 

Cash at the end of the year

59,133

39,493

 

 

Notes to the Financial Statements

For the Year Ended 31 December 2016

 

1. Accounting Policies

 

1.1 Statement of Compliance and Basis of Preparation of Financial Statements

 

The financial statements are prepared in accordance with applicable United Kingdom accounting standards, including Financial Reporting Standard 102 ("FRS 102"), the Companies Act 2006 and with the AIC Statement of Recommended Practice ("SORP") issued in November 2014 (amended January 2017), regarding the Financial Statements of Investment Trust Companies and Venture Capital Trusts. All the Company's activities are continuing.

 

1.2 Income

 

Income from investments including taxes deducted at source is recognised when the right to the return is established (normally the ex-dividend date). UK dividend income is reported net of tax credits in accordance with FRS 102 "Income Tax". Interest is dealt with on an accruals basis.

 

1.3 Investment Management Expenses

 

All three directors are involved in investment management, 10% of their salaries or fees have been charged to revenue and the other 90% to capital. All other investment management expenses have been charged to capital. The Board propose continuing this basis for future years.

 

1.4 Other Expenses

 

Expenses (including VAT) and interest payable are dealt with on an accruals basis and charged through the Revenue and Capital Accounts in an allocation that the Board consider to be a fair distribution of the costs incurred.

 

1.5 Investments

 

Listed investments comprise those listed on the Official List of the London Stock Exchange. Unlisted investments are traded on AIM. Profits or losses on sales of investments are taken to realised capital reserve. Any unrealised appreciation or depreciation is taken to unrealised capital reserve.

 

Investments have been classified as "fair value through profit and loss" upon initial recognition.

 

Subsequent to initial recognition, investments are measured at fair value with changes in fair value recognised in the Income Statement.

 

Securities of companies quoted on a recognised stock exchange are valued by reference to their quoted bid prices at the close of the year, similarly, AIM-traded investments are valued using the closing bid price on 31 December.

 

1.6 Taxation

 

The tax effect of different items of income and expenses is allocated between capital and revenue on the same basis as the particular item to which it relates, using the Company's effective rate of tax for the year.

 

 

1. Accounting Policies (continued)

 

1.7 Deferred Taxation

 

Deferred tax is recognised in respect of all timing differences that have originated but not reversed by the balance sheet date. Deferred tax liabilities are recognised for all taxable timing differences but deferred tax assets are only recognised if it is considered more likely than not that there will be suitable profits from which the future reversal of the underlying timing differences can be deducted. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are calculated at the tax rates expected to be effective at the time the timing differences are expected to reverse. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are not discounted.

1.8 Capital Reserves

 

Capital Reserve - Realised

Gains and losses on realisation of fixed asset investments are dealt with in this reserve.

 

Capital Reserve - Unrealised

Increases and decreases in the valuations of fixed asset investments are dealt with in this reserve.

 

1.9 Dividends

 

In accordance with FRS 102 "Events after the end of the Reporting Period", dividends are included in the financial statements in the year in which they are paid.

 

1.10 Share Issue Expenses

 

The costs associated with issuing shares are written off against any premium arising on the issue of Share Capital.

 

2. Income

 

Income from investments

2016

2015

£

£

UK dividend income

175,503

151,071

Foreign dividend income

46,439

56,033

UK Property REITs

20,210

11,144

Bank interest

5

61

Total income

242,157

218,309

 

 

 

UK dividend income

2016

2015

£

£

UK Main Market listed investments

115,086

93,474

UK AIM-traded shares

60,417

57,597

175,503

151,071

 

 

 

3. Return on Ordinary Activities before Taxation

2016

2015

£

£

The following amounts (inclusive of VAT) are included

within investment management and other expenses:

Directors' remuneration:

- Services as a director

21,000

17,291

- Otherwise in connection with management

49,401

47,372

Auditors' remuneration:

- Audit Services - Statutory audit

10,500

10,500

Miscellaneous expenses:

 - Other wages and salaries

10,300

31,233

 - Management services

22,140

-

 - PR and communications

9,662

11,935

 - Stock exchange subscription

6,420

6,180

 - Sundry investment management and other expenses

11,632

15,844

141,057

140,355

 

On 1 April 2016 the Company entered into a contract with J Girdlestone to provide management services at an annual cost of £24,600 plus VAT.

 

4. Employees

2016

2015

£

£

Costs in respect of Directors:

Wages and salaries

70,401

64,663

Social security costs

2,971

4,402

73,372

69,065

 

Costs in respect of administrator:

Wages and salaries

6,687

25,250

Social security costs

642

1,581

7,329

26,831

 

Total:

Wages and salaries

77,088

89,913

Social security costs

3,613

5,983

80,701

95,896

Average number of employees:

Chairman

1

1

Investment

2

2

Administration

-

1

3

4

 

 

5. Taxation

 

(i) On the basis of these financial statements no provision has been made for corporation tax (2015: Nil).

(ii) Factors affecting the tax charge for the year.

 

 

The tax charge for the period is lower than (2015: lower than) the average small company rate of corporation tax in the UK of 20 per cent. The differences are explained below:

 

 

2016

2015

 

£

£

Total return on ordinary activities before tax

337,459

469,427

 

 

Total return on ordinary activities multiplied by the average small company rate of corporation tax 20% (2015: 20%)

67,492

93,885

 

 

Effects of:

 

UK dividend income not taxable

(34,430)

(36,876)

 

Revaluation of shares not taxable

11,578

(11,765)

 

Capital gains not taxable

(58,850)

(66,530)

 

Unrelieved management expenses

14,210

21,286

 

 

Current tax charge for the year

-

-

 

 

The Company has unrelieved excess revenue management expenses of £92,354 at 31 December 2016 (2015: £83,051) and £102,597 (2015: £102,597) of capital losses for Corporation Tax purposes and which are available to be carried forward to future years. It is unlikely that the Company will generate sufficient taxable profits in the future to utilise these expenses and therefore no deferred tax asset has been recognised.

 

For the year ended 31 December 2015, the Company received approval from HM Revenue and Customs under Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010, therefore the Company was not liable to Corporation Tax on any realised investment gains for 2015. The Directors intend to continue to meet the conditions required to obtain approval and therefore no deferred tax has been provided on any capital gains or losses arising on the revaluation or disposal of investments.

 

6. Return per Ordinary Share

 

The calculation of earnings per share has been performed in accordance with FRS 102.

2016

2015

£

£

£

£

£

£

Revenue

Capital

Total

Revenue

Capital

Total

Attributable return on

ordinary activities after taxation

211,428

126,031

337,459

184,378

285,049

469,427

Weighted average number of shares

2,104,868

1,983,081

Return per ordinary share

10p

6p

16p

9.3p

14.4p

23.7p

 

 

7. Dividend

 

2016

2015

£

£

Final dividend in respect of 2015 of 7.9p (2015: a final dividend of 6.7p was paid in respect of 2014) per share

156,663

132,866

 

 

Set out below is the total dividend payable in respect of the financial year, which is the basis on which the requirements of Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 are considered.

 

It is recommended that a final dividend of 8.6p (2015: 7.9p) per ordinary share be paid amounting to a total of £185,578. For the year 2015, a final dividend of 7.9p was paid on 14 April 2016 amounting to a total of £156,663.

 

2016

2015

£

£

Revenue available for distribution

211,428

184,378

Final dividend in respect of financial year ended

31 December 2016

(185,578)

(156,663)

Undistributed Revenue Reserve

25,850

27,715

 

8. Investments

 

2016

2015

£

£

Movements in year

Valuation at beginning of year

4,709,749

4,432,113

Purchases at cost

741,319

755,023

Sales - proceeds

(570,157)

(868,860)

- realised gains on sales

294,251

332,648

(Decrease)/Increase in unrealised appreciation

(57,894)

58,825

Valuation at end of year

5,117,268

4,709,749

Book cost at end of year

3,264,509

2,799,096

Unrealised appreciation at the end of the year

1,852,759

1,910,653

5,117,268

4,709,749

 

 

UK Main Market listed investments

4,109,077

4,089,885

UK AIM-traded shares

1,008,191

619,864

5,117,268

4,709,749

 

8. Investments (continued)

 

Gains on investments

2016

2015

£

£

Realised gains on sales

294,251

332,648

(Decrease)/Increase in unrealised appreciation

(57,894)

58,825

236,357

391,473

 

The purchase costs and sales proceeds above include transaction costs of £3,695 (2015: £5,796) and £1,344 (2015: £3,605) respectively.

 

9. Debtors

2016

2015

£

£

Investment transaction debtors

249,295

119,311

Other debtors

7,669

5,057

256,964

124,368

 

10. Creditors: amounts falling due within one year

2016

2015

£

£

Social security and other taxes

2,623

3,056

Other creditors

172

172

Accruals and deferred income

12,037

12,151

14,832

15,379

 

11. Called Up Share Capital

 

2016

2015

£

£

Authorised

10,000,000 Ordinary Shares of 25p

2,500,000

2,500,000

Allotted, called up and fully paid

2,157,881 Ordinary Shares of 25p

539,470

495,770

(2015: 1,983,081 Ordinary Shares of 25p)

 

 

12. Financial Instruments

 

The Company's financial instruments comprise equity investments, cash balances and debtors and creditors that arise directly from its operations, for example, in respect of sales and purchases awaiting settlement.

 

The major risks associated with the Company are market, credit and liquidity risk. The Company has established a framework for managing these risks. The directors have guidelines for the management of investments and financial instruments.

 

Market Risk

 

Market price risk arises mainly from uncertainty about future prices of financial investments used in the Company's business. It represents the potential loss the Company might suffer through holding market positions by way of price movements other than movements in exchange rates and interest rates.

 

The Company's investment portfolio is exposed to market price fluctuations which are monitored by the Investment Manager who gives timely reports of relevant information to the Directors.

 

Adherence to the investment objectives and the internal controls on investments set by the Company mitigates the risk of excessive exposure to any one particular type of security or issuer.

 

The Company's exposure to other changes in market prices at 31 December on its investments is as follows:

 

A 20% decrease in the market value of investments at 31 December 2016 would have decreased net assets attributable to shareholders by 47.4 pence per share (2015: 47.5 pence per share). An increase of the same percentage would have an equal but opposite effect on net assets available to shareholders.

 

2016

2015

£

£

Fair value through profit or loss investments

5,117,268

4,709,749

 

 

Market risk also arises from changes in interest rates and exchange risk. All of the Company's assets are in sterling and accordingly the Company has limited currency exposure. The majority of the Company's financial assets are non-interest bearing, as a result the Company's financial assets are not subject to significant risk due to fluctuations in the prevailing levels of market interest rates.

 

The carrying amounts of financial assets best represent the maximum credit risk exposure at the balance sheet date. Bankruptcy or insolvency of the custodian may cause the Company's rights with respect to securities held with the custodian to be delayed.

 

Liquidity Risk

Liquidity Risk is the risk that the Company may have difficulty in meeting obligations associated with financial liabilities. The Company is able to reposition its investment portfolio when required so as to accommodate liquidity needs. However it may be difficult to realise its investment portfolio in adverse market conditions.

 

Maturity Analysis of Financial Liabilities

The Company's financial liabilities consist of creditors as disclosed in note 10. All items are due within one year.

 

 

12. Financial Instruments (continued)

 

Capital management policies and procedures

The Company's capital management objectives are:

 

· to ensure the company's ability to continue as a going concern;

 

· to provide an adequate return to shareholders;

 

· to support the company's stability and growth;

 

· to provide capital for the purpose of further investments.

The Company actively and regularly reviews and manages its capital structure to ensure and optimal capital structure, taking into consideration the future capital requirements of the company and capital efficiency, projected operating cash flows and projected strategic investments opportunities. The management regards capital as total equity and reserves, for capital management purposes.

 

Fair values of financial assets and financial liabilities

Fixed asset investments (see note 8) are valued at market bid price where available which equates to their fair values. The fair values of all other assets and liabilities are represented by their carrying values in the balance sheet.

 

Financial instruments by category

The financial instruments of the Company fall into the following categories

31 December 2016

At Amortised Cost

£

Assets at fair value through profit or loss

£

Total

£

 

Assets as per the balance sheet

 

Investments

-

5,117,268

5,117,268

 

Debtors

256,964

-

256,964

 

Cash at bank

59,133

-

59,133

 

Total

316,097

5,117,268

5,433,365

 

 

Liabilities as per the balance sheet

 

Creditors

14,832

-

14,832

 

Total

14,832

-

14,832

 

31 December 2015

At Amortised Cost

£

Assets at fair value through profit or loss

£

Total

£

Assets as per the balance sheet

Investments

-

4,709,749

4,709,749

Debtors

124,368

-

124,368

Cash at bank

39,493

-

39,493

 

Total

163,861

4,709,749

4,873,610

Liabilities as per the balance sheet

Creditors

15,379

-

15,379

Total

15,379

-

15,379

 

 

 

12. Financial Instruments (continued)

 

Fair value hierarchy

In accordance with FRS 102, the Company must disclose the fair value hierarchy of financial instruments.

 

The fair value hierarchy consists of the following three classifications:

 

Classification A - Quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.

Quoted in an active market in this context means quoted prices are readily and regularly available and those prices represent actual and regularly occurring market transactions on and arm's length basis.

 

Classification B - The price of a recent transaction for an identical asset, where quoted prices are unavailable.

 

The price of a recent transaction for an identical asset provides evidence of fair value as long as there has not been a significant change in economic circumstances or a significant lapse of time since the transaction took place. If it can be demonstrated that the last transaction price is not a good estimate of fair value (e.g. because it reflects the amount that an entity would receive or pay in a forced transaction, involuntary liquidation or distress sale), that price is adjusted.

 

Classification C - Inputs for the asset or liability that are based on observable market data and unobservable market data, to estimate what the transaction price would have been on the measurement data in an arm's length exchange motivated by normal business considerations.

 

 

The Company only holds classification A investments (2015: classification A investments only).

 

 

13. Net Asset Value per Share

 

The net asset value per share is based on net assets of £5,418,533 (2015: £4,858,231) divided by 2,157,881 (2015: 1,983,081) ordinary shares in issue at the year end.

 

2016

2015

Net asset value

251.1p

245.0p

 

14. Dividends paid to directors

 

During the year the following dividends were paid to the directors of the Company as a result of their total shareholding:

 

Mr Robin Boyle £32,485²

Dr. Manny Pohl £-¹

Mr Simon Moore £2,030

 

Notes:

1. Dr Manny Pohl's relationship with Global Masters Fund Limited is described in Note 1 to the table of Directors' interests on page 29. During the year a dividend of £23,491 was paid to Global Masters Fund Limited.

2. This figure includes £30,936 paid to Trehellas House Limited. Mr Robin Boyle's interest in Trehellas House Limited is described in Note 2 to the table of Directors' interest on page 29.

 

For further information:

Robin Boyle, Managing Director

Athelney Trust plc

020 7628 7937

 

 

This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
 
END
 
 
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