29 APRIL 2024
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
RELEASED BY BNP PARIBAS S.A.,
JERSEY BRANCH FINAL RESULTS ANNOUNCEMENT
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF
BLACKSTONE LOAN FINANCING LIMITED ANNOUNCE FINAL RESULTS FOR THE
YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2023
Blackstone Loan Financing Limited
Annual
Report and Audited Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31
December 2023
A Note From our
Chair
2023 was another eventful year for
the global economy. Geopolitical events, including the continuing
war in Ukraine and wider conflict and tension in the Middle East
have continued to dominate headlines. Although global inflation
appears to have peaked, central banks have been cautious about
reducing interest rates too quickly.
Despite this backdrop, the Company
delivered a total return per redeemable share of 10.39% on a
Published NAV basis, ending the period with a NAV of €0.9098 per
redeemable share. On an IFRS NAV basis, the Company returned a
total return per redeemable share of 17.76%, ending the period with
a NAV of €0.7250 per redeemable share. The difference between the
Published and IFRS NAV total return is the differing valuation
bases, with the main driver being the discount rate used. Refer to
below for details on the key assumptions that significantly
contribute to the valuation divergence.
Following the decision made by
Shareholders at the EGM held on 15 September 2023 to implement a
managed wind-down of the Company, the new investment objective of
the Company, effective from that date, is to realise all existing
assets in the Company's portfolio in an orderly manner. Refer to
the 'Strategic Overview' below for more details.
The Board is cautiously optimistic
for 2024, encouraged by improving macroeconomic data and falling
inflation. The Board gains comfort from the robust investment
approach of the Company's Portfolio Adviser and its ability to
select an underlying portfolio of high-quality borrowers, supported
by strong underlying protections.
I would like to thank shareholders
for their engagement with the Board during the year, particularly
regarding the proposals that were passed at the EGM.
I was pleased to welcome Mr Giles
Adu and Ms Belinda Crosby to the Board during the year, after the
retirement of
Ms Charlotte Valeur, Mr Gary Clark and Ms Heather MacCallum.
Together with Mr Mark Moffat, we have a strong team to govern the
Company through its wind-down period.
Steven Wilderspin
Chair
26 April 2024
STRATEGIC REPORT
Company Overview
The Company is a closed-ended
investment company incorporated on 30 April 2014 as a limited by
shares company under the Company (Jersey) Law 1991 with registered
number 115628. In addition, the Company constitutes and is
regulated as a collective investment fund under the Collective
Investment Funds (Jersey) Law 1988. The Company continues to be
registered and domiciled in Jersey. The Company's redeemable shares
are quoted on the Premium Segment of the Main Market of the
LSE.
Following the decision made by
Shareholders on 15 September 2023 to implement a managed wind-down
of the Company, the new investment objective of the Company,
effective from that date, is to realise all existing assets in the
Company's portfolio in an orderly manner.
Refer to the 'Strategic Overview'
below for more details on the purpose, values, principal
activities, new and former investment objective and the investment
policy of the Company.
Reconciliation of IFRS NAV to
Published NAV
At 31 December 2023, there was a
difference between the NAV per redeemable share as disclosed in the Statement of Financial Position,
€0.7250 per redeemable share ("IFRS NAV") and the published NAV, €0.9098 per redeemable share, which
was released to the LSE on 22 January 2024 ("Published NAV"). The
reconciliation is provided below and in Note 15 in the 'notes to
the financial statements'. The difference between the two
valuations is entirely due to the different valuation bases
used with the main driver being the
discount rate, as explained in detail
below.
Valuation policy for the
Published NAV
The Company publishes a NAV per
redeemable share on a monthly basis in accordance with its
Prospectus. The valuation process in respect of the Published NAV
incorporates the valuation of the Company's CSWs and underlying
PPNs (held by the Lux Subsidiary). These valuations are, in turn,
based on the valuation of the BCF portfolio using a CLO intrinsic
calculation methodology per the Company's Prospectus, which we
refer to as a "mark to model" approach. As
documented in the Prospectus, certain "Market Colour" (market
clearing levels, market fundamentals, BWIC, broker quotes or other
indications) is not incorporated into this methodology.
This valuation policy is deemed to be an
appropriate way of valuing the Company's holdings and of tracking
the long-term performance of the Company as the underlying
portfolio of CLOs held by BCF are comparable to held to maturity
instruments and the Company expects to receive the benefit of the
underlying cash flows over the CLOs' entire life cycles.
Valuation policy for the IFRS
NAV
For financial reporting purposes
on an annual and semi-annual basis, to comply with IFRS as adopted
by the EU, the valuation of BCF's portfolio is at fair value using
models that incorporate Market Colour at the measurement date,
which we refer to as a "mark to market" approach.
The Company also assesses and publishes the mark
to market IFRS NAV on a quarterly basis.
IFRS fair value is the price that would be received to sell an
asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction
between market participants as at the measurement date and is an
"exit price" e.g. the price to sell an asset. An exit price
embodies expectations about the future cash inflows and cash
outflows associated with an asset or liability from the perspective
of a market participant. IFRS fair value is a market-based
measurement, rather than an entity-specific measurement and so
incorporates general assumptions that market participants are
applying in pricing the asset or liability, including assumptions
about risk.
Both the mark to model Published
NAV and mark to market IFRS NAV valuation bases use modelling
techniques and input from third-party valuation
specialists.
Key Performance
Indicators
|
IFRS NAV
|
|
Published
NAV
|
|
|
|
|
NAV[1]
|
€0.7250
(31 Dec
2022: €0.6784)
|
|
€0.9098
(31 Dec
2022: €0.9081)
|
|
|
|
|
NAV
total return1
|
17.76%
(31 Dec
2022: (19.19)%)
|
|
10.39%
(31 Dec 2022: 5.22%)
|
|
|
|
|
Discount1
|
(18.62)%
(31 Dec
2022: (1.98)%)
|
|
(35.15)%
(31 Dec
2022: (26.77)%)
|
|
|
|
|
Dividend
|
€0.09
(31 Dec
2022: €0.08)
|
Further information on the
reconciliation between the IFRS NAV and the Published NAV can be
found below and in Note 15 in the 'notes to the financial
statements'.
Performance
Ticker
|
IFRS NAV per redeemable/
ordinary
share
|
Published
NAV
per redeemable/
ordinary
share
|
Share
price[2]
|
Discount
IFRS NAV
|
Discount
Published
NAV
|
Dividend
yield[3]
|
BGLF
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
31 Dec 2023
|
€0.7250
|
€0.9098
|
€0.5900
|
(18.62)%
|
(35.15)%
|
15.25%
|
31 Dec 2022
|
€0.6784
|
€0.9081
|
€0.6650
|
(1.98)%
|
(26.77)%
|
12.03%
|
BGLP[4]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
31 Dec 2023
|
£0.6285
|
£0.7887
|
£0.5150
|
(18.06)%
|
(34.70)%
|
15.14%
|
31 Dec 2022
|
£0.6006
|
£0.8040
|
£0.5888
|
(1.96)%
|
(26.77)%
|
12.03%
|
|
LTM1
return
|
3-year
annualised
|
Annualised
since
inception
|
Cumulative
since
inception
|
BGLF IFRS NAV
|
17.76%
|
3.61%
|
5.75%
|
69.53%
|
BGLF Published NAV
|
10.39%
|
12.26%
|
8.31%
|
112.54%
|
BGLF redeemable share price
|
(2.12)%
|
6.25%
|
5.83%
|
48.46%
|
The Company is not managed in
reference to a benchmark, however commentary on market indices and
market performance is detailed in the Portfolio Adviser's report
below.
Dividend and Other
Key Data
Dividends
On 23 January 2023, the Board
announced that the Company would be targeting a total 2023 annual
dividend of between €0.08 and €0.09 per ordinary share, which will
consist of quarterly payments of €0.02 per ordinary share for the
first three quarters and a final quarter payment of a variable
amount to be determined at that time. Accordingly, the Board
declared dividends of €0.02 per ordinary share for the first three
quarters of 2023 and a dividend of €0.03 per redeemable share for
the fourth quarter.
The Company's dividend policy
during its managed wind-down was set out in the Circular published
on 25 August 2023, which stated that the Board intends to continue
to distribute as dividends the interest payments deemed to be
received from BCF on a quarterly basis, having regard to any amount
which the Board deems prudent to retain in the Company.
Consequently, on 23 January 2024,
the Board announced that it is targeting a total 2024 annual
dividend of at least €0.09 per redeemable share, which will consist
of quarterly payments of €0.0225 per redeemable share.
Ordinary/redeemable share
dividends for the year ended 31 December 2023
Period in respect of
|
Date
declared
|
Ex-dividend
date
|
Payment
date
|
Amount per
ordinary/
redeemable
share
|
|
|
|
|
€
|
1 Jan 2023 to 31 Mar 2023
|
25 Apr
2023
|
4 May
2023
|
2 June
2023
|
0.0200
|
1 Apr 2023 to 30 Jun 2023
|
21 Jul
2023
|
3 Aug
2023
|
1 Sep
2023
|
0.0200
|
1 Jul 2023 to 30 Sept 2023
|
20 Oct
2023
|
2 Nov
2023
|
1 Dec
2023
|
0.0200
|
1 Oct 2023 to 31 Dec 2023
|
23 Jan
2024
|
1 Feb
2024
|
8 Mar
2024
|
0.0300
|
Ordinary share dividends for the
year ended 31 December 2022
Period in respect of
|
Date
declared
|
Ex-dividend
date
|
Payment
date
|
Amount per
ordinary
share
|
|
|
|
|
€
|
1 Jan 2022 to 31 Mar
2022
|
25 Apr
2022
|
5 May
2022
|
9 Jun
2022
|
0.0175
|
1 Apr 2022 to 30 Jun
2022
|
21 Jul
2022
|
28 Jul
2022
|
26 Aug
2022
|
0.0175
|
1 Jul 2022 to 30 Sept
2022
|
21 Oct
2022
|
3 Nov
2022
|
2 Dec
2022
|
0.0175
|
1 Oct 2022 to 31 Dec
2022
|
23 Jan
2023
|
2 Feb
2023
|
3 Mar
2023
|
0.0275
|
Year highs and lows
Years ended 31 December 2023 and 31 December
2022
|
2023
High
|
2023
Low
|
2022
High
|
2022
Low
|
Published NAV per
redeemable/ordinary share
|
€0.9220
|
€0.8808
|
€0.9657
|
€0.9035
|
BGLF share price (last
price)
|
€0.7700
|
€0.5300
|
€0.8000
|
€0.6400
|
BGLP share price (last
price)
|
£0.6650
|
£0.4760
|
£0.6750
|
£0.5650
|
Schedule of investments
As at 31 December
2023
|
Nominal
holdings
|
Market
value
|
Percentage
of
NAV
|
|
|
€
|
%
|
Investment held in the Lux
Subsidiary:
|
|
|
|
CSWs
|
208,565,744
|
298,050,226
|
92.85
|
Shares (2,000,000 Class A and 1
Class B)
|
2,000,001
|
7,944,332
|
2.47
|
|
|
|
|
Other net assets
|
|
14,992,542
|
4.68
|
Net assets attributable to Shareholders
|
|
320,987,100
|
100.00
|
As at 31 December
2022
|
Nominal
holdings
|
Market
value
|
Percentage
of
NAV
|
|
|
€
|
%
|
Investment held in the Lux
Subsidiary:
|
|
|
|
CSWs
|
239,550,782
|
290,426,295
|
96.29
|
Shares (2,000,000 Class A and 1
Class B)
|
2,000,001
|
7,294,874
|
2.42
|
|
|
|
|
Other net assets
|
|
3,893,808
|
1.29
|
Net assets attributable to Shareholders
|
|
301,614,977
|
100.00
|
Schedule of significant
transactions
Date of transaction
|
Transaction
type
|
Quantity
|
Amount
|
|
|
|
€
|
CSWs held by the
Company
|
|
3 February 2023
|
Redemption
|
(8,180,401)
|
(13,605,180)
|
5 May 2023
|
Redemption
|
(6,718,826)
|
(11,442,059)
|
4 August 2023
|
Redemption
|
(7,971,415)
|
(13,566,929)
|
6 November 2023
|
Redemption
|
(8,114,396)
|
(14,487,945)
|
Total number of CSWs redeemed
|
|
(30,985,038)
|
(53,102,113)
|
|
|
|
| |
The proceeds of the redemptions
were used to fund dividends and share buy backs and to cover other
administrative costs. The Company made no subscriptions during the
year ended 31 December 2023.
Chair's Statement
Dear Shareholders,
Company returns and
NAV[5]
The Company delivered an IFRS NAV
total return per redeemable share of 17.76% over 2023, ending the
year with a NAV of €0.7250 per redeemable share.
On a Published NAV basis, the
Company delivered a total return per redeemable share of 10.39%
during 2023, ending the year with a NAV of €0.9098 per redeemable
share. The return was composed of 9.95% dividend income and 0.44%
net portfolio movement. Refer to below for the calculation of the
IFRS and Published NAV total return.
As highlighted above, the Company
uses different valuation policies to determine Published and IFRS
NAV. As at
31 December 2023, the variance between Published and IFRS NAV was
€0.1848 per redeemable share. This is primarily associated with the
discount rates used under the two policies. The tables below
further explain the rationale regarding the differences in the
assumptions that have contributed to the variance as at 31 December
2023.
During 2023, the Company's
performance on a Published NAV and an IFRS NAV basis was supported,
through its investment in BCF, by uninterrupted distributions from
the underlying CLO and loan portfolio, which continued to benefit
from refinancing and reset activity during 2021/2022. The portfolio
(primarily the loans directly held by BCF and those CLOs that have
exited their reinvestment periods) were aided by a broader loan
market rally, noting that European and US loans returned 12.50% and
13.00%, respectively over the year, as discussed in more detail in
the Portfolio Adviser's Review.
The Company paid four dividends to
its Shareholders relating to 2023, totaling €0.09 per redeemable
share, which was at the top end of the 2023 dividend target of
€0.08 - €0.09 per redeemable share. The increased dividend declared
for the fourth quarter is a result of the strong continued and
expected cash flows of the underlying portfolio. Looking ahead to
2024, the Board has announced a dividend policy that targets a
total annual dividend of at least €0.09 per redeemable share.
Details of all dividend payments can be found within the
'Dividend and Other Key Data' section above.
The Company's dividends are funded
from the cash flows generated by its underlying CLO and loan
portfolio held within BCF. The Company's distribution policy during
its managed wind-down was set out in the Company's Circular
published on 25 August 2023, which stated that the Board intends to
continue to distribute dividends on a quarterly basis and commence
the redemption of shares, having regard to any amounts which the
Board deems prudent to retain. However, as
the Company's underlying assets are realised over time and the
portfolio diminishes in size, the Board, in consultation with the
Portfolio Adviser, may decide that it is in the best interests of
Shareholders to cease payment of dividends and to use all proceeds
received from BCF for the redemption of the redeemable shares and
the return of capital to the Shareholders.
Historical BGLF NAV and share
price
The graph shows cumulative
Published NAV and redeemable share price total returns and
cumulative returns on European and US loans[6]:
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
Historical BCF default loss
rate
The graph shows the default loss
rate, which incorporates asset recovery, within the BCF portfolio
and the default loss rate of European and US
loans[7]:
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
Market conditions
Markets recovered from a weak
start and macroeconomic headwinds to record a strong year of
performance across most asset classes in 2023. Rate volatility was
a persistent theme throughout the year, as central banks continued
to aggressively tighten policy, before eventually pausing during
the second half. The rate volatility led to periods of market
weakness through the year, including during March's regional
banking stress. Against this backdrop, resilient economic data and
most corporate fundamentals offered hope of a soft landing in the
near future, fueling a late year rally across markets.
The S&P 500 ended the year at
a near-record high, having gained 24% over the course of 2023.
Credit markets also benefitted to a slightly lesser extent and
loans, which are a natural interest rate and inflation hedge due to
their floating rate nature, reversed their 2022 losses to record
their best year since 2009.
Looking ahead to 2024, we believe
that floating rate loans and CLOs are likely to remain attractive
asset classes, even if central banks pivot, given historically
elevated all-in yields, robust corporate balance sheets and default
rates remaining within historical averages. We continue to expect
an ongoing bifurcation between issuers that are well positioned for
slower growth, against those that are more at-risk of cyclical
demand and consumer spending. As in any economic cycle, we believe
that individual credit selection will be a key driver to
performance throughout the year.
Transition away from
LIBOR
The transition away from LIBOR to
SOFR primarily impacted BCF's US CLO portfolio, which accounts for
39.57% of BCF's NAV as of year-end. A portion of BCF's US CLO
equity holdings switched its liability reference rate from LIBOR to
SOFR (inclusive of the market recognised credit spread adjustment).
In parallel, a substantial majority of CLO assets tied to LIBOR
have made the switch to SOFR with varying degrees of credit spread
adjustments. Given the reference rate migration has largely been
completed, no further impact on BCF US CLO equity holdings is
expected from this event.
ESG
The practice of responsible
investing remains a key focus for investors and for Blackstone. The
Board regularly engages with the Company's Portfolio Adviser
regarding its ESG policy. Blackstone has committed to being a
responsible investor for over 35 years and is a signatory to the
Principles for Responsible Investment. This commitment is affirmed
across the organisation and guides its approach to
investing.
Whilst the Company is currently
exempt[8] from
the requirement to report against the TCFD recommendations, the
Board continues to actively discuss ESG matters with BXCI with a
view of obtaining meaningful information to provide to
Shareholders. The Board fully acknowledges the importance of the
TCFD recommendations and expects the companies to which BCF
provides finance to be compliant in their reporting against TCFD
recommendations, as may be required by applicable law or
regulation.
Refer to the Portfolio Adviser's
Review below for further details on the BXCI's ESG
policy.
The Board
Good governance remains at the
heart of our work as a Board and is taken very seriously. The
Board believes that the Company maintains high standards of
corporate governance. The Board was very active during the year,
convening a total of 21 Board meetings and 16 Committee meetings
(excluding 12 NAV Review Committee meetings), as well as
undertaking an onsite due diligence meeting with the Portfolio
Adviser in January 2024, the agenda for which covered risk and
compliance, risk oversight monitoring, finance and accounting, ESG
and the wider market. The Board also met with the BCF Board at
the same time.
During the year, Ms Charlotte
Valeur, Mr Gary Clark and Ms Heather MacCallum retired from the
Board and the ongoing Board is grateful for their many years of
service. Mr Giles Adu and Ms Belinda Crosby joined the Board to
replace them; their backgrounds can be seen below.
The Board and the Company's
advisers meet frequently, with the latter providing general updates
as well as recommendations on pertinent matters such as the
Company's previous share repurchase programme and the managed
wind-down proposal. The Board deems the careful consideration
of such matters to be critical in ensuring the optimum returns of
the Company, particularly in light of the challenges and
uncertainty faced in recent years.
The work of the Board is also
assisted by the Audit Committee, the NAV Review Committee, the
Management Engagement Committee, the Remuneration and Nomination
Committee, the Risk Committee and the Inside Information
Committee.
The Company is a member of AIC and
adheres to the AIC Code which is endorsed by the FRC and meets its
obligations in relation to the UK Code.
Shareholder
communications
During 2023, using our Portfolio
Adviser and Brokers, the Board continued our programme of
engagement with current and prospective Shareholders. The Board
sincerely hopes that you found the shareholder consultation,
Circular, monthly factsheets, quarterly letters, quarterly update
webcasts and market commentary valuable. The decision to put
forward the managed wind-down proposals was in-part the result of
an active shareholder consultation process, together with the
Portfolio Adviser. The Board is always pleased to have contact with
Shareholders and welcomes any opportunity to meet with you and
obtain your feedback. Please refer to more details on shareholder
engagement under Section 172(1) Statement below.
Prospects and opportunities in
2024
The Board's primary focus in 2024
will be to continue implementing the managed wind-down proposal and
commence the redemption of shares. As the wind-down progresses, the
Board will also focus on streamlining operations and managing costs
as the size of the Company reduces.
The Board wishes to express its
thanks for the support of the Company's Shareholders.
Steven Wilderspin
Chair
26 April 2024
Portfolio Adviser's
Review
Bank loan market
overview
Credit investors endured a
challenging start to the year, as elevated rates and general market
volatility culminated in UBS's takeover of Credit Suisse in Europe
and the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in the US. The market
turbulence was short-lived and European and US went on to produce
the strongest year for the asset class since
2009[9]. Loans
returned 12.5% in Europe and 13.0% in the US in 2023, a sharp
contrast to the previous year, with losses of -3.3% and -1.1%
respectively. Loans are floating rate by nature and so benefit from
the elevated rate environment, resulting in compelling yields. A
strong technical supply and demand dynamic pushed average prices
for the European and US leveraged loan indices to €96.62 and $95.32
from €91.56 and $91.89 at the end of 2022, respectively.
The strong loan performance came
against a thin primary pipeline, with global loan issuance standing
at just $380 billion (€342 billion) in 2023, roughly half of that
during 2021's record breaking year and lower than 2022's muted
issuance volume. After months of minimal activity, a rally in loan
prices over the latter half of the year finally brought an uptick
in corporate finance deal volume. With a quarter of the index
priced above par by mid-September, higher-rated borrowers rolled
out more opportunistic transactions, including re-pricings, a trend
that continued into the new year.
From a corporate fundamental
perspective, most companies reported resilient earnings in 2023 and
balance sheets are generally still well positioned for a
higher-rate, slower-growth environment. Whilst some level of
deterioration can be observed in corporate margins, interest
coverage ratios remain at 3.2x for loans, compared to a four-year
quarterly average of 3.6x. Similarly, net leverage for loan issuers
has decreased to 4.9x, the lowest level over the last four years as
earnings growth has outpaced debt issuance. The supportive
fundamental landscape has played a part in spreads across European
and US loans (represented by 3-year discount margin) contracting to
505bp from 661bp and to 528bp from 652bp, respectively, as the year
progressed. Rolling 12-month loan defaults, while ticking up in the
second half of 2023, ended the year at 1.9% in the US and 1.1% in
Europe within the 10-year historical averages of 2.2% for both
regions[10].
The macroeconomic outlook remains
supportive going into 2024, as data releases highlight continued
economic and corporate resilience, raising hopes for a soft
landing. Price pressures are proving sticky, although the overall
trend is one of disinflation, pushing out expectations to the
summer for the Fed and ECB to start lowering interest rates. After
a solid start, we expect elevated base rates to underpin loan
market performance over the near-term, enabling the asset class to
maintain a record of robust returns.
The graph below shows the annual
total return for BGLF and the EU/US loan indices as of year-end
2022 and 2023[11].
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
CLO market overview
The CLO market started 2023 facing
continued headwinds, interest rate volatility and wide new issue
spreads, although conditions improved as the year progressed. CLO
creation remained robust and finished the year at €28 billion in
Europe, in line with previous year's issuance. In the US, 2023
supply marginally lagged behind 2022 to finish at $129 billion.
This pushed estimates for the total outstanding volume of CLOs
globally to over $1.3 trillion[12], demonstrating the asset
class's continued growth.
The arbitrage between CLO asset
spreads and liability costs remained challenged in the first half
of the year. That was partly due to the historically high cost of
liabilities as some dominant buyers of CLO AAA tranches remained
side-lined after a testing end to 2022, following the LDI-related,
technically-driven secondary market sell off. As investor sentiment
calmed and market volatility moderated, a number of CLO AAA buyers
returned to the market, helping spreads to meaningfully compress in
the latter part of the year. By the month of December, the AAA
spread on the tightest new issue CLO had reached 172bp in Europe
and 160bp in the US. For reference, the tightest AAA spread for new
issue deals in December 2022 priced at 225bp in Europe and 220bp in
the US.
Volatility can create a
challenging environment for primary CLO creation, but it also
provides opportunities for existing CLOs within their reinvestment
periods to improve performance by rotating portfolios into higher
quality or wider spread loans. This is a key benefit of the CLO
structure and its long term, stable mark-to-model valuation method,
particularly for those CLOs that have longer remaining reinvestment
periods.
Looking forward, we expect
corporate fundamentals to continue to drive CLO performance in
2024, with a further divergence between the performance of higher
and lower quality assets. Individual credit selection will be a key
determinant of performance between CLOs, through a focus on active
risk management.
Portfolio update - BCF
Market turbulence and softer loan
prices caused by the unexpectedly eventful month of March 2023
sparked an opportunity for BCF's CLOs to purchase assets at steep
discounts, with a fundamental view that these credits would recover
over time. Much of the focus within BCF's loan portfolio was on
rotating up in quality and away from names facing forward-looking
inflationary cost pressures, supply chain headwinds and issuers
that were most exposed to consumer discretionary
spending.
As the year progressed, subsiding
volatility and the loan market rally represented an opening for
BCF's CLOs to take advantage of strong secondary market bids and
trade out of less accretive issuers in cyclical sectors.
Additionally, CLOs within the portfolio maintained slightly reduced
cash levels by taking advantage of attractive new issue loan
allocations.
The graph below shows the top five industry concentrations
for the BCF portfolio as of 31 December
2023[13].
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
As of 31 December 2023, BCF
remained a defensively positioned portfolio of more than 650 loan
issuers, diversified across 28 sectors and 30 countries. The
portfolio was concentrated around B1-B2 rated issuers and holds
5.6% Caa rated assets (at the facility level), which is broadly
flat from the start of the year. In line with the market, the
portfolio's average loan price gained to 96.9 from 92.2 at the end
of last year. Assets priced below €/$80 fell from 6.40% in December
2022 to 3.60% in December 2023. Looking forward, we see minimum
refinancing risk in the portfolio as loan maturities are generally
wrapped around 2028. BCF's portfolios demonstrated strong
collateral quality metrics compared to the market and peer managers
in 2023. The BCF portfolio maintained a lower default rate of 0.26%
compared to the European and US loan indices of 1.10% and
1.90%[14],
respectively. A minimised level of defaults helps to ensure that
equity distributions are well protected.
BCF invested in four European new
issue CLOs in 2023, bringing the number of originated CLOs within
the portfolio to 53 across 10 vintage years, re-emphasising the
highly diversified and wholesale exposure investors experience
through this vehicle. Given the continued interest rate movements
throughout the year, the expected returns for new issue deals over
the year are in part based on the pull-to-par effect, with
underlying assets bought at a discount. This is in addition to the
traditional return from spread arbitrage, which was temporarily
squeezed in the first half of the year due to a timing mismatch
between the base rates used for assets and liabilities, as interest
rate volatility persisted. This dynamic began to normalise in the
latter part of 2023, as interest rates stabilised and we expect
this effect to continue to temper over time. Throughout the rate
volatility, BCF's CLO distributions have remained robust, even in
older vintage CLOs. The cost of capital in many of these older
deals remain quite low having been refinanced at tighter liability
spreads in 2021. That means that despite higher prepayments and
amortisation of lower cost liabilities, these older vintage CLOs
continue to produce cash flows around the mid-teen range on an
annualised basis. It is worth noting that no BCF CLO has missed a
distribution since inception.
As the Company's managed wind-down
is now effective, no further investments will be made. Importantly,
however, the underlying portfolio of CLO positions will continue to
be actively managed with the combined objectives of maximising
returns for investors, alongside the overarching aim of realising
all existing assets in an orderly manner. Given the majority of the CLOs within BCF are required to be
held until redemption or maturity, our focus will be on
continuously evaluating optimal and commercially prudent times to
redeem, which may vary depending on each specific CLO.
CLO portfolio positions
Current
Portfolio
|
Closing
Date
|
Deal
Size
(M)
|
Position
Owned
(M)
|
% of BCF
NAV
|
Reinvest.
Period
Left (Yrs)
|
Current Asset
Coupon[15]
|
Current Liability
Cost
|
Current Net Interest
Margin[16]
|
NIM
3M Prior
|
Distributions Through Last
Payment Date
|
% of
Tranche
|
Ann.
|
Cum.
|
EUR CLO Income Note
Investments
|
Phoenix Park
|
Jul-14
|
€412
|
€
16.4
|
1.0%
|
0.0
|
7.30%
|
5.63%
|
1.67%
|
1.71%
|
13.2%
|
122.4%
|
51.4%
|
Dartry Park
|
Mar-15
|
€424
|
18.8
|
1.3%
|
1.3
|
7.42%
|
5.63%
|
1.79%
|
1.70%
|
12.5%
|
107.9%
|
51.1%
|
Tymon Park
|
Dec-15
|
€415
|
16.0
|
1.4%
|
1.6
|
7.55%
|
5.70%
|
1.85%
|
1.89%
|
14.5%
|
113.8%
|
51.0%
|
Elm Park
|
May-16
|
€519
|
22.5
|
1.9%
|
1.8
|
7.38%
|
5.58%
|
1.80%
|
1.96%
|
15.0%
|
110.7%
|
54.0%
|
Griffith Park
|
Sep-16
|
€455
|
18.3
|
1.4%
|
0.0
|
7.23%
|
5.36%
|
1.87%
|
1.90%
|
11.7%
|
84.0%
|
53.4%
|
Clarinda Park
|
Nov-16
|
€417
|
16.3
|
1.4%
|
1.1
|
7.43%
|
5.71%
|
1.72%
|
1.62%
|
11.8%
|
82.3%
|
51.2%
|
Palmerston Park
|
Apr-17
|
€293
|
16.9
|
0.8%
|
0.0
|
7.14%
|
5.89%
|
1.25%
|
1.44%
|
12.5%
|
81.7%
|
53.3%
|
Clontarf Park
|
Jul-17
|
€228
|
20.4
|
0.9%
|
0.0
|
7.21%
|
6.11%
|
1.10%
|
1.20%
|
12.6%
|
79.3%
|
66.9%
|
Willow Park
|
Nov-17
|
€296
|
16.5
|
0.8%
|
0.0
|
7.11%
|
5.58%
|
1.52%
|
1.82%
|
16.2%
|
95.1%
|
60.9%
|
Marlay Park
|
Mar-18
|
€367
|
17.4
|
1.0%
|
0.0
|
7.01%
|
5.03%
|
1.98%
|
2.26%
|
18.6%
|
103.2%
|
60.0%
|
Milltown Park
|
Jun-18
|
€374
|
17.0
|
1.2%
|
0.0
|
7.14%
|
5.30%
|
1.84%
|
1.88%
|
17.8%
|
95.2%
|
65.0%
|
Richmond Park
|
Jul-18
|
€321
|
32.6
|
1.1%
|
0.0
|
7.22%
|
5.97%
|
1.25%
|
1.65%
|
15.4%
|
80.6%
|
68.3%
|
Sutton Park
|
Oct-18
|
€402
|
16.9
|
1.4%
|
0.0
|
7.15%
|
5.52%
|
1.63%
|
1.66%
|
16.8%
|
81.3%
|
66.7%
|
Crosthwaite Park
|
Feb-19
|
€516
|
23.3
|
2.1%
|
1.7
|
7.23%
|
5.51%
|
1.72%
|
1.59%
|
14.9%
|
71.5%
|
64.7%
|
Dunedin Park
|
Sep-19
|
€421
|
17.9
|
1.4%
|
2.4
|
7.27%
|
5.73%
|
1.53%
|
1.48%
|
18.6%
|
77.6%
|
52.9%
|
Seapoint Park
|
Nov-19
|
€403
|
15.2
|
1.9%
|
0.4
|
7.54%
|
5.69%
|
1.84%
|
1.55%
|
14.0%
|
49.1%
|
70.5%
|
Holland Park
|
Nov-19
|
€425
|
27.6
|
2.0%
|
0.4
|
7.41%
|
5.74%
|
1.66%
|
1.47%
|
11.2%
|
44.9%
|
72.1%
|
Vesey Park
|
Apr-20
|
€403
|
17.3
|
2.3%
|
0.9
|
7.50%
|
5.81%
|
1.69%
|
1.53%
|
17.2%
|
61.0%
|
80.3%
|
Avondale Park
|
Jun-20
|
€409
|
16.0
|
1.4%
|
2.2
|
7.26%
|
5.71%
|
1.55%
|
1.39%
|
29.4%
|
103.5%
|
63.0%
|
Deer Park
|
Sep-20
|
€355
|
14.4
|
1.5%
|
2.3
|
7.47%
|
5.71%
|
1.76%
|
1.94%
|
28.7%
|
88.2%
|
71.9%
|
Marino Park
|
Dec-20
|
€322
|
12.0
|
1.7%
|
0.0
|
7.53%
|
5.57%
|
1.95%
|
1.96%
|
17.9%
|
50.4%
|
71.4%
|
Carysfort Park
|
Apr-21
|
€404
|
17.7
|
2.2%
|
1.6
|
7.56%
|
5.63%
|
1.93%
|
1.85%
|
15.8%
|
40.3%
|
80.7%
|
Rockfield Park
|
Jul-21
|
€402
|
16.9
|
2.3%
|
1.5
|
7.46%
|
5.57%
|
1.89%
|
2.05%
|
15.0%
|
33.3%
|
80.0%
|
Dillon's Park
|
Sep-21
|
€405
|
18.5
|
2.3%
|
2.3
|
7.49%
|
5.59%
|
1.90%
|
1.88%
|
15.0%
|
30.6%
|
84.0%
|
Cabinteely Park
|
Dec-21
|
€404
|
16.7
|
2.0%
|
2.6
|
7.41%
|
5.79%
|
1.61%
|
1.53%
|
14.6%
|
27.6%
|
75.6%
|
Otranto Park
|
Mar-22
|
€443
|
25.3
|
3.0%
|
2.9
|
7.44%
|
6.04%
|
1.40%
|
1.34%
|
14.3%
|
23.2%
|
96.3%
|
Clonmore Park
|
Aug-22
|
€341
|
16.9
|
1.9%
|
3.1
|
7.57%
|
6.94%
|
0.63%
|
0.55%
|
6.1%
|
7.7%
|
100.0%
|
Edmondstown Park
|
Dec-22
|
€379
|
22.8
|
3.2%
|
3.6
|
7.72%
|
7.02%
|
0.70%
|
0.85%
|
9.2%
|
7.8%
|
100.0%
|
Bushy Park
|
Mar-23
|
€390
|
17.3
|
2.1%
|
3.8
|
7.66%
|
6.49%
|
1.17%
|
1.89%
|
13.3%
|
7.6%
|
61.3%
|
Glenbrook Park
|
Jul-23
|
€339
|
23.0
|
3.0%
|
4.1
|
7.79%
|
6.53%
|
1.26%
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
100.0%
|
Wilton Park
|
Nov-23
|
€395
|
34.9
|
3.8%
|
4.4
|
7.59%
|
6.39%
|
1.20%
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
100.0%
|
Cumulus 2023-1
|
Nov-23
|
€319
|
24.9
|
3.2%
|
n/a
|
7.22%
|
6.24%
|
0.98%
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
100.0%
|
USD CLO Income Note
Investments
|
Grippen Park
|
Mar-17
|
$413
|
$
21.0
|
0.7%
|
0.0
|
8.91%
|
7.67%
|
1.24%
|
1.38%
|
13.9%
|
91.4%
|
50.1%
|
Thayer Park
|
May-17
|
$522
|
19.3
|
1.4%
|
2.3
|
9.11%
|
7.17%
|
1.94%
|
1.92%
|
14.4%
|
92.3%
|
50.1%
|
Catskill Park
|
May-17
|
$717
|
39.5
|
1.0%
|
0.0
|
8.98%
|
7.57%
|
1.41%
|
1.55%
|
14.0%
|
89.7%
|
50.1%
|
Dewolf Park
|
Aug-17
|
$595
|
22.4
|
1.2%
|
0.0
|
9.01%
|
7.13%
|
1.89%
|
1.93%
|
15.9%
|
97.3%
|
50.1%
|
Gilbert Park
|
Oct-17
|
$924
|
36.5
|
1.5%
|
0.0
|
8.90%
|
7.39%
|
1.50%
|
1.62%
|
14.7%
|
87.7%
|
50.1%
|
Long Point Park
|
Dec-17
|
$556
|
20.8
|
1.1%
|
0.0
|
8.92%
|
7.13%
|
1.79%
|
1.85%
|
19.1%
|
110.7%
|
50.1%
|
Stewart Park
|
Jan-18
|
$800
|
65.0
|
1.1%
|
0.0
|
8.89%
|
7.17%
|
1.72%
|
1.81%
|
11.6%
|
66.8%
|
50.1%
|
Cook Park
|
Apr-18
|
$984
|
37.8
|
2.0%
|
0.0
|
8.96%
|
7.03%
|
1.93%
|
1.98%
|
16.8%
|
92.7%
|
50.1%
|
Fillmore Park
|
Jul-18
|
$561
|
21.3
|
1.7%
|
0.0
|
8.97%
|
7.03%
|
1.94%
|
1.97%
|
17.1%
|
89.1%
|
52.3%
|
Harbor Park
|
Dec-18
|
$715
|
28.0
|
2.4%
|
0.1
|
9.02%
|
7.08%
|
1.94%
|
1.97%
|
15.1%
|
73.2%
|
50.1%
|
Southwick Park
|
Aug-19
|
$503
|
18.4
|
1.9%
|
0.6
|
9.12%
|
7.01%
|
2.11%
|
2.09%
|
17.8%
|
73.9%
|
59.9%
|
Beechwood Park
|
Dec-19
|
$816
|
34.5
|
3.3%
|
3.0
|
8.89%
|
7.15%
|
1.74%
|
1.76%
|
16.7%
|
63.8%
|
61.1%
|
Allegany Park
|
Jan-20
|
$506
|
21.3
|
2.1%
|
3.1
|
8.88%
|
7.17%
|
1.71%
|
1.73%
|
15.2%
|
57.3%
|
66.2%
|
Harriman Park
|
Apr-20
|
$499
|
20.6
|
2.3%
|
2.3
|
8.92%
|
7.14%
|
1.78%
|
1.77%
|
22.4%
|
78.4%
|
70.0%
|
Cayuga Park
|
Aug-20
|
$398
|
16.1
|
1.9%
|
2.5
|
8.89%
|
7.02%
|
1.87%
|
1.84%
|
25.8%
|
82.1%
|
72.0%
|
Point Au Roche Park
|
Jun-21
|
$457
|
18.7
|
1.9%
|
2.6
|
8.93%
|
7.16%
|
1.78%
|
1.76%
|
18.3%
|
42.2%
|
61.2%
|
Peace Park
|
Sep-21
|
$660
|
27.5
|
2.8%
|
2.8
|
8.85%
|
7.10%
|
1.75%
|
1.91%
|
18.4%
|
37.8%
|
60.8%
|
Whetstone Park
|
Dec-21
|
$506
|
20.2
|
2.1%
|
3.1
|
9.01%
|
7.08%
|
1.93%
|
1.95%
|
19.7%
|
36.7%
|
62.5%
|
Boyce Park
|
Mar-22
|
$762
|
31.5
|
3.3%
|
3.3
|
8.98%
|
6.99%
|
1.99%
|
1.99%
|
19.6%
|
31.7%
|
61.8%
|
Vertical Retention
Instruments
|
Tallman Park
|
May-21
|
$410
|
$
1.5
|
0.2%
|
2.3
|
8.97%
|
7.21%
|
1.76%
|
1.74%
|
19.6%
|
46.9%
|
5.0%
|
Wehle Park
|
Apr-22
|
$547
|
$
1.8
|
0.2%
|
3.3
|
8.91%
|
7.23%
|
1.68%
|
1.65%
|
21.2%
|
33.0%
|
5.0%
|
Redeemed Or Fully Sold CLOs
|
Region
|
Vintage
|
Sale/
Redemption Date
|
BCF Position
Prior To Exit (m)
|
Current Valuation as % of
BCF
NAV[17]
|
Realised IRR
To Date[18]
|
Ann. Distribution
Through Last Payment[19]
|
Myers Park
|
US
|
2018
|
Mar-21
|
$26.4
|
N/A
|
11.1%*
|
16.4%
|
Greenwood Park
|
US
|
2018
|
Mar-21
|
$53.9
|
N/A
|
19.0%*
|
19.7%
|
Orwell Park
|
Europe
|
2015
|
May-21
|
€
24.2
|
N/A
|
13.6%*
|
23.5%
|
Stratus 2020-2
|
US
|
2020
|
Jun-21
|
$24.2
|
N/A
|
37.6%
|
93.3%
|
Niagara Park
|
US
|
2019
|
Aug-21
|
$22.1
|
N/A
|
16.6%*
|
14.9%
|
Sorrento Park
|
Europe
|
2014
|
Oct-21
|
€
29.5
|
N/A
|
9.3%*
|
18.2%
|
Castle Park
|
Europe
|
2014
|
Oct-21
|
€
24.0
|
N/A
|
11.8%*
|
23.3%
|
Dorchester Park
|
US
|
2015
|
Oct-21
|
$44.5
|
0.01%
|
11.7%*
|
18.0%
|
Buckhorn Park
|
US
|
2019
|
Feb-22
|
$24.2
|
N/A
|
16.0%*
|
19.5%
|
As of 31 December 2023, the
Company was invested in accordance with its and BCF's investment
policy and was diversified across 650+ issuers through directly
held loans and the CLO portfolio, across 28 countries and 30
different industries[20]. No
individual borrower represented more than 2% of the overall
portfolio at the end of December 2023.
Key portfolio
statistics
|
% of
NAV[21]
|
Current WA
Asset
Coupon[22]
|
Current WA
Liability[23]
|
WA
Remaining
RPs (CLOs)
|
EUR CLOs
|
59.08%
|
7.39%
|
5.87%
|
1.7
Years
|
US CLOs
|
39.57%
|
8.95%
|
7.18%
|
1.2
Years
|
Directly held loans (less
leverage)
|
8.32%
|
11.19%
|
5.41%
|
n/a
|
CLO Warehouses
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Net cash & expenses
|
-6.98%
|
-
|
-
|
n/a
|
Top 10 industries[24]
Industry
|
% of
portfolio
|
|
31
December 2023
|
Healthcare and
pharmaceuticals
|
15.9%
|
Services business
|
10.0%
|
High tech
industries[25]
|
9.6%
|
Banking, finance, insurance and
real estate (FIRE)
|
8.6%
|
Media broadcasting and
subscription
|
7.6%
|
Construction and
building
|
6.1%
|
Hotels, gaming and
leisure
|
5.0%
|
Capital equipment
|
4.6%
|
Chemicals, plastics and
rubber
|
4.5%
|
Telecommunications
|
3.9%
|
Industry
|
% of
portfolio
|
|
31
December 2022
|
Healthcare and
pharmaceuticals
|
16.7%
|
Services business
|
10.2%
|
High tech
industries25
|
8.8%
|
Banking, finance, insurance and
real estate (FIRE)
|
8.0%
|
Media broadcasting and
subscription
|
7.1%
|
Construction and
building
|
5.8%
|
Hotels, gaming and
leisure
|
5.5%
|
Chemicals, plastics and
rubber
|
5.1%
|
Telecommunications
|
4.6%
|
Services consumer
|
4.6%
|
Top 5 countries24
Country
|
% of
portfolio
|
|
31
December 2023
|
US
|
50.0%
|
France
|
10.5%
|
UK
|
7.6%
|
Luxembourg
|
6.7%
|
Netherlands
|
6.1%
|
Country
|
% of
portfolio
|
|
31
December 2022
|
US
|
52.6%
|
France
|
9.0%
|
UK
|
8.6%
|
Netherlands
|
6.3%
|
Germany
|
5.5%
|
Top 20 issuers[26]
|
#
Facilities
|
Portfolio Par
(€M)
|
Total Par Outstanding
(€M)
|
Moody's
Industry
|
Country
|
WA Price
|
WA Spread
|
WA Coupon (All-In
Rate)
|
WA Maturity
(Years)
|
Numericable
|
12
|
253
|
14,206
|
Media
Broadcasting and Subscription
|
France
|
86.8
|
4.46%
|
7.14%
|
4.3
|
Numericable is one of the largest
telecommunications operators in France by revenues and number of
subscribers, with major positions in residential fixed, residential
mobile, Business to Business, wholesale and media.
|
VodafoneZiggo
|
4
|
250
|
6,816
|
Media
Broadcasting and Subscription
|
Netherlands
|
95.0
|
3.11%
|
6.40%
|
5.3
|
VodafoneZiggo is a leading
operator in the Netherlands that provides fixed, mobile and
integrated communication and entertainment services to consumers
and businesses. The company was created as a result of a Joint
Venture between Liberty Global & Vodafone.
|
Virgin Media
|
8
|
215
|
9,985
|
Media
Broadcasting and Subscription
|
UK
|
98.2
|
2.90%
|
6.77%
|
5.2
|
Virgin Media O2 is an integrated
communications provider of mobile, broadband internet, video and
fixed-line telephony services to residential customers and
businesses in the UK. The company was created as a result of a
Joint Venture between Liberty Global & Telefonica.
|
ION Markets
|
3
|
202
|
4,025
|
Banking,
Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE)
|
Ireland
|
97.9
|
4.48%
|
8.95%
|
4.3
|
ION Markets is a global financial
software and services company that provides high performance
trading solutions to banks, hedge funds, brokers and other
financial institutions, across electronic fixed income, currencies,
equities, derivatives and commodities markets.
|
WS Audiology
|
2
|
186
|
3,128
|
Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
|
Denmark
|
98.7
|
3.93%
|
8.50%
|
2.2
|
WS Audiology was created following
the completion of the merger between Sivantos and Widex. The
combined company operates in over 125 markets and holds the third
position in the hearing aid market globally.
|
Masmovil
|
4
|
175
|
6,050
|
Telecommunications
|
UK
|
99.3
|
4.10%
|
7.35%
|
3.9
|
Masmovil is the fourth largest
telecommunications operator in Spain and offers fixed line, mobile
and internet services to customers in Spain. In July 2022, Masmovil
and Orange (#2 player in the Spanish market) signed a binding
agreement to combine the two businesses in a 50:50 Joint Venture
with an enterprise value of circa €19bn. The transaction will need
regulatory approval and is expected to close in H1 2024.
|
Ineos Quattro
|
6
|
172
|
4,428
|
Chemicals, Plastics and Rubber
|
US
|
97.8
|
2.72%
|
5.85%
|
2.7
|
Ineos Quattro, through its
subsidiaries, manufactures chemicals such as PVC, caustic soda,
styrene plus derivatives, aromatics and acetyls. Ineos Quattro
serves customers worldwide.
|
Thyssenkrupp Elevators
|
3
|
170
|
4,337
|
Capital
Equipment
|
Luxembourg
|
100.4
|
3.73%
|
8.29%
|
3.6
|
Thyssenkrupp Elevators is one of
the largest global market leaders for elevator and escalator
technology. The company designs, manufacturers, installs, services,
modernises elevators, escalators and platform lifts.
|
Paysafe
|
4
|
168
|
2,221
|
Banking,
Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE)
|
US
|
96.0
|
3.01%
|
6.10%
|
4.8
|
Paysafe is a leading specialised
payments platform, with revenues derived from payment processing,
eWallets and eCash accounts. Paysafe is a global leader in the
Gaming eCash segment, digital gambling wallets and the Merchant
Acquirer segment in the US, with a presence in Europe
also.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Sunrise/UPC
|
5
|
167
|
4,413
|
Media
Broadcasting and Subscription
|
Switzerland
|
98.7
|
2.84%
|
7.06%
|
5.2
|
Sunrise/UPC is a cable operator in
Switzerland and Slovakia. It offers broadband, tv and mobile
services.
|
Froneri
|
2
|
165
|
4,512
|
Beverage, Food and Tobacco
|
US
|
99.6
|
2.17%
|
6.73%
|
3.1
|
Froneri is a global ice cream
manufacturer with its headquarters in North Yorkshire, England. It
is the second largest ice cream producer by volume in the world,
after Unilever. Froneri was created in 2016 as a Joint Venture
between Nestle and PAI Partners to combine their ice cream
activities.
|
McAfee Corp
|
2
|
160
|
6,177
|
High
Tech Industries
|
US
|
99.2
|
3.75%
|
8.25%
|
5.2
|
McAfee is the one of the largest
security software vendors globally. McAfee is a major player in the
consumer security market, with a focus on consumer endpoint
protection. McAfee simplifies the complexity of threat detection
and response by correlating events, detecting new threats, reducing
false positives, automating, prioritizing incident response and
creating workflows that result in remediation.
|
Telenet International
|
3
|
157
|
3,728
|
Media
Broadcasting and Subscription
|
Belgium
|
98.8
|
2.23%
|
6.46%
|
4.9
|
Telenet is one of the largest
cable operators in Belgium that provides internet, TV, fixed and
mobile telephony to consumers and businesses in Flanders and
Brussels. It also provides mobile telephony services in the
Wallonia region.
|
Allied Universal
|
5
|
152
|
6,851
|
Services
Business
|
US
|
96.3
|
3.76%
|
7.45%
|
4.4
|
Allied Universal is the largest
provider of security systems and services globally, serving North
America, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia Pacific and Latin
America.
|
Grifols
|
4
|
141
|
5,745
|
Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
|
Spain
|
96.8
|
2.79%
|
5.64%
|
4.1
|
Grifols is a global healthcare
company producing plasma-derived medicines and transfusion
medicine. The company is organised into four divisions: Bioscience,
Diagnostic, Hospital and Bio Supplies & Other.
|
Independent Vetcare
|
3
|
140
|
2,270
|
Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
|
UK
|
100.1
|
5.00%
|
9.07%
|
2.9
|
Independent Vetcare is the largest
veterinary practice group in Europe. The company generates the
majority of its revenue in the UK, where it is a market leader and
is also present in Sweden, the Netherlands, Finland, Germany,
Norway, Denmark, Switzerland and North America.
|
Apex Group
|
3
|
133
|
2,962
|
Banking,
Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE)
|
US
|
99.2
|
4.05%
|
8.56%
|
4.6
|
Apex Group is a leading global
fund administration services provider with over 100 offices
worldwide and 12,200 employees and 10,000+ clients, delivering a
broad range of solutions to asset managers, capital markets and
family offices.
|
Verisure
|
7
|
129
|
4,425
|
Services
Business
|
Sweden
|
99.4
|
3.31%
|
6.81%
|
4.0
|
Verisure is Europe's leading
provider of monitored alarms solutions for residential households
and small business. The company designs, sells and installs alarms
with network connectivity across 16 countries in Europe and Latin
America, with its largest markets in terms of customers being
Spain, Sweden, Norway, France and Portugal.
|
Biogroup
|
9
|
127
|
3,150
|
Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals
|
France
|
94.9
|
3.33%
|
6.76%
|
4.1
|
Biogroup is a leading laboratory
services company mainly in France and Belgium. The company assists
physicians in the diagnosis of a variety of medical conditions
through the provision of a range of diagnostic testing services on
(primarily blood and urine) samples collected from the patients.
The company is one of the market leaders in French routine
testing and also has the ability to perform certain specialised
tests.
|
T-Mobile Netherlands
|
13
|
125
|
3,750
|
Telecommunications
|
Netherlands
|
99.6
|
4.01%
|
7.69%
|
5.3
|
T-Mobile Netherlands is the
leading mobile operator in the Netherlands with a leading market
share in both Subscriber Identity Modules (SIMs) and revenues
within the Business to Consumer Mobile segment with a strong
multi-brand portfolio (T-Mobile, Tele2, Ben, Simpel).
|
Regulatory update
Blackstone continues to monitor
operational resilience and business continuity risk and there is an
ongoing focus on enhancing and strengthening the operational
resilience framework.
On 6 April 2022, the European
Commission adopted the Delegated Regulation (as amended from time
to time) supplementing EU Regulation (EU) 2019/2088 (the "SFDR")
with regard to the regulatory technical standards ("RTS")
specifying the details of the content and presentation of the
information in relation to the principle of "do no significant
harm", information in relation to sustainability indicators and
adverse sustainability impacts and the content and presentation of
the disclosure regarding the promotion of environmental or social
characteristics (Article 8 SFDR) and sustainable investment
objectives (Article 9 SFDR) in pre-contractual documents, on
websites and in periodic reports. The SFDR RTS have applied since 1
January 2023. BXCI continues to monitor regulatory developments
with regards to SFDR on an ongoing basis.
BXCI continues to monitor the
regulatory environment for any developments with regard to the EU
Securitisation rules.
Risk management
Given the natural asymmetry of
fixed income, our experienced credit team focuses on truncating
downside risk and avoiding principal impairment and believes that
the best way to control and mitigate risk is by remaining
disciplined in all market cycles and by making careful credit
decisions while maintaining adequate diversification.
BCF's portfolio is managed to
minimise default risk and credit related losses, which is achieved
through in-depth fundamental credit analysis and diversified
portfolios in order to avoid the risk of any one issuer or industry
adversely impacting overall performance. As outlined in the
'Portfolio Update' section, BCF is broadly diversified across
issuers, industries and countries.
BCF's base currency is denominated
in Euro, though investments are also made and realised in other
currencies. Changes in rates of exchange may have an adverse effect
on the value, price or income of the investments of BCF. BCF may
utilise different financial instruments to seek to hedge against
declines in the value of its positions as a result of changes in
currency exchange rates.
Through the construction of solid
credit portfolios and our emphasis on risk management, capital
preservation and fundamental credit research, we believe the
Company's investment strategy will continue to be
successful.
Blackstone's firmwide approach to ESG
Blackstone aims to develop
resilient companies and competitive assets that deliver long-term
value for our investors. ESG principles have long informed the way
we run our firm, approach investing and partner with the assets in
our portfolio. In recent years, we have formalised our approach by
building dedicated ESG teams that look to develop value accretive
ESG policies and support integration within the business units and
regularly report progress.
Blackstone's approach to
sustainability is rooted in responsible investing and operational
improvements to drive value for our investors. Material and
applicable ESG considerations are incorporated into investment
decisions to avoid risk and create value for
investors[27].
Blackstone's portfolio of companies and assets across sectors and
geographies enables us to think about sustainability from multiple
vantage points. As investors, we consider material ESG factors both
during the due diligence of potential investments and throughout
the investment period to drive value.
Blackstone maintains a robust
staff of professionals from various disciplines who focus on ESG at
the firm to enhance the value of our investments, consistent with
our fiduciary responsibilities to our clients. Our Corporate ESG
team is responsible for firmwide coordination to ensure the firm
delivers upon its ESG initiatives and provides transparency for
management, partners and investors. Business unit ESG teams are
responsible for implementing signature ESG programs where
applicable, integrating ESG throughout the investment lifecycle as
appropriate and creating value for portfolio companies and assets
through ESG initiatives within our major businesses.
BXCI's approach to ESG
At BXCI, we believe that a key
aspect of being a responsible investor is an active evaluation of
certain ESG components of our investments and recognize the value
such evaluation can provide as we seek to grow and protect
investors' assets while managing risk. To that end, during the due
diligence phase of an investment, investment teams within BXCI aim
to consider material ESG factors that may impact investment
performance to drive value. Due diligence of relevant ESG
considerations varies by investment strategy and is based on
factors that may include (i) the nature of BXCI's investment, (ii)
the transaction process and timeline, (iii) the level of access to
information, specifically as it pertains to ESG factors and (iv)
the target portfolio company's business model.
BXCI's Global Head of ESG, Rita
Mangalick, oversees ESG policy integration, reporting, engagement
and value creation initiatives within BXCI. Ms Mangalick is
supported by several dedicated members of the BXCI ESG team.
Additionally, BXCI has an ESG Working Group, which discusses a
variety of ESG-related topics to drive value, including, as
applicable: review of investments; investor requests; market trends
and newly adopted or pending legislation, rules and
regulation.
BXCI's ESG due diligence approach
BXCI's focus on ESG stems from our
commitment to prudent investing and our culture that prioritises
robust corporate governance. We seek to identify material ESG risks
and opportunities throughout the diligence process and consider how
these factors may be used to enhance the sustainability profile of
our investments to improve investor returns and drive value, where
it is consistent with the investment strategy and where we have
ability to do so. We incorporate ESG principles into our investment
process with approaches tailored to our various
strategies.
Comprehensive due diligence
To effectively integrate the
consideration of relevant ESG factors into the due diligence stage
of our investment process to drive long-term value, it is important
for our team to understand how to best identify and assess ESG
factors that may be applicable to a particular investment. We
learned that these factors can vary significantly across
industries, leading us to partner with a third-party ESG consultant
to create a sector-specific tool that provides a framework to
conduct relevant ESG due diligence. This tool, which is based on
Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) standards, is
available to our investment teams to help them evaluate material
ESG risks and opportunities that may impact a company's
performance, enabling us to assess and mitigate these factors in a
more targeted fashion to drive value. The tool includes
industry-specific due diligence questions, potential key
performance indicators to track, detailed guidance on
considerations for evaluating the topic and recommended resources
for additional research.
Investment Committee Engagement and
documentation
During the holding period of an
investment, the investment team actively monitors the investment
and provides updates to the Investment Committee, as needed,
including with respect to ESG-related factors for certain
investment strategies. As part of this process, members of the
investment team may facilitate direct dialogue with company
management as well as track material ESG factors that may have an
impact on company performance during the anticipated holding period
of our investment.
Active post-investment monitoring
Analysis of identified ESG-related
risks and opportunities may be presented to the Investment
Committee for review questions and feedback on its views of
material ESG factors and due diligence that has been performed. If
material ESG concerns are identified, BXCI may seek to address the
situation, as appropriate, including, but not limited to, via
additional due diligence, hiring specialist advisors, attempting to
facilitate further discussions with company management or possibly
contributing to a decision not to
invest.
ESG Disclaimer
Blackstone may select or reject
portfolio companies or investments on the basis of ESG related
investment risks and this may cause Blackstone's funds and/or
portfolio companies to underperform relative to other sponsors'
funds and/or portfolio companies which do not consider ESG factors
at all or which evaluate ESG factors in a different manner. While
Blackstone believes ESG factors can enhance long term value,
Blackstone does not pursue an ESG based investment strategy or
limit its investments to those that meet specific ESG criteria or
standards, except with respect to products or strategies that are
explicitly designated as doing so in their Offering Documents or
other applicable governing documents. Any such ESG factors do not
qualify Blackstone's objectives to seek to maximise risk adjusted
returns. The ESG practices and initiatives mentioned in these
disclosures may not apply to some or all of the Company's
investments and none are binding aspects of the management of the
Company. The Company does not promote environmental or social
characteristics, nor does it have sustainable investments as its
objective.
ESG initiatives described in these
disclosures related to Blackstone's portfolio, portfolio companies
and investments (collectively, "portfolio companies") are
aspirational and not guarantees or promises that all or any such
initiatives will be achieved. Statements about ESG initiatives or
practices related to portfolio companies do not apply in every
instance and depend on factors including, but not limited to, the
relevance or implementation status of an ESG initiative to or
within the portfolio company the nature and/or extent of investment
in, ownership of, control or influence exercised by Blackstone with
respect to the portfolio company and other factors as determined by
investment teams, corporate groups, asset management teams,
portfolio operations teams, companies, investments and/or
businesses on a case by case basis. In particular, the ESG
initiatives or practices described in these disclosures are less
applicable to or not implemented at all with respect to
Blackstone's public markets investing businesses, specifically,
Credit, Hedge Fund Solutions (BXMA) and Harvest. In addition,
Blackstone will not pursue ESG initiatives for every portfolio
company.
Where Blackstone pursues ESG
initiatives for portfolio companies, there is no guarantee that
Blackstone will successfully enhance long term Shareholder value
and achieve financial returns. There can be no assurance that any
of the ESG initiatives described in this report will exist in the
future, will be completed as expected or at all, or will apply to
or be implemented uniformly across Blackstone business units or
across all portfolio companies within a particular Blackstone
business unit. Blackstone may select or reject portfolio companies
or investments on the basis of ESG related investment risks and
this may cause Blackstone's funds and/or portfolio companies to
underperform relative to other sponsors' funds and/or portfolio
companies which do not consider ESG factors at all or which
evaluate ESG factors in a different manner. Any selected investment
examples, case studies and/or transaction summaries presented or
referred to in these disclosures are provided for illustrative
purposes only and should not be viewed as representative of the
present or future success of ESG initiatives implemented by
Blackstone or its portfolio companies or of a given type of ESG
initiatives generally. There can be no assurances that Blackstone's
investment objectives for any fund will be achieved or that its
investment programs will be successful. Past performance is not a
guarantee of future results.
Blackstone Ireland Limited
26 April 2024
Strategic Overview
Purpose
The Company was incorporated with
an initial purpose of providing permanent capital to BCF, with a
view to generating stable and growing total returns for
Shareholders through dividends and value growth. Following the
decision made by Shareholders on 15 September 2023 to implement a
managed wind-down of the Company, the purpose of the Company is now
to realise all existing assets in its portfolio, with cash returned
to the Shareholders in a timely and efficient manner.
The Board delivers the Company's
purpose by working in line with its values, which form the backbone
of what the Company does and are an important part of its
culture.
Values
Integrity and trust - The Company
seeks to act with integrity in everything it does and to be
trustworthy. It seeks to uphold the highest standards of
professionalism driven by its corporate governance
processes.
Transparency - The Company aims to
ensure that all of its activities are undertaken with utmost
transparency and openness to sustain trust.
Opportunity - The ability to see
and to seize opportunities which are in the best interests of its
Shareholders.
Principal activities
The Company is a closed-ended
investment company incorporated on 30 April 2014 as a limited by
shares company under the Company (Jersey) Law 1991 with registered
number 115628. In addition, the Company constitutes and is
regulated as a collective investment fund under the Collective
Investment Funds (Jersey) Law 1988. The Company continues to be
registered and domiciled in Jersey. The Company's redeemable shares
are quoted on the Premium Segment of the Main Market of the
LSE.
The Company has a wholly-owned
Luxemburg subsidiary, Blackstone / GSO Loan Financing (Luxembourg)
S.à r.l.,
which currently has an issued share capital of 2,000,000 Class A
shares and 1 Class B share. As at 31 December 2023, 100% of the
Class A and Class B shares were held by the Company together with
208,565,744 Class B CSWs issued by the Lux Subsidiary. The Lux
Subsidiary invests in PPNs issued by BCF, which in turn invests in
CLOs and loans.
On 25 August 2023, the Board
announced its decision to put forward proposals to Shareholders for
the implementation of a managed wind-down of the Company with cash
returned to the Shareholders in a timely and efficient manner. The
Board also published a circular ("the Circular") dated 25 August
2023, to the Shareholders to convene an EGM on 15 September 2023,
seeking approval from the Shareholders for the amendments to the
Company's investment objective and policy and to its share capital,
to facilitate the managed wind-down. On 15 September 2023, the
Shareholders approved the following by way of an ordinary
resolution:
· the adoption of a new investment objective and policy, as
detailed below;
· the conversion of all shares held by the Company into
redeemable shares on the terms set out in the Circular;
and
· the issuance of a deferred share with the rights and
restrictions set out in section 3.5 of the Circular, in accordance
with article 2.1 of the Articles of Associations.
The Company's authorised share
capital consists of an unlimited number of shares of any class. As
at
31 December 2023, the Company's issued share capital was
442,738,903 redeemable shares and 1 deferred share. The Company
held no shares in treasury.
The Company is a self-managed
company. BIL acts as Portfolio Adviser to the Company and pursuant
to the Advisory Agreement, provides advice and assistance to the
Company in connection with its investment in the CSWs.
BNP Paribas S.A., Jersey Branch
acts as Administrator, Company Secretary, Custodian and Depositary
to the Company.
Investment objective and
investment policy
On 15 September 2023, Shareholders
approved a new investment objective and a new investment policy as
set our below:
New investment objective (effective from 15 September
2023)
The Company's investment objective
is to realise all existing assets in the Company's portfolio in an
orderly manner.
New investment policy (effective from 15 September
2023)
The Company will pursue its
investment objective by effecting an orderly realisation of its
assets by redeeming and/or by disposing for cash the profit
participating instruments issued by BCF and held by the Company
(indirectly through a subsidiary) (the "LuxCo PPNs"). The Company
will thereafter make timely returns of capital to Shareholders
principally by redeeming multiple portions of its issued redeemable
shares during the course of the managed wind-down (or in such other
manner as the Directors consider appropriate).
The Company does not hold any
material assets other than the LuxCo PPNs and cash received from
time to time. Upon redemption of the LuxCo PPNs, the Company will
cease to make any new investments or to undertake capital
expenditure except as deemed necessary or desirable by the Board in
connection with the managed wind-down.
Any amounts received by the
Company during the managed wind-down will be held by the Company as
cash on deposit and/or as cash equivalents, prior to returns being
made in cash to Shareholders (net of provisions for the Company's
costs and expenses).
Changes to the Company's investment policy
Any material change to the
Company's new investment policy will be made only with the approval
of the Shareholders.
Former investment objective and former investment policy
(prior to 15 September 2023)
The Company's former investment
objective was to provide Shareholders with stable and growing income returns and to grow the capital
value of the investment portfolio by exposure to floating rate
senior secured loans and bonds directly and indirectly through CLO
securities and investments in Loan Warehouses. The Company sought
to achieve its investment objective through exposure (directly or
indirectly) to one or more companies or entities established from
time to time ("Underlying Companies"), such as BCF.
The Company's former investment
policy was to invest (directly or
indirectly through one or more Underlying Companies) in a diverse
portfolio of senior secured loans (including broadly syndicated,
middle market or other loans, such investments being made by the
Underlying Companies directly or through investments in Loan
Warehouses, bonds and CLO Securities) and generate attractive
risk-adjusted returns from such portfolios. The Company intended to
pursue its investment policy by investing (through one or more
subsidiaries) in profit participating instruments (or similar
securities) issued by one or more Underlying Companies.
Each Underlying Company would use
the proceeds from the issue of the profit participating instruments
(or similar securities), together with the proceeds from other
funding or financing arrangements it had in place currently or
might have in the future, to invest in: (i) senior secured loans,
bonds, CLO Securities and Loan Warehouses; or (ii) other Underlying
Companies which, themselves, invest in senior secured loans, bonds,
CLO Securities and Loan Warehouses. The Underlying Companies might
invest in European or US senior secured loans, bonds, CLO
Securities, Loan Warehouses and other assets in accordance with the
investment policy of the Underlying Companies. Investments in Loan
Warehouses, which were generally expected to be subordinated to
senior finance provided by third-party banks, would typically be in
the form of an obligation to purchase preference shares or a
subordinated loan. There was no limit on the maximum US or European
exposure. The Underlying Companies did not invest substantially
directly in senior secured loans or bonds domiciled outside North
America or Western Europe.
Investment limits and risk
diversification
The following investment limits
and risk diversification provisions were set out in the Company's
Prospectus and governed how the Underlying Companies invested in
CLOs prior to the creation of the Redemption Pool:
The Company invests directly or indirectly through the
Underlying Companies, in a portfolio of senior secured loans and
bonds or in Loan Warehouses containing senior secured loans and
bonds and in connection with such strategy, to own debt and equity
tranches of CLOs and in the case of European CLOs and certain US
CLOs, to be the risk retention provider in each.
The Underlying Companies may periodically securitise a
portion of the loans or a Loan Warehouse in which they invest, into
CLOs which may be managed either by such Underlying Company itself,
by BIL or BLCS (or one of their affiliates), in their capacity as
the CLO manager.
Where compliance with the European Risk Retention
Requirements is sought (which may include both EUR and US CLOs),
the Underlying Companies will retain exposures of each CLO, which
may be held as:
·
CLO Income
Notes equal to: (i) between 51% and 100% of the CLO Income Notes
issued by each such CLO in the case of European CLOs; or (ii) CLO
Income Notes representing at least 5% of the credit risk relating
to the assets collateralising the CLO in the case of US CLOs (each
of (i) and (ii), (the "horizontal strip"); or
·
not less than
5% of the principal amount of each of the tranches of CLO
Securities in each such CLO (the "vertical
strip").
In the case of deals structured to be compliant with the
European Risk Retention Requirements, the applicable Underlying
Company may determine that, due to its role as an "originator" with
respect to such transaction, such Underlying Company should also
comply with the US Risk Retention Regulations. In addition, an
Underlying Company may invest in CLOs, such as middle market CLOs,
which are not exempt from the US Risk Retention Regulations and as
a result, may be required to retain exposure to such CLOs in
accordance with such rules. In such a scenario, the Underlying
Company will retain exposures to such transactions for the purpose
of complying with the US Risk Retention Regulations, which may be
held as:
·
CLO Income
Notes representing at least 5% of the fair market value of the CLO
Securities (including CLO Income Notes) issued by such CLO (the "US
horizontal strip");
·
A vertical
strip; or
·
A combination
of a vertical strip and US horizontal strip.
To the extent attributable to the Company, the value of the
CLO Income Notes retained by Underlying Companies in any CLO will
not exceed 25% of the Published NAV of the Company at the time of
investment.
Investments in CLO Income Notes and Loan Warehouses are
highly leveraged. Gains and losses relating to underlying senior
secured loans will generally be magnified. Further, to the extent
attributable to the Company, the aggregate value of investments
made by Underlying Companies in vertical strips of CLOs (net of any
directly attributable financing) will not exceed 15% of the
Published NAV of the Company at the time of investment. This
limitation shall apply to Underlying Companies in aggregate and not
to Underlying Companies individually.
Loan Warehouses may eventually be securitised into CLOs
managed either by an Underlying Company itself or by BIL or BLCS
(or one of their affiliates), in their capacity as the CLO Manager.
To the extent attributable to the Company, the aggregate value of
investments made by Underlying Companies in any single externally
financed warehouse (net of any directly attributable financing)
shall not exceed 20% of the Published NAV of the Company at the
time of investment and in all externally financed warehouses taken
together (net of any directly attributable financing) shall not
exceed 30% of the Published NAV of the Company at the time of
investment. These limitations shall apply to Underlying Companies
in aggregate and not to Underlying Companies
individually.
The following limits (the
"Eligibility Criteria") apply to senior secured loans and bonds
(and to the extent applicable, other corporate debt instruments)
directly held by any Underlying Company (and not through CLO
Securities or Loan Warehouses):
Maximum Exposure
|
% of an Underlying
Company's
gross asset value
|
Per obligor
|
5
|
Per industry sector
|
15 (With
the exception of one industry, which may be up to 20%)
|
To obligors with a rating lower
than B-/B3/B-
|
7.5
|
To second lien loans, unsecured
loans, mezzanine loans and high yield bonds
|
10
|
For the purposes of these
Eligibility Criteria, "gross asset value" shall mean gross assets,
including any investments in CLO Securities and any undrawn
commitment amount of any gearing under any debt facility. Further,
for the avoidance of doubt, the "maximum exposures" set out in the
Eligibility Criteria shall apply on a trade date basis.
Each of these Eligibility Criteria
is measured at the close of each business day on which a new
investment is made and there is no requirement to sell down in the
event the limits are breached at any subsequent point (for
instance, as a result of movement in the gross asset value or the
sale or downgrading of any assets held by an Underlying
Company).
In addition, each CLO in which an
Underlying Company holds CLO Securities and each Loan Warehouse in
which an Underlying Company invests will have its own eligibility
criteria and portfolio limits. These limits are designed to ensure
that: (i) the portfolio of assets within the CLO meets a prescribed
level of diversity and quality as set by the relevant rating
agencies that rate securities issued by such CLO or (ii) in the
case of a Loan Warehouse, that the warehoused assets will
eventually be eligible for a rated CLO. The CLO Manager will seek
to identify and actively manage assets which meet those criteria
and limits within each CLO or Loan Warehouse. The eligibility
criteria and portfolio limits within a CLO or Loan Warehouse may
include the following:
·
A limit on the weighted average life of the
portfolio;
·
A limit on the weighted average rating of the
portfolio;
·
A limit on the maximum amount of portfolio assets
with a rating lower than B-/B3/B-; and
·
A limit on the minimum diversity of the
portfolio.
CLOs in which an Underlying
Company may hold CLO Securities or Loan Warehouses in which
an Underlying Company may invest also have certain other
criteria and limits, which may include:
·
A limit on the minimum weighted average of the
prescribed rating agency recovery rate;
·
A limit on the minimum amount of senior secured
assets;
·
A limit on the maximum aggregate exposure to
second lien loans, high yield bonds, mezzanine loans and unsecured
loans;
·
A limit on the maximum portfolio exposure to
covenant-lite loans;
·
An exclusion of project finance loans;
·
An exclusion of structured finance
securities;
·
An exclusion on investing in the debt of
companies domiciled in countries with a local currency
sub-investment grade rating; and
·
An exclusion of leases.
This is not an exhaustive list of
the eligibility criteria and portfolio limits within a typical CLO
or Loan Warehouse and the inclusion or exclusion of such limits and
their absolute levels are subject to change depending on market
conditions. Any such limits applied shall be measured at the time
of investment in each CLO or Loan Warehouse.
Any material change to the
investment policy of the Company requires the approval of
redeemable Shareholders.
It is intended that the investment
policy of each substantial Underlying Company will mirror the
Company's investment policy, subject to such additional
restrictions as may be adopted by a substantial Underlying Company
from time to time.
The Company will receive periodic
reports from each substantial Underlying Company in relation to the
implementation of such substantial Underlying Company's investment
policy to enable the Company to have oversight of its
activities.
The Board considers BCF to be a
substantial Underlying Company and during the year the investment
policy of BCF also changed to include an orderly realisation of its
assets and timely return of capital to its Shareholders.
Company borrowing
limit
Following the implementation of
the managed wind-down procedures, effective 15 September 2023, the
Company will not undertake borrowing other than for short-term
working capital purposes. The Company may use derivatives for
hedging as well as for efficient portfolio management.
The Company will not utilise
borrowings for investment purposes. However, the Directors are
permitted to borrow up to 10% of the Company's Published NAV for
day-to-day administration and cash management purposes. For the
avoidance of doubt, this limit only applies to the Company and not
the Underlying Companies.
In accordance with the Company's
Prospectus, the Company may use hedging or derivatives (both long
and short) for the purposes of efficient portfolio management. It
is intended that up to 100% (as appropriate) of the Company's
exposure to any non-Euro assets will be hedged, subject to suitable
hedging contracts being available at appropriate times and on
acceptable terms.
The Company has exposure to
non-Euro assets through its investment in the Underlying Company
which has hedging arrangements in place to protect against
unfavourable currency fluctuation.
Investment strategy
Following the decision made by
Shareholders on 15 September 2023 to implement a managed wind-down
of the Company, the Company has aligned its investment strategy
with its new investment objective and investment policy as detailed
above.
Former investment strategy (prior to 15 September
2023)
Whether the senior secured loans,
bonds or other assets were held directly by an Underlying Company
or via CLO Securities or Loan Warehouses, it was intended that, in
all cases, the portfolios would be actively managed (by the
Underlying Companies or the CLO Manager, as the case may be) to
minimise default risk and potential loss through comprehensive
credit analysis performed by the Underlying Companies or the CLO
Manager (as applicable).
Vertical strips in CLOs in which
Underlying Companies might invest were expected to be financed
partly through term finance for investment-grade CLO Securities,
with the balance being provided by the relevant Underlying Company
investing in such CLO. This term financing might be full-recourse,
non-mark to market, long-term financing which might, among other
things, match the maturity of the relevant CLO or match the
reinvestment period or non-call period of the relevant CLO. In
particular and although not forming part of the Company's
investment policy, the following levels of or limitations on,
leverage were expected in relation to investments made by
Underlying Companies:
· Senior secured loans and bonds might be levered up to 2.5x
with term finance;
· Investments in "first loss" positions or the "warehouse
equity" in Loan Warehouses would not be levered;
· CLO Income Notes would not be levered;
· Investments in CLO Securities rated B- and above at the time
of issue might be funded entirely with term finance; and
· Investments in a vertical strip might be levered 6.0-7.0x,
with term finance as described above.
To the extent that they were
financed, vertical strips were anticipated to require less capital
than horizontal strips, which was expected to result in more
efficient use of the Underlying Companies' capital. In addition,
since the return profile on financed vertical strips was different
to retained CLO Income Notes, BXCI believed that vertical strips
might be more robust through a market downturn, although projected
IRRs might be slightly lower. However, an investment in vertical
strips was not expected to impact the Company's stated target
return.
From time to time, as part of its
ongoing portfolio management, the Underlying Companies might sell
positions as and when suitable opportunities arise. Where not bound
by risk retention requirements, it was the intention that the
Underlying Companies would seek to maintain control of the call
option of any CLOs securitised.
While the intention was to pursue
an active, non-benchmark total return strategy, the Company was
cognisant of the positioning of the loan portfolios against
relevant indices. Accordingly, the Underlying Companies would track
the returns and volatility of such indices, while seeking to
outperform them on a consistent basis. In-depth, fundamental credit
research dictated name selection and sector
over-weighting/under-weighting relative to the benchmark,
backstopped by constant portfolio monitoring and risk oversight.
The Underlying Companies would typically look to diversify their
portfolios to avoid the risk that any one obligor or industry would
adversely impact overall returns. The Underlying Companies also
placed an emphasis on loan portfolio liquidity to ensure that if
their credit outlook changes, they were free to respond quickly and
effectively to reduce or mitigate risk in their portfolio. The
Company believed this investment strategy would be successful as a
result of its emphasis on risk management, capital preservation and
fundamental credit research. The Directors believed the best way to
control and mitigate risk was by remaining disciplined in market
cycles, by making careful credit decisions and maintaining adequate
diversification.
Ongoing strategic considerations
The portfolio of the Underlying
Companies in which the Company invests (through its wholly-owned
subsidiary) remains broadly divided between European CLOs and US
CLOs.
The Company incorporates ESG
factors as part of its investment strategy where applicable. Refer
to above for further details. The Company operates with Euro as its
functional currency. A significant proportion of the portfolio of
assets held by Underlying Companies to which the Company has
exposure may, from time to time, be denominated in currencies other
than Euro. The Underlying Companies utilise different financial
instruments to seek to hedge against declines in the value of its
portfolio as a result of changes in currency exchange
rates.
Mechanics for returning cash to
Shareholders
Following the approval of the new
investment objective, the Board proposes to implement the managed
wind-down by returning to Shareholders the net proceeds from the
realisation of the Company's investment in BCF in an orderly manner
by way of the compulsory redemption of redeemable shares (in
respect of proceeds received from BCF attributable to the early
redemption, maturity or sale of underlying investments or pursuant
to a disposal of the LuxCo PPNs for cash).
As part of the managed wind-down,
the Company, through the Lux Subsidiary, has delivered a redemption
request in accordance with the terms of the LuxCo PPNs. A pro-rata
portion of the assets and investments of BCF (including indirect
investments held through BCM LLC) has been placed into a redemption
pool (the 'Redemption Pool'). As the assets in the Redemption Pool
redeem and are realised, the proceeds thereof, net of any actual or
reasonably anticipated liabilities, costs, expenses, debt service
of BCF, BCM LLC and the Lux Subsidiary and any actual or reasonably
anticipated costs, liabilities, margin or collateral requirements
related to hedging transactions entered by BCF, will be utilised to
redeem the LuxCo PPNs.
Having consulted with the
Portfolio Adviser, the Board anticipates that the redemption of the
CLO investments held in BCF and BCM LLC will require a period of
approximately 7 years. This is indicative only and it should not be
considered a guarantee of the Company's actual liquidity
profile.
Refer to sections 3.1 and 3.2 of
the Circular for further details.
Section 172(1)
Statement
The Company, as a member of the
AIC, complies with Provision 5 of the AIC Code and voluntarily
complies with section 172(1) of the UK Companies Act 2006 to act in
a way that promotes the success of the Company for the benefit of
its Shareholders as a whole, having regard to (among other
things):
a)
the likely consequences of any decision in the
long-term;
b)
the need to foster the Company's business relationships with
suppliers, customers and others;
c)
the impact of the Company's operations on the community and the
environment;
d)
the desirability of the Company maintaining a reputation for high
standards of business conduct; and
e)
the need to act fairly as between members of the
Company.
The Board maintains a reputation
for high standards of business conduct and endeavors to act fairly
between members of the Company by acting with integrity and
establishing trust as referred to in the Company's values. The
Company complies with the Principles and
Provisions of the AIC Code as detailed in the Statement of
Compliance with Corporate Governance below. Information on how the Board has engaged with its
stakeholders and promoted the success of the Company, while having
regard to the above, is outlined below. This covers the key
decisions the Board has taken during the year.
Stakeholder engagement
Shareholders
Why we
engage
|
How we
engage
|
Shareholders provide the necessary
capital for the Company to pursue its purpose and strategy as
outlined in the Company's Prospectus.
The Company aims to ensure its
long-term success and sustainability through its Shareholder
relationships, based on transparency and openness and thereby
fostering Shareholder confidence. This in-turn benefits the
liquidity of the Company's shares and the Company's reputation as
an esteemed market participant.
|
The Board engages with its
Shareholders as follows:
a)
by publishing:
i.
announcements on the LSE, including:
· the
Company's Published NAV performance, announced on a monthly
basis;
· the
Company's IFRS NAV performance, announced on a quarterly
basis;
· updated dividend guidance, announced with regard to the
Company's dividend policy on 23 January 2024;
ii.
monthly performance reports, on the Company's website, covering the
performance of the Company and its underlying portfolio and
including information on the composition of the underlying
portfolio;
iii. market
commentary reports issued by BXCI and published on the Company's
website covering US and EU loan, high yield and CLO performance
figures with commentary, as well as the market outlook;
iv. quarterly
investor reports, published on the Company's website, which provide
an overview of the Company's and the Underlying Company's quarterly
results, together with a market overview;
v. the
Company's Half Yearly Financial Report and the Annual Report and
Audited Financial Statements;
vi. the
Company's Key Information Document and a memorandum on
costs;
vii. ad-hoc reports,
on the Company's website, as and when required to provide further
insights into the relevant market situation;
b)
the Board and representatives of the Portfolio
Adviser holding investor calls to provide market
updates;
c)
the Board held a Shareholder Consultation on
potential policy amendments in light of the prevailing and
persistent discount to NAV at which the Company's shares trade and
with a view to broadening investor interest in the Company's shares
and maximising Shareholder total return.
d)
on 25 August 2023, the Board published a
circular, seeking approval from the Shareholders for the amendments
to the Company's investment objective and policy and to its share
capital to facilitate the managed wind-down, which was approved by
the Shareholders at an EGM held on 15 September 2023.
e)
the Board engages with its Shareholders through
its Portfolio Adviser and Brokers who communicate pertinent
information from any discussions they have had with the Company's
Shareholders. Such discussions focussed for example on the
Company's share price discount level and CLO performance;
and
f)
written communication with Shareholders in
response to queries received, as applicable.
The Board (including the different
committee Chairs) is available at the AGM to answer questions in
its areas of responsibility and the Chair encourages Shareholders
to contact him or any other Director with any queries or comments
they may have.
|
Outcome
|
The Board believes that following
the issue of publications as listed in point (a) above and its
interactions as outlined in points (b), (c), (d), (e) and (f)
during 2023, Shareholders have received relevant information
allowing them to make informed decisions about their
shareholding(s) and have been able to engage with the Company and
its advisers on any matters they consider relevant.
During the year, actions taken by
the Board following on from Shareholder discussions
include:
-
renewal/discontinuation of the share repurchase programme, refer to
the Directors' Report below and the share repurchase programme
coverage below;
- the Board,
Brokers and Portfolio Adviser discussing liquidity and discount
management on both an ongoing and frequent basis;
- Shareholder
Consultation took place to discuss the distribution/reinvestment of
excess income, potential exit opportunity and valuation methodology
used;
- publication
of the Circular dated 25 August 2023, seeking approval from the
Shareholders for the amendments to the Company's investment
objective and policy and to its share capital to facilitate the
managed wind-down; and
- amendments
to the NAV factsheets by publishing the IFRS NAV on a quarterly
basis from April 2023 on the LSE.
During 2023, all Directors were
kept informed of Shareholder engagement, as necessary, so that they
are aware of and understand the views communicated. Any pertinent
matters were followed up on by the Board and Shareholder views were
continually considered as part of the Directors' decision-making
processes.
|
Service providers
Why we
engage
|
How we
engage
|
As an investment company with no
employees, the Company is reliant on its service providers to
conduct its business. The Board considers the Portfolio Adviser,
the Administrator and the Registrar to be critical to the Company's
day-to-day operations.
The Board views the Company's
other service providers, such as brokers, auditors and lawyers as
being highly important in enabling the Company to meet its
regulatory and legal requirements as necessary.
|
The Board engages with its
Portfolio Adviser on an on-going basis through:
a)
regular communication with representatives as required, such as
telephone and email correspondence, discussing ad-hoc matters which
may arise;
b)
monthly meetings to receive updates on the performance of the
portfolio;
c)
quarterly board meetings to receive detailed updates on, but not
limited to, the loan and CLO markets and activity updates for the
Underlying Company. These include discussions about capital
inflows, performance of current investments and return
attribution;
d)
an annual due diligence meeting with senior representatives of the
Portfolio Adviser held at its offices in Dublin, Ireland in January
2024; and
e)
ad-hoc meetings to discuss day-to-day operational matters or
strategic matters.
The Board engages with its
Administrator on an on-going basis including:
a)
regular communication with representatives, such as telephone and
email correspondence, to discuss any ad-hoc matters;
b)
monthly meetings to discuss the Published NAV as computed by the
Administrator;
c)
quarterly Board meetings at which the Board receives accounting,
company secretarial and compliance updates and liaises with the
Administrator on any pertinent matters;
d)
production of the Company's Half Yearly Financial Report and Annual
Report and Audited Financial Statements;
e)
ad-hoc meetings to discuss day-to-day operational matters;
and
f) annual service review
meetings.
The Company's Registrar is
responsible for maintaining the Company's share register and for
processing any corporate actions. The Registrar's reports are
available via an online platform. The Board receives quarterly
reports in person from the Company's Registrar on key matters. The
Company otherwise engages as necessary with the Registrar via email
and telephone.
|
Outcome
|
Through its engagement with its
service providers during 2023, the Board confirms it has received
appropriate and timely advice and guidance, together with responses
to any query raised. There were no material actions resulting from
engagement from service providers. The Board's engagement during
2023 with its service providers enabled it to maintain the
effective running of the Company and to determine that the Company
is well managed and its operations and internal controls are
effective, efficient and compliant.
|
Underlying company
Why we
engage
|
How we
engage
|
The Board's purpose and strategy
is implemented through investment in the Underlying Company, BCF.
Understanding the capital requirements, specifically the timing and
quantum, of the Underlying Company is important to the Board to
ensure the Company can provide capital as required and so that
redemptions of CSWs are appropriately factored in so as to not
adversely impact the operations of the Underlying
Company.
Additionally, understanding the
performance of the Underlying Company is vital to ensuring the
Company can deliver on its investment objective of income and
capital appreciation.
|
The Board engages with the
Portfolio Adviser and the Board of directors of the Underlying
Company to understand their capital requirements and performance.
It does so through the methods described above.
The Board also met with the board
of BCF in January 2024.
|
Outcome
|
During 2023, the Board has kept
abreast of capital requirements and the performance of the
Underlying Company (BCF). It has reviewed BCF's past performance
and contributing factors to that past performance together with its
prospective outlook. From this process, the Board has considered
the effectiveness of the Portfolio Adviser and ensured the
execution of the investment strategy of the Company over the longer
term and the redemption pool mechanism.
|
Wider society
Why we
engage
|
How we
engage
|
As a responsible corporate citizen
the Company recognises that its operations have an environmental
footprint and an impact on wider society.
|
The Board welcomes the views of
stakeholders to remain current in their understanding of
stakeholder views relating to environmental and social
matters.
The Board seeks to uphold the
highest standards of professionalism and corporate governance
including diversity, inclusion and ESG. The Board expects the same
from its service providers and asks its service providers to
provide an overview of their diversity and ESG policies on an
annual basis, as part of the Company's service provider
evaluation.
Ms Belinda Crosby is responsible
for ESG matters at Board-level.
In endeavouring to exemplify best
corporate governance practice, the Board aims to positively
influence BXCI and inspire stakeholder trust.
|
Outcome
|
The Board is conscious of the
importance of good governance, including diversity, inclusion and
ESG specifically and seeks to positively influence its service
providers. During 2023, the Board liaised with BXCI to advance its
ESG initiatives and processes for upholding high standards of ESG,
responsible investing and governance; such discussions remain
ongoing as ESG procedures and requirements evolve.
|
Regulators
Why we
engage
|
How we
engage
|
The Board engages with its main
regulator, the JFSC and other regulators to ensure business is
conducted in line with their expectations and the evolving
regulatory framework.
|
The Company primarily interacts
with its main regulator through formal submissions of information
on a periodic basis (for example, periodic financial
statements).
The Company engages with its
regulators on an ad-hoc basis, via its Compliance
Officer.
The Board also receives detailed
quarterly legal, regulatory and compliance updates.
|
Outcome
|
During 2023, the Company complied
with regulatory and statutory rules, maintained an open and
transparent form of communication with its regulators and the Board
received appropriate and timely advice and guidance, together with
responses to any query the Board had. During the year, the Company
had no material communications with its regulators.
|
Corporate Activity
The principal decisions taken
below are the ones that the Board considered to have the greatest
impact on the Company. The Board considers the factors outlined
under the Section 172(1) statement and the wider interests of
stakeholders as a whole in all decisions it takes on behalf of the
Company.
Dividend policy
Description
|
On 23 January 2023, the Board
announced that the Company will be targeting a total 2023 annual
dividend of between €0.08 and €0.09 per ordinary share, which will
consist of quarterly payments of €0.02 per ordinary share for the
first three quarters and a final quarter payment of a variable
amount to be determined at that time. Accordingly, the Board
declared dividends of €0.02 per ordinary share for the first three
quarters of 2023 and a dividend of €0.03 per ordinary share for the
fourth quarter.
On 23 January 2024, the Board
announced that it is targeting a total 2024 annual dividend of at
least €0.09 per redeemable share, which will consist of quarterly
payments of €0.0225 per redeemable share. On 23 January 2024, the
Board also announced the termination of the Company's dividend
re-investment plan.
|
Impact on long-term
success
|
Stakeholder
considerations
|
Maintaining the dividend at a
consistent level to provide stability for stakeholders and
assurance of continuing income return. The dividend policy
continues to provide sufficient flexibility to pay more, dependent
on the year's results.
|
Stakeholders are provided with a
degree of certainty as to the level of Shareholder
dividends.
|
Share Repurchase Programme
Description
|
On 23 January 2023, the Company
announced that it had appointed its joint Brokers to manage a new
irrevocable Share Repurchase Programme to buy back ordinary shares
within certain pre-set parameters, to begin on 23 January 2023 and
run until 3 May 2023.
On 22 May 2023, the Board decided
to cease any buy back of shares. Since then, the Company has not undertaken any share
repurchases.
From 1 January 2023 to 31 December
2023, the Company undertook 13 share repurchases and repurchased a
total of 1,839,619 ordinary shares at a weighted average price of
€0.6676 per ordinary share. The repurchased shares were held in
treasury until 22 December 2023, on which the Company cancelled all
its treasury shares.
|
Managed wind-down
Description
|
On 25 August 2023, the Board
announced its decision to put forward proposals to Shareholders for
the implementation of a managed wind-down of the Company with cash
returned to the Shareholders in a timely and efficient manner. The
Board published a circular ("the Circular") to the Shareholders to
convene an EGM on 15 September 2023 seeking approval from the
Shareholders for the amendments to the Company's investment
objective and policy and to its share capital to facilitate the
managed wind-down.
On 15 September 2023, the
Shareholders approved the following by way of an ordinary
resolution:
- the
adoption of a new investment objective and policy. The new
investment objective is to realise all existing assets in the
Company's portfolio in an orderly manner.
- the
conversion of all shares held by the Company into redeemable shares
on the terms set out in the Circular.
the issuance of a deferred share
with the rights and restrictions set out in section 3.5 of the
Circular, in accordance with article 2.1 of the Articles of
Associations.
|
Risk Overview
Each Director is aware of the
risks inherent in the Company's business and understands the
importance of identifying, evaluating and monitoring these risks.
The Board has adopted procedures and controls to enable it to
manage these risks within acceptable limits and to meet its legal
and regulatory obligations.
The Board considers the process
for identifying, evaluating and managing any significant risks
faced by the Company on an ongoing basis and these risks are
reported and discussed at Board meetings. It ensures that effective
controls are in place to mitigate these risks and that a
satisfactory compliance regime exists to ensure all applicable
local and international laws and regulations are
upheld.
Risk appetite
Following the vote by Shareholders
for a managed wind-down of the Company on 15 September 2023, the
Board's updated strategic risk appetite is to balance the amount
distributed by the Company with the retention of a prudent cash
buffer to cover ongoing operating expenses. The Board considers
that the retention of a cash buffer sufficient to cover an
estimated two years of operating expenses is an appropriate amount.
Future distributions will be by way of dividend, in line with the
sustainable dividend policy which will continue to be communicated
to Shareholders, and by the redemption of shares.
When considering other risks, the
Board's risk appetite is effectively governed by a cost benefit
analysis while assessing mitigation measures. At all times, the
Company will seek to follow best practice and remain compliant with
all applicable laws, rules and regulations.
Statement on risk management and
internal controls
Board acknowledgements
|
Commentary
|
The Board is responsible for the
Company's risk management and internal control systems and for
reviewing their effectiveness.
|
Refer to below for a description
of risk management and internal controls.
|
The Board is responsible for the
ongoing process for identifying, evaluating and managing the
principal risks faced by the Company.
|
Refer to the section below for a
description of the principal risks faced by the Company and how the
Board assesses, monitors, measures and reports on those
risks.
|
The Board ensures the internal
control systems of its key service providers are regularly reviewed
and have been in place for the year under review and up to date of
this Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements.
|
As explained below, the Board
relies on the control environment of its key service providers and
reviews them on an ongoing basis. The Board also reviews the
performance of the Portfolio Adviser and its key service providers
on an annual basis, as outlined below.
|
Principal risks and
uncertainties
As recommended by the Risk
Committee, the Board has adopted a risk management framework to
govern how the Board identifies existing and emerging risks,
determines risk appetite, identifies mitigation and controls and
how the Board assesses, monitors, measures and reports on
risks.
The Board reviews risks at least
twice a year and receives deep-dive reports on specific risks as
recommended by the Risk Committee. Throughout the year under
review, the Board considered a set of sixteen main risks which have
a higher probability and a significant potential impact on
performance, strategy, reputation or operations (Category A risks).
Of these, the four risks identified below were considered the
principal risks faced by the Company where the combination of
probability and impact was assessed as being most significant. The
Board also considered fourteen other less significant existing or
emerging risks (Category B risks) which are monitored on a watch
list.
The Portfolio Adviser continues to
monitor the very small number of companies which the Company is
exposed to, that may be impacted by ongoing conflict between Russia
and Ukraine. Opportunities have been taken to trim the exposure, so
it is now negligible.
The global macro-economic
environment continued to experience high levels of inflation and
interest rates during much of 2023. More recently, macro-economic
conditions have seen falls in inflation with market expectations of
a peak in interest rates having been reached. The Portfolio Adviser
has focused on positioning the underlying portfolio appropriately.
The Portfolio Adviser has closely monitored these positions and
managed their risk accordingly. Refer to above for further details.
The Board has considered risks arising from the managed wind-down
in its risk assessment.
The commentary below describes the
factors affecting each of the principal risks during the
year.
Principal risk
|
|
Commentary
|
Investment performance
A key risk to the Company is
unsatisfactory investment performance due to an economic downturn
along with continued political uncertainty which could negatively
impact global credit markets and the risk reward characteristics
for CLO structuring. This could directly impact the performance of
the underlying CLOs that the Company invests in and it could also
result in a reduced number of suitable investment opportunities
and/or lower Shareholder demand.
|
|
2023: Unchanged probability,
stable impact.
During 2023, the Portfolio Adviser
reduced the Company's exposure to companies impacted by the ongoing
conflict between Russia and Ukraine to a non-material
level.
As inflation reduced in 2023,
credit demand improved in the final quarter of the year. Credit
quality was stable and rates were lower, offering refinance
opportunities with strong demand for CLOs in the second half of
2023. The Portfolio Adviser continued to actively manage the CLO
portfolios to orientate them for this environment.
The Board takes comfort from the
pedigree and resources of BXCI as Portfolio Adviser and its ability
to trade and manage risk in the portfolios in changing market
conditions.
See comments from the Portfolio
Adviser on Risk Management above.
|
Share price discount to Published NAV per redeemable
share[28]
The price of the Company's shares
may trade at a discount relative to the underlying NAV of the
shares.
This can be for a number of
reasons, including the inherent lack of liquidity in the underlying
investments and the shares, relatively poor investment performance
compared to peers and/or market perceptions of the inherent value
of the Company's portfolio.
|
|
2023: Increased probability,
stable impact.
The discount on the Published NAV
moved out to the 35% to 39% range and did not recover as
macro-economic concerns and general widening of discounts of closed
end investment companies continued. Structured finance investment
company share prices under-performed other investment company
sectors.
Following the Shareholder
Consultation, the Board recommended a managed wind-down of the
Company and return of shareholder capital to address the persistent
NAV discount. Shareholders voted in favour of the resolution set
out in the Circular.
It is the Board's intention to
continue to make dividend distributions to Shareholders as well as
return of capital throughout the wind-down process.
|
Investment valuation
The investment in the Lux
Subsidiary is accounted for at fair value through profit or loss
and the investment in PPNs issued by BCF held by the Lux Subsidiary
are at fair value. Investments in BCF (the PPNs) are illiquid
investments, not traded on an active market and are valued using
valuation techniques determined by the Directors. Because the
underlying CLO investments held by BCF are held to maturity for
risk retention purposes, they are valued using a mark-to-model
methodology, described in the Company's Prospectus, based on
various assumptions.
The valuation of the Company's
investments requires significant judgement and there is a risk that
investments may be incorrectly valued due to calculation errors or
incorrect assumptions.
|
|
2023: Increased probability,
stable impact.
The Directors use their judgement,
with the assistance of the Portfolio Adviser, in selecting an
appropriate valuation technique and refer to techniques commonly
used by market practitioners. The Board of BCF likewise use their
judgement in determining the valuation of investments and
underlying CLOs and equity tranches retained by BCF. Independent
valuation service providers are involved in determining the fair
value of underlying CLOs.
In this volatile interest rate and
inflation environment, there is an increased risk that the
assumptions behind valuation models will misjudge the impact on the
economy, credit ratings and credit default which could cause
significant market repricing. In compliance with accounting
standards, the mark to market methodology of valuation is used for
financial reporting purposes in the Annual and Half Yearly
financial statements. This valuation methodology focuses on the
fair value between a willing buyer and a willing seller and
includes Market Colour. From April 2023, the mark to market
valuation has been provided quarterly with the mark to model
valuation to give Shareholders more information.
|
Operational
The Company has no employees,
systems or premises and is reliant on its Portfolio Adviser and
other service providers for the delivery of its investment
objective and strategy.
|
|
2023: Increased probability,
stable impact.
The risk has increased, due to
staff turnover at a key service provider. This continues to be
carefully monitored to ensure adequate service levels per service
level agreements.
The Company is also reliant on the
Portfolio Adviser function, failure of which could adversely affect
the viability of the Company.
|
Going concern
Following approval of Shareholders
to place the Company into managed wind-down on 15 September 2023,
the Directors consider that the use of the going concern basis in
preparing the financial statements of the Company is no longer
appropriate. As such, these financial statements have been prepared
on a basis other than going concern. Refer to Note 2.2 in the
'notes to the financial statements' for further details.
Viability statement
At least once a year the Directors
carry out a robust assessment of the principal
risks facing the Company, including those that would
threaten its business model, future performance, solvency and
liquidity. The Directors also assess the
Company's policies and procedures for monitoring, managing and
mitigating its exposure to these risks. In assessing
viability, the Directors have considered on an individual
basis, each of the principal risks of the Company as detailed above
along with the evolution of market, economic and political
conditions, the Company's current position, investment objective
and strategy and the performance of the Portfolio Adviser and hence
how these could impact the cash flows received by the Company from
its Lux Subsidiary and ultimately from BCF.
The Directors believe that the
principal risk most likely to impact viability is that relating to
investment performance. As explained above, the Company's
underlying investment exposure is to the investment portfolio of
BCF. BCF's portfolio comprises the following categories of
investments: (i) CLO Debt and CLO Income Notes securitised by BCF,
(ii) a portfolio of senior secured loans and bonds and (iii)
preference shares. The majority of CLO investments in the portfolio
have a non-call period of approximately two years from their
origination date and cannot be redeemed until these
expire.
The directors considered two
extreme market scenarios, which would
impact the cash flows derived from BCF's investments and have
assessed how these could impact the cash flows received by the
Company:
1.
Scenario 1 included
assumptions which mirrored the GFC, namely:
|
EUR CLOs
|
US CLOs
|
Prepayment rate
|
7.5% for first 2 years; 25%
thereafter
|
10% for first 2 years; 25%
thereafter
|
Constant default rate
|
2.0% for next 2 years
|
2.0% for next 2 years
|
Recovery rate
|
60% for next 2 years
|
60% for next 2 years
|
Recovery period
|
12 months from the day of
default
|
12 months from the day of
default
|
Re-investment price
|
90 for first 6 months; 95 for the
next year; 99.5 thereafter
|
90 for first 6 months; 95 for the
next year; 99.5 thereafter
|
CCC basket stress
|
10%
|
10%
|
·
CLO warehouses assume no cash flows for the first
three years, followed by 14% yield cash flows on 50% impaired
principal.
·
BCF's revolving facility is assumed to be fully
paid down reflecting the actual reduction in the facility in March
2024.
2.
Scenario 2 included
assumptions which incorporated severe spread stress,
namely:
|
EUR CLOs
|
US CLOs
|
Prepayment rate
|
40% for first 2 years; 25%
thereafter
|
40% for first 2 years; 25%
thereafter
|
Constant default rate
|
1.65%
|
1.65%
|
Recovery rate
|
60%
|
60%
|
Recovery period
|
12 months from the day of
default
|
12 months from the day of
default
|
Re-investment price
|
100 (with re-investment spread of
3.0% over SoFR)
|
100 (with re-investment spread of
2.90% over SoFR)
|
CCC basket stress
|
<7.5%[29]
|
<7.5%29
|
·
Assumes no adjustment to the 14% statically
yielding CLO warehouse cash flows.
·
BCF's revolving facility is assumed to be fully
paid down reflecting the actual reduction in the facility in March
2024.
The Directors also considered
other key risks, as outlined above and concluded that these risks
do not impact the resilience or sustainability of the Company's
business model. While each of these key risks could have an impact
on the long-term sustainability of the Company, the Directors
concluded that each was sufficiently mitigated and would therefore
not impact the viability of the Company over a five-year
period.
The Directors have assessed the
prospects of the Company over the five-year period to 30 April
2029 which the Directors have determined constitutes an
appropriate period to provide its viability statement. The
Directors regularly receive financial forecasts from the Portfolio
Adviser presented on a quarterly basis for at least the next four
to five years. The Directors believe that financial forecasts
to support its investment strategy can be subject to changes
dependent upon investment performance, deployment of capital and
regulatory, legal and tax developments for which the impact
beyond a five-year term is difficult to assess. In addition,
the extent to which macro-economic, political, social,
technological and regulatory changes beyond a five-year term may
have a plausible impact on the Company are difficult to
envisage.
The Directors continue to
regularly review the Company's dividend policy, but at present are
satisfied that the outcomes modelled by the Portfolio Adviser under
extreme market scenarios will allow the Company to generate
sufficient cash flow to meet the dividend policy and ensure that
the Company is able to meet its liabilities, as they fall due.
Should the Company need to take action to mitigate the threats to
viability, it will consider reduction in the dividend to ensure
continued viability.
On the basis of this assessment of
the principal risks facing the Company and the modelled
extreme market scenarios by the Portfolio Adviser used to assess
the Company's prospects and in the absence of any unforeseen
circumstances, the Directors confirm that they have a reasonable
expectation that the Company will be able to continue in operation
and meet its liabilities as they fall due over the five-year period
of their assessment. However, it is worth noting that there is no
intention for the life of the Company to be limited to this
five-year period.
Performance Analysis
IFRS NAV performance analysis for
the years ended 31 December 2023 and
31 December 2022 - contributors to change
[Graphs
and charts are included in the published Annual Report and Audited
Financial Statements which is available on the Company's website
at https://blackstone.com/bglf]
Published NAV performance
analysis for the years ended 31 December 2023 and
31 December 2022 - contributors to change
[Graphs
and charts are included in the published Annual Report and Audited
Financial Statements which is available on the Company's website
at https://blackstone.com/bglf]
Further commentary on the
Company's performance is contained in the Chair's Statement and the
Portfolio Adviser's Review.
Other Information
Valuation methodology
As noted above, the Published NAV
and the IFRS NAV may diverge because of different key assumptions
used to determine the valuation of the BCF portfolio. Key
assumptions which are different between the two bases as at 31
December 2023 and 31 December 2022 are detailed below:
Asset
|
Valuation methodology
|
Input
|
IFRS
NAV
|
Published
NAV
|
IFRS
NAV
|
Published
NAV
|
|
|
|
31 December
2023
|
31 December
2022
|
CLO securities
|
Discounted cash flows
|
Constant default
rate[30]
|
2.00%
|
2.00%
|
2.00%
|
2.00%
|
|
|
Constant prepayment
rate
|
25.00%
|
25.00%
|
20.00%
|
25.00%
|
|
|
Reinvestment spread (bp over
SOFR)
|
405.40
|
363.68
|
363.99
|
360.36
|
|
|
Recovery rate loans
|
65.00%
|
65.00%
|
65.00%
|
65.00%
|
|
|
Recovery lag (months)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
Discount rate
|
25.91%
|
15.00%
|
25.30%
|
15.00%
|
All of the assumptions above are
based on weighted averages.
The below table further explains
the rationale regarding the differences in the assumptions that
significantly contributed to the valuation divergence as at 31
December 2023:
Assumptions
|
IFRS NAV
|
Published NAV
|
Reinvestment spread
|
Largely weighted by a CLO's
current portfolio weighted average spread, which assumes that the
CLO investment manager will continue to reinvest in collateral with
a similar spread and rating composition to the existing collateral
pool. In addition, weighting may be given to primary loan spreads
to the extent current primary market opportunities suggest
different spreads than the existing portfolio.
|
Represents a normalised, long-term
view of loan spreads to be achieved over the life of the CLO's
remaining reinvestment period. Initially informed by the
underwriting model at issuance, the assumption is periodically
reviewed and updated to the extent of secular changes in loan
spreads.
|
Discount rate
|
Intended to reflect the market
required rate of return for similar securities and is informed by
market research, BWICs, market colour for comparable transactions
and dealer runs. The discount rate may vary based on underlying
loan prices, exposure to distressed assets or industries, manager
performance and time remaining in reinvestment period.
|
Based on the expected rate of
return for a newly originated CLO equity security on a hold to
maturity basis. The expected rate of return is based on a long-term
market average and is periodically reviewed and updated to the
extent of secular changes in the market.
|
Source of the Company's dividend
- ordinary class
The Company through its
investments in the Lux Subsidiary receives income, on a quarterly
basis, on the PPNs held by the latter in BCF, which continues to
generate positive cash flows from its CLO income note investments
and from its portfolio of directly held and warehoused
loans.
The Company redeems CSWs on a
quarterly basis to transfer the income from the Lux Subsidiary. As
detailed above, the Company redeemed 30,985,038 CSWs in the Lux
Subsidiary during the year with a fair value of €53,102,113 to fund
the quarterly dividends.
Alternative Investment Fund
Managers' Directive ("AIFMD")
The AIFMD requires certain
information to be made available to investors in AIFs before they
invest and requires that material changes to this information be
disclosed in the annual report of each AIF. There has been no
material changes (other than those reflected in these financial
statements) to this information requiring disclosure.
Alternative Performance Measures
("APMs")
In accordance with European
Securities and Markets Authority Guidelines on APMs, the Board has
considered which APMs are included in the Annual Report and Audited
Financial Statements and require further clarification. An APM is
defined as a financial measure of historical or future financial
performance, financial position or cash flows, other than a
financial measure defined or specified in the applicable financial
reporting framework. APMs included in the financial statements,
which are unaudited and outside the scope of IFRS, are detailed in
the table below:
|
Published NAV total return
per redeemable/ordinary share[31]
|
|
Published NAV per
redeemable/ordinary share31
|
|
Discount to Published NAV
per redeemable/ordinary share31
|
Definition
|
The increase in the Published NAV
per redeemable/ordinary share plus the total dividends paid per
redeemable / ordinary share during the period, with such dividends
paid being re-invested at NAV, as a percentage of the NAV per
redeemable/ordinary share as at period end.
|
|
Gross assets less liabilities
(including accrued but unpaid fees) determined in accordance with
the section entitled "Net Asset Value" in Part I of the Company's
Prospectus, divided by the number of redeemable/ ordinary shares at
the relevant time.
|
|
BGLF's closing share price on the
LSE less the Published NAV per redeemable/ordinary share as at the
period end, divided by the Published NAV per redeemable/ordinary
share as at that date.
|
Reason
|
NAV total return summarises the
Company's true growth over time while taking into account both
capital appreciation and dividend yield.
|
|
The Published NAV per
redeemable/ordinary share is an indicator of the intrinsic value of
the Company.
|
|
The discount or premium per
redeemable/ordinary share is a key indicator of the discrepancy
between the market value and the intrinsic value of the
Company.
|
Target
|
11%+
|
|
Not
applicable
|
|
Maximum
discount of 7.5%
|
Performance
|
|
|
|
|
|
2023
|
10.39%
|
|
0.9098
|
|
(35.15)%
|
2022
|
5.22%
|
|
0.9081
|
|
(26.77)%
|
2021
|
21.82%
|
|
0.9407
|
|
(15.75)%
|
2020
|
(0.22)%
|
|
0.8435
|
|
(20.57)%
|
2019
|
14.46%
|
|
0.9187
|
|
(10.20)%
|
A reconciliation of the
above-mentioned APMs to the most directly reconcilable line items
presented in the financial statements for the years ended 31
December 2023 and 31 December 2022 is presented below:
Published NAV total return per redeemable
share
|
31 December
2023
|
31 December
2022
|
Opening Published NAV per
ordinary share (A)
|
€0.9081
|
€0.9407
|
Adjustments per ordinary
share (B)
|
€(0.2297)
|
€(0.0253)
|
Opening IFRS NAV per
ordinary share (C=A+B)
|
€0.6784
|
€0.9154
|
|
|
|
Closing Published NAV per
redeemable share (D)
|
€0.9098
|
€0.9081
|
Adjustments per redeemable
share (E)
|
€(0.1848)
|
€(0.2297)
|
Closing IFRS NAV per
redeemable share (F=D+E)
|
€0.7250
|
€0.6784
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid during the
year (G)
|
€0.0875
|
€0.0800
|
|
|
|
Published NAV total return
per redeemable share (H=(D-A+G)/A)
|
9.82%
|
5.04%
|
Impact of dividend
re-investment (I)
|
0.57%
|
0.18%
|
Published NAV total return
per redeemable share with dividends re-invested
(J=H+I)
|
10.39%
|
5.22%
|
|
|
|
IFRS NAV total return per
redeemable share (K=(F-C+G)/C)
|
19.76%
|
(17.15)%
|
Impact of dividend
re-investment (L)
|
(2.00)%
|
(2.04)%
|
IFRS NAV total return per
redeemable share with dividends re-invested
(M=K+L)
|
17.76%
|
(19.19)%
|
Refer to Note 15 for further
details on the adjustments per redeemable share.
Published NAV per redeemable share
|
31 December
2023
|
31 December
2022
|
Published NAV per redeemable
share (A)
|
€0.9098
|
€0.9081
|
Adjustments per redeemable
share (B)
|
€(0.1848)
|
€(0.2297)
|
IFRS NAV per redeemable
share (C=A+B)
|
€0.7250
|
€0.6784
|
Refer to Note 15 for further
details on the adjustments per redeemable share.
Discount per redeemable share
|
31 December
2023
|
31 December
2022
|
Published NAV per redeemable
share (A)
|
€0.9098
|
€0.9081
|
Adjustments per redeemable
share (B)
|
€(0.1848)
|
€(0.2297)
|
IFRS NAV per redeemable
share (C=A+B)
|
€0.7250
|
€0.6784
|
|
|
|
Closing share price per the
LSE (D)
|
€0.5900
|
€0.6650
|
|
|
|
Discount to Published NAV
per redeemable share (E=(D-A)/A)
|
(35.15)%
|
(26.77)%
|
Discount to IFRS NAV per
redeemable share (F=(D-C)/C)
|
(18.62)%
|
(1.98)%
|
Refer to Note 15 for further details
on the adjustments per redeemable share.
Significant Events after the
Reporting Period
Dividends
On 23 January 2024, the Company
declared a dividend of €0.03 per redeemable share in respect of the
period from 1 October 2023 to 31 December 2023 with an ex-dividend
date of 1 February 2024. A total payment of €13,282,167 was
processed on 8 March 2024.
On 23 January 2024, the Board
announced a total 2024 annual dividend target of at least €0.09 per
redeemable share, which will consist of quarterly payments of
€0.0225 per redeemable share.
On 22 April 2024, the Company
declared a dividend of €0.0225 per redeemable share in respect of
the period from
1 January 2024 to 31 March 2024 with an ex-dividend date of 2 May
2024.
Outlook
It is the Board's intention that
the Company will pursue its new investment objective and investment
policy as detailed above, through an orderly managed wind-down of
the Company and return of cash to the Shareholders of the Company,
via redemption of shares while maintaining a sustainable dividend
payment. Further comments on the outlook for the Company for the
2024 financial year and the main trends and factors likely to
affects its future development, performance and position are
contained within the Chair's Statement and the Portfolio Adviser's
Review.
Related parties
There have been no material
changes to the nature of related party transactions. Refer to Note
18 for information on related party transaction.
The Directors appointed to the
Board as at the date of approval of this Annual Report and Audited
Financial Statements are:
Steven Wilderspin,
FCA[32], IMC
Position: Chair of the Board and the Management and Engagement
Committee (non-executive and independent director, resident in
Jersey)
Date of appointment:
11 August 2017
Mr Steven Wilderspin, a qualified
Chartered Accountant, has been the Principal of Wilderspin
Independent Governance, which provides independent directorship
services, since 2007. He has served on a number of private equity,
property and hedge fund boards as well as commercial
companies.
Mr Steven Wilderspin is a director
of FTSE 250 GCP Infrastructure Investments Ltd, a director of FTSE
250 HarbourVest Global Private Equity Limited and a director of
Phoenix Spree Deutschland Limited. Mr Steven Wilderspin previously
served as the Chairman of the Audit and Risk Committee of FTSE 250
3i Infrastructure plc.
From 2001 until 2007, Mr Steven
Wilderspin was a director of fund administrator Maples Finance
Jersey Limited where he was responsible for fund and securitisation
structures. Before that, from 1997, Mr Steven Wilderspin was Head
of Accounting at Perpetual Fund Management (Jersey)
Limited.
Mr Steven Wilderspin has
significant listed corporate governance experience, so is well
placed to lead the Board.
Mark Moffat
Position: Chair of the NAV Review Committee (Non-executive and senior independent director, resident in
UK)
Date of appointment:
8 January 2019
Mr Mark Moffat has been involved
in structuring, managing and investing in CLOs for over 20 years.
Mr Mark Moffat left GSO Capital Partners LP, part of the credit
businesses of The Blackstone Group L.P., in April 2015 to pursue
other interests.
Whilst at GSO Capital Partners LP
, Mr Mark Moffat was a senior managing director and the portfolio
manager responsible for investing in structured credit and co-head
of the European activities of the Customised Credit Strategies
division.
Mr Mark Moffat joined GSO Capital
Partners LP in January 2012 following the acquisition by GSO
Capital Partners LP of Harbourmaster Capital Management
Limited where he was co-head. Prior to joining Harbourmaster in
2007, Mr Mark Moffat was head of European debt and equity capital
markets and the European CLO business of Bear Stearns. At Bear
Stearns, Mr Mark Moffat was responsible for the origination,
structuring and execution of CLOs in Europe over a seven-year
period. Prior to Bear Stearns, Mr Mark Moffat was global head of
CLOs at ABN AMRO and a director in the principal finance team of
Greenwich NatWest.
With over 20 years of experience
structuring, managing and investing in CLOs, Mr Mark Moffat brings
a deep knowledge of how CLO structures and markets perform over the
credit cycle.
Giles Adu, CAIA
Position: Chair of the Risk Committee and the Remuneration and
Nomination Committee (non-executive and independent director,
resident in Jersey)
Date of
appointment: 26 July 2023
Mr Giles Adu has over 25 years'
experience in financial markets and real estate investment across
fixed-income sales and trading, AIF structuring, capital raising
and property investment, structuring and financing. He is
currently the Co-Founder and Investment Director of a commercial
property fund and has previously held several senior advisory roles
in fixed-income and debt capital management in investment banks,
such as BNP Paribas and Credit Agricole, before launching an AIF
advisory business.
Mr Giles Adu has held several
non-executive director positions such as Emerging Markets
International Fund ICC and Candela Investment Fund and has many
years' experience of fund structuring, governance and fundraising.
Additionally, Mr Giles Adu holds an MSc in Financial Economics and
a BA in Economics and is a Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst
Charterholder.
Belinda Crosby, FCA[33], FCSI
Position: Chair of the Audit Committee and responsible for ESG matters
of the Company (non-executive and independent director, resident in
Jersey)
Date of appointment:
24 August 2023
Ms Belinda Crosby is a chartered
accountant and independent non-executive director with extensive
experience in the management, governance and compliance
requirements of commercial real estate, debt and private equity
funds and investment structures. She has over 25 years' experience
in Jersey's financial services industry and is currently the Chair
of the Audit and Risk Committee of the States of Jersey Development
Company Limited. Ms Belinda Crosby has held a range of board and
regulated key person positions and previously managed a highly
respected regulated Jersey fund services business for over 10
years. Her experience includes the managed wind-down of mature
funds and 'end-of-life' fund structuring.
Ms Belinda Crosby holds a BA in
History and is a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants
in England and Wales and a Chartered Fellow of the Chartered
Institute for Securities and Investments.
The Directors present the Annual
Report and Audited Financial Statements for the Company for the
year ended
31 December 2023.
DIRECTORS' REPORT
Directors
The Directors of the Company on
the date the financial statements were approved are listed
above.
Ms Charlotte Valeur and Mr Gary
Clark did not stand for re-election at the AGM of the Company held
on 26 July 2023 and have retired from the Board. Mr Giles Adu was
appointed as a Director at a Board meeting held after the AGM on 26
July 2023.
Following Ms Charlotte Valeur's
retirement, Mr Steven Wilderspin has been appointed Chair of the
Board and Chair of the Management Engagement Committee. Mr Giles
Adu has replaced Mr Steven Wilderspin as Chair of the Risk
Committee and Mr Gary Clark as Chair of the Remuneration and
Nomination Committee. Mr Mark Moffat has replaced Mr Gary Clark as
Chair of the NAV Review Committee and as Senior Independent
Director.
Ms Heather MacCallum resigned from
the Board on 30 September 2023. In advance of this date, the Board
conducted a recruitment exercise and have appointed Ms Belinda
Crosby as a Director, effective 24 August 2023. Ms Belinda Crosby
succeeded Ms Heather MacCallum as Chair of the Audit
Committee.
The Board thanks Ms Charlotte
Valeur, Mr Gary Clark and Ms Heather MacCallum for their time of
service on the Board of the Company.
The Board and
employees
The Board currently comprises
three male Directors and one female Director. The Company has no
employees; therefore, there is nothing further to report in respect
of gender representation within the Company.
Full details of the Company's
policy on 'Board diversity' can be found in the Corporate
Governance Report below.
Share capital
The Company's share capital
consists of an unlimited number of shares.
On 11 December 2023, in accordance
with the ordinary resolution passed by Shareholders on 15 September
2023, all ordinary shares in issue were converted to redeemable
shares and 1 deferred share in the Company was issued. On 21
December 2023, the Company cancelled all of the redeemable shares
it held in treasury, being 40,163,891.
As at 31 December 2023, the
Company had 442,738,903 redeemable shares in issue and 1 deferred
share. As at 31 December 2022, the Company had 444,578,522 ordinary
shares in issue and 38,324,272 ordinary shares in
treasury.
Share Repurchase
Programme
At the 2023 AGM held on 26 July
2023 (2022 AGM held on 17 June 2022), the Directors were granted
authority to repurchase up to 14.99% (2022: 14.99%) of the issued
share capital as at the date of the 2023 AGM (2022 AGM) for
cancellation or to be held as treasury shares.
Under this authority, during the
year ended 31 December 2023, the Company purchased 1,839,619 (2022:
16,406,180) of its ordinary shares of no par value at a total cost
of €1,230,663, including transaction costs of £2,471 (2022: a total
cost of €11,502,021, including transaction costs of €23,095). These
ordinary shares were held as treasury shares until they were
cancelled on 21 December 2023.
On 22 May 2023, the Board decided
to cease any buy back of shares. Since then, the Company has not
undertaken any share repurchases.
Authority to allot
At the 2023 AGM, the Directors
were granted authority to allot, grant options over or otherwise
dispose of up to 44,273,890 ordinary shares (being equal to 10% of
the shares in issue at the date of the AGM). This authority will
expire at the 2024 AGM.
Shareholders'
interests
As at 31 December 2023, the
Company had been notified, in accordance with Chapter 5 of the
Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules (which covers the
acquisition and disposal of major shareholdings and voting rights),
of the following Shareholders with an interest of greater than 5%
in the Company's issued share capital:
Shareholder
|
Date
notified
|
Number of voting rights
notified to the Company
|
Percentage of
voting
rights as per
notification
|
BlackRock Inc
|
8
January 2020
|
109,488,727
|
22.78%
|
Quilter plc
|
1
February 2023
|
87,305,931
|
19.71%
|
Blackstone Treasury Asia Pte
Ltd
|
9
January 2020
|
43,000,000
|
8.95%
|
Border to Coast Pensions
Partnership
|
16
January 2023
|
24,000,000
|
5.36%
|
No TR1 Notifications were received
post the year-end.
Statement of disclosure of
information to the auditor
The Directors who held office as
at the date of approval of this Directors' Report confirm that, so
far as they are each aware, there is no relevant audit information
of which the Company's auditor is unaware and that they have taken
the steps that they ought to have taken as Directors to make
themselves aware of any relevant audit information and to establish
that the Company's auditor is aware of that information.
Financial risk
management
The Company is exposed to market
risk (including interest rate risk, currency risk and price risk),
credit risk and liquidity risk arising from the financial
instruments it holds and the markets in which it invests. Refer to
Note 9 for further details.
Modern slavery
The Company would not fall into
the scope of the UK Modern Slavery Act 2015 (as the Company does
not have any turnover derived from goods and services) if it was
incorporated in the UK. As a closed-ended investment company, the
Company has no employees and its supply chain is considered to be
low risk given that suppliers are typically professional advisers
based in the Channel Islands, Ireland or the UK. Based on these
factors, the Board has considered that it is not necessary for the
Company to make a slavery and human trafficking
statement.
Steven Wilderspin
Director
26 April 2024
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
REPORT
Statement of compliance with
corporate governance
The Board of the Company has
considered the Principles and Provisions of the AIC Code. The AIC
Code addresses the Principles and Provisions set out in the UK
Code, as well as setting out additional Provisions on issues that
are of specific relevance to the Company, as an investment
company.
The Board considers that reporting
against the Principles and Provisions of the AIC Code, which has
been endorsed by the FRC and supported by the JFSC provides more
relevant information to
Shareholders.
The Company has complied with the
Principles and Provisions of the AIC Code as they apply to the
Company.
The AIC Code is available on the
AIC website (www.theaic.co.uk). It includes an explanation of how the AIC Code adapts the
Principles and Provisions set out in the UK Code to make them
relevant for investment companies.
The Board
The Board consists of four
non-executive directors. Their biographies can be found
above.
The Board meets at least four
times a year and is in regular contact with the Portfolio Adviser, the Portfolio
Manager, the Administrator and the Company Secretary. The Board is
supplied with information in a timely manner from the
Portfolio Adviser,
Portfolio Manager, the Company Secretary and other advisers in
a form and of a quality appropriate for it to be able to
discharge its duties.
Board apprentices
The Board participates in the
Board apprentice scheme and took on a Board apprentice during
2023. The Board considers this a valuable exercise in
mentoring already accomplished individuals to be future directors,
fostering equality and developing board culture.
Duties and
responsibilities
The Board has overall
responsibility for maximising the Company's success by directing
and supervising the affairs of the Company and meeting the
appropriate interests of Shareholders and relevant stakeholders,
while enhancing the value of the Company and also ensuring the
protection of investors. A summary of the Board's responsibilities
is as follows:
· statutory obligations and public disclosure;
· strategic matters and financial reporting;
· risk assessment and management including reporting,
compliance, governance, monitoring and control; and
· other matters having a material effect on the
Company.
The Board is responsible to
Shareholders for the overall management of the Company. The Board
has delegated certain operational activities of the Company to
the Portfolio Adviser, Administrator and Company Secretary. The Board
reserves the power of decisions relating to the determination of
investment policy, the approval of changes in strategy, capital
structure, statutory obligations and public disclosure and the
entering into any material contracts by the Company.
Board attendance
The following table shows the
number of meetings held by the Board and each committee for the
year ended 31 December 2023, as well as the Directors' and
Committee Members' attendance, as a percentage of the number of
meetings each Director was eligible to attend.
Meeting
|
Total
|
Charlotte
Valeur
|
Gary
Clark
|
Steven
Wilderspin
|
Heather
MacCallum
|
Mark
Moffat
|
Giles
Adu
|
Belinda
Crosby
|
Quarterly Board
|
4
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
Ad Hoc Board
|
17
|
80%
|
80%
|
100%
|
93%
|
94%
|
86%
|
100%
|
Audit Committee
|
5
|
N/A
|
67%
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
50%
|
100%
|
Management Engagement
Committee
|
1
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
100%
|
N/A
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
NAV Review Committee
|
12
|
N/A
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
92%
|
100%
|
100%
|
Remuneration and Nomination
Committee
|
6
|
75%
|
75%
|
100%
|
100%
|
83%
|
100%
|
100%
|
Risk Committee
|
4
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
100%
|
Inside Information
Committee[34]
|
0
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Chair
The Chair is responsible for
leadership of the Board, ensuring its effectiveness on all aspects
of its role and setting its agenda. The Chair is also responsible
for ensuring that the Directors receive accurate, timely and clear
information and for effective communication with
Shareholders.
Senior Independent
Director
The principal role of the Senior
Independent Director ("SID") is to support the Chair in their role
and to act as an intermediary for Shareholders or the other
directors with concerns which contact through the normal channels
of the Chair has failed to resolve. The SID leads the other
directors in the oversight of the Chair and is responsible for
ensuring an orderly succession process for the Chair, with the
Nomination Committee.
Board independence
For the purpose of assessing
compliance with principle G, provisions 10 and 13 of the AIC Code,
the Board considers all of the Directors to be
independent.
The Directors consider that there
are no factors, as set out in provision 13 in the AIC Code, which
compromise the Directors' independence and that all Directors
contribute comprehensively to the affairs of the Company. The Board
reviews the independence of all Directors annually. The Company
Secretary acts as secretary to the Board and Committees and in
doing so, assists the Chair in ensuring that all Directors have
full and timely access to all relevant documentation, organises
induction of new Directors, is responsible for ensuring that the
correct Board procedures are followed and advises the Board on
corporate governance matters.
Board evaluation
During 2023, the Board conducted
an internal evaluation to assess and report on the Directors
effectiveness both individually and collectively and ensure the
appropriate skills were present.
The methodology was for the Board
to complete an initial questionnaire before meeting with the Chair
to discuss it and other follow-on questions.
The evaluation considered guidance
outlined in the AIC Code, with account taken of other best practice
guidance. The evaluation consisted predominantly of creation,
issuance and collation of survey question responses, interviews
with the Directors of the Company and key representatives of the
Company's service providers and observation of Board and Committee
meetings. The results of the board evaluation were positive
and a number of limited recommendations were made to further
enhance the good governance of the Company. The recommendations
have formed a part of the Board's rolling action plan.
Committees of the
Board
The Board has established six
committees: an Audit Committee, a Management Engagement Committee,
a NAV Review Committee, a Remuneration and Nomination Committee, a
Risk Committee and an Inside Information Committee. Each committee
has formally delegated duties and responsibilities within written
terms of reference. These are available on the Company's
website, blackstone.com/bglf, under "Terms of Reference".
The current committee memberships
are detailed below.
Audit Committee
The Audit Committee comprises all Directors, except Mr Steven
Wilderspin and is chaired by Ms Belinda Crosby.
The terms of reference state that
the Audit Committee will meet not less than three times a year and
will meet with the Auditor at least once a year. The report on the
role and activities of this committee and its relationship with the
Auditor is included in the Audit Committee Report below.
Management Engagement
Committee
The Management Engagement Committee comprises all Directors
and is chaired by Mr Steven Wilderspin.
The terms of reference state that
the Management Engagement Committee shall meet at least once a
year; will have responsibility for monitoring and reviewing
the Portfolio Adviser's and other service providers' performance and will
recommend to the Board whether the continued appointment of
the Portfolio Adviser and other service providers is in the best interests
of the Company and Shareholders.
NAV Review Committee
The NAV Review Committee comprises all Directors, except Mr
Steven Wilderspin and is chaired by Mr Mark
Moffat.
The terms of reference state that
the NAV Review Committee shall meet at least once a month to review
and consider the Company's NAV calculation, fact sheet and related
stock exchange announcement(s).
Remuneration and Nomination
Committee
The Remuneration and Nomination Committee comprises all
Directors and is chaired by Mr Giles Adu.
The terms of reference state that
the Remuneration and Nomination Committee will meet not less than
twice a year and shall be responsible for all aspects of the
appointment and remuneration of Directors. The remuneration duties
of the committee include determining and agreeing with the Board
the framework or broad policy for the remuneration of the Directors
and to review its ongoing appropriateness and relevance.
The nomination duties of the
committee include regularly reviewing the structure, size and
composition of the Board, including the balance of skills,
experience, independence and knowledge, as well as identifying,
nominating and recommending for the approval of the Board,
candidates to fill Board vacancies as they arise.
Director Re-Election and Tenure
The Remuneration and Nomination
Committee and the Board are committed to striking the correct
balance between the benefits of continuity and benefits that come
from the introduction of new perspectives to the Board.
It is the intention of the Board
that each Director will retire after no longer than nine years in
his/her role and the Board has adopted a policy whereby all
Directors will be put up for re-election every year in line with
the AIC Code. Each of the Directors has
demonstrated a strong commitment to the Company and the Board
believes each Director's re-election to be in the best interests of
the Company. Accordingly, all current Directors will be put forward
for re-election at the forthcoming AGM.
Board succession
The Board maintains a succession
planning matrix covering the Directors' skills, the Board's
diversity and the Directors' expected year of retirement should
they hold office for nine years. The matrix is used by the
Remuneration and Nomination Committee to identify any additional
skills that would benefit the Board and to help the Remuneration
and Nomination Committee establish when to begin recruiting for any
new directors. The Board also keeps its diversity under
review.
In anticipation of the retirement
of Ms Charlotte Valeur and Mr Gary Clark, the Committee commenced a
recruitment process in October 2022 with the intention to identify
candidates for Board succession in 2023. The Board engaged Nurole,
an external market leading recruiter to manage the
process.
In association with this process,
the Board concluded it to be in the best interests of the Company
to appoint an existing director to the role of Chair. The Board
also concluded it to be in the best interests of the Company to
reduce the number of Directors from five to four following the AGM
in 2023. In a Remuneration and Nomination Committee meeting
held on 27 April 2023, Mr Steven Wilderspin was recommended to the
Board as the new Chair following the AGM in 2023. At a Board
meeting held on the same date, the Board approved the
recommendation of the Remuneration and Nomination
Committee.
Through a proper and thorough
process Mr Giles Adu was appointed as a Director of the Company
following the AGM, on 26 July 2023.
In the second half of 2023, Ms
Heather MacCallum informed the Board of her intention to step down
from the Board. The Board engaged Thomas and Dessain, a
specialist Jersey recruitment consultant, to identify candidates
for the replacement of Ms Heather MacCallum as Director and Chair
of the Audit Committee. In advance of Ms Heather MacCallum's
resignation from the Board on 30 September 2023 and following a
proper and thorough process Ms Belinda Crosby was appointed on 24
August 2024.
Nurole and Thomas and Dessain had
no other connections to the Company or any individual Director. The
recruitment processes focused not only on the qualifications of
each candidate but also on each candidate's independence and
ensuring the no appointment would create conflicts of interest.
Overall, the Board was impressed with the quality and calibre of
all of the candidates and have passed on its thanks to all of those
who participated in the process.
Risk Committee
The Risk Committee comprises all Directors and is chaired by
Mr Giles Adu.
The terms of reference state that
the Risk Committee shall meet at least two times a year. The
activities of this committee are outlined in the Risk Committee
Report below.
Inside Information
Committee
The Inside Information Committee comprises any two members of
the Board.
The Inside Information Committee
is responsible for considering whether anything brought to its
attention constitutes inside information and monitoring the
disclosure and control of such information. The Committee meets on
an ad-hoc basis when required.
Board Diversity
The Board believes in and values
the importance of a broad range of skills, experience and
diversity, including gender and cultural or ethnic background, all
of which are considered when determining the optimum composition of
the Board. Board appointments are based on merit as well as being
an appropriate fit for the Company.
While made up of five Directors,
the Board had a policy aim to have a minimum of 40% of either
gender represented on the Board while also recognising the
importance of inclusivity and ethnic diversity. The Board
remained cognisant of this policy aim when considering the new
appointments. With the reduced number of Directors, the Board was
satisfied that when balancing the quality and calibre of the
candidates with the needs of the Board, the increased ethnic
diversity achieved was a successful outcome while accepting the
reduced gender diversity.
The below tables set out the
Board's composition as at 31 December 2023 in terms of gender
identity and ethnic background. The below text compares this
against the targets prescribed by Listing Rule 9.8.6R (9)(a). In
accordance with Listing Rule 9.8.6R (9), (10) and (11), the Board
has provided the following information in relation to its
diversity. This information has been collected by self-disclosure
directly from the individuals concerned who were asked to confirm
their gender and ethnicity.
|
Number of Board members
|
Percentage of the
Board
|
Senior positions on the Board (CEO, CFO, SID
and
Chair)[35]
|
Men
|
3
|
75%
|
Steven Wilderspin - Chair of
the Board
Mark Moffat -Chair of the NAV
Review Committee and Senior Independent Director
Giles Adu - Chair of the Risk
Committee and the Remuneration and Nomination Committee
|
Women
|
1
|
25%
|
Belinda Crosby - Chair of the
Audit Committee
|
Not specified/prefer not
to say
|
Nil
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
|
Number of Board members
|
Percentage of the
Board
|
Senior positions on the Board (CEO, CFO, SID
and
Chair)35
|
White British or other White (including minority-white
groups)
|
3
|
75%
|
Steven Wilderspin - Chair of
the Board
Mark Moffat -Chair of the NAV
Review Committee and Senior Independent Director
Belinda Crosby - Chair of the
Audit Committee
|
Mixed/Multiple Ethnic Groups
|
Nil
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Asian/Asian British
|
Nil
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Black/African/Caribbean/Black British
|
1
|
25%
|
Giles Adu - Chair of the Risk
Committee and the Remuneration and Nomination Committee
|
Other ethnic group, including Arab
|
Nil
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Not specified/ prefer not to say
|
Nil
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Internal controls
The Board has applied "principle
O" of the AIC Code by establishing a continuous process for
identifying, evaluating and managing the principal risks that the
Company faces. The Board is responsible for the Company's system of
internal controls and for reviewing its effectiveness. Such a
system is designed to manage rather than eliminate the risk of
failure to achieve business objectives and can only provide
reasonable and not absolute assurance against material misstatement
or loss.
The Board obtains comfort that the
controls environment is effective in a number of ways. It receives
and reviews independent reports regarding the control environments
of key service providers Blackstone (Portfolio Adviser), BNP
Paribas S.A. (Company Secretary and Depositary) and Link
(Registrar). The auditor reports on any control findings from the
audit and regular compliance reports are received from the
Company's compliance officer. The Board also carries out annual due
diligence visits to the Portfolio Adviser in Dublin to discuss
amongst other matters, controls, risk, compliance and
valuations.
The Audit Committee assists the
Board in discharging its monitoring responsibilities. During the
course of the Board's review of the system of internal controls, it
has not identified nor been advised of any failings or weaknesses
which it has determined to be significant. Therefore, no
confirmation in respect of necessary actions has been
made.
The Directors clearly define the
duties and responsibilities of their agents and advisers, whose
appointments are made after due consideration and monitor their
ongoing performance, which is done with the assistance of the
Management Engagement Committee. All of the Company's agents and
advisers maintain their own systems of internal control on which
they report to the Board. These systems are designed to ensure
effectiveness and efficient operation, internal control and
compliance with laws and regulations. In establishing the systems
of internal control, regard is paid to the materiality of relevant
risks, the likelihood of costs being incurred and the costs of
control. It follows, therefore, that the systems of internal
control can only provide reasonable but not absolute assurance
against the risk of material misstatement or loss.
The Directors are satisfied that
the continued appointment of the relevant service providers is in
the best interests of the Shareholders.
The Board has reviewed the need
for an internal audit function and has decided that the systems and
procedures employed by the Administrator and Portfolio Adviser, including their
own internal controls and procedures, provide sufficient assurance
that a sound system of risk management and internal control, to
safeguard the Shareholders' investment and the Company's assets, is
maintained. An internal audit function specific to the Company is
therefore considered unnecessary. Full details are set out in the
Audit Committee Report below.
The Company has appointed Singer
Capital Markets and Winterflood Investment Trusts as its joint
Brokers. Together with the Brokers, the Portfolio Adviser assists
the Board in communicating with and understanding the views of the
Company's Shareholders.
RISK COMMITTEE REPORT
Membership
The Risk Committee comprises Mr
Giles Adu (Chair), Mr Steven Wilderspin, Mr Mark Moffat and Ms
Belinda Crosby.
Key objectives
The Risk Committee has been
established to assist the Board in its oversight of risk through
ensuring the Company maintains a high standard of risk
identification, monitoring and management to minimise investment
risks and any other risks not covered by the Audit
Committee.
Responsibilities
The Risk Committee's key
responsibilities are:
· ensuring the Company's compliance with its investment
objective, policies, restrictions and borrowing limits;
· ensuring that appropriate policies and reporting exists for
the monitoring of the Company's key risks;
· developing and maintaining a risk register documenting
identified risks, their mitigants, likelihood and impact, which is
reviewed regularly by the Board with action points and newly
identified risks being appropriately dealt with;
· defining risk review activities regarding investment
decisions, transactions and exposures for approval by the Board;
and
· ensuring due regard is given to all regulations, codes and
laws that the Company is subject to.
Committee meetings
In 2023, the Risk Committee met on
four occasions. The specific areas of
focus for the Committee during the year included:
· Strategy
- This was the major item for discussion during
the year. The Committee considered and discussed the potential
additional risk exposure that a managed wind-down would create for
the Company as well as establishing a new level of risk
appetite.
· Shareholder
value - Discussion of managing
potential dissonance in shareholder preferences and expectations of
capital return.
· Key service
providers - Focus on additional
risks to the Company from reliance on the Portfolio Adviser in the
wind-down environment, specially to ensure continued alignment of
interests and/or management and mitigation of identified conflicts
of interest.
Risk monitoring
Being internally managed, the
Company is responsible for both portfolio and risk management.
However, due to the nature of the investment and the limited
ability to look through, traditional market and credit risk
techniques do not apply at the Company level. That said, the Board
engages, annually and as required, with the board of BCF and
discusses with them key areas of risk.
Investment risk management and
monitoring, to ensure the successful pursuance of our investment
objective, is therefore mainly through the Company's monthly NAV
reporting process and the monitoring of investment restrictions and
eligibility criteria as carried out by the Depositary.
Giles Adu
Risk Committee Chair
26 April 2024
DIRECTORS' REMUNERATION
REPORT
Directors'
remuneration
This report provides relevant
information in respect of the Directors' remuneration.
Table of Directors' Remuneration
Component
|
Director
|
Fee
entitlement
for the
year
ended 31
December
2023
|
Fee
entitlement
for the
year
ended 31 December
2022
|
Purpose of
reward
|
|
|
£
|
£
|
|
Annual
base
fee
|
All
Directors
|
36,750
|
36,750
|
For
commitments
as
non-executive
Directors
|
Additional annual fee
|
Chair of Board
Chair of Audit
Committee
Chair of NAV Review
Committee
Chair of Management Engagement
Committee
Chair of Risk Committee
Chair of
Remuneration and Nomination Committee
Senior Independent
Director
Members of the NAV
Committee
Responsibility for ESG
|
18,750
11,500
8,000
6,500
6,500
3,000
2,000
2,000
2,000
|
18,750
11,500
8,000
6,500
6,500
-
2,000
2,000
-
|
For
additional responsibilities and
time
commitment
|
On 21 August 2023, the
Remuneration and Nomination Committee reviewed the fee structure to
ensure that there is a fee for every role that bears responsibility
or a particular time commitment. It was agreed to allocate a fee of
£2,000 for the ESG responsibility, which has been now taken over by
Ms Belinda Crosby and £3,000 to the Chair of Remuneration and
Nomination Committee which has now been taken over by Mr Giles
Adu.
The tables below outlines the
remuneration the Directors were entitled to:
|
Total fixed
remuneration
for the year ended
31 December 2023
|
Total fixed
remuneration
for the year ended
31 December 2022
|
|
£
|
£
|
Charlotte
Valeur[36]
|
35,380
|
62,000
|
Gary Clark36
|
26,678
|
46,750
|
Heather
MacCallum[37]
|
37,688
|
50,250
|
Steven Wilderspin
|
52,487
|
45,250
|
Mark Moffat
|
42,207
|
38,750
|
Giles Adu[38]
|
20,847
|
-
|
Belinda Crosby[39]
|
17,270
|
-
|
Total Directors' remuneration
|
232,557
|
243,000
|
Total Directors' remuneration (€)
|
268,835
|
281,337
|
Directors' remuneration is payable
in Sterling quarterly in arrears. No other remuneration (fixed or
variable) or compensation was paid or is payable by the Company
during the year to any of the Directors. There has been no change
to the Company's remuneration policy.
The Company has no employees,
accordingly, there is no difference in policy on the remuneration
of Directors and the remuneration of employees. No Director is
entitled to receive any remuneration which is
performance-related.
The Remuneration and Nomination
Committee reviews the Remuneration Policy and Directors'
remuneration on an annual basis.
New fee proposal
The Directors' remuneration was
last independently reviewed by Mercer Consulting in March 2020 and
the base fee was then set at £36,750 per annum. In January 2024,
the Remuneration and Nomination Committee engaged Fletcher Jones, a
highly experienced recruiter and consultant, to conduct an
independent review to consider whether the remuneration was still
an appropriate level in 2024.
In a Remuneration and Nomination
Committee held on 26 April 2024, the Committee considered the
report submitted by Fletcher Jones with its findings and
recommendations and resolved that the base fee be increased from
£36,750 to £40,750 per annum (to align more closely with peer
funds) with effect from 1 August 2024, taking total Directors'
remuneration to £225,250 per annum. While the Board continues to be
mindful of the Company's total costs and expenses, the Committee
also noted that there had been an increase in each Director's
workload due to the reduction of the Board from five to four
Directors. This proposal provides an overall decrease in the total
Directors' remuneration compared to previous years given the
reduction in the size of the Board and will remain below the limit
of £300,000 per annum as set out in the Company's Articles of
Association.
Remuneration policy
Directors' fees are determined by
the Remuneration and Nomination Committee under the terms of the
remuneration policy (the "Remuneration Policy") approved on 3
November 2021, as derived from the Company's Articles of
Association. The Remuneration and Nomination Committee also
considers the remuneration levels of similar companies and consults
external remuneration consultants where this is deemed appropriate.
No external remuneration consultants were engaged during the
year.
The Remuneration and Nomination
Committee consists of all Directors and is involved in deciding
Directors' remuneration and ensuring that remuneration received
reflects the Directors' duties, responsibilities and the value of
their time.
The Company does not provide
pensions or other retirement or superannuation benefits, death or
disability benefits or other allowances or gratuities to the
Directors or specified connected parties. The Remuneration Policy
also prohibits payments to a Director for loss of office or as
consideration for or in connection with, his or her retirement from
office. Whilst the Remuneration Policy permits part of their fee to
be paid in the form of fully-paid up shares in the capital of the
Company, the Directors' fees are not currently paid this
way.
In addition, the Remuneration
Policy allows for reasonable travel, hotel and other expenses
incurred by the Directors in the course of performing their duties
or from their performance of a special service on behalf of the
Company.
The limit for the aggregate fees
payable to the Directors is £300,000 per annum.
Directors' interests
The Directors held the following
number of redeemable shares in the Company as at the
year-end:
|
Total number of redeemable
shares as at 31 December 2023
|
Total number of ordinary
shares as at
31 December
2022
|
Steven Wilderspin
|
20,000
|
20,000
|
Mark Moffat
|
771,593
|
771,593
|
Giles Adu
|
-
|
-
|
Belinda Crosby
|
-
|
-
|
Charlotte
Valeur[40]
|
11,500
|
11,500
|
Gary Clark40
|
168,200
|
168,200
|
Heather
MacCallum[41]
|
-
|
-
|
On 9 January 2023, Mr Mark Moffat
disposed of 29,799 shares in the Company, held in his Stocks &
Shares Individual Savings Account and simultaneously acquired
29,799 shares in the Company, via his Fund & Share
Account.
There has been no other changes to
the Directors' interests as at the date of the approval of these
financial statements.
Service contracts and policy on
payment of loss of office
No Director has a service contract
with the Company. The Directors have each entered into a letter of
engagement with the Company setting out the terms of their
appointment. Directors' appointments may be terminated at any time
by giving three month's written notice, with no compensation
payable upon leaving office for whatever reason.
Giles Adu
Remuneration and Nomination Committee Chair
26 April 2024
AUDIT COMMITTEE
REPORT
Audit Committee
The Audit Committee comprises Ms
Belinda Crosby (Chair), Mr Mark Moffat and Mr Giles Adu. Ms Belinda
Crosby has recent and relevant financial experience in accounting
and auditing and the Audit Committee as a whole has competence
relevant to the sector in which the Company operates.
In addition to formal meetings,
the Audit Committee has worked with the Portfolio Adviser and Auditor to
assess the operations and controls of BCF and to assess in
particular what reliance the Audit Committee can place on the
control environment. The Chair has also had a number of discussions
with the Auditor, the Portfolio
Adviser and the Administrator around the annual
audit and half year financial reporting processes.
Role of the Audit
Committee
The function of the Audit
Committee is to ensure that the Company maintains high standards of
integrity, financial reporting and internal controls.
The Audit Committee's main roles
and responsibilities include, but are not limited to, the
following:
· monitoring the integrity of the financial statements and any
formal announcements relating to the Company's financial
performance;
· reviewing and reporting to the Board on any significant
financial reporting issues and judgements;
· reviewing and monitoring the effectiveness of the Company's
risk management and internal control arrangements;
· monitoring the statutory audit of the annual financial
statements of the Company and its effectiveness;
· reviewing the external auditor's performance, independence
and objectivity;
· making recommendations to the Board in relation to the
appointment, reappointment and/or removal of the external auditor,
the approval of the external auditor's remuneration and the terms
of the engagement;
· implementing policies surrounding the engagement of the
external auditor to supply non-audit services, where
appropriate;
· reviewing and challenging where necessary significant
accounting policies and practices; and
· reporting to the Board on how it has discharged its
responsibilities.
How the Audit Committee has
discharged its responsibilities
The Audit Committee met five times
during the year. Representatives of the Portfolio Adviser,
Company's auditor and the Administrator were invited to the
meetings as appropriate.
Monitoring the integrity of the
financial statements including significant judgements
The Audit Committee reviewed the
Company's Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the
year ended 31 December 2022 and the Half Yearly Financial Report
for the six months ended 30 June 2023 prior to discussion and
approval by the Board and the significant financial reporting
issues and judgements which they contain. The Audit Committee also
reviewed the external auditor's reports thereon, which were
discussed with the Auditor. The Audit Committee reviewed the
appropriateness of the Company's accounting principles and policies
and monitored changes to and compliance with, accounting standards
on an ongoing basis.
After the year-end, the Audit
Committee had further meetings and reviewed, prior to making any
recommendations to the Board, the Annual Report and Audited
Financial Statements for the year ended 31 December 2023. In
undertaking this review, the Audit Committee discussed with the
Auditor, the Portfolio Adviser and the Administrator the critical accounting
policies and judgements that have been applied.
The Auditor reported to the
Committee on any non-trivial misstatements that they had found
during the course of its work and confirmed that under
International Standards on Auditing (UK) no
material amounts remained unadjusted.
As requested by the Board, the
Audit Committee also reviewed the Annual Report and Audited
Financial Statements and are able to confirm to the Board that, in
our view, the Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements, taken
as a whole, is fair, balanced and understandable and provided the
information necessary for Shareholders to assess the Company's
position, performance, business model and strategy.
Significant accounting
matters
The Committee considered the key
accounting issues, matters and judgements regarding the Company's
2023 Annual Report and Financial Statements and disclosures
including those relating to:
Significant area
|
How
addressed
|
Valuation of
investments
|
The investment in the Lux
Subsidiary is accounted for at fair value through profit or loss
and the investment in PPNs issued by BCF held by the Lux Subsidiary
are at fair value. Investments in BCF (the PPNs) are illiquid
investments, not traded on an active market and are valued using
valuation techniques determined by the Directors and classified as
Level 3 under IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement.
Valuation is therefore considered
a significant area and is monitored by the Board, the Audit
Committee, the Portfolio Adviser and the Administrator. The Audit
Committee receives and reviews reports on the processes for the
valuation of investments. Following discussion, the Audit Committee
was satisfied that the judgements made and methodologies applied
were prudent and appropriate and that an appropriate accounting
treatment has been adopted in accordance with IFRS 9 Financial
Instruments.
Please see Notes 2, 5, 9 and 15 in
the financial statements for further details.
|
Assessment of risks and
uncertainties
The risks associated with the
Company's financial instruments, as disclosed in the financial
statements, particularly in Note 9, represent a key accounting
disclosure. The Audit Committee and the Risk Committee review
critically, on the basis of input from the service providers, the
process of ongoing identification and measurement of these risks
disclosures.
Evaluation of the Audit
Committee
During 2023, the Board carried out
an internal evaluation of the Board and Committees and there were
no matters arising for the Committee to consider.
Other matters
During the year, the Committee
considered compliance with relevant legislation, performance
metrics and related disclosures in the Company's financial
statements.
Risk management and internal
controls
The Board as a whole is
responsible for the Company's system of internal controls; however,
the Audit Committee assists the Board in meeting its obligations in
this regard. The daily operational activities of the Company were
delegated to its service providers and as a result, the Company has
no direct internal audit function and instead places reliance on
the external and internal audit controls of the service providers
as regulated entities. However, the Audit Committee reviews
periodic reports from the service providers to ensure that no
material issues have arisen in respect of the system of internal
controls and risk management operated by the Company's service
providers. The Committee confirms that this is an ongoing process
conducted in order to manage the risks faced by the Company. The
Audit Committee deems that, to date, there are no significant
issues in this area which need to be brought to your
attention.
External Audit
It is the responsibility of the
Audit Committee to monitor the performance, independence,
objectivity and re-appointment of the Auditor. Deloitte LLP
("Deloitte") was appointed as the first Auditor for the Company and
has acted in that position for the Company's 2014 period end audit
onwards. The lead audit partner is rotated every five years
to ensure continued independence and objectivity. The Audit
Committee met with Deloitte to consider the audit strategy and plan
for the audit in September 2023. The audit plan for the reporting
period was reviewed in September 2023 and again in February 2024
including consideration of key financial statement and audit risks,
to seek to ensure the audit was appropriately focussed.
The Auditor attends the Audit
Committee meetings throughout the year, as applicable, which allows
the opportunity to discuss any matters the Auditors may wish to
raise without the Portfolio Adviser or other service providers
being present. The auditor provides feedback at relevant
Audit Committee meetings on topics such as the key accounting
matters, mandatory communications and the control
environment.
In advance of the commencement of
the annual audit the Audit Committee reviewed a statement provided
by the Auditor confirming its independence as defined under the
relevant regulation and professional standards. In addition,
to satisfy itself regarding the Auditor's independence, the Audit
Committee undertook a review of the Auditor's compensation and the
balance between audit and non-audit fees. The Audit Committee
also discusses the performance of the Auditor independently of the
Auditor.
During 2023, the Audit Committee
reviewed its policy with respect to non-audit services and
continually monitored the level of non-audit services provided by
the Auditor to ensure alignment and compliance with best
practice. The Company's policy sets out the permitted types
of non-audit services that can be provided by the Auditor, which
are consistent with the FRC's Revised Ethical Standard
(2019). All proposed non audit services required explicit
approval from the Audit Committee. During the year, Deloitte were
contracted to review the Company's Half Yearly Financial
Statements. Audit fees for the year ended 31 December 2023
increased by 11.38% compared to 2022 (see Note 3 for further
details). Audit related services increased by 9.44% year on
year. These items have been given due consideration by the
Audit Committee, who reviewed, inter-alia the role of the
respective engagement teams and the independence of individuals
from the audit engagement team and concluded it was satisfied the
Auditor had acted in an independent and professional
manner.
As, following the completion of
the 31 December 2023 audit, Deloitte will have been appointed for a
period of ten years the Committee also undertook a re-tender of the
audit appointment for the period ended 31 December 2024
onwards. Requests for expressions of interest were invited
from eight Recognised auditors. From responses received, three
firms were invited to provide a written report and present their
audit proposal at a formal interview process. After taking
into account the audit quality, efficiency and effectiveness, use
of technology and experience and knowledge of the team, the
Committee recommended to the Board that Deloitte be re-appointed
for the 31 December 2024 audit, with a new lead audit partner in
place. The Board approved this recommendation on 20 December 2023.
The Committee expressed its thanks to all participants in this
process and noted the overall high quality of audit proposals
presented.
Belinda
Crosby
Audit Committee
Chair
26 April 2024
STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS'
RESPONSIBILITIES
The Directors are responsible for
preparing the Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements in
accordance with applicable law and regulations.
Company law requires the Directors
to prepare financial statements for each financial year. Under that
law the Directors have elected to prepare the financial statements
in accordance with IFRS, as adopted by the EU. Under company law
the Directors must not approve the financial statements unless they
are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of
the affairs of the Company and of the profit or loss of the Company
for that year. In preparing these financial statements,
International Accounting Standard 1 requires that
Directors:
·
properly select and apply accounting
policies;
·
present information, including accounting
policies, in a manner that provides relevant, reliable, comparable
and understandable information;
·
provide additional disclosures when compliance
with the specific requirements in IFRS as adopted by the EU are
insufficient to enable users to understand the impact of particular
transactions, other events and conditions on the Company's
financial position and financial performance;
and
·
make an assessment of the Company's ability to
continue as a going concern.
The Directors are responsible for
keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and
explain the Company's transactions and disclose with reasonable
accuracy at any time the financial position of the Company and
enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with The
Companies (Jersey) Law 1991. They are also responsible for
safeguarding the assets of the Company and hence for taking
reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and
other irregularities.
The Directors are responsible for
the maintenance and integrity of the corporate and financial
information included on the Company's website. Legislation in
Jersey governing the preparation and dissemination of financial
statements may differ from legislation in other
jurisdictions.
Each of the Directors, whose names
are listed above, confirms that, to the best of that Director's
knowledge and belief:
·
the financial statements, prepared in accordance
with International Financial Reporting Standards ("IFRS") as
adopted by the European Union ("EU"), give a true and fair view of
the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit or loss of
the Company;
·
the Strategic report includes a fair review of
the development and performance of the business and the position of
the Company, together with a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties that they face; and
·
the Annual Report and Audited Financial
Statements, taken as a whole, are fair, balanced and understandable
and provide the information necessary for Shareholders to assess
the Company's position and performance, business model and
strategy.
Steven Wilderspin
|
Belinda Crosby
|
Director
|
Director
|
26 April 2024
|
|
INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT TO THE
SHAREHOLDERS OF BLACKSTONE LOAN FINANCING LIMITED
Report on the audit of the
financial statements
1. Opinion
In our opinion the financial
statements of Blackstone Loan Financing Limited (the
'company'):
· give
a true and fair view of the state of the company's affairs as at 31
December 2023 and of its profit for the year then ended;
· have
been properly prepared in accordance with International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRSs) as adopted by the European
Union
· have
been properly prepared in accordance with Companies (Jersey) Law,
1991.
We have audited the financial
statements which comprise:
·
the statement of financial position;
·
the statement of comprehensive income;
·
the statement of changes in equity;
·
the statement of cash flows; and
·
the related notes 1 to 20.
The financial reporting framework
that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law, IFRSs
as adopted by the European Union.
2. Basis for opinion
We conducted our audit in
accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs
(UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those
standards are further described in the auditor's responsibilities
for the audit of the financial statements section of our
report.
We are independent of the company
in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to
our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the
Financial Reporting Council's (the 'FRC's') Ethical Standard as
applied to listed public interest entities, and we have fulfilled
our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these
requirements. The non-audit services provided to the company for
the year are disclosed in note 3 to the financial statements. We
confirm that we have not provided any non-audit services prohibited
by the FRC's Ethical Standard to the company.
We believe that the audit evidence
we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis
for our opinion.
3. Summary of our audit approach
Key audit matters
|
The key audit matter that we
identified in the current year was:
· The valuation of investments
in the Luxembourg subsidiary
Within this report, key audit
matters are identified as follows:
|
Newly identified
|
|
Increased level of risk
|
|
Similar level of risk
|
|
Decreased level of risk
|
|
Materiality
|
The materiality that we used in the
current year was €6,400,000 which was determined on the basis of
Net Assets Value of the company.
|
Scoping
|
All of the audit work to respond to
the risks of material misstatement was performed directly by the
audit engagement team.
|
Significant changes in our
approach
|
Following the implementation of a
managed wind-down of the Company (the "Managed Wind-Down"), the
financial statements have been prepared on a basis other than that
of a going concern.
|
4. Emphasis of matter - Financial statements prepared other than
on a going concern basis
We draw attention to note 2.2 in
the financial statements, which indicates that the financial
statements have been prepared on a basis other than that of a going
concern following the decision for the managed wind-down of the
Company. Our opinion is not modified in respect of this
matter.
5. Key audit matters
Key audit matters are those matters
that, in our professional judgement, were of most significance in
our audit of the financial statements of the current period and
include the most significant assessed risks of material
misstatement (whether or not due to fraud) that we identified.
These matters included those which had the greatest effect on: the
overall audit strategy, the allocation of resources in the audit;
and directing the efforts of the engagement team.
These matters were addressed in the
context of our audit of the financial statements as a whole, and in
forming our opinion thereon, and we do not provide a separate
opinion on these matters.
5.1. Valuation of investments in
the Luxembourg subsidiary
Key audit matter description
|
The company's investments in
Blackstone / GSO Loan Financing (Luxembourg) S.a.r.l. ("the
Luxembourg subsidiary") totalling €305,994,558 (2022:
€297,721,169), consists of 208,565,744 Cash Settled Warrants
("CSWs"), 2,000,000 Class A shares and 1 Class B share (31 December
2022: 239,550,782 CSWs, 2,000,000 Class A shares and 1 Class B
share) as detailed in note 6 to the financial statements. These
investments are accounted at fair value through profit and
loss.
The Luxembourg subsidiary invests
all its capital and proceeds from CSWs in Profit Participating
Notes ("PPNs") issued by Blackstone Corporate Funding Designated
Activity Company ("BCF" or the "Originator"). The fair value of the
CSWs and the Class A and Class B shares is based substantially on
the fair value of the PPNs issued by BCF, which are illiquid, not
traded on an active market, and are valued using valuation
techniques determined by the directors and classified as level III
under IFRS: Fair Value Measurement ("IFRS 13").
We therefore consider BCF as the
principal source of risks and rewards for the company with BCF's
financial situation represented by its Net Asset Value as the main
component for the fair valuation of the investments.
Reviewing risk monitoring,
performance, and the investments' valuation for the company,
requires an assessment of the positions within BCF, including its
direct and indirect investment in collateralised loan obligation
(CLO) income notes and senior secured loans and bonds. To assess
these positions, the directors of BCF use their judgement, with the
assistance of the Adviser (Blackstone Ireland Limited), in
selecting an appropriate valuation technique and refer to
techniques commonly used by market practitioners. Assumptions are
made based on quoted market rates adjusted for specific features of
any instrument.
Valuation of investments accounted
at fair value is therefore a key area of judgement and has a
significant impact on the Net Assets Value ("NAV") which is the
most significant Key Performance Indicator ("KPI") of the company
and has a direct effect on the recognition of gains and losses on
investments.
There is a risk that the
third-party valuer has used an incorrect methodology, inaccurate
data is supplied by the CLO Manager of the Originator or
inappropriate assumptions are used concerning market information.
The key assumptions include discount, prepayment, reinvestment and
default rates.
Refer to the Audit Committee Report, Material Accounting Policies and Note
6 to the Financial statements).
|
How the scope of our audit responded to the key audit
matter
|
In response to this key audit
matter:
·
We obtained an understanding of the valuation
process of the Company including how information flows from the
BCF's PPNs at fair value to the fair value of investments held by
the Company in the shares and CSWs of the Luxembourg
subsidiary.
·
We tested the relevant controls over the valuation
process run by the Company.
·
We assessed the valuation methodology for the
financial instruments held by the Company against industry
standards and IFRS 13.
·
We obtained an understanding of the financial
instruments held/issued by BCF and assessed the valuation
methodology adopted by BCF against industry standards and IFRS
13.
·
We obtained confirmations from third-party
custodians for the securities held by the Company and
BCF.
·
We obtained an understanding of the valuation
process over the valuation of the BCF's financial instruments
including BCF's direct and indirect investments in the CLO
notes.
·
We obtained an understanding of the key controls
over the valuation of CLO notes.
·
Using observable market data where available, we
challenged the significant assumptions used in the valuation
process including, but not limited to, discount rates, default
rates, prepayment rates, recovery rates, collateral liquidation
prices and reinvestment spreads. With the support of our valuation
specialists, we independently valued 100% of the CLO notes held by
BCF using independent models, market feeds and
assumptions.
·
We obtained an understanding and assessed the
design of the key controls that have been implemented over the
valuation of investments in senior secured loans and bonds held by
BCF.
·
We challenged whether the valuation policy adopted
for senior secured loans and bonds is in line with IFRS 13, and
agreed the prices recognised by management to independent data
obtained from the pricing providers used.
·
We assessed the suitability of the prices
determined by the loan pricing providers. In particular, we
performed back-testing procedures on historical prices provided by
the pricing providers and compared a sample of the prices
recognised to other independent pricing sources.
·
We obtained an understanding of the redemption
mechanism established for the redemption of BCF's PPNs, and tested
to the allocation of the fair value and associated income to the
continuing PPNs held by the Luxembourg subsidiary at 31 December
2023.
·
We tested the calculation of the change in value
of investments for the year and its recognition in the statement of
comprehensive income.
·
We assessed the appropriateness of disclosures
(including disclosures related to sensitivity) in accordance with
requirements of IFRS 13.
|
Key observations
|
Based on
the work performed we conclude that the valuation of investments in
the Luxembourg subsidiary is within a range we consider to be
reasonable.
|
6. Our application of materiality
6.1. Materiality
We define materiality as the
magnitude of misstatement in the financial statements that makes it
probable that the economic decisions of a reasonably knowledgeable
person would be changed or influenced. We use materiality both in
planning the scope of our audit work and in evaluating the results
of our work.
Based on our professional
judgement, we determined materiality for the financial statements
as a whole as follows:
Company materiality
|
€6,400,000 (2022:
€6,000,000)
|
Basis for determining materiality
|
2% of the Company's Net Asset Value
(2022: 2% of the Company's Net Asset Value)
|
Rationale for the benchmark applied
|
Net Asset Value ('NAV') is the key
performance indicator of the company and is therefore selected as
the appropriate benchmark.
|
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
6.2. Performance
materiality
We set performance materiality at a
level lower than materiality to reduce the probability that, in
aggregate, uncorrected and undetected misstatements exceed the
materiality for the financial statements as a whole. Performance
materiality was set at 70% of materiality for the 2023 audit (2022:
70%). In determining performance materiality, we considered our
risk assessment, the quality of the company's control environment,
and our past experience of the audit, which has indicated a low
number of corrected and uncorrected misstatements identified in
prior periods.
6.3. Error reporting
threshold
We agreed with the Audit Committee
that we would report to the Committee all audit differences in
excess of €320,000 (2022: €300,000 ), as well as differences below
that threshold that, in our view, warranted reporting on
qualitative grounds. We also report to the Audit Committee on
disclosure matters that we identified when assessing the overall
presentation of the financial statements.
7. An
overview of the scope of our audit
7.1. Scoping
Our audit was scoped by obtaining
an understanding of the entity and its environment, including
internal control, and assessing the risks of material misstatement.
Audit work to respond to the risks of material misstatement was
performed by the audit engagement team with the participation of
the BCF auditor (Deloitte Ireland LLP).
7.2. Our consideration of the
control environment
A third-party administrator
maintains the books and records of the company. Our audit therefore
included obtaining an understanding of the controls at this service
organisation, to the extent that they are relevant to the
company.
7.3. Our consideration of
climate-related risks
In planning our audit, we
considered the potential financial impacts on the company and its
financial statements of climate change and the transition to a low
carbon economy. We considered the directors' assessment of climate
risks and opportunities as described in the Strategic Report above,
together with our cumulative knowledge and experience of the
company and the environment in which it operates. We assessed the
disclosures about critical judgements and key sources of estimation
uncertainty as outlined in note 2.3, including the potential impact
of climate change on those judgements and estimates. We have
considered whether information included in the climate-related
disclosures in the annual report is materially consistent with the
financial statements and our understanding of the
business.
7.4. Working with other
auditors
We engaged with Deloitte Ireland
LLP, the auditor of BCF to assist us with testing of the valuation
of the investment in the Luxembourg subsidiary. We directed and
supervised their work for our purpose through issuing referral
instructions and communicating materiality to be used. We held
meetings with the auditor at several points during the audit, and
we reviewed their audit procedures and conclusions on the PPNs and
other balances in BCF's company only Statement of Financial
Position.
8. Other information
The other information comprises the
information included in the annual report other than the financial
statements and our auditor's report thereon. The directors are
responsible for the other information contained within the annual
report.
Our opinion on the financial
statements does not cover the other information and we do not
express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.
Our responsibility is to read the
other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other
information is materially inconsistent with the financial
statements or our knowledge obtained in the course of the audit, or
otherwise appears to be materially misstated.
If we identify such material
inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required
to determine whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in
the financial statements themselves. If, based on the work we have
performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of
this other information, we are required to report that
fact.
We have nothing to report in this
regard.
9.
Responsibilities of directors
As explained more fully in the
statement of directors' responsibilities, the directors are
responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for
being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such
internal control as the directors determine is necessary to enable
the preparation of financial statements that are free from material
misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.
In preparing the financial
statements, the directors are responsible for assessing the
company's ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing as
applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going
concern basis of accounting unless the directors either intend to
liquidate the company or to cease operations, or have no realistic
alternative but to do so.
10. Auditor's responsibilities for the audit of the financial
statements
Our objectives are to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a
whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or
error, and to issue an auditor's report that includes our opinion.
Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a
guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will
always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements
can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if,
individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected
to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of
these financial statements.
A further description of our
responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements is
located on the FRC's website at: www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities.
This description forms part of our auditor's report.
11. Extent to which the audit was considered capable of detecting
irregularities, including fraud
Irregularities, including fraud,
are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We
design procedures in line with our responsibilities, outlined
above, to detect material misstatements in respect of
irregularities, including fraud. The extent to which our procedures
are capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud is
detailed below.
11.1.
Identifying and
assessing potential risks related to
irregularities
In identifying and assessing risks
of material misstatement in respect of irregularities, including
fraud and non-compliance with laws and regulations, we considered
the following:
·
the nature of the industry and sector, control
environment and business performance including the design of the
company's remuneration policies, key drivers for directors'
remuneration, bonus levels and performance targets;
·
results of our enquiries of the third party
administrator and the directors and the audit committee about their
own identification and assessment of the risks of irregularities,
including those that are specific to the company's
sector;
·
any matters we identified having obtained and
reviewed the company's documentation of their policies and
procedures relating to:
o identifying, evaluating and complying with laws and
regulations and whether they were aware of any instances of
non-compliance
o detecting and responding to the risks of fraud and whether
they have knowledge of any actual, suspected or alleged
fraud
o the
internal controls established to mitigate risks of fraud or
non-compliance with laws and regulations.
·
the matters discussed among the audit engagement
team and relevant internal specialists, including tax, IT and
valuations specialists regarding how and where fraud might occur in
the financial statements and any potential indicators of
fraud.
As a result of these procedures, we
considered the opportunities and incentives that may exist within
the organisation for fraud and identified the greatest potential
for fraud in the valuation of investments in the Luxembourg
subsidiary. In common with all audits under ISAs (UK), we are also
required to perform specific procedures to respond to the risk of
management override.
We also obtained an understanding
of the legal and regulatory framework that the company operates in,
focusing on provisions of those laws and regulations that
had a direct effect on the determination of
material amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. The
key laws and regulations we considered in this context included
the Companies (Jersey) Law,
1991, Listing Rules and tax
legislation.
In addition, we considered
provisions of other laws and regulations that do not have a direct effect on the financial statements but
compliance with which may be fundamental to the company's ability
to operate or to avoid a material penalty. These included the
Jersey Financial Services Commission (JFSC) regulatory
requirements.
11.2.
Audit response to
risks identified
As a result of performing the
above, we identified valuation of investments in the Luxembourg
subsidiary as a key audit matter related to the potential risk of
fraud. The key audit matters section of our report explains the
matters in more detail and also describes the specific procedures
we performed in response to that key audit matter.
In addition to the above, our
procedures to respond to risks identified included the
following:
·
reviewing the financial statement disclosures and
testing to supporting documentation to assess compliance with
provisions of relevant laws and regulations described as having a
direct effect on the financial statements;
·
enquiring of the third-party administrator, the
audit committee and the company secretary concerning actual and
potential litigation and claims;
·
performing analytical procedures to identify any
unusual or unexpected relationships that may indicate risks of
material misstatement due to fraud;
·
reading minutes of meetings of those charged with
governance, and reviewing correspondence with the JFSC;
and
·
in addressing the risk of fraud through management
override of controls, testing the appropriateness of journal
entries and other adjustments; assessing whether the judgements
made in making accounting estimates are indicative of a potential
bias; and evaluating the business rationale of any significant
transactions that are unusual or outside the normal course of
business.
We also communicated relevant
identified laws and regulations and potential fraud risks to all
engagement team members including internal specialists and
significant component audit teams, and remained alert to any
indications of fraud or non-compliance with laws and regulations
throughout the audit.
Report on other legal and
regulatory requirements
12. Corporate Governance Statement
The Listing Rules require us to
review the directors' statement in relation to going concern,
longer-term viability and that part of the Corporate Governance
Statement relating to the Company's compliance with the provisions
of the UK Corporate Governance Code specified for our
review.
Based on the work undertaken as
part of our audit, we have concluded that each of the following
elements of the Corporate Governance Statement is materially
consistent with the financial statements and our knowledge obtained
during the audit:
·
the directors' statement with regards to the
appropriateness of adopting the going concern basis of accounting
and any material uncertainties identified set out above;
·
the directors' explanation as to its assessment of
the Company's prospects, the period this assessment covers and why
the period is appropriate set out above;
·
the directors' statement on fair, balanced and
understandable set out above;
·
the board's confirmation that it has carried out a
robust assessment of the emerging and principal risks set out
above;
·
the section of the annual report that describes
the review of effectiveness of risk management and internal control
systems set out above; and
·
the section describing the work of the audit
committee set out above.
13. Matters on which we are required to report by
exception
13.1.
Adequacy of
explanations received and accounting records
Under the Companies (Jersey) Law,
1991 we are required to report to you if, in our
opinion:
·
we have not received all the information and
explanations we require for our audit; or
·
proper accounting records have not been kept or
proper returns adequate for our audit have not been received from
branches not visited by us; or
·
the financial statements are not in agreement with
the accounting records and returns.
We have nothing to report in
respect of these matters.
14. Other matters which we are required to address
14.1.
Auditor
tenure
Following the recommendation of the
audit committee, we were appointed by the shareholders on 4 July
2014 to audit the financial statements for the year ending 31
December 2014 and subsequent financial periods. The period of total
uninterrupted engagement including previous renewals and
reappointments of the firm is 10 years covering the years ending 31
December 2014 to 31 December 2023
14.2.
Consistency of
the audit report with the additional report to the audit
committee
Our audit opinion is consistent
with the additional report to the audit committee we are required
to provide in accordance with ISAs (UK).
15. Use of our report
This report is made solely to the
company's members, as a body, in accordance with Article 113A of
the Companies (Jersey) Law, 1991. Our audit work has been
undertaken so that we might state to the company's members those
matters we are required to state to them in an auditor's report and
for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do
not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the
company and the company's members as a body, for our audit work,
for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.
As required by the Financial
Conduct Authority (FCA) Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rule
(DTR) 4.1.15R - DTR 4.1.18R, these financial statements will form
part of the Electronic Format Annual Financial Report filed on the
National Storage Mechanism of the FCA in accordance with DTR
4.1.15R - DTR 4.1.18R. This auditor's report provides no assurance
over whether the Electronic Format Annual Financial Report has been
prepared in compliance with DTR 4.1.15R - DTR 4.1.18R.
Marc Cleeve, BA,
FCA
For and on behalf of Deloitte
LLP
Recognized Auditor
Jersey
26 April 2024
STATEMENT OF
FINANCIAL POSITION
As at 31 December 2023
|
|
As at
31 December 2023
|
As at
31 December 2022
|
|
Notes
|
€
|
€
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
17,725,633
|
6,259,400
|
Prepayments
|
|
40,930
|
52,219
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss
|
5
|
305,994,558
|
297,721,169
|
Total assets
|
|
323,761,121
|
304,032,788
|
|
|
|
|
Intercompany loan
|
6
|
(2,161,082)
|
(1,694,077)
|
Payables
|
7
|
(612,939)
|
(723,734)
|
Total liabilities
|
|
(2,774,021)
|
(2,417,811)
|
|
|
|
|
Net assets
|
14,15
|
320,987,100
|
301,614,977
|
|
|
|
|
Capital and reserves
|
|
|
|
Stated capital
|
8
|
446,312,099
|
447,542,762
|
Retained loss
|
|
(125,324,999)
|
(145,927,785)
|
Shareholders' equity
|
|
320,987,100
|
301,614,977
|
|
|
|
|
NAV per redeemable/ordinary share
|
14
|
0.7250
|
0.6784
|
These financial statements were
authorised and approved for issue by the Directors on 26 April 2024
and signed on their behalf by:
Steven Wilderspin
|
Belinda Crosby
|
Director
|
Director
|
The accompanying notes below form
an integral part of the financial statements.
STATEMENT OF
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
For the year ended 31 December
2023
|
|
Year ended
31 December
2023
|
Year ended
31 December 2022
|
|
Notes
|
€
|
€
|
Income
|
|
|
|
Realised gain/(loss) on foreign
exchange
|
|
5,404
|
(15)
|
Net gain/(loss) on financial
assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
5
|
61,093,585
|
(70,894,563)
|
Bank interest income
|
|
280,143
|
-
|
Total income
|
|
61,379,132
|
(70,894,578)
|
|
|
|
|
Expenses
|
|
|
|
Operating expenses
|
3
|
(1,998,735)
|
(1,393,632)
|
Loan interest expense
|
6
|
(30,885)
|
(23,400)
|
Bank interest expense
|
|
-
|
(17,978)
|
Total expenses
|
|
(2,029,620)
|
(1,435,010)
|
|
|
|
|
Profit/(loss) before taxation
|
|
59,349,512
|
(72,329,588)
|
Taxation
|
2.11
|
-
|
-
|
Profit/(loss) after taxation
|
|
59,349,512
|
(72,329,588)
|
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive income/(loss) for the year attributable
to Shareholders
|
|
59,349,512
|
(72,329,588)
|
|
|
|
|
Basic and diluted earnings/(loss) per redeemable/ordinary
share
|
13
|
0.1340
|
(0.1587)
|
The Company has no items of other
comprehensive income and therefore the profit/loss for the year is
also the total comprehensive income/loss.
All items in the above statement
are derived from continuing operations. No operations were acquired
or discontinued during the year.
The accompanying notes below form
an integral part of the financial statements.
STATEMENT OF
CHANGES IN EQUITY
For the year ended 31 December
2023
|
|
Stated
capital
|
Retained
loss
|
Total
|
|
Notes
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Shareholders' equity at 1 January 2023
|
8
|
447,542,762
|
(145,927,785)
|
301,614,977
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year attributable to Shareholders
|
|
-
|
59,349,512
|
59,349,512
|
|
|
|
|
|
Transactions with owners
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends
|
17
|
-
|
(38,746,726)
|
(38,746,726)
|
Ordinary shares
repurchased
|
8
|
(1,230,663)
|
-
|
(1,230,663)
|
|
|
(1,230,663)
|
(38,746,726)
|
(39,977,389)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shareholders' equity at 31 December 2023
|
8
|
446,312,099
|
(125,324,999)
|
320,987,100
|
For the year ended 31 December
2022
|
|
Stated
capital
|
Retained
loss
|
Total
|
|
Notes
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Shareholders' equity at 1 January 2022
|
8
|
459,044,783
|
(37,045,206)
|
421,999,577
|
Total comprehensive loss for the
year attributable to Shareholders
|
|
-
|
(72,329,588)
|
(72,329,588)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Transactions with owners
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends
|
17
|
-
|
(36,552,991)
|
(36,552,991)
|
Ordinary shares
repurchased
|
8
|
(11,502,021)
|
-
|
(11,502,021)
|
|
|
(11,502,021)
|
(36,552,991)
|
(48,055,012)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shareholders' equity at 31 December 2022
|
8
|
447,542,762
|
(145,927,785)
|
301,614,977
|
The accompanying notes below form
an integral part of the financial statements.
STATEMENT OF
CASH FLOWS
For the year ended 31 December
2023
|
|
Year ended
31 December
2023
|
Year ended
31 December
2022
|
|
Notes
|
€
|
€
|
Cash flow from operating activities
|
|
|
|
Profit/(loss) before
taxation
|
|
59,349,512
|
(72,329,588)
|
|
|
|
|
Adjustments to reconcile profit/(loss) before taxation to net
cash flows:
|
|
|
|
- Unrealised (gain)/loss on financial assets at fair value
through profit and loss
|
5
|
(39,686,775)
|
92,214,092
|
- Realised gain on financial assets at fair value through
profit and loss
|
|
(21,406,810)
|
(21,319,529)
|
Purchase of financial assets at
fair value through profit or loss
|
5
|
-
|
(7,608,819)
|
Proceeds from sale of financial
assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
5
|
52,820,196
|
56,962,646
|
Changes in working capital
|
|
|
|
Decrease/(increase) in other
receivables
|
5
|
11,289
|
(4,804)
|
(Decrease)/increase in
payables
|
7
|
(110,795)
|
281,150
|
Net cash generated from operating
activities
|
|
50,976,617
|
48,195,148
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flow from financing activities
|
|
|
|
Ordinary shares
repurchased
|
8
|
(1,230,663)
|
(11,502,021)
|
Increase in intercompany
loan
|
6,
16
|
467,005
|
447,828
|
Dividends paid
|
17
|
(38,746,726)
|
(36,552,991)
|
Net cash used in financing activities
|
|
(39,510,384)
|
(47,607,184)
|
|
|
|
|
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
11,466,233
|
587,964
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the
start of the year
|
|
6,259,400
|
5,671,436
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the
year
|
|
17,725,633
|
6,259,400
|
The accompanying notes below form
an integral part of the financial statements.
NOTES TO THE
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the year ended 31 December
2023
1
General information
The Company is a closed-ended
limited liability investment company domiciled and incorporated
under the laws of Jersey with variable capital pursuant to the
Collective Investment Funds (Jersey) Law 1988. It was incorporated
on 30 April 2014 under registration number 115628. The Company's
redeemable shares are quoted on the Premium Segment of the Main
Market of the LSE and the Company has a premium listing on the
Official List of the FCA. The Company's C Shares were quoted on the
Specialist Fund Segment of the Main Market of the LSE until 6
January 2020 and converted to ordinary shares on 7 January
2020.
On 25 August 2023, the Board
announced that its decision to put forward proposals to
Shareholders for the implementation of a managed wind-down of the
Company with cash returned to the Shareholders in a timely and
efficient manner. The Board also published a circular ("the
Circular") to the Shareholders to convene an EGM on 15 September
2023 seeking approval from the Shareholders for the amendments to
the Company's investment objective and policy and to its share
capital to facilitate the managed wind-down.
On 15 September 2023, the
Shareholders approved the following by way of an ordinary
resolution:
· the adoption of a new investment objective and policy. The
new investment objective is to realise all existing assets in the
Company's portfolio in an orderly manner.
· the conversion of all shares held by the Company into
redeemable shares on the terms set out in the Circular.
· the issuance of a deferred share with the rights and
restrictions set out in section 3.5 of the Circular, in accordance
with article 2.1 of the Articles of Association.
On 11 December 2023, in accordance
with the ordinary resolution passed by Shareholders on 15 September
2023, all ordinary shares in issue were converted to redeemable
shares and 1 deferred share in the Company was issued. On 21
December 2023, the Company cancelled all of the redeemable shares
it held in treasury, being 40,163,891.
As at 31 December 2023, the
Company had 442,738,903 redeemable shares in issue and 1 deferred
share. As at 31 December 2022, the Company had 444,578,522 ordinary
shares in issue and 38,324,272 ordinary shares in treasury. The
Company may issue one or more additional classes of shares in
accordance with the Articles of Association.
The Company has a wholly owned
Luxemburg subsidiary, Blackstone/GSO Loan Financing (Luxembourg)
S.à.r.l., which
has an issued share capital of 2,000,000 Class A shares and 1 Class
B share held by the Company as at
31 December 2023 and 31 December 2022. The Company also holds
208,565,744 Class B CSWs as at
31 December 2023 (2022: 239,550,782) issued by the Lux
Subsidiary.
The Company's registered address
is IFC 1, The Esplanade, St Helier, Jersey, JE1 4BP, Channel
Islands.
2
Material accounting policies
2.1 Basis of preparation
and statement of compliance
The material accounting policies
applied in the preparation of these financial statements are set
out below. These policies have been applied consistently to the
Company's financial statements for all years presented except for
the adoption of new and amended standards as set out
below.
The Annual Report and Audited
Financial Statements are prepared in accordance with the Disclosure
Guidance and Transparency Rules of the FCA and with International
Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the EU. The
financial statements give a true and fair view of the Company's
affairs and comply with the requirements of the Companies (Jersey)
Law 1991, as amended.
New standards, amendments and
interpretations issued and effective for the financial year
beginning 1 January 2023
The following new standards,
amendments or interpretations are effective for the financial year
beginning
1 January 2023 and the Directors do not consider that these have a
material impact on the Company's financial statements:
· IFRS 17 Insurance Contracts
· Disclosure of Accounting Policies - Amendments to IAS 1
Presentation of Financial Statement and IFRS Practice Statement
2
· Definition of Accounting Estimate - Amendments to IAS 8
Accounting Policies, Changes in Accounting Estimates and
Errors
· Deferred Tax Related to Assets and Liabilities Arising from a
Single Transaction - Amendments to IAS 12 Income Taxes
· International Tax Reform - Pillar Two Model Rules -
Amendments to IAS 12 Income Taxes
New standards, amendments and interpretations issued but not
effective for the financial year beginning
1 January 2023 and not early adopted
The following standards become
effective in future accounting periods and have not been adopted by
the Company and the Directors do not believe that the application
of these will have a material impact on the Company's financial
statements:
· Non-current Liabilities with Covenants and Classification of
liabilities as Current or Non-current (Amendments to IAS 1
Presentation of Financial Statements) - effective for periods
beginning on or after 1 January 2024
· Lease Liability in a Sale and Leaseback (Amendments to IFRS
16 Leases) - effective for periods beginning on or after 1 January
2024
· Supplier Finance Arrangements (Amendments to IAS 7 Statement
of Cash Flows and IFRS 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures) -
effective for periods beginning on or after 1 January
2024
· IFRS S1 General Requirements for Disclosure of
Sustainability-related Financial Information and IFRS S2
Climate-related Disclosures - effective for periods beginning on or
after 1 January 2024
· Lack of Exchangeability (Amendments to IAS 21 The Effects of
Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates) - effective for periods
beginning on or after 1 January 2024
· Sale or Contribution of Assets between an Investor and its
Associate or Joint Venture (Amendments to IFRS 10 Consolidated
Financial Statements and IAS 28 Investments in Associates) -
Available for optional adoption/effective date deferred
indefinitely.
The Company's financial statements
have been prepared on a historical cost basis, except for financial
instruments measured at fair value through profit or loss at the
end of each reporting period.
The Company's functional currency
is the Euro, which is the currency of the primary economic
environment in which it operates. The Company's performance is
evaluated and its liquidity is managed in Euro. Therefore, Euro is
considered as the currency that most faithfully represents the
economic effects of the underlying transactions, events and
conditions. The financial statements are presented in Euro, except
where otherwise indicated.
2.2
Going concern
As a consequence of the Company
implementing the process of a managed wind-down as detailed in Note
1 above, the Directors consider it appropriate to adopt a basis
other than that of a going concern in preparing these financial
statements.
IFRS 9 Financial Instruments
requires financial assets to be measured at fair value through
profit or loss with the change in measurement to be effective in
the financial period following the managed wind-down decision.
There will be no substantial change in this regard as the primary
assets of the Company are financial assets which are shown at fair
value. The Board is not aware of any additional impact on these
financial statements in regards to the Company going into managed
wind-down.
The Board expects the managed
wind-down of the Company to be over a 7 year period although this
is not guaranteed.
After making enquiries with the
Portfolio Adviser and supported by the Directors' current
assessment of the Company's ability to pay its debts as they fall
due for the foreseeable future, the Directors have a reasonable
expectation that the Company has adequate resources to continue in
operational existence until the anticipated managed wind-down of
the Company. The Directors will ensure that sufficient liquidity is
held back to ensure that liabilities are at all times adequately
covered.
2.3 Critical accounting
judgements and estimates
The preparation of the financial
statements in conformity with IFRS, requires management to make
judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect items reported in
the Statement of Financial Position and Statement of Comprehensive
Income. It also requires management to exercise its judgement in
the process of applying the Company's accounting policies.
Uncertainty about these assumptions and estimates could result in
outcomes that require a material adjustment to the carrying amount
of assets and liabilities affected in future periods.
Estimates and underlying
assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis. Revisions to
estimates are recognised prospectively.
Estimates
(a)
Fair value
For the fair value of all
financial instruments held, the Company determines fair values
using appropriate techniques.
Refer to above, Note 2.8 and Note
11 for further details on the significant estimates applied in the
valuation of the Company's financial instruments and the underlying
financial instruments in BCF. Refer to Note 5 and Note 11 for
sensitivity analysis for unobservable inputs.
Judgements
(b)
Non-consolidation of the Lux Subsidiary
The Company meets the definition
of an investment entity as defined by IFRS 10 Consolidated
Financial Statements and is required to account for its investments
at fair value through profit or loss.
The Company has multiple unrelated
investors and holds multiple investments in the Lux Subsidiary. The
Company has been deemed to meet the definition of an investment
entity per IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements as the
following conditions exist:
·
the Company has obtained funds for the purpose of
providing investors with investment management services;
·
the Company's business purpose, which has been
communicated directly to investors, is investing solely for returns
from capital appreciation, investment income or both;
and
·
the performance of investments made through the
Lux Subsidiary are measured and evaluated on a fair value
basis.
The Company controls the Lux
Subsidiary through its 100% holding of the voting rights and
ownership. The Lux Subsidiary is incorporated in
Luxembourg.
Refer to Note 10 for further
disclosures relating to the Company's interest in the Lux
Subsidiary.
(c)
Non-consolidation of BCF
To determine control, there has to
be a linkage between power and the exposure to risks and rewards.
The main link from ownership would allow a company to control the
payments of returns and operating policies and decisions of a
subsidiary. To meet the definition of a subsidiary under the single
control model of IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements, the
investor has to control the investee.
Control involves power, exposure
to variability of returns and a linkage between the two:
· the investor has existing rights that give it the ability to
direct the relevant activities that significantly affect the
investee's returns;
· the investor has exposure or rights to variable returns from
its involvement with the investee; and
· the investor has the ability to use its power over the
investee to affect the amount of the investor's returns.
In the case of BCF, the relevant
activities are the investment decisions made by it. However, in the
Lux Subsidiary's case, the power to influence or direct the
relevant activities of BCF is not attributable to the Lux
Subsidiary. The Lux Subsidiary does not have the ability to direct
or stop investments by BCF; therefore, it does not have the ability
to control the variability of returns. Accordingly, BCF has been
determined not to be a subsidiary undertaking as defined under IFRS
10 Consolidated Financial Statements and the Lux Subsidiary's
investment in the PPNs issued by BCF are accounted for at fair
value through profit or loss.
2.4 Income
Interest income and expense is
recognised under IFRS 9 Financial Instruments separately through
profit or loss in the Statement of Comprehensive Income, on an
effective interest rate yield basis.
2.5 Shares in
issue
The shares of the Company are
classified as equity, based on the substance of the contractual
arrangements and in accordance with the definition of equity
instruments under IAS 32 Financial Instruments:
Presentation.
The proceeds from the issue of
shares are recognised in the Statement of Changes in Equity, net of
the incremental issuance costs.
Shares repurchased by the Company
are deducted from equity. No gain or loss is recognised in the
Statement of Comprehensive Income on the purchase, sale or
cancellation of the Company's own equity instruments. The
consideration paid or received is recognised directly in the
Statement of Changes in Equity. Shares repurchased are recognised
on the trade date.
2.6 Fees and
charges
Expenses are charged through
profit or loss in the Statement of Comprehensive Income on an
accruals basis.
2.7 Cash and cash
equivalents
Cash comprises current deposits
with banks.
Cash equivalents are short-term,
highly liquid investments that are readily convertible to known
amounts of cash and are subject to an insignificant risk of changes
in value. Cash equivalents are revalued at the end of the reporting
period using market rates and any increases/decreases are
recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income. There were no
such holdings during the year ended 31 December 2023 (2022:
nil).
2.8 Financial
instruments
Investments and other
financial assets
(i)
Initial recognition
The Company recognises a financial
asset or a financial liability in its Statement of Financial
Position when and only when, the Company becomes party to the
contractual provisions of the instrument. Purchases and sales of investments are recognised on the
trade date - the date on which the Company commits to purchase or
sell the investment.
(ii)
Classification
The Company classifies its
financial assets in the following measurement
categories:
·
those to be measured subsequently at fair value
(either through other comprehensive income or through profit or
loss); and
·
those to be measured at amortised
cost.
The classification depends on the
entity's business model for managing the financial assets and the
contractual terms of the cash flows.
For assets measured at fair value,
gains and losses are either to be recorded in profit or loss or
other comprehensive income. For investments in equity instruments
that are not held for trading, this will depend on whether the
Company has made an irrevocable election at the time of initial
recognition to account for the equity instrument at fair value
through other comprehensive income.
With the Audited Financial
Statements being prepared on a basis other than going concern and
with the change in the business model of the Company, IFRS 9
Financial Instruments requires financial assets to be measured at
fair value through profit or loss.
(iii)
Measurement
At initial recognition, the
Company measures a financial asset at its fair value plus, in the
case of a financial asset not at fair value through profit or loss,
transaction costs that are directly attributable to the acquisition
of the financial asset. Transaction costs of financial assets
carried at fair value through profit or loss are expensed in profit
or loss.
Debt instruments
Subsequent measurement of debt
instruments depends on the Company's business model for managing
the asset and the cash flow characteristics of the asset. The
Company's business model is to manage its debt instruments and to
evaluate their performance on a fair value basis. The Company's
policy requires the Portfolio Adviser and the Board to evaluate the
information about these financial assets on a fair value basis
together with other related financial information. Consequently,
these debt instruments are measured at fair value through profit or
loss.
Equity instruments
The Company subsequently measures
all equity investments at fair value. Dividends from such
investments are recognised in profit or loss as other income when
the Company's right to receive payments is established.
Changes in fair value of financial
assets at fair value through profit or loss are recognised in "net
gain/(loss) on financial assets at fair value through profit or
loss" in the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
(iv)
Derecognition
Financial assets are derecognised
when the rights to receive cash flows from the investments have
expired or the Company has transferred substantially all risks and
rewards of ownership.
(v)
Fair value estimation
Fair value is the price that would
be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an
orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement
date.
As at 31 December 2023, the
Company held 208,565,744 CSWs, 2,000,000
Class A shares and 1 Class B share issued by the Lux Subsidiary
(2022: 239,550,782 CSWs, 2,000,000 Class A shares and 1 Class B
share). These Investments are not listed or quoted on any
securities exchange, are not traded regularly and, on this basis,
no active market exists. The Company is
not entitled to any voting rights in respect of the Lux Subsidiary
by reason of its ownership of the CSWs, however, the Company
controls the Lux Subsidiary through its 100% holding of the shares
in the Lux Subsidiary. The fair value of the CSWs and the Class A
and Class B shares are based on the net assets of the Lux
Subsidiary which is based substantially in turn on the fair value
of the PPNs issued by BCF.
(vi)
Valuation process
The Directors have held discussions with BIL in order to gain comfort
around the valuation of the CLOs, the underlying assets in the BCF
portfolio and through this, the valuation of the PPNs and CSWs
as of the Statement of Financial Position
date.
The Directors, through ongoing communication with the Portfolio Adviser
including quarterly meetings, discuss the
performance of the Portfolio Adviser and
the underlying portfolio and in addition
review monthly investment performance reports. The Directors analyse the
BCF portfolio in terms of the investment mix in the portfolio. The Directors also consider the impact of
general credit
conditions and more specifically credit events in the US and European
corporate environment on the valuation of the CSWs, PPNs and the BCF portfolio.
Portfolio
The Directors discuss the valuation
process to understand the methodology regarding the valuation of
its underlying portfolio, comprising Level 3 assets. The majority
of Level 3 assets in BCF are comprised of CLOs. In reviewing the
fair value of these assets, the Directors look at the assumptions
used and any significant fair value changes during the period under
analysis.
NAV
The IFRS NAV of the Company is
calculated by the Administrator based on information from the
Portfolio Adviser and is reviewed and approved by the
Directors, taking into consideration a
range of factors including the unaudited IFRS NAV of both the Lux
Subsidiary and BCF and other relevant available information. The
other relevant information includes the review of available
financial and trading information of BCF and its underlying
portfolio, advice received from the Portfolio Adviser and such
other factors as the Directors, in their sole discretion, deem
relevant in considering a positive or negative adjustment to the
valuation.
The estimated fair values may
differ from the values that would have been realised had a ready
market existed and the difference could be material.
The fair value of the CSWs and the
Class A and Class B shares are assessed on an ongoing basis by the
Board.
Financial
liabilities
(i)
Classification
Financial liabilities include
payables which are held at amortised cost using the effective
interest rate method.
The effective interest method is a
method of calculating the amortised cost of a financial liability
and of allocating interest expense over the relevant period. The
effective interest rate is the rate that exactly discounts
estimated future cash payments (including all fees and points paid
or received that form an integral part of the effective interest
rate, transaction costs and other premiums or discounts) through
the expected life of the financial liability or where appropriate a
shorter period, to the net carrying amount on initial
recognition.
(ii)
Recognition, measurement and derecognition
Financial liabilities are measured
initially at their fair value plus any directly attributable
incremental costs of acquisition or issue. Gains and losses are
recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income when the
liabilities are derecognised. The Company derecognises a financial
liability when the obligation specified in the contract is
discharged, cancelled or expires.
2.9 Foreign currency
translations
Transactions in foreign currencies
are translated at the foreign exchange rate ruling at the date of
the transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in
foreign currencies at the Statement of Financial Position date are
translated to Euro at the foreign exchange rate ruling at that
date. Foreign exchange differences arising on translation are
recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income.
Foreign currency gains and losses
are included in profit or loss on the Statement of Comprehensive
Income as part of "Realised gain/(loss) on foreign
exchange".
2.10
Taxation
Profit arising in the Company for
the year of assessment will be subject to Jersey tax at the
standard corporate income tax rate of 0% (2022: 0%).
2.11
Dividends
Dividends to Shareholders are
recorded through the Statement of Changes in Equity when they are
declared to Shareholders.
3
Operating expenses
|
Year ended
31 December
2023
|
Year ended
31 December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
Professional fees
|
580,227
|
226,777
|
Brokerage fees
|
306,546
|
128,494
|
Administration fees
|
306,135
|
323,962
|
Audit fees and audit related
fees
|
292,324
|
263,980
|
Directors' fees (see Note
4)
|
268,835
|
281,337
|
Sundry expenses
|
136,804
|
76,014
|
Regulatory fees
|
65,226
|
61,161
|
Registrar fees
|
42,638
|
31,907
|
Total operating expenses
|
1,998,735
|
1,393,632
|
Administration fees
Under the administration
agreement, the Administrator is entitled to receive variable fees
based on the Published NAV of the Company for the provision of
administrative and compliance oversight services and a fixed fee
for the provision of company secretarial services. The overall
charge for the above-mentioned fees for the Company for the year
ended 31 December 2023 was €306,135 (2022: €323,962) and the
amount due at 31 December 2023 was €79,553 (2022:
€80,685).
Advisory fees
Under the Advisory Agreement, the
Portfolio Adviser is entitled to receive out of pocket expenses,
all reasonable third-party costs and other expenses incurred in the
performance of its obligations. On this basis, the Portfolio
Adviser recharged €11,858 to the Company (2022: €18,847). This
amount has been included under professional fees.
Audit and non-audit
fees
The Company incurred €292,324
(2022: €263,980) in audit and audit-related fees during the year of
which €196,700 (2022: €169,062) was outstanding at the
year-end.
The Company did not incur any
non-audit fees during the year (2022: nil). The table below
outlines the audit and audit related services received during the
year.
|
Year ended
31 December
2023
|
Year ended
31 December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
Audit of the Company
|
196,021
|
175,987
|
Audit-related services - review of
interim financial report
|
96,303
|
87,993
|
Total audit and audit-related services
|
292,324
|
263,980
|
Professional fees
For the year ended 31 December
2023, professional fees comprised €444,194 (2022: €53,968) in legal
fees and €136,033 (2022: €172,809) in other professional fees. The
increase in legal fees relates to additional legal advices and
procedures regarding the managed wind-down.
4
Directors' fees
The Company has no employees. The
Company incurred €268,835 (2022: €281,337) in Directors' fees
(consisting exclusively of short-term benefits) during the year of
which €nil (2022: €68,470) was outstanding at the year-end. No
pension contributions were payable in respect of any of the
Directors.
Refer to the Directors'
remuneration report above for further details on the Directors'
remuneration and their interests.
5
Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
|
As at
31 December
2023
|
As at
31 December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss
|
305,994,558
|
297,721,169
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss consist of 208,565,744 CSWs, 2,000,000 Class
A shares and 1 Class B share issued by the Lux Subsidiary (2022:
239,550,782 CSWs, 2,000,000 Class A shares and 1 Class B share
issued by the Lux Subsidiary).
CSWs
The Company has the right, at any
time during the exercise period (being the period from the date of
issuance and ending on earlier of the 3 February 2046 or the date
on which the liquidation of the Lux Subsidiary is closed), to
request that the Lux Subsidiary redeems all or part of the CSWs at
the redemption price (see below), by delivering a redemption
notice, provided that the redemption price will be due and payable
only if and to the extent that (a) the Lux Subsidiary will have
sufficient funds available to settle its liabilities to all other
ordinary or subordinated creditors, whether privileged, secured or
unsecured, prior in ranking to the CSWs, after any such payment and
(b) the Lux Subsidiary will not be insolvent after payment of the
redemption price.
The redemption price is the amount
payable by the Lux Subsidiary on the redemption of CSWs
outstanding, which shall be at any time equal to the fair market
value of the redeemable shares (that would have been issued in case
of exercise of all CSWs), as determined by the Board on a fully
diluted basis on the date of redemption, less a margin (determined
by the Board on the basis of a transfer pricing report prepared by
an independent advisor) and the redemption price for each CSW shall
be obtained by dividing the amount determined in accordance with
the preceding sentence by the actual number of CSWs
outstanding.
If at the end of any financial
year there is excess cash, as determined in good faith by the Lux
Subsidiary board (but for this purpose only), the Lux Subsidiary
will automatically redeem, to the extent of such excess cash, all
or part of the CSWs at the redemption price provided the
requirements in the previous paragraph are met, unless the Company
notifies the Lux Subsidiary otherwise. For the avoidance of doubt,
to the extent the subscription price for the CSWs to be redeemed
has not been paid at the time the CSWs were issued, the
subscription price for such CSWs to be redeemed shall be deducted
from the Redemption Price.
CSWs listed in an exercise notice
may not be redeemed.
Class A and Class B shares held in the Lux
Subsidiary
Class A and Class B shares are
redeemable and have a par value of one Euro per redeemable share. Class A and Class B Shareholders have equal
voting rights commensurate with their shareholding.
Class A and Class B Shareholders
are entitled to dividend distributions from the net profits of the
Lux Subsidiary (net of an amount equal to five per cent of the net
profits of the Lux Subsidiary which is allocated to the general
reserve, until this reserve amounts to ten per cent of the Lux
Subsidiary's nominal share capital).
Dividend distributions are paid in
the following order of priority:
· Each Class A share is entitled to the Class A dividend, being
a cumulative dividend in an amount of not less than 0.10% per annum
of the face value of the Class A shares.
· Each Class B share is entitled to the Class B dividend (if
any), being any income, such as but not limited to interest or
revenue deriving from the receivable from the PPN's held by the Lux
Subsidiary, less any non-recurring costs attributable to the Class
B shares.
Any remaining dividend amount for
allocation of the Class A dividend and Class B dividend shall be
allocated pro rata among the Class A shares.
The Board does not expect income
in the Lux Subsidiary to significantly exceed the anticipated
annual running costs of the Lux Subsidiary and therefore does not
expect that the Lux Subsidiary will pay significant or any,
dividends although it reserves the right to do so.
Fair value hierarchy
IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement
requires an analysis of investments valued at fair value based on
the reliability and significance of information used to measure
their fair value.
The Company categorises its
financial assets according to the following fair value hierarchy
detailed in IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement that reflects the
significance of the inputs used in determining their fair
values:
· Level 1:
Quoted market price (unadjusted) in an active
market for an identical instrument.
· Level 2:
Valuation techniques based on observable inputs,
either directly (i.e., as prices) or indirectly (i.e., derived from
prices). This category includes instruments valued using: quoted
market prices in active markets for similar instruments; quoted
prices for identical or similar instruments in markets that are
considered less than active; or other valuation techniques where
all significant inputs are directly or indirectly observable from
market data.
· Level 3:
Valuation techniques using significant
unobservable inputs. This category includes all instruments where
the valuation technique includes inputs not based on observable
data and the unobservable variable inputs have a significant effect
on the instrument's valuation. This category includes instruments
that are valued based on quoted prices for similar instruments
where significant unobservable adjustments or assumptions are
required to reflect differences between the instruments.
31 December 2023
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss
|
-
|
-
|
305,994,558
|
305,994,558
|
31 December 2022
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss
|
-
|
-
|
297,721,169
|
297,721,169
|
The Company determines the fair
value of the financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
using the unaudited IFRS NAV of the Lux Subsidiary and the audited
IFRS NAV of BCF.
During the years ended 31 December
2023 and 31 December 2022, there were no reclassifications between
levels of the fair value hierarchy.
The Company's maximum exposure to
loss from its interests in the Lux Subsidiary and indirectly in
BCF, is equal to the fair value of its investments in the Lux
Subsidiary.
Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss
reconciliation
The following table shows a
reconciliation of all movements in the fair value of financial
assets categorised within Level 3 between the start and the end of
the reporting period:
|
31
December
2023
|
31
December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
Balance as at 1 January
|
297,721,169
|
417,969,559
|
Purchases - CSWs
|
-
|
7,608,819
|
Sale proceeds - CSWs
|
(52,820,196)
|
(56,962,646)
|
Realised gain on financial assets
at fair value through profit or loss - CSWs
|
21,406,810
|
21,319,529
|
Total change in unrealised
gain/(loss) on financial assets for the year
|
39,686,775
|
(92,214,092)
|
Balance as at 31 December
|
305,994,558
|
297,721,169
|
|
|
|
Realised gain on financial assets
at fair value through profit or loss
|
21,406,810
|
21,319,529
|
Total change in unrealised
gain/(loss) on financial assets for the year
|
39,686,775
|
(92,214,092)
|
Net gain/(loss) on financial assets at fair value through
profit or loss
|
61,093,585
|
(70,894,563)
|
Refer to above, Note 2.8 and Note
11 for valuation methodology of financial assets at fair value
through profit and loss.
The Company's investments, through
the Lux Subsidiary, in BCF are untraded and illiquid. The Board has
considered these factors and concluded that there is no further
need to apply a discount for illiquidity as at the end of the
reporting period.
Quantitative information of significant unobservable inputs
and sensitivity analysis to significant changes in unobservable
inputs - Level 3
The significant unobservable
inputs used in the fair value measurement of the financial assets
at fair value through profit or loss within Level 3 of the fair
value hierarchy together with a quantitative sensitivity analysis
as at 31 December 2023 and 31 December 2022 are as shown
below:
Asset Class
|
Fair Value
|
Unobservable
Inputs
|
Ranges
|
Weighted
average
|
Sensitivity to changes in
significant unobservable inputs
|
|
€
|
|
|
|
|
CSWs
|
298,050,226
|
Undiscounted NAV of
BCF
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
20%
increase/decrease will have a fair value impact of +/-
€59,610,045
|
Class A and Class B
shares
|
7,944,332
|
Undiscounted NAV of the
Lux
Subsidiary
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
20%
increase/decrease will have a fair value impact of +/-
€1,588,866
|
Total as at
31
December 2023
|
305,994,558
|
|
|
|
|
Asset Class
|
Fair Value
|
Unobservable
Inputs
|
Ranges
|
Weighted
average
|
Sensitivity to changes in
significant unobservable inputs
|
|
€
|
|
|
|
|
CSWs
|
290,426,295
|
Undiscounted NAV of
BCF
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
20%
increase/decrease will have a fair value impact of +/-
€58,085,259
|
Class A and Class B
shares
|
7,294,874
|
Undiscounted NAV of the
Lux
Subsidiary
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
20%
increase/decrease will have a fair value impact of +/-
€1,458,975
|
Total as at
31
December 2022
|
297,721,169
|
|
|
|
|
Refer to Note 11 for financial and
other information on BCF including sensitivity analysis.
6
Intercompany loan
|
As at
31 December
2023
|
As at
31 December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
Intercompany loan balance as at 1
January
|
1,694,077
|
1,246,249
|
Increase in intercompany
loan
|
467,005
|
447,828
|
Intercompany loan balance as at 31 December
|
2,161,082
|
1,694,077
|
The intercompany loan - payable to
the Lux Subsidiary is a revolving unsecured loan between the
Company and the Lux Subsidiary. The intercompany loan has a
maturity date of 13 September 2033 and is repayable at the option
of the Company up to the maturity date. Interest is accrued at a
rate of 1.6% per annum and is payable annually only when a written
request has been provided to the Company by the Lux Subsidiary.
During the year ended 31 December 2023, loan interest expense
incurred by the Company was €30,885 (2022: €23,400).
7
Payables
|
As at
31 December
2023
|
As at
31 December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
Audit fees
|
196,700
|
169,062
|
Professional fees
|
124,076
|
142,314
|
Other payables
|
122,483
|
43,639
|
Intercompany loan interest
payable
|
90,127
|
59,242
|
Administration fees
|
79,553
|
80,685
|
Directors' fees
|
-
|
68,470
|
Payable on share
buyback
|
-
|
160,322
|
Total payables
|
612,939
|
723,734
|
All payables are due within the
next twelve months.
8
Stated capital
Authorised
The authorised share capital of
the Company is represented by an unlimited number of shares of any
class at no par value.
Allotted, called up and
fully-paid
Redeemable shares
|
Number of
shares
|
Stated
capital
|
|
|
€
|
As at 1 January 2023
|
444,578,522
|
447,542,762
|
Shares repurchased during the
year
|
(1,839,619)
|
(1,230,663)
|
Total redeemable shares as at 31 December
2023
|
442,738,903
|
446,312,099
|
Allotted, called up and
fully-paid
Ordinary shares
|
Number of
shares
|
Stated
capital
|
|
|
€
|
As at 1 January 2022
|
460,984,702
|
459,044,783
|
Shares repurchased during the year
and held in treasury
|
(16,406,180)
|
(11,502,021)
|
Total ordinary shares as at 31 December
2022
|
444,578,522
|
447,542,762
|
Redeemable shares
At the 2023 AGM held on 26 July
2023 (2022 AGM held on 17 June 2022), the Directors were granted
authority to repurchase up to 14.99% (2022: 14.99%) of the issued
share capital as at the date of the 2023 AGM (2022 AGM) to be held
as treasury shares.
Under this authority, during the
year ended 31 December 2023, the Company purchased 1,839,619 (2022:
16,406,180) of its ordinary shares of no par value at a total cost
of €1,230,663, including transaction costs of £2,471 (31 December
2022:a total cost of €11,502,021 ,including transaction costs of
€23,095). These ordinary shares were held as treasury shares until
they were cancelled on 21 December 2023.
At the Company's 2023 AGM, the
Company received Shareholder approval to resell up to 44,273,890
(2022: 45,932,470) shares held by the Company in treasury. Under
this authority, these shares are permitted to be sold or
transferred out of treasury for cash at a price representing a
discount to NAV per ordinary share not greater than the discount at
which such shares were repurchased by the Company. To date, no
shares have been resold by the Company under this
authority.
At the EGM held on 15 September
2023, the Shareholders approved the conversion of the ordinary
shares into redeemable shares in order to allow for proceeds of
realising assets in accordance with the managed wind-down, to be
returned to Shareholders by way of pro rata compulsory redemptions
of the redeemable shares. On 11 December 2023, all the ordinary
shares of the Company were converted to redeemable
shares.
Deferred share
Further to the Circular published
on 25 August 2023 and the Shareholders' resolution passed on 15
September 2023, a deferred share was issued by the Company on 11
December 2023 to CONJL SPV Trustee 1 Limited.
Treasury shares
On 21 December 2023, the Company
cancelled all its 40,163,891 (2022: 38,324,272) redeemable shares
which it held in treasury as at that date.
As at 31 December 2023, the
Company had 442,738,903 redeemable shares in issue and 1 deferred
share. As at 31 December 2022, the Company had 444,578,522 ordinary
shares in issue and 38,324,272 shares in treasury.
Voting rights - redeemable
shares
Holders of redeemable shares have
the right to receive income and capital from assets attributable to
such class. Redeemable Shareholders have the right to receive
notice of general meetings of the Company and have the right to
attend and vote at all general meetings.
Dividends
The Company may, by resolution,
declare dividends in accordance with the respective rights of the
Shareholders, but no such dividend shall exceed the amount
recommended by the Directors. The Directors may pay fixed rate and
interim dividends.
A general meeting declaring a
dividend may, upon the recommendation of the Directors, direct that
payment of a dividend shall be satisfied wholly or partly by the
issue of redeemable shares or the distribution of assets and the
Directors shall give effect to such resolution.
Except as otherwise provided by
the rights attaching to or terms of issue of any shares, all
dividends shall be apportioned and paid pro rata according to the
amounts paid on the Shares during any portion or portions of the
period in respect of which the dividend is paid. No dividend or
other monies payable in respect of any Share shall bear interest
against the Company.
The Directors may deduct from any
dividend or other monies payable to a Shareholder all sums of money
(if any) presently payable by the holder to the Company on account
of calls or otherwise in relation to such shares.
Any dividend unclaimed after a
period of 10 years from the date on which it became payable shall,
if the Directors so resolve, be forfeited and cease to remain owing
by the Company.
Refer to above on how dividends
are funded and to Note 20 for dividends declared after the
year-end.
Repurchase of ordinary
shares
On 22 May 2023, the Board decided
for the Company to cease any buy back of shares.
Rights as to capital
On a winding up, the Company may,
with the sanction of a special resolution and any other sanction
required by the Companies Law, divide the whole or any part of the
assets of the Company among the Shareholders in specie provided
that no holder shall be compelled to accept any assets upon which
there is a liability. On return of assets on liquidation or capital
reduction or otherwise, the assets of the Company remaining after
payments of its liabilities shall subject to the rights of the
holders of other classes of shares, to be applied to the
Shareholders equally pro rata to their holdings of
shares.
Capital management
The Company is closed-ended and
has no externally imposed capital requirements. The Company's
capital as at 31 December 2023 comprises Shareholders' equity at a
total of €320,987,100 (2022: €301,614,977). Following the
resolution passed on 15 September 2023, the Company's objectives
for managing capital are:
· to realise all its existing assets in its portfolio, with
cash returned to the Shareholders in a timely and efficient
manner;
· to maintain sufficient liquidity to meet the expenses of the
Company and to meet dividend commitments; and
· to maintain sufficient size to make the operation of the
Company cost efficient.
The Board monitors the capital
adequacy of the Company on an on-going basis and the Company's
objectives regarding capital management have been met. Refer to
Note 9C Liquidity Risk for further discussion on capital
management, particularly on how the distribution policy is
managed.
9
Financial risk management
These are components of the
Company's principal risk regarding investment performance as
outlined above. This, in turn, links to the Portfolio Adviser's
section on Risk Management. The Company is exposed to market risk
(including interest rate risk, currency risk and price risk),
credit risk and liquidity risk arising from the financial
instruments it holds and the markets in which it
invests.
9A Market
risk
Market risk is the current or
prospective risk to earnings or capital of the Company arising from
changes in interest rates, foreign exchange rates, commodity prices
or equity prices. The Company holds three investments, denominated
in Euro, in the Lux Subsidiary in the form of CSWs, Class A and
Class B shares. The CSWs are the main driver of the Company's
performance. Financial market disruptions may have a negative
effect on the valuations of BCF's investments and, by extension, on
the NAV of the Lux Subsidiary and the Company and/or the market
price of the Company's Euro shares and on liquidity events
involving BCF's investments. Any non-performing assets in BCF's
portfolio may cause the value of BCF's portfolio to decrease and,
by extension, the NAV of the Lux Subsidiary and the Company.
Adverse economic conditions may also decrease the value of any
security obtained in relation to any of BCF's
investments.
A sensitivity analysis is shown
below disclosing the impact on the IFRS NAV and total comprehensive
income of the Company, if the fair value of the Company's
investments at the year-end increased or decreased by 20%. This
level of change is considered to be reasonably possible based on
observations of past and possible market conditions. For
appreciation of the underlying exposure of BCF, refer to Note
11.
|
IFRS fair value as at year
ended 31 December 2023
|
Impact on IFRS NAV and total
comprehensive
income
(Increase by
20%)
|
Impact on
IFRS
NAV and total
comprehensive
income
(Decrease by
20%)
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Financial assets held at fair value through
profit or loss:
|
|
|
|
CSWs
|
298,050,226
|
59,610,452
|
(59,610,452)
|
Class A and Class B
shares
|
7,944,332
|
1,588,866
|
(1,588,866)
|
Total
|
305,994,558
|
61,199,318
|
(61,199,318)
|
|
IFRS fair value as at year
ended 31 December 2022
|
Impact on IFRS NAV and total
comprehensive
income
(Increase by
20%)
|
Impact on
IFRS
NAV and total
comprehensive
income
(Decrease by
20%)
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Financial assets held at fair value through
profit or loss:
|
|
|
|
CSWs
|
290,426,295
|
58,085,259
|
(58,085,259)
|
Class A and Class B
shares
|
7,294,874
|
1,458,975
|
(1,458,975)
|
Total
|
297,721,169
|
59,544,234
|
(59,544,234)
|
The calculations are based on the
investment valuation at the Statement of Financial Position date
and are not representative of the period as a whole and may not be
reflective of future market conditions.
Note 11 is an extract taken from
BCF's audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December
2023. The Company does not have any further visibility of more
granular sensitivity disclosure at BCF level.
i.
Interest rate risk
Interest rate movements affect the
fair value of investments in fixed interest rate securities and
floating rate loans and on the level of income receivable on cash
deposits.
The interest income received by
the Lux Subsidiary from investments held at fair value through
profit or loss is the interest income on the PPNs received from
BCF. Its calculation is dependent on the profit generated by BCF as
opposed to interest rates set by the market. Interest rate
sensitivity analysis is presented for BCF in Note 11 since any
potential movement in market interest rates will impact BCF's
holdings which in turn will impact the interest income received by
the Lux Subsidiary on the PPNs.
The following tables detail the
Company's interest rate risk as at 31 December 2023 and
31 December 2022:
31 December 2023
|
Interest
bearing
|
Non-interest
bearing
|
Total
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
17,725,633
|
-
|
17,725,633
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss
|
-
|
305,994,558
|
305,994,558
|
Total assets
|
17,725,633
|
305,994,558
|
323,720,191
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
Intercompany loan
|
(2,161,082)
|
-
|
(2,161,082)
|
Payables
|
-
|
(612,939)
|
(612,939)
|
Total liabilities
|
(2,161,082)
|
(612,939)
|
(2,774,021)
|
Total interest sensitivity gap
|
15,564,551
|
|
|
31 December 2022
|
Interest
bearing
|
Non-interest
bearing
|
Total
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
6,259,400
|
-
|
6,259,400
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss
|
-
|
297,721,169
|
297,721,169
|
Total assets
|
6,259,400
|
297,721,169
|
303,980,569
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
Intercompany loan
|
(1,694,077)
|
-
|
(1,694,077)
|
Payables
|
-
|
(723,734)
|
(723,734)
|
Total liabilities
|
(1,694,077)
|
(723,734)
|
(2,417,811)
|
Total interest sensitivity gap
|
4,565,323
|
|
|
As at 31 December 2023 and 31
December 2022, the majority of the Company's interest rate exposure
arose in the fair value of the underlying BCF portfolio which is
largely invested in senior secured loans of companies predominantly
in Western Europe or North America. Most of the investments in
senior secured loans carry variable interest rates and various
maturity dates. Refer to Note 11 which details BCF's exposure to
interest rate risk.
ii. Currency
risk
Foreign currency risk is the risk
that the values of the Company's assets and liabilities are
adversely affected by changes in the values of foreign currencies
by reference to the Company's base currency. The functional
currency of the Company and its Lux Subsidiary is the
Euro.
The Company and the Lux Subsidiary
are not subject to significant foreign currency risk since the
majority of their investments are denominated in Euro and their
share capital are also denominated in Euro. Refer to Note 11 which
details BCF's exposure to currency risk. BCF hedges US CLO equity
exposure by reference to mark to model valuations incorporated in
the Published NAV as defined above.
The Company did not have any
derivatives at the year-end (2022: nil).
iii. Price
risk
Price risk is the risk that the
value of the Company's indirect investments in BCF through its
holding in the Lux Subsidiary does not reflect the true value of
BCF's underlying investment portfolio. BCF's portfolio may at any
given time include securities or other financial instruments or
obligations which are very thinly traded, for which a limited
market exists or which are restricted as to their transferability
under applicable securities laws. These investments may be
extremely difficult to value accurately.
Further, because of overall size
or concentration in particular markets of positions held by BCF,
the value of its investments which can be liquidated may differ,
sometimes significantly, from their valuations. Third-party pricing
information may not be available for certain positions held by BCF.
Investments held by BCF may trade with significant bid-ask spreads.
BCF is entitled to rely, without independent investigation, upon
pricing information and valuations furnished to BCF by third
parties, including pricing services and valuation
sources.
Absent bad faith or manifest
error, valuation determinations in accordance with BCF's valuation
policy are conclusive and binding. In light of the foregoing, there
is a risk that the Company, in redeeming all or part of its
investment while BCF holds such investments, could be paid an
amount less than it would otherwise be paid if the actual value of
BCF's investment was higher than the value designated for that
investment by BCF.
Similarly, there is a risk that a
redeeming BCF interest holder might, in effect, be over-paid at the
time of the applicable redemption if the actual value of BCF's
investment was lower than the value designated for that investment
by BCF, in which case the value of BCF interests to the remaining
BCF interest holders would be reduced. Refer to Note 11 for further
details.
The Board monitors and reviews the
Company's NAV production process on an ongoing basis.
9B Credit
risk
Credit risk is the risk that a
counterparty to a financial instrument will fail to discharge an
obligation or commitment that it has entered into with the Company.
The Board has in place monitoring procedures in respect of credit
risk which is reviewed on an ongoing basis.
The Company's credit risk is
attributable to its cash and cash equivalents and financial assets
at fair value through profit or loss. An allowance for impairment
is made where there is an identified loss event which, based on
previous experience, is evidence of a reduction in the
recoverability of the cash flows.
BIL monitors for the Company, the
Lux Subsidiary, BCF and its subsidiaries the creditworthiness of
financial institutions with whom cash is held or with whom
investment or derivative transactions are entered into, on a
regular basis.
The carrying amounts of financial
assets best represent the maximum credit risk exposure at the
Statement of Financial Position date. At the reporting date, the
Company's financial assets exposed to credit risk amounted to the
following:
|
As at
31 December
2023
|
As at
31 December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
17,725,633
|
6,259,400
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss
|
305,994,558
|
297,721,169
|
Total assets
|
323,720,191
|
303,980,569
|
The Company is exposed to a
potential material singular credit risk in the event that it
requests a repayment of the CSWs from the Lux Subsidiary and
receives an acceptance of that repayment request. Under the CSW
agreement between the Company and the Lux Subsidiary, any payment
obligation by the Lux Subsidiary to the Company is conditional upon
the receipt of an equivalent amount by the Lux Subsidiary which is
derived from the PPNs issued by BCF. The Board is aware of this
risk and the concentration risk to the Lux Subsidiary and
indirectly to BCF.
Additionally, under the Profit
Participating Note Issuing and Purchase Agreement ("PPNIPA")
between the Lux Subsidiary and BCF, if the net proceeds from a
liquidation of the collateral obligations as defined in the PPNIPA
available to unsecured creditors of BCF (the "Liquidation Funds")
are less than the aggregate amount payable by BCF in respect of its
obligations to its unsecured creditors, including to the Lux
Subsidiary and the other parties to the PPNIPA (such negative
amount being referred to as a "shortfall"), the amount payable by
BCF to the Lux Subsidiary and the other parties to the PPNIPA in
respect of BCF's obligations under the PPNs will be reduced to such
amount of the Liquidation Funds which is available in accordance
with the regulatory requirements and the senior debt restrictive
covenants to satisfy such payment obligation upon the distribution
of the Liquidation Funds among all of BCF's unsecured creditors on
a pari passu and pro rata basis and shall be applied for the
benefit of the Lux Subsidiary and the other parties to the PPNIPA.
In such circumstances the other assets of BCF will not be available
for the payment of such shortfall and the rights of the Lux
Subsidiary and the other parties to the PPNIPA to receive any
further amounts in respect of such obligations shall be
extinguished and the Noteholders and the other parties to the
PPNIPA may not take any further action to recover such
amounts.
During the years ended 31 December
2023 and 31 December 2022, all cash was placed with BNP Paribas
S.A., as Custodian. The ultimate parent of BNP Paribas S.A. is BNP
Paribas which is publicly traded with a credit rating of A+
(Standard & Poor's).
The Board continues to monitor the
Company's exposure to credit risk and holds no collateral over any
of those balances. Refer to Note 11 which details BCF's exposure to
credit risk.
9C Liquidity
risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that
the Company will encounter difficulties in realising assets or
otherwise raising funds to meet financial commitments.
The Company has been established
as a closed-ended vehicle. Accordingly, there is no right or
entitlement attaching to the Company's shares that allows them to
be redeemed or repurchased by the Company at the option of the
Shareholder. This significantly reduces the liquidity risk of
the Company.
Under the terms of the unsecured
PPNs issued to its investors, BCF is contractually obliged to
ensure that its portfolio is managed in accordance with the
Company's investment objective and policy. In the event that BCF
fails to comply with these contractual obligations, the Company,
through the Lux Subsidiary, could elect for the unsecured PPNs to
become immediately due and repayable to it from BCF, subject to any
applicable legal, contractual and regulatory restrictions. Given
the nature of the investments held by BCF there is no guarantee and
indeed, it is highly unlikely that the applicable legal,
contractual and regulatory restrictions would permit BCF to
immediately repay the unsecured PPNs on the Company making such an
election.
If the Company were to elect for
the unsecured PPNs to be repaid, BCF's failure to fully comply with
its contractual obligations to do so or BCF being restricted from
doing so by law, regulation or contract could have a significant
adverse effect on the Company's business, financial condition,
results of operations and/or the market price of the
shares.
The PPNs are unsecured obligations
of BCF and amounts payable on the PPNs will be made solely from
amounts received in respect of the assets of BCF available for
distribution to its unsecured creditors. BCF is permitted to incur
leverage in the form of secured debt by way of one or more
revolving credit facilities. Such secured debt will rank ahead of
the PPNs in respect of any distributions or payments by BCF. In an
enforcement scenario under any revolving credit facility, the
provider(s) of such facilities will have the ability to enforce
their security over the assets of BCF and to dispose of or
liquidate, on their own behalf or through a security trustee or
receiver, the assets of BCF in a manner which is beyond the control
of the Company. In such an enforcement scenario, there is no
guarantee that there will be sufficient proceeds from the disposal
or liquidation of BCF's assets to repay any amounts due and payable
on the PPNs and this may adversely affect the performance of the
Company's business, financial condition and results of
operations.
Consequently, in the event of a
materially adverse event occurring in relation to BCF or the market
generally, the ability of the Company to realise its investment and
prevent the possibility of further losses could, therefore, be
limited by its restricted ability to realise its investment via the
Lux Subsidiary in BCF. This delay could materially affect the value
of the PPNs and the timing of when BCF is able to realise its
investments, which may adversely affect the Company's business,
financial condition, results of operations and/or the market price
of the shares.
The following are the remaining
contractual maturities of financial liabilities at the reporting
date. The amounts are gross and undiscounted and include
contractual interest payments.
31 December 2023
|
|
Contractual cash
flows
|
|
Carrying
amount
|
0-1 year
|
9-10 years
|
Intercompany loan
|
2,161,082
|
-
|
(2,161,082)
|
Payables
|
612,939
|
(612,939)
|
-
|
|
2,774,021
|
(612,939)
|
(2,161,082)
|
31 December 2022
|
|
Contractual cash
flows
|
|
Carrying
amount
|
0-1 year
|
9-10 years
|
Intercompany loan
|
1,694,077
|
-
|
(1,694,077)
|
Payables
|
723,734
|
(723,734)
|
-
|
|
2,417,811
|
(723,734)
|
(1,694,077)
|
The liquidity profile of BCF as at
31 December 2023 is in Note 11.
To meet the Company's target
dividend, the Company will require sufficient payments from the
CSWs held and in the event these are not received, the Board has
the discretion to determine the amount of dividends paid to
Shareholders.
10 Interests in other
entities
Interests in unconsolidated
structured entities
IFRS 12 Disclosure of Interests in
Other Entities defines a structured entity as an entity that has
been designed so that voting or similar rights are not the dominant
factor in deciding who controls the entity, such as when any voting
rights relate to the administrative tasks only and the relevant
activities are directed by means of contractual agreements. A
structured entity often has some of the following features or
attributes:
· restricted activities;
· a narrow and well-defined objective;
· insufficient equity to permit the structured entity to
finance its activities without subordinated financial support;
and
· financing in the form of multiple contractually linked
instruments that create concentrations of credit or other
risks.
Involvement with unconsolidated
structured entities
The Directors have concluded that
the CSWs and voting shares of the Lux Subsidiary in which the
Company invests, but that it does not consolidate, meet the
definition of a structured entity.
The Directors have also concluded
that BCF also meets the definition of a structured
entity.
The Directors have concluded that
CLOs, that are not subsidiaries for financial reporting purposes,
meet the definition of structured entities because:
· the voting rights in the CLOs are not dominant rights in
deciding who controls them, as they relate to administrative tasks
only;
· each CLO's activities are restricted by its Prospectus;
and
· the CLOs have narrow and well-defined objectives to provide
investment opportunities to investors.
As at 31 December 2023, the
Company owns 100% of the Class A and Class B shares in the Lux
Subsidiary comprising 2,000,000 Class A shares and one Class B
share (2022: 2,000,000 Class A shares and one Class B
share).
The Lux Subsidiary's principal
place of business is Luxembourg.
Other than the investments noted
above, the Company did not provide any financial support for the
years ended 31 December 2023 and 31 December 2022, nor had it any
intention of providing financial or other support.
The Company has an intercompany
loan payable to the Lux Subsidiary as at 31 December 2023. Refer to
Note 6 for further details.
11 Financial and other
information on BCF
The Board has provided the
following information on BCF, which has been extracted from BCF's
audited financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2023,
as it believes this will provide further insight to the Company's
Shareholders into the operations of BCF, the asset mix in its
portfolio and the risks to which BCF is exposed.
As at 31 December 2023, the Lux
Subsidiary held a 34.65% (2022: 33.8%) interest in the PPNs issued
by BCF. The disclosures have not been apportioned according to the
Lux Subsidiary's PPN holding, as the Board believes to do so would
be misleading and not provide an accurate representation of the
Company's investment in BCF.
Principal activities
BCF was established as an
originator vehicle under European risk retention rules for CLO
securitisations. It may also invest in senior secured loans, either
directly or indirectly through CLO warehouses and risk retention
companies. BCF is funded by proceeds from the issuance of PPNs
together with other financial resources available to it, such as
the BCF Facility.
Following the notices given by PPN
holders during the financial year ended 31 December 2023 to request
redemptions, the Directors of BCF decided it was in the best
interests of the shareholders to proceed with an orderly wind down
of BCF.
Investment policy
BCF's investment policy is to
invest (directly or indirectly through one or more Underlying
Companies) in a diverse portfolio of senior secured loans
(including broadly syndicated, middle market or other loans) (such
investments being made by the Underlying Companies directly or
through investments in Loan Warehouses) bonds and CLO Securities
and generate attractive risk‐adjusted returns from such portfolios.
BCF intends to pursue its investment policy by using the proceeds
from the issue of PPNs (together with proceeds from other financial
resources available to it) to invest in such assets.
BCF may invest (directly or
through other Underlying Companies) predominantly in European or US
senior secured loans, CLO Income Note securities (the most
subordinated tranche of debt issued by a CLO issuer), loan
warehouses and other assets. Investments in loan warehouses will
typically be in the form of an obligation to purchase preference
shares or a subordinated loan. There is no limit on the maximum
European or US exposure. BCF is not expected to invest (directly or
through other Underlying Companies) in senior secured loans
domiciled outside North America or Western Europe.
A CLO is a pooled investment
vehicle which may invest in a diversified group of debt securities,
in this case predominantly senior secured loans. To finance its
investments, the CLO vehicle issues debt in the form of Senior
Notes and Subordinated Equity Notes to investors. The servicing and
repayment of these notes is linked directly to the performance of
the underlying portfolio of assets. The portfolio of assets
underlying the CLO Income Note securities consist mainly of senior
secured loans, mezzanine loans, second lien loans, high yield bonds
and repurchase agreements. The portfolio of assets within BCF
consists mainly of CLO Income Note securities. Distributions on the
CLO Income Note securities, by way of interest payments, are
payable on a quarterly basis on dates established in the formation
documents of the CLOs.
As at 31 December 2023, BCF had
exposure to two (2022: two) CLOs held as vertical strips, as
defined in the Company's Investment Strategy, each being 0.2%
(2022: 0.2%) of BCF NAV.
Subsidiaries
As at 31 December 2023, BCF holds
the majority, or all, of the subordinated notes issued by a number
of European CLO issuers (the "Direct CLO Subsidiaries") as
follows:
Name of subsidiary
|
Currency
|
Deal Size
(million)
|
% Subordinated Equity Notes
Held
31 December
2023
|
|
|
Phoenix Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€412
|
51.4%
|
|
Dartry Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€424
|
51.1%
|
|
Tymon Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€415
|
51.0%
|
|
Elm Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€519
|
54.0%
|
|
Griffith Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€455
|
53.4%
|
|
Clarinda Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€417
|
51.2%
|
|
Palmerston Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€293
|
53.3%
|
|
Clontarf Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€228
|
66.9%
|
|
Willow Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€296
|
60.9%
|
|
Marlay Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€367
|
60.0%
|
|
Milltown Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€374
|
65.0%
|
|
Richmond Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€321
|
68.3%
|
|
Sutton Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€402
|
66.7%
|
|
Crosthwaite Park CLO
DAC
|
EUR
|
€516
|
64.7%
|
|
Dunedin Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€421
|
52.9%
|
|
Seapoint Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€403
|
70.5%
|
|
Holland Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€425
|
72.1%
|
|
Vesey Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€403
|
80.3%
|
|
Avondale Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€409
|
63.0%
|
|
Deer Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€355
|
71.9%
|
|
Marino Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€322
|
71.4%
|
|
Carysfort Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€404
|
80.7%
|
|
Rockfield Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€402
|
80.0%
|
|
Dillon's Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€405
|
84.0%
|
|
Cabinteely Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€404
|
75.6%
|
|
Otranto Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€443
|
96.3%
|
|
Clonmore Park CLO DAC
|
EUR
|
€341
|
100.0%
|
|
Edmondstown Park CLO
DAC
|
EUR
|
€379
|
100.0%
|
|
Bushy Park CLO
DAC[42]
|
EUR
|
€390
|
61.3%
|
|
Glenbrook Park CLO
DAC42
|
EUR
|
€339
|
100.0%
|
|
Wilton Park CLO
DAC42
|
EUR
|
€395
|
100.0%
|
|
Cumulus Static 2023-1 CLO
DAC42
|
EUR
|
€319
|
100.0%
|
|
BCF holds 100% of the PPNs issued
by BGCM DAC, which was established on 1 August 2019. BGCM DAC holds
100% of the Series 2 and Series 3 interests of BCM LLC, a US
manager-originator vehicle established on 14 May 2019.
The establishment of BCM LLC
created a structure capable of meeting potential demand for US CLOs
from European institutional investors requiring compliance with
European risk retention rules. As at 31 December 2023, BCM LLC
holds subordinated notes in the following US CLOs (the "Indirect
CLO Subsidiaries"):
Name of subsidiary
|
Currency
|
Deal Size
(million)
|
% Subordinated Equity Notes
Held
31 December
2023
|
|
|
Southwich Park CLO
Limited
|
USD
|
$503
|
59.9%
|
|
Point Au Roche Park CLO
Limited
|
USD
|
$457
|
61.2%
|
|
Whetstone Park CLO
Limited
|
USD
|
$506
|
62.5%
|
|
Peace Park CLO Limited
|
USD
|
$660
|
60.8%
|
|
Tallman Park CLO
Limited
|
USD
|
$410
|
5.0%
|
|
Beechwood Park CLO
Limited
|
USD
|
$816
|
61.1%
|
|
Harriman Park CLO
Limited
|
USD
|
$499
|
70.0%
|
|
Cayuga Park CLO Limited
|
USD
|
$398
|
72.0%
|
|
Allegany Park CLO
Limited
|
USD
|
$506
|
66.2%
|
|
Wehle Park CLO Limited
|
USD
|
$547
|
5.0%
|
|
Boyce Park CLO Limited
|
USD
|
$762
|
61.8%
|
|
In accordance with IFRS 10
Consolidated Financial Statements, the Direct CLO Subsidiaries, the
Indirect CLO Subsidiaries, BGCM DAC and BCM LLC, are all deemed to
be subsidiaries of BCF and are consolidated under its financial
reporting framework. As at 31 December 2023, BCM LLC held
investments in the following non-consolidated US CLOs:
Name
|
Gilbert Park CLO
Limited
|
Stewart Park CLO
Limited
|
Catskill Park CLO
Limited
|
Dewolf Park CLO Limited
|
Long Point Park CLO
Limited
|
Grippen Park CLO
Limited
|
Thayer Park CLO Limited
|
Cook Park CLO Limited
|
BCF also directly holds
subordinated notes in US CLOs which it was not responsible for
originating. As at 31 December 2023, BCF had direct holdings in the
following US CLOs (together with the non-consolidated US CLOs held
through BCM LLC, the "Non-Consolidated US CLOs"):
Name
|
Filmore Park CLO
Limited
|
Harbor Park CLO Limited
|
The directors of BCF have
determined that BCF did not control the Non-Consolidated US CLOs or
US CLO warehouses held directly by BCF or through BCM LLC, as
defined in IFRS 10. Therefore, these entities have not been
consolidated for the purposes of presenting BCF's consolidated
financial statements. These investments have been classified as
financial assets held at fair value through profit or
loss.
Valuation of financial
instruments
As at 31 December 2023 and 2022,
the loans held were broker priced through Markit and the bond
investments were valued by prices provided by IDC. The majority of
these assets were classified as Level 2 since the input into the
Markit price consisted of at least two quotes, however, a small
number of holdings priced through Markit consisted of only one
quote. Such assets were classified as Level 3. Both loans and bonds
are priced at current mid prices.
The CLO Income Notes issued by the
Direct CLO Subsidiaries are listed on Euronext Dublin and are
valued by a third party. The approach to valuing these CLO Income
Notes incorporates CLO specific information and modelling
techniques. Factors include (i) granular loan level data, such as
the concentration and quality of various loan level buckets, for
example, second liens, covenant lites and other structured product
assets, as well as several other factors including: discount rate,
default rates, prepayment rates, recovery rates, recovery lag and
reinvestment spread (these factors are highly sensitive and
variations may materially affect the fair value of the asset) and
(ii) structural analysis on a deal by deal basis. Pricing includes
checks on all structural features of each CLO, such as the credit
enhancement of each bond and various performance triggers
(including over-collateralisation tests, interest coverage and
diversion tests). Furthermore, reinvestment language specific to
each CLO deal is assessed, as well as the collateral manager's
performance and capabilities.
Investments in CLO Income Notes of
US CLO Issuers, held directly or indirectly, are valued using an
equivalent methodology. Similar to the above, valuation of such CLO
Income Notes uses significant unobservable inputs and accordingly
are classified as Level 3. Investments in the CLO Income Notes of
the CLO Subsidiaries and the Non-Consolidated US CLOs and in the
preference shares of the CLO warehouses are valued on the above
basis using significant unobservable inputs and accordingly, are
classified as Level 3.
Forward purchase agreements are
over-the-counter ("OTC") contracts for delayed delivery of
investments in which the buyer agrees to buy and the seller agrees
to deliver specified investments at specified prices on a specified
future date. Because the terms are not standardised, they are not
traded on organised exchanges and generally can be terminated or
closed out only by agreement of both parties to the contract. They
are valued in accordance with the terms of the forward purchase
agreement and are categorised as Level 2.
A currency swap is an interest
rate swap in which the cash flows are in different currencies. Upon
initiation of a currency swap, the counterparties make an initial
exchange of notional principals in the two currencies. During the
life of the swap, each party pays interest (in the currency of the
principal received) to the other. At the maturity of the swap, the
parties make a final exchange of the initial principal amounts,
reversing the initial exchange at the same spot rate. Contracts are
marked-to-market daily based upon calculations using a valuation
model and are categorised as Level 2.
The PPNs and debt issued by the
CLO Subsidiaries are categorised as Level 3, as they are valued
using a model which is based on the fair value of the underlying
assets and liabilities of the relevant entity.
The amortised cost of the BCF
Facility equates to its fair value due to the floating interest
rates and the proximity of the maturity dates and has been
categorised as Level 2.
Receivable for investments sold
and other receivables include the contractual amounts for
settlement of trades and other obligations due to BCF. Payable for
investments sold and other payables represent the contractual
amounts and obligations due by BCF for settlement of trades and
expenses. All of the receivable and payable balances are
categorised as Level 2.
The following tables analyse within
the fair value hierarchy BCF's financial instruments carried at
fair value as at 31 December 2023 and 31 December 2022:
31 December 2023
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Financial assets measured at fair value through profit or
loss:
|
|
|
|
|
- Investments in senior secured
loans and bonds[43]
|
-
|
4,454,821
|
27,323
|
4,482,144
|
- Investments in CLO Income
Notes
|
-
|
-
|
512,220,406
|
512,220,406
|
- Investment in BGCM
DAC
|
-
|
-
|
260,081,500
|
260,081,500
|
- - Derivative financial assets
|
-
|
6,740,708
|
-
|
6,740,708
|
Total financial assets
|
-
|
11,195,529
|
772,329,229
|
783,524,758
|
|
|
|
|
|
Financial liabilities measured at fair value through profit
or loss:
|
|
|
|
|
- PPNs
|
-
|
-
|
(874,833,126)
|
(874,833,126)
|
- Derivative financial
liabilities
|
-
|
(90,493,578)
|
-
|
(90,493,578)
|
Total financial liabilities
|
-
|
(90,493,578)
|
(874,833,126)
|
(965,326,704)
|
31 December 2022
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
|
Total
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Financial assets measured at fair value through profit or
loss:
|
|
|
|
|
- Investments in senior secured
loans and bonds43
|
-
|
319,801,298
|
12,605,793
|
332,407,091
|
- Investments in CLO Income
Notes
|
-
|
-
|
372,888,404
|
372,888,404
|
- Investment in BGCM
DAC
|
-
|
-
|
286,471,835
|
286,471,835
|
Total financial assets
|
-
|
319,801,298
|
671,966,032
|
991,767,330
|
|
|
|
|
|
Financial liabilities measured at fair value through profit
or loss:
|
|
|
|
|
- PPNs
|
-
|
-
|
(863,646,976)
|
(863,646,976)
|
- Derivative financial
liabilities
|
-
|
(80,505,196)
|
-
|
(80,505,196)
|
Total financial liabilities
|
-
|
(80,505,196)
|
(863,646,976)
|
(944,152,172)
|
The following tables show the
movement in Level 3 of BCF's fair value hierarchy for the years
ended 31 December 2023 and 31 December 2022:
31 December 2023
|
Financial assets measured at
fair value through profit or loss
|
Financial liabilities
measured at fair value through profit or loss
|
|
€
|
€
|
Opening balance
|
671,966,032
|
(863,646,976)
|
Net gain/(loss) on financial
assets and liabilities measured at fair value through profit or
loss
|
7,649,737
|
(22,587,436)
|
Purchases/Issuances
|
165,766,681
|
11,401,286
|
Sales/Redemptions
|
(73,053,221)
|
-
|
Closing Balance
|
772,329,229
|
(874,833,126)
|
31 December 2022
|
Financial assets measured at
fair value through profit or loss
|
Financial liabilities
measured at fair value through profit or loss
|
|
€
|
€
|
Opening balance
|
908,056,772
|
(1,233,581,335)
|
Net (loss)/gain on financial
assets and liabilities measured at fair value through profit or
loss
|
(322,002,133)
|
374,808,561
|
Purchases/Issuances
|
308,514,876
|
(7,608,819)
|
Sales/Redemptions
|
(222,603,483)
|
2,734,617
|
Closing Balance
|
671,966,032
|
(863,646,976)
|
BCF's policy is to recognise
transfers into and transfers out of fair value hierarchy levels as
of the last day of the accounting period. There were no transfers
between Level 1 and Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy during the
years ended 31 December 2023 or 31 December 2022.
Sensitivity of BCF Level 3 holdings to unobservable
inputs
A number of holdings as at 31
December 2023 and 31 December 2022 were priced through Markit where
the input into the Markit price was only one price, so they were
classified as Level 3. These loan assets are not modelled on
analysts' prices but are from dealers' runs therefore there are no
unobservable inputs into the prices.
The CLO Income Notes were valued
by a third party using a CLO intrinsic calculation methodology and
were classified as Level 3 because the valuation technique
incorporates significant unobservable inputs. The CLO prices are
determined by consideration of several factors including the
following: default rates, prepayment rates, recovery rates,
recovery lag and reinvestment spread. These factors are highly
sensitive and variations may materially affect the fair value of
the asset. These metrics are accumulated from various market
sources independent of BIL. Additionally, valuation incorporates a
review of each CLO indenture and the latest underlying CLO loan
portfolio forming various projections based on the quality of the
collateral, the collateral manager capabilities and general
macroeconomic conditions. The sensitivity of the fair values of the
CLO Notes, in particular CLO Income Notes to the traditional risk
variables measured separately including market risk and interest
rate risk may not be the most appropriate analysis for this asset
class. The sensitivity to valuation assumptions including interest
rates has an interdependent impact with other significant market
variables as noted in the assumptions used for valuing CLO Income
Notes. Given the values are based on third party prices, the
sensitivity to the key assumptions is not required to be
provided.
The assets classified as Level 3
represented 98.6% (2022: 67.8%) of the total financial assets. If
the price of the holdings classified as Level 3 increased or
decreased by 5% it would result in an increase or decrease in the
value of the financial assets of EUR 38,616,461 (4.93% of the total
financial assets) (2022: EUR 33,598,302 (3.39% of the total
financial assets)). There also would be an equal and opposite
effect on the valuation of the PPNs (4.93%) (2022:
(3.39%)).
The financial liabilities at fair
value through profit or loss consist of the PPNs. The PPNs are
valued using a model based on the fair value of the underlying
assets and liabilities. The amortised cost of the BCF Facility,
cash and cash equivalents, receivables and payables included in the
underlying assets and liabilities equate to their fair value due to
the floating interest rates and short-term nature of the balances.
If the value of the underlying assets or liabilities changes then
there would be an equal and opposite effect on the valuation of the
PPNs. The BCM LLC repurchase agreement is also valued in the same
manner as the BCF Facility.
Financial instruments and associated risks
The Lux Subsidiary holds one
investment in BCF in the form of PPNs. The PPNs are the main driver
of the Lux Subsidiary's performance and consequently that of the
Company. The performance of the PPNs is driven solely by the
underlying portfolio of BCF and therefore consideration of the
risks to which BCF is exposed to have also been made.
Market risk
Market risk is the current or
prospective risk to earnings or capital of BCF arising from changes
in interest rates, foreign exchange rates, commodity prices or
equity prices. Market risk embodies the potential for both losses
and gains.
Market price risk arises mainly
from uncertainty about future prices of financial instruments held.
It represents the potential loss BCF might suffer through holding
market positions in the face of price movements caused by factors
specific to the individual investment or factors affecting all
instruments traded in the market. In addition, local, regional or
global events may have a significant impact on BCF and the price of
its investments.
As all of the financial instruments
are carried at fair value through profit or loss, all changes in
market conditions will directly impact the valuation of the
PPNs.
(i) Currency
risk
Foreign currency risk arises as
the value of future transactions, recognised monetary assets and
monetary liabilities denominated in other currencies may fluctuate
due to changes in foreign exchange rates. Foreign exchange exposure
relating to non-monetary assets and liabilities is considered to be
a component of market price risk, not foreign currency
risk.
BCF's financial statements are
denominated in Euro, though investments in the US CLO warehouses,
US CLOs and senior secured loans and bonds are made and realised in
other currencies. Changes in rates of exchange may have an adverse
effect on the value, price or income of the investments of
BCF.
BIL monitors foreign currency risk
on a periodic basis. Typically, derivative contracts serve as
components of BCF's asset hedging program and are utilised
primarily to reduce foreign currency risk to BCF's investments.
Foreign currency risk on non-base currency loans and bonds is
minimised by the leveraged structure of BCF and by the use of the
multi-currency BCF Facility to draw down funds. Non-base GBP and
USD investments are funded by use of the corresponding currency
leverage of the BCF Facility which creates a matching of asset and
liability currency risk and minimising the impact of fluctuations
in exchange rates. Rolling currency forwards are used to manage the
foreign currency exposure of the preference shares of the US CLO
warehouses, the CLO Income Notes of the Indirect CLO Subsidiaries,
Dorchester Park CLO DAC and the Non-Consolidated US CLOs
denominated in foreign currencies. The market value of these USD
positions is hedged by offsetting USD forward notional amounts to
ensure BCF is fully hedged.
The following tables set out BCF's
total exposure to foreign currency risk and the net exposure to
foreign currencies of the monetary assets and liabilities as at 31
December 2023 and 31 December 2022:
31 December 2023
|
British
Pound
|
United States
Dollars
|
|
€
|
€
|
Investments in CLO Income
Notes
|
-
|
29,825,009
|
Investment in BGCM DAC
|
-
|
260,081,500
|
BCF Facility
|
(11,644)
|
(36,300)
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
35,459
|
134,458
|
Other assets and
liabilities
|
11,779
|
14,654,887
|
Net position
|
35,594
|
304,659,554
|
Notional amount of currency
forwards
|
-
|
(407,879,179)
|
Net exposure
|
35,594
|
(103,219,625)
|
|
|
|
Sensitivity 10%
|
3,559
|
(10,321,962)
|
31 December 2022
|
British
Pound
|
United States
Dollars
|
|
€
|
€
|
Investments in senior secured
loans and bonds
|
-
|
348,748
|
Investments in CLO Income
Notes
|
-
|
33,784,155
|
Investment in BGCM DAC
|
-
|
286,471,835
|
BCF Facility
|
(4,811,108)
|
(6,135,502)
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
322,070
|
147,350
|
Other assets and
liabilities
|
1,826,029
|
18,798,561
|
Net position
|
(2,663,009)
|
333,415,147
|
Notional amount of currency
forwards
|
-
|
(496,440,149)
|
Net exposure
|
(2,663,009)
|
(163,025,002)
|
|
|
|
Sensitivity 10%
|
(266,301)
|
(16,302,500)
|
Sensitivity analysis - BCF
At 31 December 2023 and 2022, had
the Euro strengthened by 10% in relation to all currencies, with
all other variables held constant, the net asset / liability
exposure would have increased by the amounts shown above for BCF.
There would be no impact on the total comprehensive income of BCF
because the fair value movement on financial liabilities would move
in the opposite direction and cancel the effect of the foreign
exchange movement.
A 10% weakening of the base
currency, against GBP and US Dollar, would have resulted in an
equal but opposite effect than that on the tables above, on the
basis that all other variables remain constant. These calculations
are based on historical data. Future currency movements and
correlations between holdings could vary significantly from those
experienced in the past.
(ii) Interest rate
risk
Interest rate risk arises from the
effects of fluctuations in the prevailing levels of market interest
rates on the fair value of financial assets and liabilities and
future cash flow.
The PPNs issued by BCF are limited
recourse obligations and are valued based on the fair value of the
underlying assets and liabilities. As the interest attached to the
PPNs is based on the income earned by BCF, any fluctuations in the
prevailing level of market interest rates that negatively affect
the fair value of the underlying financial assets will result in an
offsetting decrease in the fair value of the PPNs.
The interest rate risk associated
with cash and cash equivalents is deemed to be insignificant due to
negligible interest rates and no expected movement.
The following tables detail BCF's
exposure to interest rate risk as at 31 December 2023 and 31
December 2022. It includes the carrying value of BCF's assets and
liabilities at fair values, categorised by the type of interest
rate attached to the assets and liabilities, whether it be floating
rate, fixed or non-interest bearing:
31 December 2023
|
Floating
rate
|
Fixed rate
|
Non-interest
bearing
|
Total
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Financial assets measured at fair
value through profit or loss:
|
|
|
|
|
- Investments in senior secured
loans and bonds
|
3,594,392
|
887,752
|
-
|
4,482,144
|
- Investments in CLO Income
Notes
|
512,220,406
|
-
|
-
|
512,220,406
|
- Investment in BGCM
DAC
|
260,081,500
|
-
|
-
|
260,081,500
|
- Derivative financial
assets
|
-
|
|
6,740,708
|
6,740,708
|
Receivable for investments
sold
|
-
|
-
|
380,252,282
|
380,252,282
|
Other receivables
|
-
|
-
|
44,903,174
|
44,903,174
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
121,919,901
|
-
|
-
|
121,919,901
|
Total assets
|
897,816,199
|
887,752
|
431,896,164
|
1,330,600,115
|
|
|
|
|
|
Financial liabilities measured at
fair value through profit or loss:
|
|
|
|
|
- PPNs
|
(874,833,126)
|
-
|
-
|
(874,833,126)
|
- Derivative financial
liabilities
|
-
|
|
(90,493,578)
|
(90,493,578)
|
BCF Facility
|
(127,027,698)
|
-
|
-
|
(127,027,698)
|
Payable for investments
purchased
|
-
|
-
|
(234,007,087)
|
(234,007,087)
|
Other payables and accrued
expenses
|
-
|
-
|
(4,229,666)
|
(4,229,666)
|
Total liabilities
|
(1,001,860,824)
|
-
|
(328,730,331)
|
(1,330,591,155)
|
Total interest sensitivity gap
|
(104,044,625)
|
887,752
|
|
|
31 December 2022
|
Floating
rate
|
Fixed rate
|
Non-interest
bearing
|
Total
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Financial assets measured at fair
value through profit or loss:
|
|
|
|
|
- Investments in senior secured
loans and bonds
|
290,269,985
|
42,137,106
|
-
|
332,407,091
|
- Investments in CLO Income
Notes
|
372,888,404
|
-
|
-
|
372,888,404
|
- Investment in BGCM
DAC
|
286,471,835
|
-
|
-
|
286,471,835
|
Receivable for investments
sold
|
-
|
-
|
227,275,216
|
227,275,216
|
Other receivables
|
-
|
-
|
37,133,162
|
37,133,162
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
125,321,711
|
-
|
-
|
125,321,711
|
Total assets
|
1,074,951,935
|
42,137,106
|
264,408,378
|
1,381,497,419
|
|
|
|
|
|
Financial liabilities measured at
fair value through profit or loss:
|
|
|
|
(863,646,976)
|
- PPNs
|
(863,646,976)
|
-
|
-
|
(80,505,196)
|
- Derivative financial
liabilities
|
--
|
-
|
(80,505,196)
|
(272,926,363)
|
BCF Facility
|
(272,926,363)
|
-
|
-
|
(159,427,500)
|
Payable for investments
purchased
|
-
|
-
|
(159,427,500)
|
(4,983,324)
|
Other payables and accrued
expenses
|
-
|
-
|
(4,983,324)
|
-
|
Total liabilities
|
(1,136,573,339)
|
-
|
(244,916,020)
|
(1,381,489,359)
|
Total interest sensitivity gap
|
(61,621,404)
|
42,137,106
|
|
|
Sensitivity analysis
At 31 December 2023, had the base
interest rates strengthened/weakened by 2% (2022: 2%) in relation
to all holdings subject to interest with all other variables held
constant, the finance income would increase/decrease by EUR
1,928,323 (2022: EUR 389,686) which would subsequently impact the
amount available for distribution as finance expense. There would
be no impact on the total comprehensive income of BCF. The interest
rate sensitivity information is a relative estimate of risk and is
not intended to be a precise and accurate number. The calculations
are based on historical data. Future price movements and
correlations between securities could vary significantly from those
experienced in the current financial year.
(iii) Price
risk
Price risk is the risk that the
value of investments will fluctuate as a result of changes in
market prices (other than those arising from currency risk and
interest rate risk) whether caused by factors specific to an
individual investment, its issuer or all factors affecting all
investments traded in the market.
BCF attempts to mitigate asset
pricing risk by using external pricing and valuation sources and by
permitting the collateral manager, subject to certain requirements,
to sell collateral obligations and reinvest the proceeds. The CLO
manager actively monitors the assets within each CLO to ensure that
they do not breach the collateral quality tests and portfolio
profile tests.
Where possible, prices are
received from brokers on a monthly basis. Broker prices for loans
are sourced from Markit, a composite price provider and broker
prices for bonds are sourced from IDC.
Credit risk
Credit risk is the current or
prospective risk to earnings and capital arising from a
counterparty's failure to meet the terms of any contract with BCF
or otherwise fail to perform as agreed. The receipt of monies owed
will be subject to and dependent on the counterparty's ability to
pay such monies.
BCF is therefore open to risks
relating to the creditworthiness of the counterparty. If the
counterparty fails to make any cash payments required to settle an
investment, BCF may lose principal as well as any anticipated
benefit from the transaction.
Credit risk in financial
instruments arises from cash and cash equivalents and investments
in debt securities, as well as credit exposures of transactions
with brokers related to transactions awaiting settlement (i.e.
receivable for investment sold and other receivables).
BIL, through its investment
strategy, will endeavour to avoid losses relating to defaults on
the underlying assets. In-house credit research is used to identify
asset allocation opportunities amongst potential borrowers and
industry segments and to take advantage of episodes of market
mis-pricing. Segments and themes that are likely to be profitable
are subjected to rigorous analysis and risk is allocated to these
opportunities consistent with investment objectives. All
transactions involve credit research analysts with relevant
industry sector experience.
The credit analysis performed
involves developing a full understanding of the business and
associated risk of the loan or bond issuer and a full analysis of
the financial risk, which leads to an overall assessment of credit
risk. BIL analyses credit concentration risk based on the
counterparty, country and industry of the financial assets that BCF
holds.
At the reporting date, BCF's
financial assets exposed to credit risk are as follows:
|
31 December
2023
|
31 December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
Financial assets measured at fair
value through profit or loss
|
776,784,050
|
991,767,330
|
Derivative financial
assets
|
6,740,708
|
-
|
Receivables for investments
sold
|
380,252,282
|
227,275,216
|
Other receivables
|
44,903,174
|
37,133,162
|
Cash at bank
|
121,919,901
|
125,321,711
|
Total
|
1,330,600,115
|
1,381,497,419
|
Amounts in the above tables are
based on the carrying value of the financial assets as at the
reporting date.
Financial assets measured at
fair value through profit or loss
BCF's investment policy is to
invest predominantly in:
(i) a diverse
portfolio of senior secured loans (including broadly syndicated,
middle market or other loans);
(ii) CLO Income
Notes issued by the Issuer CLOs whose investments will be focused
predominantly in European and US senior secured loans;
and
(iii) US CLO Income Notes
(held directly or indirectly) whose investments are focused
predominantly in US senior secured loans.
For the year ended 31 December
2023
The investments in senior secured
loans and bonds held directly by BCF had the following credit
quality as rated by Moody's:
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
The senior secured loans and bonds
held directly by BCF are concentrated in the following
industries:
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
In addition to the senior secured
loans and bonds held directly, BCF invests in CLO Income Notes
issued by European and US CLO Issuers whose investments are focused
predominantly in European and US senior secured loans. Each CLO's
investment activities are restricted by its prospectus and the CLOs
have narrow and well-defined objectives to provide investment
opportunities to investors. In order to avoid excessive
concentration of risk, the policies and procedures of each CLO
include specific guidelines to focus on maintaining a diversified
portfolio. As CLO Income Noteholder in the CLOs, BCF is exposed to
the credit risk on the underlying senior secured loans and bonds
held by the CLOs. In addition, the CLO Income Notes are limited
recourse obligations of the CLOs which are payable solely out of
amounts received by the CLO in respect of the financial assets
held.
The underlying investments in
senior secured loans and bonds recognised as financial assets of
BCF's Direct CLO Subsidiaries had the following credit quality as
rated by Moody's:
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
The senior secured loans and bonds
held by the Direct CLO Subsidiaries of BCF are concentrated in the
following industries:
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
The underlying investments in
senior secured loans and bonds recognised as financial assets of
the Indirect CLO Subsidiaries of
BCF had the following credit quality as
rated by Moody's:
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
The senior secured loans and bonds
held by the Indirect CLO Subsidiaries are concentrated in the
following industries:
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
During the year, the Parent
Company held (directly and indirectly through BCM LLC) CLO Income
Notes in US CLOs which are not consolidated as subsidiaries.
Accordingly, the Parent Company is exposed to the credit risk on
the underlying US senior secured loans and bonds held by such US
CLOs. In addition, the CLO Income Notes are limited recourse
obligations of the US CLOs which are payable solely out of amounts
received by the US CLO in respect of the financial assets
held.
The underlying investments in
senior secured loans and bonds recognised as financial assets of
the US CLOs (whose Income Notes are held directly and indirectly by
the Parent Company) had the following credit quality as rated by
Moody's:
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
The underlying financial assets of
the US CLOs (whose Income Notes are held
directly and indirectly by
BCF)) exposed to credit
risk were concentrated in the following
industries:
[Graphs and charts are included in
the published Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements which
is available on the Company's website at http://blackstone.com/bglf]
Liquidity risk
Liquidity is the risk that BCF may
not be able to meet its financial obligations as they fall due. The
ability of BCF to meet its obligations is dependent on the receipt
of interest and principal from the underlying collateral
portfolios. Obligations may arise from: financial liabilities at
fair value, payable for investments purchased, BCF Facility,
interest payable on CLO Income Notes, derivative financial
liabilities, other payables and accrued expenses.
At the reporting date, the
financial obligations exposed to liquidity risk are as
follows:
Financial liabilities
measured at fair value through profit or loss
Financial liabilities at fair
value comprise PPNs issued by BCF.
All PPNs issued are limited
recourse. The recourse of the noteholders, which includes BGLF
through the Lux Subsidiary, is limited to the proceeds available to
unsecured creditors at such time from the debt obligations, CLO
Income Notes and other obligations which comply with the investment
policy. Therefore, from the perspective of BCF, the associated
liquidity risk of the PPNs is reduced.
12 Segmental
reporting
As required by IFRS 8 Operating
Segments, the information provided to the Board, who are the chief
operating decision‐makers, can be classified into one segment for
the years ended 31 December 2023 and 31 December 2022. The only
share class in issue during the years ended 31 December 2023 and 31
December 2022 is the Euro redeemable share class. For the years
ended 31 December 2023 and 31 December 2022, the Company's primary
exposure was to the Lux Subsidiary in Europe. The Lux Subsidiary's
primary exposure is to BCF, an Irish entity. BCF's primary exposure
is to the US and Europe.
13 Basic and diluted
earnings/(loss) per redeemable/ordinary share
|
As at
31 December
2023
|
As at
31 December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
Total comprehensive income/(loss)
for the year
|
59,349,512
|
(72,329,588)
|
Weighted average number of shares
during the year[44]
|
442,813,528
|
455,759,703
|
Basic and diluted earnings/(loss) per redeemable/ordinary
share
|
0.1340
|
(0.1587)
|
14 NAV per
redeemable/ordinary share
|
As at
31 December
2023
|
As at
31 December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
IFRS NAV
|
320,987,100
|
301,614,977
|
Number of redeemable/ordinary
shares at year-end
|
442,738,903
|
444,578,522
|
IFRS NAV per redeemable/ordinary share
|
0.7250
|
0.6784
|
15 Reconciliation of
Published NAV to IFRS NAV per the financial statements
|
As at
31 December
2023
|
As at
31 December
2022
|
|
NAV
|
NAV per redeemable
share
|
NAV
|
NAV per
ordinary
share
|
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
€
|
Published NAV attributable to
Shareholders
|
402,792,551
|
0.9098
|
403,726,181
|
0.9081
|
Adjustment - valuation
|
(81,805,451)
|
(0.1848)
|
(102,111,204)
|
(0.2297)
|
IFRS NAV
|
320,987,100
|
0.7250
|
301,614,977
|
0.6784
|
As noted above, there can be a
difference between the Published NAV and the IFRS NAV per the
financial statements, mainly because of the different bases of
valuation. The above table reconciles the Published NAV to the IFRS
NAV per the financial statements.
16 Reconciliation of
liabilities arising from financing activities
|
As at
31 December
2023
|
As at
31 December
2022
|
|
€
|
€
|
Opening balance
|
1,694,077
|
1,246,249
|
Increase in intercompany
loan
|
467,005
|
447,828
|
Closing balance
|
2,161,082
|
1,694,077
|
17 Dividends
The Company declared and paid the
following dividends on ordinary shares during the year ended 31
December 2023:
Period in respect of
|
Date
declared
|
Ex-dividend
date
|
Payment
date
|
Amount per ordinary
share
|
Amount
paid
|
|
|
|
|
€
|
€
|
1 Oct 2022 to 31 Dec
2022
|
23 Jan
2023
|
2 Feb
2023
|
3 Mar
2023
|
0.0275
|
12,182,392
|
1 Jan 2023 to 31 Mar 2023
|
25 Apr
2023
|
4 May
2023
|
2 June
2023
|
0.0200
|
8,854,778
|
1 Apr 2023 to 30 Jun 2023
|
21 Jul
2023
|
3 Aug
2023
|
1 Sep
2023
|
0.0200
|
8,854,778
|
1 Jul 2023 to 30 Sept 2023
|
20 Oct
2023
|
2 Nov
2023
|
1 Dec
2023
|
0.0200
|
8,854,778
|
Total
|
|
|
|
|
38,746,726
|
The Company declared and paid the
following dividends on ordinary shares during the year ended 31
December 2022:
Period in respect of
|
Date
declared
|
Ex-dividend
date
|
Payment
date
|
Amount per ordinary
share
|
Amount
paid
|
|
|
|
|
€
|
€
|
1 Oct 2021 to 31 Dec
2021
|
24 Jan
2022
|
3 Feb
2022
|
4 Mar
2022
|
0.0275
|
12,658,930
|
1 Jan 2022 to 31 Mar
2022
|
25 Apr
2022
|
5 May
2022
|
9 Jun
2022
|
0.0175
|
8,038,182
|
1 Apr 2022 to 30 Jun
2022
|
21 Jul
2022
|
28 Jul
2022
|
26 Aug
2022
|
0.0175
|
7,983,136
|
1 Jul 2022 to 30 Sept
2022
|
21 Oct
2022
|
3 Nov
2022
|
2 Dec
2022
|
0.0175
|
7,872,743
|
Total
|
|
|
|
|
36,552,991
|
18 Related party
transactions
All transactions between related
parties were conducted on terms equivalent to those prevailing in
an arm's length transaction. In accordance with IAS 24 Related
Party Disclosures, the related parties and related party
transactions during the year comprised:
Transactions with entities with
significant influence
As at 31 December 2023, Blackstone
Treasury Asia Pte held 43,000,000 redeemable shares in the Company
(2022: 43,000,000).
Transactions with key management
personnel
The Directors are the key
management personnel as they are the persons who have the authority
and responsibility for planning, directing and controlling the
activities of the Company. The Directors are entitled to
remuneration for their services. Refer to Note 4 for further
detail.
Transactions with other related
parties
At 31 December 2023, current
employees of the Portfolio Adviser and its affiliates and accounts
managed or advised by them, hold 41,380 redeemable shares (2022:
39,875) which represents 0.009% (2022: 0.009%) of the issued shares
of the Company.
The Company has exposure to the
CLOs originated by BCF, through its investment in the Lux
Subsidiary. BIL is also appointed as a service support provider to
BCF and as the collateral manager to the Direct CLO Subsidiaries.
BLCS has been appointed as the collateral manager to BCM LLC,
Dorchester Park CLO Designated Activity Company and the Indirect
CLO Subsidiaries.
Transactions with
Subsidiaries
The Company held 208,565,744 CSWs
as at 31 December 2023 (2022: 239,550,782) following redemption of
30,985,038 CSWs by the Lux Subsidiary. Refer to Note 5 for further
details.
As at 31 December 2023 and 31
December 2022, the Company held 2,000,000 Class A shares and 1
Class B share in the Lux Subsidiary with a nominal value of
€2,000,001.
As at 31 December 2023, the
Company held an intercompany loan payable to the Lux Subsidiary
amounting to €2,161,082 (2022: €1,694,077). Refer to Note 6 for
further details.
19 Controlling
party
In the Directors' opinion, the
Company has no ultimate controlling party.
20 Events after the
reporting period
The Board has evaluated subsequent
events for the Company through to 26 April 2024, the date the
financial statements are available to be issued and other than
those listed below, concluded that there are no material events
that require disclosure or adjustment to the financial
statements.
Dividends
On 23 January 2024, the Company
declared a dividend of €0.03 per ordinary share in respect of the
period from 1 October 2023 to 31 December 2023 with an ex-dividend
date of 1 February 2024. A total payment of €13,282,167 was
processed on 8 March 2024.
On 23 January 2024, the Board
announced a total 2024 annual dividend target of at least €0.09 per
redeemable share, which will consist of quarterly payments of
€0.0225 per redeemable share.
On 22 April 2024, the Company
declared a dividend of €0.0225 per redeemable share in respect of
the period from
1 January 2024 to 31 March 2024 with an ex-dividend date of 3 May
2024.
COMPANY INFORMATION
Company Information
Directors
|
|
Registered Office
|
Mr Steven Wilderspin
(Chair)
Mr Mark Moffat
Mr Giles Adu
Ms Belinda Crosby
All c/o the Company's registered office
|
|
IFC 1
The Esplanade
St Helier
Jersey
JE1 4BP, Channel
Islands
|
Portfolio Adviser
|
|
Registrar
|
Blackstone Ireland
Limited
30 Herbert Street
2nd Floor
Dublin 2, Ireland
|
|
Link Asset Services (Jersey)
Limited
12 Castle Street
St Helier
Jersey, JE2 3RT, Channel Islands
|
Administrator / Company Secretary
/ Custodian / Depositary
|
|
Auditor
|
BNP Paribas S.A., Jersey
Branch
IFC 1
The Esplanade
St Helier
Jersey
JE1 4BP, Channel
Islands
|
|
Deloitte LLP
PO Box 403, Gaspé House
66-72 Esplanade
St Helier
JE4 8WA
Channel Islands
|
Legal Adviser to the Company (as
to Jersey Law)
|
|
Legal Adviser to the Company
(as to English Law)
|
Carey Olsen
47 Esplanade
St Helier
Jersey
JE1 0BD, Channel Islands
|
|
Herbert Smith Freehills LLP
Exchange House
Primrose Street
London
EC2A 2EG
United Kingdom
|
Joint Broker
|
|
Joint Broker
|
Singer Capital Markets
1 Bartholomew Lane
London, EC2N 2AX , United Kingdom
|
|
Winterflood Investment
Trusts
The Atrium Building
Cannon Bridge House, 25 Dowgate
Hill
London, EC4R 2GA, United
Kingdom
|
GLOSSARY
AGM
|
Annual General Meeting
|
AIC
|
The Association of Investment
Companies, of which the Company is a member
|
AIC Code
|
AIC Code of Corporate Governance
2019
|
AIFMD
|
Alternative Investment Fund
Managers' Directive
|
AIF
|
Alternative Investment
Funds
|
APMs
|
Alternative Performance
Measures
|
BA
|
Bachelor of Arts
|
BCF
|
Blackstone Corporate Funding
Designated Activity Company
|
BCF Facility
|
BCF entered into a facility
agreement dated 1 June 2017, as amended between (1) BCF (as
borrower), (2) Citibank Europe plc, UK Branch (as administration
agent), (3) Bank of America N.A. London Branch (as an initial
lender), (4) BNP Paribas (as an initial lender), (5) Deutsche Bank
AG, London Branch (as initial lender), (6) Citibank N.A. London
Branch (as account bank, custodian and trustee) and (7) Virtus
Group LP (as collateral administrator)
|
BCM LLC
|
Blackstone CLO Management
LLC
|
BGCM DAC
|
BGCM Designated Activity
Company
|
BGLF or the Company
|
Blackstone Loan Financing
Limited
|
BGLP
|
Ticker for the Company's Sterling
Quote
|
BIL or the Portfolio
Adviser
|
Blackstone Ireland
Limited
|
BLCS or the Portfolio
Manager
|
Blackstone Liquid Credit
Strategies LLC
|
Board
|
The Board of Directors of the
Company
|
Bp
|
Basis points
|
Brokers
|
Singer Capital Markets and
Winterflood Investment Trusts
|
BWIC
|
Bids Wanted In
Competition
|
BXCI
|
Blackstone Alternative Credit
Advisors LP , together with its corporate credit-focused affiliates
in the credit and insurance asset management business unit of
Blackstone Inc., as the context requires (but excluding, for the
avoidance of doubt, any insurance-focused asset management
affiliates)
|
CAIA
|
Chartered Alternative Investment
Analyst
|
CEO
|
Chief Executive Officer
|
CFO
|
Chief Financial Officer
|
Circular
|
The circular dated 25 August 2023
published for the Shareholders on the LSE, containing details of
the proposals in respect of the managed wind-down. The Circular is
also available on the Company's website.
|
CSWs
|
Cash Settlement
Warrants
|
CLO
|
Collateralised Loan
Obligation
|
Discount / Premium
|
Calculated as the NAV per
redeemable share as at a particular date less BGLF's closing share
price on the LSE, divided by the NAV per redeemable share as at
that date
|
Dividend yield
|
Calculated as the last four
quarterly dividends declared divided by the share price as at the
relevant date
|
ECB
|
European Central Bank
|
EGM
|
Extraordinary General
Meeting
|
ESG
|
Environmental, Social and
Governance
|
EU
|
European Union
|
FAFVTPL
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss
|
FCA
|
Financial Conduct Authority
(UK)
|
FCSI
|
Fellow of the Chartered Institute
for Securities and Investments
|
Fed
|
Federal Reserve
|
FRC
|
Financial Reporting Council
(UK)
|
GFC
|
Global Financial Crisis
|
IDC
|
International Data
Corporation
|
IFRS
|
International Financial Reporting
Standards
|
IFRS NAV
|
Gross assets less liabilities
(including accrued but unpaid fees) determined in accordance with
IFRS as adopted by the EU
|
IMC
|
Investment Management
Certificate
|
IRR
|
Internal Rate of Return
|
JFSC
|
Jersey Financial Services
Commission
|
LDI
|
Liability-driven
investment
|
LIBOR
Loan Warehouse
|
London Inter-Bank Offered
Rate
A special purpose vehicle
incorporated for the purposes of warehousing US and/or European
floating rate senior secured loans and bonds
|
LSE
|
London Stock Exchange
|
LTM
|
Last twelve months
|
Lux Subsidiary or LuxCo
|
Blackstone / GSO Loan Financing
(Luxembourg) S.à r.l.
|
NAV
|
Net asset value
|
NAV total return per redeemable
share
|
Calculated as the increase /
decrease in the NAV per redeemable share plus the total dividends
paid per redeemable share during the period, with such dividends
paid being re-invested at NAV, as a percentage of the NAV per
redeemable share
LTM return is calculated over the
year from 1 January 2023 to December 2023
|
NIM
|
Net interest margin
|
PPNs
|
Profit Participating
Notes
|
PPNIPA
|
Profit Participating Note Issuing
and Purchase Agreement
|
Published NAV
|
Gross assets less liabilities
(including accrued but unpaid fees) determined in accordance with
the section entitled "Net Asset Value" in Part I of the Company's
Prospectus and published on a monthly basis
|
RTS
|
Regulatory technical
standards
|
SFDR
|
Sustainable Finance Disclosure
Regulation
|
SID
SOFR
|
Senior Independent
Director
Secured Overnight Financing
Rate
|
TCFD
|
Task Force on Climate-related
Financial Disclosures
|
UBS
|
Union Bank of
Switzerland
|
UK
|
United Kingdom
|
UK Code
|
UK Corporate Governance Code
2018
|
Underlying Company
|
A company or entity to which the
Company has a direct or indirect exposure for the purpose of
achieving its investment objective, which is established to, among
other things, directly or indirectly, purchase, hold and/or provide
funding for the purchase of CLO securities
BCF is the Underlying Company of
the Company
|
US
|
United States
|
USD
|
United States Dollar
|
WA
|
Weighted Average
|