Final Results
Current Trading and Outlook Embargoed for 07.00 Wednesday 17 March 2004
PARITY GROUP PLC
PRELIMINARY RESULTS
Parity Group plc ('Parity' or 'the Group'), the international IT services
group, announces its preliminary results for the year ended 31 December 2003.
Commenting on the results, Parity Group Non-executive Chairman Bill Cockburn
said:
'It appears that markets in the UK, mainland Europe and the United States are
stabilising. Our sales pipeline is stronger than it has been at any time over
the past three years, and this has given us the confidence to invest in
additional sales resources and new sales management systems.
We go into 2004 with better prospects than for some time. New contract wins
announced today are demonstrating our strengths and the success of our customer
propositions. The substantially reduced cost base makes us strongly
operationally geared and helps us to compete in the current market conditions.
The careful reinvestment of a proportion of these cost savings will further
enhance our competitiveness. Our focus for 2004 is on growth.'
Results Overview
£'000 2003 2002 % change
Continuing Operations
Turnover
Business Solutions 23,527 26,529 -11.3%
Training 25,302 27,138 -6.8%
Resourcing Solutions 107,480 100,839 6.6%
Americas 17,644 23,035 -23.4%
173,953 177,541 -2.0%
Operating profit*
Business Solutions 1,530 1,184 29.2%
Training 1,410 65 2069.2%
Resourcing Solutions 1,325 (227) 683.7%
Americas 1 618 -99.8%
Central costs and net interest (3,720) (3,565) -4.3%
546 (1,925) 128.4%
Exceptional costs (6,390) (21,033)
Discontinued operations** (12,249) (224)
Amortisation of goodwill (629) (1,385)
(18,722) (24,567)
Taxation credit 3,117 357
Loss on ordinary activities after taxation (15,605) (24,210)
*Before exceptional items, goodwill amortisation and discontinued operations
** Refers to Dutch subsidiary Parity Solutions BV closed in June 2003
Group highlights
* Marked improvement in performance in all three European business units
* US business recovered H1 loss to achieve breakeven for year
* Overhead costs reduced by 35% in past 3 years
* Continued success in achievement of stated strategy
- Group revenues from more stable outsourcing and managed service
contracts increased from £3m in 2001 to £24m in 2003
- 43% of Group revenue now coming from top 20 clients (2001: 29%)
- More contract wins announced today
* Balance sheet strengthened through rights issue
* Focus now is on growth
Contract wins announced today
* British American Tobacco - contract extension for Business Solutions
valued at £1.4m
* HBOS (Halifax Bank of Scotland) - contract extension for Training
* DWP - selected as preferred supplier in 3 staffing categories of its
procurement framework
* Marks & Spencer - preferred supplier status for Resourcing Solutions
* BT Group - preferred supplier status for Resourcing Solutions
* BT Syntegra - preferred supplier status for Resourcing Solutions
* T-Systems - preferred supplier status for Resourcing Solutions in Germany
Group financials
* Group turnover £176.0m (2002: £183.3m), including £2.0m (2002: £5.7m)
from discontinued operations
* Group pre tax profit before discontinued operations, exceptional items
and goodwill amortisation £0.5m (2002: £1.9m loss)
* Total exceptional charge for continuing operations £6.4m, resulting in
annualised savings in excess of £3.5m
* Group loss after tax and discontinued operations £15.6m (2002: £24.2m)
* Basic loss per share 7.70p (2002: 12.89p*)
* Earnings per share before discontinued operations, exceptional items and
goodwill 1.04p (2002: loss 1.20p*)
* Final dividend of 0.03p (2002: 0.03p*); total dividend for the year of
0.03p (2002: 0.14p*)
* Prior year comparatives restated for shares issued under rights issue
Divisional highlights
Business Solutions
* Second half revenues for ongoing business increased by 3% over first half
* Operating profit+ increased by 29% against prior year
* Order book at year-end increased by 29% compared to prior year
* 63% of revenues from top 10 accounts (2002: 45%)
Training
* Continued to take market share - revenue down 7% in market that declined
by 13%
* Reliance on cyclical public training market reduced to 36% of total
revenue
* Corresponding increase in proportion of revenues from outsourcing and
managed service contracts
* Major improvement in operating profit+ from £0.1m in 2002 to £1.4m in
2003
Resourcing Solutions
* Total revenue up 7% at £107.5m, of which £15.1m came from vendor
management outsourcing that moves business into managed services market
* Significant improvement in operating profit+ from £0.2m loss in 2002 to
profit of £1.3m in 2003
* Both UK and mainland Europe profitable for first time in two years
* Contractor numbers on billing increasing steadily
* 20% share of UK Government IT staffing services market
Parity Americas
* Revenue growth of 3% in second half of year over first half after three
years of decline
* First half loss reversed to breakeven+ for the year
* Market stabilising
+ before discontinued operations, exceptional costs and goodwill amortisation
Enquiries:
Parity Group plc
Telephone 020 7776 0800
Ian Miller, Group Chief Executive
Alison Leyshon, Group Finance Director
Financial Dynamics
Telephone 020 7831 3113
Giles Sanderson
Harriet Keen
Notes to Editors
About Parity Group plc
Parity is a professional services company that helps customers ensure that the
right people are in the right roles, using the right technology and the right
processes in the right way.
Parity has four core competencies:
* developing and managing large or complex IT systems, and related
consultancy services
* management and technology training, and workforce development strategy
consulting
* providing permanent and temporary staff, and managing related back office
activities
* Managing business processes related to the optimisation of workforce skills
and utilisation.
Parity operates from 30 offices across the UK, mainland Europe and the USA.
Customers across the group include AT&T, CSFB, HP, IBM, JP Morgan Chase, Shell,
and in the UK, Barclaycard, British Aerospace, BT, Lloyds TSB, National Health
Service and Royal Mail.
For more information on Parity, visit www.parity.net
Group Overview and Results
Turnover and Profits
The Group has returned to profit at the trading level in all four business
units before exceptional charges and goodwill amortisation, and after central
costs. For our continuing businesses, revenue for the year was down slightly
against 2002 at £174.0m (2002: £177.5m). However, profit before goodwill
amortisation, tax and exceptional costs improved to £0.5m (2002: £1.9m loss).
After exceptional costs, goodwill amortisation and taxation the Group reported
a loss for continuing businesses of £3.4m (2002: loss of £24.0m). Revenue for
the year included £15.1m from the contracts to provide vendor management
services that were assigned to Resourcing Solutions following the partnership
agreement that the business entered into with Chimes Inc., in 2003. In this
initial year of start up the profit contribution on these contracts has been
small but this is expected to improve as additional contracts are won.
The results for our Dutch Business Solutions unit, Parity Solutions BV, which
was put into administration in June 2003, are shown as 'discontinued
operations' in the profit and loss account. The loss arising from discontinued
operations is discussed below.
After exceptional costs, discontinued operations, goodwill amortisation and
taxation, the Group reported a loss of £15.6m (2002: £24.2m loss).
Exceptional Costs
The total exceptional charge for the year of £6.4m for continuing operations is
made up of a restructuring charge of £4.2m, £0.7m in respect of a provision
against the deficit arising on the Group's defined benefit pension scheme, £
0.6m in respect of property dilapidations, £0.2m in respect of advisors' fees
and £0.7m in respect of a provision against the carrying value of a fixed asset
investment.
As announced at the time of the rights issue, the Directors saw the opportunity
to further rationalise the Group's cost base. The total cost of this
restructuring was £4.2m and associated savings in a steady state climate should
exceed £3.5m on an annualised basis from 2004. The largest element of the
restructuring charge is a property cost of £2.7m. In addition to charges in
respect of properties vacated during the year, this includes a top up of £1.0m
to our empty property provision in respect of ongoing rent, rates and service
charges for properties originally vacated in previous years which have not been
sub-let. As highlighted at the time of our interim results we continue to
actively seek to sub-let or assign the leases on our empty properties. Since
2001, we have reduced the number of properties across the Group by 21 through a
combination of leases expiring, being assigned or sub-let. However, the state
of the property market has caused us to take a more cautious view of the length
of time this process will take for our remaining empty properties.
The 2004 cash cost of the 2003 exceptional restructuring will be £1.4m, with a
further £0.4m cash outlay in respect of pre 2003 exceptionals. Of this total
cash spend of £1.8m, £1.5m of this total cash spend of £1.8m relates to empty
properties. This spend will reduce to £0.9m in 2005 onwards following the
expiry of leases at the end of 2004.
The Group has reduced costs continuously over the past three years to
compensate for declining revenues in the longest-running recession that this
sector has known. Between 2000 and 2003 over £23.0m was removed from the cost
base. However, the Directors have agreed that certain well-focussed and
controlled revenue investment is now required to support the Group's objective
to return to growth. In particular, salaries had been frozen for over two
years and a modest salary increase across the Group has been agreed with effect
from 1 January 2004. In 2004 there will be an increase in our IT costs
following the refreshing of our hardware to facilitate a move to a common and
more versatile environment. This change will provide enhanced functionality
and a solid platform for shared Group-wide applications, including a new sales
management system. The 2004 budget assumes further limited revenue
expenditure, including additional head count, training and marketing, which
will only be committed in line with an increase in revenues.
Discontinued operations
We reported in our Interim Results that one of our Dutch subsidiaries, Parity
Solutions BV, had been put into administration on 13 June 2003. The results of
this business, including the associated exceptional costs, have been reported
as discontinued operations. The operating loss reported for this business of £
3.2m comprises an adjustment of £1.6m in respect of the overstatement of
revenues in 2002 and a trading loss of £1.6m for the period up to 13 June 2003.
In addition, we have reported a loss on termination of this business of £9.0m,
the largest element of which is £8.7m of goodwill that had been written off
directly to Other Reserves at the time of the acquisition, in accordance with
the required treatment under UK accounting standards at that time. For the
purpose of calculating the loss on termination, the goodwill has been
re-instated and written off through the Group profit and loss account and has
therefore not impacted net assets. The loss on termination also includes
closure costs of £0.3m. The total net adverse impact on shareholders' funds in
2003 arising from the discontinuation of this business was £3.5m. No further
liabilities remain.
Rights issue
In the second half of the year, the Group raised net funds of £9.2m (including
the proceeds of the sale of nil paid rights by the Employee Benefit Trust) by
way of a 7 for 8 rights issue which resulted in 134,722,122 new shares being
issued at a price of 7.5 pence per new ordinary share. The main purpose of the
rights issue was to strengthen the Group's balance sheet which had been
impacted by a high level of debt, built up primarily through acquisitions
between 1999 and 2001, the write off of £12.8m of goodwill in 2002 and the
investment required to fund the cost reduction programmes that the Group has
put in place in recent years. A stronger balance sheet means that the Group is
better positioned to compete for the larger and longer-running contracts with
substantial clients, the winning of which forms a key part of our stated
strategy. In addition, the rights issue has enabled the Group to extend the
restructuring programme described above, will provide working capital to
accommodate increased levels of activity in the business and will fund
essential investment in 2004.
Taxation
Taxation on ordinary activities for the year was a credit of £3.1m (2002: £
0.4m). The credit includes deferred tax of £2.6m made up of an increase in
trading losses carried forward for use in future years of £1.4m and short term
and other timing differences of £1.2m which largely relate to the deferral of
capital allowances. At the balance sheet date the Group has recognised a
deferred tax asset of £3.4m (2002: £1.1m). It is the Group's policy to only
recognise a deferred tax asset in respect of tax losses carried forward where
it is more likely than not that there will be taxable profits in the short-term
against which the deferred tax asset can be offset. The Group has unrecognised
deferred tax assets relating to tax losses of £1.9m (2002: £1.4m excluding
unrecognised tax assets relating to discontinued operations).
Earnings per share and dividends
The basic loss per share for the year was 7.70p (2002: loss 12.89p). Earnings
per share before exceptional items, discontinued operations and goodwill
amortisation was 1.04p (2002: loss 1.20p). Prior year comparatives have been
restated to take account of the shares issued under the rights issue.
The Board is proposing a final dividend for 2003 of 0.03p per share (2002:
final dividend 0.03p per share, total dividend for year 0.14p per share,
restated for new shares issued under the rights issue) which, if approved, will
result in a cash outlay of £87,000 on payment in July 2004.
The retained loss for the year of £15.7m (2002: loss £24.6m), has been
transferred to reserves. The distributable reserves of the Company at year end
were £20.5m (2002: £24.5m).
Cash flow and net debt
The trading activities of the continuing business generated a net cash inflow
before exceptional items for the year of £0.1m (2002: inflow £5.1m), including
a cash outflow from working capital of £2.9m (2002: inflow £4.2m). After a
cash outflow of £0.5m from discontinued operations, the net cash outflow from
operating activities before exceptional items was £0.4m (2002: £3.9m inflow).
The net cash outflow from exceptional items was £4.0m (2002: £3.1m) of which £
1.4m relates to the 2003 restructuring programme and £2.6m relates to
exceptional charges in previous years. Of the latter expenditure, the bulk
represents cash outlays on rent, rates and service charges in respect of
properties vacated in previous years and £0.6m in respect of dilapidations
charges on those empty properties where leases have now terminated.
The increase in average borrowings in the year prior to the rights issue led to
an increase in net interest paid from £0.7m in 2002 to £1.0m in 2003.
At year end, the Group had net debt of £12.0m (2002: £15.0m), a decrease of £
6.0m compared to the half year. Of the net cash inflow of £9.2m (including the
proceeds of the sale of nil paid rights by the Employee Benefit Trust) arising
in 2003 from the rights issue, £2.0m has been spent on exceptional items in the
second half of the year and £0.5m has been incurred on interest charges. The
cash outflow relating to the 2002 final dividend that was paid in July 2003 was
£0.1m. Trading activities in the second half of the year gave rise to a cash
outflow of £0.3m as working capital requirements increased.
Despite the injection of cash following the rights issue, the Board remains
acutely aware of the need for the business to generate cash. Each of the
business unit Managing Directors and Financial Controllers have been set cash
generation targets which form part of the performance conditions for their 2004
bonus. Group cash generation targets are also included in the bonus criteria
for the Executive Directors. Capital expenditure business cases must generally
demonstrate a pay back period of less than twelve months.
Banking facilities
Following the successful completion of the rights issue, the £18.0m committed
facility with our principal bankers, Lloyds TSB, remains in place through to
the end of March 2006. This facility is secured over the trade debtors of our
main UK operating companies. The Group also has an overdraft facility of £2.0m
(2002: £4.0m) with Lloyds TSB to meet short-term intra month funding
requirements.
In addition to these facilities, the Group entered into an agreement with HSBC
in September 2003 for the provision of a £4.0m invoice discounting facility in
respect of its operations in Germany, France and the US. This facility expires
in June 2004 but is expected to be renewed annually.
The Group therefore has total facilities, including overdrafts, of £24.0m and
the Board remains confident of our ability to operate within these facilities
for the foreseeable future.
Divisional Performance
Turnover (£'000) Profit / (Loss) before Return on Sales
tax %
(£'000)
2003 2002 2003 2002 2003 2002
Continuing operations
Business Solutions
United Kingdom 23,527 26,529 1,530 1,184 6.5 4.4
Training - United 25,302 27,138 1,410 65 5.6 0.2
Kingdom
Resourcing Solutions
United Kingdom 79,544 69,100 1,147 241 1.4 0.3
Mainland Europe 27,936 31,739 178 (468) 0.6 (1.5)
107,480 100,839 1,325 (227) 1.2 (0.2)
Parity Americas 17,644 23,035 1 618 - 2.7
Operating total
before central costs,
exceptional items and
goodwill
amortisation 173,953 177,541 4,266 1,640 2.4 0.9
Central costs (2,831) (2,924)
Net interest payable (889) (641)
Profit (loss) before
tax,
goodwill amortisation
and exceptional items 546 (1,925)
Goodwill amortisation (629) (1,385)
Operating exceptional (5,666) (16,343)
items
Amounts written off
investments (724) (4,690)
173,953 177,541 (6,473) (24,343)
Discontinued operations
Business Solutions
Mainland Europe 1,999 5,732 (1,598) (128)
Operating exceptional
items
(1,600) (32)
Loss on termination of
operations (9,000) -
Net interest payable (51) (64)
175,952 183,273 (18,722) (24,567)
Group Strategy
The Group operates in the IT Services and Business Process Management markets
in the UK, mainland Europe and the United States. Its three lines of business
are IT Staffing (Resourcing Solutions Division), IT Systems Development and
Management (Business Solutions Division), and IT and Management Training
(Training Division) and the Group organises along these lines in the UK and
mainland Europe. The fourth business unit, Americas, contains all three types
of business but the majority of its revenues come from IT Staffing rather than
Business Solutions or Training. For the past three years, in the face of the
most difficult market conditions in the history of the IT Services industry,
the Group has concentrated on developing strategies for each of these
businesses to improve the security of revenue and margins by concentrating on
winning larger and longer-running contracts with government and high-quality
commercial clients. It has also worked at bringing together the unique
combination of skills and capability contained within the Group to address a
growing market in Business Process Management, specifically in the Human
Resources functions of large organizations. These changes are now having the
anticipated positive impact on the business.
The success of our strategy can be seen by the increasing proportion of revenue
coming from outsourcing and other managed service contracts instead of
traditional, transactional sales. The Group produced £24m of its continuing
revenue (14%) from these contracts in 2003, against £3m (1%) in 2001. That
revenue came from multi-year outsourcing contracts in IT applications
management, the organisation and delivery of training on behalf of clients, and
the management of recruitment processes and temporary labour. This focus on
outsourcing and managed services contracts will continue and the Business
Process Management market in Human Resources is a particularly attractive
target because of the Group's skills, experience and reputation in this area.
We are also strongly focussed on key account management and the development of
client relationships based on adding value rather than competing on price.
With the emphasis on teamwork, information sharing and the development of
clients for the mutual benefit of the business units and the whole of the
Parity Group, we have seen a major improvement in the proportion of our
business coming from our Top 20 Accounts. In 2001, we had approximately 29% of
our revenue coming from this source. By 2003, that had increased to 43%. This
concentration has protected the Group from the worst of the recent recession in
our markets and has sheltered us while we changed the service offering
strategy. Going forward, the key account management approach will continue,
and the recent strengthening of our sales team should enable us to bring in new
key accounts selectively and profitably.
While these strategic changes have been taking place, the Group has been
addressing in parallel the issues of productivity and cost effectiveness.
During the past three years, the Group has reduced overhead costs for
continuing operations by 35% and average staff numbers have been reduced by
605. These actions have improved the Group's competitiveness to the point
where we compete very effectively with UK and 'offshore' operators in terms of
cost per unit of valid output, exploiting the quality of delivery, productivity
and ease of communication we believe differentiate Parity from the competition.
Going forward, the Group will continue to look to increase the proportion of
its revenue from outsourcing and other longer-term contracts. This will reduce
our dependence on traditional, commodity business and fit better with our
relationship-based, value-adding approach to market. We will continue to
manage the cost base to maximise efficiency while recognising that we need to
invest in systems, people development and sales effectiveness to maintain and
improve our ability to compete.
Business Solutions
This Business Unit operates from the UK providing consulting, systems
development and applications management services. As announced in June 2003,
its Dutch operation Parity Solutions BV was put into administration, and the
results of this business are shown as 'Discontinued Operations' in the Group
profit and loss account.
For the continuing business, 2003 saw year on year revenue reduce by 11% to £
23.5m as the Business Unit focused on only those contracts where we could
achieve acceptable margins. However, the second half of 2003 saw the Business
Unit return to growth with an increase in revenue of 3% over the first half.
Despite the drop in revenue for the year, profitability before exceptional
items and goodwill amortisation improved by 29% against the previous year as
the improved business mix and lower overheads produced far better margins.
Operating profit before exceptional costs and goodwill amortisation was £1.5m
for the year, compared to £1.2m for 2002. The Business Unit's order book again
showed a substantial improvement as it was increasingly successful in winning
large, multi-year contracts in applications management and systems
development. The backlog of work sold but yet to be delivered at year end
increased by 29% compared to prior year.
There was little indication that 2003 was any less competitive than the
previous year and clients' IT expenditure continued to be subject to very tight
control. Where the Business Unit has been successful is in developing value
propositions for existing clients and proactively taking these to the
appropriate buyer. A substantial amount of new business was sold without
having to bid, demonstrating both the quality of our client relationships and
the Business Unit's ability to identify and deliver on opportunities to improve
the business of our clients. Where we did bid, we were selective in choosing
only those prospects where we had a clear and differentiated advantage, and
that pushed up our sales efficiency and reduced our cost of sales.
The challenge and opportunity now is to accelerate the return to growth that we
saw to a limited extent in the second half of 2003 and to build more scale.
For this reason, additional sales resources have been put in place in the first
quarter of 2004, including a Business Unit Sales Director.
Training
The Training Business Unit provides management and technology training through
10 training centres around the UK and also provides managed services for
training and development in the UK and mainland Europe. Training's revenue
reduced by 7% against the previous year from £27.1m to £25.3m, but that
compared with a reduction in the market of around 13%. A survey published by
IT Skills Research in mid-2003 found that Parity Training had taken market
share in a shrinking market in the UK and had moved from seventh place to
second place in the course of twelve months.
To offset the effects of the reduction in training spend, Training has
successfully reduced its reliance on the cyclical public training market with
only 36% of its revenue coming from this source in 2003 compared to 59% in
2001. The balance of 64% of its revenue now comes from consultancy and
outsourcing contracts to manage the supply of training and development. While
most of these are framework agreements without fixed commitments to volumes,
the pricing model for this type of business is such that clients are
incentivised to purchase the volumes that they predicted during the contract
negotiation stage of the sales process. This source of revenue has proved far
more robust than public training over the past two to three years in which the
overall training market has suffered negative growth. As a result of the
action taken to reduce revenue risk and the implementation of capacity
reduction measures in public training, the Business Unit has been profitable in
both the first and second halves of 2003 and made a major improvement in
profitability compared to the previous year. Operating profit before
exceptional costs in 2003 was £1.4m, compared to £0.1m for 2002.
This Business Unit continues to expand its offereings in managed services while
constantly reviewing and refreshing or replacing its traditional training
courses. There is little indication yet that the public training market is
improving quickly, but several competitors have left the market and some of the
excess capacity should therefore have been removed. The trend towards
outsourcing the management of training and development appears to represent a
real opportunity for Training. Working with its sister Business Units in the
Group gives Training the ability to deploy better technology, create proper
value propositions for clients, and maximise the opportunity represented by our
blue-chip client base.
Resourcing Solutions
Resourcing Solutions provides temporary and permanent staff to government and
commercial organisations in the UK and mainland Europe. The principal
countries in which it operates, apart from the UK, are France, Germany,
Holland, Belgium and Switzerland. In addition, an agreement with the
market-leading supplier of contractor management software, Chimes Inc., has
enabled this Business Unit to move into Business Process Management. The
agreement provided two vendor management outsourcing contracts in the UK that
brought £15.1m of revenues in 2003. While these contracts made little impact in
2003 on profitability, they are of strategic importance in moving Resourcing
Solutions into the managed services market that is a key focus for the Group in
improving the quality and predictability of its revenue stream. Including the
effect of these contracts, revenue for the year for the UK increased by 15%
against 2002 from £69.1m, to £79.5m.
As a result of improving sales in the core business in the second half and the
effect of the further overhead cost reduction action taken during the year and
at the end of 2002, the Business Unit returned to operating profit in 2003.
Operating profit before exceptional costs and goodwill amortisation was £1.3m
compared to a loss of £0.2m in 2002. The year-end figure compares with a
trading profit at the half year of £0.1m. For the first time in two years,
both the UK and mainland Europe were profitable for the year. The UK business
has benefited from its SCAT approved supplier status with UK Government.
Resourcing Solutions now has a 20% share of the UK Government IT staffing
services market and in March 2004 was awarded a prestigious framework agreement
with the Department for Work and Pensions in the categories of Interim IT
Supply, Procurement Consultancy and Project Management Consultancy. As well as
seeing numbers on billing increase in the UK, the important German market
proved to be relatively strong throughout 2003. France and Benelux maintained
their position and Switzerland returned to growth in the second half as a
result of improved sales to new clients.
This Business Unit plans to increase the proportion of its revenue from managed
services, and the Chimes relationship provides it with the technology base to
address not only the traditional IT market but other areas of temporary labour
management. This is seen as an area of opportunity as the UK and mainland
Europe seek to improve the flexibility of its workforce, while meeting the
increasingly complex regulations on temporary labour. If Resourcing Solutions
can achieve the same change in mix that we have seen in Training, its revenue
and contribution should be far more stable and less cyclical in the future.
Parity Americas
This Business Unit operates from offices in the east of the US but services
clients across the Americas. Its primary source of revenue is staffing, but it
has profitable and growing businesses in Solutions and Training. The Americas
market has been depressed for the past two years as the weak economy affected
our key business sectors of technology manufacturing, telecommunications,
banking and transportation. Revenue from the Americas had been in decline for
almost three years and the Business Unit became loss making in the first half
of 2003. For the year, revenues decreased by 23% in Sterling (16.5% in US
Dollars), from £23.0m in 2002 to £17.6m in 2003. However, the second half of
2003 showed revenue growth of almost 3% over the first half. The improvement
in revenue, combined with the cost reduction actions taken in late 2002 and
early 2003, enabled the Americas to recover all of the loss in the first half
to breakeven for the full year.
The US market is showing increasing signs of stability if not real growth, and
with the lower cost base, it is anticipated that this unit should remain
profitable even without any overall improvement in the staffing market. Any
market upturn should produce higher margins.
The Business Unit plans to increase the proportion of its revenue coming from
Business Solutions and Training, with support from its European sister Business
Units. It has also been brought into the Key Account Management structure of
the Group. In 2003 we have succeeded in servicing two major clients on both
sides of the Atlantic through the extension of key account management. Further
opportunities are being explored.
Employees
The past three years have seen the Group go through a major transformation.
Our businesses have successfully adapted to changes in the market in order and
to drive up levels of productivity and ensure competitiveness in a tough
market. These changes have not been easy, and the fact that we have been able
to maintain quality and customer satisfaction to such a high degree speaks
volumes for the attitude and commitment of our people; the Board would like to
record its appreciation of their application, dedication and support.
Contract wins
We are pleased to announce today two contract extensions and four preferred
supplier appointments with well known blue-chip companies, as follows:
British American Tobacco has awarded business Solutions a two year extension to
its existing applications management contract, with a total value of £1.4m;
HBOS (Halifax Bank of Scotland) has awarded Training an extension to its
ongoing managed service contract to include an 18 month e-learning contract;
Department for Work and Pensions has appointed Resourcing Solutions as a
preferred supplier in three staffing categories of its procurement framework;
Marks & Spencer has appointed Resourcing Solutions as Tier 1 and Tier 2
preferred supplier of resources;
BT Group has appointed Resourcing solutions as one of six preferred suppliers
for permanent recruitment;
BT Syntegra has appointed Resourcing Solutions as one of five preferred
suppliers of IT staffing; and
T-Systems has appointed Resourcing Solutions in mainland Europe as one of five
preferred suppliers of staffing in Germany
Current trading and prospects
It appears that markets in the UK, mainland Europe and the United States are
stabilising. Our sales pipeline is stronger than it has been at any time over
the past three years, and this has given us the confidence to invest in
additional sales resources and new sales management systems.
We go into 2004 with better prospects than for some time. New contract wins
announced today are demonstrating our strengths and the success of our customer
propositions. The substantially reduced cost base makes us strongly
operationally geared and helps us to compete in the current market conditions.
The careful reinvestment of a proportion of these cost savings will further
enhance our competitiveness. Our focus for 2004 is on growth.
Group Profit and Loss Account
Continuing Discontinued Continuing Discontinued
operations operations Total operations operations Total
year year ended year ended year
year ended year ended ended ended
31 31 31 31 31 31
December December December December December December
2003 2003 2003 2002 2002 2002
Notes £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000
Turnover 3 173,953 1,999 175,952 177,541 5,732 183,273
Operating (172,518) (3,597) (176,115) (178,825) (5,860) (184,685)
costs before
goodwill
amortisation
and
exceptional
costs
Goodwill (629) - (629) (1,385) - (1,385)
amortisation
Operating 2 (5,666) (1,600) (7,266) (16,343) (32) (16,375)
exceptional
costs
Total (178,813) (5,197) (184,010) (196,553) (5,892) (202,445)
operating
costs
Operating (4,860) (3,198) (8,058) (19,012) (160) (19,172)
loss
Loss on - (9,000) (9,000) - - -
termination
of operations
Amounts 2 (724) - (724) (4,690) - (4,690)
written off
investments
Net interest (889) (51) (940) (641) (64) (705)
payable
Profit (loss)
on ordinary
activities
before
goodwill
amortisation,
exceptional 546 (1,649) (1,103) (1,925) (192) (2,117)
items and
taxation
Goodwill (629) - (629) (1,385) - (1,385)
amortisation
Exceptional
costs
Operating 2 (5,666) (1,600) (7,266) (16,343) (32) (16,375)
exceptional
costs
Loss on - (9,000) (9,000) - - -
termination
of operations
Amounts 2 (724) - (724) (4,690) - (4,690)
written off
investments
Loss on
ordinary
activities
before
taxation (6,473) (12,249) (18,722) (24,343) (224) (24,567)
Taxation on 3,117 - 3,117 357 - 357
ordinary
activities
Loss on
ordinary
activities
after
taxation (3,356) (12,249) (15,605) (23,986) (224) (24,210)
Ordinary 5 (87) - (87) (393) - (393)
dividends on
equity shares
Retained loss
for the
financial
period (3,443) (12,249) (15,692) (24,379) (224) (24,603)
Loss per 4 Restated
ordinary
share
- Basic (7.70)p (12.89)p*
- Diluted (7.70)p (12.89)p*
Earnings
(loss) per
share before
goodwill
amortisation,
discontinued
operations 4
and
exceptional
costs
- Basic 1.04p (1.20)p*
- Diluted 1.04p (1.20)p*
* Restated for shares issued under rights issue
Group Balance Sheet
2003 2002
Notes £'000 £'000
Fixed assets
Intangible assets 9,616 10,245
Tangible fixed assets 2,586 4,380
Fixed investments 478 1,177
12,680 15,802
Current assets
Stock - work in progress 561 -
Debtors
- due within one year 40,550 39,028
- due after more than one year 3,418 -
Cash at bank and in hand 7 3,241 3,608
47,770 42,636
Creditors: amounts falling due within one year (30,942) (44,466)
Net current assets (liabilities) 16,828 (1,830)
Total assets less current liabilities 29,508 13,972
Creditors: amounts falling due after more than one (11,058) -
year
Provisions for liabilities and charges (4,500) (2,364)
Net assets 13,950 11,608
Capital and reserves
Called up share capital 14,434 7,698
Capital redemption reserve 8 50 50
Share premium account 8 6,062 3,729
Other reserves 8 44,110 35,320
Profit and loss account 8 (50,706) (35,189)
Equity shareholders' funds 13,950 11,608
Group Cash Flow Statement
2003 2002
Notes £'000 £'000
Net cash flow from operating activities before
discontinued
operations and exceptional costs 6 130 5,107
Cash flows from discontinued operations 6 (515) (1,233)
Net cash flow from operating activities before 6 (385) 3,874
exceptional items
Exceptional items (4,050) (3,075)
Net cash flow from operating activities (4,435) 799
Return on investments and servicing of finance
Interest received 46 126
Interest paid (1,066) (867)
Net cash outflow from returns on investments and
servicing of
finance (1,020) (741)
Taxation (paid) received (164) 508
Capital expenditure and financial investment
Purchase of tangible fixed assets (509) (649)
Sale of tangible fixed assets 27 531
Additions to fixed investments (25) -
Net cash outflow from capital expenditure and financial
investment (507) (118)
Equity dividends paid (90) (2,676)
Net cash outflow before financing (6,216) (2,228)
Financing
Issue of ordinary share capital 10,104 29
Expenses of share issue (979) -
Proceeds on sale of nil paid rights in Employee Benefit 84 -
Trust
Repayment of loan notes (14) (3,986)
(Decrease) increase in borrowings (1,719) 3,000
Repayment of capital element of finance lease (14) -
obligations
Net cash inflow (outflow) from financing 7,462 (957)
Increase (decrease) in cash in the period 1,246 (3,185)
Reconciliation of Net Cash Flow to Movement in Net Debt
2003 2002
£'000 £'000
Increase (decrease) in cash in the period 1,246 (3,185)
Decrease (increase) in borrowings 1,719 (3,000)
Repayment of obligations under finance leases 14 -
Variable rate loan notes 2004 repaid 14 3,986
Change in net debt resulting from cash flows in the period 2,993 (2,199)
Exchange movements 56 (122)
Other non cash changes (91) -
Movement in net debt in the period 2,958 (2,321)
Net debt at 1 January 2003 (14,995) (12,674)
Net debt at 31 December 2003 (12,037) (14,995)
Reconciliation of Movements In Equity Shareholders' Funds
2003 2002
£'000 £'000
Loss for the year attributable to shareholders (15,605) (24,210)
Dividends (87) (393)
Retained loss (15,692) (24,603)
Other recognised gains (losses) 175 (394)
Shares issued net of issue costs 9,069 29
Gain on sale of nil paid rights in Employee Benefit Trust 84 -
Reversal of goodwill previously written off directly to 8,706 -
reserves
Net increase (decrease) in shareholders' funds 2,342 (24,968)
Equity shareholders' funds at start of year 11,608 36,576
Equity shareholders' funds at end of year 13,950 11,608
Group Statement of Total Recognised Gains and Losses
2003 2002
£'000 £'000
Loss for the year attributable to shareholders (15,605) (24,210)
Currency translation differences on foreign currency net 175 (394)
investments
Total recognised losses for the year (15,430) (24,604)
Notes to the Accounts
1. BASIS OF PREPARATION
The financial information for the year ended 31 December 2003 included in this
preliminary announcement does not constitute the full statutory accounts for
the year. The results for the year ended 31 December 2003 are an extract from
the Company's statutory accounts. These accounts have been reported on by the
Company's auditors and will be delivered to the Registrar of Companies in due
course. The report of the auditors was unqualified and did not contain a
statement under section 237(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 1985.
The results for the year ended 31 December 2002 are an extract from the
Company's statutory accounts for that year. Those statutory accounts have been
reported on by the Company's auditors and delivered to the Registrar of
Companies. The report of the auditors was unqualified and did not contain a
statement under Section 237(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 1985.
Basis of Consolidation
The consolidated financial statements incorporate the results of Parity Group
plc and its subsidiary undertakings drawn up to 31 December each year.
2. EXCEPTIONAL COSTS AND DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS
Exceptional costs of £6,390,000 in continuing operations (2002: £
21,033,000) were incurred during the year in respect of the following items:
2003 2002
£'000 £'000
Restructuring of operations
Redundancy paymentsâ–² 1,163 1,782
Property restructuring* 2,723 1,561
Other* 363 106
4,249 3,449
Property dilapidations* 551 -
Advisors' fees* 184 122
SSAP 24 pension chargeâ–² 682 -
Impairment of goodwill - 12,772
Operating exceptional costs before discontinued operations 5,666 16,343
Amounts written off investments 724 4,690
Total exceptional costs before discontinued operations 6,390 21,033
Segmental analysis of exceptional costs affecting continuing
operations
2003 2002
£'000 £'000
Business Solutions - United Kingdom 1,793 9,958
Training - United Kingdom 710 901
Resourcing Solutions
United Kingdom 1,836 4,390
Mainland Europe 33 -
Parity Americas 220 501
Central costs 1,798 5,283
6,390 21,033
â–² Classified as staff costs under Companies Act 1985
* Classified as other operating costs under Companies Act 1985
On 9 May 2003, the Group announced that accounting irregularities had
been identified at Parity Solutions BV, which resulted in an overstatement of
the Group's revenue and operating profit for 2002 of £1,600,000. As reported
in the Interim Results, this business was subsequently put into administration
and the results for the period have been shown as discontinued operations. The
overstatement of revenues in 2002 within discontinued operations has been
treated as an operating exceptional item in 2003. Discontinued operations have
also been charged with a non-operating exceptional loss on termination of the
Dutch operations of £9,000,000, which comprises the reversal of goodwill
previously written off to reserves of £8,706,000 and other closure costs of £
294,000.
3. SEGMENTAL ANALYSIS
The Group provides information technology services through its Business
Solutions, Training, Resourcing Solutions and Parity Americas business
segments.
2003 2002
Profit Profit
(loss) (loss)
before before
Turnover taxation Net Turnover taxation Net
assets assets
Continuing operations £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000
Business Solutions
United Kingdom 23,527 1,530 517 26,529 1,184 1,307
Training - United 25,302 1,410 3,218 27,138 65 616
Kingdom
Resourcing Solutions
United Kingdom 79,544 1,147 1,621 69,100 241 6,667
Mainland Europe 27,936 178 5,615 31,739 (468) 2,001
107,480 1,325 7,236 100,839 (227) 8,668
Parity Americas 17,644 1 1,701 23,035 618 1,409
Operating total
before central costs,
exceptional items and
goodwill
amortisation 4,266 12,672 1,640 12,000
Central costs (2,831) (2,924)
Net interest payable (889) (641)
Non-operating assets
and
liabilities including (8,338) (12,803)
net debt
Profit (loss) before
tax,
goodwill amortisation
and exceptional items 546 (1,925)
Goodwill amortisation (629) (1,385)
Operating exceptional (5,666) (16,343)
items
Amounts written off
Investments (724) (4,690)
Intangible assets 9,616 10,245
173,953 (6,473) 13,950 177,541 (24,343) 9,442
Discontinued
operations
Business Solutions
Mainland Europe 1,999 (1,598) - 5,732 (128) 2,166
Operating exceptional (1,600) (32)
items
Loss on termination of
operations (9,000) -
Net interest payable (51) (64)
175,952 (18,722) 13,950 183,273 (24,567) 11,608
Turnover and profit are stated on the basis of origin. There is
no material difference between turnover and profit by origin and by
destination.
Turnover for Resourcing Solutions in the UK as shown above
excludes £1,977,000 (2002: £1,264,000) of inter-segmental turnover and includes
£15,070,000 (2002: £nil) of turnover in respect of management service
contracts, further details of which are provided in the Group Overview and
Results. Turnover for Business Solutions in the UK excludes £709,000 (2002: £
59,000) of inter-segmental turnover. Turnover for discontinued operations as
shown above excludes £nil (2002: £97,000) of inter-segmental turnover.
Turnover for Training as shown above excludes £70,000 of inter-segmental
turnover (2002: £107,000).
Of the goodwill amortisation charge for the year £543,000 (2002: £
1,078,000) relates to Business Solutions in the UK and £86,000 (2002: £307,000)
relates to Resourcing Solutions in the UK.
4. EARNINGS PER ORDINARY SHARE
Basic earnings per share is calculated by dividing the earnings attributable to
ordinary shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares in
issue during the year, excluding those held in the Employee Benefit Trust which
are treated as cancelled. Earnings per ordinary share for 2002 has been
restated to take into account a deemed change in the weighted average number of
shares resulting from the rights issue completed during 2003.
For diluted earnings per share, the weighted average number of ordinary shares
in issue is adjusted to assume conversion of all dilutive potential ordinary
shares. The Group has one class of dilutive potential ordinary shares being
those share options granted to employees where the exercise price is less than
the average market price of the Company's ordinary shares during the year. In
October 2003 the Company granted 5,585,000 share options under the Executive
Share Option Plan. These options have an exercise price of £0.10 which is less
than the average price of the Company's ordinary shares during the year and
therefore have been included in the diluted EPS calculations. For share
options granted prior to 2003, the exercise price is greater than the average
market price of the Company's ordinary shares and consequently the share
options granted to employees are excluded from the diluted EPS calculations.
2003 2002
(Loss) earnings per share (Loss) earnings per share
(Loss) (Loss) Basic Diluted
earnings Basic Diluted earnings pence pence
£'000 pence pence £'000 restated restated
Loss per ordinary
share (15,605) (7.70) (7.70) (24,210) (12.89) (12.89)
Exceptional costs
(net of tax credit) 4,827 2.38 2.38 20,374 10.85 10.85
Discontinued
operations 12,249 6.05 6.05 192 0.10 0.10
Goodwill
amortisation 629 0.31 0.31 1,385 0.74 0.74
Earnings (loss)
per ordinary share
before goodwill
amortisation,
discontinued
operations and
exceptional items 2,100 1.04 1.04 (2,259) (1.20) (1.20)
Supplementary basic and diluted EPS have been calculated to exclude the effect
of goodwill amortisation, discontinued operations and exceptional items. The
adjusted numbers have been provided in order that the effects of goodwill
amortisation, discontinued operations and exceptional items on reported
earnings can be fully appreciated.
4. EARNINGS PER ORDINARY SHARE continued
The weighted average number of ordinary shares used in the calculation of basic
and diluted earnings per share is as follows:
2003 2002
Average Average
number number
restated
Basic
i) Weighted average number of shares in issue 205,375,143 190,552,336
Adjustment for shares held by EBT (2,756,238) (2,756,238)
202,618,905 187,796,098
Dilutive
ii) Weighted average number of shares in issue 205,375,143 190,552,336
Adjustment for share options 46,783 -
Adjustment for shares held by EBT (2,756,238) (2,756,238)
202,665,688 187,796,098
The number of ordinary shares in issue at 31 December 2003 was
288,691,692 (2002: pre rights issue 153,969,570).
5. ORDINARY DIVIDENDS ON EQUITY SHARES
The Directors have proposed a final dividend of 0.03p (2002: 0.03p
adjusted for the shares issued under the rights issue) per ordinary share,
payable on 5 July 2004 to all shareholders on the register at the close of
business on 4 June 2004.
6. RECONCILIATION OF OPERATING PROFIT TO NET CASH FLOW
Continuing Discontinued Continuing Discontinued
operations operations Total operations operations Total
year year ended year ended year
year ended year ended ended ended
31 31 31 31 31 31
December December December December December December
2003 2003 2003 2002 2002 2002
£'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000
Operating
profit (loss) before
exceptional 806 (1,598) (792) (2,670) (127) (2,797)
items
Depreciation of 1,619 60 1,679 2,210 156 2,366
tangible assets
Amortisation of 629 - 629 1,385 - 1,385
intangible assets
Loss on
disposal of
tangible 2 - 2 108 - 108
assets
Movement in (2,926) 1,023 (1,903) 4,074 (1,262) 2,812
working capital
Net cash flow
from operating
activities
before exceptional
items 130 (515) (385) 5,107 (1,233) 3,874
The net cash outflow from exceptional items during the year was £
4,050,000 (2002: £3,075,000). The cash outflow from exceptional costs incurred
in 2003 was £1,448,000. Cash outflows in 2003 relating to exceptional costs
incurred in 2002 and prior years were £2,602,000.
Depreciation of tangible assets excludes an exceptional charge of £
503,000 (2002: £150,000) relating to accelerated depreciation on tangible fixed
assets.
Discontinued Operations
In 2003 Parity Solutions BV contributed £515,000 (2002: £1,233,000
outflow) to the net operating cash outflow, paid £51,000 (2002: £62,000) in
respect of servicing of finance, paid £nil (2002: £nil) in respect of taxation
and utilised £16,000 (2002: £33,000) for capital expenditure.
7. ANALYSIS OF NET DEBT
At Other At
1 January Cash non-cash Exchange 31 December
2003 flow changes movements 2003
£'000 £'000 £000's £'000 £'000
Cash at bank and in hand 3,608 (481) - 114 3,241
Overdrafts (3,575) 1,727 - - (1,848)
33 1,246 - 114 1,393
Borrowings (15,000) 1,719 - (58) (13,339)
Obligations under finance
leases - 14 (91) - (77)
Variable rate loan notes (28) 14 - - (14)
2004
(14,995) 2,993 (91) 56 (12,037)
8. GROUP RESERVES
Capital Profit &
redemption Share Other loss
reserve premium reserves account Total
£'000 £'000 £'000 £'000 £'000
At 1 January 2003 50 3,729 35,320 (35,189) 3,910
Premium on shares issued
during the year - 3,368 - - 3,368
Issue expenses - (1,035) - - (1,035)
Gain on sale of nil paid
rights
by Employee Benefit Trust - - 84 - 84
Retained loss for the year - - - (15,692) (15,692)
Reversal of goodwill in
reserves - - 8,706 - 8,706
Exchange adjustments - - - 175 175
At 31 December 2003 50 6,062 44,110 (50,706) (484)
The cumulative amount of unamortised goodwill which has been
written off to reserves is £60,585,000 (2002: £69,291,000). Other creditors
and accruals include unpaid issue expenses of £56,000.