Draper Esprit plc
("Draper Esprit", "the Company", or "the plc")
INTERIM RESULTS FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED 30 SEPTEMBER 2019
Draper Esprit (LSE: GROW, Euronext Growth: GRW), a leading venture capital firm investing in and developing high growth digital technology businesses, today announces its interim results for the period ended 30 September 2019.
Financial highlights
· Gross Portfolio Value increased to £683 million (31 March 2019: £594.0 million) with a 12% Gross Portfolio Value fair value increase of £70 million during the six-month period driven by strong performance in the core portfolio;
· NAV per share has increased by 10% to 574 pence (31 March 2019: 524 pence);
· £23 million of cash realisations supportive of NAV (six-months to 30 September 2018: £3 million);
· £677 million net assets (31 March 2019: £619 million);
· £126 million available resources at period end, including £50 million available from EIS & VCT funds;
· Profit after tax of £59 million (£39 million for the six-months to 30 September 2018); and
· £50 million of new debt finance raised (£20 million drawn at period-end).
Operational highlights
· £42 million deployed by plc with a further £15 million from EIS/VCT funds into new and existing companies;
· The Group has invested in 5 new companies (including 3 via the Earlybird partnership) and 9 existing portfolio companies (including 1 via Earlybird partnership) increasing its total number of investee companies to 57, as at 30 September 2019*;
· Core portfolio has increased in value by 17% to £485 million (31 March 2019: £415 million);
· Remain on course to achieve stated financial objective of delivering a portfolio return of 20% for the full year; and
· Growth in average core portfolio revenues of 56% in the year ending 31 December 2019 and 61% in the year ending 31 December 2020.
Post- period End
· Appointment of Martin Davis as Chief Executive Officer and Simon Cook as Chief Investment Officer; and
· Investment of £7 million in Freetrade and £3 million investment in Paragraf (both plc and EIS/VCT).
*Reporting threshold - companies with a NAV of £1 million or more.
Simon Cook, Chief Investment Officer at Draper Esprit, commented:
"We have recorded a strong first six-month performance and our 12% fair value increase during the period means that we are on track to deliver our stated 20% annualised portfolio return target. Our half year performance was underpinned by good funding rounds for Ravenpack and Pollen (formerly Verve) alongside positive trading performances at firms including Graphcore, Trustpilot and Aircall, as well as £22.7 million from cash exits, supportive of NAV.
"We have maintained a prudent approach to investment, ensuring that all our portfolio companies meet our strict investment criteria. The strength of our balance sheet means that we have retained the necessary firepower to invest in the right businesses at the right valuations. Furthermore, our portfolio provides us with a natural hedge against the weakness of Sterling given that many of our core assets, due to their global reach, trade in Euros and Dollars.
"We continue to see a range of exciting and high growth technology companies across the sectors in which we operate and remain focused on executing our strategy of providing early and growth-stage technology companies with the capital, network, and support they need to pursue their global growth plans. We are now in a better position than ever to capitalise on these opportunities and support companies across all stages of development and are delighted to have announced the addition of Martin Davis as Chief Executive Officer."
-ENDs-
Enquiries
Draper Esprit plc Ben Wilkinson (CFO) Isabella Cookson (Head of Marketing & Research) |
+44 (0)20 7931 8800 |
Numis Securities Nominated Adviser & Joint Broker Richard Thomas Jamie Loughborough |
+44 (0)20 7260 1000 |
Goodbody Stockbrokers Euronext Growth Adviser & Joint Broker Don Harrington Charlotte Craigie Dearbhla Gallagher |
+44 (0) 20 3841 6202 |
Powerscourt Public relations James White Elly Williamson Jessica Hodgson
|
+44 (0)20 7250 1446
|
CHIEF EXECUTIVE'S REVIEW
Operating review
During the six months ended 30 September 2019, Draper Esprit has made good progress and remains on course to achieve our stated financial objective of delivering a portfolio return of 20% for the full year, having produced a 12% gross fair value increase during the first six months of the current year.
The strength of this performance has been driven by ongoing trading gains across our portfolio, combined with positive valuation uplifts following successful funding rounds, particularly from Ravenpack and Pollen (formerly Verve), alongside £22.7 million from cash exits, supportive of NAV.
Through the first half of this year we have focused on building out the infrastructure needed to support the increasing maturity of the Group and our portfolio companies, strengthening our operational team to support the next stage of Draper Esprit's growth.
Post period-end, we announced the appointment of Martin Davis as Chief Executive Officer, while I have transitioned from my role as Chief Executive Officer to become Chief Investment Officer.
We have also made further key hires across our operations teams in line with our strategy of building a platform of scale for entrepreneurs looking to raise series A-C financing and supporting our portfolio companies at all stages of their development. This growth in the team has also led to an expansion of our headquarters in London by taking an additional floor at our Garrick Street offices.
We remain committed to our disciplined approach to new investments while maintaining adequate financial firepower across the Group.
Our investment strategy is focused on sourcing the best long-term investment opportunities from across both the UK and Europe. As a further reflection of this, we have signed up to the UN's Principles of Responsible Investment to underline our commitment to sustainable investment decisions. We believe this will improve our ability to meet commitments to stakeholders as well as better align our investment activities with the broader interests of society.
The universe of investment opportunities is increasing as industrial disruption continues at pace and working practices shift to encompass big data driven by rapid advances in high-growth sectors including hardware, financial technology, deeptech, artificial intelligence and digital healthcare. We also continue to work alongside the team at Earlybird Digital West, leveraging our collective investment teams, skills and experience, particularly in the German-speaking market.
Portfolio performance
Due to investments made during the period, strong growth across portfolio companies and also cash exits, Gross Portfolio Value increased to approximately £683.0 million, up 93% from the £354.0 million at 30 September 2018 (and up 15% from £594.0 million at 31 March 2019). The Net Portfolio Value increased to £638.4 million, up 90% from the £336.2 million at 30 September 2018 (and up 14% from £562.1 million at 31 March 2019).
The increase in the Gross Portfolio Value reflects both the investments made during the period of £41.5 million (£203.0 million during the 12 months ended 30 September 2019) and a gross fair value increase of £70.2 million in the six months ended 30 September 2019 (£162.0 million fair value increase for the 12 months ended 30 September 2019).
The increase in fair value in the period was driven primarily by the continued positive performance across the portfolio combined with strong financing rounds and as the majority of portfolio companies report revenues in non-sterling currencies, FX contributions have also had a positive impact.
Notable uplifts during the period include Ravenpack (following their recent funding round led by GP Bullhound, leading to a NAV increase of £18.3 million), Peak Games with a NAV increase of £11.3 million, Revolut with a NAV increase of £9.6 million, and Smava a NAV increase of £5.2 million. Other portfolio uplifts include Pollen, following their recent funding round led by Northzone, leading to a NAV increase of £2.7 million, and N26 (now a core company) with a NAV increase of £0.5 million. Furthermore, average revenues in the core portfolio have also seen growth of 56% to over $120.0 million in 2019. The sustainability of their growth is underpinned by strong gross margins of over 60%.
New and follow on investments
During the period, the Group has invested £41.5 million across new and existing portfolio companies (six-months to 30 September 2018: £65.0 million / full year to 31 March 2019: £226.4 million), with a further £14.7 million via our EIS and VCT co-investment funds (six-months to 30 September 2018: £ 10.6 million / 31 March 2019: £35.1 million) into the next generation of high-growth digital technology companies as well as supporting our existing portfolio companies.
New investments in this period included Decibel, the real-time customer experience platform, and Sweepr, a Dublin-based diagnostic platform for the smart home. The plc also continued to build stakes in existing portfolio companies and invested a further £19.5 million in those companies growing at pace. Notable investments include Pollen, Realeyes, and Ieso Digital Health.
Via our strategic partnership with Earlybird Digital West, we made a range of new investments including Aiven, a cloud data platform provider, Istamotion, an online transaction platform for used cars, and Getsafe, a company which uses AI to manage insurance via smartphones. In addition, we invested further into the banking company, N26, which has since been added to our core portfolio.
Seed funds
Our strategy of investing in Europe's top seed funds continues to bear fruit in fuelling the early stage ecosystem, giving entrepreneurs access to capital, and by accelerating our own access to future dealflow. Since April 2019, we have invested £4.3 million in leading seed funds across Europe.
In the period, we have committed a further €1.5 million to France based FRST Ventures and, post-period end, €1.5 million to Latvia based Change Ventures, which backs Baltic founders around the world. To date, the Group has made total commitments of £36.0 million to 18 funds, including Change Ventures post period end. Such commitments will be drawn down over a 5-year period.
Successful exits
During the period, the plc generated £22.7 million in cash from the partial sales of our stakes in TransferWise, the international money transfer platform, UiPath, the robotic process automation (RPA) software company, and Codility, the software platform for technology recruitment. Other proceeds were generated from escrows from previous sales. The disposals in the period were supportive of NAV.
Plc cash at the period-end was £46.0 million, as well as £30.0 million undrawn from the debt facility, with a further £50.0 million available to deploy within EIS/VCT co-investment funds. Including the revolving debt facility we secured in May 2019, the Group has £126.0 million of investment capacity, affording the business a high degree of financial flexibility when assessing future investment opportunities.
Post-period end
Post period-end, we have continued to see a strong pipeline of investments and have made further new investments including:
· A £4.0 million investment in stock investing app, Freetrade, with £3.0 million from EIS and VCT funds, as part of a $15.0 million series A round. This round follows two previous crowdfunding rounds earlier in the year where Freetrade raised over 400% of its original target, from 5,000 community members. The funds are being used to accelerate the company's launch in Europe;
· A £0.9 million investment in Paragraf, a Cambridge-based company building a new way to produce graphene at scale, alongside a further £1.7 million from EIS and VCT; and
· A £0.6 million investment via our partnership with Earlybird Digital West into Crosslend, the leading digital debt marketplace, as part of its €35 million funding round led by Santander InnoVentures.
Expansion of management team
On 4 November we announced an addition to the senior leadership team to support the continued growth of Draper Esprit. The appointment of Martin Davis as Chief Executive Officer and my transition to Chief Investment Officer are the latest measures we have put in place to build the infrastructure we need to further scale the Group.
Martin has more than 20 years' experience in financial services and technology. He was most recently CEO of investment management business Kames Capital and has held several other senior roles at financial advisory and fintech businesses. Martin brings particular expertise in supporting businesses as they scale-up. As co-founder of Draper Esprit, I will continue to focus on seeking out fast growing, private digital technology businesses with global potential in line with the Company's track record of generating 20%+ net returns.
Outlook
We are well placed to build on the positive momentum we have generated during the first half of the year and continue to provide European entrepreneurs with the growth capital they need in order to realise their global ambitions. We remain on course to deliver an increase in Gross Portfolio Value in line with our core strategic aim of 20% per annum but remain committed to maintaining a disciplined approach to pricing, deployment and valuation of our current portfolio.
While management are mindful of the ongoing uncertainty caused by Brexit and the broader political climate, we have sizable cash reserves for future investments and continue to see a strong pipeline of potential investments in high-growth companies.
As companies remain private for longer, our model continues to provide investors with a vehicle to access high quality and high growth European technology companies and, with the addition of Martin Davis to our senior leadership team, our focus now is on putting in place the infrastructure we need to scale our offering further and accelerate the growth of the business.
Simon Cook
Former Chief Executive Officer (to November 2019), now Chief Investment Officer
Portfolio Review
We are pleased to announce that we are on track to deliver our annual target gross portfolio return of 20%. During the six-month period ended 30 September 2019, the gross portfolio returned 12% fair value growth underpinned by continued strong revenue growth across the core portfolio, new financing rounds and strong exits.
The gross value of the Group's investment holdings before deductions for carry and deferred tax, increased by £89.0 million to £683.0 million at 30 September 2019 from £594.0 million at 31 March 2019 (30 September 2018: £354.0 million). During the period, the Group has realised £22.7 million of cash (six-months to 30 September 2018: £2.5 million / full year to 31 March 2019: £16.0 million) from the partial sale of stakes in TransferWise, UiPath, and Codility , and further proceeds from the sale of Bitbar and amounts held in escrow relating to past disposals. These disposals were supportive of NAV.
During the period, the Group has invested £41.5 million across new and existing portfolio companies, with a further £14.7 million via our EIS and VCT co-investment funds.
Notable new investments by the plc include:
· Leading an €8.0 million Series A funding round in Sweepr, the Dublin-based customer experience platform for the connected home, with a £2.7 million investment. Sweepr's platform works by gathering a detailed digital context in order to provide customers real-time support when troubleshooting their smart devices;
· £10.1 million in a funding round for Decibel, a London-based software company;
· A range of new investments via our strategic partnership with Earlybird Digital West including:
o £1.3 million into Helsinki-based Aiven, a cloud data platform provider, as part of an €8.0 million round led by Earlybird;
o £1.1 million into Istamotion, an online transaction platform for used cars; and
o £2.5 million in Getsafe, a Heidelberg-based company which uses AI to manage insurance via smartphones.
We continue to build our stakes in existing portfolio companies, investing a further £19.5 million in those companies which are growing at pace. This includes a further £2.5 million from plc into Pollen (formerly Verve) as part of a $55.0 million round led by Northzone, with a further £6.5 million from the VCT/ EIS vehicles. As a result of the valuation at which this latest funding round completed, following a period of growth that has seen their marketplace sell eight hundred thousand experiences over the last 12 months, Pollen has joined our core company portfolio.
Other follow on investments include £2.2 million in Realeyes, the machine learning platform which measures emotions through facial recognition, as part of a £9.5 million round led by Japanese mobile phone giant NTT, and a further £1.0 million in IESO Digital Health, the mental health app. We have also furthered our investments in companies including Unbound, PushDoctor, and Kaptivo.
In the core portfolio, a further £6.3 million was invested into Berlin-headquartered digital banking company N26 as part of a $170.0 million round via our strategic partnership with Earlybird Digital West. We have made other follow-on investments via our strategic partnership with Earlybird Digital West including, MyDataModels, the Automated Machine Learning solution that builds and runs predictive models, and Deepcode, a platform which uses AI to learn from open source software to help developers write better code, as part of a $4.0 million round.
Since April 2019, we have also invested £4.3 million in leading seed funds across Europe.
The net fair value increase of £57.6 million is driven by strong performance in the following notable core portfolio companies, namely Ravenpack (£18.3 million) which closed an investment round led by GP Bullhound generating a 117% uplift in fair value, Peak Games (£11.3 million), which has demonstrated continued strong performance, Revolut (£9.6 million), to align with growth in the company, Pollen moves into the core portfolio after closing a funding round with Northzone generating a 20% uplift in fair value and Smava (£5.2m). This was partially offset by write downs in Lyst (£2.5m) and SportPursuit (£2.2 million), reflecting the movements in comparative listed peers during the period and currency movements. Continued high average revenue growth across the core portfolio underpins these uplifts with commercial milestones being achieved in the key movers.
In the period, Revolut, Pollen and N26 have moved into core holdings to bring the number of core holdings, which account for approximately 70% of the total portfolio value, to 18. The remaining portfolio value is spread across significant minority interests in 39 companies including 10 held via Earlybird (31 March 2019: 39 companies, 9 held via Earlybird) *.
The core portfolio, comprising: Graphcore, Trustpilot, Peak Games, Ravenpack, Smava, UiPath, Lyst, Perkbox, M-Files, Ledger, Revolut, Pollen, Aircall, Transferwise, Finalcad, Podpoint, SportPursuit, and N26 represents a value of £484.7 million and reflects average revenue growth of 56% to over $120.0 million in 2019 and projecting further growth of 61% into 2020.
*Reporting threshold - companies with a NAV of £1 million or more.
Core Portfolio updates
Graphcore
Graphcore, the machine intelligence chip company, announced the opening of their new Cambridge office and plans to hire 500 new staff. They have also expanded into Beijing, China, and Hsinchu, Taiwan.
The company has developed IPUs (Intelligent Processing Units) which enable unprecedented levels of compute. In May 2019, the company announced that Dell was one of the first customers to build an IPU-based Dell platform, combined with Graphcore's Poplar software stack. This platform is due to launch in Q4 2019, ready to ship to customers before year end.
Post period-end, the company announced their collaboration with Microsoft Azure. This is the first time a major public cloud vendor is offering Graphcore IPUs which are built from the ground up support next generation machine learning. The development is a testament of the maturity of their patented IPU technology.
Trustpilot
Since Trustpilot, the online review site, raised a series E round of $55 million in March, it has made a number of significant hires, adding a new Chief Marketing Officer, Chief Human Resources Officer, Chief Legal and Policy Officer to its team, as well as adding to its Board of Directors. Trustpilot now has generated more than 70 million reviews of over 300,000 web domains with almost 2 million reviews written each month. Since 2018, it has climbed to be one of the top 30 websites in the UK and ranked one of the 600 most visited websites in the world.
In order to make its ratings easier to understand and more transparent, Trustpilot launched TrustScores and 'Transparent Flagging' to create more nuanced ways to understand overall ratings.
Peak Games
During the period, Peak Games, the mobile games developer, continued to grow at pace. According to estimates by Sensor Tower Store Intelligence, the firm has generated more than an estimated $1.1 billion in gross player spending to date led by its 2015 release Toy Blast.
Peak Games titles are most popular among players in the United States, where they have generated close to an estimated 68 percent of their revenue or an estimate of nearly $802 million. The UK is the publisher's second largest market at 4.2% of spending, followed by Japan at 4%.
Ravenpack
Post period-end, Ravenpack, the leading big data analytics provider for hedge funds and banks, raised a further $10 million from the technology advisory and investment firm GP Bullhound to fuel its expansion into Asia, as well as to diversify its product offering in order to target corporate customers.
During the period, Ravenpack has introduced the new 'Ravenpack connections' tool as the latest innovation to expose business relationships and interconnections among thousands of entities including companies, organisations, and key business and political figures affecting capital markets.
Smava
During the period, Smava, the online social lending platform, announced that it plans to IPO, having achieved strong, consistent growth with a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 90% from 2012. The company is now the largest specialised loan portal in Germany, generating over €2 billion in loan volume. In 2017, it became the first company in Germany to offer negative interest rates. Smava also recently expanded its office in Berlin, moving to new headquarters.
UiPath
UiPath, the robotic process automation (RPA) software company, raised its series D investment round of $568.0 million at a post-money valuation of $7 billion, led by Coatue and joined by Dragoneer, Wellington, Sands Capital, Accel, funds and accounts managed by T. Rowe Price Associates, CapitalG, Sequoia and Earlybird. At the $7 billion valuation, UiPath is now one of the fastest growing and highest- valued AI enterprise software companies in the world.
The company has now increased annual recurring revenue (ARR) from $8 million to an estimate of over $200 million from 2017 to 2019 and has grown its employee base to over 2,500. Recent customer additions include American Fidelity, BankUnited, Duracell, Google, Japan Exchange Group, LogMeIn, McDonalds, NHS Shared Business Services, Nippon Life Insurance Company, NTT Communications Corporation, Orange™, Ricoh Company, Ltd., Rogers Communications, Shinsei Bank, Quest Diagnostics, Uber, US Navy, Voya Financial, Virgin Media, and World Fuel Services.
Lyst
London-based Lyst, the leading platform for the world's fashion shoppers, helped 90 million users last year to find and discover the perfect fashion item from a selection of more than 18,000 leading brands. The number of users grew 36% from 66 million, for the same period of the previous year.
Lyst continues to invest in growth in several areas: the main focus is product improvement and very particularly for Registered Users where they are seeing very strong retention and economics, as well as the internationalization process with more than 10 localised domains launched in the last 18 months, and expansion of assortment and monetization.
The company announced that Bradley Horowitz, VP of Product at Google, joined the Board. This appointment coincides with other key senior Lyst hires, including Lucas McGregor as Chief Technology Officer, bringing experience from The Walt Disney Company, and Simon Dance as SVP of Growth, who rejoins Lyst from Amazon.
Perkbox
Since Perkbox, the employee engagement platform, raised £13.5 million in March 2019 from a round led by Draper Esprit alongside several of previous angel investors, the company have signed up a number of new partners including ASDA, Dune, Philips, Sainsbury's and H&M. The company continues to expand globally with 113 perks live on their platform in Australia, and their France team being awarded the "Innovation Award" at the SalonCE Fair.
Perkbox's platform now includes four key pillars: Perks, Insights, Recognition and Medical. Their recognition platform saw a 118% increase in the number of reward transactions.
To fuel further growth, the company has made several key hires including Marissa White as Revenue Operations Director and Ed Ellis as Organisational Readiness Director. Perkbox was named one of London Stock Exchange's "1000 companies to inspire Britain" and ranked at 25th as one of Europe's Fastest Growing Businesses by The FT.
M-Files
During the period, M-Files, the intelligent information management platform, announced that they have now linked their platform to Microsoft Office 365, Microsoft Teams, and Salesforce Customer 360 in order to streamline the customer experience further.
The company has also hired a new CMO and have won a number of awards including the European Investment Bank's 2019 Innovation Award.
Ledger
Ledger, the hardware security wallet for cryptocurrencies and blockchain applications successfully launched the Nano X product and the Ledger Live companion software. Meanwhile the Ledger Vault, a security solution for financial institutions, continues to be sold across Europe, Asia and the US.
Ledger continues to diversify its strategy by building security technology for other blockchain based applications. Having partnered with Engie, the French multinational electric utility business, Ledger continues to explore the ways in which its technology can support IoT applications. The company is also working with Birdz, a pioneer in remote water consumption metering and subsidiary of Veolia, to ensure the authenticity of the drinkable water collection data.
Revolut
Revolut, a global money app and debit card was named one of the top 50 fastest growing tech companies by Deloitte. The disruptor bank supports 90 currencies, with no international transaction fees, boasts 8+ million customers and is responsible for 350m+ transactions.
The company recently launched commission free trading as part of their services and has expanded to Australia and Singapore. Martin Gilbert, the former Standard Life Aberdeen co-Chief Executive, joined the Revolut board as executive chairman post- period end.
Pollen (formerly Verve)
Pollen, formerly known as Verve, an invite-only marketplace that enables people to bring their friends to the best experiences and share rewards, raised a further $60 million in new financing, bringing the total capital raised to date to $100 million. The raise was led by Northzone, and other investors included Sienna Capital, Backed, Kindred and Draper Esprit. Gareth Jefferies of Northzone and Timo Boldt, CEO of Gousto, have now joined Draper Esprit Investment Director Nicola McClafferty on the Board of the company.
The financing will allow Pollen to scale its influential membership base and expand more deeply into music, sports and travel, with plans to move into other experiences and products in the future, tapping into an increasingly larger share of the $800 billion that 16-28-year-olds spend annually. Pollen's growing portfolio of travel and music experiences range from beach holidays and festivals to city weekends and a broad range of ski packages. To help achieve this goal as part of the funding round Pollen has acquired Lifestylez, the largest college ski and snowboard experience player in North America, deepening Pollen's reach within the travel industry. The company has strategically leveraged acquisitions across North America to expand the breadth of experiences on the platform.
The marketplace has 35 thousand active members globally, who have sold 330k experiences since the beginning of the year. Pollen has sold almost one million experiences in total across travel, live events and festivals; it works with 500+ world class brands including Live Nation, MGM Resorts, TAO, Hakkasan, AEG & C3; and secured partnerships with Ticketmaster, Eventbrite, Priceline, Stubhub, and SeeTickets.
Aircall
During the period, Aircall, the cloud-based call centre, launched a new partner program to help agents and resellers sell its phone solution to their SMB customers. The new channel partnerships will enable further growth as it helps companies reach new audiences.
The company also hired Sandrine Meunier as Chief People Officer and opened new offices in New York as their sales accelerate in the US.
TransferWise
TransferWise, the international money transfer platform, now has over 5 million active users transferring over £4 billion a month.
In July, the company announced its plan to hire 750 employees in the next 12 months, including the appointment of two non-Executive Directors to the board, the CFO of Adyen, Ingo Uytdehaage, and David Wells, former CFO of Netflix. While also making changes to make its app and website more efficient and simpler for the user, it has integrated with the UK's Open Baking API. This means that most of users sending money from a UK bank account can now do so instantly and conveniently. Furthermore, the company is steadily rolling out its TransferWise for Business account and has now given hundreds of companies access via the beta program.
TransferWise continues to expand internationally, having launched its debit card in the US, and having added Uganda to the list of countries users can send money to.
Finalcad
During the period, Finalcad, the mobile software platform for the construction industry, launched Finalcad Live, "Slack" for construction, enabling real-time defect tracking connected to the daily site log on to the platform. The company has also made several strategic hires across the business including; Franck Le Tendre, former Industry Director EMEA at Dropbox, as Chief Operating Officer, Stephane Delbecque as Chief Product Officer and Charlotte Nizieux as Chief Marketing Officer.
In September, the company was also selected to be part of the Next 40, a collection of France's most promising start-ups, an initiative run by Cédric O, France's Minister of State for the Digital Sector.
Pod Point
Podpoint, the electric charge point supplier, has expanded its presence outside the UK, and launched in Norway. The company has also started offering commercial charging, winning its first major contract with Peppe's Pizza - Scandinavia's largest pizza chain. It has been helping Peppe's to electrify its fleet by installing charge-points at all Peppe Pizza branches in the country.
The company has also announced significant new clients including MG Motor UK; Bristol Airport; Mitsubishi dealerships; Europe's leading parking operator APCOA; homebuilders Bellway and Redrow; and the Volkswagen Financial Services (VWFS) Fleet.
Sportspursuit
Sportspursuit, the UK-based sport-specific ecommerce site, has now reported it has reached its goal of becoming EBITDA profitable in H2 2018. The members only private sport sales website was voted Retailer of the Year in September by Ski Club Great Britain.
N26
N26, the German based mobile bank, extended their series D financing round with a further $170m. Their total round was therefore $470m at a $3.5 billion valuation, ranking them amongst the top ten most valuable FinTech companies worldwide. The company reports 3.5 million customers in 24 markets across Europe who generate over €2 billion in monthly transaction volume.
The company launched this summer in the US and confirms plans to enter the Brazilian market later in the year, they also recently announced that online banking executive from Google, Thomas Grosse joined their team as Chief Banking officer.
Interim Financial Review
The six-month period ended 30 September 2019 has been another active period with £41.5 million invested, alongside a further £14.7 million deployed from EIS/VCT funds, as well as delivering a debt raise of £50.0 million which adds another pool of investable capital. The pace of investment has reduced from the previous period (year-ended 31 March 2019), but is in line with our £60.0 million target from plc.
The Gross Portfolio Value of £683.0 million (31 March 2019: £594.0 million) has grown as a result of £41.5 million of investment, fair value growth of £70.2 million in the portfolio and less net realisations of £22.7 million. The Gross Portfolio Value is subject to deductions for the fair value of the carry liabilities and deferred tax to generate the net investment value of £638.4 million (£562.1 million at 31 March 2019) which is reflected on the condensed consolidated interim statement of financial position as financial assets held at fair value through the profit or loss. The Gross Portfolio Value Table below has been generated to reflect gross and net movement in value of the portfolio during the period.
The net fair value gain on investments of £57.6 million (£114.7m at 31 March 2019) is reflected in the condensed consolidated interim statement of comprehensive income. A deferred tax provision of £5.6 million (£5.4 million at 31 March 2019) is accrued against the gains in the portfolio to reflect those portfolio companies where the Company owns less than 5% of the equity holding. This amount is netted against the investments in the condensed consolidated interim statement of financial position. Carry balances of £39.6 million (£27.7 million at 31 March 2019) are accrued to management teams, including previous and current employees of the Group based on the current fair value at the period-end and deducted from the Gross Portfolio Value.
Net assets have increased by 10% to £677.5 million (£618.6 million at 31 March 2019) in the period. The increase in the balance sheet reflects the positive performance of the investments. Trade and other receivables include a £3.7 million loan to Esprit Capital I Fund LP (see note 19 for further details), receivables of £2.2 million in respect of priority profit payments from underlying funds, as well as increases in prepayments and accrued income.
This is offset by the loan liability recognised in respect of the draw down of £20.0 million on the new debt facility. In June 2019, the Company entered into a new revolving credit facility agreement with Silicon Valley Bank ("SVB") and Investec raising £50.0 million of debt capital to fund the future growth plans of the Group's portfolio companies. With a strong balance sheet further enhanced by the new debt facility, the Company continues to provide support to the private high growth technology companies into which it invests. As a revolving credit facility, it is anticipated that draw downs and pay downs will be driven by portfolio investments and realisations. The facility reduces the overall cost of capital to the Company and provides further funding flexibility (see note 12 for further details).
Period-end cash balances of £45.5 million (including restricted cash, see note 12) reflect the cash balance of £50.3 million at the end of March 2019, the subsequent debt drawdown of £19.5 million net of fees of £0.5m, investments of £41.5 million, realisations of £22.7 million, and the operating costs of the business. With a total of £20.0 million of drawn debt the net cash position at the period end is £25.5 million (including restricted cash).
During the period, the Group has applied IFRS 16 Leases using the modified retrospective approach. See further details in significant accounting policies - note 4. The impact on the condensed consolidated interim statement of financial position has been the recognition of right-to-use assets of £1.5 million at 30 September 2019 (recognised under property, plant and equipment) and lease liabilities of £1.5 million. In the condensed consolidated interim statement of comprehensive income, during the period depreciation charges of £0.1m were recognised in respect of the right-to-use assets and interest of £0.04 million was recognised in respect of the lease liabilities. These balances reflect the lease costs of the London office.
Condensed consolidated interim statement of comprehensive income
Investment income for the year comprises the £57.6 million of unrealised investment gains (six-months to 30 September 2018: £41.5 million) and fee income of £5.5 million (six-months to 30 September 2018: £2.5 million) which is generated from management fees and director fees. General & administration costs of £5.0 million in the period reflect the increased size of the team (with 35 employees at the end of September 2019) as we develop a scalable platform to continue to grow and invest.
Gross Portfolio Value Table
|
|
Fair Value of investments 31-Mar-19 |
Investments |
Realisations |
Movements in Fair Value |
Draper Esprit (Ireland) Limited |
Fair Value of investments 30-Sep-19 |
Interest FD category* at reporting date |
|
Investments |
£m |
£m |
£m |
£m |
£m |
£m |
|
1 |
Graphcore |
78.6 |
- |
- |
4.7 |
- |
83.3 |
B |
2 |
Trustpilot |
62.0 |
- |
- |
3.5 |
- |
65.5 |
C |
3 |
Peak Games |
41.7 |
- |
- |
11.3 |
- |
53.0 |
B |
4 |
Ravenpack |
15.6 |
- |
- |
18.3 |
- |
33.9 |
D |
5 |
Smava |
23.5 |
- |
0.0 |
5.2 |
- |
28.7 |
B |
6 |
Ui Path |
33.0 |
- |
(4.6) |
0.1 |
- |
28.5 |
A |
7 |
Lyst |
27.8 |
- |
- |
(2.5) |
- |
25.2 |
C |
8 |
Perkbox |
23.7 |
- |
0.0 |
0.0 |
- |
23.7 |
C |
9 |
M-files |
17.2 |
- |
0.0 |
1.6 |
- |
18.8 |
B |
10 |
Ledger |
17.7 |
- |
0.0 |
0.1 |
- |
17.8 |
B |
11 |
Revolut |
7.4 |
- |
0.0 |
9.6 |
- |
17.0 |
A |
12 |
Pollen (formerly, Verve) |
10.9 |
2.5 |
0.0 |
2.7 |
- |
16.1 |
B |
13 |
Aircall |
9.9 |
- |
0.0 |
3.9 |
- |
13.8 |
B |
14 |
Transferwise |
27.7 |
- |
(15.0) |
(0.1) |
- |
12.6 |
A |
15 |
FinalCad |
12.4 |
- |
0.0 |
0.0 |
- |
12.4 |
C |
16 |
PodPoint |
11.1 |
- |
0.0 |
1.0 |
- |
12.1 |
B |
17 |
SportPursuit |
13.3 |
- |
0.0 |
(2.2) |
- |
11.2 |
E |
18 |
N26 |
4.3 |
6.3 |
0.0 |
0.5 |
- |
11.1 |
A |
|
Remaining portfolio |
154.3 |
32.7 |
(3.1) |
12.4 |
- |
196.2 |
- |
|
Total |
592.1 |
41.5 |
(22.7) |
70.1 |
- |
680.9 |
|
|
Co-invest assigned to plc |
2.0 |
- |
- |
0.1 |
- |
2.1 |
|
|
Gross Portfolio Value |
594.1 |
41.5 |
(22.7) |
70.2 |
- |
683.0 |
|
|
Carry external |
(27.7) |
- |
- |
(11.9) |
- |
(39.6) |
|
|
Portfolio Deferred tax |
(5.4) |
- |
- |
(0.2) |
- |
(5.6) |
|
|
Trading carry & co-invest |
1.1 |
- |
- |
(0.6) |
- |
0.5 |
|
|
Draper Esprit (Ireland) Limited |
0.0 |
- |
- |
0.1 |
- |
0.1 |
|
|
Net Portfolio Value |
562.1 |
41.5 |
(22.7) |
57.6 |
- |
638.4 |
|
|
Notes |
Unaudited Period Ended 30 Sep 2019 £'000s |
Unaudited Period Ended 30 Sep 2018 £'000s |
Audited Year Ended 31 Mar 2019 £'000s |
Unrealised gains on investments held at fair value through the profit and loss |
10 |
57,646 |
41,518 |
114,715 |
Fee income |
|
5,480 |
2,513 |
6,101 |
Total investment income |
|
63,126 |
44,031 |
120,816 |
Operating expenses |
|
|
|
|
General administrative expenses |
|
(5,005) |
(3,333) |
(7,774) |
Depreciation and amortisation |
|
(219) |
(79) |
(163) |
Share based payments - resulting from Company share option scheme |
|
(442) |
(550) |
(1,100) |
Share based payments - resulting from acquisition of subsidiary |
|
- |
(1,990) |
(1,989) |
Investment and acquisition costs |
|
(45) |
(185) |
(207) |
Exceptional items |
|
- |
(34) |
(34) |
Total operating costs |
|
(5,711) |
(6,171) |
(11,267) |
Profit from operations |
|
57,415 |
37,860 |
109,549 |
Finance income/expenses |
|
|
|
|
Finance costs |
6 |
(310) |
- |
- |
Net foreign exchange gain |
6 |
1,498 |
1,208 |
1,481 |
Finance income on cash and cash equivalents |
6 |
100 |
54 |
120 |
Profit before tax |
|
58,703 |
39,122 |
111,150 |
Income taxes |
|
- |
12 |
11 |
Profit for the period/year |
|
58,703 |
39,134 |
111,161 |
Other comprehensive income |
|
- |
- |
- |
Total comprehensive income for the period/year |
|
58,703 |
39,134 |
111,161 |
Profit attributable to: |
|
|
|
|
Owners of the parent |
|
58,307 |
38,827 |
110,579 |
Non-controlling interest |
|
396 |
307 |
582 |
Earnings per share attributable to owners of the parent: |
|
|
|
|
Basic earnings per weighted average shares (pence) |
7 |
49 |
44 |
115 |
Diluted earnings per weighted average shares (pence) |
7 |
47 |
42 |
110 |
The notes below are an integral part of these condensed consolidated interim financial statements.
|
Notes |
Unaudited 30 Sep 2019 £'000s |
Unaudited 30 Sep 2018 £'000s |
Audited 31 Mar 2019 £'000s |
Non-current assets |
|
|
|
|
Intangible assets |
8 |
10,079 |
10,181 |
10,130 |
Investments in associates |
9 |
258 |
258 |
258 |
Financial assets held at fair value through the profit or loss |
10 |
638,452 |
336,200 |
562,061 |
Property, plant and equipment |
|
1,823 |
235 |
209 |
Total non-current assets |
|
650,612 |
346,874 |
572,658 |
Current assets |
|
|
|
|
Trade and other receivables |
|
8,357 |
2,394 |
1,140 |
Cash and cash equivalents |
|
43,654 |
103,821 |
50,358 |
Restricted cash |
12 |
1,878 |
- |
- |
Total current assets |
|
53,889 |
106,215 |
51,498 |
Current liabilities |
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables |
|
(5,361) |
(2,531) |
(4,959) |
Loans and borrowings |
|
- |
- |
- |
Lease liabilities |
16 |
(310) |
- |
- |
Total current liabilities |
|
(5,671) |
(2,531) |
(4,959) |
Non-current liabilities |
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax |
13 |
(621) |
(641) |
(631) |
Loans and borrowings |
12 |
(19,538) |
- |
- |
Lease liabilities |
16 |
(1,176) |
- |
- |
Total non-current liabilities |
|
(21,335) |
(641) |
(631) |
Net assets |
|
677,495 |
449,917 |
618,566 |
Equity |
|
|
|
|
Share capital |
14 |
1,179 |
991 |
1,179 |
Share premium account |
14 |
395,747 |
299,717 |
395,783 |
Merger relief reserve |
|
13,097 |
13,097 |
13,097 |
Share-based payments reserve - resulting from Company share option scheme |
15 |
2,155 |
1,163 |
1,713 |
Share-based payments reserve - resulting from acquisition of subsidiary |
|
10,823 |
10,824 |
10,823 |
Retained earnings |
|
254,044 |
123,985 |
195,737 |
Equity attributable to owners of Draper Esprit Plc |
|
677,045 |
449,777 |
618,332 |
Non-controlling interests |
|
450 |
140 |
234 |
Total equity |
|
677,495 |
449,917 |
618,566 |
Net assets per share (pence) |
7 |
574 |
454 |
524 |
The condensed consolidated interim financial statements were approved by the Board of Directors and authorised for issue on 25 November 2019.
B.D. Wilkinson
Chief Financial Officer
The notes below are an integral part of these condensed consolidated interim financial statements.
|
Notes |
Unaudited Period 30 Sep 2019 £'000s |
Unaudited As at 30 Sep 2018 £'000s |
Audited As at 31 Mar 2019 £'000s |
Cash flows from operating activities |
|
|
|
|
Operating profit after tax |
|
58,703 |
39,156 |
111,161 |
Adjustments to reconcile operating profit to net cash flows used in operating activities: |
|
|
|
|
Exceptional costs |
|
- |
(34) |
- |
Revaluation of investments held at fair value through the profit and loss |
10 |
(57,646) |
(41,518) |
(114,715) |
Depreciation and amortisation |
|
219 |
79 |
163 |
Share-based payments - resulting from Company share option scheme |
15 |
442 |
550 |
1,100 |
Share-based payments - resulting from acquisition of subsidiary |
|
- |
1,990 |
1,989 |
Exchange differences on cash and cash equivalents |
|
(1,498) |
(1,262) |
(1,481) |
Finance expense |
|
310 |
- |
- |
Finance income |
|
(100) |
|
|
(Increase)/decrease in trade and other receivables |
|
(3,525) |
(1,138) |
189 |
Increase/(decrease) in trade and other payables |
|
402 |
(417) |
2,011 |
Purchase of investments |
|
(41,453) |
(64,950) |
(226,432) |
Proceeds from disposals in underlying investment vehicles |
|
22,674 |
- |
15,984 |
Net loans made (to)/returned from underlying investment vehicles and Group companies |
|
(3,751) |
2,487 |
(4,679) |
Net cash used in operating activities |
|
(25,223) |
(65,057) |
(214,710) |
Tax paid |
|
(10) |
- |
(32) |
Net cash (outflow) from operating activities |
|
(25,233) |
(65,057) |
(214,742) |
Cash flows from investing activities |
|
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant and equipment |
|
(267) |
(56) |
(58) |
Interest received |
6 |
100 |
54 |
120 |
Net cash (outflow) from investing activities |
|
(167) |
(2) |
62 |
Cash flows from financing activities |
|
|
|
|
Cash paid to non-controlling interests |
|
(180) |
(457) |
(638) |
Proceeds from loan |
12 |
20,000 |
- |
- |
Arrangement fee paid on issuance of loan |
12 |
(500) |
- |
- |
Interest payments |
|
(99) |
- |
- |
Repayments of borrowings and leasing liabilities |
16 |
(109) |
- |
- |
Proceeds from issue of share capital at a premium |
|
- |
115,035 |
215,035 |
Equity Issuance costs |
|
(36) |
(3,547) |
(7,481) |
Net cash inflow from financing activities |
|
19,076 |
111,031 |
206,916 |
Net (decrease)/ increase in cash & cash equivalents |
|
(6,324) |
45,972 |
(7,764) |
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period |
|
50,358 |
56,641 |
56,641 |
Exchange differences on cash and cash equivalents |
|
1,498 |
1,208 |
1,481 |
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period/year |
|
43,654 |
103,821 |
50,358 |
Restricted cash at period/year end |
|
1,878 |
- |
- |
Total cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash at period/year end |
|
45,532 |
103,821 |
50,358 |
The notes below are an integral part of these condensed consolidated interim financial statements.
Unaudited |
Share capital £'000s |
Share
£'000s |
Merger relief reserve £'000s |
Share-based payments reserve - resulting from Company share option scheme £'000s |
Share-based payments reserve - resulting from acquisition of subsidiary £'000s |
Retained earnings £'000s |
Total attributable £'000s |
Attributable to non-controlling interests £'000s |
Total equity £'000s |
Balance at 31 March 2019 |
1,179 |
395,783 |
13,097 |
1,713 |
10,823 |
195,737 |
618,332 |
234 |
618,566 |
Comprehensive Income for the year |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit for the period |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
58,307 |
58,307 |
396 |
58,703 |
Amounts paid to non-controlling interest |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(180) |
(180) |
Total comprehensive income for the period |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
58,307 |
58,307 |
216 |
58,523 |
Contributions by and distributions to the owners: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue of share capital (note 14) |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Share premium (note 14) |
- |
(36) |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(36) |
- |
(36) |
Merger relief reserve |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Share based payments - resulting from Company share option scheme (note 15) |
- |
- |
- |
442 |
- |
- |
442 |
- |
442 |
Share based payments - resulting from acquisition of subsidiary |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Balance at 30 September 2019 |
1,179 |
395,747 |
13,097 |
2,155 |
10,823 |
254,044 |
677,045 |
450 |
677,495 |
Unaudited |
Share capital £'000s |
Share
£'000s |
Merger relief reserve £'000s |
Share-based payments reserve - resulting from Company share option scheme £'000s |
Share-based payments reserve - resulting from acquisition of subsidiary £'000s |
Retained earnings £'000s |
Total attributable £'000s |
Attributable to non-controlling interests £'000s |
Total equity £'000s |
Balance at 31 March 2018 |
716 |
188,229 |
13,097 |
613 |
8,834 |
86,230 |
297,719 |
2,792 |
300,511 |
Comprehensive Income for the year |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjustment for transitioning to IFRS 15 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(1,072) |
(1,072) |
(2,502) |
(3,574) |
Profit for the period |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
38,827 |
38,827 |
307 |
39,134 |
Amounts paid to non-controlling interest |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(457) |
(457) |
Total comprehensive income for the period |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
38,827 |
38,827 |
(150) |
38,677 |
Contributions by and distributions to the owners: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue of share capital (note 14) |
275 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
275 |
- |
275 |
Share premium (note 14) |
- |
111,488 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
111,488 |
- |
111,488 |
Merger relief reserve |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Share based payments - resulting from Company share option scheme (note 15) |
- |
- |
- |
550 |
- |
- |
550 |
- |
550 |
Share based payments - resulting from acquisition of subsidiary |
- |
- |
- |
- |
1,990 |
- |
1,990 |
- |
1,990 |
Balance at 30 September 2018 |
991 |
299,717 |
13,097 |
1,163 |
10,824 |
123,985 |
449,777 |
140 |
449,917 |
Audited |
Share capital £'000s |
Share £'000s |
Merger relief reserve £'000s |
Share-based payments reserve - resulting from Company share option scheme £'000s |
Share-based payments reserve - resulting from acquisition of subsidiary £'000s |
Retained earnings £'000s |
Total attributable £'000s |
Attributable to non-controlling interests £'000s |
Total equity £'000s |
Balance at 31 March 2018 |
716 |
188,229 |
13,097 |
613 |
8,834 |
86,230 |
297,719 |
2,792 |
300,511 |
Comprehensive Income for the year |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjustment for transitioning to IFRS 15 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(1,072) |
(1,072) |
(2,502) |
(3,574) |
Profit for the period |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
110,579 |
110,579 |
582 |
111,161 |
Amounts paid to non-controlling interest |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(638) |
(638) |
Total comprehensive income for the period |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
109,507 |
109,507 |
(2,558) |
106,949 |
Contributions by and distributions to the owners: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue of share capital (note 14) |
463 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
463 |
- |
463 |
Share premium (note 14) |
- |
207,554 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
207,554 |
- |
207,554 |
Merger relief reserve |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Share based payments - resulting from Company share option scheme (note 15) |
- |
- |
- |
1,100 |
- |
- |
1,100 |
- |
1,100 |
Share based payments - resulting from acquisition of subsidiary |
- |
- |
- |
- |
1,989 |
- |
1,989 |
- |
1,989 |
Balance at 31 March 2019 |
1,179 |
395,783 |
13,097 |
1,713 |
10,823 |
195,737 |
618,332 |
234 |
618,566 |
The notes below are an integral part of these condensed consolidated interim financial statements.
Notes to the condensed consolidated interim financial statements
1. General information
Draper Esprit Plc (the Company") is a public limited company incorporated and domiciled in England and Wales. On 15 June 2016, the Company listed on the London Stock Exchange's AIM market and the Irish Stock Exchange's (trading as Euronext Dublin) Euronext Growth market.
The Company is the ultimate parent company in which results of all subsidiaries are consolidated. The condensed consolidated interim financial statements for the period ended 30 September 2019 comprise the condensed consolidated interim financial statements of the Company and its subsidiaries (together, "the Group"). The information for the six-month period ended 30 September 2019 and 2018 do not constitute statutory accounts as described in section 80 of the Companies Act 2006. Comparative figures for the year ended 31 March 2019 are taken from the full statutory accounts, which contained an unqualified audit opinion.
The condensed consolidated interim financial statements are presented in Pounds Sterling (GBP/£), which is the currency of the primary economic environment in which the Group operates. All amounts are rounded to the nearest thousand, unless otherwise stated.
2. Standards not affecting the reported results or financial position
No upcoming changes under IFRS are likely to have a material effect on the reported results or financial position. Management will continue to monitor upcoming changes.
3. Adoption of new and revised standards
IFRS 16 Leases
From the 1 April 2019, the Group has adopted IFRS 16 Leases, which became effective for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2019. The Group has applied IFRS 16 using the modified retrospective approach and therefore the comparative information has not been restated and continues to be reported under IAS 17 and IFRIC 4. The details of accounting policies under IAS 17 and IFRIC 4 are disclosed in the Draper Esprit Plc annual report for the year ended 31 March 2019. See further details in significant accounting policies - note 4.
4. Significant accounting policies
Basis of accounting
The condensed consolidated interim financial statements are for the six-month period ended 30 September 2019 and have been prepared on a going concern basis in accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial Statements' (IAS 34). They are unaudited and do not include all of the information required in statutory annual financial statements in accordance with the IFRSs as adopted by the EU and should be read conjunction with the consolidated financial statements for the year ended 31 March 2019.
The condensed consolidated interim financial statements have been approved for issue by the Board of Directors on 25 November 2019.
a. Significant accounting policies
Other than the adoption by the Group of IFRS 16 - see (a)(i) below - the condensed consolidated interim financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies adopted by the Group's most recent annual financial statements for the year ended 31 March 2019.
(i) IFRS 16 Leases
Policy applicable from 1 April 2019 (for impact analysis, please see note 16)
At inception of a contract, the Group assesses whether a contract is, or contains, a lease. A contract is, or contains, a lease if the contract conveys the right to control the use of an identified asset for a period of time in exchange for consideration. To assess whether a contract conveys the right to control the use of an identified asset, the Group assesses whether:
· The contract involves the use of an identified asset - this may be specified, explicitly or implicitly, and should be physically distinct or represent substantially all of the capacity of a physically distinct asset. If the supplier has a substantive substitution right, then the asset is not identified;
· The Group has the right to obtain substantially all of the economic benefits from use of the asset throughout the period of use; and
· The Group has the right to direct the use of the asset. The Group has this right when it has the decision-making rights that are most relevant to changing how and for what purpose the asset is used. In rare cases where the decision about how and for what purpose the asset is used is predetermined, the Group has the right to direct the use of the asset if either:
· The Group has the right to operate the asset; or
· The Group designed the asset in a way that predetermines how and for what purpose it will be used.
This policy is applied to contracts entered into, or changed, on or after 1 April 2019. The policy is applied taking into account transitional provisions within IFRS 16 for the existing operating lease as at 1 April 2019.
At inception or on reassessment of a contract that contains a lease component, the Group allocates the consideration in the contract to each lease component on the basis of their relative stand-alone prices.
Lessee
The Group recognises a right-of-use asset and a lease liability at the lease commencement date. The right-of-use asset is initially measured at cost, which comprises the initial amount of the lease liability adjusted for any lease payments made at or before the commencement date, plus any initial direct costs incurred and an estimate of costs to dismantle and remove the underlying asset or to restore the underlying asset, less any lease incentives received.
The right-of-use asset is subsequently depreciated using the straight-line method from the commencement date to the earlier of the end of the useful life of the right-of-use asset or the end of the lease term.
The lease liability is initially measured at the present value of the lease payments that are not paid at the commencement date, discounted using the interest rate implicit in the lease or, if that rate cannot be readily determined, the Group's incremental borrowing rate. The lease liability is measured at amortised cost using the effective interest method. It is remeasured when there is a change in future lease payments.
When the lease liability is remeasured, a corresponding adjustment is made to the carrying amount of the right-of-use asset or is recorded in the profit or loss if the carrying amount of the right-of-use asset has been reduced to zero.
The Group presents right-of-use assets that do not meet the definition of investment property in 'property, plant and equipment' and lease liabilities in 'lease liabilities' in the statement of financial position.
Short-term leases and leases of low-value assets
The Group has elected not to recognise right-of-use assets and lease liabilities for short-term leases that have a lease term of 12 months or less and leases of low-value assets, including IT equipment. The Group would recognise the lease payments associated with these leases as an expense on a straight-line basis over the lease term.
Under IAS 17
For treatment under IAS 17, see the accounting standards notes within the Draper Esprit Plc annual report for the year ending 31 March 2019.
5. Critical accounting estimates and judgements
The Directors have made the following judgements and estimates that have had the most significant effect on the carrying amounts of the assets and liabilities in the condensed consolidated interim financial statement. The estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the estimate is revised if the revision affects only that period, or in the period of the revision and future periods if the revision affects both current and future periods. Actual results may differ from estimates. The key estimates, (5)(a) and (5)(b), and judgements, (5)(c) and (5)(d), are discussed below. There have been no changes to the accounting estimates and judgements in the financial period ended 30 September 2019.
a. Valuation of unquoted equity investments at fair value through the profit and loss
The Group invests into Limited Companies and Limited Partnerships which are considered to be investment companies that invest in unquoted equity for the benefit of the Group. These investment companies are measured at fair value through the profit or loss based on their NAV at the year end. The Group controls these entities and is responsible for preparing their NAV which is based on the valuation of their unquoted investments. The Group's valuation of investments measured at fair value through profit or loss is therefore dependent upon estimations of the valuation of the underlying portfolio companies.
The Group, through its controlled investment companies also invests in investment companies which primarily focus on German or seed investments. These investments are considered to be 'Fund of Fund investments' for the Group and are recognised at their NAV at the year-end date. These Fund of Fund investments are not controlled by the Group and some do not have coterminous year ends with the Group. To value these investments, management obtain the latest financial statements of the investments and discuss further movements with the management of the companies. Where the Fund of Funds hold investments that are individually material to the Group, management perform further procedures to determine that the valuation of these investments has been prepared in accordance with the Group's valuation policies for portfolio companies outlined below and these valuations will be adjusted by the Group where necessary based on the Group valuation policy for valuing portfolio companies.
The estimates required to determine the appropriate valuation methodology of unquoted equity investments means there is a risk of material adjustment to the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities. These estimates include whether to increase or decrease investment valuations or not and require the use of assumptions about the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities that are not readily available or observable.
The fair value of unlisted securities is established with reference to the International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation Guidelines ("IPEV Guidelines"). An assessment will be made at each measurement date as to the most appropriate valuation methodology.
The Group invests in early-stage and growth technology companies, through predominantly unlisted securities. Given the nature of these investments, there are often no current or short-term future earnings or positive cash flows. Consequently, 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 observable market data, being the price of the most recent transaction. Fair value estimates that are based on observable market data will be of greater reliability than those based on estimates and assumptions and accordingly where there have been recent investments by third parties, the price of that investment will generally provide a basis of the valuation.
If this methodology is used, its initial use and the length of time for which it remains appropriate to use the price of recent investment depends on the specific circumstances of the investment, and the Group will consider whether this basis remains appropriate each time valuations are reviewed. In addition, the valuation will be calibrated to validate the use of this methodology at each measurement date.
The Group also considers alternative methodologies in the IPEV Guidelines, being principally price-revenue or price-earnings multiples, depending upon the stage of the asset, requiring management to make assumptions over the timing and nature of future revenues and earnings when calculating fair value.
Where a fair value cannot be estimated reliably, the investment is reported at the carrying value at the previous reporting date unless there is evidence that the investment has since been impaired.
In all cases, valuations 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 Group 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. See Note 17 and 18 for information on unobservable inputs used and sensitivity analysis on investments held at fair value through the profit and loss.
b. Carrying amount of goodwill
Determining whether goodwill is impaired requires an estimation of the recoverable amount of the cash-generating units to which goodwill is allocated. An impairment review is performed on an annual basis unless there is a trigger event during the period. The recoverable amount is based on "value in use" calculations, which requires estimates of future cash flows expected from the cash generation unit (CGU) and a suitable discount rate in order to calculate present value. The key assumptions for the value in use calculations are the discount rate using pre-tax rates that reflect the current market assessments of the time value of money and risks specific to the CGU. The internal rate of return ("IRR") used was based on past performance and experience. The carrying amount of goodwill as at the statement of financial position date was £9.7 million, which was recognised during the year ended 31 March 2017 in according with IFRS 3 Business Combinations. The Group has conducted a sensitivity analysis on the impairment test of the CGU and the carrying value. A higher discount rate in the range of 15%-20% does not reduce the carrying value of goodwill to less than its recoverable amount.
The CGU was determined to be the fund managers. This is a critical management judgement, as they are responsible for generating dealflow and working with investee companies creating value and maximising returns for the Group.
c. Control assessment
The Group has a number of entities within its corporate structure and a judgement has been made of which should be consolidated in accordance with IFRS 10, and which should not. The Group consolidates all entities where it has control over the following: power over the investee to significantly direct the activities; exposure, or rights, to variable returns from its involvement with the investee, and the ability to use its power over the investee to affect the amount of the investor's returns. The Company does not consolidate qualifying investment companies it controls in accordance with IFRS 10 and instead recognises them as investments held at fair value through the profit and loss.
d. Business combinations
The Directors have undertaken a detailed assessment of the substance of the transaction through which the Company acquired the underlying investment vehicles and Esprit Capital Partners LLP and its subsidiaries with reference to the requirements of IFRS 10 and IFRS 3. Following that assessment based on the judgement of Directors, it has been determined that this transaction is appropriately accounted for as an acquisition.
6. Finance income/(expense)
|
Period ended 30 September 2019 £'000s |
Period ended 30 September 2018 £'000s |
Year ended 31 March 2019 £'000s |
Interest on leases |
(43) |
- |
- |
Interest and expenses on loans and borrowings |
(267) |
- |
- |
Finance costs |
(310) |
- |
- |
Net foreign exchange gain |
1,498 |
1,208 |
1,481 |
Interest income on cash and cash equivalents |
100 |
54 |
120 |
Net finance income |
1,288 |
1,262 |
1,601 |
7. Earnings per share and net asset value
The calculation of basic earnings per weighted average shares is based on the profit attributable to shareholders and the weighted average number of shares. When calculating the diluted earnings per share, the weighted average number of shares in issue is adjusted for the effect of all dilutive share options and awards.
Basic earnings per ordinary share
|
Profit after tax £'000s |
Weighted average no. of shares 000 |
Pence |
30 September 2019 |
58,307 |
117,925 |
49 |
30 September 2018 |
38,827 |
87,802 |
44 |
31 March 2019 |
110,579 |
96,051 |
115 |
Diluted earnings per ordinary share
|
Profit after tax £'000s |
Weighted average no. of shares '000 |
Pence |
30 September 2019 |
58,307 |
122,814 |
47 |
30 September 2018 |
38,827 |
91,826 |
42 |
31 March 2019 |
110,579 |
100,506 |
110 |
Net asset value per share is based on the net asset attributable to shareholders and the number of shares at the relevant reporting date. When calculating the diluted earnings per share, the number of shares in issue at balance sheet date is adjusted for the effect of all dilutive share options and awards.
Net asset value per ordinary share
|
Net assets £'000s |
No. of shares at balance sheet date '000 |
Pence |
30 September 2019 |
677,045 |
117,925 |
574 |
30 September 2018 |
449,777 |
99,058 |
454 |
31 March 2019 |
618,332 |
117,925 |
524 |
Diluted net asset value per ordinary share
|
Net assets £'000s |
No. of shares at balance sheet date '000 |
Pence |
30 September 2019 |
677,045 |
122,814 |
551 |
30 September 2018 |
449,777 |
103,946 |
433 |
31 March 2019 |
618,332 |
122,814 |
503 |
8. Intangible assets
30 September 2019 |
Goodwill1 £'000s |
Customer contracts2 £'000s |
Total £'000s |
Cost |
|
|
|
Cost carried forward as at 1 April 2019 |
9,653 |
818 |
10,471 |
Additions during the period |
- |
- |
- |
Cost as at 30 September 2019 |
9,653 |
818 |
10,471 |
Accumulated amortisation |
|
|
|
Amortisation carried forward as at 1 April 2019 |
- |
(341) |
(341) |
Charge for the period |
- |
(51) |
(51) |
Accumulated amortisation as at 30 September 2019 |
- |
(392) |
(392) |
Net book value: |
|
|
|
As at 30 September 2019 |
9,653 |
426 |
10,079 |
30 September 2018 |
Goodwill1 £'000s |
Customer contracts2 £'000s |
Total £'000s |
Cost |
|
|
|
Cost carried forward as at 1 April 2019 |
9,653 |
818 |
10,471 |
Additions during the period |
- |
- |
- |
Cost as at 30 September 2019 |
9,653 |
818 |
10,471 |
Accumulated amortisation |
|
|
|
Amortisation carried forward as at 1 April 2019 |
- |
(341) |
(341) |
Charge for the period |
- |
(51) |
(51) |
Accumulated amortisation as at 30 September 2019 |
- |
(392) |
(392) |
Net book value: |
|
|
|
As at 30 September 2019 |
9,653 |
426 |
10,079 |
31 March 2019 |
Goodwill1 £'000s |
Customer contracts2 £'000s |
Total £'000s |
Cost |
|
|
|
Cost carried forward as at 1 April 2018 |
9,653 |
818 |
10,471 |
Additions during the year |
- |
- |
- |
Cost as at 31 March 2019 |
9,653 |
818 |
10,471 |
Accumulated amortisation |
|
|
|
Amortisation carried forward as at 1 April 2018 |
- |
(239) |
(239) |
Charge for the year |
- |
(102) |
(102) |
Accumulated amortisation as at 31 March 2019 |
- |
(341) |
(341) |
Net book value: |
|
|
|
As at 31 March 2019 |
9,653 |
477 |
10,130 |
1 Goodwill of £9.7 million on the acquisition of all the capital interests in Esprit Capital Partners LLP, a Venture Capital manager based in the UK, on 15 June 2016 and represents the value of the acquired expertise and knowledge of the fund managers. The directors have identified the fund managers as the cash-generating unit ("CGU") being the smallest group of assets that generates cash inflows independent of cash flows from other assets or groups of assets. The fund managers are responsible for generating deal flow and working closely with investee companies creating value and maximising returns for the Group. The Group tests goodwill annually for impairment comparing the recoverable amount using value-in-use calculations and the carrying amount. Value-in-use calculations are based on future expected cash flows generated by the CGU from management fees that would be received if the portfolio of assets were managed by an independent third party under commercial terms over the next eight years. The key assumptions for the value in use calculations are the discount rate using pre-tax rates that reflect the current market assessments of the time value of money and risks specific to the CGU, and the percentage of management fees. The discount rate used was 10% and the management fees were charged at 2% of portfolio assets.
2 An intangible asset of £0.8 million was also recognised in respect of the anticipated profit arising from management fees as a result of the participation in Encore Ventures LLP following the acquisition of Esprit Capital Partners LLP.
Acquisition of Esprit Capital Partners LLP
On 15 June 2016, the Company acquired 100% of the member's capital of Esprit Capital Partners LLP, a venture capital manager based in the UK. For further details on this acquisition, please see the annual report for the year ending 31 March 2019.
9. Investments in associates
On 24 November 2016, Draper Esprit acquired a 30.77% stake in Elderstreet Holdings Limited, the holding company of Elderstreet Investments Limited with an option to acquire the balance of the Elderstreet shares. The initial consideration of £0.26 million was satisfied by the issue of 73,667 new ordinary shares of 1 pence each in the capital of the Company.
10. Investments
On 24 November 2016, Draper Esprit acquired a 30.77% stake in Elderstreet Holdings Limited, the holding company of Elderstreet Investments Limited with an option to acquire the balance of the Elderstreet shares. The initial consideration of £0.26 million was satisfied by the issue of 73,667 new ordinary shares of 1 pence each in the capital of the Company.
|
Unaudited As at 30 Sept 2019 £'000s |
Unaudited As at 30 Sept 2018 £'000s |
Audited As at 31 Mar 2019 £'000s |
As at 1 April |
562,061 |
231,910 |
231,910 |
Investments made in the period1 |
41,453 |
65,259 |
226,432 |
Investments settled in shares |
- |
- |
309 |
Loans repaid from underlying investment vehicles |
(22,674) |
(2,487) |
(15,984) |
Loans made to underlying investment vehicles |
(34) |
- |
4,679 |
Unrealised gains on the revaluation of investments |
57,646 |
41,518 |
114,715 |
As at period end |
638,452 |
336,200 |
562,061 |
1Investments made in the period of £41.5 million are amounts the Company has invested in underlying investment vehicles. This is not the equivalent to the total amount invested in portfolio companies as existing cash balances from the investment vehicles are reinvested.
11. Operating segments
IFRS 8 Operating Segments defines operating segments as those activities of an entity about which separate financial information is available and which are evaluated by the Chief Operating Decision Maker to assess performance and determine the allocation of resource. The Chief Operating Decision Maker has been identified by the Board of Directors as the Chief Executive Officer. The Group has one operating segment identified, the investment portfolio of the Group, which is monitored closely, and strategic decisions are made on the basis of the investment portfolio performance.
12. Loans and borrowings
In June 2019 the Company entered into a revolving credit facility agreement with Silicon Valley Bank and Investec (together the "Financiers") of £50.0 million over a 3-year term to fund the future growth plans of investee companies. The Company incurred costs of £0.5 million with respect to this facility which are presented within loans and borrowings on the statement of financial position and are amortised over the life of the facility (3 years). The bank loans are secured on agreed assets of the Group within the asset class of investments, updated as agreed with the Financiers from time to time, and are subject to customary financial and non-financial covenant conditions which the Group must comply.
The new facility agreement introduced financial and non-financial covenants.
(a) There must be a minimum of ten core investments at all times (core investments are not defined in the same way as in this interim report as it is more broadly defined);
(b) The ratio of the NAV of all investments (as defined in the agreement) to original investment cost should not be less than 1.1:1.0 at any time; and
(c) The ratio of the NAV (as defined in the agreement) plus amounts in the collateral account to financial indebtedness (as defined in the agreement) should not be less than 10:1 at any time.
In addition, the borrowing base (as defined in the agreement) must exceed the facility amount.
As collateral for interest payments, an amount equal to the aggregate amount of interest costs due for the coming six months, all being equal, must be held in an Interest Reserve Account at all times. The balance of this at 30 September 2019 was £1.9 million and is reflected on the condensed consolidated interim statement of financial position as restricted cash.
The debt facility is repayable on maturity (June 2022) but may become repayable earlier if certain conditions are not met.
As at 30 September 2019, the Company has drawn down £20.0 million of the £50.0 million facility. The drawn down amount of £20.0 million is recognised in the condensed consolidated interim statement of financial position under non-current liabilities net of the arrangement and agent fee balance of £0.5 million.
|
Period ended 30 Sept 2019 £'000s |
Period ended 30 Sept 2018 £'000s |
Year ended 31 Mar 2019 £'000s |
|
Bank loan senior facility amount |
50,000 |
- |
- |
|
Interest rate |
BOE base rate + 6.75% / 7.50% floor |
- |
- |
|
Drawn at balance sheet date |
20,000 |
- |
- |
|
Arrangement fees |
(462) |
- |
- |
|
Loan liability balance |
19,538 |
- |
- |
|
Undrawn facilities at balance sheet date |
30,000 |
- |
- |
|
13. Deferred tax
Deferred tax is calculated in full on temporary differences under the liability method using a tax rate of 17% (31 March 2019: 17%). The movement on the deferred tax account is shown below:
|
Period ended 30 Sept 2019 £'000s |
Period ended 30 Sept 2018 £'000s |
Year ended 31 Mar 2019 £'000s |
Arising on business combination |
(95) |
(105) |
(89) |
Arising on co-invest and carried interest |
(526) |
(536) |
(599) |
Other timing differences |
- |
- |
57 |
At the end of the period |
(621) |
(641) |
(631) |
14. Share capital and share premium
Ordinary share capital
30 September 2019 - Allotted and fully paid |
Number |
Pence |
At the beginning of the period |
117,925,470 |
1 |
Issue of share capital during the period for cash |
- |
- |
Issue of share capital during the period as consideration for investment purchase |
- |
- |
At the end of the period |
117,925,470 |
1 |
There were no new shares issued in the period.
30 September 2018 - Allotted and fully paid |
Number |
Pence |
At the beginning of the period |
71,611,773 |
1 |
Issue of share capital during the period for cash |
27,380,952 |
1 |
Issue of share capital during the period as consideration for investment purchase |
64,820 |
1 |
At the end of the period |
99,057,545 |
1 |
31 March 2019 - Allotted and fully paid |
Number |
Pence |
At the beginning of the period |
71,611,773 |
1 |
Issue of share capital during the period for cash |
46,248,877 |
1 |
Issue of share capital during the period as consideration for investment purchase |
64,820 |
1 |
At the end of the period |
117,925,470 |
1 |
Share premium
Allotted and fully paid |
Period ended 30 Sept 2019 £'000s |
Period ended 30 Sept 2018 £'000s |
Year ended 31 Mar 2019 £'000s |
At the beginning of the period |
395,783 |
188,229 |
188,229 |
Premium arising on the issue of ordinary shares |
- |
115,035 |
215,035 |
Transfer to merger relief reserve |
- |
- |
- |
Equity issuance costs ^ |
(36) |
(3,547) |
(7,481) |
At the end of the period |
395,747 |
299,717 |
395,783 |
^ The negative premium movement on ordinary shares in the period arises from costs relating to the latest issue of shares that fell in this period relating to an issuance of shares in the prior period.
15. Share-based payments
|
Date of |
Number of |
Number of |
Vesting |
Exercise Price (pence) |
Fair value per granted instrument (pence) |
Draper Esprit plc 2016 Company Share Option Scheme (CSOP)
|
28-Nov-16 |
1,618,967 |
101,400 |
3 years |
355 |
64.1 |
Draper Esprit plc 2016 Company Share Option Scheme (CSOP)
|
28-Nov-16 |
152,528 |
- |
5 years |
355 |
89.3 |
Draper Esprit plc 2016 Company Share Option Scheme (CSOP)
|
11-Nov-17 |
180,000 |
- |
3 years |
359 |
89.8 |
Draper Esprit plc 2016 Company Share Option Scheme (CSOP)
|
28-Nov-17 |
116,016 |
- |
5 years |
387 |
97.9 |
Draper Esprit plc 2016 Company Share Option Scheme (CSOP)
|
28-Nov-17 |
1,191,913 |
48,926 |
3 years |
387 |
70.9 |
Draper Esprit plc 2016 Company Share Option Scheme (CSOP)
|
30-Jul-18 |
1,205,600 |
- |
3 years |
492 |
152.9 |
Draper Esprit plc 2016 Company Share Option Scheme (CSOP)
|
30-Jul-18 |
102,750 |
101,400 |
5 years |
492 |
186.4 |
Draper Esprit plc 2016 Company Share Option Scheme (CSOP)
|
20-Feb - 19 |
876,868 |
- |
3 years |
530
|
67.8 |
Draper Esprit plc 2016 Company Share Option Scheme (CSOP)
|
20-Feb - 19 |
75,000 |
- |
5 years |
530
|
95.2 |
There were no share-based payments in the period.
The Black Scholes Option Pricing Model has been used for valuation purposes. All options are settled in shares. Volatility is expected to be in the range of 20-30% based on an analysis of the Company's and peer group's share price. The risk-free rate used was 0.73% and 1.57% and was taken from zero coupon United Kingdom government bonds on a term consistent with the vesting period. There are no performance conditions attached to these share options.
16. Leases
Lessee - Real Estate Leases
The Group leases office buildings in London for use by its staff. The Group also has offices in Cambridge and in Dublin, however these contracts are classified as service contracts and not leases. Information about leases for which the Group is a lessee is presented below. The Group has applied IFRS 16 using the modified retrospective approach and therefore the comparative information has not been restated and continues to be reported under IAS 17 and IFRIC 4. One office building lease was identified as an operating lease previously and disclosed in the notes to the financial statements in the Draper Esprit Plc annual report dated 31 March 2019. A new lease commenced during the current period, relating to the 3rd floor of 20 Garrick Street, WC2E 9BT.
The Group leases IT equipment such as printers for use by staff. The Group has elected to apply the recognition exemption for leases of low-value to these leases.
Right-of-use assets
|
Property £'000s |
Total £'000s |
Balance at 31 March 2019 |
- |
- |
Transition to IFRS 16 - recognition of right-of-use asset in respect of existing leases |
835 |
835 |
Balance at 1 April 2019 |
835 |
835 |
Additions during the period |
778 |
778 |
Depreciation charge for the period |
(131) |
(131) |
Balance at 30 September 2019 |
1,482 |
1,482 |
Lease liabilities
|
Property £'000s |
Total £'000s |
Maturity analysis - contractual undiscounted cash flows |
|
|
Less than one year |
405 |
405 |
One to five years |
1,312 |
1,312 |
More than five years |
- |
- |
Total undiscounted lease liabilities at 30 September 2019 |
1,717 |
1,717 |
|
Property £'000s |
Total £'000s |
Lease liabilities included in the condensed consolidated interim statement of financial position |
|
|
Current |
310 |
310 |
Non-current |
1,176 |
1,176 |
Total lease liabilities at 30 September 2019 |
1,486 |
1,486 |
As at 31 March 2019, no lease liabilities were recognised on balance sheet. As noted above, the Group recognised one operating lease under IAS 17. See note 23 to the annual report for Draper Esprit plc as at 31 March 2019 for further details. As at 1 April 2019, in accordance with the transition to IFRS 16, lease liabilities of £0.8 million were recognised in respect of this lease. A further lease commenced during the period relating to the 3rd floor of 20 Garrick Street, London. Lease liabilities in respect of this lease were recognised in accordance with IFRS 16 in the period.
Amounts recognised in the condensed consolidated interim statement of comprehensive income
|
Unaudited period ended 30 September 2019 £'000s |
Year ended 31 March 2019 £'000s |
Interest on lease liabilities |
43 |
- |
Depreciation charge for the period on right-of-use assets |
131 |
- |
Expenses relating to short-term leases |
- |
- |
Expenses relating to leases of low-value assets, excluding short-term leases of low-value assets |
3 |
- |
Under IAS 17, expenses of £0.2 million were recognised in the condensed consolidated interim statement of comprehensive income in respect of operating lease rentals.
Payments of £0.1 million in respect of rental payments paying down the lease liability have been recognised in the condensed consolidated interim statement of cash flows.
Under IAS 17, one lease in respect of the 2nd floor of 20 Garrick Street was recognised as an operating lease - please see the notes to the Draper Esprit plc annual report dated 31 March 2019 for further information. This lease was the only lease identified at the beginning of this period. A further lease commenced during the period in respect of the 3rd floor of 20 Garrick Street and can be seen in the additions to right-to-use assets above.
17. Fair value measurements
This section should be read with reference to note 5(a) and note 10. The Group classifies financial instruments measured at fair value through the profit and loss according to the following fair value hierarchy:
· Level 1: inputs are quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or liabilities that the entity can access at the measurement date;
· Level 2: inputs are inputs, other than quoted prices included within Level 1, that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly; and
· Level 3: inputs are unobservable inputs for the asset or liability.
One investment via our strategic partnership with Earlybird Digital West is classified as level 1 in the fair value hierarchy as it is listed and is valued using market share price.
All other investments are held at fair value through the profit and loss are classified as level 3 in the fair value hierarchy. There were no transfers between Levels 1, 2 and 3 during the period.
Significant unobservable inputs for Level 3 valuations
The fair value of unlisted securities is established with reference to the International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation Guidelines ("IPEV Guidelines"). In line with the IPEV Guidelines, the Group may base valuations on earnings or revenues where applicable, market comparables, price of recent investments in the investee companies, or on net asset values. An assessment will be made at each measurement date as to the most appropriate valuation methodology.
See note 5(a), where valuation policies are discussed in more detail.
Financial instruments, measured at fair value, categorised as Level 3 within the fair value hierarchy can be split into two main valuation techniques. Valuation techniques can be categorised as based on last round price or revenue-multiple. As at 30 September 2019, financial instruments measured using last round price valuation methodology totalled £464.8 million (30 September 2018: £177.4 million, 31 March 2019: £405.9 million). As at 30 September 2019, financial instruments measured using revenue-multiple valuation methodology totalled £212.6 million (30 September 2018: £158.8 million, 31 March 2019: £186.1 million).
Each portfolio company will be subject to individual assessment. Where the Group invests in fund of fund investments, the value of the portfolio will be reported by the fund to the Group. The Group will ensure that the valuations comply with the Group policy.
The valuation multiple is the main assumption applied to valuation based on a revenue-multiple methodology. The multiple is derived from comparable listed companies. Companies in the same industry and geography, and, where possible, with a similar business model and profile are selected and then adjusted for factors including liquidity risk, growth potential and relative performance. They are also adjusted to represent our longer-term view of performance through the cycle or our existing assumption. The portfolio we have is diversified across sectors and geographies and the companies within our core portfolio holdings which have valuations based on revenue-multiples have an average multiple of 3x.
If the multiple used to value each unquoted investment valued on a revenue-multiples basis as at 30 September 2019 was to decrease by 10%, the investment portfolio would decrease by £21.0 million (30 September 2018: £15.9 million, 31 March 2019: £18.6 million). If the multiple increases by 10% then the investment portfolio would increase by £21.0 million (30 September 2018: £15.9 million, 31 March 2019: £18.6 million).
18. Financial instruments risk
Financial risk management
Financial risks are usually grouped by risk type: market, liquidity and credit risk. These risks are discussed in turn below.
Market risk - Foreign currency
A significant portion of the Group's investments and cash deposits are denominated in a currency other than sterling. The principal currency exposure risk is to changes in the exchange rate between GBP and USD/EUR. Presented below is an analysis of the theoretical impact of 10% volatility in the exchange rate on shareholder equity.
Theoretical impact of a change in the exchange rate of +/-10% between GBP and USD/EUR would be as follows:
Foreign currency exposures - Investments |
30 Sept 2019 £'000s |
30 Sept 2018 £'000s |
31 Mar 2019 £'000s |
Investments - exposures in USD & EUR |
486,255 |
138,176 |
412,146 |
10% decrease in GBP* |
540,338 |
151,994 |
456,632 |
10% increase in GBP** |
415,327 |
124,359 |
375,948 |
* £280 million (Sept 2018: £105.0 million, March 2019: 305.0 million) denominated in USD and £260.0 million (Sept 2018: £47.0 million, March 2019: £151.0 million) denominated in EUR.
** £215 million (Sept 2018: £86.0 million, March 2019: £250.0 million) denominated in USD and £200.0 million (Sept 2018: £39.0 million, March 2019: £126.0 million) denominated in EUR.
Certain cash deposits held by the Group are denominated in Euros and US Dollars. The theoretical impact of a change in the exchange rate of +/-10% between GBP and USD/EUR would be as follows:
Foreign currency exposures - Cash |
30 Sept £'000s |
30 Sept £'000s |
31 March 2019 £'000s |
Cash denominated in EUR |
14,473 |
15,720 |
10,522 |
10% decrease in EUR: GBP |
13,026 |
14,148 |
9,470 |
10% increase in EUR: GBP |
15,921 |
17,292 |
11,574 |
Cash denominated in USD |
5,921 |
5,075 |
9,746 |
10% decrease in USD: GBP |
5,329 |
4,568 |
8,771 |
10% increase in USD: GBP 10% increase in EUR: GBP |
6,513 |
5,583 |
10,721 |
Market risk - Price risk
Market price risk arises from the uncertainty about the future prices of financial instruments held in accordance with the Group's investment objectives. It represents the potential loss that the Group might suffer through holding market positions in the face of market movements.
The Group is exposed to equity price risk in respect of equity rights and investments held by the Group and classified on the balance sheet as financial assets at fair value through the profit and loss. These equity rights are held in unquoted high growth technology companies and are valued by reference to revenue or earnings multiples of quoted comparable companies where applicable as discussed more fully in Note 5(a). Revenue or earnings multiples of quoted comparable companies are subject to market movements.
The Group seeks to manage this risk by routinely monitoring the performance of these investments, employing stringent investment appraisal processes.
Theoretical impact of a fluctuation in equity prices of +/-10% would be as follows:
Equity risk exposure |
30 Sept 2019 £'000s |
30 Sept 2018 £'000s |
31 Mar 2019 £'000s |
Investments - FV based on comparatives |
212,617 |
158,847 |
186,100 |
10% decrease in price |
191,355 |
142,962 |
167,490 |
10% increase in price |
233,879 |
174,732 |
204,710 |
Liquidity risk
Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash and short-term bank deposits with an original maturity of three months or less held in readily accessible bank accounts. The carrying amount of these assets is approximately equal to their fair value. Responsibility for liquidity risk management rests with the Board of Draper Esprit plc, which has established a framework for the management of the Group's funding and liquidity management requirements. The Group manages liquidity risk by maintaining adequate reserves and by continuously monitoring forecast and actual cash flows. The utilisation of the loan facility and requirement for utilisation requests is monitored as part of this process.
Lease liabilities fall due over the term of the lease - see note 16 for further details. The debt facility has a term of 3 years - for further details, see note 12. All other Group payable balances at balance sheet date and prior periods fall due for payment within one year.
Credit risk
Credit risk refers to the risk that a counterparty will default on its contractual obligations resulting in financial loss. The Group is exposed to this risk for various financial instruments, for example by granting receivables to customers, placing deposits. The Group's trade receivables are amounts due from the investment funds under management, or underlying portfolio companies. The Group's maximum exposure to credit risk is limited to the carrying amount of financial assets at 30 September is summarised below;
Classes of financial assets impacted by credit risk, carrying amounts |
30 Sept £'000s |
30 Sept 2018 £'000s |
31 March 2019 £'000s |
Trade receivables |
3,262 |
326 |
424 |
Cash at bank and on hand |
43,654 |
103,821 |
50,358 |
The Directors consider that all the above financial assets that are not impaired or past due for each of the reporting date under review are of good credit quality. In respect of trade and other receivables the Group is not exposed to significant risk as the principal customers are the investment funds managed by the Group, and in these the Group has control of the banking as part of its management responsibilities.
Capital management
The Group's objectives when managing capital are to
· safeguard their ability to continue as a going concern, so that they can continue to provide returns for shareholders and benefits for other stakeholders, and
· maintain an optimal capital structure.
·
In order to maintain or adjust the capital structure, the Group may adjust the amount of dividends paid to shareholders, return capital to shareholders, issue new shares or sell assets to manage cash.
Interest rate risk
The Group's interest rate risk arises from borrowings on the £50.0 million loan facility with Silicon Valley Bank and Investec, which was entered into in June 2019. Prior to the period ending 30 September 2019, the Group did not have any borrowings. The Group's borrowings are denominated in GBP and are carried at amortised cost.
One drawdown of £20.0 million was made on the facility during the period at an interest rate of 7.5%. Future drawdowns may be subject to a different interest rate. The facility agreement has an interest rate calculated with reference to the Bank of England base rate (currently 0.75%) with a Margin of 6.75%. The agreement has an interest rate floor of 7.5%. As such, if the base rate increases, the interest charged on future drawdowns will increase.
19. Related party transactions
The Group has various related parties stemming from relationships with Limited Partnerships managed by the Group, its investment portfolio, its advisory arrangements (board seats) and its key management personnel. In addition, the Company has related parties in respect of its subsidiaries in the form of management fees and expense recharges.
During the period, the Company received fees relating to administrative expenses from Encore Ventures LLP, a 71.2% owned subsidiary, totalling £650,000 (Sept 2018: £420,000, March 2019: £840,000). At the date of the condensed consolidated interim statement of financial position, the amount due was £320,000 (£350,400 as at 30 September 2018, £70,000 as at 31 March 2019).
During the period, the Company received fees from Elderstreet Draper Esprit VCT, an associate, totalling £126,615 (£108,536 as at 30 September 2018, £ 53,737 as at 31 March 2019).
The Company also enters into transactions with its portfolio companies, during the period these totalled was £20,583 (£41,796 as at 30 September 2018, £43,958 as at 31 March 2019) and due from them was £4,500 (£36,202 as at 30 September 2018, £16,357 as at 31 March 2019).
During the period, the Company loaned £3.7 million to Esprit Capital Fund No 1 & No 2 LP on an arm's length basis. The loan is repayable on demand and interest is charged at 10% per annum.
20. Ultimate controlling party
The Directors of Draper Esprit plc do not consider there to be a single ultimate controlling party of the Group.
21. Alternative Performance Measures ("APM")
The Group has included the APMs listed below in this report as they highlight key value drivers for the Group and, as such, have been deemed by the Group's management to provide useful additional information to readers of this report. These measures are not defined by IFRS and should be considered in addition to IFRS measures.
Gross Portfolio Value
The Gross Portfolio Value is the gross fair value of the Group's investment holdings before deductions for the fair value of carry liabilities and any deferred tax. The Gross Portfolio Value is subject to deductions for the fair value of carry liabilities and deferred tax to generate the net investment value, which is reflected on the condensed consolidated interim statement of financial position as financial assets held at fair value through profit or loss. Please see page 14 for a reconciliation to the net investment balance.
22. Subsequent events
Post period-end, Draper Esprit has made the following investments:
· Committed £7.0 million investment in stock investing app Freetrade, as part of a $15.0 million series A round, £4.0 million from the Group and £3.0m from EIS and VCT.
· £2.6m investment in Paragraf, a Cambridge-based company building a new way to produce graphene at scale, £0.9m from the Group and £1.7m from EIS and VCT.
Expansion of management team
Post period-end, we announced the appointment of Martin Davis as Chief Executive Officer, while Simon Cook has transitioned from his role as Chief Executive Officer and has now become Chief Investment Officer. This underlines the growing importance of providing breadth of experience and expertise to support the Group.
Martin has more than 20 years' experience in financial services and technology. He was most recently CEO of investment management business Kames Capital and has held several other senior roles at financial advisory and fintech businesses. Martin brings particular expertise in supporting businesses as they scale-up. A co-founder of Draper Esprit, Simon will continue to focus on seeking out fast growing, private digital technology businesses with global potential in line with the Company's track record of generating 20%+ net returns.
In this document, where the context permits, the expressions set out below shall bear the following meaning:
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"Admission" or "IPO" |
the Admission of the enlarged share capital to trading on AIM and ESM on 15 June 2016 and such admission becoming effective in accordance with the AIM Rules and the ESM Rules respectively. The IPO included the acquisition of Esprit Capital Partners LLP and Draper Esprit (Ireland) Limited. |
"Act" |
the UK Companies Act 2006. |
"AIM" |
AIM, the market of that name operated by the London Stock Exchange. |
"Audit Committee" |
the Audit Committee of the Board. |
"BOE" |
Bank of England. |
"Company" or "Draper Esprit" or "plc" |
Draper Esprit plc, a company incorporated in England and Wales with registered number 09799594 and having its registered office at 20 Garrick Street, London, WC2E 9BT. |
"Core Portfolio Companies" |
the top companies by value that represent approximately 70% of the overall portfolio value. |
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"DEF" or "Digital East Fund" |
Digital East Fund 2013 SCA SICAR |
"Directors" or "Board" |
the Directors of the Company from time to time. |
"Draper Esprit Funds" |
the Esprit Funds and the Encore Funds. |
"Draper Venture Network" |
the self-governed network of ten independent growth and venture funds, of which Esprit Capital is a member. |
"EB IV" / "Earlybird Fund IV" |
Earlybird GmbH & Co. Beteiligungs-KG IV |
"EB VI" / "Earlybird Fund VI" |
Earlybird DWES Fund VI GmbH & Co. KG |
EIS |
The EIS funds managed by Encore Ventures LLP. EIS funds being Enterprise Investment Scheme under the provisions of Part 5 of the Income Tax Act 2007. |
"Encore Funds" |
DFJ Esprit Angels' EIS Co-Investment Fund, DFJ Esprit Angels' EIS Co-Investment II, DFJ Esprit EIS III and DFJ Esprit EIS IV and each an "Encore Fund". |
"Encore Ventures" |
Encore Ventures LLP, a limited liability partnership incorporated in England and Wales under the registration number OC347590 with its registered office at 20 Garrick Street, London, WC2E 9BT. |
"ESM" |
the Enterprise Securities Market operated and regulated by the Irish Stock Exchange. |
"Esprit Capital" |
Esprit Capital Partners LLP (previously Draper Esprit LLP) , a limited liability partnership incorporated in England and Wales under the registration number OC318087 with its registered office at 20 Garrick Street, London, WC2E 9BT, the holding vehicle of the Group immediately prior to Admission. |
"Esprit Ireland" |
Draper Esprit (Ireland) Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company incorporated in Ireland under the registration number 572006 with its registered office at 32 Molesworth Street, Dublin 2, Ireland. |
"FCA" |
the UK Financial Conduct Authority. |
"FOF" or "FoF" |
Fund of Funds. |
"Gross Portfolio Value" |
Gross portfolio value is the value of the portfolio of investee companies held by funds controlled by the Company before accounting for deferred tax, external carried interest and amounts co-invested. |
"Group" |
the Company and its subsidiaries from time to time and, for the purposes of this document, including Esprit Capital LLP and its subsidiaries and subsidiary undertakings. |
"HMRC" |
HM Revenue & Customs. |
"IFRS" or "IFRSs" |
International Financial Reporting Standards, as adopted for use in the European Union. |
"Irish Stock Exchange" |
Irish Stock Exchange Plc. |
"IRR" |
the internal rate of return. |
"Net Asset Value" |
the value, as at any date, of the assets of the Company after deduction of all liabilities determined in accordance with the accounting policies adopted by the Company from time to time. |
"Ordinary Shares" |
ordinary shares of £0.01 pence each in the capital of the Company. |
"PricewaterhouseCoopers" or "PwC" |
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales with registered number OC303525 and having its registered office at 1 Embankment Place, London, WC2N 6RH. |
"International Private |
the International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation Guidelines, as amended from time to time. |
"SVB" |
Silicon Valley Bank. |
"VC" |
venture capital. |
"VCT" |
The VCT funds managed by Draper Esprit VCT. VCT (venture capital trust) funds being UK closed-ended collective investment schemes. |