SERAPHIM SPACE INVESTMENT
TRUST PLC
(the "Company"
or "SSIT")
Full Year
Results
Seraphim Space Investment Trust
PLC (LSE: SSIT), the world's first listed SpaceTech investment
company, announces its results for the financial year ended 30 June
2024.
The annual report and accounts can
be found
here. A
summary is set out below.
Financial Summary
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
Change
|
NAV
|
|
£228.1m
|
£222.4m
|
2.6%
|
NAV per
share1
|
|
96.18p
|
92.90p
|
3.5%
|
Portfolio
valuation
|
|
£201.5m
|
£187.4m
|
7.5%
|
Fair value vs.
cost1
|
|
104.7%
|
98.5%
|
620bp
|
Liquid resources
|
|
£27.0m
|
£35.3m
|
-23.6%
|
Market capitalisation
|
|
£129.5m
|
£64.6m
|
100.4%
|
Share
price1
|
|
54.6p
|
27.0p
|
-102.2%
|
-Discount/+premium1
|
-43.2%
|
-70.9%
|
2,770bp
|
Ongoing
charges1
|
1.83%
|
1.89%
|
-10bp
|
Number of shares in
issue
|
237.2m
|
239.4m
|
-0.9%
|
|
|
|
|
1 Alternative performance
measure - see Alternative Performance Measures on pages 144 and 145
of the of the annual report and accounts.
Full Year Highlights
· Portfolio valuation up £14.1m to £201.5m at
30 June 2024, driven by additional
investments, increased fair value net gains and minimal FX
gain.
· The
private companies in the top 10 holdings (81.8% of the overall
portfolio fair value and 72.2% of NAV) collectively saw their
revenues increase year-on-year by an average of 71% (in Sterling)
and 224% (on a fair value weighted basis).
· 77% of the portfolio by fair value
has a robust cash runway, with 60%
fully funded and 17% funded for 12 months or more
from 30 June 2024, based on management projections and including
raises completed post period end.
· Approximately $540m raised by the private portfolio during
the year.
· £11.0m
deployed in four new portfolio companies (including the in specie
£3.8m investment into Seraphim Space Ventures II LP) and six
existing portfolio companies.
· SSIT
sold its interest in nine early-stage companies to Seraphim Space's
new early stage venture fund.
· Cash
balance of £27.0m
at year end.
Transactions Completed During the Year
Company
|
Segment
|
HQ
|
Type
|
Cost
£m
|
ALL.SPACE
|
Downlink
|
UK
|
Follow-on
|
2.8
|
Skylo
|
Downlink
|
US
|
New investment
|
1.6
|
Xona Space Systems
|
Platforms
|
US
|
Follow-on
|
1.0
|
SatVu
|
Platforms
|
UK
|
Follow-on
|
0.2
|
Voyager
|
|
US
|
Follow-on
|
0.2
|
2 early-stage
investments
|
|
|
New investment
|
0.9
|
2 early-stage
investments
|
|
|
Follow-on
|
0.5
|
Seraphim Space Ventures II
LP
|
|
UK
|
New investment
|
3.8
|
Total
|
|
|
|
11.0
|
Portfolio Key Developments
Major funding
rounds
· ICEYE (20.9% of NAV): Raised oversubscribed $93m
Series E round led by Solidium.
· D-Orbit (14.5% of NAV): Raised €100m+ Series C round led by
Marubeni.
· HawkEye 360 (9.4%
of NAV): Raised $68m in a Series D1 round led by
BlackRock, and $40m debt financing from Silicon Valley
Bank.
· LeoLabs (5.7% of NAV): Closed $29m additional equity financing round led by
GP Bullhound.
· Xona
Space Systems (2.3% of NAV): Raised $19m in Series A round led by SSIT and Future
Ventures.
· AST
SpaceMobile (NASDAQ: ASTS, 1.9%
of NAV): Raised over $200m including strategic
equity investments from AT&T and Google.
· Skylo (0.7% of NAV): SSIT made an initial investment in $37m round led by
Intel Capital.
Major
milestones
· SatVu (4.9% of NAV): Successfully launched and commissioned its first
infrared imaging satellite.
· Tomorrow.io (1.7%
of NAV): Demonstrated unprecedented accuracy of
weather data from its pathfinder satellites.
· Voyager (1.0% of NAV): Agreed to partner with Airbus, Northrup Grumman and
Mitsubishi on its Starlab space station.
· AST
SpaceMobile: Signed commercial agreements with both AT&T and
Verizon to provide the company's first space-based broadband
network directly to cell phones of their subscribers.
· Spire Global (NYSE: SPIR, 1.1% of NAV): Announced
collaboration with Nvidia to further advance the company's
AI-driven weather prediction capabilities.
IPOs, M&A,
exits
· Astroscale (TYO: 186A, 1.7%
of NAV): Completed oversubscribed JPY23.8bn /
$153m IPO on the growth market of the Tokyo Stock
Exchange.
· HawkEye 360 (9.4%
of NAV): Completed the acquisition from Maxar
Intelligence of RF Solutions, a provider of secure, precise,
geospatial intelligence.
· Seraphim Space Ventures II (1.7% of NAV): SSIT sold its interest
in nine early stage companies to Seraphim Space's new early stage
venture fund.
Setbacks
· SatVu (4.9% of NAV): Experienced an issue on its first satellite after
six months of operations which led to a failure of the satellite;
two additional replacement satellites have since been
ordered.
Will Whitehorn, Chair of Seraphim Space Investment Trust plc,
commented:
"The year to 30 June 2024 was one
of significant milestones for both SSIT's portfolio and the space
sector as a whole. The heightened role of SpaceTech in the context
of geopolitics continues to grow apace. In the last year, this has
seen countries pushing for sovereign space capabilities not just in
orbit, but increasingly on the moon too. With the commercial sector
playing an ever-greater role in delivering these capabilities to
nation states, many of SSIT's portfolio companies are well aligned
with servicing the growing demand from government customers. This
has enabled 17 existing portfolio companies (12 of which are
private and five of which are publicly traded) to raise c.$900m in
additional funding (including further closes on previous rounds)
between them during the year, ensuring that the portfolio is well
capitalised to continue its positive trajectory.
The Company has both boosted its
available liquidity and reduced the number of holdings that could
require additional capital through the combination of the disposal
of nine early stage holdings and the IPO of portfolio company
Astroscale. With six portfolio companies, representing 60% of the
portfolio by fair value, now indicating they are fully funded, the
Company's reserves are expected to be sufficient to continue to
meet the needs of the portfolio during the year ahead
whilst enabling the Investment Manager to continue to seek
exceptional new potential additions to the portfolio."
Mark Boggett, Chief Executive Officer, Seraphim Space Manager
LLP, said:
"Once again, the portfolio has
defied the difficulties of the wider macroeconomic climate by
collectively managing to raise c.$900m from both the private and
public capital markets over the course of the year. This is a
testimony to the portfolio's enduring attractiveness to both other
existing investors and new investors that such substantial levels
of capital raising were achieved.
Besides these high levels of
fundraising activity, the underlying performance of the portfolio
was also encouraging. Buoyed by increasing demand from government
customers, the private companies within the top 10 holdings (which
together constitute 81.8% of the portfolio fair value and 72.2% of
NAV) collectively saw their revenues increase year-on-year by an
average of 71% (in Sterling) and 224% (on a fair value weighted
basis).
On the back of such growing
revenues and recent fundraising activity, we are pleased to see
that the portfolio is largely well capitalised, with some of the
Company's largest, more developed holdings now projecting that they
have sufficient cash to reach profitability. Taken together with
the increased potential liquidity represented by the listed
portfolio, this strengthens our view that SSIT will continue to
have adequate resources to support the needs of the portfolio as
required over the year ahead."
Analyst and Investor Presentations
There will be a webinar for equity
analysts at 09:00 (UK time) today and an online presentation for
retail investors at 11:00 (UK time) today. To register for either
event, please contact SEC Newgate by email at
seraphim@secnewgate.co.uk.
Both presentations will be hosted
by the Chair Will Whitehorn and Seraphim Space Manager LLP's CEO
Mark Boggett, CIO James Bruegger and COO Sarah
Shackleton.
-
Ends -
Media Enquiries
Seraphim Space Manager LLP (via SEC
Newgate)
|
|
Mark Boggett, CEO / James
Bruegger, CIO / Rob Desborough
|
|
SEC Newgate (Communications advisers)
|
seraphim@secnewgate.co.uk
|
Clotilde Gros / George Esmond
/ Harry Handyside
|
+44 (0)
20 3757 6767
|
Deutsche Numis
|
|
David Benda / Mark Hankinson /
Gavin Deane / Neil Coleman
|
+44 (0)
20 7545 8000
|
J.P. Morgan Cazenove
|
|
William Simmonds / Jérémie
Birnbaum / Rupert Budge
|
+44 (0)
20 7742 4000
|
Ocorian Administration (UK) Limited
|
seraphimteam@ocorian.com
|
Lorna Zimny
|
+44 (0)
28 9078 5880
|
Notes to Editors
About Seraphim Space
Investment Trust plc
Seraphim Space Investment Trust
plc (the "Company") is the world's first listed fund focused on
SpaceTech. The Company seeks exposure predominantly to early and
growth stage private financed SpaceTech businesses that have the
potential to dominate globally and that are sector leaders with
first mover advantages in areas such as climate, communications,
mobility and cyber security.
The Company is listed on the
Premium Segment of the London Stock Exchange.
Further information is available
at: https://investors.seraphim.vc.
About Seraphim Space Manager
LLP
Seraphim Space Manager LLP
("Seraphim Space" or the "Manager") is based in the UK and manages
Seraphim Space Investment Trust plc.
Further information is available
at www.seraphim.vc.
Investment Manager
The Company is managed by Seraphim
Space Manager LLP (the 'Investment
Manager' or 'Seraphim
Space'), the world's most prolific SpaceTech investment
group. The Investment Manager's team consists of seasoned venture
capitalists and some of the space sector's most successful
entrepreneurs who scaled their businesses to multi-billion Dollar
outcomes.
The Investment Manager has
supported more than 130 SpaceTech companies across its fund
management and accelerator activities since 2016 and has a proven
track record of delivering value.
Positioned at the heart of the
global SpaceTech ecosystem, the Investment Manager has a
differentiated model, using information asymmetry generated from
its global deal flow, partnerships with leading industry players
and primary research to back the most notable emerging SpaceTech
companies shaping a new industrial revolution.
The Investment Manager is a
signatory to the UN Principles for Responsible Investment
('UN PRI'). Its first UN
PRI report was filed in 2024.
Key Highlights
As at 30
June 2024
Key Performance Indicators
For the year ended 30 June
2024
NAV per share
movement1 3.5%
(Prior
year: -7.1%)
Discount (as at 30 June
2024)1
-43.2%
(30
June 2023: -70.9%)
Fair value vs. cost (as at
30 June 2024)1 104.7%
(30
June 2023: 98.5%)
|
Share price
movement1 102.2%
(Prior
year: -49.1%)
Ongoing
charges1 1.83%
(Prior
year: 1.89%)
|
|
Financial Summary
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
Change
|
NAV
|
|
£228.1m
|
£222.4m
|
2.6%
|
NAV per
share1
|
|
96.18p
|
92.90p
|
3.5%
|
Portfolio
valuation
|
|
£201.5m
|
£187.4m
|
7.5%
|
Fair value vs.
cost1
|
|
104.7%
|
98.5%
|
620bp
|
Liquid resources
|
|
£27.0m
|
£35.3m
|
-23.6%
|
Market capitalisation
|
|
£129.5m
|
£64.6m
|
100.4%
|
Share
price1
|
|
54.6p
|
27.0p
|
102.2%
|
-Discount/+premium1
|
-43.2%
|
-70.9%
|
2,770bp
|
Ongoing
charges1
|
1.83%
|
1.89%
|
-6bp
|
Number of shares in
issue
|
237.2m
|
239.4m
|
-0.9%
|
|
|
|
|
1 Alternative performance
measure - see Alternative Performance Measures
below.
Portfolio Snapshot
As at 30 June 2024
Fair value
£201.5m
(30
June 2023: £187.4m)
|
Top 10 investments
as % of fair value
84.0%
(30
June 2023: 85.7%)
|
|
Private portfolio
fair value vs. cost 126.8%
(30
June 2023: 119.2%)
Money raised by private
portfolio companies1,2 >$540m
(30
June 2023: >$360m)
|
Listed portfolio
fair value vs. cost 26.7%
(30
June 2023: 13.0%)
Percentage of portfolio by
fair value that is fully funded1
60.0%
(30
June 2023: 2.1%)
|
|
Number of private portfolio
companies that are fully funded or have 12 months or more of cash
runway1
14
(30
June 2023: 20)
|
Average cash runway of
private portfolio that is not fully funded from 30 June
20241,3 14
months
(30
June 20233: 20 months)
|
|
1 Source: Portfolio company
data and management projections.
2 Between 1 July 2023 and 30
June 2024.
3 Fair value weighted average
(as defined in the Glossary below.) number of months of cash runway
from 30 June 2024 for the private portfolio companies that are not
fully funded, representing 33%
of the
portfolio fair value, taking into account cash as at year end and
any fundraising raised post year end (30 June 2023: 97% of the
portfolio fair value was not fully funded).
Portfolio Key Developments
1. Major funding rounds
·
ICEYE: Raised oversubscribed
$93m Series E round led by Solidium
·
D-Orbit: Raised €100m+ Series
C round led by Marubeni
·
HawkEye
360: Raised $68m Series D1 round
led by BlackRock, and $40m debt financing from Silicon Valley
Bank
·
LeoLabs: Closed $29m
additional equity financing round led by GP Bullhound
·
Xona Space
Systems: Raised $19m Series A round
led by SSIT and Future Ventures
·
AST
SpaceMobile: Raised over $200m
including strategic equity investments from AT&T and
Google
·
Skylo: SSIT made an initial
investment in $37m round led by Intel Capital
2. Major milestones
·
SatVu: Successfully launched
and commissioned its first infrared imaging satellite
·
Tomorrow.io: Demonstrated
unprecedented accuracy of weather data from its pathfinder
satellites
·
Voyager: Agreed to partner
with Airbus, Northrup Grumman and Mitsubishi on its Starlab space
station
·
AST
SpaceMobile: Signed commercial
agreements with both AT&T and Verizon to provide the company's
first space-based broadband network direct to cell phones of their
subscribers
·
Spire
Global: Announced collaboration
with Nvidia to further advance the company's AI-driven weather
prediction capabilities
3. IPOs, M&A, Exits
·
Astroscale: Completed
oversubscribed JPY23.8bn / $153m IPO on the growth market of the
Tokyo Stock Exchange
·
HawkEye
360: Completed the acquisition from
Maxar Intelligence of RF Solutions, a provider of secure, precise,
geospatial intelligence
·
Seraphim Space
Ventures II: SSIT sold its interest
in nine early stage companies to Seraphim Space's new early stage
venture fund
4. Setbacks
·
SatVu: Experienced an issue
on its first satellite after six months of operations which led to
a failure of the satellite; two additional replacement satellites
have since been ordered
Sector Highlights
The space sector continued to
exhibit robust growth and resilience through a number of new
capabilities demonstrated. SpaceTech's central role in geopolitics
continued to be reinforced, with countries across the world racing
to claim their stake in space.
Jul 23: Space
Foundation reports that global space economy has reached
$546bn
[link]
Aug 23: India's Chandrayaan-3
spacecraft lands near the lunar south pole, making India the fourth
country to successfully land on the moon
Sep 23: AST SpaceMobile
demonstrates world's first space-based 5G cellular broadband
connection to an unmodified smartphone on earth
Sep 23: Eutelsat completes $3.4bn
OneWeb merger, creating a multi-orbit connectivity
powerhouse
Oct 23: Federal Communications
Commission issues the first-ever space debris fine to DISH for
failing to properly de-orbit a satellite
Oct 23: Amazon launches first
prototype satellites from its planned constellation of more than
3,000 satellites
Jan 24: Japanese Space Agency
(JAXA) smart lander successfully lands on the moon, making Japan
the fifth country to land on the moon
Jan 24: SpaceX demonstrates its
direct to cell technology sending its first text messages from
space using its Starlink satellites
Feb 24: Varda Space successfully
returned its first capsule from space containing pharmaceutical
materials processed in low earth orbit
Feb 24: Intuitive Machines becomes
first commercial operator to land on the moon
Mar 24: SpaceX launch: Starship
rocket launches on third test flight and declared it a
success
Apr 24: China announces plans to
launch mega constellations of small satellites
Apr 24: World Economic Forum predicts that the space sector will
reach $1.8tn by 2035
[link]
Jun 24: China's Chang'e 6 space
probe returns the world's first samples from the far side of the
moon
Jun 24: Boeing Starliner has
troubled first mission delivering
astronauts to the ISS
Chair's Statement
"The year to 30 June 2024 was one
of significant milestones for both SSIT's portfolio and the space
sector as a whole. The heightened role of SpaceTech in the context
of geopolitics continues to grow apace. In the last year, this has
seen countries pushing for sovereign space capabilities not just in
orbit, but increasingly on the moon too. With the commercial sector
playing an ever-greater role in delivering these capabilities to
nation states, many of SSIT's portfolio companies are well aligned
with servicing the growing demand from government customers. This
has enabled 17 existing portfolio companies (12 of which are
private and five of which are publicly traded) to raise c.$900m in
additional funding (including further closes on previous rounds)
between them during the year, ensuring that the portfolio is well
capitalised to continue its positive trajectory.
The Company has both boosted its
available liquidity and reduced the number of holdings that could
require additional capital through the combination of the disposal
of nine early stage holdings and the IPO of portfolio company
Astroscale. With six portfolio companies, representing
60% of the portfolio by
fair value, now indicating they are fully funded, the Company's
reserves are expected to be sufficient to continue to meet the
needs of the portfolio during the year ahead whilst enabling the
Investment Manager to continue to seek exceptional new potential
additions to the portfolio."
Will
Whitehorn
Chair
I am pleased to present the third
Annual Report of Seraphim Space Investment Trust PLC for the year
ended 30 June 2024.
I would like to thank all
shareholders for their ongoing support, despite the continuing
macroeconomic and geopolitical challenges.
Progress in the Year
During the year, the Company
invested £11.0m
in four new portfolio companies (including the in specie £3.8m
investment into Seraphim Space Ventures II LP) and six existing
portfolio companies, leading to a portfolio of 25 active SpaceTech
companies valued at £201.5m at 30 June 2024 (2023: 30
active companies, £187.4m). In addition, the Company had
£27.0m (2023:
£35.3m) of cash reserves at the year end.
As outlined in my reports for
previous periods, the Company continues to reserve cash to support
existing portfolio companies whilst continuing to actively seek to
invest modest amounts in new target companies. As explained in the
Investment Manager's Report, overall, the portfolio continues to be
well capitalised, with a number of management teams of portfolio
companies believing their companies are already fully funded and/or
expected to be EBITDA positive in the near term.
A detailed review of the performance of the
portfolio companies can also be found in the Investment Manager's
Report.
NAV
Net asset
year-over-year growth of 2.6%, from £222.4m to
£228.1m
at 30 June 2024 was
driven by an increase in the fair value of the portfolio, which was
partially offset by running costs and buying back shares. The NAV
per share increased by 3.5%, from 92.90p to 96.18p at the year end, driven by the
fair value increase and the impact of the
share buy-backs.
The private companies in the
portfolio continue to account for the majority of the portfolio
(80.0% by number
of portfolio companies and 94.4% by fair value). The fair value
of the private portfolio (excluding Astroscale which listed during
the year) increased 10.0% over the year, reaching
126.8% vs. cost
(126.7% excluding
FX impact) at the year end.
The listed element of the
portfolio remained depressed (26.7% fair
value vs. cost), although it improved through the year with notable
price increases seen at AST SpaceMobile and Spire Global, and the
inclusion of Astroscale which listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in
June 2024.
There was minimal impact
from foreign exchange variations
(+£0.1m, +0.05p per share) in the
year.
Share Price
The Company's share price showed
significant positive momentum during the year, reaching
54.6p on 30 June 2024,
an increase of 102.2% from 27.0p at 30 June 2023. However, the share price remained
depressed, at a discount of 43.2%
vs. the NAV per share at the year end, due to the
general global macroeconomic and geopolitical environment and the
volatility experienced by growth and smaller technology stocks and
alternative investment vehicles.
As explained previously, given the
discrepancy of performance between NAV and share price, the Board
announced a share repurchase programme on 13 July 2023. During the
year, the Company bought back a total of
2,186,344 shares (0.9% of the shares in issue on 30 June 2023) at
an aggregate cost of £1.0m, increasing the NAV per share by
0.44p. The shares bought back are being held in
treasury.
Capital Allocation
Policy
Each year, the Company seeks
shareholder approval at the AGM to have the ability to repurchase
shares. Similar to its peers in the market, the Company continues
to trade at a substantial discount to NAV. While a buy-back of
shares is usually in the interests of all shareholders as it helps
to stabilise the share price, and, when trading at a substantial
discount to NAV, it also increases NAV per share, it also reduces
the liquid resources of the Company. This results in the capital
that has been used for buy-backs no longer being available for
investments.
The Board regularly considers
multiple factors to determine the best use of the Company's
capital, including the positive impact on NAV per share from
buy-backs, the opportunity cost of using capital for buy-backs,
potential returns from investments and the need to support
portfolio companies through follow-on investment.
Earnings and Dividend
The Company made a gain after tax
of £6.7m for the year, equal to 2.83p per share, made up of a
revenue loss after tax of £3.7m, equal to (1.57)p per share, and a
capital gain after tax of £10.5m, equal to 4.40p per
share.
Due to the nature of the Company's
investments and its focus on achieving capital growth over the long
term, we do not anticipate recommending payment of a dividend in
the foreseeable future.
Responsible
Investment
During the year, the Investment
Manager continued to use its proprietary due diligence tool in
order to assess sustainability opportunities and ESG risks
associated with each potential investment, as well as annually
monitoring existing investments. In addition, the Investment
Manager filed its first UN PRI report and completed its first
carbon footprint assessment, achieving carbon neutrality for the
year ended 31 March 2024 by retiring 268 tCO2e in
accordance with the One Carbon World Carbon Neutral International
Standard. Please refer to the Responsible Investment section
below for more
details.
Availability of Annual
Reports
In the interests of the
environment and for ease of access, Annual Reports are available on
the Company's website and can be viewed and downloaded at
https://investors.seraphim.vc/.
Copies of Annual Reports will only be available on
request.
Annual General Meeting
The AGM of the Company will be
held at 11.00 a.m. on 26 November 2024 at Seraphim Space's offices,
1 Fleet Place, London, EC4M 7WS (GPS postcode EC4M 7RA). The AGM
will include a presentation from the Investment Manager (a video of
the presentation will be added to the website as soon as
practicable after the AGM). Details of the resolutions to be
proposed at the AGM, together with explanations, will be included
in the notice of meeting to be distributed to shareholders on 21
October 2024. As a matter of good practice, all resolutions will be
conducted on a poll and the results will be announced to the market
as soon as possible after the AGM.
The Directors and representatives
of the Investment Manager will be available at the AGM (either in
person or via video conference) to answer shareholder questions. We
do recognise that some shareholders may be unable to come to the
AGM and, if you have any questions about the Annual Report, the
investment portfolio or any other matter relevant to the Company,
please write to us via email at seraphimteam@ocorian.com
or by post to The Company Secretary, Seraphim
Space Investment Trust PLC, 5th Floor, 20 Fenchurch
Street, London, EC3M 3BY. If you are unable to attend the AGM, I
urge you to submit your proxy votes in good time for the meeting,
following the instructions on the proxy form. If you vote against
any of the resolutions, we would be interested to hear from you so
that we can understand the reasons behind any
objections.
Events After the Year End
Post period, there has also been a
further significant increase in AST SpaceMobile's share price which
increased from $11.61 to $24.18 on 11 October 2024, resulting in a
£4.7m increase in the fair value of the Company's investment.
Fluctuations in the share price of other listed holdings post
period, alongside a partial sell down of the Company's holding in
Astroscale, means that the overall fair value of the Company's
listed holdings stood at £12.5m as at 11 October 2024, up from
£11.4m at 30 June 2024.
Outlook
We envisage that recent favourable
market trends will continue to benefit the portfolio. In
particular, we anticipate that governments will continue to
accelerate their engagement with emerging SpaceTech companies that
are now the driving force of innovation within the space sector.
Likewise, we expect to see increased adoption of SpaceTech by a
wide array of terrestrial sectors, with the ongoing convergence of
satcoms and telecoms one particular area primed for such
growth.
As concerns about inflation and
high interest rates start to abate, we anticipate further
improvements in investor sentiment towards growth-orientated
investment opportunities. We are optimistic that this will benefit
both SSIT itself and the portfolio as a whole.
Given the Company's current cash
reserves, we expect the majority of investment activity will remain
focused on supporting those existing portfolio companies we have
the greatest conviction in, whilst continuing to seek out
exceptional new potential investments that may offer our investors
exposure to new facets of the burgeoning space market.
Will
Whitehorn
Chair
14 October 2024
Investment Manager's Report
"Once again, the portfolio has
defied the difficulties of the wider macroeconomic climate by
collectively managing to raise c.$900m from both the private and
public capital markets over the course of the year. This is a
testimony to the portfolio's enduring attractiveness to both other
existing investors and new investors that such substantial levels
of capital raising were achieved.
Besides these high levels of
fundraising activity, the underlying performance of the portfolio
was also encouraging. Buoyed by increasing demand from government
customers, the private companies within the top 10 holdings (which
together constitute 81.8% of the portfolio fair value and 72.2% of
NAV) collectively saw their revenues increase year-on-year by an
average of 71% (in Sterling) and 224% (on a fair value weighted
basis[1]).
On the back of such growing
revenues and recent fundraising activity, we are pleased to see
that the portfolio is largely well capitalised, with some of the
Company's largest, more developed holdings now projecting that they
have sufficient cash to reach profitability. Taken together with
the increased potential liquidity represented by the listed
portfolio, this strengthens our view that SSIT will continue to
have adequate resources to support the needs of the portfolio as
required over the year ahead."
Mark Boggett
CEO, Seraphim Space Manager
LLP
Overview
The first half of FY23/24 saw a
continuation of our strategy implemented in the previous year as a
continued reaction to the global macroeconomic backdrop. This
strategy was focussed on dealing with the uncertainty in the wider
market, by both protecting and growing existing portfolio value
and, very selectively, making investments, both new and follow-ons.
Over the course of the second half of FY23/24, we saw some level of
recovery in the market, but continued to maintain our strategic
focus.
We are happy to report that 17 of
the companies in the portfolio at the start of the year
successfully raised additional funding over the course of the year,
raising c.$900m in aggregate. It is notable that the vast majority
of new funding rounds were led by new investors joining the
existing syndicates.
Importantly, and a testament to
the maturing of the portfolio, the management teams of six of our
portfolio companies, representing 60% of the fair value of the
portfolio, believe their companies are fully funded based on their
latest projections. In a similar vein, management teams
representing a majority of the fair value of the portfolio expect
their companies to be EBITDA profitable in either 2024 or
2025.
Over the course of the year, we
participated in select funding rounds across our existing
portfolio, most notably as a co-lead of Xona Space Systems' Series
A round.
We also saw portfolio company
Astroscale, successfully going public on the Tokyo Stock Exchange
in June 2024. In line with our focus to maximise NAV by optimising
liquidity requirements and portfolio value, we sold down 40% of our
holding in Astroscale for £3.6m prior to the year end.
Lastly, SSIT made a new $2m
investment in US-based satellite communications company Skylo. We
believe the investment represents an exceptional opportunity and we
are happy to report that the company has since entered into
commercial agreements as a satellite communications partner with
both Google and Verizon.
Market overview
·
SpaceTech is proving to be highly resilient in an
uncertain economic environment driven by increasing interest in
defence, global security and climate change mitigation.
·
Record numbers of early stage deals and a
recovery in the amount of sizeable growth stage deals indicates the
continued attraction of SpaceTech to investors
worldwide.
·
As shown by the chart in the annual report,
SpaceTech venture capital ('VC') investment over the last 12-month
('LTM') period to 30 June
2024 showed a strong recovery. Investment was up by 66% against the
previous 12-month period. In contrast, the general VC market faced
a 10% contraction over the same time period.
·
Despite a decline in the number of deals
completed within the general VC market, SpaceTech continues to see
an ever-increasing number of investment-worthy startups being
founded and funded.
·
The number of SpaceTech deals continues to rise
to new heights. An all-time record of 174 SpaceTech deals were
completed in Q2 CY24, with a total of 528 completed over the LTM
period to 30 June 2024.
Investment Activity
Year ended 30 June 2024
Acquisitions
|
Company
|
Segment
|
HQ
|
Type
|
Cost
£m
|
ALL.SPACE
|
Downlink
|
UK
|
Follow-on
|
2.8
|
Skylo
|
Downlink
|
US
|
New investment
|
1.6
|
Xona Space Systems
|
Platform
|
US
|
Follow-on
|
1.0
|
SatVu
|
Platform
|
UK
|
Follow-on
|
0.2
|
Voyager
|
Beyond Earth
|
US
|
Follow-on
|
0.2
|
2 early stage
investments
|
|
|
New investment
|
0.9
|
2 early stage
investments
|
|
|
Follow-on
|
0.5
|
Seraphim Space Ventures II
LP
|
|
UK
|
New investment
|
3.8
|
Total
|
11.0
|
In July 2023, the Company
completed a $3.5m (£2.8m) follow-on investment into ALL.SPACE's Series C round, alongside a
number of existing and new investors. With this funding, ALL.SPACE
plans to invest in the remaining development to get its first
production model into market and grow its sales efforts.
In April 2024, the Company
completed a £250k follow-on investment into SatVu's Series A extension round,
alongside existing investors. This funding takes the business
through the build and launch of its next two production
satellites.
Also in April 2024, SSIT acquired
a £3.8m interest in Seraphim Space
Ventures II LP (the 'Venture Fund'), a new private venture
capital vehicle managed by Seraphim Space, pursuant to the sale of
the portfolio of early stage companies referred to under
'Disposals'. SSIT will make no further commitments to the Venture
Fund.
In May 2024, the Company completed
a $1.25m (£1.0m) follow-on investment into Xona Space Systems' $19m Series A
round, alongside a number of existing and new investors. With this
funding, Xona Space plans to launch its first production satellite,
as well as progress its development on various government
contracts.
In May 2024, the Company completed
a $222k (£173k) follow-on investment into Voyager.
Details of the new investment in
Skylo, made in December
2023, are included in the case study below.
Disposals
In the year, the Company received
£7.3m in proceeds from disposals.
Astroscale went public on the
Tokyo Stock Exchange on 5 June 2024. The IPO was oversubscribed at
a subscription price of JPY850 per share and backed by both
institutional and retail investors. Following the IPO and within
the reporting period SSIT sold 530,000 of its shares in the
company, equivalent to 40% of its holding, for £3.5m. This is
equivalent to 94% of the original cost of investment of those
shares that were sold.
In April 2024, the Company
announced the sale of nine early stage portfolio companies (the
'Early Stage Portfolio') to
the Venture Fund for a total consideration of £3.8m, settled
through the issuance of an interest for the Company in the Venture
Fund. This strategic transaction had the dual benefit of enabling
the Company to concentrate its resources on its more mature assets,
whilst also building a larger pipeline for future growth round
investments via the Venture Fund's wider portfolio of early stage
SpaceTech companies.
New investment case study: Skylo
Investment thesis
|
Skylo is a non-terrestrial network operator enabling existing
GEO and future LEO satcoms operators to seamlessly connect with any
smartphone and IoT endpoint globally.
Its technology will help unlock the potential of direct to
device connectivity from space, closing the gap between the satcoms
and terrestrial telecoms markets.
|
Round
|
Series A+
|
SSIT investment / round
size
|
$2m / $37m
|
Co-investors
|
Intel Capital, Innovation
Endeavors, BMW iVentures, Samsung Catalyst, Next 47,
Softbank
|
Problem
|
Outside of terrestrial mobile
networks there are large connectivity gaps that cannot economically
be covered by cell towers, yet, in an ever more interconnected
world, customers require 'always on' solutions.
|
Solution
|
Skylo, through its virtual radio
access network, seamlessly integrates GEO-based and, in the future,
LEO-based non-terrestrial networks ('NTNs') into the terrestrial mobile
ecosystem.
This allows any mobile and IoT
device with an industry standard 3GPP Release 17-compliant chipset
to connect to the NTN. The customer's device simply roams onto the
NTN when outside of areas of terrestrial coverage.
|
Market
|
We expect the combined market
potential for messaging and IoT to be in the $billions. Expanding
the service into voice and data would increase the opportunity by
an order of magnitude.
|
Latest news
|
· Tami
Erwin, former CEO of Verizon Business, joined the company's board
in March 2024.
· In
August 2024, Google chose Skylo as exclusive partner to provide
satellite connectivity to its new flagship Google Pixel 9 mobile
phone to provide SOS services.
· In
August 2024, Verizon, the largest mobile network operator in the
US, partnered with Skylo to provide satellite-based emergency
services to its customers starting in 2024, and satellite-based
text messaging from 2025.
|
Portfolio Performance
Year ended 30 June 2024
Holdings
|
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
Company
|
Sub-sector
|
HQ
|
Cost1
£m
|
Fair value1
£m
|
% of NAV
|
Fair
value1
£m
|
ICEYE
|
Earth Observation
|
Finland
|
39.6
|
47.8
|
20.9%
|
45.5
|
D-Orbit
|
In-orbit Services
|
Italy
|
11.6
|
33.1
|
14.5%
|
21.5
|
ALL.SPACE
|
Ground Terminals
|
UK
|
22.2
|
24.1
|
10.6%
|
21.2
|
HawkEye 360
|
Earth Observation
|
US
|
18.7
|
21.5
|
9.4%
|
20.6
|
LeoLabs
|
Data Platforms
|
US
|
11.7
|
12.9
|
5.7%
|
12.4
|
SatVu
|
Earth Observation
|
UK
|
7.0
|
11.2
|
4.9%
|
14.7
|
Xona Space Systems
|
Navigation
|
US
|
5.4
|
5.3
|
2.3%
|
3.7
|
PlanetWatchers
|
Data Analytics
|
UK
|
5.6
|
4.8
|
2.1%
|
4.8
|
AST SpaceMobile
|
Satcoms
|
US
|
4.4
|
4.4
|
1.9%
|
1.6
|
Tomorrow.io
|
Data Platforms
|
US
|
4.2
|
4.0
|
1.7%
|
3.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Top 10 investments
|
|
|
130.4
|
169.1
|
74.1%
|
149.9
|
Other investments2
(12)
|
|
|
58.6
|
28.7
|
12.6%
|
32.9
|
Non-material
investments2 (5)
|
|
|
3.5
|
3.7
|
1.6%
|
4.6
|
Total investments
|
|
|
192.5
|
201.5
|
88.3%
|
187.4
|
Net current assets
|
|
|
|
26.6
|
11.7%
|
35.0
|
Total assets
|
|
|
|
228.1
|
100.0%
|
222.4
|
1 Includes the cost of new and follow-on investments and
disposals, where relevant, made since 30 June 2023 of £2.2m in
aggregate.
2 Prior year includes assets fully or partially disposed of
during the year to 30 June 2024.
Private portfolio
· The
private portfolio, which comprises the main part of the Company's
investments representing 94.4% of fair value and 83.3% of NAV,
performed solidly, with its fair value closing the year at 126.8%
vs. cost (126.7% excluding FX gains).
· In
aggregate, the fair value of the private portfolio (excluding
Astroscale which went public during the year) increased 10.0% over
the year.
· The
private holdings continued to deliver on milestones and a number
have seen substantial revenue growth leading to their management
teams expecting them to become EBITDA profitable during 2024 or
2025.
· Over
the year, there were significant increases in the fair values of
D-Orbit (fair value vs.
cost: 285%),
driven by a funding round which closed earlier in the year, and
ICEYE (fair value vs.
cost: 121%),
driven by a higher premium being applied to the price of its last
round than the previous year due to continued strong
performance.
· These gains more than offset fair value reductions
experienced by other private portfolio companies.
Fair value reductions in the private portfolio
included SatVu (fair value
vs. cost: 160%),
due to the setback from its failed satellite as explained
below, and Altitude Angel (fair value vs.
cost: 98%), due
to underperformance.
Listed portfolio
· As
explained in previous periods, public companies which listed via
SPAC transactions suffered significant share price falls in 2022
and 2023.
· During the year, there was positive movement in the fair
value of the Company's listed holdings (excluding Astroscale which
listed during the year), in aggregate reaching £7.5m, up 56.3% from
30 June 2023.
· The
listed portfolio including Astroscale (20.0% of the portfolio by
number of companies) represented just 5.0% of NAV and 5.6% of
portfolio fair value at the end of the year (fair value vs. cost:
26.7%).
· AST
SpaceMobile (NASDAQ: ASTS; fair
value vs. cost: 99%) and Spire Global
(NYSE: SPIR; fair value vs. cost: 25%) have both delivered well
commercially over the last year, and both experienced material
share price increases in the year.
· Arqit
(NASDAQ: ARQQ; fair value vs. cost: 3%) continues
to experience share price declines, with a further £1.5m reduction
in fair value during the year. Following the end of the period, a
new CEO has been appointed.
Portfolio fundraising activity
· In
aggregate, c.$900m was raised by new and existing portfolio
companies during the year, including additional closes on rounds
closed in the prior year, with over $540m raised by privately held
portfolio companies and over $350m by public portfolio
companies.
· Of
the 10 existing privately-held portfolio companies that raised
new rounds in the
year:
o 80% were led by or had significant participation from
external investors demonstrating the attractiveness of those
companies to new investors;
o 40% of these companies raised up rounds and 20% raised flat
round or unpriced rounds, which is a testament to the strong
performance of these companies; and
o 40% of these companies closed funding rounds at reduced
valuations relative to their previous round.
Portfolio cash runway
· The
Company is satisfied with the cash position of the portfolio
companies in aggregate and the success of the portfolio in
accessing funding during the past year.
· 77% of the portfolio by fair value
has a robust cash runway, with 60%
fully funded based on latest projections from the
companies' management teams (up from 2% at the prior year end)
and 17% funded
for 12 months or more from 30 June 2024, including raises completed
post period end.
· The
management teams of six companies (five of which are top 10
holdings) are projecting that the companies are fully
funded.
· Five
companies representing 16%
of the fair value of the portfolio have less than
12 months of cash runway. These companies are reducing cash burn,
increasing their focus on government business development and
grants to increase revenues and reducing costs to extend their cash
runways (from 30 June 2024). The companies are actively
fundraising, with several having closed new funding rounds post
period, and, where appropriate, sale processes are under
consideration.
· We
note that it is not atypical for venture capital backed companies
to have less than 12 months cash runway. Most companies typically
raise on c.18-month cycles. To date, our portfolio companies that
have required additional financing to extend their cash runways
have been able to raise the necessary funding.
· Excluding the fully funded companies, the remainder of the
private portfolio has a fair value weighted average cash runway
of 14 months
(from 30 June 2024). While this is lower than the 20-month average
at the prior year end, only 2% of the portfolio was fully funded
then vs. 60% as at 30 June 2024 based on portfolio company
management projections.
Valuation policy
Overview
In respect of private company
valuations, fair value is established by using recognised valuation
methodologies, in accordance with the International Private Equity
and Venture Capital Valuation ('IPEV') Guidelines. The Company has a
valuation policy for unquoted securities to provide an objective,
consistent and transparent basis for estimating their fair value in
accordance with IFRS as well as the IPEV Guidelines. The unquoted
securities valuation policy and the associated valuation procedures
are subject to review on a regular basis, and updated, as
appropriate, in line with industry best practice.
In summary, the Company determines
fair value in accordance with the IPEV Guidelines by focusing on
updating the enterprise value (either through there being a new
funding round or through a valuation recalibration exercise or
adjustment for milestones) and then applying the implied equity
value (based on adjustments for new debt, etc) to the company's
capital structure (i.e. preference stack). In the event of
commercial (or technical) underperformance of a portfolio company,
a write down can then also be applied, typically in increments of
25%, to reduce fair value.
Quarterly valuation
process
All valuations are considered on a
quarterly basis and calibrated against the price of the last
funding round to ensure this price remains reasonable.
Recalibration event
In addition, for the material
portfolio companies (a) whose last funding rounds took place more
than 12 months earlier or (b) which had experienced a significant
milestone event or material under or overperformance (each a
'recalibration event'), the
Company undertakes a recalibration across a greater number of
datapoints. This process entails assessing the enterprise value
following the most recent round against a composite of four
elements: observable market data (where possible), recent relevant
private investment transactions, public market valuations of
comparable companies and the company's internal metrics and
performance. This exercise further strengthens the valuation
process with the goal of preserving shareholder confidence in the
NAV during volatile market conditions and will be conducted when a
recalibration event occurs and every quarter thereafter until a new
priced funding round is completed.
Portfolio fair value
Portfolio valuation methodologies
As outlined in the charts in the
annual report, all but three portfolio companies representing 82.6%
of the portfolio by fair value are valued using either available
market price or an enterprise value ('EV') that has been recalibrated in the
last six months using the extended process associated with a
recalibration event as explained under 'Valuation Policy'
above.
Listed share price performance
Over the last 12 months, there has
been some recovery in the public markets, but continued share price
declines for SPACs on average as shown by the table below. Space
SPACs have also underperformed the overall market, continuing to
show greater declines in their share prices on average than that
seen by all SPACs. Thanks to strong share price accretion at AST
SpaceMobile and Spire Global over the year, the average share price
performance of Arqit, AST SpaceMobile and Spire Global in the SSIT
portfolio outperformed the market with 70% share price accretion on
average.
Summary of SPAC share price performance
|
1
July 2023 to 30 June 2024
|
All SPACs (average)
|
(31.6)%
|
Space/SpaceTech SPACs
(average)
|
(37.3)%
|
SSIT listed (average)
|
70.4%
|
Arqit
|
(98.9)%
|
AST SpaceMobile
|
147.0%
|
Spire Global
|
163.1%
|
Source: Factset; Seraphim Space analysis
|
|
Quarterly valuation changes in the three months ended
30 June 2024
· During the quarter ended 30 June 2024, the portfolio fair
value increased by £0.7m, increasing fair value to 104.7% vs. cost (105.2% excluding FX
losses).
· £1.0m in unrealised FX losses, disposals of £7.3m and a £1.4m
realised fair value loss were offset by an unrealised fair value
increase of £5.2m and additions of £5.3m.
· Fair
value increases during the quarter at AST SpaceMobile, ICEYE and Astroscale were largely offset by fair
value adjustments at Xona Space
Systems.
· AST
SpaceMobile moved into the top 10
holdings in the quarter ended 30 June 2024.
Performance of the Company
Year ended 30 June 2024
Portfolio Attribution
· £6.3m in new investments and £4.7m of follow-ons more than
offset £7.3m in proceeds from disposals in the year.
· Increase in unrealised fair value of £11.8m and minimal FX
gain more than offset £1.4m of realised fair value loss during the
year.
· £201.5m
fair value of portfolio at the end of the year.
· 610bps increase in closing portfolio
fair value vs. portfolio cost, including FX movements.
NAV
· NAV
increased 2.6% over the year to £228.1m (30 June 2023:
£222.4m).
· The
portfolio fair value (including FX movements) increased by
£14.1m over the
year.
· 2.2m
shares were bought back during the year at an aggregate cost of
£1.0m.
· The
NAV per share increased from 92.90p to 96.18p over the year.
· £27.0m
liquid resources (11.8%
of NAV) at 30 June 2024 (30 June 2023:
£35.3m).
The Company is targeting an
annualised total return on the Company's portfolio of at least 20%
over the long term. The Company has no formal benchmark index but
has tracked its NAV per share and share price movements against the
following the indices for reference.
· MSCI
World Aerospace and Defense Index (£) - a significant proportion of
portfolio companies' revenues are derived from the broader
aerospace and defence industry and/or have governments as
significant customers.
· MSCI
World Climate Change Index (£) - a significant proportion of
portfolio companies' revenues are derived from climate change
products and services.
· FTSE
All-Share Index (£) - the Company is listed on the London Stock
Exchange.
· NASDAQ (£) - the Company invests in SpaceTech, a subset of
the broader technology market, and two of its listed holdings are
listed on NASDAQ.
· Dow
Jones Global Technology Index (£) - the Company invests globally in
SpaceTech, a subset of the broader technology market.
· S&P Kensho Space Index (£) - the Company invests globally
in SpaceTech, a subset of the broader space sector.
· Goldman Sachs Future Tech Leaders Equity ETF (£) - the
Company invests globally in SpaceTech, a subset of the broader
technology market.
Material events After the Year
End
·
ALL.SPACE: the Company
invested a further $5m in a new funding round, alongside other
existing investors in August 2024.
·
Spire
Global: on 14 August 2024 the
company announced that it would delay the filing of its Q2 2024
financial report due to an ongoing review of certain elements of
its accounting practices. The company has until mid-February 2025
to comply with the SEC filing requirements or face
delisting.
·
AST
SpaceMobile: the company launched
its first five commercial satellites on 12 September 2024 and
saw its share price increase to $24.18 as at 11 October 2024,
equivalent to a £4.7m post period increase in fair
value.
·
D-Orbit: on 27 September 2024
the company announced that it had reached a second and final close
on its Series C funding round bringing the total size of the round
to €150m.
·
Astroscale: the Company sold
a further 629,240 shares, equivalent to
47% of its holding, for additional
proceeds of £3.5m. This is equivalent to 77% of the original
Sterling cost of those shares that were sold.
Outlook
Although we continue to actively
seek out exceptional new potential investment opportunities, based
on SSIT's current resources, we anticipate that our focus for the
year ahead will primarily be on supporting the existing
portfolio.
We expect to make a limited number
of follow-on investments during the course of the year into those
companies that may require additional support and in which we have
the greatest conviction.
We will continue to work closely
with the portfolio's key growth stage assets as some of them now
approach the potentially significant milestone of becoming EBITDA
profitable. We believe achieving this could in due course provide a
springboard for potential IPOs and/or acquisition
interest.
We are optimistic that recent
trends around growing customer demand and sustained investor
interest will continue to benefit the portfolio during the year
ahead, helping our portfolio companies to maintain a positive
trajectory.
Mark Boggett
CEO
Seraphim Space Manager
LLP
Investment Manager
14 October 2024
Top 10
Investments
|
ICEYE
|
D-Orbit
|
ALL.SPACE
|
HawkEye 360
|
LeoLabs
|
Web
|
www.iceye.com
|
www.dorbit.space
|
www.all.space
|
www.he360.com
|
www.leolabs.space
|
HQ
|
Finland
|
Italy
|
UK
|
US
|
US
|
Taxonomy
|
Platform / Earth
Observation
|
Launch / In-orbit
Services
|
Downlink / Ground
Terminals
|
Platform / Earth
Observation
|
Product / Data
Platforms
|
Status
|
Private / Unicorn
|
Private / Soonicorn
|
Private / Minicorn
|
Private / Soonicorn
|
Private / Minicorn
|
Stake category
|
>5-10%
|
>5-10%
|
>10-15%
|
0-5%
|
0-5%
|
Fair value vs. cost
|
121%
|
285%
|
108%
|
115%
|
111%
|
Valuation method
|
Premium to price of recent
investment
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment
|
Description
|
ICEYE operates the world's first
and largest constellation of miniaturised satellites that use radar
to image the earth both during the day and night, even through
cloud. ICEYE's radar technology has the ability to monitor change
in near real-time.
|
D-Orbit is the market leader in
the space logistics and orbital transportation services
industry.
|
ALL.SPACE is aiming to create a
mesh network of satellite connectivity by developing an antenna
capable of connecting to any satellite in any constellation in any
orbit.
|
HawkEye 360 operates the world's
largest satellite constellation collecting radio frequency signals
to identify and geolocate previously invisible
activities.
|
LeoLabs is providing the mapping
service for space by deploying a network of ground-based antennas
capable of detecting objects as small as 2cm as far as 1,000km
away.
|
Total estimated long-term
addressable market
|
$10bn+
|
$1-5bn
|
$10bn+
|
$10bn+
|
$1-5bn
|
Key sectors addressed
|
Insurance, defence,
climate
|
Space logistics,
datacentres
|
Communications, defence,
transport
|
Maritime, defence
|
Space, insurance,
defence
|
Principal UN SDG
alignment:
Recent Key
Developments:
|
13, 11, 2
· Generated over $100m in revenue in 2023.
· Launched 7 satellites in 2024 YTD.
· Ranked no. 30 in the 'Financial Times 1,000' of Europe's
fastest growing companies.
· Closed oversubscribed $93m growth round
|
9, 11
· Closed €150m Series C funding round.
· Established D-Orbit USA to enter the US market and pursue
opportunities in satellite bus manufacturing.
· Successfully launched its 12th and 13th ION Satellite Carrier
missions.
|
9, 8, 10
· Closed additional funding from existing investors including
SSIT.
· Appointed 30-year satcoms / defence sector veteran, Paul
McCarter, as new CEO.
|
9, 16, 8
· Closed $68m Series D-1 funding round led by BlackRock and
$40m in debt financing from Silicon Valley Bank.
· Completed the acquisition of RF Solutions from
Maxar.
· Increased its constellation to 31 satellites in
orbit
|
9, 16, 17
· Closed $29m additional equity financing.
· Appointed Tony Frazier (formerly of Maxar Technologies) as
new CEO.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SatVu
|
Xona Space Systems
|
PlanetWatchers
|
AST SpaceMobile
|
Tomorrow.io
|
|
Web
|
www.satellitevu.com
|
www.xonaspace.com
|
www.planetwatchers.com
|
ast-science.com
|
www.tomorrow.io
|
|
HQ
|
UK
|
US
|
UK
|
US
|
US
|
|
Taxonomy
|
Platform / Earth
Observation
|
Platform / PNT
|
Analyse / Data
Analytics
|
Platform /
Communications
|
Platform / Data
Platforms
|
|
Status
|
Private / Minicorn
|
Private / Soonicorn
|
Private / Seedcorn
|
Public / Listed
|
Private / Soonicorn
|
|
Stake category
|
>10-15%
|
>10-15%
|
>25-50%
|
0-5%
|
0-5%
|
|
Fair value vs. cost
|
160%
|
98%
|
87%
|
99%
|
94%
|
|
Valuation method
|
Partial write down to price of
recent investment
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment
|
Partial write down to price of
recent investment
|
Mark to market
|
Partial write down to price of
recent investment
|
|
Description
|
SatVu is aiming to monitor the
heat signatures of any building on the planet in near real time to
determine valuable insights into economic activity, energy
efficiency and carbon footprint.
|
Developing a next-generation GPS
satellite constellation for more secure and precise position and
timing.
|
PlanetWatchers has developed an
AI-enabled analytics platform using satellite radar imagery for
crop monitoring, insurance and automated insurance claims
assessments.
|
AST SpaceMobile is launching a
constellation of cell towers in space, providing direct to cell 5G
connectivity from space.
|
Tomorrow.io is powering actionable
weather insights around the world. The company's mission is to help
countries, businesses and individuals better manage their
weather-related challenges with the best information and
insights.
|
|
Total estimated long-term
addressable market
|
$1-5bn
|
$10bn+
|
$5-10bn
|
$50bn+
|
$30bn+
|
|
Key sectors addressed
|
Energy, property, defence,
climate
|
Transport, defence,
logistics
|
Agriculture, insurance,
climate
|
Space, telecoms,
communications
|
Logistics, aviation, maritime,
government civil, government defence
|
Principal UN SDG
alignment:
Recent Key
Developments:
|
7, 11, 13
· Commissioned its 1st satellite and entered commercial
operations.
· Satellite then suffered an issue resulting in its
failure.
· Completed first close of new funding round.
· Ordered 2nd and 3rd satellites.
|
8, 9, 11
· Completed $19m Series A funding round led by Future Ventures
and SSIT.
|
12, 2, 8
· Launched new enterprise SaaS product to further simplify
acreage reporting and claims processing.
|
9, 11, 10
· Signed commercial agreements with both AT&T and
Verizon.
· Raised over $300m including strategic equity investments from
AT&T and Google.
· Successfully launched first 5 commercial
satellites.
|
13, 14, 9
· Demonstrated unprecedented accuracy of weather data from its
pathfinder satellites.
· Named in 'TIME 100 Most Influential Companies'
list.
· Named by Fast Company as the world's most innovative
logistics company.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Responsible Investment
'The Investment Manager continues
to engage with the space industry and portfolio companies to help
them deliver positive sustainability impacts and mitigate ESG
risks.'
Sarah Shackleton
COO, Seraphim Space
The Company is focused on being a
responsible investor and taking into consideration environmental,
social and governance ('ESG') factors.
The Investment Manager is a
signatory to Principles of Responsible Investment, the UN-supported
network of investors dedicated to promoting sustainable investment
through incorporating ESG factors into their investment and
ownership decisions (the 'UN
PRI'). The Investment Manager submitted its first UN PRI
annual report in 2024.
Responsible Investment Policy
The Investment Manager's
Responsible Investment Policy, which has been adopted by the
Company, may be found at https://seraphim.vc/esg/.
The Investment Manager reviews and updates its Responsible
Investment Policy as necessary to reflect emerging regulations and
best practices.
The Directors and Investment
Manager believe that ensuring robust assessment of ESG-related
risks and opportunities as part of the investment analysis and
decision-making processes leads to investment in more robust
businesses, ultimately creating long-term, sustainable
value.
Potential Sustainability Impact
The Investment Manager believes
that the portfolio companies' contribution to the United Nations
Sustainable Development Goals (the 'SDGs') and their underlying targets is
a key factor in the delivery of sustainability impact by the
portfolio and, as such, consideration of the SDGs is an integral
part of Seraphim Space's decision-making process. Each portfolio
company contributes to at least one SDG, and every SDG is addressed
by at least one portfolio company. SDG 9
(innovation/infrastructure) is, unsurprisingly, the most common
SDG, with 22 portfolio companies contributing to it.
Seraphim Space is represented on
the Advisory Board of the Space Sustainability Principles by the
Earth & Space Sustainability Initiative ('ESSI')[2].
Ownership and ESG reporting
Seraphim Space works with the
shareholders, boards and management teams of portfolio companies to
help them achieve sustainability impacts and mitigate ESG
risks.
In situations where a portfolio
company fails to address adequately any significant risks
identified at investment, Seraphim Space will take this into
consideration when assessing follow-on investment opportunities
into the company.
Objective Reporting Metrics for ESG Factors
Percentage of desired
measures1 in place across the portfolio2 to
manage ESG risk
77%
(30
June 2023: 67%)
|
Proportion of the active
portfolio with a founder who identifies as female or from an ethnic
minority
24%
(30
June 2023: 20%)
|
Senior management
identifying as female or from an ethnic minority within the
portfolio2
25%
(30
June 2023: 21%)
|
Seraphim Space staff
identifying as female / from an ethnic minority
47% /
13%
(30
June 2023: 50% / 20%)
|
Average portfolio company
headcount growth3 8.1%
(30
June 2023: 22.1%)
|
Percentage of energy
consumption that is renewable2
20%
(30
June 2023: 30%)
|
1 Desired measures as explained under 'ESG Governance and Risk
Management' below. Source:
Portfolio company data.
2 Fair value weighted average (as defined in the Glossary
below.) of the portfolio
companies providing information (which represented 93% of the fair
value as at 30 June 2024 and 95% of the fair value as at 30 June
2023). Source: Portfolio company data.
3 Fair value weighted average (as defined in the Glossary
below.) year-on-year
growth for the 12 months ended 30 June 2024 of the private
companies in the top 10, representing 82% of fair value (72% of
NAV) as at 30 June 2024 (2023: 86% of fair value, 72% of NAV).
Source: Portfolio company data.
93% of the portfolio by fair value
as at 30 June 2024 (2023: 95%) provided the above data, with the
remaining 7% (2023: 5%) comprised predominantly of listed portfolio
companies or private companies where SSIT had no information
rights.
ESG governance and risk
management
The Investment Manager allocates
points (up to a maximum of 15) to private portfolio companies based
on the number of measures that it would like to see and which they
have in place to manage ESG risk, including frequency of discussion
of such topics by the board and the policies and processes to
assess and mitigate such risks. On a fair value weighted basis, 77%
of the desired measures were in place across the portfolio as at 30
June 2024 (up from 67% at the prior year end), as companies
increasingly focused on ESG, governance and risk driven by
shareholder influence and general market adoption.
Diversity
A growing body of evidence
suggests that diverse teams are more innovative and achieve higher
returns than those with just one gender and/or one race or
ethnicity represented[3]. Forbes outlines
the outperformance of diverse teams, explaining that companies with
at least one female or ethnically diverse founder generate over 60%
in business value[4]. The SSIT active portfolio
includes six companies (24%) with a diverse founder i.e. one that
identifies as female or from an ethnic minority.
SSIT portfolio diversity statistics
|
|
|
SSIT
portfolio1
|
Industry comparisons
|
|
Average
|
Fair
value weighted average2
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Board members identifying as
female
|
13%
|
9%
|
9%
|
4%
|
High tech companies 2020 -
8%3
|
Board members identifying as from
an ethnic minority
|
10%
|
7%
|
12%
|
9%
|
|
Senior management identifying as
female or from an ethnic minority
|
25%
|
19%
|
25%
|
21%
|
|
Staff identifying as female or
from an ethnic minority
|
25%
|
27%
|
13%
|
23%
|
Venture capital-backed startups
2020 - men (89.3%) and white (71.6%)4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sources: Portfolio company information; Seraphim Space
analysis
Notes: 1 Data provided by portfolio companies
representing 93% of the fair value as of 30 June 2024
(95% of the fair value as of 30
June 2023 for prior year statistics).
2 Fair value weighted average (as defined in the
Glossary below).
3 https://techcrunch.com/2021/08/29/diversifying-startups-and-vc-power-corridors/.
4
https://venturebeat.com/games/diversity-vc-reports-1-87-of-venture-capital-allocated-to-women-and-minority-owned-startups/.
Compared to the diversity
information outlined in the BVCA and Level 20 Diversity &
Inclusion 2023 Report and the BVCA Diversity & Inclusion 2024
Report, as at 30 June 2024, Seraphim Space outperformed the market
in overall female representation as outlined in the chart in the
annual report, but lagged in terms of ethnic minority
representation.
Seraphim Space and SSIT diversity compared to the UK Private
Equity and Venture Capital ('PE/VC') Industry
Job creation
As portfolio companies continue to
access funding and continue to deliver against milestones, they
also drive job creation. On a fair value weighted basis, the
private companies in the top 10 holdings grew headcount by 8.1% in
the 12 months to 30 June 2024 (compared to 22.1% in the prior
year).
Carbon emissions/energy
reduction
In 2024, Seraphim Space conducted
its first carbon footprint assessment, validated by One Carbon
World Ltd. This assessment encompassed all activities under
Seraphim Space's operational control, including Scopes 1, 2 and
partial Scope 3, as outlined in The Greenhouse Gas Protocol: A
Corporate Accounting and Reporting Standard (Revised Edition) (the
'Protocol').
The Protocol aligns with
international standards ISO 14064 and PAS 2060. During the
measurement period from 1 April 2023 to 31 March 2024, Seraphim
Space's GHG emissions were recorded at 267.29 tCO2e. To
achieve carbon neutrality for this period, the Firm balanced all
emissions by retiring 268 tCO2e through 100 + 168
Certified Emissions Reductions from the UN Clean Development
Mechanism project titled 'GHG Emission Reduction: Saving the Ozone
Layer'. The carbon neutrality of the Investment Manager's
activities has been achieved in accordance with the One Carbon
World Carbon Neutral International Standard.
Given the fact that the private
portfolio companies are relatively early in their life, a number
are not yet measuring energy consumption, and Scope 1/2 and 3
carbon emissions are only measured by five and four private
portfolio companies respectively (up from four and two in the prior
year). On a fair value weighted basis, 20% of energy consumption is
renewable. We are planning to engage with the portfolio companies
to drive further work in this key area having now completed the
Investment Manager's first carbon assessment.
Business Review
Business Model
SSIT is the world's first and only
listed SpaceTech fund providing public access to private SpaceTech
businesses.
The Company carries on business as
an investment trust, which is a form of a collective investment
vehicle constituted as a closed-ended public limited company. The
Company's shares are traded on the
closed-ended investment funds category of the London Stock
Exchange's main market.
The Company has no employees. It
is managed by the Board, comprising four independent non-executive
Directors, which is responsible for the overall stewardship and
governance of the Company. The management of the Company's
investments in accordance with its investment objective and policy
is delegated to the Investment Manager and the Company's other
day-to-day functions, including administrative, financial and share
registration services, are carried out by duly appointed service
providers. The Board oversees the activities and performance of the
Investment Manager and other key service providers.
Investment Strategy
The Company provides investors
with exposure to nascent SpaceTech companies, being businesses
which rely on space-based connectivity or precision, navigation and
timing signals, or whose technology or services are already
addressing, originally derived from or of potential benefit to the
space sector. These businesses comprise companies providing the
SpaceTech infrastructure for collecting and communicating data,
principally via satellites, as well as companies with the
technology that facilitates the exploitation of this data for
terrestrial applications in areas such as climate, communications,
mobility and security (including cyber security).
Investment Objective
The Company's objective is to
generate capital growth over the long term through investment in a
diversified, international portfolio of predominantly early and
growth stage unquoted SpaceTech businesses with the potential to
dominate globally.
Investment Policy
The Company seeks exposure to
early and growth stage privately financed SpaceTech businesses,
acquiring primarily minority holdings. The Company intends to
realise long-term value through exiting its investments over
time.
The Company invests
internationally with a view to maintaining a diversified portfolio
primarily located in the US, UK and continental Europe. The
Company's portfolio is expected to comprise 20 to 50 holdings. The
Company will at all times invest and manage the portfolio in a
manner consistent with spreading investment risk.
Investments are mainly in the form
of equity and equity-related instruments although the Company may
invest in a range of financial instruments including, without
limit, securities, derivatives, warrants, options, futures,
convertible bonds, convertible loan notes, convertible loan stocks
or convertible preferred equity. The Company may also on occasion
invest in other debt-based investments not referred to above,
including, without limit, loan stock, payment-in kind instruments
and shareholder loans. In addition to participating in new issues,
the Company may also undertake secondary transactions that involve
the acquisition of existing stakes.
The Company may invest in
companies, as well as other forms of legal entity, including
partnerships and limited liability partnerships. The Company may
acquire investments directly or by way of holdings in special
purpose vehicles, intermediate holding entities or other
structures. The Company will not invest in other listed
closed-ended investment funds.
Investment
restrictions
The Company will invest and manage
its assets with the objective of spreading risk through the
following investment restrictions:
· other than the ability for the aggregate value of the
Company's holding in one single portfolio company or other entity
to represent up to 20% of gross asset value, the aggregate value of
the Company's
holding in any other single portfolio company or other entity will
represent no more than 15% of gross asset value; and
· the Company's aggregate investment in publicly quoted companies will
represent no more than 30% of gross asset value.
The Company will generally only
invest in publicly quoted companies that constituted part of the
Initial Portfolio or the Retained Assets or in circumstances where
it has already made an initial investment prior to the portfolio
company's initial public offering. However, the Company may invest
up to 5% of gross asset value in aggregate in publicly quoted
companies that do not constitute part of the Initial Portfolio or
the Retained Assets or in which it has not already made an initial
investment prior to an initial public offering. For the avoidance of doubt, any process by which an unlisted
investment of the Company becomes listed shall be deemed not to be
a new investment by the Company.
Each of the restrictions referred
to above is calculated at the time of investment. The Company will
not be required to dispose of any investment or to rebalance the
portfolio as a result of a change in the respective valuations of
its assets.
Hedging and
derivatives
Save for investments made using
equity-related instruments as described above, the Company will not
employ derivatives of any kind for investment purposes other than
to potentially hedge downside risk on a quoted portfolio company
for specific reasons, such as where the Company is subject to
lock-up provisions. Derivatives may be used for currency hedging
purposes.
Borrowings
Although the Company does not
intend to use structural gearing with a view to enhancing returns
on investments, the Company may, from time to time, use borrowings
for the purpose of bridging investments, managing its working
capital requirements and efficient portfolio management purposes.
Borrowings will not exceed 10% of NAV, calculated at the time of
drawdown of the relevant borrowings.
Cash
management
The Company may hold cash on
deposit and may invest in cash equivalent investments, which may
include short-term investments in money market-type funds and
tradeable debt securities ('Cash
and Cash Equivalents'). There is no restriction on the
amount of Cash or Cash Equivalents that the Company may hold or
where it is held.
Cash and Cash Equivalents will be
held with approved counterparties and in line with prudent cash
management guidelines agreed between the Board and the Investment
Manager.
The Company will hold sufficient
Cash or Cash Equivalents for the purpose of making follow-on
investments in accordance with the Company's investment policy and
to manage the working capital requirements of the
Company.
Target Returns and Dividend Policy
The Directors intend to manage the
Company's affairs to achieve shareholder returns through capital
growth rather than income.
The Company has no formal
benchmark. However, the Company targets an annualised total return
on the Company's portfolio of at least 20% over the long term
(adjusted for any dividends paid or share buy-backs by the
Company). This is a target only and reflects the Investment
Manager's expectations of the potential returns that can be
generated by investing in a portfolio of early and growth stage
private SpaceTech companies which have the potential to generate
substantial returns for their shareholders over the long term
whilst recognising that not all portfolio companies will achieve
their potential and that some may fail in their entirety. This
should not be taken as an indication of the Company's expected
future performance, return or results over any period and does not
constitute a profit forecast. The actual return generated by the
Company over any period will depend on a wide range of factors,
including, but not limited to, the terms of the investments made,
the performance of its portfolio companies, general macroeconomic
conditions and fluctuations in currency exchange rates.
As the Company's priority is to
produce capital growth over the long term, it has no dividend
target and will not seek to provide shareholders with a particular
level of distribution. However, the Company intends to comply with
the requirements for maintaining investment trust status for the
purposes of section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 regarding
distributable income. Therefore, in accordance with regulation 19
of the Investment Trust (Approved Company) (Tax) Regulations 2011,
the Company will not (except to the extent permitted by those
regulations) retain more than 15% of its income (as calculated for
UK tax purposes) in respect of each accounting period and any
excess will be distributed in the form of a final
dividend.
Share Rating Management
The Board recognises the need to
address any sustained and significant imbalance of buyers and
sellers which might otherwise lead to the ordinary shares trading
at a material discount or premium to their NAV.
The Board has not adopted any
formal discount or premium targets which would dictate the point at
which the Company would seek to buy back or issue ordinary shares.
However, the Board is committed to utilising its share buy-back and
issuance authorities where appropriate in such a way as to mitigate
the effects of any such imbalance. In considering whether buy-back
or issuance might be appropriate in any particular set of
circumstances, the Board will take into account, amongst other
things, prevailing market conditions, (in the case of buy-backs)
the level of the Company's discount relative to those of other
listed investment companies investing mainly in private companies,
the cash resources readily available to the Company, the Company's
immediate pipeline of investment opportunities, the level of the
Company's borrowings (if any), the Company's working capital
requirements and the degree of NAV accretion that will result from
the buy-back or issuance, and, in the case of buy-backs, whether
higher returns could be made from investing capital than buying
back ordinary shares.
Details of the share repurchase
programme implemented during the year are set out under 'Share
Price' below. The Board
will keep shareholders informed, on a regular and ongoing basis, of
the approach which it has adopted to share rating management,
principally through commentary in the Company's Annual and Interim
Reports.
Key Performance Indicators
The Board uses a number of
performance measures to assess the Company's success in meeting its
strategic objectives. The key performance indicators ('KPIs') (also referred to as
alternative performance measures) are:
· the movement in NAV per share (as the Company does not pay
dividends, this is the same as the NAV total return per
share);
· the movement in the share price (as the Company does not pay
dividends, this is the same as the total shareholder
return);
· the premium/discount of the share price to the NAV per
share;
· ongoing charges; and
· the portfolio fair value vs. cost.
The first four KPIs are
established industry measures. Having regard to the Company's
target return, we believe that, at this stage in the Company's
life, the portfolio fair value vs. cost is an appropriate KPI to
measure the portfolio's performance. The KPIs have not changed from
the prior year.
Due to the unique nature of the
Company's investment strategy, there are no direct listed
competitors or directly comparable indices. Consequently, we do not
consider that there is a relevant external comparison against which
to assess the KPIs and, as such, performance against the KPIs is
considered on an absolute basis.
An explanation of the KPIs can be
found in the Alternative Performance Measures section below. The KPIs for the year ended 30
June 2024 (and the prior year) are shown below. Additional comments on the
performance of the Company during the year are provided in the
Chair's Statement and Investment Manager's Report.
Environmental, Social and Governance
Matters
Socially responsible
investment
The Board has endorsed the
Investment Manager's Responsible Investment Policy, which seeks to
ensure that the Investment Manager's management of SSIT's
investments takes account of environmental, social, governance and
ethical factors, where appropriate. However, the Company does not
have explicit sustainability investment objectives or policies and
does not, and will not seek to, apply a sustainability label under
the FCA's UK Sustainability Disclosure Requirements and investment
labels regime.
The Investment Manager actively
engages with portfolio companies on ESG factors and often has a
participation role at board level with such companies, helping to
guide their governance policies. Details of the Investment
Manager's Responsible Investment Policy are included below.
Environment
As an investment company with all
its activities outsourced to third parties, the Company does not
have any physical assets, property, employees or operations of its
own and, therefore, the Company's own direct environmental impact
is minimal. The Company has no greenhouse gas emissions to report
from its operations, nor does it have responsibility for any other
emissions producing sources under the Companies (Directors' Report)
and Limited Liability Partnerships (Energy and Carbon Reporting)
Regulations 2018. For the same reasons, the Company considers
itself to be a low energy user (i.e. it uses less than 40,000kWh of
energy in the reporting period) for the purpose of Streamlined
Energy & Carbon Reporting and, therefore, is not required to
disclose energy and carbon information.
As an investment company, SSIT is
exempt from the FCA's UK Listing Rules requirement to report
against the Taskforce for Climate-related Financial Disclosures
framework.
A key focus of the Investment
Manager's Responsible Investment Policy, and its engagement with
portfolio companies, is on their management of environmental risks,
particularly those associated with climate change, and their
ability to develop products and services that help address climate
change impacts.
Employees, human rights and
community issues
The Board recognises the
requirement under section 414C of the Companies Act 2006 to provide
information about employees, human rights and community issues,
including information in respect of any of its policies in relation
to these matters and their effectiveness. This requirement does not
apply to SSIT as it has no employees, all of the Directors are
non‑executive and
it has outsourced all of its functions to third-party service
providers. Consequently, SSIT has not reported further in respect
of this requirement.
Modern
slavery
The Company does not provide goods
or services in the normal course of business and, as an investment
company, does not have customers. Consequently, the Directors do
not consider that the Company is required to make a statement under
the Modern Slavery Act 2015 in relation to slavery or human
trafficking.
Diversity
The Board and Investment Manager
strongly believe that having diversity in professional skills,
experience, identity and cognitive thought has significant benefits
when making decisions.
The Board's diversity policy is
set out on the Corporate Governance Report below. The Board currently comprises
four independent Directors appointed on merit-based qualifications.
The professional skills and experience which the current members of
the Board bring to SSIT's leadership are described below. Currently, the Board has 75%
female representation (greater than the FCA's target for listed
companies of 40%) and the Senior Independent Director (Sue Inglis)
is also female (in line with the FCA's target for listed companies
of one senior position being held by a woman). The Board does not
currently have at least one member from a minority ethnic
background (contrary to the FCA's target for listed companies). For
the reasons set out in its Report below, the Nomination Committee
concluded, in its annual review of the Board composition, that
recruitment of a Director solely to meet the ethnic diversity
target was not appropriate for the time being but agreed that this
will be a key consideration for future appointments.
The Investment Manager (together
with its affiliates) has a diverse employee base (currently, 47%
female and 13% from ethnic minority backgrounds) and continues to
dedicate recruiting resources to increasing its diversity across
all positions and levels.
Integrity and business
ethics
We have a zero-tolerance policy in
relation to business ethics and tax evasion. As the Company's
operations are delegated to third-party service providers, as part
of the annual evaluation of the Investment Manager, Administrator
and other key service providers, we seek confirmation that (a)
adequate safeguards are in place in keeping with the Bribery Act
2010, the Criminal Finances Act 2017 and the sanctions element of
the Economic Crime (Transparency and Enforcement) Act 2022 to
protect against any such potentially illegal behaviour by employees
or agents and (b) a zero-tolerance policy towards the provision of
illegal services is maintained, together with details of the
safeguards.
Risk and Risk Management
Risk
appetite
The Board is ultimately
responsible for defining the level and type of risk that the
Company considers appropriate, ensuring it remains in line with the
Company's investment objective and investment policy which set out
the key components of its risk appetite. The Company's risk
appetite is considered in light of the principal and emerging risks
that the Company faces.
Risk
management
The Board, through the Audit
Committee, has established, in conjunction with the Investment
Manager and Administrator, an ongoing process that is designed to
identify, manage and mitigate on a timely basis both the principal
and emerging risks inherent to the Company's business and
activities.
The risk management process
includes undertaking, at least half-yearly, a robust assessment of
the principal and emerging investment, financial, regulatory and
operational risks facing the Company. Particular attention is given
to those risks that might threaten the long-term viability of the
Company and identified key risks are recorded in the Company's risk
matrix, which, in the case of each risk, assesses the likelihood of
it occurring and its potential impact, the controls in place to
mitigate it, the effectiveness of those controls and the residual
likelihood of it occurring and the residual potential
impact.
Further information on the
Company's risk management and internal controls can be found in the
Corporate Governance Report below.
Principal risks and uncertainties
Based on the Company's risk
matrix, the principal risks and uncertainties faced by the Company
are those listed in the table below, which also summarises the
potential impact of those risks and the controls in place to
mitigate them. During the year the Board reviewed and concluded
that public share price volatility and ESG are no longer considered
to be principal risks faced by the Company and are therefore not
captured in the table below.
Risk
|
Potential impacts
|
Mitigation/controls
|
1. Portfolio company performance
Risk that portfolio companies, being predominantly early and
growth stage private companies which may lack breadth and depth of
management team and capital and have a higher risk profile than
larger, more established companies, are unable to commercialise
their technology, products, business concepts or services and/or
otherwise fail to achieve their business
objectives
|
· Reduction in a portfolio company's valuation, potentially
resulting in 100% write-off
· Adverse impact on SSIT's ability to realise the investment in
a profitable and timely manner
· Reduced NAV and shareholder returns
|
· The Investment Manager has extensive experience of investing
into and supporting early and growth stage businesses and it
provides support and has experience of improving portfolio company
management teams and changing them if necessary
· As companies grow and develop, their management teams tend to
also expand to manage the growth
· The Investment Manager actively engages with portfolio
companies, including, in many cases, by way of board representation
or observer status
· The Investment Manager has a rigorous investment process that
is designed to identify and manage risks
· A third-party technical due diligence provider is engaged
prior to every material investment to assess the technological and
market opportunity
· The Investment Manager monitors progress against critical
milestones, with the aim of supporting portfolio companies with
changes in strategy where progress is not as anticipated
· SSIT's investment strategy is to ensure sufficient
diversification within its portfolio by investing in a range of
companies at different stages in their lifecycle and across a range
of sub- sectors and geographies, and to syndicate investments with
other investors to ensure portfolio companies are well
capitalised
· During the year, the Company sold a number of early stage
companies to Seraphim Space Ventures II LP (the 'Venture Fund') and invested into the
Venture Fund which will allow for greater diversification of
exposure to early stage companies and mean there is less
requirement for follow-on investment
· The Investment Manager provides a detailed update at each
scheduled Board meeting, including information on investment
environment, portfolio performance, specific factors affecting
portfolio companies (individually or collectively), transactions,
investment pipeline and cash flow forecasts
|
2. Liquidity
Risk that SSIT has insufficient liquid resources to particate
in subsequent funding rounds by portfolio companies or make new
investments
|
· Dilution of SSIT's holdings in existing portfolio
companies
· Reduced portfolio valuation
· Reduced NAV and shareholder return
· Reputational damage
|
· The Investment Manager monitors the cash runways of portfolio
companies and maintains cash flow projections based on its
assessment of return potential, timing and scale of potential
funding rounds, the ability of others in portfolio company
syndicates to support funding rounds, the availability of new
investment opportunities and SSIT's projected operating costs in
order to manage SSIT's ability to participate in forthcoming
funding rounds
· Cash flow forecasts are reviewed regularly by the
Board
· During the year, the Company sold a number of early stage
companies to the Venture Fund and invested into the Venture Fund
and there is no longer any requirement for follow-on investment
into those companies by SSIT, enabling SSIT to concentrate its
resources available for investment on its more mature
assets
· Portfolio companies have a track
record of raising significant capital to meet their funding
requirements from other internal and external investors
|
3. Valuation
Risk that estimates, assumptions and judgements used in
valuing SSIT's investments in private companies lead to a material
misstatement of the valuation and, consequently, of SSIT's
NAV
|
· Reputational damage
· Reduced NAV and shareholder returns
· Reduced demand for SSIT's shares
· Reduced liquidity in SSIT's share trading
· Increase in share price discount
|
· Valuations are prepared in accordance with the IPEV Valuation
Guidelines and the Investment Manager's valuation policy, which has
been formally reviewed by the Board and commented upon by the
Company's Auditor and is consistently applied
The Audit Committee meets with the
Investment Manager at special meetings solely to consider the
quarterly valuations, giving the Audit Committee an opportunity to
challenge the valuations and to request further information before
the valuations are approved SSIT's external Auditor reviews the
valuations and methodology and typically attends ad hoc Audit
committee meetings when interim and year end valuations are
presented and discussed by the Investment Manager as part of their
annual audit review procedures
|
4. Realisation
Risk that, as SSIT's private company investments are illiquid
and its investments may have restrictions on sale or transfer of
shares, SSIT may be unable to realise investments at short notice
or at all and/or the price achieved on any realisation may be at a
material discount to the prevailing valuation
|
· Reduced NAV and shareholder returns
|
· SSIT's investment strategy is to hold investments for the
long term in order to deliver capital growth, SSIT has no debt,
dividend or buy-back obligations, it does not have a fixed life and
it manages its liquidity to pay its operating costs as they fall
due, so there is no pressure to realise investments
· As set out opposite 'Valuation' above, SSIT has a robust and
consistent valuation process
|
5. Macroeconomic
Risk that the performance and business continuity of
portfolio companies may be materially adversely affected by
geopolitical risks, including conflict a pandemic/epidemic, climate
change and/or other macroeconomic conditions, including, interest
rate rises and inflation.
|
· Significant widescale disruption impacting businesses
generally
· Adverse impact on global markets and investor
sentiment
· Reduced portfolio valuations
· Reduced NAV and shareholder return
· Reduced liquidity in SSIT's share trading
· Increase in share price discount
· SSIT's access to additional capital constrained
|
· The Investment Manager completes extensive due diligence
procedures prior to investment and, on an ongoing basis, monitors
and works closely with portfolio companies to provide advice and
experience in dealing with adverse macroeconomic conditions and
disruptive events
|
6. Foreign exchange
Risk that FX movements materially adversely affect the value
of investments made in currencies other than
Sterling
|
· Reduced NAV and shareholder returns
|
· SSIT invests globally and has exposure to several
non-Sterling currencies, providing some FX risk
diversification
· Whilst it is not currently SSIT's policy to actively manage
FX risk, the Investment Manager monitors FX rates and may, in
consultation with the Board and SSIT's corporate brokers, explore
mitigating options
· The Company has engaged a provider who has demonstrated a
track record of favourable rates for FX spot trades
|
7. Investment return
Risk that SSIT fails to achieve its investment objective and
provide a satisfactory investment return
|
• Reduced demand for SSIT's shares
• Reduced liquidity in SSIT's share trading
• Increase in share price discount
|
• The returns on SSIT's private company investments are the
principal drivers of the overall investment return; as set out in
other risks, in particular, 'Portfolio company performance',
'Liquidity' and 'Realisation' above, there are robust controls in
place to mitigate the principal risks associated with such
investments
• The Board conducts a rigorous strategy review
annually
|
8. Discount
Risk that SSIT's shares trade at a material discount to NAV
as a result of an imbalance between buyers and sellers which may
occur for a wide variety of reasons
|
• Reduced liquidity in SSIT's share trading
• Reduced shareholder return
• Discount may attract short-term investors with return
aspirations materially different to SSIT's investors supportive of
its long-term strategy
• SSIT's access to additional capital constrained
|
• The Board, the Investment Manager and SSIT's corporate
brokers monitor the SSIT share price discount (and premium) on an
ongoing basis and movements in the share register on a regular
basis, taking into account broader market conditions
• Proactive investor communication and engagement by the Board,
the Investment Manager and SSIT's corporate brokers to enhance
investors' understanding of SSIT, its strategy and associated
risks
• Shareholders are encouraged to engage freely with the Board
on matters that are of concern to them so that the Board can
understand their views and concerns and consider them in its
discussions and decision-making
• SSIT has authorities in place to buy back shares, which the
Board may use when deemed to be in the best interests of
shareholders as a whole
• In July 2023, the Board announced a buy-back programme to
support the Company's share price in light of the significant
discount it was experiencing and 2,186,344 shares had been bought
back and were held in treasury as at 30 June 2024
|
9. Key persons
Risk that one or more of Mark Boggett, James Bruegger and Rob
Desborough (key members of the Investment Manager's team at the
time of IPO) and recently promoted Andre Ronsoehr cease to be
actively engaged in the management of SSIT's
portfolio
|
• Adverse impact on SSIT's ability to implement its investment
strategy
• Reduced NAV and shareholder returns
|
• The Investment Manager has controls and incentives in regard
to key person retention, including annual bonus, share of any
performance fee payable by SSIT and succession planning
• The Investment Manager's recruitment and appointments since
SSIT's IPO have added further depth to its team
• The Investment Management Agreement may be terminated by SSIT
if a key person leaves the Investment Manager and is not
replaced by (a) person(s) of equal or satisfactory standing within
a specified timeframe
|
Emerging risks
Following consideration of the
investment, financial, regulatory and operational risks facing the
Company, the Board concluded that there were no emerging risks
facing the Company that required to be added to the principal risks
and uncertainties during the year ended 30 June 2024 or since that
date up to the date of this Annual Report.
Longer-term Viability
As required by the AIC Code, the
Directors have assessed the prospects of the Company over a period
longer than the 12 months required for the going concern statement.
The Board, with the assistance of the Audit Committee, has assessed
the Company's prospects over the period of three years ending 30
September 2027. The Board has chosen this period because it is
consistent with the three-year basis that the Directors evaluate
the Company's financial position on a quarterly basis and
projecting financial and economic scenarios over a longer period
would be imprecise given the lack of long-term economic visibility.
During the viability assessment period ending 30 September 2027, an
ordinary resolution will be proposed at the AGM in 2026 pertaining
to the Company continuing as an investment company.
In assessing the Company's
prospects and longer-term viability, we have taken into
account:
· the nature of the Company's business;
· the principal risks and their mitigation identified under
'Principal risks and uncertainties' above;
· the Company's cash and cash equivalents, as well as the value
of its listed holdings;
· the Company's cash requirements to meet ongoing fees and
expenses is monitored by the Investment Manager, and the Company
expects to maintain sufficient assets in cash reserves to meet
these obligations;
· the ability of the Investment Manager and Directors to
minimise the level of cash outflows, if necessary, as the
Investment Manager considers the Company's future cash requirements
before making investments and the Board receives regular updates
from the Investment Manager on the Company's cash position and
forecast cash flows, which allows the Board to limit funding for
existing and/or new investments as required;
· the circumstances in which a performance fee is payable to
the Investment Manager as outlined in note 4 to the financial
statements below;
and
· the Company does not have any gearing or any obligation to
pay dividends or buy back shares.
We have also assumed that SSIT's
performance will continue to be satisfactory and that there will
continue to be demand for UK-listed investment companies. Based on
this and recent feedback received through regular shareholder
engagement, we currently anticipate that the ordinary resolution to
be proposed at the 2026 AGM to continue SSIT as an investment
company will be passed.
The process for identifying,
evaluating and managing significant and any emerging risks faced by
the Company and periodic reports from the Investment Manager and
Administrator regarding such risks are reviewed routinely at Audit
Committee and Board meetings. The Board ensures that effective
controls are in place to mitigate these risks and that a
satisfactory compliance regime exists to ensure all applicable
local and international laws and regulations are upheld. When
required, the Company seeks expert advice regarding tax, legal and
other factors.
Based on a robust assessment of
the principal and emerging risks facing the Company, the Board
believes that the most significant risks to the Company's
longer-term viability are:
· the risk of a significant and prolonged economic downturn
which could affect the Company through adverse impacts to growth
company valuations, leading to poor investment performance, a wide
share price discount and a tough fundraising
environment;
· a significant majority of the Company's investments are in
private companies that are not liquid and may be subject to
restrictions on sale or transfer, which may limit the Company's
ability to realise investments at short notice and/or at a
reasonable price or at all; and
· the inability to raise funds, should the need
arise.
The Board has considered the
Company's viability over the three-year period, based on a working
capital model prepared by the Investment Manager. The working
capital model forecasts key cash flow drivers, such as capital
deployment rate and operating expenses, and includes robust
downside scenarios with continued high interest rates and a
considered amount of additional investment activity in the near
term. Capital raises, realisations and/or share buy-backs are
assumed to not occur during the three-year period, unless already
predetermined.
Based on its assessment, the Board
has concluded there is a reasonable expectation that the Company
will continue to meet its liabilities as they fall due and remain
viable, even in a scenario where global macroeconomic uncertainty
persists for an extended period and including severe but plausible
downside scenarios over the three-year period of the
assessment.
Life of the Company
The Company has no fixed life but,
in accordance with its Articles of Association, an ordinary
resolution proposing that it continues in existence as an
investment company will be proposed at its AGM in 2026 and, if
passed, every five years thereafter. If any such resolution is not
passed, proposals will be put forward by the Directors within three
months from the date of the resolution to the effect that the
Company be wound up, liquidated, reconstructed or
unitised.
Future Development of the Company
While the future development of
the Company is dependent on the success of its investment strategy,
which is subject to various factors including external ones (such
as the macroeconomic environment and market developments) which are
outside the control of the Board and Investment Manager, and the
future attractiveness of the Company as an investment vehicle, the
Board's intention is that the Company will continue to pursue its
investment objective and policy. The Chair's Statement and the
Investment Manager's Report include commentary on the outlook for
the Company.
Approval of Strategic Report
The Strategic Report is provided
in accordance with The Companies Act 2006 (Strategic Report and
Directors' Report) Regulations 2013 and is intended to provide
information about the Company's strategy and business needs, its
performance and results for the year and the information and
measures which the Directors use to assess, direct and oversee the
Investment Manager in the management of the Company's activities.
The Strategic Report has been approved by the Board and is signed
on its behalf by:
Will Whitehorn
Chair
14 October 2024
Section 172: Promoting the Success of the
Company
S.172 Responsibilities
Under section 172 of the Companies
Act 2006 ('s.172'), the
Directors have a duty to act in the way they consider, in good
faith, would be most likely to promote the success of the Company
for the benefit of its members as a whole. In doing so, the
Directors are required to take into account (amongst other matters)
the likely long-term consequences of their decisions, the need to
foster relationships with the Company's wider stakeholders, the
desirability of the Company maintaining a reputation for high
standards of business conduct and the impact of the Company's
operations on the community and environment.
As an externally managed
investment company, SSIT has no premises, employees or customers
and conducts its core activities through third-party service
providers. Currently, SSIT has no debt finance. We consider,
therefore, shareholders to be the Company's principal stakeholders
but also regard potential shareholders, the Investment Manager, the
Administrator, other key service providers (corporate brokers,
Auditor, legal advisers, public relations and communications
adviser, depositary and registrar) and portfolio companies as key
stakeholders. The Investment Manager's Responsible Investment
Policy is integrated into its investment process, ensuring that it
has regard to the impact of SSIT's investments on the wider
community and environment.
Our responsibilities to
stakeholders, together with consideration of the long-term
consequences of our decisions and maintaining high standards of
business conduct, are integral to the way we operate as a Board and
are foremost in our minds in our discussions, decision-making and
reporting. We place great importance on our engagement with
shareholders and other stakeholders and welcome, therefore, their
views and concerns so that we can consider them in our discussions
and decision-making.
Stakeholder Engagement
The table below sets out the
principal ways in which we engage with the Company's key
stakeholder groups.
Stakeholder group
|
|
Shareholders and potential investors
|
Why they are important
Continued shareholder support and
engagement and attracting new investors are critical to the
continuing existence of the Company and the delivery of its
long-term strategy.
How we engage
The Company has a broad range of
shareholders, comprising both professional and retail investors,
and has developed various ways of engaging with them,
including:
· Regulatory
announcements and publications: The
Company issues regulatory announcements via the London Stock
Exchange in respect of routine reporting obligations, periodic
financial and portfolio information updates and in response to
other events. The Company's Annual and Interim Reports and
associated presentations, as well as quarterly reports and fact
sheets and shareholder circulars, are made available on the
Company's website. Their availability is announced via the London
Stock Exchange.
· RNS Reach
newsletter: The Company issues a
monthly newsletter via RNS Reach to provide timely updates, based
on publicly available information, on the Company's investments,
its Investment Manager and the wider SpaceTech market.
· Website (https://investors.seraphim.vc/): This includes videos, research
notes available to retail investors and other relevant information
to enhance investors' understanding of the Company, its strategy
and investments and the wider SpaceTech market. Shareholders and
other interested parties can subscribe to email news updates by
registering online on the website.
· Investor
meetings and events: The Investment
Manager, on behalf of the Board and with the assistance of SSIT's
corporate brokers and public relations and communications advisor,
undertakes a programme of investor engagement throughout the year.
During the year to 30 June 2024, the Investment Manager held four
group meetings for research analysts and four professional and/or
retail investor webinars through the Company's public relations and
communications advisor following the announcement of the annual and
interim results and Q1 and Q3 NAVs and updates. Each analyst
presentation had at least 20 attendees. Through the Company's corporate brokers, there were 59
interactions with 154 unique investors. Directors attend some
investor meetings to gauge sentiment first hand. All investors are
offered the opportunity to meet the Chair, Senior Independent
Director or other Board members.
· Capital markets
day: This is an event, attended by
research analysts and professional investors, held periodically
consisting of presentations from the Chair and senior members of
the Investment Manager's team. The capital markets day held on 18
October 2023 also included presentations from a selection of SSIT's
portfolio companies. Videos of the event are available on SSIT's
website. The next capital markets day is scheduled for 7 November
2024.
· Investor
relations updates: At its scheduled
Board meetings, the Directors receive updates on the share trading
activity, share price performance and investor feedback. The
Directors also receive investor feedback following investor
roadshows arranged by the Company's corporate brokers.
· Annual General
Meetings: The AGM provides a forum
for shareholders to meet, ask questions and discuss issues with the
Directors and Investment Manager. The next AGM will take place on
26 November 2024 (the notice convening the meeting will be set out
in a separate circular to shareholders).
· Working with
external partners: The Board also
engages some external providers, such as a public relations and
communications adviser, to assist in investor communication and
obtain input on specific aspects of shareholder communications,
such as developing more effective ways to communicate with
investors.
We welcome diversity of thought
and opinions. Shareholders may contact the Company via
seraphimteam@ocorian.com
or by post via the Company Secretary on any
matters that they wish to discuss with the Board and the Company
Secretary will arrange for the relevant Board member to contact
them.
Target outcomes
· Shareholders and potential investors receive relevant
information to enable them to evaluate the Company's performance
and whether their investment interests are aligned with the
Company's strategy.
· Ongoing demand for SSIT's shares, which can help narrow the
discount at which the shares trade to their NAV, which benefits
shareholders.
· We receive feedback and views on investor concerns and
priorities which inform our discussions and decisions.
|
Investment Manager
(Seraphim Space Manager
LLP)
|
Why it is important
The Investment Manager's
specialist knowledge and experience is vital to implementing SSIT's
investment strategy successfully and achieving its long-term
success.
How we engage
Important components in the
collaboration with the Investment Manager are:
· drawing on Board members' individual professional skills and
experience to support the Investment Manager in the performance of
its responsibilities to the Company, including implementing SSIT's
investment strategy; and
· willingness to make the Board members' experience available
to support the Investment Manager in the sound, long-term
development of its business and resources, recognising that SSIT is
currently the principal client of the Investment Manager and so the
long-term success of the Investment Manager is closely aligned to
that of the Company.
We engage with the Investment
Manager in numerous ways, including:
· Regular
reporting: We receive at least
quarterly reports from the Investment Manager on performance,
investment activity and pipeline, portfolio company developments,
cash flow projections and investor relations activities, as well as
on a wide range of other topics.
· Meetings: The Board and
Investment Manager meet face-to-face at least for scheduled Board
and Committee meetings. In addition, the Board and Investment
Manager frequently meet, either in person or virtually, between
scheduled Board and Committee meetings to consider ad hoc
matters.
· Continuous
dialogue: The Board maintains an
open dialogue with the Investment Manager, engaging on key matters
affecting SSIT or the Investment Manager.
Target outcomes
· We engage with the Investment Manager in a collaborative and
collegiate manner, whilst also ensuring that appropriate and
regular challenge is brought.
· The Company's portfolio is well-managed, enabling it to meet
its strategic objectives and achieve long-term sustainable
success.
|
Administrator/ Company Secretary
(Ocorian Administration (UK)
Limited)
|
Why it is important
The Administrator provides
accounting, company secretarial and other administrative services,
so maintaining a strong, collaborative relationship with the
Administrator is critical to the effective running of SSIT's
day-to-day operations.
How we engage
We engage with the Administrator
in several ways, including:
·
Regular reporting: We receive
at least quarterly reports from the Administrator on a range of
matters, including financial, corporate governance, legal,
regulatory and compliance matters.
·
Meetings: The Administrator
attends both scheduled and ad hoc Board and Committee
meetings.
·
Continuous dialogue: The
Board maintains open and constructive dialogue with the
Administrator, engaging on key matters affecting SSIT.
In addition, the Investment
Manager, on our behalf, engages with the Administrator on at least
a weekly basis and ensures service levels are satisfactory and
appropriate controls are in place.
Target outcomes
· We maintain a strong, collaborative relationship with the
Administrator.
· The Company's day-to-day operations are well-managed,
supporting its ability to meet its strategic objectives and achieve
long-term sustainable success.
|
Other key service providers
(corporate brokers, Auditor, legal
advisers, public relations and communications adviser, depositary,
registrar - see below for
details)
|
Why they are important
For the Company to operate as a
listed investment company, the Board relies on the other key
service providers for essential services and for advice and support
in meeting relevant obligations and complying with best practice.
Constructive working relationships with the other key service
providers helps ensure the Company continues to operate
effectively.
How we engage
We engage with the other key
service providers in several ways, including receiving regular and,
as needed, ad hoc reports, face-to-face meetings (at the request of
the Board or the relevant service provider) and other dialogue as
and when appropriate.
In addition, the Investment
Manager and/or Administrator, on our behalf, engage with the other
key service providers on a regular basis and ensure service levels
are satisfactory.
Target outcomes
· We, directly and indirectly, maintain constructive working
relationships with our other key service providers.
· Other key service providers provide the required level of
service, enabling the Company to meet its obligations and follow
best practice.
|
Portfolio companies
|
Why they are important
For the Company to deliver capital
appreciation, it needs to invest in portfolio companies that
ultimately develop their products and services and successfully
grow.
How we engage
The Investment Manager, on our
behalf, engages with portfolio companies on a regular basis through
participation on their boards, interaction with their shareholders,
introductions to partners, customers and potential funding
providers and value-add support and advice. In addition, we engage
with portfolio companies during investor events.
Target outcomes
Portfolio companies benefit from
the engagement, leading to their growth and, ultimately, higher
value for the Company.
|
Examples of Stakeholder Considerations and
Outcomes
Set out below are examples of
decisions and actions during the year which have required the
Directors to have regard to applicable s.172 factors.
Topic
|
Stakeholder considerations and outcome
|
Investment approvals
|
S.172 consideration: the desirability of the Company
maintaining a reputation for high standards of business
conduct
The Company has appointed the
Investment Manager to manage its investments on a discretionary
basis, save where the Investment Manager may have a potential
conflict of interest.
A company affiliated with the
Investment Manager runs accelerator programmes for very early stage
SpaceTech companies and receives share options and/or warrants from
participants in those programmes. During the year, the Investment
Manager proposed that SSIT invest, in aggregate, up to £1.3m, in
three former accelerator programme participants (all follow-on
investments) where the affiliate had a potential conflict of
interest. In each case, the Board considered the proposed
investment and the conflict and noted that only the independent
members of the Investment Manager's Independent Advisory Committee
(listed below) had
considered the investment at the Investment Manager's Investment
Committee meeting and were recommending the investment. The Board
was satisfied that the conflict had been managed appropriately and
the investments were consistent with SSIT's strategy and objectives
and had the benefit of having been monitored by the Investment
Manager for some time. Accordingly, the Board concluded that it was
in the interests of SSIT's shareholders to approve the
investments.
Also during the year, the
Investment Manager proposed that we should sell 100% of SSIT's
interests in nine early stage portfolio companies, being all early
stage investments made by SSIT since IPO (the 'Early Stage Portfolio'), to the
Venture Fund in exchange for an interest in the Venture Fund. The
Venture Fund is a new private venture capital vehicle managed by
Seraphim Space that will invest during its 10-year life in Seed and
Series A stage SpaceTech companies globally. Having sought advice
from our corporate brokers and legal and tax advisers and obtained
an independent valuation of the Early Stage Portfolio, we were
satisfied that the potential conflict of interest on the part of
the Investment Manager had been managed appropriately and concluded
that the proposal was in the best interests of shareholders as a
whole, principally for the following reasons:
· the transaction had the dual benefit of enabling SSIT to
concentrate its resources on its more mature assets, whilst also
building a larger pipeline for future growth round investments by
SSIT via the Venture Fund's wider portfolio of early stage
SpaceTech companies;
· the Early Stage Portfolio would be sold at a price equal to
the independent valuation, which SSIT commissioned from Azets, of
£3.8m (vs. cost of £3.5m), so the transaction would be NAV neutral;
and
· SSIT will not incur any management fees or be subject to
carried interest as a limited partner in the Venture
Fund.
Stakeholders influencing considerations and/or impacted by
outcome: Shareholders and potential
investors, relevant portfolio companies.
|
Capital allocation
|
S.172 consideration: the likely consequences of the decisions
in the long term
Having regard to the challenging
environment for raising additional capital (debt and/or equity) and
in expectation that such environment would continue for some time,
the Board and Investment Manager regularly reviewed the Company's
cash resources and other sources of liquidity, identified the
anticipated shorter-term funding requirements of SSIT's portfolio
companies and agreed capital allocations for supporting portfolio
companies and new investment opportunities until such time as the
fundraising environment improves or a significant liquidity event
occurs. These allocations were consistent with SSIT's long-term
strategy, should enable the Company to continue to foster good
relationships with portfolio company management teams and maintain
its standing as a key investor in the SpaceTech sector and are
aimed at supporting the long-term growth of the NAV per
share.
Stakeholders influencing considerations and/or impacted by
outcome: portfolio companies,
Shareholders and potential investors, Investment
Manager.
|
Share price discount
|
S.172 considerations: the likely consequences of the
decisions in the long term, the need to act fairly as between
members of the Company
Having initially traded at a
substantial premium to NAV post-IPO, the share price dropped to a
discount following Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 as
investor sentiment turned against high growth stocks generally and
the discount continued to widen thereafter. Since the ordinary
shares have been trading at a discount, the Board has kept under
review whether NAV-accretive share buy-backs would be in the best
interests of shareholders as a whole having regard to market
conditions generally, the ratings of other UK-listed investment
companies, the anticipated shorter-term funding requirements of
SSIT's portfolio companies, the investment opportunities available
to the Company, feedback from shareholder meetings and advice from
SSIT's corporate brokers.
At the beginning of the year under
review, the ordinary share price discount had widened to a level
that the Board concluded, having regard to the matters referred to
in the previous paragraph, that it would be in the interests of
shareholders to commence a limited share repurchase programme. On
13 July 2023, the Board announced a share repurchase programme
funded out of SSIT's existing cash resources. During the year, the
Company bought back a total of 2,186,344 shares (0.9% of the shares
in issue at 12 July 2023) at an average share price of 45.01p and
an aggregate cost of £1.0m. The share buy-backs created some
additional market liquidity for sellers, whilst providing NAV
accretion for remaining shareholders and appear to have contributed
to a material narrowing of the share price discount.
In conjunction with the share
repurchase programme, we, together with the Investment Manager,
have continued our pro-active engagement with shareholders and
potential investors, seeking to promote SSIT, highlight the
significant progress of our portfolio companies and communicate our
faith in the value of the portfolio in an attempt to counter
the negative investor sentiment towards growth stocks and create
additional demand for the ordinary shares.
Stakeholders influencing considerations and/or impacted by
outcome: Shareholders and potential
investors.
|
Annual review of service providers
|
S.172 consideration: the need for the Company's to foster
business relationships with suppliers, customers and
others
The Management Engagement
Committee met during the year to review the Company's external
service providers and, in particular, the quality and costs of the
services provided (details of the review are included in the
Management Engagement Report below). For the reasons noted in its
Report, the Management Engagement Committee concluded that the
interests of the Company's shareholders would be best served by the
ongoing appointments of the Investment Manager, the Administrator
and SSIT's other key service providers on the existing
terms.
Stakeholders influencing considerations and/or impacted by
outcome: Investment Manager,
Administrator, other key service providers,
shareholders.
|
Directors and Investment Manager
Board of Directors
The Board of the Company, which
combines considerable knowledge of the SpaceTech industry, venture
capital investment, the investment company sector and corporate
governance, is responsible for ensuring conformance to the
investment strategy, monitoring the performance of the Investment
Manager and ensuring good governance, including in relation to ESG
matters.
The Directors are all
non-executive and independent.
|
William (Will) Whitehorn
Chair
|
Susan (Sue) Inglis
Senior Independent Director
|
Angela Lane
Director
|
Christina McComb
Director
|
Date of appointment
|
14 June 2021
|
14 June 2021
|
1 January 2022
|
14 June 2021
|
Committee membership
|
AC, RNC, MEC
|
AC, RNC©, MEC
|
AC©, RNC, MEC
|
AC, RNC, MEC©
|
Professional skills and experience
|
Will was formerly a director of
Virgin Group and President of Virgin Galactic until 2010. He has
since pursued a private equity and non-executive career. He is the
President of UKSpace, the trade body that represents the Space
industry in the UK. In addition to these corporate roles, he has
been a Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society since 2014 and is a
member of the UK Government's Space Exploration Advisory Committee,
which reports to the UK Space Agency.
|
Sue has a wealth of experience
from more than 30 years advising listed investment companies and
financial institutions. Her executive roles included Managing
Director, Corporate Finance in the investment companies team at
Cantor Fitzgerald Europe and investment companies and financial
institutions teams at Canaccord Genuity. Sue is a qualified lawyer
and was a partner and head of the funds and financial services
group at Shepherd & Wedderburn, a leading Scottish law firm. In
1999 she was a founding partner of Intelli Corporate Finance, an
advisory boutique firm focusing on the asset management and
investment company sectors, which was acquired by Canaccord Genuity
in 2009.
|
Angela has decades of experience
working with private equity-owned companies and investment
companies and as the chair of audit and remuneration committees.
She is a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in
England and Wales and began her career at the venture capital firm
3i PLC and became a partner of 3i's Growth Capital business,
overseeing the UK Growth Capital portfolio. Subsequently, she has
held a number of positions as chair of private equity-backed
businesses. She is currently on the Board of and acts as chair of
the audit committee for three investment trusts investing in quoted
and unquoted companies.
|
Christina has over 25 years'
experience of venture capital and growth investment as a former
director of 3i PLC and other venture funds. She is Chair and
non-executive director of Aegon UK plc. She has been a director of
other investment companies, including as Chair of Standard Life
European Private Equity Trust PLC, from which role she retired in
April 2022. She has also held a number of senior public sector
roles involved in SME and growth business finance, including as
Senior Independent Director at the British Business Bank. She was
awarded an OBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours 2018 for services to
the economy.
|
External appointments
|
Listed
companies: Chair of Good Energy
Group PLC and Craneware PLC.
Other significant
appointments: None.
|
Listed
companies: Senior independent
director of Baillie Gifford Growth US Growth Trust PLC, senior
independent director and Audit Committee chair of CT Global Managed
Portfolio Trust PLC and non-executive director of Invesco Global
Equity Income Trust PLC.
Other significant
appointments: None.
|
Listed
companies: Non-executive director
and chair of the Audit Committee of BlackRock Throgmorton Trust
PLC, Pacific Horizon Investment Trust PLC and Dunedin Enterprise
Investment Trust PLC.
Other significant
appointments: None.
|
Listed
companies:
None.
Other significant
appointments:
Chair of Aegon UK plc,
non-executive director and Investment Committee member of Better
Society Capital Ltd, non-executive director and Investment
Committee member of Midlands Mindforge Ltd.
|
Committee membership key
|
AC
|
Audit Committee
|
MEC
|
Management Engagement
Committee
|
RNC
|
Remuneration and Nomination
Committee
|
©
|
Chair
|
Investment Manager
The Company has appointed Seraphim
Space Manager LLP as its alternative investment fund manager. The
Seraphim Space team is comprised of seasoned venture capitalists
and some of the sector's most successful entrepreneurs who scaled
their SpaceTech businesses to multi-billion Dollar
exits.
The senior individuals responsible
for executing and overseeing the Company's investment strategy are
shown below.
Mark Boggett, General Partner & CEO
Mark is a pioneer in SpaceTech
investment having co-founded Seraphim Space and launched the
Seraphim Space LP fund, Seraphim Space Accelerator, UK Space Tech
Angels and SSIT. Previously, Mark was a director at YFM Equity
Partners, the firm behind the high profile British Smaller
Companies VCTs 1 and 2. He also worked at Brewin Dolphin and
Williams de Broe. He completed his undergraduate degree in
Accounting & Finance and a Master in Economics and Finance from
University of Leeds. Mark has been a fund representative on the
boards of a range of leading global SpaceTech companies, including
LeoLabs, Spire Global (listed on NYSE), Arqit (listed on NASDAQ)
and HawkEye 360.
James Bruegger, General Partner & CIO
James, co-founder and CIO of
Seraphim Space, is a prolific venture capital investor in the
global SpaceTech domain. James was an early venture capital
investor in Arqit, ICEYE, LeoLabs and D-Orbit and led investments
in several companies that went public, including Spire Global and
AST SpaceMobile. Previously, he worked at YFM Equity Partners and
Burlington Consultants, a boutique strategy consultancy that was
acquired by Deloitte & Touche. James holds a first-class degree
in History from University College London. James has been a fund
representative on the boards of a range of leading global SpaceTech
companies, including ICEYE, D-Orbit, UltraSoC, ALL.SPACE and
SatVu.
Rob Desborough, General Partner
Rob is a partner at Seraphim
Space, heading up the early stage investments. He is a co-founder
of Seraphim Space Accelerator, which was launched in 2018 and is
now one of the world's leading accelerator programmes for SpaceTech
start-ups. Prior to Seraphim Space, Rob was with YFM Equity
Partners as an Investment Director. Rob holds a BSc (Hons) in
Biomedical Sciences from University of Glasgow and a Postgraduate
Diploma (PGDip) in Information Technology Systems from University
of Strathclyde. Under Rob's guidance the Seraphim Space Accelerator
has graduated 109 SpaceTech start-ups, which have collectively
raised over $500m. He is a fund representative on the boards of
Xona Space Systems, Altitude Angel and other early stage
investments.
Andre Ronsoehr, Investment Partner
Andre is an Investment Partner at
Seraphim Space, following a career focussed on the space sector. He
worked for almost a decade at Virgin Management, the family office
of Sir Richard Branson. Andre co-led the seed investment in OneWeb
in 2015 and was instrumental in investments into Virgin Galactic
and Virgin Orbit. During this time, Andre worked hand-in-hand with
the boards and C-level teams of each of these three pioneering
space businesses, helping shape them into $billion businesses.
Andre has been a fund representative on the boards of a range of
SpaceTech companies, including Astroscale and
PlanetWatchers.
Sarah Shackleton, Partner & COO
Sarah is a Partner and the COO at
Seraphim Space and has more than 25 years of finance experience.
Prior to Seraphim Space, Sarah was a partner at Development
Partners International since its inception in 2007. She was
responsible for administration of the firm and its funds, including
legal, compliance, HR, IT, operations, facilities and ESG and also
sat on the investment committee. Sarah has experience as an active
board director on private equity fund general partners and
investment holding companies. Before joining Development Partners
International, Sarah was an Associate Director in the Technology
Equity Research team at UBS in London, specialising in the
telecommunications equipment sector and covering large-cap European
companies, including Nokia, Ericsson and Alcatel-Lucent. Sarah
holds a BSc (Hons) in Economics and Accounting from University of
Bristol.
Kenny Mumford, Partner & General
Counsel
Kenny is General Counsel at
Seraphim Space and has 25 years of legal experience with growth
companies and venture capital investors. Previously, Kenny was a
partner at MBM Commercial LLP for nearly 15 years, latterly as Head
of Corporate. In that role, Kenny acted for high-growth companies
and investors (including Seraphim Space), concerning all aspects of
equity investment, fund formation, business sales and acquisitions,
joint ventures and restructuring, alongside general corporate
advice. Previous roles before MBM included In-house Counsel at
Braveheart Investment Group plc, Investment Manager at Scottish
Enterprise and solicitor at Shepherd+ Wedderburn. Kenny is a
solicitor and notary public in Scotland and holds an LLB (Hons) and
Diploma in Legal Practice from University of Edinburgh.
Patrick McCall, Venture Partner
Patrick joined as a Venture
Partner to the Company after working for Virgin Group for 25 years
where he was Senior Partner. He was chair or on the board of eight
companies that grew from being startups to being valued at over $1
billion. He was chair of Virgin Galactic, Virgin Orbit,
Virgin Trains, Trainline and Virgin Unite, and was also a board
director of many Virgin Group companies, including Virgin Active,
Virgin Blue, Virgin Mobile USA, OneWeb and Virgin Money. He
also spent 10 years as an investment banker at S.G. Warburg and has
a degree in Economics and Agricultural Economics from Exeter
University. Patrick is a director of three SSIT companies,
ALL.SPACE, SatVu and D-Orbit.
Maureen Haverty, Investment Principal
Maureen joined Seraphim Space in
2022 following a successful career in the space industry. She was
COO at Apollo Fusion, a space start up that was sold for $145m,
where she was responsible for business development, manufacturing
and complex programmes. She was also Senior Director of Corporate
Development at Astra, a rocket launch company listed on NASDAQ. She
has a first-class Batchelor Civil and Environmental Engineering
(BE) degree from University College Cork and a PhD in Nuclear
Engineering from University of Manchester. Maureen is focussed on
deal origination, deal execution, portfolio management and fund
operations in addition to actively supporting the Seraphim Space
Camp Accelerator.
Candace Johnson, Independent Advisory Committee
Member
Candace has a long and
distinguished career as founder/co-founder of space ventures such
as SES ASTRA, SES Global, Loral-Teleport Europe and Europe Online,
as well as having played critical roles in developing space sector
leaders, including Iridium and ILS. An experienced venture
capitalist and investor, she has been a member of the Strategic
Committee of Iris Capital for the past decade and served as
President of EBAN and is now President Emeritus. Candace serves and
has served on the boards of a number of emerging space leaders,
including NorthStar Earth and Space and Kacific. Candace serves on
Seraphim Space's Investment Committee as an independent member to
advise on and address any conflicts of interest.
Matt O'Connell, Independent Advisory Committee
Member
Matt is a recognised thought
leader in the geospatial intelligence industry. Currently an
Operating Partner at DCVC, supporting its investments, including
space companies Capella and Planet. Matt has been working with
Seraphim Space since 2018. Before that, he was CEO of OneWeb until
July 2016. In 2006, he founded GeoEye, a leading global provider of
satellite and aerial imagery and digital mapping information, which
was acquired by Digital Globe in 2013 for $1.3bn. He has served on
several private company boards and government and industry advisory
commissions. Matt serves on Seraphim Space's Investment Committee
as an independent member to advise on and address any conflicts of
interest.
Ann Winblad, Independent Advisory Committee
Member
Ann is a Managing Director of
Hummer Winblad Venture Partners, a venture capital firm she
co-founded in 1989. She is a well-known and respected software
industry entrepreneur and technology leader. Ann's firm has
launched over 160 enterprise software companies and led investments
that pioneered successful companies across the enterprise software
sector. She served as a director of numerous private and public
companies including MuleSoft, Hyperion, Sonatype, The Knot, Liquid
Audio, Net Perceptions and Ace Metrix. She also currently serves as
a Director of OptiMine. Ann serves on Seraphim Space's Investment
Committee as an independent member to advise on and address any
conflicts of interest.
Directors' Report
The Directors present their Report
for the year ended 30 June 2024. The Corporate Governance Report
below is deemed to form
part of this Report.
Company Status
The Company is incorporated and
domiciled in the United Kingdom and registered in England and
Wales.
The Company is an investment
company as defined in section 833 of the Companies Act 2006,
approved as an investment trust in accordance with section 1158 of
the Corporation Tax Act 2010 ('s.1158') and an alternative investment fund under the Alternative
Investment Fund Managers Regulations. The Directors intend at all times
to conduct the affairs of the Company to enable it to continue to
qualify as an investment trust for the purposes of
s.1158.
The Company manages its affairs so
as to be a qualifying investment for inclusion in an Individual
Savings Account and it is the Directors' intention that the Company
should continue to do so.
Business Review
The Company's principal activity
is investment in a diversified, international portfolio of
predominantly early and growth stage privately financed SpaceTech
businesses that have the potential to dominate globally and are
category leaders with first mover advantages in areas such as
climate change, sustainability, communications, mobility and global
security (including cyber security) with the objective of
generating capital growth over the long term.
A detailed review of the Company's
business and performance during the year, any future likely
developments in the Company and the outlook for the Company are
contained in the Strategic Report and should be read as part of
this Report.
Results and Dividends
The total comprehensive income for
the year was a profit of £6.7m (2023: loss of £16.9m), comprising a
loss of £3.7m (2023: loss of £4.5m) attributable to revenue and
a profit of £10.5m (2023: loss of £12.4m) attributable to
capital. As the Company is focused on
generating capital growth over the long term and given the nature
of the Company's investments, the Board does not anticipate
recommending paying any dividends in the foreseeable
future.
Share Capital
As at 30 June 2024, the Company's
issued share capital comprised 239,384,928 ordinary shares of £0.01
each, of which 2,186,344 ordinary shares were held in treasury. The
total number of voting rights of the Company at 30 June 2024 was,
therefore, 237,198,584.
Shareholders are entitled to all
dividends paid by the Company (however, as stated above, the
Company does not expect to pay dividends in the foreseeable
future). On a winding up, provided the Company has satisfied all
its liabilities, shareholders are entitled to the surplus assets of
the Company. Shareholders are entitled to attend and vote at all
general meetings of the Company and, on a poll, to one vote for
each ordinary share held. Shares held in treasury have no rights to
dividends, capital or vote.
There are:
· no restrictions on the transfer of securities in the Company
save where (a) the Company is legally entitled to impose such
restrictions, such as restrictions on transfers by Directors and
persons closely associated with them during closed periods, or (b)
the Company's Articles of Association allow the Board to decline to
register a transfer of shares or otherwise impose a restriction on
shares to prevent the Company breaching any law or
regulation;
· no agreements between holders of securities regarding their
transfer which are known to the Company;
· no restrictions on exercising voting rights save where the
Company is legally entitled to impose such restrictions, such as
if, having been served with a notice under section 793 of the
Companies Act 2006, a shareholder fails to disclose details of any
past or present beneficial interest;
· no special rights with regard to control attached to
securities in the Company; and
· no agreements to which the Company is a party that might
affect its control following a successful takeover bid.
Share Issues and Buy-backs
The Board has not adopted any
formal premium or discount targets which would dictate the point at
which the Company would seek to issue or buy back ordinary
shares.
During the year ended 30 June
2024, the Company did not issue any new ordinary shares and bought
back through the market 2,186,344 ordinary shares into treasury at
an average price of 45.01p and for an aggregate consideration of
£1.0m (the rationale for these buy-backs is set out opposite 'Share
price discount' below). In the period since the year end to 14 October 2024,
the Company did not issue or buy-back any
shares.
The Company's current general
authorities to allot for cash on a pre-emptive or non-pre-emptive
basis up to 23,719,858 ordinary shares, representing c.10% of the
ordinary shares in issue on the date the authority was granted,
expires at the conclusion of the 2024 AGM. Ordinary resolution 9
and special resolution 10 will be proposed at the forthcoming AGM
seeking renewal of such authorities to issue ordinary shares up to
10% of the ordinary shares in issue on the date the authorities are
granted until the next AGM or 31 December 2025, whichever is the
earlier. Unless specifically authorised by shareholders, no issue
of ordinary shares (or sale of ordinary shares from treasury) on a
non-pre-emptive basis will be made at a price less than the
prevailing NAV per ordinary share at the time of issue (or
sale).
The Company's current authority to
make market purchases of up to 35,556,067 ordinary shares,
representing 14.99% of the ordinary shares in issue on the date the
authority was granted, expires at the conclusion of the 2024 AGM.
Special resolution 11 will be proposed at the forthcoming AGM
seeking renewal of this authority until
the next AGM or 31 December 2025, whichever is the earlier. The
Company may hold bought-back shares in treasury and then re-sell
such shares (or any of them) for cash or cancel bought-back shares
(or any of them). Shares will only be re-sold from treasury at a
premium to the NAV per share.
Major Interests in Shares
At 30 June 2024 and 30 September
2024, the Company had been notified under the FCA's Disclosure
Guidance and Transparency Rules or was otherwise aware of the
following shareholders who were directly or indirectly interested
in 3% or more of the voting rights in the Company's issued share
capital:
Holder
|
% of voting rights
30 June 2024
|
% of voting rights
30 September 2024
|
British Business Bank
Finance
|
14.07
|
14.07
|
Schroders
|
11.08
|
10.57
|
Hargreaves Lansdown Asset
Mgmt
|
7.15
|
7.36
|
RBC Brewin Dolphin
|
5.49
|
5.26
|
RBC Dominion Securities
|
5.27
|
5.27
|
Asset Value Investors Limited
(UK)
|
3.92
|
4.53
|
Airbus Defence & Space
Limited
|
3.69
|
3.69
|
Interactive Investor Services
Limited (UK)
|
3.40
|
3.53
|
Directors
The names and biographical details
of the Directors who all served throughout the year are shown
below. Details of the
interests of the Directors and their connected persons in the
Company's ordinary shares, the Directors' remuneration policy and
their remuneration can be found in the Directors' Remuneration
Report below. No Director
has a service contract with the Company and there are no agreements
between the Company and its Directors providing for compensation
for loss of office.
The rules concerning the
appointment and replacement of Directors are contained in SSIT's
Articles of Association and the Companies Act 2006. Further details
are provided in the Corporate Governance Report below.
In line with the AIC Code and the
Company's Articles of Association, all of the Directors are
retiring at the forthcoming AGM and each offers themself for
re-election. The Board has reviewed the performance and commitment
of the Directors standing for re-election and considers that each
should continue to serve on the Board as they bring wide, current
and relevant experience that allows them to contribute effectively
to the leadership of the Company and have demonstrated full
commitment to and independence in their roles.
Directors' Insurance and Indemnification
Directors' and officers' liability
insurance cover is in place in respect of the Directors and was in
place throughout the year.
The Company's Articles of
Association provide that the Company may, subject to the Companies
Act 2006 and other applicable UK legislation for the time being in
force affecting the Company, indemnify any person who is a Director
of the Company against (a) any liability whether in connection with
any negligence, default, breach of duty or breach of trust by that
person in relation to the Company or any associated company or (b)
any other liability incurred by or attaching to that person in the
actual or purported execution and/or discharge of that person's
duties and/or the exercise or purported exercise of that person's
powers and/or otherwise in relation to or in connection with that
person's duties, powers or office.
Related Party and Investment Manager
Transactions
The Company's transactions with
related parties during the year were with its Directors. There were
no material transactions between the Company and its Directors
during the year other than the amounts paid to them in respect of
Directors' remuneration for which there were no outstanding amounts
payable at the year end.
Details of amounts paid to the
Investment Manager during the year are included in note to
the financial statements below. During the year, the Investment
Manager recharged the Company for £116k of third-party expenses it
incurred on the Company's behalf. There were no amounts outstanding
to the Investment Manager at 30 June 2024.
As explained below, in April 2024, the Company
announced the sale of nine early stage portfolio companies to the
Venture Fund for a total consideration of £3.8m, settled through
the issuance of an interest for the Company in the Venture Fund.
The Investment Manager also acts as investment manager to the
Venture Fund.
Risks and Risk Management
The principal risks and
uncertainties facing the Company are set out below. Further details of the
Company's key financial risks are set out in note 14 to the
financial statements below
Going Concern
In light of the conclusions drawn
in the longer-term viability statement below and as set out in note 2 to the
financial statements below, the Directors have a reasonable
expectation that the Company has adequate resources to continue in
operational existence for at least 12 months from the date of this
Annual Report. Accordingly, the Directors believe that it is
appropriate to continue to adopt the going concern basis in
preparing the financial statements.
Disclosure of Information to the Company's
Auditor
Having made enquiries of the
Investment Manager and Administrator, each of the Directors
confirms that, at the date of approval of this Report:
· as far as they are aware, there is no relevant audit
information of which the Auditor is unaware; and
· they have taken all the steps a Director might reasonably be
expected to have taken to be aware of any relevant audit
information and to establish that the Auditor is aware of that
information.
This confirmation is given and
should be interpreted in accordance with the provisions of section
418 of the Companies Act 2006.
Independent Auditor
The Directors will propose the
re-appointment of BDO LLP as the Company's Auditor and resolutions
concerning this and to authorise the Audit Committee to determine
the Auditor's remuneration will be proposed at the forthcoming
AGM.
Annual Report
As disclosed in the Audit
Committee Report below,
after due consideration the Audit Committee concluded that this
Annual Report, taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and
understandable. Therefore, the Board is of the opinion that this
Annual Report provides the information necessary for shareholders
to assess the position and performance, strategy and business model
of the Company.
Events After the Balance Sheet Date
Save as disclosed in note 17 to
the financial statement below, there have been no significant
events since 30 June 2024.
2024 AGM
The next AGM will be held at 1
Fleet Place, London, EC4M 7WS (GPS postcode EC4M 7RA) at 11.00 on
26 November 2024. The formal notice convening the AGM, together
with an explanation of the resolutions to be considered at it, will
be sent to shareholders in due course and a copy of the notice will
be published on the Company's website (https://investors.seraphim.vc).
We believe that all the
resolutions to be proposed at the AGM are in the best interests of
shareholders as a whole and therefore recommend shareholders to
vote in favour of them as we will be doing with our own
holdings.
Articles of Association
The Company's Articles of
Association may only be amended by special resolution at a general
meeting of shareholders.
UK Listing Rule 9.8.4C
The FCA's UK Listing Rule 9.8.4C
requires the Company to include certain information in a single
identifiable section of the Annual Report or a cross-reference
table indicating where the information is set out. The Directors
confirm that there are no disclosures to be made in this
regard.
Approval
This Directors' Report was
approved on 14 October 2024.
On behalf of the Board:
Will Whitehorn
Chair
14 October 2024
Corporate Governance
Report
Corporate Governance Framework and
Compliance
The FCA's Disclosure Guidance and
Transparency Rules (the 'Disclosure Rules') require listed
companies to disclose how they have applied the principles and
complied with the provisions of the UK Corporate Governance Code
issued by the Financial Reporting Council (the 'FRC') in July 2018 (the 'UK Code'). The UK Code can be viewed
at www.frc.org.uk.
In January 2024 the Financial Reporting Council updated the UK Code
which will apply to financial years beginning on or after 1 January
2025.
The related Code of Corporate
Governance issued by the Association of Investment Companies (the
'AIC') in February 2019
(the 'AIC Code') addresses
the principles and provisions set out in the UK Code, as well as
setting out additional provisions on issues that are of specific
relevance to listed closed-ended investment companies, such as the
Company. The AIC Code is available on the AIC website
(www.theaic.co.uk).
In August 2024 the AIC Code was updated and endorsed by the FRC,
the 2024 AIC Code applies to accounting periods beginning on or
after 1 January 2025, with the exception of Provision 34 which will
apply to accounting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2026.
It includes an explanation of how the AIC Code adapts the
principles and provisions set out in the UK Code to make them
relevant for listed closed-ended investment companies. The FRC has
endorsed the AIC Code and confirmed that AIC member companies who
report against the AIC Code will be meeting their obligations in
relation to the UK Code and the associated disclosure requirements
of the Disclosure Rules.
The Company is a member of the AIC
and the Board considers that reporting against the principles and
provisions of the AIC Code provides more relevant information on
the Company's governance arrangements to shareholders than
reporting against the principles and provisions of the UK
Code.
The Board operates under a
governance framework which is consistent with the principles and
provisions of the AIC Code. This Report describes how the Company
applies those principles and provisions. The Audit, Management
Engagement and Remuneration and Nomination Committee Reports
below are deemed to form
part of this Report. The Board confirms that the Company complied
with the relevant principles and provisions of the AIC Code during
the year.
As an externally managed
investment company, the Company has no employees and all its
substantive operations are conducted on its behalf by its
third-party service providers. Consequently, the Company has not
complied with the provisions in the UK Code relating to the role of
the chief executive, executive directors' remuneration and the need
for an internal audit function. However, the Audit Committee
considers the need for an internal audit function at least annually
(see below for further
information).
Board Leadership and
Purpose
Role of the Board
The Board is collectively
responsible for promoting the long-term sustainable success of the
Company, generating value for shareholders whilst having regard to
the interests of wider society.
The Board's role is to provide
leadership and direction within a robust framework of risk
management and internal controls. It sets the Company's strategic
objectives (subject to the Company's Articles of Association and
such approval of the shareholders in
general meeting as may be required from time to time) and ensures
that the necessary resources are in place to enable the Company's
objectives to be met.
In managing the Company, the aim
of both the Board and the Investment Manager is always to ensure
SSIT's long-term sustainable success and, therefore, the likely
long-term consequences of any decision are a key consideration. The
Investment Manager's Responsible Investment Policy is integrated
into its investment process, ensuring that it has regard to the
interests of wider society in managing SSIT's portfolio.
Company purpose and
strategy
The Company's purpose is to
provide a vehicle through which a broad range of investors can gain
exposure to a diversified, international portfolio of predominantly
early and growth stage privately financed SpaceTech businesses that
have the potential to dominate globally and are category leaders
with first mover advantages in areas such as climate change,
sustainability, communications, mobility and security (including
cyber security). The Company seeks to generate capital growth over
the long term for shareholders.
Operating as an externally managed
investment company, SSIT seeks to fulfil its purpose by delegating
operational matters to specialist third-party service providers,
subject to oversight by the Board. In particular, the Investment
Manager and Administrator are responsible for implementing the
Company's strategy and managing the Company's day-to-day
operations, respectively. The Company's success is based on such
implementation and management being effective. The Board's strategy
is, therefore, to work closely with the Investment Manager and
Administrator in a long-term relationship designed to foster an
environment that is consistent with SSIT's culture and values and
contributes to achieving SSIT's strategic objectives.
Culture and
values
As an externally managed
investment company, SSIT's culture and values are the product of
the behaviours of both the Board and the Investment Manager and the
way in which they interact with each other and with the Company's
other stakeholders.
The Board operates in an open,
respectful and inclusive manner, where differences of perspective
are welcomed and constructive challenge is encouraged. Advice and
input are sought from external advisers and others, as required, to
ensure a broad range of views are available and to guard against
groupthink.
The Investment Manager has
established an organisation driven by purpose where its employees
are united by a passion to work with the most impactful companies
in the SpaceTech sector. The Investment Manager strives to develop
a culture of candour and openness, with employees empowered to
innovate and work autonomously. Value is placed on output (the
quality of work produced) rather than input (the number of hours
logged). Team cohesion and collaboration are core tenets of the
Investment Manager's people strategy.
Both the Board and Investment
Manager aim to ensure that SSIT is run in a manner that is
consistent with their beliefs in integrity, fairness, transparency
and diligence and responsive to the views of the Company's
shareholders and other stakeholders. Both seek to maintain high
standards of business conduct at all times.
We believe that the culture and
values of the Board and Investment Manager encourage constructive
and robust challenge and debate, lead to coherent discussions,
generate strong collective wisdom and ultimately lead to good
decision making, all of which are important to the successful
implementation of the Company's strategic objectives.
Conflicts of
interest
Directors have a duty to avoid
situations where they have, or could have, a direct or indirect
interest that conflicts, or possibly could conflict, with the
Company's interests ('conflict
situations'). As permitted by the Companies Act 2006, the
Company's Articles of Association allow the Directors to authorise
conflict situations, where appropriate.
The Board has a procedure in place
to deal with conflict situations. As part of this process,
Directors must submit any actual or potential conflict situations
they may have to the Board for approval as soon as possible. In
deciding whether to approve a conflict situation, the Board will
act in a way it considers, in good faith, will be most likely to
promote the Company's success, taking into consideration whether
the Director's ability to act in accordance with their wider duties
is affected. The Company Secretary maintains the register of
approved conflict situations (which also includes a list of other
external positions held). Directors have a duty to keep the Board
updated about any changes to their approved conflict situations. In
certain circumstances the conflicted Director may be required to
absent themself from discussions or decisions on the matter on
which they are conflicted. No such circumstances arose in the year.
None of the Directors have, or have had, any potential conflicts of
interest of the nature listed in provisions 6 and 12 of the AIC
Code.
The Board also has a procedure in
place to manage potential conflicts of interest of the Investment
Manager. These can arise, for example, where share options and/or
warrants have been granted to an affiliate of the Investment
Manager by a participant in an accelerator programme run by that
affiliate and the Company subsequently has the opportunity to
invest in the participant. In such instances, only the independent
advisory committee members of the Investment Manager's Investment Committee (listed below) consider the
investment at the Investment Committee meeting, and the final stage
of the Board's conflict management process requires any such
investment to be approved by the Board before it is made. Details
of potential conflicts of interest of the Investment Manager that
arose during the year are set out opposite 'Investment
approvals' below.
Division of
Responsibilities
The Board has overall
responsibility for the Company's activities. However, the Company
has delegated or outsourced various matters to its standing
Committees and key service providers, most notably the Investment
Manager and the Administrator, all of which operate within clearly
defined terms of reference or agreements that set out their roles,
responsibilities and authorities.
Board
The Board's principal
responsibilities include:
· determining the Company's strategic objectives;
· overseeing the execution of the Company's strategy, business
conduct and implementation of its key investment, financial,
operational and compliance policies, ensuring they are aligned with
SSIT's purpose and strategy and the Board's culture and values and
that any necessary corrective action is taken;
· ensuring that appropriate internal controls and risk
management frameworks are in place to enable risk to be managed and
continually assessed;
· scrutinising the performance of the Investment Manager,
Administrator and other key service providers and holding them to
account; and
· ensuring effective engagement with, and encouraging
participation from, shareholders and other key
stakeholders.
Matters not delegated or
outsourced to Committees and key service providers are reserved for
consideration and approval by the Board (including those matters
listed in a formal schedule of reserved matters approved by the
Board), thus enabling the Board to maintain full and effective
control over appropriate strategic, financial, operational and
compliance matters. The reserved matters include:
• approving SSIT's long-term
objectives and any matters of a strategic nature, including any
change in investment objective, policy and restrictions, including
those which may need to be submitted to shareholders for
approval;
• the appointment and
removal of key service providers and any material amendments to the
Company's agreements with them;
• approval of any other
material contracts and agreements entered into, varied or
terminated;
• approving any transactions
with related parties;
• approval of quarterly and
any ad hoc NAV and other financial announcements;
• approval of the Company's
operating and marketing budgets;
• the Company's corporate
governance arrangements; and
• approving any actual or
potential conflicts of interest, including any potential
investments in respect of which the Investment Manager may have a
potential conflict of interest.
The full schedule of matters
reserved for the Board is available on the Company's website
(https://investors.seraphim.vc/).
The primary focus at Board
meetings is a review of investment performance and associated
matters (such as new investments, progress of portfolio companies,
investment pipeline, projected cash flow and market environment),
share price discount/premium, investor relations, industry issues,
legal and regulatory (including corporate governance) developments
and principal and emerging risks and uncertainties, in particular
those identified in the Strategic Report.
Chair
The Chair is Will Whitehorn. His
primary role as Chair is to provide leadership to the Board. The
principal responsibilities of the Chair include:
• ensuring the overall
effectiveness of the Board in directing the Company;
• taking a leading role in
setting the Company's strategic objectives;
• facilitating open, honest
and constructive debate among Directors and the effective
contribution of all Directors;
• ensuring the Company is
meeting its responsibilities to shareholders and wider
stakeholders; and
• engaging with shareholders
to ensure that the Board has a clear understanding of their
views.
Full details of the Chair's role
and responsibilities are available on the Company's website
(https://investors.seraphim.vc/).
Senior Independent Director
('SID')
The SID is Sue Inglis. Her primary
responsibilities as such are to serve as a sounding board for the
Chair, act as an intermediary for other Directors and be available
to respond to shareholders' concerns if they cannot be resolved
through the normal channels of communication (i.e. through the
Chair). The SID leads the annual evaluation of the Chair. Full
details of the SID's role and responsibilities are available on the
Company's website (https://investors.seraphim.vc/).
Board
Committees
The Board has three standing
Committees, being the Audit Committee, Management Engagement
Committee and Remuneration and Nomination Committee. The roles and
responsibilities of the Committees are included in their respective
Reports below and the
terms of reference of each Committee are available on the Company's
website (https://investors.seraphim.vc/).
The Committees review their terms of reference at
least annually, with any proposed changes recommended to the Board
for approval. Committee Chairs attend AGMs to answer any questions
on each of their Committees' activities. In addition, Committee
Chairs will seek engagement with shareholders on significant
matters related to their areas of responsibility.
The Board may also establish
additional Committees from time to time to take operational
responsibility on specific matters. These Committees ensure that
key matters are dealt with efficiently.
Investment
Manager
The Investment Manager is the
Company's alternative investment fund manager (the 'AIFM') for the purpose of the EU AIFM
Directive as incorporated into UK legislation. The Investment
Management Agreement dated 22 June 2021 between the Company and the
Investment Manager (the 'IMA') sets out the matters in respect
of which the Investment Manager has authority and responsibility,
subject to the overall control and supervision of the Board. These
include the Investment Manager having full discretion in relation
to SSIT's portfolio management activities in accordance with SSIT's
investment policy and any other restrictions imposed by the IMA or
the Board from time to time. The Investment Manager is also
responsible for promoting the Company's investment proposition to
professional and retail investors.
In advance of Board meetings, the
Investment Manager provides regular reports, which include
operating updates on the Company's investments, information on
potential new investment opportunities, cash flow forecasts and
other financial information and other relevant information. Senior
representatives of the Investment Manager attend Board meetings.
The Investment Manager is responsible for keeping the Board
informed, in a timely manner, of any material developments arising
from its portfolio management activities or other relevant matters,
including interactions with shareholders and other key
stakeholders.
Under the IMA, the Investment
Manager is entitled to management fees, details of which are
included in note 4 to the financial statements below. The Investment Manager's
appointment is terminable by the Company or Investment Manager on
not less than 12 months' notice, such notice to expire on or at any
time after the third anniversary of SSIT's launch. The IMA may be
terminated with immediate effect on the occurrence of certain
events.
Administrator/Company
Secretary
The Company has appointed the
Administrator to provide fund accounting, company secretarial and
other administrative services. The Administrator's responsibilities
include:
• undertaking the day-to-day
financial and administration functions of the Company, including
calculation of the NAV and maintenance of the Company's accounting
and statutory records;
• providing the company
secretarial functions required by the Companies Act
2006;
• ensuring that the Company
complies with applicable laws, rules and regulations, including
laws and regulations applicable to investment trusts and the rules
of the FCA and London Stock Exchange;
• advising on governance
matters;
• supporting the Board to
ensure that it has the policies, processes and information it needs
to function effectively and efficiently;
• ensuring that Board
procedures are followed; and
• facilitating good and
timely information flows within the Board and its Committees and
between Directors and the Investment Manager and other service
providers.
In advance of Board meetings, the
Administrator provides regular reports, which include financial and
other operational information, details of any breaches or
complaints and relevant legal and regulatory, corporate governance
and other technical updates. The Administrator is responsible for
keeping the Board informed, in a timely manner, of any material
developments regarding matters within the scope of its role and
responsibilities.
Board and Committee Meetings
Regular Board and Committee
meetings are scheduled throughout the year (Board: four; Audit
Committee: eight, including four valuation meetings; Management
Engagement Committee: one; Remuneration and Nomination Committee:
one). In addition, the Board and Committees meet between scheduled
meetings in preparation for or follow-up after scheduled meetings
and any other matters that may arise between scheduled meetings.
The Company also holds an annual strategy meeting to enable the
Directors to consider strategic matters outside of standard Board
meetings.
The Company Secretary assists the
Board and Committee Chairs in agreeing the agenda in sufficient
time before the meeting to allow input from key stakeholders. Care
is taken to ensure that papers are presented clearly and with the
appropriate level of detail and delivered in a timely manner in
advance of the relevant meeting to ensure the Directors have
sufficient time to prepare properly for the meeting and to make
further enquiries about any matter prior to the meeting, should
they so wish. This also allows any Director who is unable to attend
to submit views in advance of the meeting.
The Investment Manager, the
Administrator and, as required, the Company's other key service
providers are expected to be present at formal Board and Committee
meetings unless identified conflicts require otherwise.
The proceedings at all Board and
Committee meetings are fully recorded, including any Director's
concerns, in the minutes. After each Board and Committee meeting,
the Company Secretary operates a follow-up procedure to ensure that
actions are completed as agreed by the Board or
Committee.
Attendance at meetings
The number of scheduled meetings
during the year, and the attendance of the individual Directors at
those meetings, is shown in the table below.
|
Board
|
Audit
Committee
|
Remuneration and Nomination
Committee
|
Management Engagement
Committee
|
No. of meetings
|
4
|
8
|
1
|
1
|
Will Whitehorn
|
4
|
8
|
1
|
1
|
Sue Inglis
|
4
|
8
|
1
|
1
|
Angela Lane
|
4
|
8
|
1
|
1
|
Christina McComb
|
4
|
8
|
1
|
1
|
In addition to the scheduled
meetings, there were two ad hoc Board and Committee meetings during
the year. Typically, all Directors attend ad hoc meetings, although
this is not always feasible or necessary and Directors who are
unable to attend a meeting can communicate their views ahead of the
meeting. The Board also meets from time to time on an
informal basis to discuss, in particular, developments affecting
the Company and progress on identified workstreams.
Board Composition and Succession
Board composition and
independence
At the date of this Report, the
Board consists of four non-executive Directors, all of whom are
(and were on appointment) independent of the Investment Manager.
Each of the Directors is (and was on appointment) independent when
assessed against the circumstances set out in provision 13 of the
AIC Code.
The current Board was selected to
bring a breadth of professional skills, experience and knowledge
relevant to the Company's structure and strategy. Three of the
Directors were appointed prior to the IPO and the fourth joined the
Board on 1 January 2022. Details of the Directors, including their
professional skills and experience, are set out below.
The composition of the Board is a
fundamental driver of its success as the Board must provide strong
and effective leadership of the Company without any one individual
or small group dominating the decision-making. The strong and
diverse mix of experienced individuals on the current Board enables
high calibre debate and constructive challenge. The Board is able
to use the professional skills, experience and knowledge of the
individual Directors to their maximum potential and make decisions
that are in the best long-term interests of the Company.
The Board's tenure, succession and
diversity policies seek to ensure that the Board continues to be
well-balanced and refreshed from time to time by the appointment of
new Directors with the necessary professional skills, experience,
knowledge and personal qualities and who can bring fresh
perspectives.
Board
diversity
In accordance with the FCA's UK
Listing Rules 14.3.33, we are required to disclose on a 'comply or
explain' basis whether the Board has met the following targets: (a)
at least 40% of the Board should be women; (b) at least one of the
senior Board positions should be held by a woman; and (c) at least
one member of the Board should be from a minority ethnic
background. The required disclosures are set out in the tables
below and are based on information
provided by individual Directors in response to a request from the
Administrator.
As an externally managed
investment company with solely non-executive Directors, the Company
does not have a chief executive or a chief financial officer (both
being 'senior positions' under the relevant FCA UK Listing Rule)
and has no employees. Accordingly, no disclosures about executive
management positions have been included. However, given the nature
of the Company, the Board considers the chair of the Audit
Committee to be senior positions and, therefore we have added a
further (last) column to the prescribed tables below to show the
Board-defined senior positions.
Board gender representation at 30 June 2024
|
No. of Board
members
|
% of Board
|
No. of senior positions on
Board (Chair, SID)
|
No. of Board-defined senior
positions (Chair, SID, Audit Committee Chair)
|
Men
|
1
|
25%
|
1
|
1
|
Women
|
3
|
75%
|
1
|
2
|
Other categories
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Not specified/prefer not to
say
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Board ethnicity representation at 30 June
2024
|
No. of Board
members
|
% of the
Board
|
No. of senior positions on
Board (Chair, SID)
|
No. of Board-defined senior
positions (Chair, SID, Audit Committee Chair)
|
White British or other White
(including minority-white groups)
|
4
|
100
|
2
|
3
|
Mixed/Multiple Ethnic
groups
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Asian/Asian British
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Black/African/ Caribbean/Black
British
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Other Ethnic group, including
Arab
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Not specified/ prefer not to
say
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
As shown in the tables above, the
Board has met the gender-based diversity targets but has not met
the ethnicity-based diversity target. The Board supports the
principle of boardroom diversity, of which gender and ethnicity are
important aspects. The Company's policy is that the Board should be
comprised of Directors who collectively display the necessary
balance of professional skills, experience, perspectives and length
of service and that appointments to the Board should be made on
merit, against objective criteria, including diversity in its
broadest sense.
The objective of the of the
Company's diversity policy is to have a broad range of professional
skills, knowledge, experience, backgrounds, approaches and length
of service represented on the Board. The Board believes that this
ensures that there is a breadth of perspectives among the Directors
and the challenge needed to support good decision-making and,
ultimately, will make the Board more effective in promoting the
long-term sustainable success of the Company and generating value
for shareholders. Consequently, achieving a diversity of
perspectives and backgrounds on the Board is a key consideration in
any Director search process.
As part of its annual evaluation
of the composition of the Board, the Remuneration and Nomination
Committee debated whether it would be in shareholders' interests to
recruit, at this stage, a Director that would allow the Board to
meet the ethnicity-based diversity target referred to above. As
explained in its Report below, the Remuneration and Nomination
Committee decided against recruiting an ethnically diverse Director
at this time.
Appointments to the
Board
The Remuneration and Nomination
Committee reviews at least annually the composition of the Board
and its Committees, including the balance of professional skills,
experience, knowledge, diversity (including age, gender, social and
ethnic backgrounds and cognitive and personal strengths) and length
of service, and makes recommendations to the Board when it
considers that a new Director should be recruited.
Once a decision has been taken by
the Board to recruit a new Director, the Remuneration and
Nomination Committee oversees the recruitment process. At the
outset, the Committee reviews the current balance and diversity of
the Board, identifies any specific professional skills, experience,
knowledge and personal qualities that are required to ensure the
continued effective operation of the Board and then sets objective
selection criteria to ensure a formal and transparent appointment
process. The Remuneration and Nomination Committee
intends to use non-executive director recruitment consultants and/or open advertising when recruiting new
Directors. Following the creation of a
shortlist of candidates, the decision-making process will be based
on merit, with due consideration of the objective selection
criteria identified.
When considering new appointments,
the Committee also takes into account other demands on the
candidates' time. In advance of joining the Board, successful
candidates will be asked to disclose any existing significant
commitments with an indication of the time involved and to confirm
that they are able to allocate sufficient time to the business of
the Company and that there are no situations where they have, or
could have, a direct or indirect interest that conflicts, or
possibly could conflict, with the Company's interests.
Directors are not appointed for
any specific term and are subject to election at the first AGM
following their appointment and, thereafter, annual re-election at
AGMs appointment and may resign by notice in writing to the Board
at any time. At the time of appointment, a new Director receives a
letter of appointment that sets out their duties and obligations.
Copies of the letters of appointment of the current Directors are
available for inspection at the Company's registered office and at
each AGM.
Board induction and
training
New Directors receive an induction
on joining the Board covering the Company's strategy, policies,
operational structure and governance, which is coordinated by the
Company Secretary. In addition, new Directors are briefed fully
about the Company's strategy and portfolio by the Investment
Manager.
The Company Secretary is charged
with assisting in the ongoing training and development of all
Directors, including providing the Directors with details of the
Company's regulatory and statutory obligations (and changes
thereto). Directors are able to receive training or additional
information on any specific subject pertinent to their role as a
Director that they request or require. The Directors are encouraged
to participate in relevant industry events and to attend any other
relevant seminars and conferences, if necessary, at the Company's
expense.
Information and
support
To enable the Board to function
effectively and the Directors to discharge their responsibilities,
the Directors are regularly updated on investment, financial,
investor and other stakeholder engagement and other matters. In
addition to periodic reporting at scheduled Board and Committee
meetings, the Directors receive, and may request, ad hoc
information from the Investment Manager, Administrator and other
key service providers.
The Directors have access to the
advice and services of the Administrator. In addition, there is a
procedure in place for Directors to take independent professional
advice at the Company's expense should this be required to aid them
in their duties. No such independent professional advice was sought
during the year under review
Time
commitment
All Directors are aware of the
need to allocate sufficient time to the Company in order to
discharge their responsibilities effectively. Directors must obtain
prior approval from the Board when they take on any additional
external appointments and it is their responsibility to ensure that
such appointments will not prevent them meeting their time
commitments to the Company.
Election and re-election by
shareholders
Directors are required to stand
for election at the first AGM following their and annual
re-election at each subsequent AGM. Directors' appointments are
reviewed by the Remuneration and Nomination Committee ahead of
their submission for election or re-election, with submission being
contingent on satisfactory performance evaluation and their
willingness to continue to act.
If, at a general meeting at which
a Director retires, the Company neither re-elects that Director nor
appoints another person to the Board in the place of that Director,
the retiring Director shall, if willing to act, be deemed to have
been re-elected unless at the general meeting it is resolved not to
fill the vacancy or a resolution for the re-election of the
Director is put to the meeting and not passed.
All of the Directors will retire
at the forthcoming AGM and are willing to continue to act. Having
considered their effectiveness, demonstration of commitment to the
role, attendance at meetings and contribution to the Board's and
Committees' deliberations, the Board has approved the nomination
for re-election of all of the Directors.
Board
tenure
The Board's policy on Director,
including Chair, tenure is that a Director should normally serve no
longer than nine years but, where it is in the best interests of
the Company, its shareholders and other stakeholders, a Director
may serve for a limited time beyond that.
The Board believes that the
continuity of experience and knowledge of its Directors is
important and that a suitable balance requires to be struck with
the need for refreshing the professional skills and experience
of the Board. The Board believes that some limited flexibility in
its approach to Director, including Chair, tenure will enable it to
manage succession planning more effectively.
Succession
planning
The Remuneration and Nomination
Committee is responsible for succession planning and its approach
to succession planning is explained in its Report below.
Annual Performance Evaluations
Board, Committees, Chair and
individual Directors
Details on the annual evaluations
of the Board, its standing Committees, the Chair and individual
Directors, conducted by the Remuneration and Nomination Committee,
are included in that Committee's Report below. Having considered the
Committee's report and recommendations, the Board accepted all the
Committee's recommendations.
Investment
Manager
Details on the annual evaluation of
the Investment Manager, conducted by the Management Engagement
Committee, are included in that Committee's Report
below. Having considered the
Committee's report and recommendation, the Board believes that the
continued appointment of the Investment
Manager on the terms agreed is in the interests of the shareholders
as a whole.
Administrator and other key
service providers
Information on the annual
evaluations of the Administrator and other key service providers is
included in the Management Engagement Committee Report
below. Having considered the
Committee's report and recommendations, the Board accepted all the
Committee's recommendations.
Risk Management and Internal Controls
A critical factor in achieving the
long-term sustainable success of the Company is understanding the
risks that the Company faces and ensuring that controls are in
place to manage and mitigate them. The Company's principal and
emerging risks, together with details of how we seek to manage and
mitigate them, are set out in the Strategic Report. The Company's
financial risks are discussed in note 14 to the financial
statements below .
Responsibility for risk
management and internal controls
The Board is responsible for
determining the nature and extent of the principal and emerging
risks the Company is willing to take in order to achieve its
long-term strategic objectives. The Board is also responsible for
maintaining the Company's systems of risk management and internal
controls (such as financial, operational and compliance
controls).
Risk management and internal
control systems
The Board, through the Audit
Committee, has established, in conjunction with the Investment
Manager and Administrator, an ongoing process that is designed to
identify, manage and mitigate on a timely basis both the principal
and emerging risks inherent to the Company's business and
activities and safeguard the Company's assets. The process
takes account that the
Company has delegated its day-to-day activities to the Investment
Manager and Administrator and has clearly defined their roles,
responsibilities and authorities. The Investment Manager, which is
regulated by the FCA, and Administrator have their own risk
management and internal control systems that operate on an ongoing
basis. The Administrator has an annual type 2 report produced under
the International Standard on Assurance Engagements (ISAE) 3402,
which entails an independent rigorous examination and testing of
its controls and processes.
The Company has a risk-based
approach to risk management and internal controls through a
detailed matrix that identifies each of the key risk associated
with the Company's business and activities and the controls
employed to mitigate those risks. Accordingly, the process seeks to manage rather than
eliminate the risk of failure to achieve the Company's business
objectives and provides reasonable, but not absolute, assurance
against material misstatement or loss.
The Audit Committee is responsible
for monitoring and regularly reviewing the Company's risk
management and internal control process, including the risk matrix,
and reports its findings and conclusions to the Board. Where
changes in risk are identified during the year, the risk matrix is
updated as appropriate and an assessment made as to whether further
action is required to manage and/or mitigate the changes identified
and then the updated risk matrix is recommended by the Audit
Committee to the Board for approval.
The Board, either directly or
through the Audit Committee, oversees the ongoing performance and
actions of the Investment Manager and Administrator at scheduled
meetings and, as required, at ad hoc meetings. At the scheduled
Board and Audit Committee meetings, the Investment Manager reports
on the performance and valuation of the Company's investments,
activities since the last scheduled meetings, any specific new or
merging risks identified relating to the Company's investment
activities and cash projections and the Administrator reports on
the Company's corporate activity and financial, compliance,
governance, legal and regulatory matters. The Board also receives
updates from the Investment Manager and Administrator on material
developments affecting the Company's business, activities or
investments between scheduled Board meetings.
The Board, Investment Manager and
Administrator, together, review all financial performance and
results notifications. In addition, the Investment Manager reports
to the Board twice a year regarding the Company's longer-term
viability, which includes financial sensitivities and stress
testing of the business to ensure that the adoption of the going
concern basis continues to be appropriate.
The Company is ultimately dependent
upon the quality and integrity of the management and staff of the
Investment Manager and Administrator. In each case, qualified and
able individuals have been selected at all levels. The Investment
Manager and Administrator are aware of the Company's risk
management and internal controls relevant to their activities and
are collectively accountable for the operation of those
controls.
Each year a detailed review of the
quality of services and performance of the Investment Manager,
Administrator and other key service providers pursuant to their
terms of engagement is undertaken by the Management Engagement
Committee.
The Company's risk management and
internal control systems accord with the AIC Code and the FRC's
'Guidance on Risk Management, Internal Control and Related
Financial and Business Reporting' were in operation, and did
not change materially, throughout the year and up to the date of
this Report.
Effectiveness of risk
management and internal controls
The AIC Code requires the Board to
review the effectiveness of the Company's systems of risk
management and internal controls at least annually. At its October
2024 meeting, the Audit Committee carried out an annual assessment
of the Company's risk management and internal controls for the year
ended 30 June 2024 and took into account events since the year end.
The Committee determined that the risk management and internal
controls were operating effectively and as expected.
Based on the ongoing work of the
Audit Committee in monitoring the risk management and internal
control systems on behalf of the Board and the Audit Committee's
report to the Board on its findings and conclusions regarding those
systems, the Board:
· is satisfied that it has carried out a robust assessment of
the principal and emerging risks facing the Company, including
those that could threaten its business model, future performance,
solvency, liquidity or reputation; and
· has reviewed the adequacy and effectiveness of the risk
management and internal control systems and no significant failings
or weaknesses were identified.
Internal Audit Function
For the reasons stated in the Audit
Committee Report below, the Board does not currently consider that
an internal audit function is required.
Relations with Shareholders and Other
Stakeholders
We place great importance on
communication with shareholders, as well as with the Investment
Manager, Administrator and other key stakeholders. Details of our
engagement with all of the Company's key stakeholders and examples
of how we had regard to those stakeholders in our decision-making
processes during the year are set out in the Strategic Report. In
addition, the Chairs of the Board's standing Committees will seek
to engage with shareholders on significant matters related to their
areas of responsibility.
The Board recognises that
relationships with service providers and other suppliers are
enhanced by prompt payment and the Administrator, in conjunction
with the Investment Manager, ensures all payments are processed
within the contractual terms agreed with individual
suppliers.
Approval
This Corporate Governance Report
was approved by the Board on 14 October 2024.
On behalf of the Board:
Will Whitehorn
Chair
October 2024
Audit Committee
Report
Angela Lane
I am pleased to present my report
as Chair of the Audit Committee. All Board members are also members
of the Committee.
The Committee members have
considerable business and financial experience. In particular, I am
a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and
Wales. The AIC Code permits the Chair of the Board to be a member
of the Committee and the Board believes that Will Whitehorn's
SpaceTech industry experience and knowledge is a significant
benefit to the Committee. The Board considers that the membership
of the Committee as a whole has sufficient recent and relevant
sector and financial experience to discharge the responsibilities
of the Committee All members of the Committee are independent of
the Company's Auditor, Investment Manager and
Administrator.
The role of the Committee is to
assist the Board in protecting shareholders' interests through
fair, balanced and understandable financial reporting, ensuring
effective internal controls and maintaining an appropriate
relationship with the Company's Auditor. The Committee operates to a forward-planned agenda linked to
the Company's financial calendar. The Committee meets eight times a
year (four valuation meetings and four meetings to, amongst other
matters, approve the quarterly NAVs) and at such other times as the
Committee Chair shall require.
Representatives of the Investment
Manager and Administrator attend Committee meetings and the
Committee Chair may invite other external specialists as and when
deemed appropriate. The Auditor attends the Committee meeting at
which the Annual Report is considered and such other meetings as
may be agreed with the Committee Chair. At least once a year the
Committee meets with the Auditor without any representative of the
Investment Manager or Administrator being present.
The Committee's authority and
duties are clearly defined in its written terms of reference which
are available on the Company's website (https://investors.seraphim.vc/).
The terms of reference include all matters
indicated by the FCA's Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rule
7.1, the AIC Code and the UK Code. The terms of reference are
reviewed at least annually.
Key responsibilities
· Scrutinising and, where appropriate, challenging the
Investment Manager's proposed valuations of SSIT's private company
investments.
· Monitoring the integrity of SSIT's financial reporting and,
where appropriate, challenging the financial reporting judgements
of the Investment Manager and Administrator.
· Keeping under review the adequacy and effectiveness of SSIT's
risk management and internal control systems.
· Considering the ongoing assessment of SSIT as a going concern
and of its longer-term viability.
· Appointing the Auditor, approving its remuneration,
monitoring the extent of any proposed non‑audit services and generally
overseeing the relationship.
· Monitoring the Auditor's independence, objectivity and
effectiveness.
· Reviewing the performance and quality of the Auditor's audit
work.
· Reporting to the Board on the main matters discussed at
Committee meetings and making recommendations as
appropriate.
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Principal Activities
The Committee met eight times
during the year and two times in the subsequent period to the date
of this Report. In addition, there was ongoing liaison and
discussion between the Auditor (BDO LLP), Investment Manager,
Administrator and me with regard to the audit approach and progress
and other matters pertinent to the Committee.
The main matters reviewed and
discussed at its meetings included:
· the Investment Manager's valuation approach and the quarterly
valuations of the Company's investments prepared by the Investment
Manager;
· SSIT's key risks, including emerging risks, and its risk
matrix;
· the adequacy and effectiveness of the Company's risk
management and internal control systems;
· SSIT's costs budget and costs incurred relative to
budget;
· SSIT's ability to continue as a going concern and of its
longer-term viability;
· SSIT's periodic financial statements, including accounting
policies;
· the format and content of the Annual and Interim Reports,
associated results announcements and related matters;
· whether there is a need for an internal audit
function;
· the Financial Reporting Council's latest Annual Review of
Audit Quality Report and its Audit Quality Inspection and
Supervision Report on BDO LLP;
· the Auditor's independence, fee and terms of engagement;
and
· the audit plan of the Auditor and its
implementation.
Significant Areas of
Judgement
The most significant risk of
misstatement of the Company's financial statements relates to the
valuations of SSIT's private company investments, which are held at
fair value through profit or loss and represent a significant
proportion of the Company's net assets (83.3% as at 30 June 2024),
as their valuations the use of estimates, assumptions and
judgements. Whilst the Administrator calculates the NAV, the most
significant input to calculating the NAV is the valuations of the
Company's investments, which are prepared by the Investment
Manager. Accordingly, there is also an inherent risk of management
override as the Investment Manager's performance fee is calculated
based on NAV (see note 4 to the financial statements below for details of the performance
fee). Valuations are subject to review by the Committee and
approval by the Board.
The Company's private company
investments are predominantly early or growth stage companies.
Valuations are prepared in accordance with the IPEV Valuation
Guidelines and the Investment Manager's valuation policy, which is
formally reviewed by the Audit Committee on at least an annual
basis and is approved by the Board. The Investment Manager's Report
approach to valuation of investments is outlined in its Report
below and notes 2 and 8 to
the financial statements below respectively.
On a quarterly basis, the
Investment Manager provides a detailed analysis of the proposed
valuations of the Company's investments with supporting materials.
These are initially reviewed and discussed in detail by the
Committee at a valuation meeting and the Committee, as necessary,
challenges the analysis and supporting materials, including the
methodology and integrity of the valuations, and may request
additional information. The final proposed valuations are then
considered by the Committee at its meeting to approve the quarterly
NAV. Once the Committee has satisfied itself that the key
estimates, assumptions and judgements used in the valuations are
appropriate and that the investments have been fairly valued, it
recommends the valuations for approval by the Board.
The Auditor has explained the
results of its audit work on valuations in its Report below. There were no adjustments
proposed that were material in the context of this Annual Report as
a whole.
Risk Management and Internal Controls
Under the AIC Code, the Board is
required to establish procedures to manage risk, oversee the
internal control framework and determine the nature and extent of
the principal risks the Company is willing to take in order to
achieve its long-term strategic objectives. A principal role of the
Committee is to assist the Board in this regard. Details of the
Company's risk management and internal controls framework are set
out under 'Principal Risks and Uncertainties' below. The Company's principal and
emerging risks, together with details of how the Board seeks to
manage and mitigate them, are also set out under 'Risk and Risk
Management' below. The
Committee continued to monitor the effectiveness of the Company's
risk management and internal controls framework during the year,
making changes as required.
The AIC Code requires the Board to
review the effectiveness of the Company's risk management and
internal controls systems at least annually. At its October
2024 meeting, the Committee carried out an annual assessment of the
Company's risk management and internal control systems for the year
ended 30 June 2024 and took into account events subsequent to the
year end. No significant weaknesses in the systems were identified
and the Committee concluded that they were operating effectively
and as expected.
Financial Reporting
The primary role of the Committee
in relation to financial reporting is to review, with the
Administrator, Investment Manager and, in the case of the Annual
Report, Auditor, and report to the Board on the integrity of the
financial statements and the appropriateness of the Annual or
Interim Report, as appropriate, concentrating on, amongst other
matters:
· the quality and acceptability of accounting policies and
practices;
· the clarity of the disclosures and compliance with financial
reporting standards and relevant financial and governance reporting
requirements;
· material areas in which significant judgements are applied or
where there have been discussions with the Auditor, including the
valuation of unlisted investments and going concern and viability
statements;
· the Company's longer-term viability;
· whether the strategic report in the Annual Report includes a
fair review of the development and performance of the business and
financial position of the Company, together with a description of
the principal and emerging risks and uncertainties that it faces;
and
· whether the Annual Report, taken as a whole, is fair,
balanced and understandable and provides the information necessary
for shareholders to assess the Company's position and performance,
business model and strategy.
To aid its review, the Committee
considers reports from the Administrator and Investment Manager
and, in relation to the Annual Report, the report from the Auditor
on the outcome of its annual audit. Information on the assessment
of SSIT's longer-term viability is set out in the Strategic
Report.
Having completed a comprehensive
review of this Annual Report and made enquiries of the various
parties involved in its preparation, the Committee concluded that
this Annual Report, taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and
understandable and provides the necessary information for
shareholders to assess the Company's financial position,
performance, business model and strategy. The Committee reported
its conclusion to the Board.
Internal Audit
The Committee considers at least
once a year whether there is a need for an internal audit function.
Currently, the Committee does not consider there to be a need for
an internal audit function on the basis that the Company has no
employees and all outsourced functions are with parties who have
their own internal controls and procedures. The Management
Engagement Committee regularly reviews the performance of the
Investment Manager, Administrator and other key service providers
and their risk and control processes.
Auditor
BDO LLP was appointed as the
Company's Auditor following its incorporation. The reappointment of
the Auditor is subject to annual shareholder approval at the AGM.
There are no contractual obligations restricting the choice of
Auditor and the Company will put the audit services contract out to
tender at least every 10 years. In accordance with professional
guidelines, the Company's statutory auditor will be rotated at
least every five years. The current statutory auditor, Mr Wieder,
has completed his third year in the role.
To form a view on audit quality
and the effectiveness of the external audit process, the Committee
reviewed and considered:
· the Auditor's fulfilment of the agreed audit plan and
variations from it;
· discussions or reports highlighting the major issues that
arose during the course of the audit;
· based on the Committee's own observations and interactions
with the Auditor and feedback from the Administrator and Investment
Manager, the performance of the audit team, including:
- the
audit team's understanding of the Company's business and
activities;
- the
level of diligence, professional scepticism and challenge offered
by the audit team;
- the
technical competence, skills, experience and overall quality of the
audit team;
- the
timeliness of delivering the tasks required for the audit and
reporting to the Committee;
- the
overall quality of the service; and
- the
overall robustness of the audit.
Following this review, the Audit
Committee was satisfied that BDO LLP had carried out its duties in
a diligent and professional manner and provided a high level of
service.
The Committee monitors the
Auditor's independence through three aspects of its
work:
· its policy regulating the non-audit services that may be
provided by the Auditor to the Company;
· assessing the appropriateness of the fees paid to the Auditor
for all work undertaken by it; and
· reviewing the information and assurances provided by the
Auditor on its compliance with the relevant ethical
standards.
Details of the audit fees paid to
BDO LLP in respect of the year under review and the prior year are
set out in note 5 to the financial statements below . During the last three
financial years, BDO LLP was paid
non-audit fees of £210k (including VAT) in relation to share issue
and valuation work completed before the IPO. Notwithstanding such
non-audit services, the Committee considered BDO LLP to be
independent of the Company and that the provision of such services
was not a threat to BDO LLP's objectivity and
independence.
BDO LLP confirmed that all its
partners and staff involved with the audit were independent of any
links to the Company and that these individuals had complied with
BDO LLP's ethics and independence policies and procedures which are
fully consistent with the Financial Reporting Council's Ethical
Standards.
Having satisfied itself as to the
effectiveness of the audit process and independence of BDO LLP as
the Company's Auditor, the Committee recommended to the Board that
BDO LLP be reappointed as Auditor for the year ending 30 June 2024.
Accordingly, a resolution proposing the reappointment of BDO LLP as
the Auditor will be put to shareholders at the 2024 AGM.
The Committee will continue to
monitor the performance of the Auditor on an annual basis and will
consider its independence and objectivity, taking account of
appropriate guidelines. In addition, the Committee Chair will
continue to maintain regular contact with the lead audit partner
outside the formal Committee meeting schedule, not only to discuss
formal agenda items for upcoming meetings, but also to review any
other significant matters.
Committee Evaluation
The Audit Committee's
composition and activities are reviewed annually as part of the Board's annual
performance evaluation undertaken by the
Remuneration and Nomination Committee (see the Remuneration and
Nomination Committee Report below
for further information). Having completed the
annual evaluation process in May 2024, the Remuneration and
Nomination Committee concluded that the Audit Committee had the
right balance of membership in terms of breadth of professional skills, experience and knowledge
relevant to the Company's structure and strategy
and was operating effectively with the
appropriate level of diligence and challenge.
Approval
This Audit Committee Report was
approved on 14 October 2024.
On behalf of the
Committee:
Angela Lane
Audit Committee Chair
14 October 2024
Management Engagement Committee Report
Christina McComb
I am pleased to present my report
as Chair of the Management Engagement Committee. All Board members
are also members of the Committee.
The Committee's authority and
duties are clearly defined in its written terms of reference which
are available on the Company's website (https://investors.seraphim.vc/).
The terms of reference are reviewed at least
annually.
The Committee meets once a year
and at such other times as the Committee Chair shall
require. It met once during the
year.
Key responsibilities
· Evaluating the performance of the Investment
Manager.
· Considering the merit of obtaining an independent appraisal
of the Investment Manager's services.
· Reviewing the terms of the Investment Management Agreement,
including the methodology and level of the fees payable to the
Investment Manager.
· Evaluating the performance of SSIT's other key service
providers (except for the Auditor) and whether those service
providers deliver value for money services.
· Assessing whether the culture, policies and practices of the
Investment Manager and other key service providers are consistent
with good risk management, compliance and regulatory
frameworks.
· Reporting to the Board on the main matters discussed at
Committee meetings and making recommendations as
appropriate.
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Principal Activities During the Year
Evaluation of the Investment
Manager
The performance of the Investment
Manager is considered at every Board meeting, with a formal
evaluation by the Committee at least once each year. To assist in
ongoing monitoring, the Board receives detailed reports and views
from the Investment Manager on the Company's investment strategy,
investment portfolio and pipeline (including associated risks) and
investment performance.
The Committee met in May 2024 for
the purpose of the formal annual evaluation of the Investment
Manager's performance and to review the terms of the Investment
Management Agreement (details of which are included under
'Investment Manager' below
and in note 4 to the financial statements
below), including the fee
provisions. The Committee reviewed a detailed questionnaire
completed by the Investment Manager, which included sections on the
Investment Manager's systems, controls and policies. The results of
the detailed questionnaire completed by the Directors and the
Investment Manager in connection with the Board evaluation, to the
extent that they were relevant to the Investment Manager
evaluation, were also reviewed. Other factors reviewed
included:
· depth, quality and continuity of the Investment Manager's
team responsible for SSIT;
· investment results achieved to date;
· the Investment Manager's engagement with the Board, investors
and other key stakeholders;
· the Investment Manager's ongoing commitment to promoting the
Company;
· the Investment Manager's compliance with contractual
arrangements and duties, including compliance with SSIT's
investment policy;
· the methodology and level of the management fees, and where
relevant the performance fees(see note 4
to the financial statements below
for details) and the other terms of the
Investment Management Agreement, having regard to those of
comparable listed investment companies; and
· the Investment Manager's culture and its strategy and goals
for developing its business.
Following its review, the
Committee concluded that the Investment Manager was performing well
against the requirements set by the Board and that it was
satisfied, in all material respects, with the services provided by,
performance of and support from the Investment Manager and also
with the interaction between the Board and the Investment
Manager.
The Committee concluded that, in
its opinion, the continuing appointment of the Investment Manager
on the terms agreed was in the best interests of shareholders as a
whole and recommended this to the Board. The Board agreed with the
Committee's recommendation and approved the continuing appointment
of the Investment Manager on the terms agreed.
Evaluation of other key
service providers
The performance of the Company's
other key service providers is monitored by the Board on an ongoing
basis and formally evaluated by the Committee at least once a
year, with a key focus on the
Administrator and Company Secretary.
At its meeting in May 2024, the
Committee undertook the formal annual evaluation of the other key
service providers' performance and reviewed their respective
remuneration. The Committee reviewed a detailed questionnaire
completed by the other key service providers, which included
sections on their systems, controls and policies.
In most instances, relationships with the other
key service providers are managed by the Investment Manager and/or
Administrator and Company Secretary on behalf of the Board and the
Committee considered feedback received from them regarding the
levels of service provided by, and relationships with, the other
key service providers.
The Committee was satisfied, in
all material respects, with the levels of service provided
by the other key service
providers. The Committee concluded that,
in its opinion, the continuing appointments of the
other key service providers on the terms agreed remained appropriate and in the best
interests of the Company and recommended this to the Board. The
Board agreed with the Committee's recommendations and approved the
continuing appointments of the other key service provider on the
terms agreed.
Committee Evaluation
The Management Engagement
Committee's composition and
activities are reviewed as part of the
Board's annual performance evaluation undertaken by
the Remuneration and Nomination Committee (see
the Remuneration and Nomination Committee Report
below for further
information). Having completed the annual evaluation process in May
2024, the Remuneration and Nomination concluded that the Management
Engagement Committee had the right balance of membership
and was discharging its
duties effectively.
Approval
This Management Engagement
Committee Report was approved on 14 October 2024.
On behalf of the
Committee:
Christina McComb
Management Engagement Committee
Chair
14 October 2024
Remuneration and Nomination Committee
Report
Sue Inglis
I am pleased to present my report
as Chair of the Remuneration and Nomination Committee. All Board
members are also members of the Committee. Individual Directors are
not involved in decisions connected with their own
appointments.
The Committee's authority and
duties are clearly defined in its written terms of reference which
are available on the Company's website (https://investors.seraphim.vc/).
The terms of reference are reviewed at least
annually.
The Committee meets once a year,
and at such other times as the Committee Chair shall require. It
met once during the year.
Key responsibilities
· Developing and reviewing the Directors' remuneration policy
and policies on Board tenure and diversity.
· Reviewing the Directors' remuneration levels and considering
the need to appoint external remuneration consultants.
· Reviewing outside commitments of the Directors.
· Evaluating the Board, its Committees and the Directors and
considering whether Directors should be recommended for election or
re-election.
· Reviewing the composition of the Board and its Committees,
including the balance of professional skills, experience,
knowledge, diversity (including gender, social and ethnic
backgrounds and cognitive and personal strengths) and length of
service.
· Formulating succession plans for the Directors consistent
with SSIT's policies on Board tenure and diversity.
· Identifying, evaluating and recommending candidates for new
Board appointments.
· Reporting to the Board on the main matters discussed at
Committee meetings and making recommendations as
appropriate.
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Principal Activities During the Year
Annual evaluation of Board,
Committees and Directors
The Committee ensures that there is
a formal and rigorous annual evaluation of the performance of the
Board, its standing Committees, the Chair and individual
Directors.
The evaluations, which were
facilitated by the Company Secretary and undertaken during May
2024, consisted of performance appraisals, questionnaires and
discussions to determine effectiveness and performance in various
areas. The areas considered included (a) the composition,
knowledge, professional
skills and independence of the Board and its
standing Committees, (b) governance and processes, (c) the
contributions of individual Directors to the work of the Board and
its standing Committees, (d) the relationships and communication
between the Directors, as well as between the Board and the
Investment Manager, the Administrator and other key service
providers, (e) investment matters, (f) shareholder engagement
delivering shareholder value and (g) key priorities for the
financial year ending 30 June 2025. The Committee also sought the
views of the Investment Manager as part of the evaluation process.
The performance evaluation of the Chair was led by Sue Inglis as
the Company's Senior Independent Director
and Chair of the Committee.
Following review and discussion of
the evaluation results, the Committee concluded, at its scheduled
meeting in May 2024, that:
·
each Director continued to be independent in
character and judgement, their professional skills, experience and
knowledge were a significant benefit to the Board and its
Committees and they had demonstrated their ability to commit the
time required to fulfil their responsibilities;
·
the Directors (individually and collectively as
the Board and members of the standing Committees) had been
operating effectively;
· the Board and each of its Committees had a good balance of
relevant professional skills, experience and knowledge relevant to
the Company's structure and strategy;
and
·
there were no specific additional training
requirements for any of the Directors.
The Committee was cognisant that
the Board does not currently have at least one member from a
minority ethnic background (contrary to the FCA's target for listed
companies) and had a robust debate as to whether to recruit an
ethnically diverse Director in the near future. Based on SSIT's
current size, the Committee concluded a Board of four Directors was
appropriate and, accordingly, the recruitment of an ethnically
diverse Director would either require an existing Director to stand
down or add additional cost for the Company. The Committee noted
the outcome of the evaluation of the current Directors, Board and
standing Committees referred to above and agreed that the Board and
standing Committee structures, sizes and
compositions were appropriate at this stage in the Company's
life. The Committee also noted that all
Directors had been in office for less than four years. The
Committee concluded that shareholders' interest would not be best
served by recruiting an ethnically diverse Director at this
stage. However, the Committee supports the principle of
boardroom diversity, including ethnic diversity, and agreed
that ethnic representation will be an
important consideration in future Board appointments.
The Committee agreed at the
proposed re-election of each Director at the 2024 AGM should be
recommended.
The Committee made recommendations
to the Board based on the outcome of its
deliberations.
Annual review of Directors'
remuneration
Details of the annual review of
Directors' fees and its outcome can be found in the Directors'
Remuneration Report below.
Other routine
activities
The Committee also
reviewed:
· the Board's policies on diversity and Board tenure and
recommended them to the Board for approval (see 'Board
diversity' below and 'Board
tenure' below for details of these
policies, as approved by the Board);
· the Board's succession plan; and
· the Directors' remuneration policy and concluded that no
changes were required in respect of the year ending 30 June
2024.
Succession planning
The Board is at a relatively early
stage of its life, with all Directors having a number of years of
their tenure left. The tenure of all Directors, including the
Chair, is expected not to exceed nine years unless exceptional
circumstances warrant, such as to allow for phased retirements of
the current Directors who were all appointed at, or shortly after,
the Company's IPO. The Committee considers succession planning
annually and has developed a succession plan that seeks to achieve
an appropriate balance between preservation of experience and
knowledge and bringing in fresh ideas and perspectives and is
consistent with the Company's policies on Board tenure and
diversity.
The aim of the Company's
succession plan is:
·
to preserve continuity by phasing the retirement
of the original Directors so that they do not all retire at once
after serving nine years;
·
to ensure the necessary balance of professional
skills, experience, perspectives and length of service is
maintained.
The Committee intends to
use non-executive director
recruitment consultants and/or open
advertising when recruiting new Directors in the future. In line
with our commitment to robust governance and continuity, we
anticipate the succession of the original Directors will be
staggered and take place in the coming years to ensure a seamless
transition whilst maintaining the strategic direction of the
Company. The process for recruiting additional Directors is
described under 'Appointments to the Board' below.
Committee Evaluation
The Committee's composition and
activities are reviewed as part of the annual Board evaluation
process. As noted above, the last annual Board evaluation process
was completed in May 2024, with the Committee concluding it was
operating effectively with the right balance of membership
and professional skills.
Approval
This Remuneration and Nomination
Committee Report was approved on 14 October 2024.
On behalf of the
Committee:
Sue Inglis
Remuneration and Nomination
Committee Chair
14 October 2024
Directors' Remuneration Report
This Report has been prepared by
the Directors in accordance with the requirements of the Companies
Act 2006 and the Large and Medium-sized Companies and Groups
(Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008. By law, the Company's
Auditor is required to audit certain of the disclosures provided in
this Report. Where disclosures have been audited, they are
indicated as such. An ordinary resolution for the approval of this
Report (excluding the 'Remuneration Policy' section) will be put to
shareholders at the Company's AGM on 26 November 2024.
Annual Statement from the Chair of the
Board
The Company's remuneration policy,
which is set out below, is subject to shareholder approval every
three years or sooner if an alteration to the policy is proposed.
The remuneration policy was approved at the AGM held on 17 November
2022 and no changes to the policy are proposed. It is intended that
the current remuneration policy will continue in force until the
AGM in 2025.
The Directors' remuneration has
been set in order to attract individuals of a calibre appropriate
to the future development of the Company. For the year ended 30
June 2024, the Directors' remuneration was set at £50,000 per annum
for each Director (and has remained unchanged since the Company's
IPO in 2021). Following the Remuneration and Nomination Committee's
most recent annual review of Directors' fees in May 2024, the Board
approved the Committee's recommendation that the fee should be
increased by 5% to £52,500 per annum for each Director effective 1
July 2024. The Company's flat fee
structure for Directors' is unusual but, having assessed the
Directors' respective contributions and activities
in promoting the long-term sustainable success of
the Company and generating value for
shareholders, the
Remuneration and Nomination Committee concluded that the structure remained appropriate as a fair
reflection of those contributions. The Remuneration and Nomination Committee did not receive independent advice or services in
respect of its review of the Directors' remuneration but did
consider the level of directors' fees paid by comparable UK-listed
investment companies.
Remuneration Policy
It is the Company's policy to
determine the level of Directors' fees which should be sufficient
to attract and retain Directors with appropriate professional
skills and experience necessary for the effective stewardship of
the Company and the expected contribution of the Board as a whole
in achieving the Company's objectives. The time committed to the
Company's business and the specific responsibilities of individual
Directors are taken into account. The policy aims to be fair and
reasonable in relation to the level of fees payable to
non-executive directors of comparable investment companies and
other investment companies of similar size and complexity as the
Company.
The Company's Articles of
Association limit the aggregate fees payable to the Directors to
£500,000 per annum (any change to that
limit requires shareholder approval).
Within that limit, it is the responsibility of the Board as a whole
to determine and approve the Directors' fees, following a
recommendation from the Remuneration and Nomination Committee. The
fees are fixed and payable in cash, quarterly in arrears. Annual
fees are pro-rated where a change takes place during a financial
year. Directors have no entitlement to pensions or
pension-related benefits, medical or life insurance schemes, share
options or long-term incentive schemes.
The Directors' fee rates are
reviewed by the Remuneration and Nomination Committee at least
annually, but reviews will not necessarily result in a change to
the rates. Any feedback received from shareholders will be taken
into account when setting fee rates. Directors abstain from voting
on their own fees.
The Directors are entitled to the
reimbursement of reasonable fees and expenses incurred by them in
the performance of their duties. Where expenses are recognised as a
taxable benefit, a Director may receive the grossed-up costs of
that expense as a benefit.
The Directors do not have a
service contract. Each Director has signed a letter of appointment
with the Company. The letters of appointment do not include any
minimum period of notice of termination by either party or any
provision for compensation for loss of office.
Annual Report on Directors' Remuneration (Audited
Information)
The table below shows all
remuneration earned by each individual Director during the
year.
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Role
|
30 June
2024
£
|
30 June
2023
£
|
Will Whitehorn
|
Chair
|
50,000
|
50,000
|
Sue Inglis
|
Senior Independent Director and
Remuneration and Nomination Committee Chair
|
50,000
|
50,000
|
Angela Lane
|
Audit Committee Chair
|
50,000
|
50,000
|
Christina McComb
|
Management Engagement Committee
Chair
|
50,000
|
50,000
|
Total
|
|
200,000
|
200,000
|
None of the Directors received any
taxable benefits or other remuneration or additional discretionary
payments during the year from the Company (2023: £NIL).
Changes in Directors' Remuneration
The table below shows the
percentage changes in the level of Directors' fees from year to
year since the Company's IPO in 2021.
|
Change - year
ending/ended
|
|
30 June
2025
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
30 June
2022
|
Annual fixed fee per
Director
|
5.0%
|
--
|
-
|
-
|
Relative Importance of Spend on Pay
The remuneration of the Directors
with respect to the year totalled £200,000 (2023: £200,000). As
explained under 'Target Returns and Dividend Policy' below, the Directors to manage the
Company's affairs to achieve shareholder returns through capital
growth rather than income. Therefore, no dividends have been
declared or paid during the year (2023: none) and a comparison of
amounts paid to Directors against distributions to shareholders
would not be relevant.
Directors' Interests (Audited Information)
The Directors who held office
during the year and their interests (including the interests of
their connected persons, where applicable) in the ordinary shares
of the Company at 30 June 2024 are shown in the table below. There
have been no changes to the Directors' interests between 30 June
2024 and the date of this Report.
|
30 June 2024
Ordinary shares
|
30 June 2023 Ordinary
shares
|
Will Whitehorn
|
130,000
|
100,000
|
Sue Inglis
|
50,000
|
50,000
|
Angela Lane
|
47,000
|
27,284
|
Christina McComb
|
41,706
|
25,000
|
There are no requirements for the
Directors to own shares in the Company.
Statement of Voting at Annual General
Meeting
An ordinary resolution to approve
the Directors' remuneration policy requires to be put to
shareholders at least every three years and an advisory ordinary
resolution to approve the Directors' Remuneration Report (excluding
the Directors' remuneration policy) requires to be put to members
at each AGM. The results of the last resolutions put to
shareholders, which were both proposed on polls, were as set
out in the table below.
|
Votes for
|
Votes
against
|
Total
votes
|
Votes
withheld
|
|
No.
|
%
|
No.
|
%
|
No.
|
No.
|
Approval of Directors'
remuneration policy at 2022 AGM
|
88,012,818
|
99.6
|
356,387
|
0.4
|
88,369,005
|
72,047
|
Approval of Directors'
remuneration report for year ended 30 June 2023 at 2023
AGM
|
82,850,000
|
99.4
|
528,249
|
0.6
|
83,378,249
|
23,459
|
Approval
This Directors' Remuneration
Report was approved by the Board on 14 October 2024.
On behalf of the Board:
Will Whitehorn
Chair
14 October 2024
Directors' Responsibilities Statement
Responsibilities
The Directors are responsible for
preparing the Annual Report, including the financial statements, in
accordance with applicable law and regulations.
Company law requires the Directors
to prepare financial statements for each financial year. Under
compony law, the Directors are required to prepare the Company's
financial statements in accordance with UK-adopted International
Accounting Standards and the requirements of the Companies Act
2006. Under company law, the Directors must not approve the
financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a
true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Company and of
the profit or loss for the Company for the relevant financial
year.
In preparing the financial
statements, the Directors are required to:
·
select suitable accounting policies and then
apply them consistently;
·
make judgements and accounting estimates that are
reasonable and prudent;
·
state whether they have been prepared in
accordance with UK-adopted International Accounting Standards,
subject to any material departures disclosed and explained in the
financial statements;
·
prepare the financial statements on the going
concern basis unless it is inappropriate to presume that the
Company will continue in business; and
·
prepare a Directors' Report, strategic report and
Directors' remuneration report which comply with the requirements
of the Companies Act 2006.
The Directors are responsible
for:
·
keeping adequate accounting records that are
sufficient to show and explain the Company's transactions and
disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial
position of the Company and enable them to ensure that the
financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006;
·
for safeguarding the assets of the Company and,
hence, for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection
of fraud and other irregularities; and
·
ensuring that the Annual Report, taken as a
whole, is fair, balanced and understandable and provides the
information necessary for shareholders to assess the Company's
performance, business model and strategy.
Website Publication
The Directors are responsible for
ensuring the Annual Report and financial statements are made
available on a website. Financial statements are published on the
Company's website in accordance with legislation in the UK
governing the preparation and dissemination of financial
statements, which may vary from legislation in other jurisdictions.
The maintenance and integrity of the Company's website is the
responsibility of the Directors, which they have delegated to the
Investment Manager. The Directors' responsibilities also extend to
the ongoing integrity of the financial statements contained on the
website.
Responsibility Statement
The Directors confirm to the best
of their knowledge that:
·
the Company's financial statements have been
prepared in accordance with UK-adopted International Accounting
Standards and give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities,
financial position and profit and loss of the Company;
·
the Strategic Report includes a fair review of
the development and performance of the business and financial
position of the Company, together with a description of the
principal and emerging risks and uncertainties that it faces;
and
·
the Annual Report, including the financial
statements, taken as a whole, are fair, balanced and understandable
and provide the information necessary for shareholders to assess
the Company's position and performance, business model and
strategy.
This responsibility statement was
approved by the Board on 14 October 2024.
On behalf of the Board
Will Whitehorn
Chair
14 October 2024
Statement of Comprehensive
Income
For the year ended 30 June 2024
|
|
Year ended
30 June 2024
|
Year ended
30 June 2023
|
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Investment gain/(loss)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net gain/(loss) on investments
held at fair value through profit or loss
|
8
|
-
|
10,454
|
10,454
|
-
|
(12,416)
|
(12,416)
|
|
|
-
|
10,454
|
10,454
|
-
|
(12,416)
|
(12,416)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Expenses
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Management fee
|
4
|
(2,826)
|
-
|
(2,826)
|
(2,912)
|
-
|
(2,912)
|
Other operating
expenses
|
5
|
(1,482)
|
-
|
(1,482)
|
(1,851)
|
-
|
(1,851)
|
Total expenses
|
|
(4,308)
|
-
|
(4,308)
|
(4,763)
|
-
|
(4,763)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Operating (loss)/profit for the year
|
|
(4,308)
|
10,454
|
6,146
|
(4,763)
|
(12,416)
|
(17,179)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Finance income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest income
|
|
582
|
-
|
582
|
260
|
-
|
260
|
Total finance income
|
|
582
|
-
|
582
|
260
|
-
|
260
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Loss)/profit for the year before tax
|
|
(3,726)
|
10,454
|
6,728
|
(4,503)
|
(12,416)
|
(16,919)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tax
|
6
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(Loss)/profit and total comprehensive (expense)/income
attributable to equity holders of the Company
|
|
(3,726)
|
10,454
|
6,728
|
(4,503)
|
(12,416)
|
(16,919)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit per share
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic and diluted
(losses)/earnings per share (pence)
|
7
|
(1.57)
|
4.40
|
2.83
|
(1.88)
|
(5.19)
|
(7.07)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
All Revenue and Capital items in
the above statement derive from continuing operations. No
operations were acquired or discontinued in the year or prior
year.
The Total column of this statement
is the profit and loss account of the Company, and the Revenue and
Capital columns represent supplementary information prepared under
guidance issued by the Association of Investment
Companies.
The accompanying notes
below form an integral
part of these financial statements.
Statement of Financial
Position
As at 30 June 2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Investments at fair value through
profit or loss
|
8
|
201,499
|
187,428
|
|
|
201,499
|
187,428
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
9
|
98
|
88
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
10
|
26,985
|
35,309
|
|
|
27,083
|
35,397
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
11
|
(444)
|
(428)
|
|
|
(444)
|
(428)
|
|
|
|
|
Net current assets
|
|
26,639
|
34,969
|
|
|
|
|
Net assets
|
|
228,138
|
222,397
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
12
|
2,394
|
2,394
|
Share premium
|
12
|
60,377
|
60,377
|
Treasury shares
|
12
|
(987)
|
-
|
Retained losses
|
|
(6,822)
|
(13,550)
|
Other reserves
|
12
|
173,176
|
173,176
|
Total shareholders' funds
|
|
228,138
|
222,397
|
|
|
|
|
Number of shares in issue at year
end
|
13
|
237,198,584
|
239,384,928
|
|
|
|
|
Net assets per share (pence)
|
|
96.18
|
92.90
|
The financial statements were
approved and authorised for issue by the Board of Directors on 14
October 2024 and signed on its behalf by:
Will
Whitehorn
Sue Inglis
Chair
Director
Registered Company Number
13395698
The accompanying notes
below form an integral
part of these financial statements.
Statement of Changes in
Equity
For the year ended 30 June 2024
|
|
|
|
|
Retained
(losses)/earnings
|
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
|
Treasury
shares
|
Special distributable
reserve
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total shareholders' funds at 1
July 2023
|
2,394
|
60,377
|
-
|
173,176
|
(8,789)
|
(4,761)
|
222,397
|
Repurchase of ordinary
shares
|
-
|
-
|
(987)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(987)
|
Total comprehensive
(expense)/income for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(3,726)
|
10,454
|
6,728
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total shareholders' funds at 30 June 2024
|
2,394
|
60,377
|
(987)
|
173,176
|
(12,515)
|
5,693
|
228,138
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
For the Year ended 30 June 2023
|
|
|
|
|
Retained
(losses)/earnings
|
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
|
Treasury
shares
|
Special distributable
reserve
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total shareholders' funds at 1
July 2022
|
2,394
|
60,377
|
-
|
173,176
|
(4,286)
|
7,655
|
239,316
|
Total comprehensive expense for
the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(4,503)
|
(12,416)
|
(16,919)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total shareholders' funds at 30 June 2023
|
2,394
|
60,377
|
-
|
173,176
|
(8,789)
|
(4,761)
|
222,397
|
The accompanying notes
below form an integral
part of these financial statements.
Statement of Cash
Flows
For the year ended 30 June
2024
|
|
For the Year
Ended
|
For the Year
Ended
|
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from operating activities
|
|
|
|
Profit /(loss) for the year before
tax
|
|
6,728
|
(16,919)
|
|
|
|
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Foreign currency cash
movement
|
|
(68)
|
237
|
Purchase of investments
|
|
(7,145)
|
(21,330)
|
Disposal of investments
|
8
|
3,528
|
3,341
|
Unrealised movement in fair value
of investments
|
8
|
(11,875)
|
10,456
|
Realised loss on disposal of
investments
|
8
|
1,421
|
1,960
|
Movement in payables
|
11
|
16
|
118
|
Movement in receivables
|
9
|
(10)
|
33
|
Net cash used in operating activities
|
|
(7,405)
|
(22,104)
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
Share buy-backs
|
12
|
(987)
|
-
|
Net cash generated from financing
activities
|
|
(987)
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
Net movement in cash and cash
equivalents during the year
|
|
(8,392)
|
(22,104)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the
beginning of the year
|
|
35,309
|
57,650
|
Exchange translation
movement
|
|
68
|
(237)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the
year
|
|
26,985
|
35,309
|
Cash flows include bank interest
received of £582k (30 June 2023: £260k).
The accompanying notes
below form an integral
part of these financial statements.
NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
For the year ended 30 June 2024
1. General
Information
The Company is an externally
managed closed-ended investment company, incorporated in England
and Wales on 14 May 2021 with registered number 13395698. The
Company's ordinary shares were admitted to trading on the London
Stock Exchange's main market on 14 July 2021.
2. Material Accounting
Policies
The principal accounting policies
applied in the preparation of these financial statements are set
out below. These policies have been consistently applied, unless
otherwise stated.
The following relevant IFRSs have
been applied in these Financial Statements during the year
-
- IAS 1 (amended), 'Presentation
of Financial Statements' - (amendments regarding the disclosure of
accounting policies, effective for accounting periods commencing on
or after 1 January 2023). The changes arising from the amendments
to these IFRSs are either presentational and/or minor in nature. In
the opinion of the Directors, the adoption of these new and amended
standards has had no material impact on the Financial Statements of
the Company.
Basis of preparation
These financial statements have
been prepared on the historic cost basis, as modified for the
measurement of certain financial instruments held at fair value
through profit or loss and in accordance with UK-adopted
International Accounting Standards and those parts of the Companies
Act 2006 applicable to companies under International Financial
Reporting Standards.
Where presentational guidance set
out in the Association of Investment Companies Statement of
Recommended Practice for the Financial Statements of Investment
Trust Companies and Venture Capital Trusts (the 'AIC SORP') is consistent with the
requirements of UK-adopted International Accounting Standards, the
Directors have sought to prepare the financial statements on a
basis compliant with the recommendations of the AIC SORP. In
particular, supplementary information which analyses the Statement
of Comprehensive Income between items of revenue or capital nature
has been presented alongside the total Statement of Comprehensive
Income. The determination of whether an item should be recognised
as revenue or capital is carried out in accordance with the
principles and recommendations set out in the AIC SORP. The
Directors have chosen to apply the non-allocation approach, so all
indirect costs are charged to the revenue column of the Statement
of Comprehensive Income.
In these financial statements,
values are rounded to the nearest thousand (£'000), unless
otherwise indicated.
Going concern
The Company's cash balance at 30
June 2024 was £27.0m (2023: £35.3m), which was sufficient to cover
its liabilities of £0.4m (2023: £0.4m) at that date and any
foreseeable expenses for a period of at least 12 months from the
date of approval of these financial statements, including in severe
but plausible downside scenarios. The Company's cash balance at the
date of approval of these financial statements was
£25.6m.
The Company's cash balance is
comprised of cash held on deposit with substantial global financial
institutions with strong credit ratings and the risk of default by
the counterparties is considered extremely low. The major cash
outflows of the Company are expected to be for the acquisition of
new investments, which are discretionary. The Company is
closed-ended and there is no requirement for the Company to buy
back or redeem shares.
Heightened inflation rates and
interest rates continue to depress the macroeconomic environment,
impacting global markets. Capital markets and the Company's share
price and investments continue to experience volatility which
remains a risk to the Company. The Directors and Investment Manager
continue to consider the following specific key potential
impacts:
· increased volatility in the fair value of
investments;
· uncertainty regarding the Company's ability to raise
additional capital and support the existing portfolio;
and
· disruptions to business activities of the portfolio
companies.
In considering these key potential
impacts, the Directors and Investment Manager have assessed them
with reference to the Company's risk framework and mitigation
measures in place.
Having made inquiries, the Board
is satisfied that the Company's service providers have robust
processes in place in order to continue to provide the required
level of services to the Company, and to maintain compliance with
laws and regulations, in the face of the challenges arising as a
result of the weak macroeconomic environment. There have been no
operational difficulties encountered or disruption in service to
date.
Based on the assessment outlined
above, including the various risk mitigation measures in place, the
Directors do not consider that the impact of a weak global
macroeconomic environment has created a material uncertainty over
the assessment of the Company as a going concern.
On the basis of this review, and
after making due enquiries, the Directors have a reasonable
expectation that the Company has adequate resources to continue in
operational existence for at least 12 months from the date of
approval of these financial statements. Accordingly, they continue
to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the financial
statements.
Segmental reporting
The chief operating
decision-maker, who is responsible for allocating resources and
assessing performance of the operating segments, has been
identified as the Board of Directors as a whole. The key measure of
performance used by the Board to assess the Company's performance
and to allocate resources is the Company's NAV, as calculated in
accordance with UK-adopted International Accounting Standards, and,
therefore, no reconciliation is required between the measure of
profit or loss used by the Board and that contained in the
financial statements.
For management purposes, the
Company is organised into one main operating segment, which invests
predominantly in early and growth stage privately financed
SpaceTech businesses globally.
All of the Company's current bank
interest income is derived from within the UK.
The Company's non-current assets
are located in the US, the UK, the EU, Israel and Japan. Due to the
Company's nature, it has no customers.
Functional currency and foreign currency
transactions
These financial statements are
presented in Sterling. As the majority of the Company's
transactions are in Sterling, it is appropriate for the Company's
functional currency to be Sterling. However, the Company holds
investments denominated in currencies other than Sterling,
including US Dollars. In addition, an element of any income from
the Company's investments may be generated in currencies other than
Sterling.
Transactions in foreign currencies
are translated at the foreign exchange rate ruling at the date of
the transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in
foreign currencies at the reporting date are translated at the
foreign exchange rate ruling at that date. Foreign exchange
differences arising on translation are recognised in the Statement
of Comprehensive Income. The Company may employ derivatives for
currency hedging purposes, but the Board did not do so in the
year.
New and amended standards and interpretations not
applied
At the date of authorisation of
these financial statements, the following amendments had been
published and will be mandatory for future accounting
periods.
Effective for accounting periods
beginning on or after 1 January 2024:
· classification of liabilities as current or non-current
(amendments to IAS 1 Presentation of Financial
Statements);
· non-current liabilities with covenants (amendments to IAS 1
Presentation of Financial Statements); and
· supplier finance arrangements (amendments to IAS 7 Statement
of Cash Flows and IFRS 7 Financial Instruments:
Disclosures).
Effective for accounting periods
beginning on or after 1 January 2025:
· lack
of exchangeability (amendments to IAS 21 The Effects of Changes in
Foreign Exchange Rates).
The Company has considered the
IFRS accounting standards and interpretations that have been issued
but are not yet effective. None of these standards or
interpretations are likely to have a material effect on the
Company, as it is the belief of the Board that the activities of
the Company are unlikely to be affected by the changes to these
standards, although any disclosures recommended by these standards,
where applicable, will be provided as required.
Assessment as an investment entity
IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial
Statements sets out the following three essential criteria that
must be met if a company is to be considered as an investment
entity:
· it
must obtain funds from multiple investors for the purpose of
providing those investors with investment management
services.
· it
must commit to its investors that its business purpose is to invest
funds solely for returns from capital appreciation, investment
income or both; and
· it
must measure and evaluate the performance of substantially all of
its investments on a fair value basis.
In satisfying the second essential
criteria, the notion of an investment time frame is critical, and
an investment entity should have an exit strategy for the
realisation of its investments. 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 portfolio
risk 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.
The Directors are of the opinion
that the Company meets the essential criteria and typical
characteristics of an investment entity as it obtains funds from
investors to invest for returns from capital appreciation and
substantially all of its investments are held at fair value through
profit or loss, in accordance with IFRS 9 Financial
Instruments. Fair value is measured in accordance with IFRS
13 Fair Value Measurement.
Fair value movement
Gains or losses resulting from the
movement in fair value of the Company's investments held at fair
value through profit or loss are recognised in the Capital column
of the Statement of Comprehensive Income at each valuation
point.
Expenses
The Company's management,
administration and all other expenses are charged through the
Revenue column and any performance fee is charged to the Capital
column of the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Taxation
The Company has received
confirmation from HMRC that it has been accepted as an approved
investment trust with effect from 14 July 2021, provided it
continues to meet the eligibility conditions of section 1158 of the
Corporation Tax Act 2010 ('s.1158') and the ongoing requirements
for approved companies in the Investment Trust (Approved Company)
(Tax) Regulations 2011. The Directors believe that the Company has
conducted its affairs in compliance with s.1158 since approval was
granted and intends to continue to do so.
In respect of each accounting
period for which the Company is and continues to be approved by
HMRC as an investment trust, the Company will be exempt from UK
corporation tax on its chargeable gains. The Company will, however,
be subject to UK corporation tax on its income (currently at a rate
of 25%).
In principle, the Company is
liable to UK corporation tax on any dividend income. However, there
are broad-ranging exemptions from this charge which would be
expected to be applicable in respect of most of the dividends the
Company may receive.
To the extent that the Company
receives income from, or realises amounts on the disposal of,
investments in foreign countries it may be subject to foreign
withholding or other taxation in those jurisdictions. To the extent
it relates to taxable income, this foreign tax may, to the extent
not relievable under a double tax treaty, be able to be treated as
an expense for UK corporation tax purposes, or if the Company has a
tax liability it may be treated as a credit against UK corporation
tax up to certain limits and subject to certain
conditions.
Financial instruments
Financial assets and financial
liabilities are recognised in the Statement of Financial Position
when the Company becomes a party to the contractual provisions of
the instrument. Financial assets and financial liabilities are only
offset, and the net amount reported in the Statement of Financial
Position and Statement of Comprehensive Income, when there is a
currently enforceable legal right to offset the recognised amounts
and the Company intends to settle on a net basis or realise the
asset and liability simultaneously.
At 30 June 2024 and 2023, the
carrying amounts of cash and cash equivalents, receivables,
payables and accrued expenses reflected in the financial statements
are reasonable estimates of fair value in view of the nature of
these instruments or the relatively short period of time between
the original instruments and their expected realisation.
Financial assets
The classification of financial
assets at initial recognition depends on the purpose for which the
financial asset was acquired and its characteristics.
The Company's financial assets
principally comprise of cash and cash equivalents and investments
held at fair value through profit or loss.
Cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents comprise
cash balances, short-term deposits held on call with banks, money
market investments, and other short-term highly liquid deposits
with original maturities of three months or less and that are
readily convertible to a known amount of cash and are subject to an
insignificant risk of changes in value.
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 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 cost, being the fair value
of consideration given. Transaction costs are recognised in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income as incurred.
Fair value is defined as the
amount for which an asset could be exchanged between knowledgeable
willing parties in an arm's length transaction. The value of the
Company's investments is calculated on the following
bases:
· the
value of investments that are not publicly traded are valued using
recognised valuation methodologies in accordance with the IPEV
Valuation Guidelines. These methods include primary valuation
techniques such as revenue or earnings multiples, milestones or
recent transactions;
· where an investment in an unlisted business has been made
recently, the Company may use the calibrated price of recent
investment as the best indicator of fair value. In such a case,
changes or events subsequent to the relevant transaction date are
assessed to ascertain if they imply a change in the investment's
fair value;
· publicly traded securities are valued by reference to their
bid price or last traded price, if applicable, on the relevant
exchange in accordance with the AIC's valuation guidelines and
applicable accounting standards. Where trading in the securities of
a portfolio company is suspended, the investment in those
securities would be valued at the estimate of its net realisable
value. In preparing valuations, account is taken, where
appropriate, of latest dealing prices, valuations from reliable
sources, comparable asset values and other relevant factors;
and
· any
value otherwise than in Sterling is converted into Sterling at the
prevailing rate.
Derecognition of financial assets
A financial asset (in whole or in
part) is derecognised:
· when
the Company has transferred substantially all the risks and rewards
of ownership; or
· when
it has neither transferred nor retained substantially all the risks
and rewards and when it no longer has control over the asset or a
portion of the asset; or
· when
the contractual right to receive cashflow has expired.
Purchases of investments for cash
are classified as operating activities in the Statement of Cash
Flows as the Company's objective is to generate capital growth
through investment in a portfolio of predominantly early and growth
stage privately financed SpaceTech businesses.
Financial liabilities
The Company's financial
liabilities are measured at amortised cost and include trade and
other payables and other short-term monetary liabilities which are
initially recognised at fair value and subsequently measured at
amortised cost using the effective interest rate method.
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, £0.01 has been recognised in share capital and the remaining
amount received has been recognised in share premium. Incremental
costs directly attributable to the issue of new shares are shown in
share premium as a deduction from proceeds. Amounts in the share
capital and share premium accounts are not
distributable.
The amount standing to the credit
of the share premium account of the Company on completion of the
IPO, less issue expenses set off against the share premium account,
was cancelled by a court order dated 14 December 2021 and credited
to the special distributable reserve (presented as 'Other
reserves'). Retained earnings include cumulative unrealised
movements in investments which are classified as capital in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income, which are not distributable; and
cumulative revenue items, which are classified as distributable to
shareholders.
3. Significant Accounting
Judgements, Estimates and Assumptions
The preparation of the financial
statements requires the application of estimates which may affect
the results reported in the financial statements. Estimates, by
their nature, are based on judgement and available
information.
Investment entity
As disclosed in note 2, the
Directors have concluded that the Company meets the definition of
an investment entity as defined in IFRS 10, IFRS 12 and IAS 27.
This conclusion involved a degree of judgement and assessment as to
whether the Company met the criteria outlined in the accounting
standards.
Valuation
The key area involving a high
degree of estimation or complexity that is significant to the
financial statements has been identified as the risk of
misstatement of the valuation of the Company's unlisted investments
(see note 8). In addition, as disclosed in note 4, amounts payable
as management fee or performance fee to the Investment Manager are
dependent on NAV and, therefore, valuation of
investments.
The Company's unlisted investments
are early or growth stage companies. The Company abides by the IPEV
Valuation Guidelines in determining fair value. Given the nature of
these investments, there are often no current or short-term future
earnings or positive cash flows. Although not considered to be the
default valuation technique, the appropriate approach to determine
fair value may be based on a methodology with reference to a
calibrated price of recent investment, or, in the case of terms for
a future round being agreed, fair value may be based with reference
to a calibrated price of such future round, discounted for
execution risk. This is of greater reliability than other methods
based on estimates and assumptions and, accordingly, where there
have been recent investments by third parties, the price of that
investment generally provides a basis of the valuation. Recent
transactions may include post year end (if terms were agreed pre
year end) as well as pre year end transactions depending on their
nature and timing. Where a significant milestone is achieved by a
portfolio company and there has not yet been a subsequent funding
round, the fair value is determined using comparable metrics. Where
relevant, such as in cases where portfolio companies are profitable
or have stable and predictable revenues, fair value may be
determined using a multiples approach (earnings or revenue,
respectively). It may be necessary to apply discounts to some or
all of the comparables due to differences between the portfolio
company and the comparables (such as size, margin, liquidity,
marketability, etc). In addition, in the case of underperformance,
fair value write-downs are taken. Publicly traded securities are
valued by reference to their bid price or last traded
price.
All valuations are considered on a
quarterly basis and calibrated against the price of the last
funding round to ensure this price remains reasonable. In addition,
the Company undertakes a more thorough recalibration for the
material portfolio companies (i) whose last funding rounds took
place more than 12 months earlier or (ii) which had experienced a
significant milestone event or material under- or over-performance
(each a 'recalibration
event'). This process entails assessing the enterprise value
following the most recent round against a composite of four
elements: observable market data (where possible), recent relevant
private investment transactions, public market valuations of
comparable companies and the company's internal metrics and
performance.
In all cases, valuations of
unlisted investments are based on the judgement of the Directors
after consideration of the above and upon available information
believed to be reliable, which may be affected by conditions in the
financial markets. Due to the inherent uncertainty of the
investment valuations, the estimated values may differ
significantly from the values that would have been used had a ready
market for the investments existed and the differences could be
material. Due to this uncertainty, the Company may not be able to
sell its investments at the carrying value in these financial
statements when it desires to do so or to realise what it perceives
to be fair value in the event of a sale.
4. Management and Performance
Fees
Management fee
Under the Investment Management
Agreement, the Investment Manager is entitled to a management fee
of 1.25% per annum of NAV up to £300m and 1.00% per annum of NAV
above £300m, payable quarterly in advance.
Management fees incurred in the
year were £2.8m (2023: £2.9m), of which £NIL was payable to the
Investment Manager as at 30 June 2024 (2023: £NIL).
Performance fee
Under the Investment Management
Agreement, the Investment Manager is also entitled to a performance
fee of 15% over an 8% hurdle with full catch-up, calculated on NAV
annually. The performance fee is only payable where the adjusted
NAV at the end of a performance period exceeds the higher of the
performance hurdle and a high-water mark. Any accrued
performance fee will only be paid to the extent that the aggregate
of the net realised profits on unlisted investments, net unrealised
gains on listed investments and income received from investments
during the relevant performance period is greater than the
performance fee payable and, to the extent that such aggregate is
less than the performance fee payable, an amount equal to the
difference shall be carried forward and included in the performance
fee payable as at the end of the next performance period.
Subject to the Takeover Code, the Investment Manager is required to
reinvest 15% of any performance fee paid in shares of the Company.
Full details of the performance fee are set out in the Company's
IPO prospectus, which is available on the Company's website
(https://investors.seraphim.vc/).
No performance fee was accrued for
or paid to the Investment Manager for the year (2023:
£NIL).
5.
Operating
Expenses
|
Year Ended
30 June 2024
|
Year Ended
30 June 2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Administration & depository
fees
|
290
|
219
|
Legal & professional
fees
|
273
|
394
|
Directors' fees
|
223
|
224
|
Audit of statutory financial
statements
|
105
|
96
|
Irrecoverable VAT
|
60
|
95
|
Insurance expense
|
22
|
23
|
Other operating
expenses
|
509
|
800
|
Total operating expenses
|
1,482
|
1,851
|
The Company had no employees
during the year ended 30 June 2024 (2023: NIL)
6.
Tax
As an investment trust, the
Company is exempt from UK corporation tax on capital gains arising
on the disposal of shares.
Capital profits from its creditor
loan relationships or derivative contracts are exempt from UK tax
where the profits are accounted for through the Capital column of
the Statement of Comprehensive Income, in accordance with the AIC
SORP.
No tax liability has been
recognised in the financial statements.
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK corporation tax charge on
profits for the year at 25% (2023: 20.5%¹)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
¹ The tax rate changed from 19% to
25% on 31 March 2023 such that the average rate for the year was
20.5% and this is the percentage used for the tax
reconciliation.
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Return on ordinary activities
before taxation
|
(3,726)
|
10,454
|
6,728
|
(4,503)
|
(12,416)
|
(16,919)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Loss)/profit on ordinary
activities multiplied by standard rate of corporation tax in the UK
of 25% (2023: 20.5%1)
|
(932)
|
2,614
|
1,682
|
(923)
|
(2,545)
|
(3,468)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Effects of:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-taxable (gains)/losses on
investments
|
-
|
(2,614)
|
(2,614)
|
-
|
2,545
|
2,545
|
Disallowable expenses
|
1,616
|
-
|
1,616
|
32
|
-
|
32
|
Excess management expenses not
utilised in the year
|
(685)
|
-
|
(685)
|
891
|
-
|
891
|
Total tax charge
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
As at 30 June 2024, the Company
has not recognised a deferred tax asset of £3,056k (2023: £2,106k)
arising as a result of having unutilised management expenses
carried forward at the year end of £12,225k (2023: £8,424k) based
on a prospective corporation tax rate of 25% (2023: 20.5%). These
expenses will only be utilised if the tax treatment of the
Company's income and chargeable gains changes or if the Company's
investment profile changes.
Deferred tax is not provided on
capital gains and losses arising on the revaluation or disposal of
investments because the Company meets (and intends to continue to
meet for the foreseeable future) the conditions for approval as an
investment trust company.
7.
Earnings Per
Share
|
Year ended 30 June
2024
|
Year ended 30 June
2023
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
(Loss)/profit attributable to
equity - £'000
|
(3,726)
|
10,454
|
6,728
|
(4,503)
|
(12,416)
|
(16,919)
|
Weighted average number of
ordinary shares in issue
|
|
|
237,478,177
|
|
|
239,384,928
|
Basic and diluted
(losses)/earnings per share in the year (pence)
|
(1.57)
|
4.40
|
2.83
|
(1.88)
|
(5.19)
|
(7.07)
|
8.
Investments Held
at Fair Value Through Profit or Loss
For the year ended 30 June 2024
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Opening balance
|
3,171
|
1,637
|
182,620
|
187,428
|
Investment additions
(1)
|
-
|
-
|
15,800
|
15,800
|
Investment disposals
(2)
|
-
|
-
|
(12,183)
|
(12,183)
|
Transfers from Level 3 to Level
1
|
3,852
|
-
|
(3,852)
|
-
|
|
7,023
|
1,637
|
182,385
|
191,045
|
Loss on disposals
|
-
|
-
|
(1,421)
|
(1,421)
|
Change in fair value
|
(82)
|
2,752
|
9,088
|
11,758
|
Change in fair value - foreign
exchange movement
|
5
|
30
|
82
|
117
|
|
(77)
|
2,782
|
7,749
|
10,454
|
Net (loss)/gain on investments
held at fair value through profit or loss
|
(77)
|
2,782
|
7,749
|
10,454
|
Closing balance
|
6,946
|
4,419
|
190,134
|
201,499
|
|
|
|
|
|
[1] During the year ended 30
June 2024, cash transactions amounted to £7.1m (2023: £17.1m) and
non-cash transactions amounted to £8.7m (2023: £NIL) and relate to
the conversions of loan to equity in D-Orbit (£4.8m) and Seraphim
Space Ventures II LP (£0.1m) and the initial investment in Seraphim
Space Ventures II LP (£3.8m).
[2] During the year ended 30
June 2024, cash transactions amounted to $3.5m (2023: £NIL) and
non-cash transactions amounted to £8.7m (2023: £NIL) and relate to
the conversions of loan to equity in D-Orbit (£4.7m) and Seraphim
Space Ventures II LP (£0.1m) and the in specie distribution of nine
assets to Seraphim Space Ventures II LP (£3.8m).
For the year ended 30 June 2023
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Opening balance
(1)
|
16,236
|
2,373
|
167,474
|
186,083
|
Investment additions
|
-
|
-
|
17,102
|
17,102
|
Investment disposals
|
(3,341)
|
-
|
-
|
(3,341)
|
Transfers from Level 3 to Level
1
|
103
|
-
|
(103)
|
-
|
|
12,998
|
2,373
|
184,473
|
199,844
|
Loss on disposals
|
(1,358)
|
-
|
(602)
|
(1,960)
|
Change in fair value
|
(7,569)
|
(525)
|
4,427
|
(3,667)
|
Change in fair value - foreign
exchange movement
|
(900)
|
(211)
|
(5,678)
|
(6,789)
|
|
(9,827)
|
(736)
|
(1,853)
|
(12,416)
|
Net loss on investments held at
fair value through profit or loss
|
(9,827)
|
(736)
|
(1,853)
|
(12,416)
|
Closing balance
|
3,171
|
1,637
|
182,620
|
187,428
|
[1] Investment in AST
SpaceMobile was reclassified to a Level 2 investment.
During the year ended 30 June 2024
investments with a fair value of £3.9m were transferred from Level
3 to Level 1 due to the Astroscale IPO and listing in June 2024
(2023: investments with a fair value of £0.1m were transferred from
Level 3 to Level 1 due to the Nightingale IPO and listing in
November 2022).
Fair value measurements
The Company measures fair value
using the following fair value hierarchy that prioritises the
inputs to valuation techniques used to measure fair value. The
hierarchy gives the highest priority to unadjusted quoted prices in
active markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1
measurements) and the lowest priority to valuations with
unobservable inputs (Level 3 measurements). The three levels of the
fair value hierarchy under IFRS 13 are as follows:
Level
1:
Quoted price (unadjusted) in an active
market for an identical instrument.
Level
2:
Valuation techniques based on observable inputs, either directly
(i.e. as prices) or indirectly (i.e. derived from prices). This
category includes instruments valued using quoted prices in active
markets for similar instruments, quoted prices for identical or
similar instruments in markets that are considered less than active
or other valuation techniques for which all significant inputs are
directly or indirectly observable from market data.
Level 3:
Valuation techniques using significant unobservable inputs. This
category includes all instruments for which the valuation technique
includes inputs that are not based on observable data and the
unobservable inputs have a significant effect on the instrument's
valuation. This category includes instruments that are valued based
on quoted prices for similar instruments for which significant
unobservable adjustments or assumptions are required to reflect
differences between the instruments.
The level in the fair value
hierarchy within which the fair value measurement is categorised in
its entirety is determined on the basis of the lowest level input
that is significant to the fair value measurement. For this
purpose, the significance of an input is assessed against the fair
value measurement in its entirety. If a fair value measurement uses
observable inputs that require significant adjustment based on
unobservable inputs, that measurement is a Level 3
measurement.
Assessing the significance of a
particular input to the fair value measurement in its entirety
requires judgement, considering factors specific to the asset or
liability.
The determination of what
constitutes 'observable' requires significant judgement by the
Company. The Company 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 objective of the valuation
techniques used is to arrive at a fair value measurement that
reflects the price that would be received if an asset was sold or a
liability transferred in an orderly transaction between market
participants at the measurement date.
The following table analyses,
within the fair value hierarchy, the Company's investments measured
at fair value at 30 June 2024 and 2023.
As at June 2024
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Listed investments
|
6,946
|
4,419
|
-
|
11,365
|
Unlisted investments
|
-
|
-
|
190,134
|
190,134
|
|
6,946
|
4,419
|
190,134
|
201,499
|
As at June 2023
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Listed investments
|
3,171
|
1,637
|
-
|
4,808
|
Unlisted investments
|
-
|
-
|
182,620
|
182,620
|
|
3,171
|
1,637
|
182,620
|
187,428
|
The Level 1 investments were
valued by reference to the closing bid prices of each portfolio
company on the reporting date.
Due to their nature, the unlisted
investments are always expected to be classified as Level 3 as
these are not traded and their fair values will contain
unobservable inputs.
Significant unobservable inputs for Level 3
valuations
The fair value of unlisted
securities is established with reference to the IPEV Valuation
Guidelines and the Company may base valuations on the calibrated
price of recent investment in the portfolio companies, comparable
milestones or multiples of earnings or revenues where applicable.
An assessment is made at each measurement date as to the most
appropriate valuation methodology.
The valuation methodologies
applied involve subjectivity in their significant unobservable
inputs and the table below outlines these inputs. Note 14
illustrates the sensitivity that flexing these inputs has on fair
value ('FV').
As at 30 June 2024
Valuation methodology
|
FV (£'000)
|
|
Unobservable input
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Level 1
|
|
|
|
Available market price
|
6,946
|
|
n/a
|
|
|
|
|
Level 2
|
|
|
|
Available market price
|
4,419
|
|
n/a
|
|
|
|
|
Level 3
|
|
|
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (<3 months)
|
22,812
|
|
Transaction price and company
performance
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (3-6 months)
|
38,289
|
|
Transaction price and company
performance
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (>6 months)
|
65,329
|
|
Transaction price and company
performance
|
|
|
|
|
Premium to price of recent
investment
|
47,785
|
|
Premium percentage, transaction
price and company performance
|
Partial write down to price of
recent investment
|
12,297
|
|
Write down percentage, transaction
price and company performance
|
Milestone multiples
|
3,622
|
|
Discount to
comparables/multiples
|
Total
|
201,499
|
|
|
As at 30 June 2023
Valuation methodology
|
FV (£'000)
|
Unobservable input
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Level 1
|
|
|
Available market price
|
3,171
|
n/a
|
|
|
|
Level 2
|
|
|
Available market price
|
1,637
|
n/a
|
|
|
|
Level 3
|
|
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (<3 months)
|
44,428
|
Transaction price and company
performance
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (3-6 months)
|
13,708
|
Transaction price and company
performance
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (>6 months)
|
7,624
|
Transaction price and company
performance
|
Calibrated price of future
investment
|
21,237
|
Transaction price and company
performance
|
Premium to price of recent
investment
|
45,463
|
Premium percentage
|
Partial write down to price of
recent investment
|
10,476
|
Write down percentage
|
Discount to price of recent
investment (post-period)
|
33,474
|
Uncertainty discount
|
Milestones and
multiples
|
6,210
|
Weightings and discount to
comparables/multiples
|
Total
|
187,428
|
|
Details of significant holdings as
required by Schedule 4 of The Large and Medium-sized Companies and
Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulation 2008 are set out
below.
30 June 2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Name
|
Nature of relationship
|
Country of incorporation
|
Class of shares held
|
%
shareholding
|
Capital & reserves (£)
|
Profit/(loss) (£)
|
Year end of data
|
Notes
|
PlanetWatchers (UK)
Limited
|
Shareholder
|
UK
|
Series Seed 2
Preference
Pre-Series A Preference
Series A Preference
|
78%
29%
43%
|
12,052,704
|
Not publicly available
|
31-Dec-23
|
|
30 June 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Name
|
Nature of relationship
|
Country of incorporation
|
Class of shares held
|
%
shareholding
|
Capital & reserves (£)
|
Profit/(loss) (£)
|
Year end of data
|
Notes
|
Bamboo Systems Group
Limited
|
Shareholder
|
UK
|
A Preference
|
47%
|
(1,355,598)
|
Not publicly available
|
31-Dec-20
|
In administration as of
21-Nov-21
|
PlanetWatchers (UK)
Limited
|
Shareholder
|
UK
|
Series Seed 2
Preference
Pre-Series A Preference
Series A Preference
|
78%
29%
43%
|
12,106,431
|
Not publicly available
|
31-Dec-22
|
|
9. Trade and Other
Receivables
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Prepayments
|
83
|
78
|
VAT receivable
|
15
|
10
|
|
98
|
88
|
10. Cash and Cash
Equivalents
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
26,985
|
35,309
|
|
26,985
|
35,309
|
Cash and cash equivalents include
money market investments of £10.9m (30 June 2023:
£10.2m).
11. Trade and Other
Payables
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Accruals
|
294
|
313
|
Trade creditors
|
150
|
115
|
|
444
|
428
|
12. Share
Capital
Date
|
Issued and fully paid
|
Number of
ordinary
shares
|
Share
capital
|
Treasury
shares
|
Share
premium
|
Other
reserves
|
Total
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
30-Jun-23
|
Opening balance
|
239,384,928
|
2,394
|
-
|
60,377
|
173,176
|
235,947
|
30-Jun-24
|
Share buy-backs in the
year
|
-2,186,344
|
-
|
-987
|
-
|
-
|
-987
|
30-Jun-24
|
237,198,584
|
2,394
|
-987
|
60,377
|
173,176
|
234,960
|
On 13 July 2023, the Company
announced a share repurchase programme to repurchase ordinary
shares in the Company. During the year, 2,186,344 shares were
purchased (2023: NIL). The Company holds 2,186,344 of its ordinary
shares in treasury and has 237,198,584 ordinary shares in issue
(excluding treasury shares).
13. Net Asset Value Per
Share
The net asset value per ordinary
share at the year end was as follows:
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
Net assets (per Statement of
Financial Position)
|
|
£228.1m
|
£222.4m
|
Number of ordinary shares issued
(excluding treasury shares)
|
|
237,198,584
|
239,384,928
|
Net asset value per
share
|
|
96.18p
|
92.90p
|
14. Financial Risk
Management
Financial risk management objectives
The Company's investing activities
intentionally expose it to a variety of financial risks. The
Company makes investments in order to generate returns, in
accordance with its investment policy and
objectives.
The most important types of
financial risks to which the Company is exposed are market risk
(including price, interest rate and foreign currency risk),
liquidity risk and credit risk. The Board has overall
responsibility for the determination of the Company's risk
management and sets policies to manage financial risks at an
acceptable level to achieve the Company's objectives. The policy
and process for measuring and mitigating each of the main risks are
described below. The Investment Manager and the Administrator
provide advice to the Board which allows it to monitor and manage
financial risks relating to its operations through internal risk
reports which analyse exposures by degree and magnitude of risks.
The Investment Manager and the Administrator report to the Board on
a quarterly basis.
Categories of financial instrument
For financial assets and
liabilities carried at amortised cost, the Directors are of the
opinion that their carrying value approximates to their fair
value.
Financial assets/liabilities are
as follows:
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
Financial assets
|
|
|
Investments held at fair value
through profit or loss:
|
|
|
Investments
|
201,499
|
187,428
|
|
|
|
Other financial assets:
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
26,985
|
35,309
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
98
|
88
|
|
|
|
Financial liabilities
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
-444
|
428
|
Capital risk management
The Company manages its capital to
ensure that it will be able to continue as a going concern while
maximising the capital return to shareholders. The capital
structure of the Company consists of share capital, share premium,
treasury shares, retained losses and other reserves, as stated in
the Statement of Financial Position.
In order to maintain or adjust the
capital structure, the Company may buy back shares or issue new
shares. There are no external capital requirements imposed on the
Company.
During the year ended 30 June
2024, the Company had no borrowings (2023: £NIL).
The Company's investment policy is
set out in the Strategic Report.
Market risk
Market risk includes price risk
(including the impact of the general market on the price of any
listed holdings or the uncertainty associated with the price of
unlisted holdings), foreign currency risk and interest rate
risk.
a) Price risk
The investments held by the
Company present a potential risk of loss of capital to the Company.
Price risk arises from uncertainty about future prices of the
financial investments held by the Company. See note 8 for
quantitative information about the fair value measurement of the
Company's Level 3 investments.
The table below outlines that the
valuation methodologies employed involve subjectivity in their
significant unobservable inputs and illustrates sensitivity of the
valuations to these inputs. The table below shows the reasonable
alternative inputs.
As at 30 June 2024
Valuation methodology
|
FV (£'000)
|
Key unobservable input
|
Other unobservable
inputs
|
Range
|
Reasonable alternative
inputs
|
Change in FV
(£'000)
|
|
|
|
|
|
(+)
|
(-)
|
(+)
|
(-)
|
Level 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Available market price
|
6,946
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
5%
|
-5%
|
347
|
(347)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Level 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Available market price
|
4,419
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
5%
|
-5%
|
221
|
(221)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Level 3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (<3 months)
|
22,812
|
Transaction price1 and
company performance
|
2, 3, 4, 5,
8
|
n/a
|
5%
|
-5%
|
925
|
(799)
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (3-6 months)
|
38,289
|
Transaction price1 and
company performance
|
2, 3, 4, 5,
8
|
n/a
|
10%
|
-10%
|
3,829
|
(4,375)
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (>6 months)
|
65,329
|
Transaction price1 and
company performance
|
2, 3, 4, 5,
8
|
n/a
|
20%
|
-20%
|
8,140
|
(4,714)
|
Premium to price of recent
investment
|
47,785
|
Premium percentage, transaction
price1 and company performance
|
6
|
15%
|
5%
|
-20%
|
2,078
|
(7,520)
|
Partial write down to price of
recent investment
|
12,297
|
Write down percentage, transaction
price1 and company performance
|
7
|
15% - 50%
|
25%
|
-25%
|
1,689
|
(3,051)
|
Milestone multiples
|
3,622
|
Discount to comparables /
multiples
|
3,4,5, 8
|
50%
|
10%
|
-10%
|
802
|
(100)
|
Total
|
201,499
|
|
|
|
|
|
18,031
|
(21,127)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes:
1 While transaction price is observable, where it is deemed to
be the appropriate valuation methodology, it is also calibrated
against recent developments and other methodologies as outlined in
the table above.
2 Benchmark performance against relevant indices - the
selection of appropriate benchmarks is assessed for each
investment, taking into account its industry, geography, products
and customers.
3 EV/revenue multiple of comparable companies or
M&A/secondary transactions - the selection of comparable
companies or M&A/secondary transactions is assessed for each
investment, taking into account its industry, geography, level of
revenue and growth profile.
4 Milestone comparison with private company comparables - the
selection of milestones to be compared to EV is assessed for each
investment based on its industry and includes milestones such as
number of satellites/missions/radars, headcount and funding
raised.
5 Growth in company metrics - the selection of metrics is
assessed for each investment based on its industry, level of
revenue and growth profile and includes metrics such as
satellites/missions/radars, headcount, revenue and
bookings.
6 The premium percentage applied for strong performance is
typically in 5% increments - the level of premium to be applied is
assessed for each investment based on its level of performance,
cash runway and ability to deliver revenue growth.
7 The write down percentage applied for underperformance is
typically in 25% increments - the level of write down to be applied
is assessed for each investment based on its level of
underperformance, cash runway and ability to show
improvement.
8 Where multiple methods of calibration or valuation are used,
weightings of 5-40% are applied to these methods to total 100% -
the level of weighting applied to each method is assessed for each
investment based on the relevance of such method and to offset the
impact of any outliers.
Valuation methodology
|
FV (£'000)
|
Key unobservable input
|
Other unobservable
inputs
|
Range
|
Reasonable possible shift in
input
|
Change in FV
(£'000)
|
|
|
|
|
|
(+)
|
(-)
|
(+)
|
(-)
|
Level 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Available market price
|
3,171
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
5%
|
-5%
|
159
|
(159)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Level 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Available market price
|
1,637
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
5%
|
-5%
|
82
|
(82)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Level 3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (<3 months)
|
44,428
|
Transaction price1 and
company performance
|
2, 3, 4, 5,
9
|
n/a
|
5%
|
-5%
|
2,221
|
(2,221)
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (3-6 months)
|
13,708
|
Transaction price1 and
company performance
|
2, 3, 4, 5,
9
|
n/a
|
10%
|
-10%
|
1,371
|
(1,371)
|
Calibrated price of recent
investment (>6 months)
|
7,624
|
Transaction price1 and
company performance
|
2, 3, 4, 5,
9
|
n/a
|
20%
|
-20%
|
1,525
|
(1,525)
|
Calibrated price of future
investment
|
21,237
|
Transaction price1 and
company performance
|
2, 3, 4, 5,
9
|
n/a
|
5%
|
-5%
|
1,062
|
(1,062)
|
Premium to price of recent
investment
|
45,463
|
Premium percentage
|
6
|
|
5%
|
-15%
|
2,273
|
(6,818)
|
Partial write down to price of
recent investment
|
10,476
|
Write down percentage
|
7
|
25% - 50%
|
25%
|
-25%
|
2,619
|
(2,619)
|
Discount to price of recent
investment (post-period)
|
459
|
Uncertainty discount
|
8
|
15%
|
20%
|
-5%
|
92
|
(23)
|
Discount to price of recent
investment (post-period)
|
33,015
|
Uncertainty discount
|
8
|
5%
|
10%
|
-5%
|
3,302
|
(1,651)
|
Milestones and
multiples
|
6,210
|
Weightings9 and
discount to comparables / multiples
|
3, 4, 5
|
n/a
|
10%
|
-10%
|
621
|
(621)
|
Total
|
187,428
|
|
|
|
|
|
15,327
|
(18,152)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes:
1 While transaction price is observable, where it is deemed to
be the appropriate valuation methodology, it is also calibrated
against other methodologies as outlined in the table
above.
2 Benchmark performance against relevant indices - the
selection of appropriate benchmarks is assessed for each
investment, taking into account its industry, geography, products
and customers.
3 EV/revenue multiple of comparable companies or
M&A/secondary transactions - the selection of comparable
companies or M&A/secondary transactions is assessed for each
investment, taking into account its industry, geography, level of
revenue and growth profile.
4 Milestone comparison with private company comparables - the
selection of milestones to be compared to EV is assessed for each
investment based on its industry and includes milestones such as
number of satellites/missions/radars, headcount and funding
raised.
5 Growth in company metrics - the selection of metrics is
assessed for each investment based on its industry, level of
revenue and growth profile and includes metrics such as
satellites/missions/radars, headcount, revenue and
bookings.
6 The premium percentage applied for strong performance is
typically in 10% increments - the level of premium to be applied is
assessed for each investment based on its level of performance,
cash runway and ability to deliver revenue growth.
7 The write down percentage applied for underperformance is
typically in 25% increments - the level of write down to be applied
is assessed for each investment based on its level of
underperformance, cash runway and ability to show
improvement.
8 The uncertainty discount applied where terms for a new
funding round have been agreed, but the round has not yet closed,
can vary from 0-100% - the level of discount applied is assessed
for each investment based on the level of certainty.
9 Where multiple methods of calibration or valuation are used,
weightings of 5-40% are applied to these methods to total 100% -
the level of weighting applied to each method is assessed for each
investment based on the relevance of such method and to offset the
impact of any outliers.
Reasonable alternative inputs are
explained as follows:
· Investments valued using Level 1 methodologies or the
calibrated price of recent transactions which completed in the
three months to the year end are flexed up and down by 5% as the
Board believes these do not involve significant
subjectivity.
· Investments valued using the calibrated price of recent
transactions which completed more than three months but less than
six months before the year end are flexed up and down by 10% as the
subjectivity is thought to be greater than the above, but still not
very material.
· Investments valued using the calibrated price of recent
transactions which completed more than six months before the year
end are flexed up and down by 20% as there is a greater chance that
market movements would impact the price of private
transactions.
· Partial write downs used in the period were 15-50%, but tend
to usually be applied in 25% increments and, therefore, the inputs
are flexed up and down by this amount to account for this level of
improvement or deterioration in the portfolio companies'
performance.
· Premiums of 15% were applied where the recalibration exercise
suggested an increase to enterprise value was warranted due to
strong performance. In an upside scenario, this input is flexed up
by 5% and accounts for a 5% flex up in relation to the underlying
price which the Board does not believe involves significant
subjectivity. In the downside scenario, the input is flexed down by
20% to remove the applied premium and accounts for a 5% reduction
in relation to the underlying price.
· Investments valued using milestone multiples relative to
comparable companies or M&A/secondary transactions, with the
discount factor flexed up and down by 10%. A 10% flex is considered
reasonable as a result of judgement in relation to the comparable
multiples.
The Company is exposed to a
variety of risks which may have an impact on the carrying value of
the Company's investments.
i) Not actively traded
The majority of the Company's
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 Company's
investments vary as to the 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, the risk is managed through careful selection of
investments within the specified limits of the investment policy.
The investments are monitored on an ongoing basis by the Investment
Manager.
ii) Concentration
The Company invests principally in
early and growth stage unquoted SpaceTech businesses. This means
that the Company is exposed to the concentration risk of only
making investments in the SpaceTech sector, of which concentration
risk may further relate to sub-sector, geography, relative size of
an investment or other factors.
The Board and the Investment
Manager monitor the concentration of the investment portfolio on a
quarterly and ongoing basis respectively to ensure compliance with
the investment policy.
iii) Liquidity
The Company maintains flexibility
in funding by keeping sufficient liquidity in cash, short-term
deposits and other cash equivalents, which may be invested on a
temporary basis in line with the cash management policy as agreed
by the Board from time to time.
As at 30 June 2024, £27.0m, or
11.9% of Company's financial assets, were money market fixed
deposits and cash balances held on deposit with banks with high
credit ratings (2023: £35.3m, or 15.9%).
b) Foreign currency risk
The Company has exposure to
foreign currency risk due to the acquisition of some investments
and payment of some expenses in currencies other than Sterling.
Consequently, the Company is exposed to risks that the exchange
rate of its functional currency relative to other foreign
currencies may change in a manner that has an adverse effect on the
value of that portion of the Company's assets or liabilities
denominated in currencies other than Sterling.
The following table shows the FX
rates as at 30 June 2024 compared to 30 June 2023.
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
% change
|
GBP/USD
|
1.265
|
1.271
|
(0.47)
|
GBP/EUR
|
1.181
|
1.165
|
1.37
|
GBP/DKK
|
8.802
|
8.675
|
1.44
|
GBP/AUD
|
1.897
|
1.910
|
(0.69)
|
The following table sets out, in
Sterling, the Company's total exposure to foreign currency risk and
the net exposure to foreign currencies of the monetary assets and
liabilities.
As at 30 June 2024
|
£
|
USD $
|
€
|
DKK
|
AUD $
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment at fair value through
profit or loss
|
19,995
|
144,538
|
33,840
|
3,126
|
-
|
201,499
|
Total non-current assets
|
19,995
|
144,538
|
33,840
|
3,126
|
-
|
201,499
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
82
|
16
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
98
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
20,864
|
6,121
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
26,985
|
Total current assets
|
20,946
|
6,137
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
27,083
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
(444)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(444)
|
Total current liabilities
|
(444)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(444)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total net assets
|
40,497
|
150,675
|
33,840
|
3,126
|
-
|
228,138
|
As at 30 June 2023
|
£
|
USD $
|
€
|
DKK
|
AUD $
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment at fair value through
profit or loss
|
25,477
|
135,871
|
22,101
|
3,876
|
103
|
187,428
|
Total non-current assets
|
25,477
|
135,871
|
22,101
|
3,876
|
103
|
187,428
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
88
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
88
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
32,437
|
2,872
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
35,309
|
Total current assets
|
32,525
|
2,872
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
35,397
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
(428)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(428)
|
Total current liabilities
|
(428)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(428)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total net assets
|
57,574
|
138,743
|
22,101
|
3,876
|
103
|
222,397
|
If the US Dollar
weakened/strengthened by 5% (2023: 5%) against Sterling with all
other variables held constant, the fair value of net assets would
increase/decrease by £7,534k (2023: £6,794k).
If the Euro weakened/strengthened
by 5% (2023: 5%) against Sterling with all other variables held
constant, the fair value of net assets would increase/decrease by
£1,692k (2023: £1,105k).
If the Danish Krone
weakened/strengthened by 5% (2023: 5%) against Sterling with all
other variables held constant, the fair value of net assets would
increase/decrease by £156k (2023: £194k).
If the Australian Dollar
weakened/strengthened by 5% (2023: 5%) against Sterling with all
other variables held constant, the fair value of net assets would
increase/decrease by £0k (2023: £5k).
c) Interest rate risk
The Company's exposure to interest
rate risk relates to the Company's cash and cash equivalents. The
Company 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 Statement of Financial Position, the majority of
the Company's cash and cash equivalents were held in interest
bearing fixed deposit accounts.
The Company had no other
Interest-bearing assets or liabilities as at the reporting date. As
a consequence, the Company was only exposed to variable market
interest rate risk. As at 30 June 2024, the cash balance held by
the Company was £27.0m (2023: £35.3m). A 0.5%
increase/decrease in interest rates with all other variables held
constant would result in a change to interest received of +/- £134k
per annum (2023: 0.5% increase/decrease resulting in a change of
+/- £176k).
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that
the Company may not be able to meet a demand for cash or fund an
obligation when due. The Investment Manager and the Board monitor
forecast and actual cash flows to consider future investing
activities.
The Company adopts a prudent
approach to liquidity management and through the preparation of
budgets and cash flow forecasts maintains sufficient cash reserves
to meet its obligations.
Credit risk
Credit risk refers to the risk
that a counterparty to a financial instrument will default on a
contractual obligation or commitment that it has entered into with
the Company, resulting in financial loss to the Company. It arises
principally from investments in money market funds held and also
from derivative financial assets, cash and cash equivalents and
other receivables balances.
The Company's policy for credit
risk is to minimise its exposure to counterparties with perceived
higher risk of default by only dealing with counterparties that
meet certain credit standards.
Credit risk is monitored on an
ongoing basis by the Investment Manager in accordance with the
procedures and policies in place.
The table below shows the material
cash and short-term deposit balances and credit rating for the
counterparties used by the Company at the year end.
Counterparty
|
Location
|
Rating
|
As at 30 June
2024
|
As at 30 June
2023
|
|
|
S&P
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
Barclays
|
UK
|
A+
|
16,133
|
25,038
|
JPMorgan Asset
Management
|
UK
|
A-
|
10,852
|
10,271
|
The Company's maximum exposure to
credit risk default at the year end is shown below:
|
|
As at 30
June
2024
|
As at 30
June
2023
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Investments held at fair value
through profit or loss
|
201,499
|
187,428
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
26,985
|
35,309
|
Trade and other receivables (less
prepayments)
|
|
15
|
10
|
Directors
As at 30 June 2024, the Company
had four non-executive Directors. Directors' fees (excluding
employer national insurance contributions) for the year ended 30
June 2024 amounted to £200k (2023: £200k), of which £NIL was
outstanding at the year end (2023: £NIL).
Investment Manager
Seraphim Space Manager LLP has
been appointed as the Company's exclusive Investment Manager and
AIFM and is responsible for the day-to-day operation and management
of the Company's investment portfolio, subject at all times to the
overall supervision of the Board.
For the provision of services
under the Investment Management Agreement, the Investment Manager
earns a management fee and performance fee, as disclosed in note 4.
Further details of the Investment Management Agreement are included
under 'Investment Manager' in the Corporate Governance Report
below.
During the year, the Investment
Manager recharged the Company for £116k of third party expenses it
incurred on the Company's behalf.
As explained below, in April 2024, the
Company announced the sale of nine early stage portfolio companies
to the Venture Fund for a total consideration of £3.8m, settled
through the issuance of an interest for the Company in the Venture
Fund. The Investment Manager also acts as investment manager to the
Venture Fund.
16. Ultimate Controlling
Party
In the opinion of the Board, on
the basis of the shareholdings advised to it, the Company has no
ultimate controlling party.
17. Subsequent
Events
Please refer below for details of subsequent events
in the normal course of business. There are no other significant
subsequent events.
Alternative Performance Measures
We assess the Company's
performance using a variety of measures, some of which are not
specifically defined under UK-adopted International Accounting
Standards and are therefore termed 'APMs'. Our APMs, which
are shown below, are reconciled, where appropriate, to the
financial statements through the narrative below. The Board
believes that each of the APMs, which are typically used within the
listed investment company sector, (with the exception of portfolio
fair value vs. cost), provide additional useful information to
shareholders to help assess the Company's performance.
Share Price Movement
The share price is a measure of
the value of a share in the Company as determined by the stock
market The share price movement measures how the share price has
performed over the relevant period of time, expressed as a
percentage of the opening share price. As the Company does not pay
dividends, the shareholder total return for any period is the same
as the share price movement over that period.
30 June 2024 vs 30 June 2023
|
|
|
Share price on 30 June
2023
|
a
|
27.0
|
Share price on 30 June
2024
|
b
|
54.6
|
Movement
|
(b-a)/a
|
102.2%
|
30 June 2023 vs 30 June 2022
|
|
|
Share price on 30 June
2022
|
a
|
53.0
|
Share price on 30 June
2023
|
b
|
27.0
|
Movement
|
(b-a)/a
|
-49.1%
|
NAV per Share Movement
The NAV per share is a measure of
the value of the Company attributable to each share at the relevant
date (see note 13 to the financial statements below). The NAV per share movement is
a measure of our success in creating shareholder value over the
relevant period of time, expressed as a percentage of the opening
NAV per share. As the Company does not pay dividends, the NAV total
return for any period is the same as the NAV per share movement
over that period.
30 June 2024 vs. 30 June 2023
|
|
|
NAV per share on 30 June
2023
|
a
|
92.90
|
NAV per share on 30 June
2024
|
b
|
96.18
|
Movement
|
(b-a)/a
|
3.5%
|
30 June 2023 vs. 30 June 2022
|
|
|
NAV per share on 30 June
2022
|
a
|
99.97
|
NAV per share on 30 June
2023
|
b
|
92.90
|
Movement
|
(b-a)/a
|
-7.1%
|
-Discount/+Premium
The -discount/+premium is a
measure of the share price relative to the NAV per share, expressed
as a percentage of the NAV per share. If the percentage is
negative, the shares were trading at a price lower than (i.e. a
discount to) their NAV and, if it is positive, they were trading at
a price higher than (i.e. a premium to) their NAV.
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
NAV per share (note 13 to the
financial statements)
|
a
|
96.18p
|
92.90p
|
Share price
|
b
|
54.60p
|
27.00p
|
-Discount/+premium
|
(b-a)/a
|
-43.2%
|
-70.9%
|
Ongoing Charges
The ongoing charges ratio is a
measure of the recurring annual costs of running the Company based
on historical data, indicating the minimum gross profit that the
Company needs to produce to make a positive return for
shareholders. It is calculated using the AIC methodology and is the
Company's recurring operating costs incurred in the 12 months
ending at the end of the relevant financial period, charged to
Revenue or Capital in the Statement of Comprehensive Income,
calculated as a percentage of the average published NAV in respect
of that 12-month period. Operating costs exclude, for this purpose,
the costs of acquiring and disposing of investments, any finance
costs, costs of issuing or buying back shares, taxation and any
costs not expected to recur in the foreseeable future.
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Investment management fee (note 4
to the financial statements)
|
|
2,826
|
2,912
|
Other operating expenses (note 5
to the financial statements)
|
|
1,482
|
1,851
|
Less non-recurring operating
expenses
|
|
(157)
|
(442)
|
Ongoing charges
|
a
|
4,151
|
4,321
|
Average quarterly NAV
|
b
|
226,902
|
228,604
|
Ongoing charges ratio
|
a/b
|
1.83%
|
1.89%
|
The ongoing charges calculated
above are different from the ongoing costs provided in the
Company's Key Information Document (the 'KID'), which are calculated in line
with the Packaged Retail and Insurance-based Investment Products
Regulation. The ongoing costs in the KID include investment
transaction costs.
Portfolio Fair Value vs. Cost
Portfolio fair value vs. cost is a
measure of the absolute performance of the investments in the
Company's portfolio at the relevant reporting date since they were
acquired. It is the amount by which the fair value of the
investments in the portfolio at the end of the relevant financial
period has changed in relation to the aggregate cost of those
investments (adjusted for any disposals), expressed as a percentage
of the aggregate cost.
|
|
30 June
2024
|
30 June
2023
|
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Portfolio fair value (note 8 to
the financial statements)
|
a
|
201.5
|
187.4
|
Aggregate cost of the assets
(adjusted for any disposals)
|
b
|
|
|
192.5
|
190.2
|
Portfolio fair value vs. cost
|
a/b
|
104.7%
|
98.5%
|
Glossary
Administrator or Company Secretary: Ocorian
Administration (UK) Limited.
AI: artificial
intelligence.
AIC: The Association of
Investment Companies, the trade body for UK-listed closed-ended
investment companies.
AIC SORP: The Statement of
Recommended Practice for the Financial Statements of Investment
Trust Companies and Venture Capital Trusts, issued by the AIC as
amended from time to time.
Auditor: BDO LLP.
Average quarterly NAV: calculated as the mean NAV at each of the four quarter end
periods throughout the year.
Board: the Board of Directors
of the Company.
Bookings: contracted future
revenues.
Company or
SSIT: Seraphim Space
Investment Trust PLC.
CY: calendar year, a one-year
period that begins on 1 January and ends on 31 December.
Directors: the Directors of
the Company.
Discount: the share price of
a listed investment company is rarely the same as its NAV. When the
share price is lower than the NAV per share it is said to be
trading at a discount. The discount is the difference between
the share price and the NAV, expressed as a percentage of the
NAV.
ESG: environmental, social
and governance.
EV: enterprise
value.
Fair value-weighted average growth:
average growth rates for multiple portfolio
companies, weighted by each portfolio company's relative fair
value.
FCA: Financial Conduct
Authority.
FV: fair value.
FX: foreign
exchange.
GEO: geosynchronous
equatorial orbit (35,786km from earth) with a 24-hour
period.
GP: general
partner.
GPS: global positioning
system.
Gross asset value: the value
of the gross assets of the Company, determined in accordance with
its accounting policies.
IAS: International Accounting
Standard.
IFRS: the International
Financial Reporting Standards, being the principles-based
accounting standards, interpretations and the framework by that
name issued by the International Accounting Standards Board, to the
extent they have been adopted by the UK.
IoT: the interconnection via
the internet of computing devices embedded in everyday objects,
enabling them to send and receive data.
Initial Portfolio: the
portfolio of investments acquired from the LP Fund by the Company
on completion of its IPO, details of which are set out in the IPO
prospectus, which is available on the Company's website
(https://investors.seraphim.vc/).
Investment Management Agreement: the investment management agreement entered into between the
Investment Manager and the Company, details of which are included
under 'Investment Manager' in the Governance Report below.
Investment Manager or
Seraphim Space: Seraphim
Space Manager LLP.
IPEV: the International
Private Equity and Venture Capital Association.
IPO: initial public offering,
being an offering by a company of its share capital to the public
with a view to seeking an admission of its shares to a recognised
stock exchange.
LEO: low earth orbit, being
an orbit that is relatively close to the earth's surface, extending
from 160km to 2,000km above earth.
London Stock Exchange: London
Stock Exchange PLC.
LP Fund: Seraphim Space
LP.
LTM: last 12
months.
M&A: mergers and
acquisitions.
NASDAQ: National Association
of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations.
NAV or net asset
value: the value of the assets of
the Company less its liabilities as calculated in accordance with
its accounting policies (or, in the context of an ordinary share,
the NAV of the Company divided by the number of ordinary shares in
issue (but excluding any treasury shares)).
Premium: a premium occurs
when the share price of a listed investment company is higher than
the NAV. The premium is the difference between the share
price and the NAV, expressed as a percentage of the NAV.
Retained Assets:
the investments acquired from the LP Fund by the
Company subsequent to its IPO, details of which are set out in the
IPO prospectus, which is available on the Company's website
(https://investors.seraphim.vc/).
RF: radio frequency, which
involves using electromagnetic radiation for transferring
information between two circuits that have no direct electrical
connection.
SaaS: software as a
service.
Seraphim Space Accelerator:
the accelerator programme for early stage SpaceTech companies run
by an affiliate of the Investment Manager.
SPAC: special purpose
acquisition company.
SpaceTech: in the context of
a business, an organisation which relies on space-based
connectivity and/or precision, navigation and timing signals or
whose technology or services are already addressing, originally
derived from or of potential benefit to the space
sector.
Total return: the total
return on an investment comprises both changes in the NAV per share
or share price and any dividends paid to shareholders and is
calculated on the basis that all historic dividends have been
reinvested in the NAV or shares on the date the shares become
ex-dividend.
Treasury shares: the Company
has the authority to make market purchases of its ordinary shares
for retention as treasury shares for future reissue, resale,
transfer or cancellation. Treasury shares do not receive
distributions and the Company is not entitled to exercise the
voting rights attaching to them.
VC: venture capital.
Venture Fund: Seraphim Space Ventures II LP.
Corporate Information
Registered Office
5th Floor
20 Fenchurch Street
London
EC3M 3BY
Board of Directors
Will Whitehorn (Chair)
Sue Inglis (Senior Independent
Director)
Christina McComb
Angela Lane
Investment Manager
Seraphim Space Manager
LLP
2nd Floor
One Fleet Place
London
EC4M 7WS
Administrator and Company Secretary
Ocorian Administration (UK)
Limited
5th Floor
20 Fenchurch Street
London
EC3M 3BY
Corporate Brokers
Deutsche Numis, London
Branch
Winchester House
1 Great Winchester
Street
London
EC2N 2DB
J.P. Morgan Securities
PLC
25 Bank Street
Canary Wharf
London
E14 5JP
Legal Adviser
Stephenson Harwood LLP
1 Finsbury Circus
London
EC2M 7SH
Depositary
Ocorian Depositary (UK)
Limited
5th Floor
20 Fenchurch Street
London
EC3M 3BY
Registrar
Computershare Investor Services
PLC
The Pavilions
Bridgwater Road
Bristol
BS99 6ZZ
Independent Auditor
BDO LLP
55 Baker Street
London
W1U 7EU
Custodian
Liberum Wealth
1st Floor Royal
Chambers
St Julian's Avenue
St Peter Port
Guernsey
GY1 3JX
Public Relations and Communications Adviser
SEC Newgate
14 Greville Street
London
EC1N 8SB
Identifiers
Website: https://investors.seraphim.vc/
ISIN: GB00BKPG0138
Ticker: SSIT
SEDOL: BKPG013
GIIN: GXNBCF.99999.SL.826
Registered Company Number: 13395698
Legal Entity Identifier: 2138002THGUZBGZC2V85
Cautionary Statement
The Annual Report may include
statements that are, or may be deemed to be, 'forward-looking
statements'. These forward-looking statements are sometimes, but
not always, identified by the use of forward-looking terminology,
including the terms 'believes', 'estimates', 'anticipates',
'expects', 'intends', 'may', 'will' or 'should' or, in each case,
their negative or other variations or comparable
terminology.
Forward-looking statements include
all matters that are not historical facts. They appear in a number
of places throughout this Annual Report and include statements
regarding the intentions, beliefs or current expectations of the
Directors or Investment Manager concerning, amongst other things,
the investment objective and investment policy, investment
performance, results of operations, financial condition, liquidity,
financing strategies and prospects of the Company and the markets
in which it invests.
By their nature, forward-looking
statements involve risks and uncertainties because they relate to
events and depend on circumstances that may or may not occur in the
future. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future
performance.
The Company's actual investment
performance, results of operations, financial condition, liquidity,
financing strategies and prospects may differ materially from the
impression created by the forward-looking statements contained in
this Annual Report.
Subject to their legal and
regulatory obligations, the Directors and the Investment Manager
expressly disclaim any obligations to update or revise any
forward-looking statement contained in this Annual Report to
reflect any change in expectations with regard thereto or any
change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any
statement is based.
[1] Fair value weighted average
(as defined in the Glossary below.)