LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE
ANNOUNCEMENT
JPMORGAN AMERICAN INVESTMENT
TRUST PLC
FINAL RESULTS FOR THE YEAR
ENDED 31ST DECEMBER 2023
Legal Entity
Identifier: 549300QNAI4XRPEB4G65
Information disclosed in accordance
with the DTR 4.1.3
JPMorgan American Investment Trust
plc ('JAM' or the 'Company'), the FTSE 250 trust investing in North
American companies, announces its annual results for the year ended
31st December 2023 (the "Reporting
Period").
Financial highlights for the Reporting Period
include:
·
JAM generated a NAV total return, with debt at
fair, of +24.7% in 2023 compared with +18.9% for its benchmark, the
S&P 500 Index, while its share price total return was
+26.6%.
·
Since the change in investment approach on
1st June 2019 to the end of February 2024, JAM has
generated a NAV total return of +116.3% compared with +97.3% for
its benchmark. This represents an annualised outperformance of 2.2
percentage points.
·
JAM's discount narrowed from 1.7% to 0.3% in the
year and it has subsequently traded at premium allowing the
re-issuance of shares from treasury.
·
At the end of 2023, 91.5% of JAM's assets were
invested in US large cap stocks, through a high conviction
portfolio of 40 stocks. This represented a carefully curated
selection of the Manager's best growth and value investment ideas.
The small cap portfolio represented 6.5% of assets, with the
balance in liquidity funds.
·
The Ongoing Charges Ratio for 2023 was 0.38% and
JAM remains one of the most competitively priced US actively
managed funds available to UK investors, in either closed-ended or
open-ended form.
·
Subject to shareholder approval at the AGM, a
final dividend of 5.25p will be paid on 31st May 2024, making a
total dividend of 7.75p per share for the 2023 Financial Year. This
represents an increase of 6.9% on the previous year's total
dividend.
Operational highlights for the Reporting Period
include:
·
After 10 years' service, including seven as Chair,
Dr. Kevin Carter will retire at the AGM on Thursday, 15th May. He
will be succeeded by Robert Talbut, who has been a Non-Executive
Director since 2017.
·
Ms Pui Kei Yuen was appointed as a Non-Executive
Director of the Company with effect from 1st January 2023 and Mr
Colin Moore was appointed as a Non-Executive Director of the
Company with effect from 1st February 2024.
Outlook
·
It is encouraging to see inflation trending down
and the US economy performing more strongly than expected, and
seemingly likely on the glide path to a soft landing.
·
There is an unusually high degree of uncertainty
about the implications of the US presidential election outcome
later this year for both domestic US policy and for the nation's
international relations. However, the Board believes that the
Company's Manager has already demonstrated its considerable skill
in navigating the many unique challenges equity markets have faced
over recent years, as evidenced by their performance track
record.
CHAIR'S STATEMENT
The performance of the US stock
market exceeded most expectations in 2023, as the US Federal
Reserve's aggressive monetary policy stance succeeded in driving
inflation down, without thus far tipping the economy into the
recession many feared. A handful of the market's largest stocks led
the market higher, buoyed by optimism about the potential for
Artificial Intelligence (AI) to generate growth and productivity
increases. The Company's net asset value (NAV), with debt at fair
value, increased by 24.7% on a total return basis in 2023 in
sterling terms, ahead of its benchmark, the S&P 500, which
increased by 18.9% on the same basis. During the year, the share
price traded between a discount of 7.3% and a premium of 0.4%
compared to NAV.
These very satisfying annual returns
extend the Company's long-term track record of strong outright
gains and benchmark outperformance. Since the Company changed its
investment approach on 1st June 2019, it has outperformed the
benchmark index by 18.9% in the subsequent 57 months through to the
end of February 2024, providing a NAV total return to shareholders
of 116.3% compared with a benchmark return of 97.3%. This is an
annualised outperformance of 2.2 percentage points since the change
in investment approach.
The
Portfolio
At the end of the review period,
91.5% of your Company's total assets were invested in US large cap
stocks, in a high conviction portfolio of some 40 stocks. This
represents a carefully curated selection of the Manager's best
growth and value investment ideas. The proportions of growth and
value weightings can vary between 60% and 40% in either direction
and stood at 54% in growth and 46% in value at the period end. The
overall allocation to the small cap portfolio was approximately
6.5% at period end. The balance of the portfolio was invested in
liquidity funds.
The Company's small cap allocation
was invested in a portfolio of stocks that replicated the portfolio
of the JPMorgan US Small Cap Growth Fund until November 2023.
Thereafter, the strategy was changed from a growth focus to a more
blended approach, which has resulted in a portfolio which is fairly
evenly balanced between growth and value small cap stocks. The
Board believes the new strategy is better aligned with the large
cap strategy.
More details about performance
attribution and portfolio activity during the year can be found in
the Investment Manager's report in the Annual Report.
Gearing
The Company is able to deploy
gearing which over time is expected to enhance performance provided
the cost of the gearing is less than the performance of the
Company's equity portfolio.
The Board believes it is prudent for
its gearing capacity to be funded from a mix of sources, including
short- and longer-term tenors and fixed and floating rate
borrowings. The Company's gearing strategy is implemented through
the use of an £80 million revolving credit facility (with an
additional £20 million accordion) with Mizuho Bank Ltd. This is
drawn in US Dollars to match the currency of the Company's asset
base. Alongside this bank facility, the Company has in issue a
combined US$100 million of unsecured loan notes issued via
private placements, US$65 million of which is repayable in February
2031 and carries a fixed interest rate of 2.55% per annum. The
remaining US$35 million of this private placement matures in
October 2032 and carries a fixed interest rate of 2.32%.
The Board has set the current
tactical level of gearing at 5%, with a permitted range around this
level of plus or minus 5%, meaning that currently gearing can vary
between 0% and 10%. This tactical level of gearing remained
unchanged throughout the year. The Company ended the year with
gearing equivalent to 2.8% of net assets.
At the time of writing, the gearing
level of the Company was 3.1%, calculated in line with the
Association of Investment Companies ('AIC') methodology. The Board
continues to review the appropriate gearing level on a regular
basis.
Board Review of the Manager
As in prior years, the Board visited
the Manager's offices in New York and held meetings with the
portfolio managers and the analyst teams. The Board also met with
JPMorgan's senior management team to discuss the performance of the
portfolio, the Company's strategy and to review broader aspects of
the Manager's service. During the year, as an exception, the Board,
accompanied by JPM's senior management team, also visited San
Francisco. The purpose of the trip was to visit a few portfolio
companies to understand the impact of AI on their businesses, how
this is likely to evolve, and its implications for the wider
economy.
As previously announced, Tim Parton
retired as the portfolio manager of the growth team on
1st March 2024. I would like to thank Tim and wish him a happy
and well-deserved retirement. The Company has been informed by the
Manager, that Jonathan Simon, the portfolio manager responsible for
large cap value stocks, has given notice that he intends to retire
in early 2025. Jonathan will continue with his existing
responsibilities until his retirement and the Company will make an
announcement regarding his successor in due course.
The Manager provides other services
to the Company, including accounting, company secretarial and
marketing services. These have been formally assessed through the
annual manager evaluation process. Taking all factors into account,
the Board concluded that the ongoing appointment of the Manager is
in the continuing interests of shareholders.
Ongoing Charges
The Board continues to monitor
closely the Company's cost base. The Company's Ongoing Charges
Ratio ('OCR') for the year under review was 0.38% (2022: 0.36%).
The increase this year is primarily attributable to the additional
investment in sales and marketing efforts by the Company. The
Company remains one of the most competitively priced US actively
managed funds available to UK investors, in either closed-ended or
open-ended form.
Share Price and Premium/Discount
Throughout most of the year, the
Company's shares traded at a discount to its NAV except for a brief
period later in the year. Consistent with our statements made in
previous years, and because share buy-backs at a discount to NAV
enhance the NAV for remaining shareholders, the Board is prepared
to buy-back shares when they stand at anything more than a small
discount. This undertaking has operated for several years and
applies in normal market conditions.
During the year 6,314,594 shares
were purchased into Treasury, at a cost of £45 million,
representing 2.5% of the Company's issued share capital (excluding
shares held in Treasury) at the beginning of 2023. The average
discount to NAV at which these shares were purchased was 3.8%. Most
of the shares were repurchased in the first half of the year, and
the most recent buyback was in July. Since the year end, the shares
have traded near to NAV and the Company has been able to issue
150,000 shares from Treasury at a premium to NAV.
The Company will again ask
shareholders to approve the repurchase of up to 14.99% of its
capital at a discount to estimated NAV at the forthcoming
Annual General Meeting. We will also be seeking shareholder
permission to issue shares, where the Board is confident of
sustainable market demand. The authority, if approved, will allow
the Company to issue up to 10% of its issued share capital from
Treasury. The Company will only issue shares at a price in excess
of the estimated NAV, including income and with the value of the
debt at fair value.
Dividends
Whilst capital growth is the primary
aim of the Company, the Board understands that dividend receipts
can be an important element of shareholder returns. As such the
Board has sought to enhance shareholder returns with a progressive
dividend policy.
The Company paid an interim dividend
in respect of the 2023 financial year (FY23) of 2.5p on
6th October 2023 (unchanged from the interim dividend paid in
FY22). Subject to shareholder approval at the AGM, a final dividend
of 5.25p will be paid on 31st May 2024 to shareholders on the
register on 21st April 2024, making a total dividend of 7.75p per
share for FY23. The Board is happy to report that this represents
an increase of 6.9% on last year's total dividend of 7.25p per
share.
After the payment of the proposed
final dividend, the balance in the revenue reserves will be
£22.0 million, equivalent to 12.0p per share (2022: 11.5p per
share) or 1.6 times (2022: 1.6 times) the current dividend. The
prudent approach of building up revenue reserves in prior years
provides the Board with a means of supporting current and future
dividend levels, should earnings per share drop materially in any
financial year.
The Board continues to monitor the
net income position of the Company and, based on current estimated
dividend receipts for the year ahead, the Board aims to continue
its progressive dividend policy in the forthcoming year.
Environmental, Social and Governance ('ESG')
The Manager continues to enhance its
ESG approach, which ensures it best captures the fundamental
insights of the investment team. ESG factors are integrated fully
into the Portfolio Manager's investment process, and more
information can be found in the Annual Report.
The
Board
It has been my pleasure and honour
to serve as a member of the Board over the past ten years,
including seven years as its Chair. It is my intention, as
previously communicated, to retire from the Board at the Annual
General Meeting (AGM) to be held in May 2024.
In keeping with the Board's history
of appointing Chairs from within its existing complement of
directors to ensure continuity, I am delighted to announce that
Robert Talbut will succeed me as Chair at the conclusion of the
forthcoming AGM.
Sir Alan Collins retired from the
Board in May 2023 and as previously reported, Ms Pui Kei Yuen was
appointed as a Non-Executive Director of the Company with effect
from 1st January 2023. Mr Colin Moore was appointed as a
Non-Executive Director of the Company with effect from 1st February
2024. Colin has over 40 years' experience in the investment
industry. His previous roles include Global Chief Investment
Officer at Columbia Threadneedle, Chief Investment Officer of
International Value at Putnam Investments and Chief Investment
Officer at Rockefeller & Co. For both of these appointments,
the Company engaged an independent search consultancy, Odgers
Berndtson.
The results of this year's
externally facilitated Board evaluation process by Lintstock
confirmed that Directors possess the experience and attributes to
support a recommendation to shareholders that, with the exception
of myself, they seek appointment/re-appointment at the Company's
forthcoming AGM. In line with the AIC Code of Corporate Governance,
additional statements to support the re-appointment of each
Director are included in the Annual Report.
Shareholder engagement
The Board believes that shareholder
interactions are very helpful in assisting it with the management
of the Company's affairs, and, as opportunities arise, Board
members welcome and seek such meetings.
During the past year, the Manager
also held meetings and regular calls with shareholders, including
webinars, and provided portfolio and market updates on the
Company's website. I am pleased to report that the Company was
rated as the "Best Active Fund" in the US at the 2023 AJ Bell
Investment Awards.
During the year, the Board also
undertook an Asset Reunification Programme, conducted by the
Company's registrar, which aimed to trace and reunite shareholders
with unclaimed shares and dividends in the Company valued at
c.£900,000.
Annual General Meeting
This year's AGM will be held on
Thursday, 15th May 2024 at 2.30 p.m. at Trinity House, Tower Hill
London EC3N 4DH. Apart from the formal business of the meeting,
shareholders will have the opportunity to hear from our portfolio
managers, Jonathan Simon and Felise Agranoff, who will make a
presentation by video, to be followed by a question and answer
session.
Shareholders are invited to attend
the meeting and raise any questions they have, either at the
meeting, or in advance, by writing to the Company Secretary at the
address given in the Annual Report or via email to invtrusts.cosec@jpmorgan.com. As
is normal practice for the Company, all voting on the resolutions
will be conducted on a poll. The Board strongly encourages all
shareholders to exercise their votes by completing and returning
their proxy forms in accordance with the notes to the Notice of
Meeting included in the Annual Report.
For shareholders who wish to follow
the AGM proceedings, but choose not to attend in person, we will be
able to offer participation via video conferencing facilities.
Details on how to register, together with access details, can be
found on the Company's website: www.jpmamerican.co.uk. Shareholders
viewing the meeting via conferencing software will not be able to
vote in the poll and we therefore especially encourage those
shareholders who cannot attend in person, to exercise their votes
in advance of the meeting by completing and submitting their form
of proxy. Shareholders are also encouraged to send any questions to
the Board, via the Company Secretary, at the email address above,
ahead of the AGM. We will endeavour to answer all relevant
questions at the meeting, or via the website, depending on
arrangements in place at the time.
If there are any changes to the
arrangements for the Annual General Meeting, the Company will
update shareholders through the Company's website and, if
appropriate, through an announcement to the London Stock
Exchange.
Stay Informed
The Company delivers email updates
with regular news and views, as well as the latest performance. If
you have not already signed up to receive these communications and
you wish to do so, you can opt in via https://web.gim.jpmorgan.com/emea_investment_trust_subscription/welcome?targetFund=JAM
Outlook
It is encouraging to see inflation
trending down and the US economy performing more strongly than
expected, and seemingly likely on the glide path to a soft
landing.
This bodes well for US equities in
the year ahead, although there are, as ever, potential threats,
especially on the geopolitical front. There is an unusually high
degree of uncertainty about the implications of the US presidential
election outcome later this year for both domestic US policy and
for the nation's international relations.
However, the Board believes that the
Company's Manager has already demonstrated its considerable skill
in navigating the many unique challenges equity markets have faced
over recent years, as evidenced by their performance track
record.
The Board is confident that the
investment process and deep resources of the Manager, in
combination with the Company's investment structure and policy,
continue to present shareholders with an attractive long term
investment proposition.
Dr
Kevin Carter
Chair
26th March 2024
INVESTMENT MANAGER'S
REPORT
Market Review
The year just past was a strong one
for most equity markets, with the S&P 500 Index boasting
a double-digit return of +26.2% in US dollars, and +19.2% in
sterling. Despite a period of turbulence in February and March
2023, when a large west coast regional bank fell victim to the US
Federal Reserve's (Fed) aggressive tightening cycle, raising fears
of much broader financial sector instability, the market resumed
its recovery from its 2022's lows. Declining inflation and the
promise of lower interest rates were the primary market drivers,
further supported by the new secular growth opportunity created by
the arrival of accessible generative artificial intelligence (Gen
AI) tools. The index performance was heavily dominated by the
'Magnificent 7' - Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, NVIDIA, Meta
Platforms and Tesla - whose combined weight now comprises 28% of
the S&P 500; these contributed a striking 83% of the
index's performance for the year.
The US economy proved to be more
resilient in the face of aggressive monetary tightening than many
expected, as the much-anticipated full-scale US recession has yet
to materialise. But, as in the late 1980s, the economy did
experience rolling recessions across a range of industries, most
notably housing, and a very significant and widespread inventory
correction, as supply chains normalised following their
pandemic-induced disruptions. The Fed's work on inflation seems to
be done, as the CPI has retreated from a peak of 9.1% in June 2022
to 3.4% in December 2023, with further reductions in the pipeline
and numerous deflationary influences emerging.
US corporate earnings have also been
stronger than expected. Earnings forecasts for 2023 increased
steadily over the course of the year as recession fears and
elevated costs subsided. Technology spending has begun to
reaccelerate after a period of optimisation and digestion, while
significant government spending programs around clean energy and
reshoring of strategic manufacturing have supported very strong
capital spending by businesses.
The sharp rise in interest rates by
the Fed created considerable challenges that were felt most acutely
in parts of the regional banking sector, precipitating the dramatic
failure of three banks - Silicon Valley Bank, First Republic and
Signature Bank - in the early part of the year. Monetary tightening
phases such as this one have a history of triggering high profile
failures, from Long Term Capital Management in 1998, to Lehman
Brothers, Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual in 2008. Interest rate
pressure on regional banks, and banks in general, directly impacts
their willingness to lend. Not surprisingly, bank lending surveys
highlight that corporate lending standards have tightened
meaningfully, and that lending by small banks, particularly lending
for commercial real estate, is very constrained. Private credit
funds have partially stepped in to fill that vacuum, but more for
commercial and industrial business loans.
As mentioned previously, the stock
market rebound was fuelled significantly by the 'Magnificent 7',
whose average return for the year was 76%, nearly three times the
return for the S&P 500. This resurgence in the mega cap tech
stocks was partly triggered by the launch of ChatGPT, which
showcased recent breakthroughs in generative AI. For the first
time, individuals have direct access to the underlying large
language model that can answer complex questions and solve
problems. Companies across almost all industries have begun to
invest in AI; there appears to be considerable risk in not doing
so. The competitive disruption and the potentially favourable
impact on productivity that AI will herald are very hard to
estimate but could be quite substantial. Timing is also hard to
assess.
It is no surprise given the
dominance of AI that the best performing sectors for the S&P
500 in 2023 have been tech-driven, with information technology,
communication services and consumer discretionary stocks all up
more than 40%. Energy, which was the best performing sector in
2022, was one of the worst performers over the past year,
registering a 1.3% decline due to the drop in oil prices and fears
of an economic slowdown. Defensive stocks did not fare well either,
with utilities suffering a 7% decline. Despite the turmoil in
the banking sector, financials finished the period up
13%.
Large cap stocks, as represented by
the S&P 500 Index, outperformed the small cap Russell 2000
Index, returning +26.1% compared to the 16.9% rise in small caps.
In a reversal of 2022's outcome, Value names lagged Growth by a
wide margin, as the Russell 3000 Value Index returned +11.7% while
the Russell 3000 Growth Index returned +41.2%.
The following tables provide an
overview of the returns of different investment styles in the US
market during 2023, as well as the sector performance of the
S&P 500.
2023 US Equities Style performance (US$)
2023
|
Value
|
Blend
|
Growth
|
Large
|
11.5%
|
26.3%
|
42.7%
|
Mid
|
12.7%
|
17.2%
|
25.9%
|
Small
|
14.6%
|
16.9%
|
18.7%
|
2023 S&P 500 Index performance (US$)
Source: FactSet, Russell Investment
Group, Standard & Poor's, Wilshire, J.P. Morgan Asset
Management. Data as of 31st December 2023. All calculations
are cumulative total return, including dividends reinvested for the
stated period. For all time periods, total return is based on
Russell style indices with the exception of the large blend
category, which is based on the S&P 500 Index. Past performance
is not a reliable indicator for current and future
performance.
Performance and Overall Asset Allocation
The Company's net asset value rose
24.7% on a total return basis in 2023, significantly outpacing the
18.9% return of the S&P 500 Index. This result means that 2023
was the fourth year out of the past five that the Company has
delivered double digit returns.
The large cap portion of the
portfolio, which at over 90% of the Company's assets is its biggest
allocation, added the most value over the period. Gearing was also
additive given the market's rally. The Company's small cap
allocation, which averaged approximately 7% over the period,
detracted from relative returns.
Performance attribution
For the year ended 31st December
2023
|
|
|
|
%
|
%
|
Contributions to total returns
|
|
|
Net asset value (debt at fair value)
total return
|
|
|
in sterling
termsAPM
|
|
24.7
|
Benchmark total return (in sterling
terms)
|
|
18.9
|
Excess return
|
|
5.8
|
Combined Portfolio return in US
dollar terms1
|
33.4
|
|
Benchmark total return in US dollar
terms
|
26.0
|
|
Combined Portfolio relative return in US dollar
terms
|
7.4
|
|
Large & Small Cap Portfolio
contribution2:
|
|
|
Large Cap Portfolio in US dollar
terms
|
8.4
|
|
Small Cap Portfolio in US dollar
terms
|
-1.0
|
|
Combined Portfolio relative return in US dollar
terms
|
7.4
|
|
Contributions to return
|
|
|
Equity portfolio (ex-cash and
gearing) in US dollar terms
|
5.5
|
|
Cash and gearing impact in US
dollar terms3
|
1.9
|
|
Combined Portfolio relative return in US dollar
terms
|
7.4
|
|
Effect of foreign currency
translation4
|
-0.4
|
|
Combined Portfolio relative return in sterling
terms
|
7.0
|
7.0
|
Management fee and other
expenses5
|
|
-0.4
|
Finance costs5
|
|
-0.4
|
Share buybacks6
|
|
0.1
|
Impact of fair valuation of
debt7
|
|
-0.5
|
Total
|
|
5.8
|
Source: J.P.
Morgan/Morningstar.
All figures are on a total return
basis. Performance attribution analyses how the Company achieved
its recorded performance relative to its benchmark.
1 The aggregated returns of both the
Large Cap and Small Cap portfolios.
2 The split of returns by portfolio,
relative to the benchmark. This has been calculated using the
average weighting of the Large Cap and Small Cap portfolios over
the year.
3 Cash and gearing - measures the
impact on returns of the principle amount of borrowings or cash
balances on the Company's relative performance.
4 Effect of foreign currency
translation - measures the impact of currency exposure differences
between the Company's portfolio and its benchmark.
5 Management fee, other expenses and
finance costs - the payment of fees, expenses and finance costs
(interest paid on borrowings) reduces the level of total assets,
and therefore has a negative effect on relative
performance.
6 Share buybacks - measures the
enhancement to net asset value per share of buying back the
Company's shares for cancellation at a price which is less than the
Company's net asset value per share.
7 The impact of fair valuation includes
the effect of valuing the combined US$100m private placements at
fair value.
APM Alternative Performance Measure ('APM').
Large Cap Portfolio
The decisive outperformance by the
large company portion of the portfolio over the review period was
mainly driven by good stock selection.
Strong stock-specific contributors
included NVIDIA, the
leading producer of graphics processing units (GPUs), a class of
semiconductors originally developed for video gaming applications,
but now predominantly deployed in large data centre applications.
NVIDIA's share price rallied over 200% for the year, reflecting a
sequence of huge positive earnings revisions. The highly
computer-intensive workloads undertaken by the hyperscale cloud
service providers (Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, etc.) require the
much faster processing speeds offered by parallel-processing GPUs.
This requirement is massively magnified when the application in
question is the training of a large language model (LLM) for
generative AI, and NVIDIA is almost the only provider of these
applications.
Our overweight position in the
semiconductor company Advanced
Micro Devices proved beneficial. It is known for
designing and developing computer processors and graphic
technologies. The company reported strong performance throughout
the year. Tailwinds from AI optimism and a positive guidance on the
sales of AI chips for the next year, contributed to the
rally.
Another top contributor was cyber
security company Palo Alto
Networks. The prevalence, scope and impact of cyber-attacks
continues to rise, and digital security is now a top IT budget
priority for all businesses and government agencies. Palo Alto
offers the most comprehensive suite of solutions for larger private
and public organisations. Another top contributor was online travel
services provider Booking
Holdings. This company reported record earnings throughout
the year, surpassing 2019 levels as the post-COVID travel boom
continued. Like many leading companies, Booking has emerged from
the pandemic in a more favourable competitive position.
Portfolio holdings that detracted
from returns during the year included multinational pharmaceuticals
company Bristol-Myers
Squibb, and financial services company Bank of America. Bristol-Myers is in
transition from a reliance on more mature products to newly
launched ones, and the performance of these new lines of business
has lagged expectations. The stock's share price decline over the
year reflects these setbacks. However, we have maintained our
holding due to our ongoing confidence in the long-term outlook for
this business and the stock's unassuming valuation. Bank of
America's stock was impacted early in the year by the previously
mentioned regional bank failures, but rallied quite strongly in the
fourth quarter, to end the year essentially flat. We remain
comfortable with our position in this leading financial
institution.
Performance was also hindered by our
exposure to SolarEdge
Technologies. This company provides electrical inverters
that convert DC power from solar panels to AC power for domestic
and commercial use. The solar market corrected during the year due
to regulatory changes in certain key US states, general economic
weakness and intensifying competition in Europe. SolarEdge's
failure to address these challenges meant that the company no
longer qualified as a 'best idea' in the growth sleeve of the
portfolio, and so was sold.
Large Cap Portfolio Stock Attribution
For
the year ended 31st December 2023
|
Relative
weight
|
Stock
return
|
Impact
|
Top
Contributors
|
(%)
|
(%)
|
(%)
|
NVIDIA
|
0.4
|
239.0
|
1.4
|
Advanced Micro Devices
|
1.8
|
127.6
|
1.2
|
Palo Alto Networks
|
1.6
|
111.3
|
1.1
|
Booking Holdings
|
1.4
|
76.0
|
0.7
|
Martin Marietta Materials
|
1.9
|
48.6
|
0.6
|
|
Relative
weight
|
Stock
return
|
Impact
|
Top
Detractors
|
(%)
|
(%)
|
(%)
|
Bristol Myers Squibb
|
1.4
|
-26.2
|
-0.9
|
Bank of America
|
1.6
|
4.8
|
-0.7
|
Xcel Energy
|
-0.1
|
-11.6
|
-0.6
|
SolarEdge Technologies
|
0.0
|
-33.0
|
-0.6
|
Kinder Morgan
|
2.3
|
4.1
|
-0.6
|
Source: Wilshire. It is shown for
illustrative purposes only and is not meant to be representative of
actual results. The portfolio is actively managed. Holdings, sector
weights, allocations and leverage, as applicable, are subject to
change at the discretion of the investment manager without notice.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of current and future
results.
Portfolio Activity
The market pullback in 2022 created
some opportunities to acquire attractive, higher growth companies
at more reasonable prices. As always, we remain very selective,
only adding names with differentiated and compelling fundamentals.
Over the past year we purchased eleven new names and exited the
same number.
One important re-acquisition early
in the year was Meta
Platforms, the holding company for Facebook, Instagram,
WhatsApp, Reels and the Oculus virtual reality product line. After
a challenging period for growth and profitability, the company
implemented measures to rein in capital expenditure and operating
expenses. It has also deployed more AI tools to enhance advertising
placement, support user protection and improve the on-line
experience. To us, the company seems re-energised and growth has
reaccelerated. Its valuation remains attractive and estimates are
being revised higher as the recovery becomes more apparent. Meta
has faced numerous headwinds in the last couple of years, including
increasing competition from TikTok, the negative impact of Apple's
IDFA (Identification for Advertisers) changes, a weaker than
expected advertising environment, and concerns over its ambitions
related to virtual reality and the 'metaverse'. Now many of those
headwinds have eased and the company is able to play more
offense.
The purchase of Meta was funded by
the sale of Zoom Video
Communications. Zoom provides one of the two main video
communications platforms, along with Microsoft Teams, that became a
must-have during the pandemic for a massively expanded customer
base of home-based and hybrid workers.
Zoom's value proposition to
enterprises is compelling, as video conferencing remains a very
viable alternative to face-to-face meetings, and working from home
remains popular amongst many workers. However, video conferencing
has become another of the business applications that Microsoft is
willing to bundle with its broader enterprise offering, at no
additional cost. Especially in the small/medium business space, it
is just very difficult for Zoom to compete with free.
We also introduced a position in
Intuit to the portfolio in
March, funded by exiting Ingersoll
Rand. Intuit is the dominant provider of personal tax
preparation software, via its TurboTax offering. It is also the
default choice of small business accounting and other software
packages, providing QuickBooks, QuickBooks Online and now
Mailchimp, and runs a personal finance platform, Credit Karma. We
believe the durability of QuickBooks's double digit revenue growth
over the next few years is underestimated by the market. The
company is well-positioned to benefit from the favourable tailwinds
supporting small/medium sized businesses. We view Intuit as a very
high-quality company with a relatively defensive business model,
whose P/E valuation had corrected back to 2018 levels. Yet it is
offering a potential 10% revenue growth and mid/high teens earnings
growth.
We sold our position in Ingersoll Rand, a leading player in the
compressor industry. Compressors are fundamental to most
manufacturing and other industrial processes, and there is now a
clear replacement cycle in favour of newer, more energy-efficient
models. However, the disposal was motivated by some concerns,
albeit so far unjustified, that the company might experience a
cyclical slowdown and an inventory correction in its distribution
channels.
We also purchased Regency Centers, a real estate
investment trust that owns and operates retail shopping centres. We
initiated our position in the stock due to its superior property
portfolio and balance sheet strength. The company's tenants focus
on necessity, service, convenience and value, to serve the
essential needs of the communities in which it has locations. Most
of its centres are in suburban areas with strong demographics and
populations with above average income levels.
To accommodate Regency Centers, we
exited T-Mobile, the US's
number three wireless communications company, behind Verizon and
AT&T. The company has increased its market share aggressively,
but additional accelerated growth is likely to be harder to
realise.
Within the energy sector, during the
second half of the year, we bought EOG Resources, funded by the sale of
ConocoPhillips. Both
companies engage in the exploration, production and marketing of
crude oil and natural gas. We view EOG as one of the best operators
in this commodity business, with a highly differentiated culture of
innovation, technology leadership, and a very sophisticated
approach to capital allocation. With over ten years of inventory,
we expect EOG Resources to make capital investments with high
returns and low reinvestment risk. We now see a more attractive
risk/reward opportunity in this name than in
ConocoPhillips.
We also initiated a position in
Ross Stores, an operator of
discount retail apparel and home accessories stores. Ross sells an
ever-changing selection of goods, substantially below department
store prices, to a lower-income demographic. The post-COVID period
has been particularly favourable for discount retailers, as they
help other retailers clear excess inventory that flooded in once
supply chains reopened. Department stores are losing market share
over the long term as we believe they will continue to experience
reduced sales growth and Ross has ample opportunity to continue to
expand its store network, while deploying free cash flow to
repurchase shares and further enhance earnings per share
growth.
To fund the acquisition of Ross
Stores, we sold our position in DexCom, a medical device company that
provides continuous glucose monitors for use by diabetics, to help
them manage their disease more precisely. The stock has been under
pressure driven by the view, which we share, that new weight-loss
drugs are likely to reduce the incidence of Type 2 diabetes - a
welcome development, but one which will lower demand for DexCom's
products.
In a related area of the healthcare
sector, we established a position in Eli Lilly, funded by the sale of our
holding in Intuitive
Surgical. Eli Lilly is a major pharmaceutical company
focused on diabetes, oncology, immunology and neuroscience. The
company has recently emerged as a leader in the field of GLP-1
drugs, derived from compounds used to treat diabetes, which have
shown dramatic results in the successful treatment of obesity and
related diseases. These therapies must be administered indefinitely
to be effective, creating very large and long-term market
opportunities. The health benefits are, however, striking and the
cost, while high, appears to be justified - this class of drugs may
be one of the most significant healthcare innovations in decades.
Intuitive Surgical is the dominant leader in robotic surgery
systems. Despite reporting earnings in line with analysts'
expectations, the stock has been under pressure due to the
perceived impact of GLP-1s on bariatric, and potentially other,
surgical procedures.
In the utility sector, we replaced
Xcel Energy with NextEra
Energy. NextEra Energy is
the world's largest generator and supplier of clean, renewable
energy: wind and solar. The company is expected to be one of the
largest utility company beneficiaries of the Inflation Reduction
Act, which offers substantial tax credits for clean energy
investments. A long-time high-flyer, NextEra's stock suffered a
substantial correction as higher interest rates and scarcer capital
availability raised questions about the returns on large solar
projects. This seemed to us to be a market over-reaction to a
near-term and temporary setback for a sector with undisputed
viability over the longer-term. Xcel Energy is also a large
electricity utility, focused on central US markets, but it lacks
NextEra's scale of growth opportunities and its technical expertise
in renewables.
We also exited Charter Communications to fund the
purchase of United Parcel
Service. Like many cable companies, Charter has faced a
slowly decaying base of home video customers (a phenomenon known as
'cord cutting'). Competition also seems to be increasing in the
higher growth broadband-only market, with attractive new fixed and
satellite-based wireless offerings in the market. We bought
United Parcel Service, the
leading logistics and package delivery company. We were attracted
to the company on account of its strengthened management team and
its focus on improving the quality and profitability of its revenue
rather than concentrating purely on growing volumes.
One of the more recent portfolio
adjustments has been the initiation of a position in Broadcom, funded by our exit from
Oracle. Oracle provides
software products and services that address many core corporate IT
requirements. We purchased the stock earlier in 2023, on the view
that companies with legacy Oracle solutions might find it
convenient to stay with Oracle as they transitioned from site-based
facilities to more efficient cloud-based services. However, the
company has experienced some execution issues in the pace of that
cloud migration and we question their ability to truly compete with
very strong, established cloud competitors. We perceived a more
attractive opportunity in Broadcom, a global manufacturer and
supplier of certain key semiconductor categories, and also certain
enterprise software tools. The key defining characteristics of
Broadcom (formerly Avago Systems), have been best in class
management, a very close partnership with customers, relentless
cost control and very strategic and thoughtful capital allocation.
We believe Broadcom has a sustainable franchise with very high
market shares, and we are excited about the earnings accretion from
the recent large acquisition of VMWare, a cloud service
provider.
Value and growth exposure
The large cap portfolio is divided
between value and growth stocks, with the allocation allowed to
vary between 60:40 and 40:60. At the end of the review period,
value stocks comprised some 46% of the large cap portfolio, and
growth stocks were higher, with a 54% allocation. This is close to
the current growth/value split of the S&P500 index. The graph
is included in the Annual Report.
Portfolio Holdings
Large Cap Portfolio
As at 31st December 2023
This table is included in the Annual
Report.
The table below shows that the large
cap portfolio at the year end was trading at a 29% discount to the
market on a free cash flow basis, which confirms that we are not
paying a premium for good cash flow. The portfolio is expected to
deliver earnings growth of around 14% for the next 12 months, which
is in line with the market, however, both of these figures are
based on consensus earnings, which may need to be revised. It is
comforting to have the valuation cushion provided by our holdings,
relative to the market.
Characteristics
|
Large Cap
Portfolio
|
S&P 500
|
Weighted Average Market
Cap
|
US$564.8bn
|
US$588.9bn
|
Price/Earnings, 12-month
forward1
|
16.7x
|
16.7x
|
Price/Free Cash Flow, last
12-months
|
12.2x
|
17.1x
|
EPS Growth, 12-month
forward
|
13.9%
|
14.2%
|
Return on Equity, last
12-months
|
25.2%
|
24.5%
|
Predicted Beta
|
1.02
|
-
|
Predicted Tracking Error
|
2.32
|
-
|
Active Share
|
62%
|
-
|
Number of holdings
|
40
|
500
|
Source: FactSet, Barra, J.P. Morgan
Asset Management. Data as of 31st December 2023.
1 Including
negatives.
Small Cap Portfolio
The small cap portfolio negatively
impacted returns over the review period, as it underperformed the
S&P 500. The overall allocation to the small cap portfolio was
maintained at approximately 5.0% during the first six months of the
year. As the small cap selloff intensified, the allocation was
increased due to the attractive opportunities emerging in this
space, and we ended the year with an allocation of 6.5%.
Small cap valuations now look very
compelling relative to large caps and we have experienced a
prolonged period of large cap stocks outperforming small cap
stocks. It feels like the stage is starting to be set for a
reversal, although timing is always hard to predict.
For more than 30 years, the
Company's small cap allocation comprised small cap growth stocks.
However, in the fourth quarter of 2023, we added a small cap value
strategy to the small cap allocation, to bring the overall small
cap allocation towards a more blended style. We believe this is a
more complementary fit with the profile of the large cap
portfolio.
Outlook
The US economy has so far held up
better than many expected, and diminishing inflation pressures,
combined with improved growth prospects have fuelled hopes of a
soft landing. The unemployment rate has remained in a narrow range
between 3.4% and 4.0% since December 2021, and could stay in this
range in the year ahead.
However, the pace of job creation is
likely to slow, so consumer spending could grow more slowly,
especially as we expect banks to gradually tighten lending
standards. However, while younger and lower income households are
showing signs of increased financial stress, overall consumer
financial conditions remain quite manageable, and with interest
rates set to decline, we do not expect to see an outright decline
in consumer spending.
Inflation should continue its steady
downward trend. Last year, reported inflation was boosted by
several factors, including its large housing component, which
significantly lags actual house prices and rent levels. A
restricted supply of new and used cars also contributed to
inflation pressures, as did faster wage growth and a sustained
resurgence in airline travel following the pandemic. However, all
these trends are now abating, suggesting that inflation will
continue to moderate in the year ahead.
Oil prices have fallen back within a
more normal range of US$ 70-80 per barrel for West Texas
Intermediate crude. Going forward, the combination of a sluggish
global economy and increased output from the US and non-OPEC
nations should more than offset any further reductions in OPEC and
Russian output, holding oil prices in check.
This combination of factors - a soft
landing, lower inflation, falling rates and relatively stable oil
prices might appear to offer a 'Goldilocks' scenario for the stock
market; not too hot and not too cold. The market's valuation
certainly reflects a more optimistic consensus, although the
headline number is boosted by some multiple expansion for the
highflying Magnificent 7, with other areas of the market still
offering attractive investment opportunities.
There are certainly many potential
risks to a rosy outlook, including the US presidential election,
the lagged impact of higher interest rates, an expanding fiscal
deficit and very significant geopolitical tensions. But the market
is often said to climb a wall of worry, and in the current instance
such worries have resulted in the accumulation of vast amounts of
cautious cash enjoying safe, but unexciting 5.0% money market
returns. As money market returns begin to track the Fed fund rate
lower, at least some of this cash is likely to be tempted back to
the more compelling and rewarding opportunities on offer in US
equity markets. Our portfolio should benefit
accordingly.
Jonathan Simon
Felise Agranoff
Portfolio Managers
26th March 2024
PRINCIPAL AND EMERGING
RISKS
The Directors confirm that they have
carried out a robust assessment of the principal and emerging risks
facing the Company, including those that could threaten its
business model, future performance, solvency or liquidity. The
risks identified and the ways in which they are managed or
mitigated are summarised below.
With the assistance of JPMF, the
Risk Committee, chaired by Sir Alan Collins until May 2023 and
thereafter by Mr Robert Talbut, has drawn up a risk
matrix, which identifies the principal and emerging risks to the
Company. These are reviewed and discussed on a regular basis by the
Board.
These risks fall broadly into the
following categories:
Principal risk
|
Description
|
Mitigating activities
|
Investment Strategy and Resources
|
Investment Process and
Strategy
|
An inappropriate investment
strategy, poor asset allocation or the level of gearing, may lead
to underperformance against the Company's benchmark index and its
peer companies, resulting in the Company's shares trading on a
wider discount.
|
The Board mitigates this risk
through its investment policy and guidelines, which are monitored
and reported on regularly by the Managers. The Board monitors the
implementation and results of the investment process with the
Portfolio Managers and reviews data which details the portfolio's
risk profile. The Manager deploys the Company's gearing within a
range set by the Board.
|
Loss of Investment Team or
Investment Manager
|
The sudden departure of or failure
to adequately replace one or both of the Senior Portfolio Managers
or several members of the wider investment management team could
result in a short term deterioration in investment
performance.
|
The Manager has a depth of
experienced investment resources and takes steps to reduce the
likelihood of such an event by ensuring appropriate succession
planning and the adoption of a team-based approach.
|
Technological Change and or
Disruption
|
Changes in technology may disrupt
the business of investee companies impacting their market
value.
|
The Manager has extensive research
resources focused on technology.
|
ESG Requirements From
investors
|
The Company's policy on ESG and
climate change may be out of line with investors'
expectations.
|
The Board liaises closely with the
Managers on this to understand the ESG integration process and
shareholder expectations.
|
Performance
|
Market
|
Market risk arises from uncertainty
about the future prices of the Company's investments. This market
risk comprises three elements - equity market risk, currency risk
and interest rate risk.
|
The Board and Manager monitor and
review these market risks and their potential impact on the
portfolio. This is a risk that investors take having invested into
a single country fund
|
Share Price Relative to Net Asset
Value
|
The shares trading on an excessive
discount or premium to Net Asset Value can negatively impact
shareholders.
|
The Board monitors the Company's
premium/discount level and is committed to buy-back shares when
they stand at anything more than a small discount, and also to
issue shares at a premium where the Board is confident of
sustainable market demand, to enhance the NAV per share for
remaining shareholders.
|
Regulatory, Compliance & Operational
|
Operational and
Cybercrime
|
Disruption to, or failure of, the
Manager's accounting, dealing or payments systems or the
custodian's or depositary's records could prevent accurate
reporting and monitoring of the Company's financial position. The
Company is dependent on third parties for the provision of all of
its services and systems, especially those of the Manager, the
Administrator and the Depositary.
|
The Board has received the cyber
security policies for its key third party service providers
and the Manager has assured the Directors that the Company benefits
directly or indirectly from all elements of JPMorgan's Cyber
Security programme. The Board keeps the services of the Manager and
third-party suppliers under continuous review and receives regular
control reports.
|
Accounting, Legal and Regulatory
Compliance
|
In order to qualify as an investment
trust, the Company must comply with Section 1158 of the Corporation
Tax Act 2010 ('Section 1158').
|
The Section 1158 qualification
criteria are continually monitored by the Manager and the results
reported to the Board each month. In addition, the Board seeks to
ensure compliance with all relevant regulation and legislation in
the UK, Europe and the US and relies on the services of its
Manager, and its professional advisers to monitor compliance with
all relevant requirements.
|
Geopolitical, Macro and Other Exogenous
Issues
|
|
There are numerous risks of this
type. Below are some examples.
|
There is little direct control of
this type of risk possible but it is important to monitor
them.
|
Legislative and Regulatory
Change
|
Changes in legislation, including in
the US, UK and the European Union, may adversely affect the Company
either directly or because of restrictions or enforced changes on
the operations of the Manager.
|
The Board continues to monitor
changes to the regulatory, legislative and taxation framework
within which it operates, whether such changes were designed to
affect it or not. In order to do this, the Board draws on the
expertise and advice of its professional advisers, including the
Manager.
|
Widespread Social and Economic
Disruption
|
Recent examples of the Global
Financial Crisis or the Covid-19 pandemic may have ended or abated
but disruption may reoccur for several reasons.
|
The Board monitors the effectiveness
and efficiency of service providers' disaster recovery processes
through ongoing compliance and operational reporting.
|
Climate Change
|
Climate change has become one of the
most critical issues confronting companies which could present a
material risk to the value of investee companies.
|
The Manager's investment process
integrates ESG factors including climate change into its approach
to assess the potential impact on investee companies.
|
Geopolitical
|
There is an increasing risk to
market stability and investment opportunities from geopolitical
conflicts, such as between Russia and the Ukraine, China and
Taiwan, China and the US, and the turmoil in the Middle
East.
|
The Company addresses these global
developments in regular questioning of the Manager and with
external expertise and will continue to monitor these
issues.
|
Artificial Intelligence
(AI)
|
Advances in computing power means
that AI has become a powerful tool that will impact a huge range of
areas and with a wide range of applications that include the
potential to disrupt and even to harm.
|
The Board works with the Manager to
monitor developments concerning AI as its use evolves and considers
how it might threaten the Company's activities, which may, for
example, include a heightened threat to
cybersecurity.
|
Emerging risk
|
Description
|
Mitigating activities
|
Threat to liberal
democracies
|
There appears to be an increasing
threat to a number of western democracies, including the US, as
a result of the growing influence of populist, nationalistic
politicians. In addition, there would appear to be
a heightened threat to the orderly democratic process, which
is particularly relevant given this year's US Presidential
election.
|
The Board will monitor developments
in this area carefully both in conjunction with the Manager and
other external experts when appropriate, and consider how this risk
might threaten the Company's activities.
|
TRANSACTIONS WITH THE MANAGER AND
RELATED PARTIES
Details of the management contract
are set out in the Directors' Report in the Annual Report. The
management fee payable to the Manager for the year was £4,261,000
(2022: £4,329,000) of which £nil (2022: £nil) was outstanding at
the year end.
Included in administration expenses
in note 6 in the Annual Report are safe custody fees amounting to
£15,000 (2022: £12,000) payable to JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. of
which £5,000 (2022: £2,000) was outstanding at the year
end.
Handling charges on dealing
transactions amounting to £12,000 (2022: £11,000) were payable to
JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A during the year of which £5,000 (2022:
£3,000) was outstanding at the year end.
The Company also holds cash in the
JPMorgan USD Liquidity LVNAV Fund, which is managed by JPMF. At the
year end this was valued at £33.9 million (2022: £33.8 million).
Income amounting to £1,648,000 (2022: £611,000) was receivable
during the year of which £nil (2022: £131,000) was outstanding at
the year end.
At the year end, total cash of
£280,000 (2022: £1,079,000) was held with JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A..
The net amount of interest of £6,000 (2022: £1,000) was receivable
by the Company during the year from JPMorgan Chase of which £nil
(2022: £nil) was outstanding at the year end.
Full details of Directors'
remuneration can be found in the Annual Report.
STATEMENT OF DIRECTORS'
RESPONSIBILITIES
The Directors are responsible for
preparing the Annual Report & Financial Statements in
accordance with applicable law and regulations.
Company law requires the Directors
to prepare the Annual Report & Financial Statements for
each financial year. Under that law, the Directors have elected to
prepare the financial statements in accordance with United Kingdom
Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (United Kingdom Accounting
Standards and applicable law). Under company law the Directors must
not approve the Financial Statements unless they are satisfied
that, taken as a whole, the Annual Report & Financial
Statements are fair, balanced and understandable, provide the
information necessary for shareholders to assess the Company's
position, performance, business model and strategy and that they
give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Company
and of the total return or loss of the Company for that period. In
order to provide these confirmations, and in preparing these
financial statements, the Directors are required to:
• select suitable
accounting policies and then apply them consistently;
• make judgements and
accounting estimates that are reasonable and prudent;
• state whether
applicable UK Accounting Standards have been followed, subject to
any material departures disclosed and explained in the financial
statements; and
• prepare the financial
statements on a going concern basis unless it is inappropriate to
presume that the Company will continue in business
and the Directors confirm that they
have done so.
The Directors are responsible for
keeping proper accounting records that are sufficient to show and
explain the Company's transactions and disclose with reasonable
accuracy at any time the financial position of the Company and to
enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the
Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the
assets of the Company and hence for taking reasonable steps for the
prevention and detection of fraud and other
irregularities.
The accounts are published on the
www.jpmamerican.co.uk website, which is
maintained by the Company's Manager. The maintenance and integrity
of the website maintained by the Manager is, so far as it relates
to the Company, the responsibility of the Manager. The work carried
out by the Auditor does not involve consideration of the
maintenance and integrity of this website and, accordingly, the
Auditor accepts no responsibility for any changes that have
occurred to the accounts since they were initially presented on the
website. The accounts are prepared in accordance with
UK legislation, which may differ from legislation in other
jurisdictions.
Under applicable law and regulations
the Directors are also responsible for preparing a Directors'
Report, Strategic Report, Statement of Corporate Governance and
Directors' Remuneration Report that comply with that law and those
regulations.
Each of the Directors, whose names
and functions are listed in the Annual Report on page 47, confirms
that, to the best of their knowledge:
• the financial
statements, which have been prepared in accordance with United
Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (United Kingdom
Accounting Standards and applicable law), give a true and fair view
of the assets, liabilities, financial position and return or loss
of the Company; and
• the Strategic Report
includes a fair review of the development and performance of the
business and the position of the Company, together with a
description of the principal risks and uncertainties that it
faces.
The Board confirms that it is
satisfied that the Annual Report & Financial Statements taken
as a whole are fair, balanced and understandable and provide the
information necessary for shareholders to assess the strategy and
business model of the Company.
The Board also confirms that it is
satisfied that the Strategic Report and Directors' Report include a
fair review of the development and performance of the business, and
the position of the Company, together with a description of the
principal risks and uncertainties that the Company
faces.
For and on behalf of the
Board
Dr
Kevin Carter
Chair
26th March 2024
STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE
INCOME
For
the year ended 31st December 2023
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
Revenue
|
Capital
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Gains/(losses) on investments held at
fair value
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
through profit or loss
|
-
|
304,636
|
304,636
|
-
|
(144,183)
|
(144,183)
|
Net foreign currency
gains/(losses)
|
-
|
5,078
|
5,078
|
-
|
(8,319)
|
(8,319)
|
Income from investments
|
16,519
|
1,214
|
17,733
|
18,883
|
1,063
|
19,946
|
Interest receivable
|
1,654
|
-
|
1,654
|
612
|
-
|
612
|
Gross return/(loss)
|
18,173
|
310,928
|
329,101
|
19,495
|
(151,439)
|
(131,944)
|
Management fee
|
(852)
|
(3,409)
|
(4,261)
|
(866)
|
(3,463)
|
(4,329)
|
Other administrative
expenses
|
(1,053)
|
-
|
(1,053)
|
(835)
|
48
|
(787)
|
Net
return/(loss) before finance costs and taxation
|
16,268
|
307,519
|
323,787
|
17,794
|
(154,854)
|
(137,060)
|
Finance costs
|
(627)
|
(2,506)
|
(3,133)
|
(651)
|
(2,607)
|
(3,258)
|
Net
return/(loss) before taxation
|
15,641
|
305,013
|
320,654
|
17,143
|
(157,461)
|
(140,318)
|
Taxation charge
|
(1,429)
|
(909)
|
(2,338)
|
(2,943)
|
(326)
|
(3,269)
|
Net
return/(loss) after taxation
|
14,212
|
304,104
|
318,316
|
14,200
|
(157,787)
|
(143,587)
|
Return/(loss) per share
|
7.73p
|
165.41p
|
173.14p
|
7.42p
|
(82.45)p
|
(75.03)p
|
The dividends payable in respect of
the year ended 31st December 2023 amount to 7.75p (2022: 7.25p) per
share, costing £14,152,000 (2022: £13,746,000). Details of
dividends paid and proposed are given in note 2.
All revenue and capital items in the
above statement derive from continuing operations. No operations
were acquired or discontinued in the year.
The 'Total' column of this statement
is the profit and loss account of the Company and the 'Revenue' and
'Capital' columns represent supplementary information prepared
under guidance issued by the Association of Investment
Companies.
The net return/(loss) after taxation
represents the profit/(loss) for the year and also the total
comprehensive income.
STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN
EQUITY
|
Called up
|
|
Capital
|
|
|
|
|
share
|
Share
|
redemption
|
Capital
|
Revenue
|
|
|
capital
|
premium
|
reserve
|
reserves
|
reserve
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
At
31st December 2021
|
14,082
|
151,850
|
8,151
|
1,292,152
|
29,885
|
1,496,120
|
Repurchase of shares into
Treasury
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(35,032)
|
-
|
(35,032)
|
Net (loss)/return
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(157,787)
|
14,200
|
(143,587)
|
Dividends paid in the year (note
2)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(13,418)
|
(13,418)
|
At
31st December 2022
|
14,082
|
151,850
|
8,151
|
1,099,333
|
30,667
|
1,304,083
|
Repurchase of shares into
Treasury
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(45,108)
|
-
|
(45,108)
|
Net (loss)/return
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
304,104
|
14,212
|
318,316
|
Dividends paid in the year (note
2)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(13,292)
|
(13,292)
|
At
31st December 2023
|
14,082
|
151,850
|
8,151
|
1,358,329
|
31,587
|
1,563,999
|
STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL
POSITION
At
31st December 2023
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Fixed assets
|
|
|
Investments held at fair value through profit or
loss
|
1,608,263
|
1,381,109
|
Current assets
|
|
|
Debtors
|
789
|
938
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
34,207
|
34,884
|
|
34,996
|
35,822
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
Creditors: amounts falling due
within one year
|
(1,121)
|
(30,083)
|
Net
current assets
|
33,875
|
5,739
|
Total assets less current liabilities
|
1,642,138
|
1,386,848
|
Creditors: amounts falling due after more than one
year
|
(78,139)
|
(82,765)
|
Net
assets
|
1,563,999
|
1,304,083
|
Capital and reserves
|
|
|
Called up share capital
|
14,082
|
14,082
|
Share premium
|
151,850
|
151,850
|
Capital redemption reserve
|
8,151
|
8,151
|
Capital reserves
|
1,358,329
|
1,099,333
|
Revenue reserve
|
31,587
|
30,667
|
Total shareholders' funds
|
1,563,999
|
1,304,083
|
Net
asset value per share - debt at par
|
856.5p
|
690.3p
|
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
For
the year ended 31st December 2023
|
2023
|
20221
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cash
flows from operating activities
|
|
|
Net return/(loss) before finance
costs and taxation
|
323,787
|
(137,060)
|
Adjustment for:
|
|
|
Net (gains)/losses on investments
held at fair value through profit or loss
|
(304,636)
|
144,183
|
Net foreign currency exchange
(gains)/losses
|
(5,078)
|
8,319
|
Dividend income
|
(17,733)
|
(19,946)
|
Interest income
|
(1,654)
|
(612)
|
Realised foreign currency exchange
losses on transactions
|
(756)
|
(1,022)
|
Realised foreign currency exchange
(losses)/gains on JPMorgan
|
|
|
USD Liquidity Fund
|
(596)
|
3,739
|
Increase in accrued income and other
debtors
|
(14)
|
(29)
|
Increase/(decrease) in accrued
expenses
|
214
|
(56)
|
Net
cash outflow from operations before dividends and
interest
|
(6,466)
|
(2,484)
|
Dividends received
|
14,423
|
16,413
|
Interest received
|
1,656
|
481
|
Overseas withholding tax
recovered
|
1,182
|
167
|
Net
cash inflow from operating activities
|
10,795
|
14,577
|
Purchases of investments
|
(625,714)
|
(496,876)
|
Sales of investments
|
703,254
|
540,264
|
Net
cash inflow from investing activities
|
77,540
|
43,388
|
Dividends paid
|
(13,292)
|
(13,418)
|
Repurchase of shares into
Treasury
|
(45,108)
|
(35,036)
|
Repayment of bank loan
|
(26,929)
|
(78,558)
|
Draw down of bank loan
|
-
|
78,596
|
Loan interest paid
|
(1,269)
|
(906)
|
Private placement interest
paid
|
(2,007)
|
(1,995)
|
Net
cash outflow from financing activities
|
(88,605)
|
(51,317)
|
(Decrease)/increase in cash and cash
equivalents
|
(270)
|
6,648
|
Cash and cash equivalents at start of
year
|
34,884
|
28,355
|
Foreign currency exchange
movements
|
(407)
|
(119)
|
Cash
and cash equivalents at end of year
|
34,207
|
34,884
|
Cash
and cash equivalents consist of:
|
|
|
Cash and short term
deposits
|
280
|
1,079
|
Cash held in JPMorgan USD Liquidity
Fund
|
33,927
|
33,805
|
Total
|
34,207
|
34,884
|
1 The presentation of the Cash Flow
Statement, as permitted under FRS 102, has been changed so as to
present the reconciliation of 'net return/(loss) before finance
costs and taxation' to 'net cash inflow from operating activities'
on the face of the Cash Flow Statement. Previously, this was shown
by way of note. Interest paid has also been reclassified to
financing activities as this relates to the bank loans and private
placement note. Previously, this was shown under operating
activities. Other than changes in presentation of the certain cash
flow items, there is no change to the cash flows as presented in
previous periods.
Analysis of change in net debt
|
As at
|
|
Other
|
As at
|
|
31st
December
|
|
non-cash
|
31st
December
|
|
2022
|
Cash flows
|
charges
|
2023
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cash
and cash equivalents
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and short term
deposits
|
1,079
|
(799)
|
-
|
280
|
Cash held in JPMorgan USD Liquidity
LVNAV Fund
|
33,805
|
529
|
(407)
|
33,927
|
|
34,884
|
(270)
|
(407)
|
34,207
|
Borrowings
|
|
|
|
|
Debt due within one year
|
(29,096)
|
26,929
|
2,167
|
-
|
Debt due after one year
|
(82,765)
|
-
|
4,626
|
(78,139)
|
|
(111,861)
|
26,929
|
6,793
|
(78,139)
|
Net
debt
|
(76,977)
|
26,659
|
6,386
|
(43,932)
|
Other non-cash charges relate to an
amortisation adjustment on borrowings and foreign currency exchange
gains/(losses).
NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
For
the year ended 31st December 2023
1. Accounting policies
(a) General information and basis of
accounting
The Company is a closed-ended
investment company incorporated in the UK. The address of its
registered office is at 60 Victoria Embankment, London, EC4Y
0JP.
The financial statements are
prepared under the historical cost convention, modified to include
fixed asset investments at fair value, in accordance with the
Companies Act 2006, United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting
Practice ('UK GAAP'), including FRS 102 'The Financial Reporting
Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland' and with the
Statement of Recommended Practice 'Financial Statements of
Investment Trust Companies and Venture Capital Trusts' (the 'SORP')
issued by the Association of Investment Companies in July
2022.
All of the Company's operations are
of a continuing nature.
The Directors have undertaken a
rigorous review of the Company's ability to continue as a going
concern. The Board has, in particular, considered the ongoing
conflicts between Ukraine and Russia and in the Middle East, and
does not believe the Company's going concern status is affected.
The Company's assets, the vast majority of which are investments in
quoted securities which are readily realisable, exceed its
liabilities significantly under all stress test scenarios reviewed
by the Board. Gearing levels and compliance with borrowing
covenants are reviewed by the Board on a regular basis. The
Directors have also assessed the ability of the Company to repay
the amount drawn down under its revolving credit facility, which
expires in August 2025, and are satisfied as to its ability to do
so on account of the ability of the Company to raise new finance
via loans or share issuances, or alternatively through the
realisation of investments in the Company's highly liquid quoted
securities. Furthermore, the Directors are satisfied that the
Company and its key third party service providers have in place
appropriate business continuity plans and confirm they have been
able to maintain service levels through disruption such as that
caused by the pandemic.
Accordingly, the financial
statements have been prepared on the going concern basis as it is
the Directors' reasonable expectation that the Company has adequate
resources to continue in operational existence for a period of
at least 12 months from the date of approval of the financial
statements.
The policies applied in these
financial statements are consistent with those applied in the
preceding year.
2. Dividends
(a) Dividends paid and proposed and
declared
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Dividends paid
|
|
|
2022 Final dividend of 4.75p (2021:
4.50p)
|
8,727
|
8,646
|
2023 Interim dividend of 2.50p (2022:
2.50p)
|
4,565
|
4,772
|
Total dividends paid in the year
|
13,292
|
13,418
|
Dividends declared
|
|
|
2023 Final dividend of 5.25p (2022:
4.75p)
|
9,587
|
8,974
|
All dividends paid and declared in
the period have been funded from the Revenue Reserve.
The dividend proposed in respect of
the year ended 31st December 2022 amounted to £8,974,000. However,
the amount paid amounted to £8,727,000 due to shares repurchased
after the balance sheet date but prior to the share register record
date.
In accordance with the accounting
policy of the Company, the dividend declared in respect of the year
ended 31st December 2023, will be reflected in the financial
statements for the year ending 31st December 2024.
(b) Dividend for the purposes of Section
1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 ('Section
1158')
The requirements of Section 1158 are
considered on the basis of dividends declared in respect of the
financial year, shown below.
The revenue available for
distribution by way of dividend for the year is £14,212,000 (2022:
£14,200,000).
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
2023 Interim dividend of 2.50p (2022:
2.50p)
|
4,565
|
4,772
|
2023 Final dividend of 5.25p (2022:
4.75p)
|
9,587
|
8,974
|
Total
|
14,152
|
13,746
|
The revenue reserve after payment of
the final dividend will amount to £22,000,000 (2022:
£21,693,000).
3. Return/(loss) per share
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Revenue return
|
14,212
|
14,200
|
Capital return/(loss)
|
304,104
|
(157,787)
|
Total return/(loss)
|
318,316
|
(143,587)
|
Weighted average number of shares in
issue during the year
|
183,852,137
|
191,374,674
|
Revenue return per share
|
7.73p
|
7.42p
|
Capital return/(loss) per
share
|
165.41p
|
(82.45)p
|
Total return/(loss) per share
|
173.14p
|
(75.03)p
|
The total return per share
represents both basic and diluted return per share as the Company
has no dilutive shares.
4.
Net asset value per share
The net asset value per Ordinary
share and the net asset value attributable to the Ordinary shares
at the year end are set out below. These were calculated using
182,603,216 (2022: 188,917,810) Ordinary shares in issue at the
year end (excluding Treasury shares).
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
Net asset value
attributable
|
Net asset value
attributable
|
|
£'000
|
pence
|
£'000
|
pence
|
Net
asset value - debt at par
|
1,563,999
|
856.5
|
1,304,083
|
690.3
|
Add: amortised cost of US$65 million
2.55%
|
|
|
|
|
Private Placement Feb
2031
|
50,727
|
27.8
|
53,723
|
28.4
|
Less: fair value of US$65 million
2.55%
|
|
|
|
|
Private Placement Feb
2031
|
(45,636)
|
(25.0)
|
(45,913)
|
(24.3)
|
Add: amortised cost of US$35 million
2.32%
|
|
|
|
|
Private Placement Oct
2032
|
27,412
|
15.0
|
29,042
|
15.4
|
Less: fair value of US$35 million
2.32%
|
|
|
|
|
Private Placement Oct
2032
|
(23,328)
|
(12.8)
|
(23,522)
|
(12.5)
|
Net
asset value - debt at fair value
|
1,573,174
|
861.5
|
1,317,413
|
697.3
|
5.
Non-statutory accounts
The financial information set out
above does not constitute the Company's statutory accounts for the
year ended 31 December 2023 but is derived from those accounts.
Statutory accounts for the year ended 31 December 2023 will be
delivered to the Registrar of Companies in due course. The Annual
Report and Financial Statements include the Report of the
Independent Auditors which was unqualified and did not contain a
statement under either section 498(2) or section 498(3) of the
Companies Act 2006
Neither the contents of the
Company's website nor the contents of any website accessible from
hyperlinks on the Company's
website (or any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part
of, this announcement.
26th March 2024
For further information:
Priyanka Vijay Anand
JPMorgan Funds
Limited
0800 20 40 20 (or +44 1268 44 44 70)
ENDS
A copy of the Annual Report will
shortly be submitted to the FCA's National Storage Mechanism and
will be available for inspection at https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism
The Annual Report will be available
on the Company's website at www.jpmamerican.co.uk
where up-to-date information on the Company,
including daily NAV and share prices, factsheets and portfolio
information can also be found.
JPMORGAN FUNDS LIMITED