Final Results - Year Ended 31 December 1999
Shires Smaller Companies PLC
22 February 2000
SHIRES SMALLER COMPANIES PLC
PRELIMINARY ANNOUNCEMENT
Shires Smaller Companies plc aims to provide an overall return
greater than that of the FTSE All-Share Index from a portfolio
invested principally in high-yielding securities of UK smaller
companies.
Preliminary Results for the Year Ended 31 December 1999
1999 1998
Net assets attributable to shareholders £47.8m £34.9m
Fully diluted net asset value per share 228.7p 166.9p
Dividends per share 6.6p 6.4p
Total return on net assets for the year was 41.5%, compared
with a return of 53.4% on the FTSE SmallCap Index (excluding
Investment Companies) and 20.6% on the FTSE 100 Index.
The good return in absolute terms was below benchmark
because the Company's dividend objective restricts investment in
low-yielding equities.
The proposed final dividend is 2.25p per share, making a
total of 6.6p for the year, an increase of 3.1% on 1998.
It is intended to take on additional gearing to raise the
yield on net assets while still retaining the Company's growth
characteristics, with a view to achieving a lower discount.
For further information, please contact:-
David Williams, Managing Director,
Glasgow Investment Managers 0141 572 2700
Shires Smaller Companies plc
Chairman's Statement
Introduction
Investment in the shares of UK smaller companies provided very
good returns in 1999 which more than recovered the shortfall in
performance relative to large market capitalisation stocks
suffered in 1998. The FTSE SmallCap Index (excluding Investment
Companies) returned 53.4% over the year, well ahead of the 20.6%
return on the FTSE 100 Index.
This simple statement of good performance over the year hides a
more complex picture. In the first half of the year the more
cyclical stocks, particularly in the Basic Industries, General
Industrials and Cyclical Services groups, provided very good
returns as interest rates fell and forecasts of aggregate output
growth in the UK economy were raised. In the second half of the
year, however, when interest rates began to rise again, the
performance of cyclical stocks deteriorated and more growth
orientated shares, in Services and Information Technology, took
up the running. In the last four months of 1999 the smaller
companies in the group returned 208.0%.
Investment Returns
The total return on net assets of Shires Smaller Companies was
41.5%. This good return in absolute terms was below the 53.4%
return on the Company's benchmark, the FTSE SmallCap Index
(excluding Investment Companies), largely because the Company's
dividend objective limits the number of low-yielding equities
which may be included in the portfolio.
Over the year under review the discount at which the Company's
ordinary share price stood to underlying fully diluted net asset
value per share rose from 23.3% to 27.4%. As a result the
return to an ordinary shareholder, at 35.1%, was lower than the
return on net assets. Since 31 December 1999, the Company's
year end, the discount has fallen. It stood at 24.4% at 31
January 2000.
Earnings and Dividends
Net revenue return per share rose by 32.4% to 8.05p from 6.08p
last year, due principally to the receipt of special dividends
from Helical Bar and Anglian Group.
The Directors are proposing a final dividend of 2.25p per
ordinary share, which brings total dividends for the year to
6.6p per share, a rise of 3.1% compared with 1998. If approved,
the final dividend will be paid on 31 March 2000 to shareholders
on the register at close of business on 10 March 2000.
Portfolio Profile
After the stockmarket setback in the third quarter of 1998 short-
term borrowing was raised to finance additional investment in
smaller companies' shares, which at that time appeared to
represent attractive value, and gearing rose to 34.9% of net
assets. In the course of 1999, as share prices rose, the
exposures to ordinary shares and convertibles were progressively
reduced. Some of the short-term borrowings were repaid and
gearing fell to 23.6%.
Share Repurchase
The authority to buy back the Company's ordinary shares, first
granted by shareholders at the Extraordinary General Meeting in
March 1998, was renewed at the Annual General Meeting in March
1999. The Company was then advised that in order to repurchase
its shares it might need to revoke its investment company
status, which could have affected its ability to pay dividends
in certain circumstances.
Regulations have recently been introduced, however, which allow
an investment company to purchase its own shares out of capital
profits without loss of investment company status. The
Directors now propose to amend the Articles of Association to
take advantage of the new regulations. A resolution to achieve
this will be proposed at the Annual General Meeting. Once the
Articles have been amended, any buying back of shares will be
made through capital reserves and it will not be necessary to
reduce the share premium account.
Investment Policy and Share Price Rating
During the first three years of the Company's life its ordinary
shares very rarely traded on a greater than 5% discount to fully
diluted net asset value per share. Indeed at times they traded
on a small premium. Over the last four years, however, the
discount has generally ranged from 15% to 20%, until the last
quarter of 1999 when it rose again to end the year at 27.4%. The
higher discount may be attributed to two main factors: an
oversupply of smaller company investment trusts at a time when
smaller companies have performed less well than the UK equity
market as a whole; and the yield on the Company's shares, while
still at a significant premium to UK ordinary shares in general,
is now less attractive to those seeking income than the yield
available from a number of alternative vehicles.
The Board, therefore, intends to take on additional gearing in
order to permit the yield on net assets to be raised. As it is
the intention that the value of the Company's holding of
ordinary shares will continue to exceed the value of its net
assets, the Directors believe that this is compatible with
retaining the growth characteristics of the Company. The
Directors also believe that the higher yield will result in a
significant reduction in the discount.
Continuation Vote
As required by the Company's Articles of Association, at the
forthcoming Annual General Meeting an ordinary resolution will
be proposed that the Company should continue as an investment
trust for a further five year period. The Board believes that
continuation is in the best interests of all shareholders
because the record under the investment strategy which has been
followed to date demonstrates the Company's ability to combine
provision of a high dividend yield with growth of both income
and capital to achieve a competitive total return from
investment in higher-yielding UK smaller companies.
The Directors, therefore, recommend shareholders to vote in
favour of the resolution, as they intend to do in respect of
their own beneficial shareholdings.
Outlook
Stocking up and celebratory spending before and over the
Millennium appears to have contributed to the recent
acceleration in UK economic activity. With interest rates
rising and some post-Millennium slowdown expected, it seems
likely that the more optimistic forecasts of output growth this
year may not be met. If as a result inflationary pressures
prove weaker than currently anticipated, interest rates may peak
sooner and at lower levels than currently discounted in the
money markets, a development which should presage further
progress for the UK equity market.
Annual Report and Annual General Meeting
The Annual Report will be mailed to shareholders on 22 February
2000. Copies may be obtained from the managers, Glasgow
Investment Managers Limited, Sutherland House, 149 St Vincent
Street, Glasgow G2 5DR after that date.
The Annual General Meeting will be held at Trinity House, Tower
Hill, London EC3N 4DH on Friday 24 March 2000 at 12 noon.
J Stubbs
Chairman
SHIRES SMALLER COMPANIES PLC
Statement of Total Return
(incorporating the Revenue Account)
for the year ended 31 December 1999
1999 1998
(restated) (see note 3)
Revenue Capital Total Revenue Capital Total
£000 £000 £000 £000 £000 £000
Gains/(Losses)on
investments - 13,948 13,948 - (1,518) (1,518)
Cancellation of warrants (227) (227) (3) (3)
Income 2,491 - 2,491 2,113 - 2,113
Investment management
fee 216 216 432 211 211 422
Other administrative
expenses 179 - 179 201 - 201
NET RETURN BEFORE
FINANCE COSTS
AND TAXATION 2,096 13,505 15,601 1,701 (1,732) (31)
Finance costs of 514 514 1,028 511 511 1,022
borrowings
_____ _____ ______ ______ _____ _____
RETURN ON ORDINARY
ACTIVITIES BEFORE
TAXATION 1,582 12,991 14,573 1,190 (2,243) (1,053)
Taxation - - - 2 - 2
_____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____
RETURN ON ORDINARY
ACTIVITIES AFTER
TAXATION FOR THE
FINANCIAL YEAR 1,582 12,991 14,573 1,192 (2,243) (1,051)
Dividends on 1,297 - 1,297 1,255 - 1,255
equity shares
_____ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____
TRANSFER TO/(FROM)
RESERVES 285 12,991 13,276 (63) (2,243) (2,306)
Return per share
- undiluted 8.05p 66.12p 74.17p 6.08p (11.45)p (5.37)p
- fully diluted 7.67p 62.98p 70.65p 5.72p (10.77)p (5.05)p
Dividends per
share 6.60p 6.40p
SHIRES SMALLER COMPANIES PLC
Distribution of Assets
Valuation at Valuation at
31 December 1998 Movements during the year 31 December 1999
Appreciation/
Purchases Sales (Depreciation)
£000 % £000 £000 £000 £000 %
Ordinary shares 41,371 118.7 14,376 15,800 14,520 54,467 113.9
Convertibles 5,666 16.2 - 445 (572) 4,649 9.7
_____ ____ _____ _____ ____ _________
47,037 134.9 14,376 16,245 13,948 59,116 123.6
Net current
liabilities (2,209) (6.3) (1,333) (2.8)
_____ ____ ______ ______
TOTAL ASSETS
(less current
liabilities) 44,828 128.6 57,783 120.8
Long term loan (9,962) (28.6) (9,968) (20.8)
_____ ____ ________ ____
NET ASSETS 34,866 100.0 47,815 100.0
Net asset value per share
- undiluted 177.5p 243.3p
- fully diluted 166.9p 228.7p
Notes
1. All revenue and capital items in the above statement derive
from continuing operations. No operations were acquired or
discontinued in the year.
2. The financial information set out above does not constitute
the Company's statutory accounts for the years ended 31 December
1998 and 1999 but is derived from those accounts. Statutory
accounts for 1998 have been delivered to the Register of
Companies, and those for 1999 will be delivered following the
Company's annual general meeting. The auditors have reported on
those accounts; their reports were unqualified and did not
contain statements under section 237(2) or (3) of the Companies
Act 1985.
3. Dividends are credited to revenue on the date when the
investment is first quoted ex-dividend at the amount receivable
without any attributable tax credit. This is a change in
accounting policy to comply with Financial Reporting Standard 16
'Current Tax' which has replaced Statement of Standard
Accounting Practice 8. Under the latter Standard, dividends
(other than foreign income dividends) were recognised inclusive
of an attributable tax credit which also formed part of the tax
charge. There is no overall impact on return after tax and
shareholders' funds.