THIS ANNOUNCEMENT CONTAINS INSIDE INFORMATION AS STIPULATED
UNDER THE UK'S MARKET ABUSE REGULATION. UPON THE PUBLICATION OF
THIS ANNOUNCEMENT, SUCH INSIDE INFORMATION IS NOW CONSIDERED TO BE
IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN.
30 September 2024
DIGITAL 9 INFRASTRUCTURE
PLC
("D9" or the
"Company" or, together with
its subsidiaries, the "Group")
RESULTS FOR THE HALF YEAR
ENDED 30 JUNE 2024
The Board of Digital 9 Infrastructure plc announces
the Company's unaudited results for the six-month period ended 30
June 2024.
· The Company's
30 June 2024 NAV was £403 million, equivalent to a NAV per share of
46.59p, a decline of 41% (£283 million) relative to 31 December
2023.
· Annualised
total return based on NAV was (72.0)% (H1 2023: (11.2)%),
principally due to the significant downward revaluation in the
period.
· The NAV
decline between 31 December 2023 and 30 June 2024 was primarily due
to:
o A downward revision
to long-term financial forecasts of portfolio companies that form
the basis of valuation models, affected in substantial part by a
re-assessment of the assumptions relating to the availability of
financing and timing thereof;
o £16 million of
interest costs incurred in the period, including £11 million in
respect of the Revolving Credit Facility ("RCF") and £5 million in respect of the
Arqiva Group Vendor Loan Note ("VLN");
o A provision
for additional vendor consideration which would be in the form of
an increase to the VLN that may be due under the terms of the
purchase agreement for Arqiva; and
o £6 million of
professional fees incurred in the period related to the sale of the
Verne Global group of companies ("Verne
Global"). This is in addition to £15 million of professional
and transaction related fees incurred in FY 2023 in respect of the
Verne Global sale as disclosed on 30 April 2024.*
· The
June 2024 NAV also reflects the Verne Global transaction and
subsequent RCF repayments.
o The Verne
Global transaction, which completed on 15 March 2024, resulted in
the receipt of $440 million of cash proceeds (£347 million) which
included initial cash proceeds of $415 million (£327 million) and a
deferred consideration of $25 million (approximately £20
million).
o The sale also
triggered the recognition of the potential earn-out payment
("Earn
Out") of up to $135 million (approximately £107 million)
that will be based on the underlying performance of Verne Global in
2026. The earn-out was valued at £29 million as at June 2024 (31
December 2023: £27 million).
o The received
proceeds of £347m together with the fair value of the potential
earn out of £29 million totalled £376 million. This compares with
the 31 December 2023 valuation of £372 million.
o £321 million
of the proceeds from the Verne Global transaction were used to pay
down the Company's RCF. As at 30 June
2024, the balance on the RCF was £53 million (December 2023: £375
million) and is due for repayment in March 2025.
o In the six-month-period
to 30 June 2024, consolidated portfolio revenue declined by 1.5%
and consolidated portfolio EBITDA declined by 7.1% compared with
the same period in 2023.**
· On 25 March
2024, the Company's shareholders voted in favour of the Board
pursuing the sale of the Company's remaining assets in an orderly
manner to maximise shareholder value and return capital to
shareholders (the "Managed Wind-Down"), and for a commensurate
change to the Company's objectives and investment policy.
· Sale
preparations of Aqua Comms, EMIC-1, SeaEdge UK1 and Elio Networks
were initiated following shareholder approval of the Company's
Managed Wind-Down. The Board will provide material updates on each
sale process, as necessary.
· The
Board has determined that it is in shareholders' best interests to
publish an aggregate NAV to protect the Company's commercial
position during live sale processes of underlying portfolio
companies. At the point when the Company's commercial position
changes, the Board will provide the customary transparency on asset
valuations.
· The
Group's RCF matures in March 2025. Ahead of this the Board intends
either to refinance the outstanding RCF balance or repay it with
asset sale proceeds, subject to progress of the Managed Wind-Down
and its timing. The Group is in breach of one of the RCF covenants
and the RCF lenders have indicated that, at present, they intend to
work collaboratively with the Company, where possible, over the
coming weeks to explore the option of providing a waiver, or
alternative action if more appropriate at the time, of the breach.
See further details in the Going Concern section in Note 2 of the
financial statements.
· As announced
on 30 April 2024, the Company provided notice to the Investment
Manager, Triple Point Investment Management LLP ("Triple Point"), to terminate the
Investment Management Agreement ("IMA") on the earliest date permissible
under the IMA being 31 March 2025. On 29 January 2024, the previous
Board disclosed its intention to actively explore whether Triple
Point might agree revised commercial terms that would be in the
best interests of the Company and its shareholders. In light of the
material downward revaluation of the portfolio's NAV as at June
2024, announced by the Company on 6 September 2024, the Board is
continuing this review and intends to update shareholders at the
earliest opportunity. As announced on 6 September 2024, the Board
has made significant progress in its independent review of the
Company's investment management arrangements and a further
announcement is expected in the near future.
* As of 31 December,
£5.6 million of success
fees related to the sale of Verne Global had not yet been accrued
as the transaction had not closed at this point. As of 30 June
2024, the fees have now been incurred following completion of the
sale.
** Figures presented in the
portfolio highlights exclude Verne Global for the period following
completion of its sale on 15 March 2024.
Financial Highlights
As at
|
30 Jun
2024
|
31 Dec
2023
|
30 Jun
2023
|
IFRS Net Asset Value
("NAV")
|
£403m
|
£686m
|
£866m
|
IFRS NAV per share
|
46.59p
|
79.33p
|
100.13p
|
IFRS Investment Valuation
|
£384m
|
£676m
|
£839m
|
Adjusted Gross Asset
Value*
|
£459m
|
£1,067m
|
£1,245m
|
Aggregate Group debt*
|
£233m
|
£545m
|
£526m
|
Group Cash
(unrestricted)*
|
£23.9m
|
£17.6m
|
£47.0m
|
For the period
|
6 months to
30 June 2024
|
12 months to
31 Dec 2023
|
6 months to
30 June 2023
|
Earnings per share
|
(32.73p)
|
(27.43p)
|
(6.63p)
|
Ongoing charges ratio
(annualised)*
|
1.63%
|
1.33%
|
1.20%
|
Dividends paid per
share
|
-
|
3p
|
3p
|
Annualised Total return (based on
NAV)*
|
(71.7%)
|
(23.1%)
|
(11.2%)
|
Annualised Combined portfolio
revenue*
|
£389m
|
£447m
|
£445m
|
Annualised Combined portfolio
EBITDA*
|
£180m
|
£198m
|
£212m
|
* Alternative Performance Measure
("APM"). Further information on APMs can be found in the Annual
Report.
Portfolio Highlights
In
£ million
|
6 months to
30 June 2024
|
6 months to
30 June 2023
|
Y/Y
Change %
|
Consolidated Portfolio Revenue
|
|
|
|
Aqua Comms*
|
£16.0m
|
£13.8m
|
15.9%
|
Verne Global**
|
N/A
|
£24.4m
|
N/A
|
Arqiva
|
£174.0m
|
£179.3m
|
(3.0%)
|
Elio Networks
|
£4.1m
|
£4.0m
|
2.5%
|
Sea Edge UK1
|
£0.5m
|
£0.5m
|
-
|
Consolidated Portfolio EBITDA
|
|
|
|
Aqua Comms*
|
£3.6m
|
£4.1m
|
(12.2%)
|
Verne Global**
|
N/A
|
£7.2m
|
N/A
|
Arqiva
|
£83.7m
|
£90.1m
|
(7.1%)
|
Elio Networks
|
£2.2m
|
£2.2m
|
-
|
Sea Edge UK1
|
£0.5m
|
£0.5m
|
-
|
* Excluding EMIC-1.
** The sale of Verne Global was
completed on 15 March 2024.
Aqua
Comms
Aqua Comms is a leading carrier-neutral owner and operator of
subsea fibre, providing essential connectivity through 20,000 km of
transatlantic, North Sea and Irish Sea routes.
Revenue for the period increased 16% year-on-year
due to increased sales on existing systems and the launch of AEC-3.
EBITDA decreased 12% due mainly to planned headcount increases to
support sales, operations and expansion, as well as temporary costs
related to internalising its Network Operations Centre.
EMIC-1
Managed by Aqua Comms, EMIC-1 connects key European hubs with
Salalah, Oman and Mumbai, India, bringing a new, high-capacity
cable system to underserved markets experiencing exponential growth
in bandwidth requirements.
Following a large pre-sale in Q4 of last year, the
leader of the investor consortium building out the cable system
continues to explore alternative plans to connect the Red Sea and
Indian leg of the system, to allow service to start even if the
original wet route is not fully completed.
Arqiva
Group
Arqiva is the UK's pre-eminent national provider of
television and radio broadcast infrastructure and provides
end-to-end connectivity solutions in the media and utility
industries.
Arqiva generated revenue of £174 million for the
period, down 3% year-on-year. Positive revenue indexation through
inflation-linked contracts was offset by reduced digital
terrestrial television ("DTT") channel sales, lower pricing on
contract renewals and customer losses. Profit margins were impacted
by rising power costs and increased headcount expenses, reflecting
macroeconomic wage pressures and strategic investments in new media
markets.
Elio
Networks
Elio Networks is a high-speed wireless connectivity provider
in Ireland.
Revenue for the period increased 3% year-on-year
while EBITDA was stable. Elio Networks has generated strong growth
momentum in Cork City since launching in 2023, reaffirming its
position as the leading wireless fixed connectivity player in
Ireland.
Sea Edge
UK1
Sea Edge UK1 is the UK's only landing station for the North
Sea Connect subsea cable. D9 owns the underlying real estate of Sea
Edge UK1 and its revenue is in the form of rent.
Revenue and EBITDA for the period grew by 6% and 7%
year-on-year, respectively, due to continued positive revenue
indexation and reduced expenses. The Company has agreed to defer
the rent due as part of the sale process of SeaEdge.
Verne Global
Earn-Out
An earn-out payment of up to US$135 million is payable to the
Company subject to Verne Global achieving run-rate EBITDA targets
for the year ending 31 December 2026.
The Company's Board and Investment Manager continues
to receive information relating to Verne Global's EBITDA under the
terms of the Sale and Purchase Agreement to inform the valuation of
the Earn-Out. Based on this information, the Earn-Out has been
valued at £29m.
Liquidity Position
The Group's total unrestricted
cash amounted to £23.9 million as of 30 June 2024 (31 December
2023: £17.6 million), of which £4 million
was held in unconsolidated subsidiaries (Digital 9 Wireless
OpCo 2 Limited and Digital 9 HoldCo Limited).
Restricted cash amounted to £10 million as of 30 June 2024 (31
December 2023: £32 million).
Group Financial Leverage
£'m
|
30 June
2024
|
31 December 2023
|
Drawn RCF inc. Letters of Credit
("LoC")
|
53
|
375
|
Vendor Loan Note
("VLN")*
|
180
|
170
|
Aggregate Group debt
|
233
|
545
|
Group Cash & Equivalents (inc.
restricted cash)
|
(34)
|
(49)
|
Net Debt
|
199
|
496
|
Consolidated Portfolio EBITDA
(annualised)
|
180
|
198
|
Net Debt / EBITDA
|
1.1x
|
2.5x
|
Arqiva debt (pro-rated for D9
ownership)**
|
737
|
744
|
Verne Global debt
|
-
|
79
|
Adjusted Net Debt
|
936
|
1,319
|
Adjusted Net Debt / EBITDA
|
5.2x
|
6.7x
|
* £10 million of additional notes
issued in June 2024 as PIK interest.
** In line with previously
reported figures, this is D9's share of Arqiva gross debt. The
balance does not include cash held by Arqiva.
The 57%
decline in aggregate Group debt to £233 million as at 30 June 2024 (31 December 2023: £545
million;) resulted from the £322 million
reduction in the outstanding RCF balance to £53 million, while the Arqiva Group VLN increased by £10 million
to £180 million as a result of accrued PIK
interest (for further detail see the 'Capital structure at
Arqiva and at HoldCo level' section).
Going concern
In adopting the appropriateness of the Going Concern
basis of preparation the Board considered the fact that the Company
is in Managed Wind-Down. The Board determined
that given associated timelines for realising both the potential
Earn-Out payment from the Verne Transaction and completing the
sales of all of the Company's investments (notably the Company's
stake in Arqiva), it is appropriate to have prepared the Financial
Statements included within the Interim Report on a Going Concern
basis.
Despite significant balance sheet deleveraging
related to the repayment of over 85% of the Group's RCF in March
and May 2024, £53 million drawn debt remains outstanding, with the
balance due in March 2025. The Company's
Going Concern assessment is dependent on the Group either
completing the sale of assets to fund the repayment of the
remaining balance of the Group's RCF by
March 2025 or alternatively refinancing this debt. The Company
intends to explore all options available to repay the RCF including
refinancing and/or using proceeds from divestments should they be
successful ahead of the RCF repayment date.
In addition, the Directors have also considered the
fact that Company's wholly owned subsidiary D9 Holdco has not met
one of its covenants under the terms of the RCF. The RCF Lenders
have indicated that, at present, they intend to work
collaboratively with the Company, where possible, over the coming
weeks to explore the option of providing a waiver, or alternative
action if more appropriate at the time, of this breach, but in the
meantime they are reserving their rights in that regard.
No provision has been made for the
costs of winding up the Company as these will be charged to the
Income Statement on an accruals basis as they are incurred or as
the Company becomes obligated to make such payments in the
future.
As included within the Going
Concern section in the Financial Statements (Note:
2), the Company continues to disclose a material
uncertainty, which may cast significant doubt over the
Company's ability
to continue as a going concern. The Board does believe that the
Company and the Group have adequate resources to continue in
operational existence for a period of at least 12 months since the
reporting date.
ENDS.
Contacts
Triple Point Investment Management LLP (Investment
Manager)
Diego Massidda
Arnaud Jaguin
|
D9contact@triplepoint.co.uk
+44 (0)20 7201
8989
|
The Company
Eric Sanderson
c/o FTI Consulting
Panmure Liberum Limited (Financial Adviser)
Chris Clarke
Darren Vickers
|
+44 (0)203 100
2000
|
J.P. Morgan Cazenove (Corporate Broker)
William Simmonds
Jérémie Birnbaum
|
+44 (0)20 7742
4000
|
FTI Consulting (Communications Adviser)
Mitch Barltrop
Maxime Lopes
|
dgi9@fticonsulting.com
+44 (0) 7807 296 032
+44 (0) 7890 896 777
|
LEI: 213800OQLX64UNS38U92
About Digital 9
Infrastructure plc:
Digital 9 Infrastructure plc (DGI9) is an investment
trust listed on the London Stock Exchange and a constituent of the
FTSE All-Share. The Company is focussed on the infrastructure of
the internet, holding as of 30 June 2024 a portfolio of
high-quality subsea fibre, data centre and wireless communication
businesses. DGI9's shareholders unanimously approved a Managed
Wind-Down of the Company's portfolio in March 2024 and
subsequently, the Company is undergoing an orderly realisation of
its assets to maximise shareholder value. For more information on
DGI9, please visit www.d9infrastructure.com.
The Investment Manager is Triple
Point Investment Management LLP ("Triple Point") which is authorised and
regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. For more information
on the Investment Manager please visit www.triplepoint.co.uk.
CHAIR'S
STATEMENT
The Company faced significant
challenges over the period and in recent years. Following the
constitution of a new Board of Directors over the last few months,
our focus is to reset the Company's priorities in delivering an
orderly wind-down of the D9's portfolio of assets.
To oversee this process, I was
appointed Chair on 30 May 2024, and since 12 August 2024, following
the appointment of three additional new non-executive directors,
the D9 Board has operated on a near-full time basis, with almost
daily meetings.
During this time, the new Board has
overseen the completion of the interim portfolio valuation,
progressed the ongoing sale processes for the Company's
wholly-owned assets, and sought to honour the existing commitments
made to shareholders; including the Investment Management
Review.
The Board fully understands
shareholders' frustration regarding the persistent discount at
which the Company's share price is trading relative to its NAV, the
cessation of the Company's dividend, and the NAV reduction to 30
June 2024.
We recognise that delivering on the
Board's stated commitments is critical for good governance and
ultimately to realise the mandate shareholders voted for in March
2024, being the implementation of the Managed Wind-Down and taking
every action possible to realise shareholder value over
time.
To do so, the Board's
decision-making is characterised by four factors:
1. The Board will seek
to realise all of the Company's investments in a manner that
achieves a balance between maximising the net value from these
assets and making timely capital returns to
shareholders.
2. The Board will seek
to repay the remaining RCF, which amounted to £53 million as of 30
June 2024. The RCF remains subject to refinancing in March 2025,
when the facility matures. The Company maintains an ongoing
constructive dialogue with RCF lenders as the Managed Wind-Down
progresses.
3. The Board will seek
to ensure the Company preserves value by actively managing all
costs associated with both its obligations as a listed company and
those necessary to implement the Managed Wind-Down.
4. The Board will seek
to regularly engage with its shareholders through timely market
communication. We trust that the Company's shareholders acknowledge
it will often be in the Company's interest to limit sensitive
disclosure to protect its commercial position during live sale
processes.
Portfolio Valuation
For the period ended 30 June 2024,
the portfolio NAV declined to £403 million at 30 June 2024 (31 Dec
2023: £686 million). The Board determined that it is in
shareholders' best interests to publish an aggregate NAV to protect
the Company's commercial position during live sale processes of
portfolio companies. At the point when the Company's
commercial position changes, the Board will provide the customary
transparency on asset valuations.
In considering the valuation of the
larger portfolio positions (Arqiva, Aqua Comms, Elio Networks and
the Verne Global earn out) as at 30 June 2024, for each position
the Board has concluded that the low-end of an acceptable value
range was appropriate; and in arriving at their fair value
conclusions for each of these positions, the Board has obtained an
independent valuation. The Board's adoption of the low-end of
an acceptable value range is the same basis adopted by the previous
Board as at 31 December 2023.
The valuation ranges were primarily
based on a discounted cash flow model from revenue forecasted over
a 8-10 year period followed by a terminal value based on a long
term growth rate. Revenue projections were derived from the
portfolio company business plans.
In the preparation of the portfolio
business plans for the 30 June 2024 valuation, there was a
re-assessment of the assumptions relating to the availability of
finance for underlying portfolio companies, and timing thereof, and
the consequential impact on the growth expectations of the
portfolio companies.
The Board is cognisant that had
certain of the assumptions adopted in the 30 June 2024 valuation
been adopted at 31 December 2023, the valuation at that date would
have been materially lower.
Sale Processes
The Board remains committed to
maximising shareholder value from the sale of the Company's
wholly-owned assets at the earliest possible
opportunity.
Sale preparations of Aqua
Comms, EMIC-1, SeaEdge UK1 and Elio Networks, were initiated
following shareholder approval of the Company's Managed Wind-Down.
The Board will provide material updates on each sale process, as
necessary.
The Board continues to believe that
the launch of a sale process for D9's stake in Arqiva requires more
consideration due to the complexity of the business and the
co-shareholding structure. The Board continues to explore various
options for Arqiva in consultation with a collaborative shareholder
group. Further detail is set out in the Company's circular dated 28
February 2024.
As part of the Verne Transaction,
the Company can benefit from a potential earn-out payment of up to
$135 million (approximately £107 million), subject to Verne Global
achieving run-rate EBITDA targets for 2026 which were outlined to
all prospective bidders at the time of the Verne Global sale.
The Company also has customary protections to
ensure Verne Global continues operating and reporting substantially
in line with prior practices, including quarterly updates on its
EBITDA to the Investment Manager and the D9 Board. The growth
trajectory of the business to date is in line with expectations
based on information received to date.
During the Managed Wind-Down, the
Company intends to maintain its investment trust status and listing
with due consideration for the regulatory requirements and costs of
doing so following the sale of the Company's wholly owned assets.
Investment Management Arrangements
Review
As announced on 30 April 2024, the Company provided
notice to the Investment Manager, Triple Point Investment
Management LLP ("Triple
Point"), to terminate the Investment Management Agreement
("IMA") on the earliest
date permissible under the IMA being 31 March 2025. On 29 January
2024, the previous Board disclosed its intention to actively
explore whether Triple Point might agree revised commercial terms
that would be in the best interests of the Company and its
shareholders. In light of the material downward revaluation of the
portfolio's NAV as at June 2024, announced by the Company on 6
September 2024, the Board is continuing this review and intends to
update shareholders at the earliest opportunity. As announced on 6
September 2024, the Board has made significant progress in its
independent review of the Company's investment management
arrangements and a further announcement is expected in the near
future.
Capital Allocation
Ultimately, following the full
repayment and cancellation of the RCF, the Board intends to use
proceeds to prioritise returns of capital to shareholders over the
Group's longer-term obligations.
As previously disclosed, any cash
distributions to shareholders will likely take the form of returns
of capital but with final allocation amounts to be determined at
the time by the Board in conjunction with the Investment Manager
and taking into consideration the Company's liquidity.
No further dividend distributions
are planned or foreseen. The Company will also cease to make any
new investments except where there may be a legal or contractual
imperative to do so, or if new investments may facilitate a sale
process and in turn deliver superior shareholder value.
I would like to thank shareholders
for their continued engagement with the Company and the new Board
through what was a challenging period.
Eric Sanderson
Chair
30 September 2024
KEY
PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
In order to track the Company
and/or Group's progress, the key performance indicators ("KPIs")
monitored are set out below.
Sustainability KPIs are reported
on a yearly basis, and the KPIs for the year ended 31 December 2023
can be found in the Company's separate Sustainability Report which
is available here:
https://www.d9infrastructure.com/digital-9-infrastructure-plc-sustainability-report-2023/.
KPI AND DEFINITION
|
RELEVANCE TO STRATEGY
|
PERFORMANCE
|
COMMENT
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1. Total return
(%)1
|
|
|
|
The change in NAV in the period
and dividends paid per share in the period.
|
The total return highlights the
underlying performance of the portfolio's investment valuations,
including dividends paid.
|
(35.9)% for the six-month period
to 30 June 2024 (June 2023: (5.6)%).
|
The negative total return is
primarily due to the decrease in the fair value of the Company's
Investment Portfolio, additional expenses incurred in relation to
the Verne Global transaction and RCF and VLN interest
expenses.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2. Total shareholder return
(%)*
|
|
|
|
The change in share price and
dividends paid per share.
|
The total shareholder return
highlights the share price movements, including re-investment of
dividends.
|
(24.9)% for the six-month period
to 30 June 2024 (June 2023: (26.1)%).
|
The decrease was primarily driven
by a significant fall in the share price. During the period, no
dividends were declared, which also
contributed to the share price decline.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3. Earnings per share
(pence)
|
|
|
|
The post-tax earnings attributable
to shareholders divided by weighted average number of shares in
issue over the period.
|
The EPS reflects the Company's
ability to generate earnings from its investments, including
valuation increases.
|
(32.73) pence per share for the
six-month period to 30 June 2024 (see Note 13) (June 2023:
(6.63) pence per share.
|
The main driver in the loss per
share for the six-month period was the movement in fair value of
the Company's Investment Portfolio, and costs incurred during the
period. Other key drivers were financing costs incurred for the
Group's RCF and VLN.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4. NAV per share
(pence)
|
|
|
NAV divided by number of shares
outstanding as at the period end.
|
The NAV per share reflects our
ability to grow the portfolio and to add value to it throughout the
life cycle of our assets.
|
46.59 pence per share (30 June
2023: 100.13 pence per share; 31 December 2023: 79.33 pence
per share) (see Note 14).
|
The NAV per share fell as a result
of the negative fair valuation movement in the period and costs
incurred including financing costs incurred for the Group's RCF and
VLN. The negative fair value adjustment equates to 29.72 pence per
share drop in NAV.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5. Ongoing Charges
Ratio*
|
|
|
|
Annualised ongoing charges are the
Company's management fee and all other operating expenses (i.e.
excluding acquisition costs and other non-recurring items)
expressed as a percentage of the average published undiluted NAV in
the period, calculated in accordance with Association of Investment
Companies guidelines.
|
Ongoing charges show the drag on
performance caused by the operational expenses incurred by the
Company.
|
1.63% annualised for the six-month
period to 30 June 2024 (six-month period ended June 2023,
annualised: 1.20%).
|
A key measure of Operational
performance.
The Ongoing charges ratio has
increased in line with the decrease in NAV. Total expenses for the
period have decreased compared to the prior year, but the ratio as
a percentage of the lower NAV increased.
The calculation does not include
costs associated with the sale of investments nor with the
Strategic Review.
|
|
* Alternative Performance Measure
("APM"). Further information on APMs can be found in the Annual
Report.
INVESTMENT MANAGER'S REPORT
Company and Portfolio
Performance
The Company reported a pre-tax loss
of £283 million for the six months to 30 June 2024 (six months to
30 June 2023: £57 million pre-tax loss), equal to a 32.73 pence
loss per share (six months to 30 June 2023: 6.63 pence loss per
share), under IFRS 10 investment entity accounting. This was the
net result of income received from investments and revaluation
losses arising on the investments held at fair value as at 30 June
2024. During the six-month period, the Company's NAV decreased from
£686 million (79.33 pence per share) as at 31 December 2023 to £403
million as at 30 June 2024 (46.59 pence per share). Further details
regarding the decline in NAV are provided in the Financial Review
section.
For the first six months of 2024,
aggregate Investee Company revenue declined by 1% year-on-year,
whilst EBITDA fell 7% in the same period due to continued margin
pressure at Arqiva and Aqua Comms. Further details are provided in
the following sections.
Portfolio company debt as at 30
June 2024 consisted of £737 million at Arqiva (31 December 2023:
£744 million), presented pro rata based on D9's 51.76% economic
interest.
Managed Wind-Down
In line with the new investment
objective and investment policy approved by the Shareholders in the
General Meeting held on 25 March 2024, non-binding offers for
certain assets have been received and a selected number of
preferred bidders have been admitted to a second phase of the sales
processes, which will include detailed due diligence. Sales
processes are also ongoing for various assets in the portfolio,
excluding Arqiva. There can be no guarantee that the sales will
proceed, and the sale processes will only be progressed if the
Board is satisfied that the values achieved are acceptable. A
further update on the sales processes will be made as matters
progress.
Financial Review
Net Asset Value
The following chart shows the
movement in the Company's NAV on a pence per share basis, for the
six-month period from 31 December 2023 to 30 June 2024.
In the six months to 30 June 2024,
the portfolio's fair value reduced by £257 million or 29.72 pence
per share.
The total fall in NAV of the
Company of £283 million or 32.74 pence per
share was driven by portfolio fair value movement of £257 million,
RCF and VLN interests of £16 million, Verne Global disposal fees of
£6 million and net other costs of £4 million.
NAV per share movement - six
months to 30 June 2024
(pence per share)
Reconciliation to IFRS
Valuation
The below chart shows the build-up
of the IFRS Investment Valuation held on the Balance Sheet of the
Company, which amounts to a total of £384 million. This includes a
£360 million valuation for the Company's wholly-owned subsidiary
Digital 9 HoldCo Limited, which holds the investments in the
underlying Investee Companies. A £24 million shareholder loan the
Company has made to Digital 9 HoldCo Limited is shown
separately.
In the chart below, Total Portfolio
Value (£424 million) is net of all VLN deductions, being VLN
principal (£163 million), as well as additional VLN notes issued in
June 2023 (£7 million) and in June 2024 (£10 million) in respect of
interest for prior periods (please see
below the section entitled 'Capital
structure at Arqiva and at HoldCo level' for further detail).
Deductions are also made for the RCF which, for the avoidance of
doubt, does not sit on the Company's Balance Sheet but as it is
held in Digital 9 HoldCo Limited, an unconsolidated subsidiary of
the Company.
Digital 9 HoldCo Limited valuation
reconciliation as of 30 June 2024
(£ million)
Valuations
The valuation follows an
independent valuation process for Aqua Comms, Arqiva and Elio
Networks as at 30 June 2024. The total portfolio valuation is £424
million. This is net of the total VLN balance as of June 2024,
which includes additional PIK notes issued in June 2023 and June
2024.
As of 30 June 2024, Company NAV per
share is 46.59 pence per share, a 41% reduction from 79.33 pence
per share as of 30 December 2023. A major part of the NAV reduction
is attributable to a re-assessment of the assumptions relating to
the availability of finance for underlying portfolio companies and
its impact on portfolio companies' growth outcomes in the valuation
models, as compared to those inputs used in arriving at the NAV as
at 31 December 2023.
Summary of Portfolio Valuation
methodology
The cash flows used in the
valuations are based on plans signed off by Investee Company
boards. These models are used to evaluate Investee Company
performance and assess the performance of Investee Company
management.
Valuation
Investment valuations are
calculated at the financial half-year (30 June) and the financial
year-end (31 December) periods. For the current period ended 30
June 2024, in arriving at their fair value conclusions, the Board
obtained an independent valuation of Aqua Comms, Elio Networks,
Arqiva Group and the Verne Earn-Out. EMIC-1 and SeaEdge UK1 were
valued by TriplePoint. The Verne Global Earn-Out was valued
utilising a Monte Carlo Simulation.
Discount rates
As described in Note
7, investments are
typically valued on a discounted cash flow ("DCF") basis. The
discounted cash flow from revenue is forecast over an 8-to-10-year
period followed by a terminal value based on a long-term growth
rate. Discount rates are arrived at via a bottom-up analysis of the
weighted average cost of capital, using both observable and
unobservable inputs, and calculation of the appropriate beta based
on comparable listed companies. Where appropriate, a sense-check to
the DCF analysis is done by comparison to market multiples. The
weighted average discount rate used in these valuations was 13.80%
(31 December 2023: 13.62%).
Liquidity
The chart below shows the
unrestricted cash movements for the Group in the six-month period
to 30 June 2024. For the avoidance of doubt, this chart includes
all unrestricted cash across the D9 subsidiaries to 30 June
2024.
At 30 June 2024, the Group held
total cash of £33.6 million*. Of this, unrestricted cash available
for use was £23.9 million. Unrestricted
cash includes £19.8m held at the Company level, with the £4.1
million balances being held in unconsolidated
subsidiaries.
As at 30 June 2024, the Group had
cash of £5.1 million in a restricted
interest reserve account, under the terms of its RCF. In agreement
with its RCF lenders, the Company negotiated and agreed that from 1
January 2024 the cash reserves in the RCF's interest reserve
account can be used for interest payments which enables the Company
to pay interest for the residual RCF without using any unrestricted
cash until the RCF's maturity in March 2025. The Group also had
£4.6 million restricted cash held in an escrow account in relation
to the EMIC-1 project.
All Letters of Credit relating to
Verne Global Iceland were cancelled in Q1 2024.
* Alternative Performance Measure
("APM"). Further information on APMs can be found in the 2023
Annual Report.
Unaudited Unrestricted Cash Group
Waterfall - 1 January 2024 to 30 June 2024
(£ million)
Inflation
In the period, inflation has
started to stabilise following the highs of last year, which has
had a strong positive cash flow impact for Arqiva. Last year, 13.5%
RPI in March 2023 resulted in Arqiva paying £147 million in
accretion on its inflation-linked swaps. This year, RPI declined to
4.3% in March 2024, corresponding to a £53 million accretion
payment by Arqiva (equating to c.£28 million prorated for D9's
51.76% economic interest in Arqiva). High inflation last year had
two main impacts on Arqiva. The first was the immediate but short
negative cash flow impact of the large 2023 accretion payment. The
second is positive, increasing EBITDA in the long term due to the
compounding effect of Arqiva's long-term inflation-linked
contracts.
Debt financing
Excluding Investee Companies, D9
had gross debt of £233 million as of 30 June 2024, corresponding to
51% of Adjusted GAV. This comprised the Company's RCF, which was
fully drawn at £53 million, as well as the outstanding VLN balance
of £180 million. Interest on the VLN can be paid either in cash or
by issuance of additional notes, and the latter option was
exercised in respect of the 12 months to 30 June 2024, increasing
the outstanding balance by £10 million. The current balance
consists of £163 million principal and £17 million of additional
notes.
Investee company
leverage
As of 30 June 2024, Arqiva was the
only Investee Company with external debt, with a balance of £1,423
million (including project debt), of which D9's share was £737
million (31 December 2023: £744 million).
Debt metrics
The below table shows the Group's
leverage position as at 30 June 2024.
|
30 June
2024
|
31
December 2023
|
30 June
2023
|
|
£'million
|
£'million
|
£'million
|
Total Portfolio Value
|
424.0
|
1,028.8
|
1,153.5
|
Subsidiary Cash &
Equivalents
|
13.8
|
34.6
|
48.9
|
RCF
|
(53.3)
|
(373.8)
|
(355.0)
|
Net Subsidiary Other
Liabilities
|
(24.1)
|
(49.8)
|
(37.1)
|
PLC inter-company loan
|
23.9
|
36.2
|
29.1
|
Reconciled IFRS
Valuation
|
384.3
|
676.1
|
839.4
|
PLC Other Current Assets
|
1.7
|
1.5
|
0.8
|
PLC Receivables &
Cash
|
19.8
|
14.8
|
29.5
|
Total Assets
|
405.8
|
692.3
|
869.7
|
RCF
|
53.3
|
375.0
|
375.0
|
Adjusted GAV
|
459.1
|
1,067.3
|
1,244.7
|
|
£'million
|
£'million
|
£'million
|
|
RCF
|
53.3
|
375.0
|
356.2
|
|
VLN (including £17 million
additional notes issued in respect of interest)
|
180.0
|
169.8
|
169.8
|
|
Total Group Leverage
|
233.3
|
544.8
|
526.0
|
|
Leverage / Adjusted GAV
|
50.8%
|
51.0%
|
42.3%
|
|
As of 30 June 2024, the Company's
net debt / EBITDA position has decreased since 31 December 2023,
mainly as a result of the significant partial repayment and
cancellation of the Company's RCF following the sale of Verne
Global.
Net Debt / EBITDA
|
At
30
June
2024 (£'million)
|
|
At 31
December 2023 (£'million)
|
|
At 30
June
2023 (£'million
|
Drawn RCF
|
53
|
|
375
|
|
355
|
VLN*
|
180
|
|
170
|
|
170
|
Group Cash & Equivalents (inc.
restricted cash)
|
(34)
|
|
(49)
|
|
(78)
|
Net Debt
|
199
|
|
496
|
|
447
|
Annualised Portfolio
EBITDA
|
180
|
|
198
|
|
209
|
Net Debt / EBITDA
|
1.1x
|
|
2.5x
|
|
2.1x
|
Arqiva debt (prorated for D9
ownership)**
|
737
|
|
744
|
|
769
|
Verne Global debt
|
-
|
|
78
|
|
78
|
Adjusted Net Debt
|
936
|
|
1,318
|
|
1,294
|
Adjusted Net Debt /
EBITDA
|
5.2x
|
|
6.7x
|
|
6.2x
|
*Includes £6.8 million additional
notes issued in June 2023 and £10.2 million additional notes issued
in June 2024 in respect of interest for the periods
prior.
**This is D9's share of Arqiva
gross debt. It is not an Arqiva net debt figure and as a result
does not include cash held by Arqiva; it is a more conservative
approach and is in line with previously reported
figures.
Please see below the
'Provision in respect of
potential VLN adjustment'
section for further details relating to the
potential change to the VLN relating to the Bilsdale
matter.
Review of Portfolio as of 30 June
2024
Aggregate revenues for the Investee
Companies during the period amounted to £194.7 million, 1% lower
than the same six-month period to 30 June 2023. The decrease was
largely attributable to small customer losses at Arqiva, mitigated
by Aqua Comms' higher-than-expected O&M sales and Elio
Networks' continued drive to grow their higher bandwidth Elio
Enterprise product. In line with business plans, margins have
remained under pressure for some of the businesses, particularly
Arqiva and Aqua Comms, resulting in a 7% year-on-year drop in
EBITDA for the period. In the six months to 30 June 2024, the
portfolio's fair value reduced by £257 million or 29.72 pence per
share. Further details on the portfolio revaluation are provided in
the Financial Review section above.
Portfolio Financial
Performance
|
Six
months to 30 June 2024
|
Six
months to 30 June 2023
|
12
months to December 2023
|
12
months to December 2022
|
Revenue
|
£194.7
million
|
£197.5
million
|
£396.0
million
|
£363.8
million
|
Year-on-year growth (%)
|
(1%)
|
10%
|
9%
|
0%
|
EBITDA
|
£89.9
million
|
£96.9
million
|
£180.6
million
|
£193.2
million
|
Year-on-year growth (%)
|
(7%)
|
0%
|
(7%)
|
(0%)
|
%
margin
|
46%
|
49%
|
46%
|
53%
|
Aqua Comms (excluding
EMIC-1)
Aqua Comms is a leading
carrier-neutral owner and operator of subsea fibre cable systems
with a strategic opportunity to expand, connecting the world's
largest traffic hubs. It is a transatlantic leader, with its AEC-1,
AEC-2, AEC-3, CC-1, CC-2 and North-sea Connect cables, and is
expanding around the globe. Through its niche product suite and
carefully considered partner network, Aqua Comms delivers high
speed solutions for carriers who desire best-in-class connectivity,
without the complexity.
Sector
|
Subsea
|
Initial investment
|
£170 million
|
Currency
|
USD
|
Total capex funded to
date
|
£17 million
|
Date invested
|
April 2021
|
Total investment to date
|
£187 million
|
Ownership
|
100%
|
Revenue (six months to 30 June
2024)
|
£16.0 million
|
SDG9 alignment
|
Connectivity
|
EBITDA (six months to 30 June
2024)
|
£3.6 million
|
Compared to the six months to 30
June 2023, revenue increased by 16% in the six months to 30 June
2024 mainly driven by increased sales in Aqua Comms' existing
systems and on AEC-3, which became operational in the third quarter
of last year. EBITDA decreased by 12% mainly because of the planned
addition of headcount to support sales, operations and expansion
into new geographies such as Asian markets, in line with the
business' long-term strategy, along with additional and temporary
overlapping costs to internalise its previously outsourced Network
Operations Centre (with the transition on track to finalise at the
end of this year).
Aqua Comms has had a strong start
to the year and continues its success in the transatlantic market
with large, announced sales such as a 25% fibre pair sale on its
transatlantic system to Energy Sciences Network (ESnet).
As planned, Aqua Comms has now lit
the second fibre pair it owns on AEC-1, as customer demand has
driven the need to supply further capacity on this
system.
|
Six
months to 30 June 2024
|
Six
months to 30 June 2023
|
2023
|
2022
|
Revenue
|
£16.0
million
|
£13.8
million
|
£28.3
million
|
£27.2
million
|
%
growth
|
16%
|
3%
|
4%
|
5%
|
EBITDA
|
£3.6
million
|
£4.1
million
|
£8.6
million
|
£12.7
million
|
%
growth
|
(12%)
|
(36%)
|
(32%)
|
(5%)
|
%
margin
|
23%
|
30%
|
30%
|
47%
|
EMIC-1
Aqua Comms is also managing the
EMIC-1 system with its development continuing through 2024 before
earliest expected launch in 2025. EMIC-1 has the potential to be
delayed further based on the geopolitical situation in the Red Sea
and Middle East, which is impacting the ability of new cable
systems to be deployed in the region. Despite the geopolitical
situation and potential for further delay, the Aqua Comms team
achieved a large pre-sale on EMIC-1 in Q4 of last year. The
leader of the investor consortium building out the cable system
continues to explore alternative plans to connect the Red Sea and
Indian leg of the system, to allow service to start even if the
original wet route is not fully completed.
Sector
|
Subsea
|
Initial investment
|
-
|
Currency
|
USD
|
Total capex funded to
date
|
£39 million
|
Date invested
|
August 2021
|
Ownership
|
100%
|
SeaEdge UK1
SeaEdge UK1 is a data centre asset
and subsea fibre landing station, located on the UK's largest data
centre campus in Newcastle. D9 owns the underlying real estate of
SeaEdge UK1 and leases the facility to data centre operator
Stellium Data Centres Ltd, via a 25-year occupational lease.
SeaEdge UK1 offers unique positioning as a premier data centre
provider in the UK with unparalleled connectivity to North America,
the Nordics, and the UK via exclusive subsea Cable Landing
Station's and proprietary local network.
Sector
|
Data centre
|
Initial investment
|
£16 million
|
Currency
|
GBP
|
Total capex funded to
date
|
-
|
Date invested
|
December 2021
|
Total investment to date
|
£16 million
|
Ownership
|
100%
|
Revenue (six months to 30 June
2024)
|
£0.5 million
|
SDG9 alignment
|
Connectivity &
Decarbonisation
|
EBITDA (six months to 30 June
2024)
|
£0.5 million
|
SeaEdge UK1 is the UK's only
landing station for the North Sea Connect subsea cable, which
improves connectivity in northern England and forms part of the
North Atlantic Loop subsea network, which includes Aqua Comms'
AEC-1 and AEC-2 cables.
In the six months to 30 June 2024,
revenue grew by 6% and EBITDA by 7% compared with the same period
in the previous year. This was due to continued positive revenue
indexation and reduced expenses. The Company has agreed to defer the rent
due as part of the sale process of SeaEdge.
The asset is leased on fully
repairing and insuring terms to the tenant and operator, Stellium
Data Centres Ltd, via a 25-year occupational lease with over 21
years remaining.
|
Six
months to 30 June 2024
|
Six
months to 30 June 2023
|
2023
|
2022
|
Revenue
|
£0.5
million
|
£0.5
million
|
£1.0
million
|
£0.9
million
|
%
growth
|
6%
|
-
|
11%
|
n/a
|
EBITDA
|
£0.5
million
|
£0.5
million
|
£1.0
million
|
£0.9
million
|
%
growth
|
7%
|
7%
|
13%
|
n/a
|
%
margin
|
95%
|
94%
|
94%
|
93%
|
Elio Networks
Elio Networks is a leading
provider of resilient and high performance B2B connectivity,
operating the highest-capacity Fixed Wireless Access (FWA) network
in Ireland, with dedicated up to 10 Gbps (Gigabits per second)
lines due to a dense base station coverage.
Sector
|
Wireless
|
Initial investment
|
£51 million
|
Currency
|
EUR
|
Total capex funded to
date
|
-
|
Date invested
|
April 2022
|
Total investment to date
|
£51 million
|
Ownership
|
100%
|
Revenue (six months to 30 June
2024)
|
£4.1 million
|
SDG9 alignment
|
Connectivity
|
EBITDA (six months to 30 June
2024)
|
£2.2 million
|
Elio Networks continued growing its
high-quality wireless connectivity operations in 2024, with revenue
of £4.1 million achieved in the six months to 30 June 2024, a 3%
increase compared to the six months to 30 June 2023. Elio Networks
has seen strong growth momentum in Cork city since launching in
2023, reaffirming its position as the leading wireless fixed
connectivity player in Ireland.
Elio Networks has a diverse client
base, including larger multinationals, government bodies, global
technology companies, small professional service firms, retail and
hospitality companies. Elio Networks was launched to address the
growing requirement for affordable high-speed broadband in the
greater Dublin area. Since then, it has grown to become the largest
wireless internet service provider ("ISP") in the greater Dublin
region, with the 2023 expansion into Cork city reaffirming its
position as a leading connectivity player in Ireland.
|
Six
months to 30 June 2024
|
Six
months to 30 June 2023
|
2023
|
2022
|
Revenue
|
£4.1
million
|
£4.0
million
|
£8.0
million
|
£7.6
million
|
%
growth
|
3%
|
6%
|
5%
|
6%
|
EBITDA
|
£2.2
million
|
£2.2
million
|
£4.1
million
|
£4.0
million
|
%
growth
|
-
|
11%
|
2%
|
(14%)
|
%
margin
|
54%
|
55%
|
51%
|
53%
|
Arqiva
Arqiva is the UK's pre-eminent
national provider of television and radio broadcast infrastructure
and provides end-to-end connectivity solutions in the media and
utility industries. It has been an early and leading participant in
the development of smart utility infrastructure in the UK through
its smart water and energy metering services. It is also a leading
provider of satellite uplink infrastructure and distribution
services in the UK.
Sector
|
Wireless
|
Initial investment
|
£300 million
|
Currency
|
GBP
|
Total capex funded to
date
|
-
|
Date invested
|
October 2022
|
Total investment to date
|
£300 million
|
Ownership
|
48.02%
|
Revenue (six months to 30 June
2024)
|
£174.0 million
|
SDG9 alignment
|
Connectivity
|
EBITDA (six months to 30 June
2024)
|
£83.7 million
|
Note: Figures presented are
prorated based on D9's 51.76% economic interest in
Arqiva.
Arqiva is a large, robust
business with c.1,300 employees and predictable earnings
underpinned by long‐term contracts with
blue‐chip customers,
including the BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Sky, Discovery, the DCC and
Thames Water. Arqiva's utilities business continues to represent a
growth opportunity grounded in a quality product offering and
enabling clear cost savings and environmental benefits.
Arqiva achieved revenue of £174m in
the six months to 30 June 2024, down 3% year-on-year. Positive
revenue indexation through Arqiva's inflation-linked contracts was
offset by reduced DTT channel sales, lower pricing on contract
renewals and customer losses. EBITDA declined year-on-year, with
margins impacted by rising power costs and increased headcount
expenses, reflecting macroeconomic wage pressures and strategic
investments in new media markets.
In May 2024, Ofcom published a
report on the future of TV distribution, which outlined how the
market could evolve over the next 10-15 years. Arqiva is in close
dialogue with relevant stakeholders including the regulator and
relevant government departments as this area of policy debate
progresses.
In the utilities sector, the
UK's water industry regulator, Ofwat, published its draft
determinations for the 2025-2030 period, which signal the largest
investment programme since privatisation. This includes an
ambitious rollout of over 10 million smart water meters, presenting
Arqiva with a significant growth opportunity to leverage its smart
metering expertise and support the sector's strategic agenda in
water and waste monitoring.
Capital structure at Arqiva
and at HoldCo level
In October 2022, D9
acquired a 51.76% economic interest (48.02% equity stake) in Arqiva
for £463 million, which consisted of £300 million paid in cash and
£163 million owed to the vendor in the form of a vendor loan note
(VLN).
As of 30 June 2024, D9 owes the
£163 million VLN principal to the vendor along with £17 million of
PIK interest (additional notes issued on 30 June 2023 and 30 June
2024). Arqiva also holds a large balance of shareholder loans owed
to its own shareholders. For the avoidance of doubt, these do not
represent an external debt obligation and should be excluded when
examining Arqiva's leverage. Arqiva's total external debt as of 30
June 2024 was £1,423 million, which corresponds to £737 million
attributable to D9 pro rata based on its 51.76% economic
interest.
Provision in respect of potential
VLN adjustment
Arqiva's Bilsdale site returned to
full operation in January 2024 following
the 2021 fire and subsequent restoration. We expect net costs
associated with the incident to be lower than anticipated at
acquisition. Per the terms agreed with the vendor at the time of
the acquisition by D9, this cash flow upside for Arqiva is expected
to be offset by an increase to the VLN. The Group
holds a provision in respect of this potential adjustment to the
VLN and any such adjustment to the VLN will be made when it
crystallises. The provision has not been stated explicitly due to
its commercially sensitive nature, but it has been accounted for at
D9 HoldCo level such that the impact is reflected within the fair
value of the investments in D9 HoldCo for the
period.
Inflation-linked
swaps
The six months to 30 June
2024 have seen inflation stabilising, following the highs of last
year, with a strong positive cash flow impact for Arqiva. Last
year, 13.5% RPI in March 2023 resulted in Arqiva paying £147
million in accretion on its inflation-linked swaps. In stark
contrast this year, RPI was down to 4.3% in March, resulting in a
£53 million accretion payment (equating to c.£28 million prorated
for D9's 51.76% economic interest in Arqiva). For the avoidance of
doubt, accretion is paid out of Arqiva's own cash flows and not by
D9. Please see above the
'Provision in respect
of potential VLN adjustment' section for further
details relating to the potential change to the VLN relating to the
Bilsdale matter.
As disclosed in June
2023, Arqiva implemented a collar on its inflation-linked swaps,
which applies a cap and floor to future accretion payments,
limiting downside cash flow exposure for the business. Given that
March 2024 RPI fell within the collar's range (2.5% to 6.0%), there
were no collar cash flows relating to Arqiva's 2024 accretion
payment.
Vendor loan note
interest
D9's 2022 acquisition of a 48.02%
equity stake in Arqiva consisted of £300 million paid in cash and a
£163 million vendor loan note issued by the vendor.
Please see above the 'Provision in respect of potential
VLN adjustment' section for further details relating to the potential change
to the VLN relating to the Bilsdale matter. The VLN, which matures in 2029, is non-recourse to the
Company. In the event of a default, recourse is limited to the
Company's shares in Arqiva Group Limited, and this charge is
registered at Companies House against D9 Wireless Midco 1 Limited,
a subsidiary of the Company.
The VLN is due to mature on 18
October 2029 and has the following stepped interest rate
profile:
· 6%
per annum up to and including 30 June 2025;
· 7%
per annum from 1 July 2025 up to 30 June 2026;
· 8%
per annum from 1 July 2026 up to 30 June 2027; and
· 9%
per annum from 1 July 2027 to maturity.
Interest on the VLN is due annually
in arrears on 30 June and can be paid either in cash or by issuance
of additional payment-in-kind ("PIK") notes. This PIK option was
exercised in respect of the 12 months to 30 June 2024, increasing
the outstanding balance from £169.8 million as of 30 June 2023 to
£180 million as of June 2024. This consists of £163 million
principal and £17 million of additional notes. PIK interest is
capitalised into the balance of the VLN annually in June each year,
and all interest on the Arqiva VLN was PIK as of 30 June 2024. No
interest on the VLN has been settled in cash.
Accrued interest must be repaid in
full before distributions can be made to the Group. After the
fourth anniversary of the VLN (18 October 2026), the Group can only
receive distributions if the entirety of the VLN principal and any
rolled up interest have been repaid in full.
|
Six
months to 30 June 2024
|
Six
months to 30 June 2023
|
2023
|
2022
|
Revenue
|
£174.0
million
|
£179.3
million
|
£358.6
million
|
£328.1
million
|
%
growth
|
(3%)
|
11%
|
9%
|
-
|
EBITDA
|
£83.7
million
|
£90.1
million
|
£166.9
million
|
£175.7
million
|
%
growth
|
(7%)
|
3%
|
(5%)
|
1%
|
%
margin
|
48%
|
50%
|
47%
|
54%
|
Note: Figures presented are
pro-rated based on D9's 51.76% economic interest in
Arqiva.
Verne Global Earn-Out
As previously announced, the
Company completed the Verne Transaction which consisted of a
potential earn-out payment of up to approximately £107 million
(US$135million) (the "Earn-Out") payable subject to Verne Global
achieving run-rate EBITDA targets for the year ending on 31
December 2026.
We continue to receive information
relating to Verne Global's EBITDA under the terms of the Sale and
Purchase Agreement in order to inform the valuation of the
Earn-Out.
Diego Massidda
Head of Digital
Infrastructure
Triple Point Investment Management
LLP
30 September 2024
PRINCIPAL RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES
The table below sets out what the
Board believes to be the principal risks and uncertainties facing
the Group. The table does not cover all of the risks that the Group
may face. The Board defines the Group's risk appetite, enabling the
Group to judge the level of risk it is prepared to take in
achieving its overall objectives. Additional risks and
uncertainties not presently known to management or deemed to be
less material at the date of this report may also have an adverse
effect on the Group.
|
|
Risk Impact
|
Risk Mitigation
|
Impact, Likelihood and Change in
Period
|
1.
|
Persistent, Negative Market
Sentiment. Leading to increased activism
|
The fund has suffered as a result of
a lengthy period where share price has traded at a discount to NAV.
There are a number of legacy drivers behind the market sentiment,
which include: wider macroeconomic and market conditions, Group's
leverage position, Investment Manager and Board personnel
changes.
Combined, these have led to a
reduced level of shareholder confidence which has manifested in a
continued level of complaints and increased Board
engagements.
Specifically, the Board have
experienced multiple changes of membership. This
has in part caused disruption to the ongoing governance and
oversight of the fund and is seen as a contributor to the increased
level of activism.
|
The Board has continued to maintain
an open dialogue with shareholders and provided market updates on
the execution of its strategy, which has included a formal
consultation with shareholders to determine the forward-looking
strategy, which sought to address shareholder concerns re the
performance and management of the fund.
Ongoing, the Board and Investment
Manager have sought appropriate corporate and legal advice to
ensure the fund conducts itself appropriately and informed
decisions and actions have been taken to deliver the best possible
outcome to shareholders.
There has recently been appointment
of new members to the Board including the appointment of a new
Chair - all of which will add depth, capacity and ensure all
Committees can operate appropriately and enable the Board to fulfil
its oversight obligations.
|
Impact:
High
Likelihood:
High
Change in period:
Stable
|
2.
|
Liquidity and Solvency
Risk
|
The company made a significant
repayment to the RCF debt liability, following the successful sale
of Verne. The residual balance requires active management given the
proximity to the repayment date (March 25), and that the group is
in breach of one of its financial covenants.
|
The Company has several management
actions in place to manage its debt obligations and is in
regular dialogue with its funding partners. In addition it is
working with the Lenders to explore options for a waiver of its
breach whilst it continues the orderly realization with a view to
sales or repayment of the RCF as soon as practicable.
General liquidity is managed via
regular cashflow monitoring, supplier negotiations, and regular
visibility at Board level through ongoing reporting.
|
Impact:
High
Likelihood:
High
Change in
period: Increased
|
3.
|
Transaction / Execution
Risk
|
The execution of the wind-down
strategy will be completed in an appropriate and timely manner and
one that achieves best outcomes for investors. The underlying
quality and performance of the Investee Companies are considered
robust both financially and operationally; notwithstanding that
access to capital for further investment would enhance value in
certain instances. Where appropriate and available, this will still
be explored, subject to there being no detriment to overarching
achievement of strategy. The closure of transactions may prove
materially more complex than anticipated given the geography and
regulatory bias of the Investee Companies.
|
Each transaction will be supported
by a carefully selected team of advisers, which together with the
experience of the Investment Management team are best placed to
navigate the inherent risks in selecting the most appropriate deal
and respectively concluding; with the priority of delivering best
investor outcomes.
|
Impact:
Moderate to High
Likelihood:
Moderate
Change in period:
Stable
|
4.
|
Future Portfolio Funding
|
A number of the portfolio companies
required access to funding to fulfill capex requirement, for which
projects are dependent upon.
Limitations on or access to funding
may impact performance and valuations.
|
Portfolio Companies are actively
managing funding options to support fulfillment of their
project plans.
Where necessary management actions
are in place to monitor the impact in delays in accessing the
required capital.
|
Impact:
Moderate
Likelihood:
Moderate to High
Change in period:
Increased
|
5.
|
Interruptions to operations
including infrastructure and technology
|
D9's Investee Companies rely on
infrastructure and technology to provide their customers with a
highly reliable service. There may be a failure to deliver this
level of service because of numerous factors. This could result in
the breach of performance conditions in customer contracts,
resulting in financial or regulatory implications.
|
The Digital Infrastructure
Investments in which the Group invests use proven technologies,
typically backed by manufacturer warranties, when installing
applicable machinery and equipment. Investee Companies hire experts
with the technical knowledge and seek third-party advice where
required. Where appropriate, there are insurances in place to cover
issues such as accidental damage and power issues.
|
Impact:
Moderate to High
Likelihood:
Moderate
Change in period:
Stable
|
6
|
Dependency on Investment
Manager
|
The Company is heavily reliant on
the full range of an Investment Manager's services, their expertise
and specific knowledge pursuant to the strategic direction of the
fund.
Successful
execution of the strategy to manage
a winddown of the fund, maximising shareholder value, is dependent
upon the appointment of an Investment Manager who has knowledge and
experience of the individual dynamics of each individual Investee
Companies and the markets that they operate in, which can be
leveraged to develop an approach which achieves the maximum for
shareholders.
|
The selection of a new and/or
continuation of engagement with the Investment Manager, forms part
of the Strategic Review, which the Board is continuing to manage
with the support of independent advisers.
The decision will be based upon who
can achieve the best outcome for investors.
Post 31 December 2023, the Board
served notice to the existing Investment Manager, whose current
obligations are set to end on 31 March 2025, in line with the
expiry of the lock-in period,
Any changes to the Investment
Manager will see new fee arrangements entered into and the Board
will ensure that return and reward are aligned with delivery of
strategy.
|
Impact:
Moderate to High
Likelihood:
Moderate
Change in period:
Stable
|
7.
|
Regulatory Risk
|
There are several regulatory
stakeholders involved both at a Fund but also individual Portfolio
Company level. The Board operates in an open and transparent manner
and have external advisers appointed to support and ensure
obligations are met. Breach of obligation and/or failure to
maintain adequate engagement can lead to increased scrutiny,
resulting in financial and/or reputational impacts.
|
Compliance with regulatory
expectations is a key focus of the Board. Relationships with FCA
and JFSC are supported through engagement with the Investment
Manager Triple Point Investment Management LLP and corporate
service providers such as Ocorian Fund Services (Jersey) Ltd and
INDOS Financial Limited. Individual Investee Companies have direct
engagement with their regulators and recruit staff that have
experience and deep understanding of the obligations in which they
operate under.
|
Impact:
Moderate
Likelihood:
Moderate
Change in period:
Stable
|
Emerging Risks
Introduction of, or amendment to
laws, regulations, or technology (especially in relation to climate
change)
The global ambition for a more
sustainable future has never been greater, particularly in light of
various climate-related events across the globe. There is
increasing pressure for governments and authorities to enforce
green-related legislation. This could materially affect
organisations which are not set up to deal with such changes in the
form of financial penalties, operational and capital expenditure to
restructure operations and infrastructure, or even ceasing of
certain activities.
The Investment Manager will
continue to actively monitor changes and to actively engage with
portfolio companies to improve their alignment with current and
future legislation, regulations and best practices in this
field.
Changes to power supply and prices
/ Supply chain disruption
As demonstrated by the Russia's
invasion of Ukraine, global conflicts can have significant
disruption to both power supply and supply chains. The changing
political landscape across the world and increased tensions are
monitored by the Investment Manager. Scenario planning tool are
used to understand the impacts and possible mitigation
actions.
Development of disruptive
technology
The digital infrastructure sector
is constantly evolving. As a result, there is a risk that
disruptive technology emerges which results in current digital
infrastructure assets becoming obsolete. The Investment Manager
constantly monitors the emerging technology trends with digital
infrastructure to ensure Investee Companies evolve their business
models where required and new investment opportunities are
accurately assessed.
Other information
Going Concern
The Directors have concluded that
it is appropriate for the condensed financial statements to be
prepared on a going concern basis. As
included within the Going Concern section in the Financial
Statements (Note: 2), the Company
continues to disclose a material uncertainty, which may cast
significant doubt over the Company's ability to continue as a going
concern. Full details are set out in Note 2
of the attached financial statements.
DIRECTORS' RESPONSIBILITY STATEMENT
The Directors confirm that to the
best of their knowledge this condensed set of financial statements
has been prepared in accordance with IAS 34 as adopted by the
European Union and that the operating and financial review includes
a fair review of the information required by DTR 4.2.7 and DTR
4.2.8 of the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the
United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority namely:
• an
indication of important events that have occurred during the period
and their impact on the condensed financial statements and a
description of the principal risks and uncertainties for the
remaining six months of the financial year; and
• material related party transactions in the period as disclosed
in Note 10.
A list of the Directors is shown in
Note 10.
Shareholder information is as
disclosed on the Digital 9 Infrastructure plc website.
Approval
This Directors' responsibilities
statement was approved by the Board of Directors and signed on its
behalf by:
Eric Sanderson
Chair
30 September 2024
UNAUDITED INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the
six months ended 30 June 2024
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
For the six-month period ended 30
June 2024
|
|
Half-year 2024 (unaudited)
|
Half-year 2023 (unaudited)
|
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Income from investments held at fair
value
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
27,972
|
-
|
27,972
|
Loss on investments held at fair
value
|
7
|
-
|
(279,463)
|
(279,463)
|
-
|
(81,520)
|
(81,520)
|
Interest income
|
|
1,352
|
-
|
1,352
|
1,211
|
-
|
1,211
|
Other income
|
|
190
|
-
|
190
|
433
|
-
|
433
|
Total income
|
|
1,542
|
(279,463)
|
(277,921)
|
29,616
|
(81,520)
|
(51,904)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Expenses
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment management
fees
|
5
|
(2,497)
|
(832)
|
(3,329)
|
(3,365)
|
(1,121)
|
(4,486)
|
Other operating expenses
|
|
(2,022)
|
-
|
(2,022)
|
(977)
|
-
|
(977)
|
Total operating
expenses
|
|
(4,519)
|
(832)
|
(5,351)
|
(4,342)
|
(1,121)
|
(5,463)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Loss)/profit on ordinary activities before
taxation
|
|
(2,977)
|
(280,295)
|
(283,272)
|
25,274
|
(82,641)
|
(57,367)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Taxation
|
6
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Loss)/profit and total
comprehensive (expense)/income attributable to
shareholders
|
|
(2,977)
|
(280,295)
|
(283,272)
|
25,274
|
(82,641)
|
(57,367)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Loss)/earnings per ordinary share
- basic and diluted (pence)
|
13
|
(0.34p)
|
(32.39p)
|
(32.73p)
|
2.92p
|
(9.55p)
|
(6.63p)
|
The total column of this statement
is the Condensed Statement of Comprehensive Income of Digital 9
Infrastructure Plc ("the Company") prepared in accordance with
International Accounting Standard 34 'Interim Financial Reporting',
as adopted by the European Union ("EU"). The supplementary revenue
return and capital columns have been prepared in accordance with
the Association of Investment Companies Statement of Recommended
Practice (AIC SORP).
All revenue and capital items in
the above statement derive from continuing operations. The Company
does not have any other income or expenses that are not included in
the net profit for the year. The net profit for the year disclosed
above represents the Company's total comprehensive
income.
This Condensed Statement of
Comprehensive Income includes all recognised gains and
losses.
The accompanying Notes below are an
integral part of these Condensed Interim Financial
Statements.
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL
POSITION
As at 30 June 2024
|
|
Note
|
30 June
2024 (unaudited)
|
|
31
December 2023
(audited)
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investments at fair value through
profit or loss
|
|
7
|
384,300
|
|
676,060
|
Total non-current assets
|
|
|
384,300
|
|
676,060
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
|
1,699
|
|
1,471
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
|
19,763
|
|
14,809
|
Total current assets
|
|
|
21,461
|
|
16,280
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total assets
|
|
|
405,761
|
|
692,340
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
|
(2,702)
|
|
(6,009)
|
Total current
liabilities
|
|
|
(2,702)
|
|
(6,009)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total net assets
|
|
|
403,059
|
|
686,331
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity attributable to equity
holders
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stated capital
|
|
8
|
793,286
|
|
793,286
|
Capital reserve
|
|
|
(404,060)
|
|
(123,765)
|
Revenue reserve
|
|
|
13,833
|
|
16,810
|
Total Equity
|
|
|
403,059
|
|
686,331
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net asset value per ordinary share
- basic and diluted
|
|
14
|
46.59p
|
|
79.33p
|
The Condensed Interim Financial
Statements were approved and authorised for issue by the Board on
30 September 2024 and signed on its behalf by:
Eric Sanderson
Chairman
30 September 2024
The accompanying Notes are an
integral part of these Condensed Interim Financial
Statements.
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN
SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
For the six-month period ended 30
June 2024
|
|
|
Stated
capital £'000
|
Capital
reserve
£'000
|
Revenue
reserve £'000
|
Total
equity £'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Balance as at 1 January
2023
|
|
|
819,242
|
133,894
|
(3,516)
|
949,620
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Transactions with owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
|
|
(25,956)
|
-
|
-
|
(25,956)
|
Profit /(loss) and total
comprehensive income/(expense) for the period
|
|
|
-
|
(82,641)
|
25,274
|
(57,367)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Balance as at 30 June
2023
|
|
|
793,286
|
51,253
|
21,758
|
866,297
|
|
|
|
Stated
capital £'000
|
Capital
reserve
£'000
|
Revenue
reserve £'000
|
Total
equity £'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Balance as at 1 January
2024
|
|
|
793,286
|
(123,765)
|
16,810
|
686,331
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Transactions with owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loss and total comprehensive expense
for the period
|
|
|
-
|
(280,295)
|
(2,977)
|
(283,272)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Balance as at 30 June
2024
|
|
|
793,286
|
(404,060)
|
13,833
|
403,059
|
The accompanying Notes are an
integral part of these Condensed Interim Financial
Statements.
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CASH
FLOWS
For the six-month period ended 30
June 2024
|
|
Note
|
Half-year 2024
|
|
Half-year 2023
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
|
£'000
|
Cash flows from operating
activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Loss) on ordinary activities before
taxation
|
|
|
(283,272)
|
|
(57,367)
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Losses on investments held at fair
value
|
|
7
|
279,463
|
|
81,520
|
Cash flow used in
operations
|
|
|
(3,809)
|
|
24,153
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Increase)/decrease in trade and
other receivables
|
|
|
(228)
|
|
616
|
(Decrease)/increase in trade and
other payables
|
|
|
(3,306)
|
|
674
|
Net cash (outflow)/inflow from
operating activities
|
|
|
(7,343)
|
|
25,443
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from investing
activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loan investment additions
|
|
7
|
(1,300)
|
|
-
|
Loan investment repayment
|
|
7
|
13,597
|
|
-
|
Net cash inflow generated in
investing activities
|
|
|
12,297
|
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from financing
activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
|
|
-
|
|
(25,955)
|
Net cash flow generated from
financing activities
|
|
|
-
|
|
(25,955)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net increase/(decrease) in cash and
cash equivalents
|
|
|
4,954
|
|
(512)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reconciliation of net cash flow to
movements in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the
beginning of the half-year
|
|
|
14,809
|
|
30,001
|
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and
cash equivalents
|
|
|
4,954
|
|
(512)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of
the half-year
|
|
|
19,763
|
|
29,489
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
The accompanying Notes are an
integral part of these Condensed Interim Financial
Statements.
Notes to the Interim Financial
Statements
CORPORATE INFORMATION
Digital 9 Infrastructure plc (the
"Company" or "D9") is a Jersey registered alternative investment
fund, and it is regulated by the Jersey Financial Services
Commission as a 'listed fund' under the Collective Investment Funds
(Jersey) Law 1988 (the "Funds Law") and the Jersey Listed Fund
Guide published by the Jersey Financial Services Commission. The
Company is registered with number 133380 under the Companies
(Jersey) Law 1991.
The Company is domiciled in Jersey
and the address of its registered office, which is also its
principal place of business, is 26 New Street, St Helier, Jersey,
JE2 3RA.
The Company was incorporated on 8
January 2021 and is a Public Company. The Company's Ordinary Shares
were admitted to trading on the Specialist Fund Segment of the Main
Market of the London Stock Exchange under the ticker DGI9 on 31
March 2021.
The Company's principal activity
was investing in a diversified portfolio of critical digital
infrastructure assets which contribute to improving global digital
communications whilst targeting sustainable income and capital
growth for investors. In line with the new investment objective and
investment policy approved by the Shareholders in the General
Meeting held on 25 March 2024, the Company will not make any new
investments save that investments may be made in existing Investee
Companies when considered appropriate to maximise value for
shareholders.
These condensed interim financial
statements comprise only the results of the Company, as its
investment in Digital 9 Holdco Limited ("D9 Holdco") is measured at
fair value through profit or loss.
1.
BASIS OF PREPARATION OF HALF-YEAR
REPORT
These condensed interim financial
statements for the half-year reporting period ended 30 June 2024
have been prepared in accordance with European Union adopted
International Accounting Standard 34, 'Interim Financial Reporting'
and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules sourcebook of
the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.
The interim report does not include
all the notes of the type normally included in the annual financial
report. Accordingly, this report is to be read in conjunction with
the annual report for the year ended 31 December 2023 and any
public announcements made by the Company during the interim
reporting period.
Where presentational guidance set
out in the Association of Investment Companies Statement of
Recommended Practice (the "AIC SORP") is consistent with the
requirements of IAS 34 Interim Financial Reporting and
International Financial Reporting Standards ("IFRS") the Directors
have sought to prepare the financial statements on a basis
compliant with the recommendations of the AIC SORP. In particular,
supplementary information which analyses the Condensed Statement of
Comprehensive Income between items of a revenue and capital nature
has been presented alongside the total Condensed Statement of
Comprehensive Income.
Following the recent shareholder
vote at the General Meeting, the Company is now in a Managed
Wind-Down and as a result the objective of the Company is no longer
to acquire digital infrastructure projects, it is to ensure an
orderly wind down and return proceeds to Shareholders. The Company,
via D9 Holdco has begun the process to start selling select
Investee Companies and whilst this process in on-going, the
Directors deem the operations of the Company to be
continuing.
The accounting policies adopted are
consistent with those of the previous financial year and
corresponding interim reporting period.
(a)
Investment entities
The Directors have concluded that
in accordance with IFRS 10, the Company meets the definition of an
investment entity, having evaluated against the criteria presented
below that needs to be met. Under IFRS 10, investment entities are
required to hold financial investments at fair value through profit
or loss rather than consolidate them on a line-by-line basis. There
are three key conditions to be met by the Company for it to meet
the definition of an investment entity.
For each reporting period, the
Directors will continue to assess whether the Company continues to
meet these conditions:
· It obtains funds
from one or more investors for the purpose of providing these
investors with professional investment management
services;
· It
commits to its investors that its business purpose is to invest its
funds solely for returns (including having an exit strategy for
investments) from capital appreciation, investment income or both;
and
· It measures and evaluates the performance of substantially all
its investments on a fair value basis.
The Company satisfies the first
criteria as it has multiple investors and has obtained funds from a
diverse group of shareholders for the purpose of providing them
with investment opportunities to invest in a large pool of digital
infrastructure assets.
In satisfying the second criteria,
the notion of an investment timeframe is critical. An investment
entity should not hold its investments indefinitely but should have
an exit strategy for their realisation. The intention of the
Company is to seek equity interests in digital infrastructure
projects that have an indefinite life; the underlying assets that
it invests in will have a medium to long term expected life. The
exit strategy for each asset will depend on the characteristics of
the assets, transaction structure, exit price potentially
achievable, suitability and availability of alternative
investments, balance of the portfolio and lot size of the assets as
compared to the value of the portfolio. Whilst the Company is in
a Managed Wind-Down process, the Company may dispose of the
investments should an appropriate opportunity arise where, in the
Investment Manager's opinion, the value that could be realised from
such disposal would represent a satisfactory return on the
investment and enhance the value of the Company as a
whole.
During the period, the Company sold
100% of its ownership in the Verne Global Group of Companies,
reinforcing the exit strategy point described above. As the Company
enters into its wind- down phase, it will continue to realise its
exit strategy across its portfolio.
The Company satisfies the third
criteria as it measures and evaluates the performance of all of its
investments on a fair value basis which is the most relevant for
investors in the Company. Management use fair value information as
a primary measurement to evaluate the performance of all the
investments and in decision making.
In assessing whether it meets the
definition, the Company shall also consider whether it has the
following typical characteristics of an investment
entity:
a) it has more than one
investment
b) it has more than one
investor
c) it has investors that are not
related parties of the entity
d) it has ownership interests in
the form of equity or similar interests.
As per IFRS 10 a parent investment
entity is required to consolidate subsidiaries that are not
themselves investment entities and whose main purpose is to provide
services relating to the entity's investment activities.
The Directors have assessed whether
D9 Holdco satisfies those conditions set above by considering
the characteristics of the whole group structure, rather than
individual entities. The Directors have concluded that the
Company and D9 Holdco are formed in connection with each other
for business structure purposes. When considered together, both
entities display the typical characteristics of an investment
entity.
The Company entering into a Managed
Wind-Down, a decision which was made and voted on by shareholders
during the period, and the changes in the group structure following
the sale of Verne Global have not impacted the management's
judgement and conclusion over the IFRS 10 investment entity
application and the Company has applied the same accounting
policies described.
The Directors are therefore of the
opinion that the Company meets the criteria and characteristics of
an investment entity and therefore, subsidiaries are measured at
fair value through profit or loss, in accordance with IFRS 13 "Fair
Value Measurement", IFRS 10 "Consolidated Financial Statements" and
IFRS 9 "Financial Instruments".
(b)
Going concern
Material Uncertainty
Following the recent shareholder
vote at the General Meeting, the Company is now in a Managed
Wind-Down. The Directors however believe that the Company and its
subsidiaries (together the "Group") have adequate resources to
continue in operational existence until the conclusion of a period
of at least 12 months. The unaudited condensed interim
financial statements for the half-year ended 30 June 2024 therefore
continue to be prepared on a going concern basis.
In adopting the appropriateness of
the Going Concern basis of preparation the Board considered the
fact that the Company is in Managed Wind-Down. In doing so various
options for realising the stake in Arqiva were considered by the
Board and after careful consideration of Arqiva's plans and current market
conditions, the Board believes that the maximisation of the value
of the Company's
stake in Arqiva is likely to take longer to realise than the other
investments held by the Company. This process may take up to 3
years.
Additionally following the recent
sale of Verne Global, the Company may receive a potential Earn-Out
payment of up to $135 million, which is subject to Verne Global
achieving run-rate EBITDA targets for the financial year ending
December 2026. As both the sale of Arqiva and the receipt of any
Earn-Out payment are expected to take a number of years, the Board
still believes that the Going Concern basis of preparation of the
financial statements remains appropriate.
However, the
Company's going
concern assessment is dependent on the Group either completing the
sale of assets to fund the repayment of the remaining balance of
the Group's
Revolving Credit Facility due by March 2025 or alternatively
refinancing this debt.
In addition, the Directors have
also considered the fact that the Company's wholly owned subsidiary D9 Holdco
has not met one of its covenants under the terms of the RCF
(related to its Global LTV), as reported to
the board by Triple Point on 25 September 2024, and as notified to
the RCF Lenders that same day. The RCF Lenders have indicated that, at present, they intend to work
collaboratively with the Company, where possible, over the coming
weeks to explore the option of providing a waiver, or alternative
action if more appropriate at the time, of this breach, but in the
meantime they are reserving their rights in that regard.
In relation to the remaining term
of the RCF, the RCF Lenders have indicated
that they intend to work collaboratively, where possible, with
Digital 9 Holdco Limited (the
"Borrower") with
a view to finding a solution to the covenant breach for the
remaining term of the loan, which could include a repayment though
an asset sale or from a refinancing, as noted above.
The Directors have made this
assessment of going concern, taking into account a wide range of
information relating to present and future conditions, current
performance and outlook, including the Company's cash and liquidity position, and
finding a solution for the subsidiary's covenant breach noted
above.
In particular the board have
considered the position of the Company, and the following
matters:
- The fact that shareholders have already approved the orderly
wind down of the Company and the realisation of the underlying
assets, which are actively being worked on.
-
The understanding that the
breach was inadvertent (i.e. resulting from the revaluation of the
groups assets) and that all other covenants are being met, and are
forecast to be met for the remainder of the duration of the
facility.
-
The understanding that the
group is continuing to service the debt and that all interest
payments have been made, and are forecast to continue to be made on
time.
-
That the current fair value of the groups
investments together with available cash are around 8 times of the
outstanding amount of the RCF.
The Directors believe that the
Company and the Group have adequate resources to continue in
operational existence for a period of at least 12 months since the
reporting date. As at 30 June 2024, the
Company had a cash balance of £33.6
million. However, given that a degree of uncertainty exists
in the timing of ongoing strategic initiatives which includes
management's
ability to refinance or repay the Group's existing RCF (of which
c.£53 million remains at 26 September 2024)
due in the next 12 months (March 2025), and finding a solution for
the subsidiary's
covenant breach as noted above, there exists a material uncertainty
which may cast significant doubt over the
Company's ability
to continue as a going concern.
Accordingly, no provision has been
made for the costs of winding up the Company as these will be
charged to the Income Statement on an accruals basis as they are
incurred or as the Company become obligated to make such payments
in the future.
(c)
New and amended standards adopted by the
Company
A number of amended standards
became applicable for the current reporting period. The group did
not have to change its accounting policies or make retrospective
adjustments as a result of adopting these amended standards.
Management do not expect the new or amended standards will have a
material impact on the Company's interim financial statements. The
most significant of these standards are set out below:
(a)
Classification of Liabilities as Current or
Non-current and Non-current liabilities with covenants - Amendments
to IAS 1
(b)
Lease liability in sale and leaseback -
Amendments to IFRS 16
(c)
Supplier Finance Arrangements - Amendments to IAS
7 and IFRS 7
FORTHCOMING
REQUIREMENTS
The following standards and
interpretations had been issued but were not mandatory for annual
reporting periods ending on 31 December 2024.
(a)
Amendments to IAS 21 - Lack of Exchangeability
(effective date 1 January 2025)
3.
SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING JUDGEMENTS, ESTIMATES AND
ASSUMPTIONS
In the application of the Company's
accounting policies, the Directors are required to make judgements,
estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of
assets, liabilities, income and expenses. It is possible that
actual results may differ from these estimates.
(a)
Significant accounting judgements
(i)
Investment entity
As discussed above in Note 2(a),
the Company meets the definition of an investment entity as defined
in IFRS 10 and therefore its subsidiary entities have not been
consolidated in these financial statements.
(b)
Key sources of estimation uncertainty
The estimates and underlying
assumptions underpinning our investments are reviewed on an ongoing
basis by both the Board and the Investment Manager. Revisions to
any accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the
estimate is revised if the revision affects only that period, or in
the period of the revision and future periods if the revision
affects both current and future periods.
(i)
Fair value measurement of investments at fair
value through profit or loss
The Company owns 100% of D9 Holdco
which through its wholly owned subsidiaries invest in digital
infrastructure projects. The fair value of the underlying
investments in digital infrastructure projects is calculated by
discounting at an appropriate discount rate future cash flows
expected to be generated by the trading subsidiary companies and
received by D9 Holdco, through dividend income, equity redemptions
and Shareholder loan repayments or restructurings and adjusted in
accordance with the IPEV (International Private Equity and Venture
Capital) valuation guidelines, where appropriate, to comply with
IFRS 13 and IFRS 9. The fair value of the underlying
investments in turn impacts the fair value of the Company's
investment in D9 Holdco.
During the period, an Independent
Valuer was appointed to carry out the fair valuation of four of the
financial assets for financial reporting purposes, including level
3 fair valuations. The remaining two assets were valued by the
Investment Manager and indicative sale price.
Estimates such as the forecasted
cash flows from investments form the basis of making judgements
about the fair value of assets, which is not readily available from
other sources. The discounted cash flows from earnings are
forecasted over an 8-to-10-year period followed by a terminal value
based on a long- term growth rate or exit multiple. Discount rates
are arrived at via a bottom-up analysis of the weighted average
cost of capital, using both observable and unobservable inputs, and
calculation of the appropriate beta based on comparable listed
companies where appropriate, a sense-check to the DCF analysis is
compared to market multiples.
The discounted cash flow from
earning is forecasted over an 8-to-10-year period followed by a
terminal value based on a long-term growth rate or exit multiples.
The discounted cash flow comprises a bottom-up analysis of the
weighted average cost of capital over time, using unobservable
inputs; and calculation of the appropriate beta based on comparable
listed companies. Where appropriate, a sense-check to the DCF
analysis is compared to market multiples.
The valuation for SeaEdge and EMIC
is based on valuations carried out by the Investment
Manager.
A broad range of assumptions are
used in the Company's valuation models, which are arrived at by
reviewing and challenging the business plans of the Investee
Companies with their management. The Investment Manager exercises
its judgement and uses its experience in assessing the expected
future cash flows from each investment and long-term growth rates.
The impact of changes in the key drivers of the valuation are set
out below.
The following significant
unobservable inputs were used in the model, cash flows, terminal
value and discount rates. The key area where estimates are
significant to the financial statements and have a significant risk
of causing a material adjustment to the carrying amounts of assets
and liabilities within the next financial year is in the valuation
of the investment portfolio. The portfolio is diversified by
sector, geography and underlying risk exposures. The majority
of assets in the investment portfolio are typically valued on a
discounted cash flow basis which requires assumptions to be made
regarding future cash flows, terminal value and the discount rate
to be applied to these cash flows. The Earn-Out valuation
methodology is described in more detail below.
The discount rate applied to the
cash flows in each investment portfolio company is a key source of
estimation uncertainty. The acquisition discount rate is adjusted
to reflect changes in company-specific risks to the deliverability
of future cash flows and is calibrated against secondary market
information and other available data points, including comparable
transactions. The weighted average discount rate used in
these valuations was 13.80% derived from the Free Cash Flow to
Equity ("FCFE") discounted cashflow approach.
The cash flows on which the
discounted cash flow valuations are based are derived from detailed
financial models. These incorporate a number of assumptions with
respect to individual portfolio companies, including: forecast new
business wins or new orders; cost-cutting initiatives; liquidity
and timing of debtor payments; timing of non-committed capital
expenditure and construction activity; the terms of future debt
refinancing; and macroeconomic assumptions such as inflation and
energy prices.
The terminal value attributes a
residual value to the portfolio company at the end of the projected
discrete cash flow period based on market comparables. The
valuation of each asset has significant estimation in relation to
asset-specific items but there is also consideration given to the
impact of wider megatrends such as the transition to a lower-carbon
economy and climate change. The effects of climate change,
including extreme weather patterns or rising sea levels in the
longer term, could impact the valuation of the assets in the
portfolio in different ways. The weighted average long-term growth
rate used in the valuation was 0.18%.
The fair value of the Earn-Out,
attributable to the Verne Global transaction was computed by way of
a Monte Carlo analysis. In this approach a random value is selected
for each of the simulations, based on a range of estimates. The
model is calculated based on this random value. The result of the
model is recorded, and the process is repeated. A typical Monte
Carlo simulation calculates the model hundreds or thousands of
times, each time using different randomly selected values. The
results are used to describe the likelihood, or probability, of
reaching various results in the model.
4.
SIGNIFICANT CHANGES IN THE CURRENT REPORTING
PERIOD
The Company has reviewed its
exposure to climate related and other emerging business risks, but
has not identified any risks that could impact the financial
performance or position of the Company and its subsidiaries as at
30 June 2024.
The financial position and
performance of the Company was particularly affected by the
following events and transactions during the six months to 30 June
2024:
Completion of Verne
disposal
On 14 March 2024, the Company
completed the sale of its entire stake through its 100% owned
subsidiary in the Verne Global group of companies to funds managed
or advised by Ardian France SA for an equity purchase price of up
to US$575 million (approximately £450 million). Following the Verne
Transaction's completion the Company received US$415 million
(£325.8 million). The completion follows receipt of all applicable
regulatory approvals and the satisfaction of all conditions in line
with the previously communicated timetable.
Managed Wind-Down
The Board published a circular to
shareholders on 28 February 2024 to convene a general meeting and
seek approval from shareholders to amend the Company's Investment
Objective and Policy. The appropriate resolution was subsequently
approved on 25 March 2024 with 99.9% of the votes cast in
favour.
The Company will not make any new
investments save that investments may be made in existing Investee
Companies when considered appropriate to maximise value for
shareholders. A financial advisor has been engaged to support the
proposed wind-down process and to provide the Board with an
independent review of the investment management arrangements. It
will include evaluating the options of the Company (i) continuing
to be managed by Triple Point on different fee arrangements; (ii)
managed by a new investment manager, or (iii) becoming a
self-managed alternative investment fund. The Board served the Investment Manager notice with a
termination to take effect in March 2025. Shareholders should note
that during the Managed Wind-Down, the Company intends to maintain
its investment trust status and listing.
RCF Repayment
The Company, through D9 Holdco
Limited made total repayment and partial cancellation of the
Group's RCF of c.£321 million. The repayment which included funds
that were released from the Interest Reserve as a consequence of
the repayment itself reducing the drawn RCF amount to c.£53
million.
For a detailed discussion about the
Company's performance and financial position please refer to the
Chair's Statement.
5.
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT FEES
|
|
Half-year 2024 (unaudited)
|
Half-year 2023 (unaudited)
|
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Management fees
|
|
2,497
|
832
|
3,329
|
3,365
|
1,121
|
4,486
|
Total management fees
|
|
2,497
|
832
|
3,329
|
3,365
|
1,121
|
4,486
|
The Company served notice of
termination to the Investment Manager before 31 March 2024
following the completion of the Verne Global sale, with the
Investment Management Agreement to terminate on 31 March
2025.
The Company and the Investment
Manager entered into an Investment Management Agreement on 8 March
2021 and a Side Letter dated 17 March 2021.
The Company and Triple Point
Investment Management LLP (the "Investment Manager") have entered
into the Investment Management Agreement pursuant to which the
Investment Manager has been given responsibility, subject to the
overall supervision of the Board, for active discretionary
investment management of the Company's Portfolio in accordance with
the Company's Investment Objective and Policy.
The Investment Manager is appointed
to be responsible for risk management and portfolio management and
is the Company's AIFM. The Investment Manager has full discretion
under the Investment Management Agreement to make investments in
accordance with the Company's Investment Policy from time to
time.
This discretion is, however,
subject to: (i) the Board's ability to give instructions to the
Investment Manager from time to time; and (ii) the requirement of
the Board to approve certain investments where the Investment
Manager has a conflict of interest in accordance with the terms of
the Investment Management Agreement.
With effect from 31 March 2021, the
date of admission of the Ordinary Shares to trading on the
Specialist Fund Segment of the Main Market of the London Stock
Exchange, the Company shall pay the Investment Manager a management
fee (the "Annual Management Fee") calculated, invoiced and payable
quarterly in arrears based on the Adjusted Net Asset Value which is
based on funds deployed and committed at the relevant quarter
date.
The total amount accrued and due to
Triple Point at the period end was £1.6 million.
The management fee is calculated at
the rates set out below:
Adjusted Net Asset Value
|
|
|
Annual Management Fee (percentage
of Adjusted Net Asset Value)
|
|
|
|
|
Up to and including £500
million
|
|
|
1.0%
|
Above £500 million up to and
including £1 billion
|
|
|
0.9%
|
Exceeding £1 billion
|
|
|
0.8%
|
|
|
|
| |
For the period from 1 July 2021, in
the event that less than 75 percent of the net proceeds from the
issue of shares have been deployed, Adjusted Net Asset Value is the
Current Net Asset Value at the previous reporting date adjusted as
follows:
(a) Deduction from the Current Net
Asset Value for undeployed and uncommitted cash balances
(b) Addition to the Current Net
Asset Value the amount equal to the total funds (if any) deployed
after the Current Net Asset Value Date and before the end of the
relevant Quarter.
In the event that 75 per cent or
more of the net proceeds of all relevant issues have been deployed
there will be no deduction from the Current Net Asset Value for any
undeployed cash balances.
6.
TAXATION
The Company is registered in
Jersey, Channel Islands but resident in the United Kingdom for
taxation. The standard rate of corporate income tax currently
applicable to the Company is 25% (2023: 25%).
The financial statements do not
directly include the tax charges for the Company's intermediate
holding company, as D9 Holdco is held at fair value. D9 Holdco is
subject to taxation in the United Kingdom.
The tax charge for the period is
less than the standard rate of corporation tax in the UK of 25%
(2023: 25%). The differences are explained below.
|
Half-year 2024
|
Half-year 2023
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net (loss)/profit before
tax
|
(2,977)
|
(280,295)
|
(283,272)
|
25,274
|
(82,641)
|
(57,367)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tax at UK corporation tax standard
rate of 25%
|
(744)
|
(70,074)
|
(70,818)
|
6,319
|
(20,660)
|
(14,341)
|
Effects of:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loss on financial assets not
taxable
|
-
|
69,866
|
69,866
|
-
|
20,380
|
20,380
|
Exempt UK dividend income
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(6,993)
|
-
|
(6,993)
|
Other disallowed expenses
|
33
|
-
|
33
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Excess of allowable
expenses
|
711
|
208
|
919
|
674
|
280
|
954
|
Total tax charge
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Investment companies which have
been approved by HM Revenue & Customs under section 1158 of the
Corporation Tax Act 2010 are exempt from tax on capital gains. The
Directors are of the opinion that the Company has complied with the
requirements for maintaining investment trust status for the
purposes of section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010. The
Company has not provided for deferred tax on any capital gains
or losses arising on the revaluation of investments.
The Company has unrelieved excess
management expenses of £22 million. It is unlikely that the Company
will generate sufficient taxable profits in the future to utilise
these expenses and therefore no deferred tax asset has been
recognised.
The unrecognised deferred tax
asset calculated using a tax rate of 25% amounts to £5.5
million.
7.
FINANCIAL ASSET AT FAIR VALUE THROUGH PROFIT OR
LOSS
As set out in Note 2, the Company
designates its interest in its wholly owned direct subsidiary as a
financial asset at fair value through profit or loss.
Summary of the Company's
valuation:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
£'000
|
At 31 December 2023:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Opening balance 1 January
2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
920,971
|
Debt investments in D9 Holdco
additions
|
|
|
|
|
|
7,103
|
Change in fair value of
investments
|
|
|
|
|
|
(252,014)
|
As at 31 December 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
676,060
|
Analysis of financial
assets:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity investments in D9
Holdco
|
|
|
|
|
|
639,852
|
Debt investments in D9
Holdco
|
|
|
|
|
|
36,208
|
As at 31 December 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
676,060
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 30 June 2024:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Opening balance 1 January
2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
676,060
|
Debt investments in D9 Holdco
additions
|
|
|
|
|
|
1,300
|
Debt investments in D9 Holdco
repayment
|
|
|
|
|
|
(13,597)
|
Change in fair value of
investments
|
|
|
|
|
|
(279,463)
|
As at 30 June 2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
384,300
|
Analysis of financial
assets:
Equity investments in D9
Holdco
|
|
|
|
|
|
360,389
|
Debt investments in D9
Holdco
|
|
|
|
|
|
23,911
|
As at 30 June 2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
384,300
|
Valuation process
During the period, an independent
valuer was appointed to carry out the fair valuation of four
financial assets for financial reporting purposes, including level
3 fair valuations. The remaining two assets were valued at
cost. These valuations are presented to the Board for their
approval and adoption. The valuation is carried out on a
six-monthly basis as at 30 June and 31 December each year and is
reported to shareholders in the Annual Report and Financial
Statements.
Valuation methodology
The Company owns 100% of its
subsidiary D9 Holdco. The Company meets the definition of an
investment entity as described by IFRS 10, as such, the Company's
investment in D9 Holdco is valued at fair value. D9 Holdco's cash,
working capital balances and fair value of investments are included
in calculating fair value of D9 Holdco. The Company acquires
underlying investments in special purpose vehicles ("SPV") through
its investment in D9 Holdco.
The Board has carried out fair
market valuations of the underlying investments held by the
underlying subsidiaries of D9 Holdco Limited in Arqiva, Aqua Comms,
Elio Networks and the Verne Global Earn-Out as at 30 June 2024
based on the valuation report carried out by the independent
valuer. The valuation for SeaEdge and EMIC is based on valuations
carried out by the Investment Manager. The Directors have
considered the valuation and satisfied themselves as to the
methodology used, the discount rates and key assumptions applied,
and the valuations. All SPV investments are at fair value through
profit or loss and are valued using the IFRS 13 framework for fair
value measurement. The fair value of the underlying investments in
turn impacts the fair value of the Company's investment in D9
Holdco.
The following economic assumptions
were used in the valuation of the SPVs.
The main Level 3 inputs used by the
Group are derived and evaluated as follows:
• The valuer uses its judgement in
arriving at the appropriate discount rate using a capital asset
pricing model to calculate a pre-tax rate that reflects current
market assessment. This is based on its knowledge of the market,
considering intelligence gained from its bidding activities,
discussions with financial advisers in the appropriate market and
publicly available information on relevant transactions. The
bottom-up analysis of the discount rate and the appropriate beta is
based on comparable listed companies. Investments are valued using
a discounted cash flow approach, being valued on a FCFE basis and
taking into account non-binding bids received by the Company for
these investments during the period. The portfolio weighted average
discount rate for investments valued under the FCFE discounted cash
flows approach was 13.80%.
• To calculate portfolio NAV, 88%
of total NAV from Investment companies is valued using the FCFE
discounted cash flows approach, 3% of total NAV is valued using
evidence of indicative offer and the remaining 9% of investments
being valued at cost.
• Expected cash inflows are
estimated based on terms of the contracts and the Company's
knowledge of the business and how the current economic environment
is likely to impact it taking into consideration of growth rate
factors. The portfolio weighted long-term growth rate for
investments valued under the FCFE discounted cash flows approach
was 0.18%.
• Future Foreign exchange rates of
GBP against USD and
Fair value measurements
As set out above, the Company
accounts for its interest in its wholly owned direct subsidiary as
a financial asset at fair value through profit or loss.
IFRS 13 requires disclosure of fair
value measurement by level. The level of fair value hierarchy
within the financial assets or financial liabilities is determined
on the basis of the lowest level input that is significant to the
fair value measurement. Financial assets and financial liabilities
are classified in their entirety into only one of the following 3
levels:
Level 1 - quoted prices
(unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or
liabilities;
Level 2 - inputs other than quoted
prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the assets
or liabilities, either directly (i.e., as prices) or indirectly
(i.e. derived from prices); and
Level 3 - inputs for assets or
liabilities that are not based on observable market data
(unobservable inputs).
The following table presents the
Company's financial assets and financial liabilities measured and
recognised at fair value at 30 June 2024 and 31 December
2023:
|
|
Total
|
Quoted
prices in active markets (Level 1)
|
Significant observable inputs
(Level
2)
|
Significant unobservable inputs
(Level
3)
|
Assets measured at fair
value:
|
Date of
valuation
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Equity investment in D9
Holdco
|
30 June
2024
|
360,3899
|
-
|
-
|
360,389
|
Debt investment in D9
Holdco
|
30 June
2024
|
23,911
|
-
|
-
|
23,911
|
Equity investment in D9
Holdco
|
31
December 2023
|
639,852
|
-
|
-
|
639,852
|
Debt investment in D9
Holdco
|
31
December 2023
|
36,208
|
-
|
-
|
36,208
|
There have been no transfers
between Level 1 and Level 2 during the period, nor have there been
any transfers between Level 2 and Level 3 during the
year.
The Company's investments are
reported as Level 3 in accordance with IFRS 13 where external
inputs are "unobservable" and value is the Directors' best
estimate, based upon advice from relevant knowledgeable
experts.
Fair value measurements using
significant unobservable inputs (level 3)
As set out within the significant
accounting estimates and judgements in note 3(b), the valuation of
the Company's financial asset is an estimation uncertainty. The
sensitivity analysis was performed based on the current capital
structure and expected performance of the Company's investment in
D9 Holdco. For each of the sensitivities, it is assumed that
potential changes occur independently of each other with no effect
on any other base case assumption, and that the number of
investments in the SPVs remains static throughout the modelled
life. The following table summarises the quantitative information
about the significant unobservable inputs used in Level 3 fair
value measurement and the changes to the fair value of the
financial asset if these inputs change upwards or downwards by
0.25% for long-term growth rate and 1% for discount
rate:
Unobservable inputs
|
Valuation if rate increases by 1%
|
Movement in valuation
|
|
Valuation if rate decreases by 1%
|
Movement in valuation
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Long-term growth rate (+/- by
0.25%)
|
465,571
|
4,589
|
|
453,602
|
(7,380)
|
Discount rates (+/- by
1%)
|
415,560
|
(45,422)
|
|
510,963
|
49,981
|
8.
STATED CAPITAL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary shares of no par
value
|
|
|
|
|
31
December 2023
|
Allotted, issued and fully
paid:
|
No of
shares
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
As at 1 January 2023
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
819,242
|
Ordinary Shares at 31 December
2023
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
819,242
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid (Note 9)
|
|
|
|
|
(25,956)
|
Stated capital at 31 December
2023
|
|
|
|
|
793,286
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
30 June 2024
Allotted, issued and fully
paid:
|
No of
shares
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
As at 1 January 2024
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
793,286
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary Shares at 30 June
2024
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
793,286
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stated capital at 30 June
2024
|
|
|
|
|
793,286
|
Shareholders are entitled to all
dividends paid by the Company and, on a winding up, provided the
Company has satisfied all its liabilities, the shareholders are
entitled to all of the residual assets of the Company.
9.
SUBSIDIARIES
At the reporting date, the Company
had one wholly owned subsidiary, being its 100% investment in
Digital 9 Holdco Limited. The following table shows subsidiaries of
the Company. As the Company is regarded as an Investment Entity as
referred to in Note 2, these subsidiaries have not been
consolidated in the preparation of the financial
statements.
Name
|
Place
of business
|
|
% Interest
|
|
Principal activity
|
Registered office
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Digital 9 Holdco Limited
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Holding company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
The following companies are held by
D9 Holdco Limited and its underlying subsidiaries:
|
|
Digital 9 DC Limited
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Intermediate holding
company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
Digital 9 Fibre Limited
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Intermediate holding
company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
Digital 9 Wireless
Limited
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Intermediate holding
company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
Digital 9 Subsea Holdco
Limited
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Intermediate holding
company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
Digital 9 Subsea
Limited1
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
Digital 9 Seaedge
Limited2
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Leaseholding company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
D9 DC Opco 2
Limited2
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Intermediate holding
company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
D9 DC Opco CAN 1
Limited10
|
Canada
|
|
100%
|
|
Dormant
|
44 Chipman Hill Suite 1000 Saint
John NB E2L 2A9 Canada
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
D9 Wireless Opco 1
Limited3
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Intermediate holding
company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
D9 Wireless Midco 1
Limited3
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Intermediate holding
company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
D9 Wireless Opco 2
Limited4
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Intermediate holding
company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
D9 Wireless Opco 3
Limited3
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Dormant
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
D9 Fibre Opco 1
Limited9
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Dormant
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
D9 Fibre Opco 2
Limited9
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Intermediate holding
company
|
The Scalpel, 18th Floor, 52 Lime
Street, London EC3M 7AF
|
Aqua Comms Designated Activity
Company1
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Holding company
|
The Exchange Building, 4 Foster
Place, Dublin 2
|
Aqua Comms Connect
Limited5
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Intermediate holding
company
|
The Exchange Building, 4 Foster
Place, Dublin 2
|
America Europe Connect 2
Limited5
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
The Exchange Building, 4 Foster
Place, Dublin 2
|
America Europe Connect 2 Denmark
ApS5
|
Denmark
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
c/o Bech-Bruun Langeline Alle 35,
Copenhagen
|
North Sea Connect Denmark
ApS5
|
Denmark
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
c/o Bech-Bruun Langeline Alle 35,
Copenhagen
|
Aqua Comms Management (UK)
Limited5
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Management company
|
85 Great Portland Street, London W1W
7LT
|
Aqua Comms Denmark
ApS5
|
Denmark
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
c/o Bech-Bruun Langeline Alle 35,
Copenhagen
|
Aqua Comms (Ireland)
Limited5
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
The Exchange Building, 4 Foster
Place, Dublin 2
|
America Europe Connect
Limited5
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
The Exchange Building, 4 Foster
Place, Dublin 2
|
Celtix Connect
Limited5
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
The Exchange Building, 4 Foster
Place, Dublin 2
|
Aqua Comms Management
Limited5
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Management company
|
The Exchange Building, 4 Foster
Place, Dublin 2
|
Sea Fibre Networks
Limited5
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
The Exchange Building, 4 Foster
Place, Dublin 2
|
Aqua Comms (IOM)
Limited5
|
Isle of Man
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
c/o PCS Limited, Ground Floor,
Murdoch Chambers, South Quay, Douglas, IOM IM1 5AS
|
Aqua Comms (UK)
Limited5
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
85 Great Portland Street, London W1W
7LT
|
Aqua Comms Services
Limited5
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
The Exchange Building, 4 Foster
Place, Dublin 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
America Europe Connect (UK)
Limited5
|
UK
|
|
100%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
85 Great Portland Street, London W1W
7LT
|
America Europe Connect 2 USA
Inc5
|
USA
|
|
49%
|
|
Subsea fibre optic
network
|
251 Little Falls Drive, Wilmington,
Delaware, 19808 USA
|
Leeson Telecom
Limited6
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Enterprise broadband
|
6-9 Trinity St, Dublin, D02 EY47,
Ireland
|
Leeson Telecom One
Limited6
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Enterprise broadband
|
6-9 Trinity St, Dublin, D02 EY47,
Ireland
|
Leeson Telecom Holdings
Limited7
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Enterprise broadband
|
6-9 Trinity St, Dublin, D02 EY47,
Ireland
|
W R Computer Network
Limited7
|
Ireland
|
|
100%
|
|
Enterprise broadband
|
6-9 Trinity St, Dublin, D02 EY47,
Ireland
|
Arqiva Group
Limited8
|
UK
|
|
48.02%
|
|
Holding Company
|
Crawley Court, Winchester, Hampshire
SO21 2QA
|
1
|
- Held by Digital 9 Subsea
Holdco
|
|
7
|
- Held by Leeson Telecom
Limited
|
2
|
- Held by Digital 9 DC
Limited
|
|
8
|
- Held by D9 Wireless Opco 2
Limited
|
3
|
- Held by Digital 9 Wireless
Limited
|
|
9
|
- Held by Digital 9 Fibre Limited
|
4
|
- Held by D9 Wireless Midco 1
Limited
|
|
10
|
- Held by D9 Opco 2 Limited
|
5
|
- Held by Aqua Comms Designed
Activity Company and its intermediate holding companies
|
|
|
|
6
|
- Held by D9 Wireless Opco 1
Limited
|
|
10.
TRANSACTIONS WITH THE INVESTMENT ADVISERS AND
RELATED PARTY DISCLOSURE
Directors
Directors are remunerated for their
services at such rate as the directors shall from time to time
determine. The current Directors (Philip Braun, Robert Burrow and
Andrew Zychowski) are each paid an annual fee of £50,000 and the
Chair of the Company (Eric Sanderson) is entitled to receive an
annual fee of £100,000. The previous Directors who resigned during
the period were each paid an annual fee of £40,000 other than the
Chair of the Audit Committee who was
entitled to an additional £5,000 and the Chair of the Company who
was entitled to receive an annual fee of £75,000.
Director
|
Number
of Ordinary shares held
|
|
|
Aaron Le Cornu (resigned 22 July
2024)**
|
107,024
|
|
|
Keith Mansfield (resigned 4 January
2024)**
|
294,819
|
|
|
Charlotte Valeur (resigned 30 May
2024)**
|
10,000
|
|
|
Gailina Liew (resigned 11 June
2024)**
|
-
|
|
|
Richard Boléat (resigned 23 March 2024)**
|
65,000
|
|
|
Brett Miller (resigned 23 March
2024)**
|
400,000
|
|
|
Eric Sanderson (appointed 8 May
2024)
|
-
|
|
|
Philip Braun (appointed 22 July
2024)
|
-
|
|
|
Andrew Zychowski (appointed 22 July 2024)
|
2,630,000*
|
|
|
Robert Burrow (appointed 12 August
2024)
|
-
|
|
|
*Mr Zychowski and persons closely
associated to him together hold 2,630,000 shares in the Company, or
0.3% of its share capital. In addition, other family members of Mr
Zychowski hold 603,000 shares in the Company.
**Shares held at the date of
resignation.
Investment Manager
The Company considers Triple Point
as the Investment Manager as a key management personnel and
therefore a related party. Further details of the investment
management contract and transactions with the Investment Manager
are disclosed in Note 5.
Transaction with subsidiary
undertakings
The Company, through its subsidiary
undertakings has capital expenditure commitments totalling £8.1
million relating to EMIC-1 (2023: £11.3 million).
Loan to subsidiary
undertaking
As at the period-end, the Company
had provided a total loan of £23.9 million (2023: £36.2 million) to
Digital 9 Holdco Limited. During the period, an additional £1.3
million was provided and £13.6 million was repaid. This was used to
assist the underlying Investee Companies with their capital
expenditure requirements. Interest of £1.3 million (2023:
£2.6 million) were charged on the loan during the
period.
Amounts due from subsidiary
undertakings
Included within Other receivables
is an amount due from subsidiary undertakings:
|
|
30 June
2024
|
|
31
December 2023
|
Subsidiary
undertakings:
|
|
£'000
|
|
£'000
|
Aqua Comms DAC
|
|
61
|
|
120
|
D9 DC Opco 1 Limited
|
|
-
|
|
27
|
D9 DC Opco 3 Limited
|
|
-
|
|
51
|
D9 Wireless Opco 1
Limited
|
|
16
|
|
22
|
D9 Wireless Opco 2
Limited
|
|
97
|
|
129
|
Digital 9 Seaedge
Limited
|
|
5
|
|
7
|
Digital 9 Subsea Limited
|
|
10
|
|
11
|
Digital 9 Holdco Limited
|
|
-
|
|
18
|
|
|
189
|
|
385
|
11.
EVENTS AFTER THE REPORTING PERIOD
There are no post balance sheet
events.
12.
CONTINGENT LIABILITIES
There were no contingent
liabilities at 30 June 2024.
13.
EARNINGS PER SHARE
Earnings per share ("EPS") amounts
are calculated by dividing profit for the period attributable to
ordinary equity holders of the Company by the weighted average
number of Ordinary Shares in issue during the period. As there are
no dilutive instruments outstanding, both basic and diluted
earnings per share are the same.
The calculation of basic and
diluted earnings per share is based on the following:
Period ended 30 June
2024:
|
Revenue
|
|
Capital
|
|
|
Total
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Calculation of Basic Earnings per
share
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net loss attributable to ordinary
shareholders (£'000)
|
(2,977)
|
|
(280,295)
|
|
|
(283,272)
|
Weighted average number of ordinary
shares
|
865,174,954
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings per share - basic and
diluted
|
(0.34p)
|
|
(32.39p)
|
|
|
(32.73p)
|
There is no difference between
basic or diluted Loss per Ordinary Share as there are no
convertible securities.
There is no difference between the
weighted average Ordinary or diluted number of Shares.
|
|
|
Calculation of Weighted Average
Number of Shares in Issue
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
January 2024
|
|
30 June
2024
|
No of days
|
|
181
|
|
181
|
Ordinary Shares
|
|
|
|
|
No. of shares
|
|
|
|
|
Opening Balance
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
865,174954
|
New Issues
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
Closing Balance
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted Average
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Period ended 30 June
2023:
|
Revenue
|
|
Capital
|
|
|
Total
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Calculation of Basic Earnings per
share
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit attributable to ordinary
shareholders (£'000)
|
25,274
|
|
(82,641)
|
|
|
(57,367)
|
Weighted average number of ordinary
shares
|
865,174,954
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings per share - basic and
diluted
|
2.92p
|
|
(9.55p)
|
|
|
(6.63p)
|
There is no difference between
basic or diluted Loss per Ordinary Share as there are no
convertible securities.
There is no difference between the
weighted average Ordinary or diluted number of Shares.
Calculation of Weighted Average
Number of Shares in Issue
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
January 2023
|
|
30 June
2023
|
No of days
|
|
|
|
181
|
|
181
|
Ordinary Shares
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
No. of shares
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Opening Balance
|
|
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
865,174,954
|
New Issues
|
|
|
|
-
|
|
-
|
Closing Balance
|
|
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted Average
|
|
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
14.
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE
Net Asset Value per share is
calculated by dividing net assets in the Statement of Financial
Position attributable to Ordinary equity holders of the parent by
the number of Ordinary Shares outstanding at the end of the period.
Although there are no dilutive instruments outstanding, both basic
and diluted NAV per share are disclosed below.
Net asset values have been
calculated as follows:
|
|
|
30 June
2024
|
|
31
December 2023
|
Net assets at end of period
(£'000)
|
|
|
403,059
|
|
686,331
|
Shares in issue at end of
period
|
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
865,174,954
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
IFRS NAV per share - basic and
dilutive
|
|
|
46.59p
|
|
79.33p
|
UNAUDITED ALTERNATIVE PERFORMANCE
MEASURES
1.
ONGOING CHARGES RATIO
Ongoing Charges Ratio is a figure
published annually by an investment company which shows the drag on
performance caused by operational expenses.
|
Period
to 30 June 2024
|
|
Annualised to 31 Dec 2024
|
|
|
|
Annualised to 31 Dec 2023
|
|
£'000
|
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Management fee
|
3,329
|
|
6,658
|
|
|
|
8,668
|
Other operating expenses
|
1,116
|
|
2,232
|
|
|
|
2,192
|
Total management fee and other
operating expenses
|
4,445
|
(a)
|
8,890
|
|
|
|
10,860
|
Average undiluted net
assets*
|
544,695
|
(b)
|
544,695
|
|
|
|
817,975
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ongoing charges ratio % (c =
a/b)
|
0.82%
|
(c)
|
1.63%
|
|
|
|
1.33%
|
* - Average undiluted net assets
has been calculated as the average of net asset value at 1 January
2024 of £686.3 million and net asset value as at 30 June 2024 of
£403.1 million.
Annualised expenses are the
estimate of the annual cost of management fees and other operating
expenses based on the six months' cost in the period to 30 June
2024 excluding Strategic Review costs.
2.
TOTAL RETURN
Total NAV return is a way to
measure the performance of an investment company. A fund's NAV
return is the percentage change between its net asset value at the
beginning and end of a particular period plus dividends
paid.
|
|
30 June
2024
|
|
31
December 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
Closing NAV per share
(pence)
|
|
46.59
|
|
79.33
|
Add back dividends paid*
(pence)
|
|
12.00
|
|
12.00
|
Adjusted closing NAV
(pence)
|
|
58.59
|
|
91.33
|
Adjusted NAV per share as at the
period end less NAV per share at 31 December 2023 (31 December
2022)
|
(a)
|
(58.59-91.33)
|
|
(91.33 -
118.76)
|
NAV per share at 31 December 2023
(31 December 2022)
|
(b)
|
91.33
|
|
118.76
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total return % (c = a/b)
|
(c)
|
(35.85%)
|
|
(23.10%)
|
* Total cumulative dividends paid
since IPO.
4.
MARKET CAPITALISATION
Market capitalisation refers to the
market value of a company's equity. It is a simple but important
measure that is calculated by multiplying a company's shares
outstanding by its price per share.
|
|
|
30 June
2024
|
|
31
December 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Closing share price at period
end
|
|
(a)
|
22.35p
|
|
29.75p
|
Number of shares in issue at period
end
|
|
(b)
|
865,174,954
|
|
865,174,954
|
Market capitalisation (c) = (a) x
(b)
|
|
(c)
|
£193,366,602
|
|
£257,389,549
|
5.
CAPITAL DEPLOYED
This is a measure of amounts
invested into the portfolio of investments less any amounts
relating to refinance proceeds or sell-downs.
|
|
|
30 June
2024
|
|
31
December 2023
|
|
Deployed
|
Committed fund
|
£'000
|
|
£'000
|
Aqua Comms DAC
|
187,508
|
-
|
187,508
|
|
187,508
|
EMIC-1
|
39,272
|
8,092
|
47,364
|
|
47,262
|
Verne Holdings Limited^
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
256,595
|
SeaEdge UK1
|
16,355
|
-
|
16,355
|
|
16,355
|
Leeson Telecom
|
50,807
|
-
|
50,807
|
|
50,807
|
Volta Data Centres^
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
65,456
|
Ficolo Oy^
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
118,927
|
Arqiva*
|
480,020
|
-
|
480,020
|
|
469,830
|
Total deployment
|
773,962
|
8,092
|
782,054
|
|
1,212,740
|
* - Includes £180 million Vendor
Loan Notes issued by D9 Wireless Opco 2 Limited.
^ - The sale process for
Verne Global entities completed in March 2024.
6.
TOTAL SHAREHOLDER RETURN
A measure of the return based upon
share price movements over the period and assuming reinvestment of
dividends. This APM allows shareholders to establish their return
by using share price as a metric rather than NAV.
|
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31
December 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
Closing share price
(pence)
|
|
|
22.35
|
29.75
|
Add back effect of dividend
reinvestment (pence)
|
|
|
-
|
1.29
|
Adjusted closing share price
(pence)
|
|
(a)
|
22.75
|
31.04
|
Opening share price
(pence)
|
|
(b)
|
29.75
|
86.40
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total shareholder return
(c = (a-b)/b)
|
|
(c)
|
(24.87%)
|
(64.08%)
|
The above return is for the period
to 30 June 2024 (31 December 2023: year to 31 December
2023).
GLOSSARY AND DEFINITIONS
"Adjusted Gross Asset
Value"
|
The aggregate value of the total
assets of the Company as determined with the accounting principles
adopted by the Company from time to time as adjusted to include any
third-party debt funding drawn by, or available to, any Group
company (which, for the avoidance of doubt, excludes Investee
Companies);
|
"Admission"
|
The admission of the Company's
Ordinary Share capital to trading on the Premium Segment of the
Main Market of the London Stock Exchange;
|
"Aqua Comms"
|
Aqua Comms Designation Activity
Company, a private company limited by shares incorporated and
registered in Ireland;
|
"AIFM"
|
the alternative investment fund
manager of the Company being Triple Point Investment Management
LLP;
|
"AIFMD"
|
The EU Alternative Investment Fund
Managers Directive 2011/61/EU;
|
"Board"
|
The Directors of the Company from
time to time;
|
"D9" or the "Company"
|
Digital 9 Infrastructure plc,
incorporated and registered in Jersey (company number
133380);
|
"Digital Infrastructure"
|
Key services and technologies that
enable methods, systems and processes for the provision of
reliable and resilient data storage and transfer;
|
"Digital Infrastructure
Investments"
|
An investment which falls within the
parameters of the Company's investment policy and which may include
(but is not limited to) an investment into or acquisition of an
Investee Company or a direct investment in digital infrastructure
assets or projects via an Investment SPV or a forward funding
arrangement.
|
"DTR"
|
The Disclosure Guidance and
Transparency Rules sourcebook containing the Disclosure Guidance,
Transparency Rules, corporate governance rules and the rules
relating to primary information providers;
|
"EBITDA"
|
Earnings before interest, taxes,
depreciation and amortisation;
|
"EU or European Union"
|
The European Union first established
by the treaty made at Maastricht on 7 February 1992;
|
"EPS"
|
Earnings per share;
|
"ESG"
|
Environmental, Social and
Governance;
|
"FCA"
|
The Financial Conduct
Authority
|
"GAV"
|
The gross assets of the Company in
accordance with applicable accounting rules from time to
time;
|
"Group"
|
The Company and any other companies
in the Company's Group for the purposes of Section 606 of the
Corporation Tax Act 2010 from time to time but excluding Investee
Companies;
|
"Investee Company"
|
A company or special purpose vehicle
which owns and/or operates Digital Infrastructure assets or
projects in which the Group invests or acquires;
|
"Investment Manager"
|
Triple Point Investment Management
LLP (partnership number OC321250);
|
"Investment Objective"
|
The Company's investment objective
as approved by shareholders on 25 March 2024;
|
"Investment Policy"
|
The Company's investment policy as
set out in the Prospectus approved by shareholders on 25 March
2024;
|
"Investment SPV"
|
A special purpose vehicle used to
acquire or own one or more Digital Infrastructure
Investments.
|
"IPO"
|
The Company's initial public
offering launched on 8 March 2021 which resulted in the admission
of, in aggregate, 300 million Ordinary Shares to trading on the
Specialist Fund Segment of the Main Market on 31 March
2021;
|
"NAV"
|
Net Asset Value being the net assets
of the Company in accordance with applicable accounting rules from
time to time;
|
"Ongoing Charges Ratio"
|
A measure of all operating costs
incurred in the reporting period, calculated as a percentage of
average net assets in that year. Operating costs exclude costs of
buying and selling investments, interest costs, taxation,
non-recurring costs and the costs of buying back or issuing
ordinary shares;
|
"Ordinary Shares"
|
Ordinary shares of no-par value in
the capital of the Company;
|
"RCF"
|
Revolving Credit Facility
|
"SDG9"
|
The UN's Sustainable Development
Goal 9; and
|
"Total Shareholder
Return"
|
The increase in Net Asset Value in
the period plus distributions paid in the period.
|