RNS Announcement
The Scottish American Investment
Company P.L.C.
Legal Entity Identifier:
549300NF03XVC5IFB447
Regulated Information
Classification: Additional regulated information required to be
disclosed under the applicable laws and regulations.
The following is the results
announcement for the year to 31 December 2023 which was approved by
the Board on 14 February 2024.
Results for the year to 31 December 2023 and Board and Manager
updates
¾ Dividend - The full year dividend, including a recommended
final dividend of 3.80p, is 14.10p per share. This is 2% higher
than the 2022 dividend, extending the Company's record of dividend
increases to fifty consecutive years. This year's increase is
modest when set against last year's 9% increase and, whilst
inflation has moderated somewhat since last year, does not match
the annual rate of inflation of 4% as measured by CPI over
2023.
¾ Revenues - Income was £30m (2022 - £30m) and earnings per
share were 13.48p (2022 - 13.82p).
¾ Total return* - SAINTS delivered a strong absolute
return over the year: its share price total return was 8.2% and the
net asset value total return (capital and income with borrowing at
fair) was 11.8%. However, SAINTS' returns did not keep up with
global equities† which returned 15.7% over 2023. SAINTS'
share price return has, in common with investment trusts generally,
been affected by a broadening of discounts.
¾ In a
year when the market's returns were driven by a handful of large US
technology companies SAINTS' relative performance has been affected
by both its focus on equities which pay dividends and its
investments in diversifying assets which enhance the portfolio's
yield. Both are features which the Board regards as intrinsic
strengths of SAINTS in its pursuit of its objectives over the long
term.
¾ SAINTS aims to grow its dividend ahead of inflation over the
long term. Over the past ten years SAINTS has increased its
dividend at an annualised rate of 3.3% per annum, which compares
with UK CPI of 2.9%.
¾ SAINTS also aims to deliver attractive returns over the long
term - SAINTS' NAV total return (with borrowings at fair value) has
exceeded that of both global equities generally and that of the
global equity income sector over the past five and ten
years.
¾ Outlook - The Board remains of the view that a long-term
approach based on investing globally for sustainable growth is the
best route to achieving SAINTS' aims. In addition, we are
encouraged that the Managers have continued to find new and
attractive opportunities. We retain great confidence in the
Managers, and this confidence has been further strengthened by the
operational performance of SAINTS' holdings over the past
year.
Board update
In April 2023, it was announced that
Bronwyn Curtis would not be seeking re-election to the Board in
2024. It remains her intention not to do so, and she will step down
at the conclusion of this year's AGM. At the Board's request, Dame
Mariot Leslie has agreed, subject to her re-election as a Director,
to take over as Senior Independent Director following Bronwyn's
retirement.
Manager update
Toby Ross is today stepping back
from his role as manager of SAINTS to concentrate on his other
responsibilities at Baillie Gifford. The Board thanks Toby for his
significant contribution to SAINTS in recent years, and looks
forward to continuing to work with James Dow as manager and Ross
Mathison as deputy manager in the coming years.
* See Glossary of Terms
and Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this
announcement.
† As
measured by the total return of the FTSE All-World Index (in
sterling terms).
Source: Morningstar/LSEG/Baillie
Gifford and relevant underlying index providers
14 February 2024
SAINTS' objective is to deliver real
dividend growth by increasing capital and growing income. Its
policy is to invest mainly in equity markets, but other investments
may be held from time to time including bonds, property and other
asset classes.
The Company is managed by Baillie
Gifford, the Edinburgh based fund management group with around £224
billion under management and advice as at 14 February
2024.
Past performance is not a guide to
future performance. SAINTS is a listed UK company. As a result, the
value of its shares and any income from those shares is not
guaranteed and could go down as well as up. You may not get back
the amount you invested. As SAINTS invests in overseas securities,
changes in the rates of exchange may also cause the value of your
investment (and any income it may pay) to go down or up. You can
find up to date performance information about SAINTS on the SAINTS'
page of the Managers' website saints-it.com.
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.
For further information please
contact:
James Dow and Ross Mathison,
Managers, The Scottish American Investment Company
P.L.C.
Tel: 0131 275 2000
James Budden, Baillie Gifford &
Co
Tel: 0131 275 2000
Jonathan Atkins, Director, Four
Communications
Tel: 0203 920 0555 or 07872
495396
Chairman's statement
SAINTS' objective is to deliver real
dividend growth by increasing capital and growing income. The Board
is recommending a final dividend which will bring the total
dividends for the year to 14.10p per share, an increase of 2% over
the previous year. The Company continues to meet its objective of
growing dividends ahead of inflation over the long term, and the
recommended dividend will also extend the Company's record of
raising its dividend to fifty consecutive years.
Overview
2023 has been a strange year for the
world and in investment markets. Macroeconomics and geopolitics
have remained to the fore, but the intense focus on inflation and
the path of interest rates, and on whether the landing will be hard
or soft, has meant that economic news which seems bad has often
been taken by the market as good. A war is raging in Europe, yet
the vagaries of US and European politics have tested the strength
of Western support, even as the crisis in the Middle East has
diverted attention elsewhere. Tensions with and challenges within
China continue to have far reaching effects, from onshoring in the
US to heightened fears over the future of Artificial Intelligence
('AI'). And at the coalface, companies have had to contend with
rising debt costs, a banking crisis in the US, customers with
falling real wages and the prospect of faltering demand.
However, whilst there have been many
causes of concern, as envisaged a year ago economies have continued
to grow. Central banks may have been slow to respond to the
inflationary threat. But they have subsequently shown admirable
independence in doing what is necessary to bring inflation under
control. Inflationary pressures have subsided, and interest rate
expectations have moved downwards, providing some support in the
final months of the year both to equity and property prices.
The market has climbed the proverbial wall of worry, helped by
earnings which, collectively and thus far, have continued to rise.
But the pattern of performance within the market has been unusual:
its gains have been highly concentrated, driven by a handful of
very large technology companies in the US which are taken as being
in an AI sweetspot, augmented by beneficiaries of strong energy
prices and high interest rates.
In this environment, SAINTS'
emphasis on steady earnings growth and dependability has stood the
Company in good stead in terms of both the operational performance
of its holdings and its absolute NAV performance. But
unsurprisingly its NAV returns have not kept pace with the market
and, in the context of a widening of discounts across the
investment trust sector, SAINTS' share price has not kept pace with
its NAV over the year.
For the long term investor, however,
it is the underlying growth and the growth prospects of SAINTS'
holdings which are of most importance. And here the Managers'
Review (below) tells an encouraging story.
Given the long-term nature of the
Company's objectives, it is worth emphasising both SAINTS'
successful record of raising its dividend ahead of inflation over
the long term, and the strong total returns it has delivered. In
particular, as SAINTS' 150th anniversary year draws to a close, the
Board and the managers are pleased that 2023 marked the fiftieth
successive year of dividend growth for SAINTS'
shareholders.
Dividend and Inflation
The Board recommends a final
dividend of 3.80p which will take the full year dividend to 14.10p
per share, 2% higher than the 2022 dividend of 13.82p. This year's
increase is modest when set against last year's 9% increase and,
whilst inflation has moderated since last year, does not
match the annual rate of inflation of 4% as measured by CPI over
2023.
It remains the Company's objective
to deliver real dividend growth over the long term, and over the
last ten years the Company's dividends have in the round increased
at a rate (3.3% per annum) which has been above the rate of
inflation (2.9% per annum).
Revenues
Whilst investment income has
remained steady at £30m, earnings per share dipped to 13.48p over
the year, a decrease of 2.5%. Operational performance of the
holdings has been generally encouraging. Equity income has fallen a
little, due to a reduction in special dividends during the year.
Infrastructure dividends grew healthily, while income from bonds
dropped back due to a combination of exchange rates and divestments
to fund property purchases. Rental income from property was a
little lower, as the property managers made a number of sales with
a view to reinvesting the proceeds to enhance the quality,
dependability and lease length of the portfolio: to this end, the
purchase of the M23 Pease Pottage motorway service area, which was
completed after the year end, is a welcome addition to the
portfolio. Despite all that, and modest share issuance, revenues
per share before tax were broadly in line with last year. However,
there was an increase in the rate of taxation during the year,
which was partly due to withholding taxes on dividends, and partly
a function of a higher corporation tax rate in the UK. This
increase in taxation largely accounts for the slight drop in
earnings per share.
Both managers (Baillie Gifford and,
for the Company's property investments, OLIM) continue to focus on
supporting the dependability and the future growth of the Company's
dividend in line with its objective.
Total Return Performance
SAINTS delivered a strong absolute
return over the year: its share price total return was 8.2% and the
net asset value total return (capital and income with borrowing at
fair) was 11.8%. However, SAINTS' returns did not keep up with
global equities (as measured by the total of return of the FTSE
All-World Index in sterling terms) which returned 15.7% over 2023.
As mentioned above, SAINTS' share price return has, in common with
investment trusts generally, been affected by a broadening of
discounts.
There were two principal reasons why
SAINTS' NAV return did not keep pace with the market, both of which
relate to features which the Board regard as intrinsic strengths of
SAINTS. The first is the nature of its equity portfolio, which is
built for and has delivered dependability and growth in income and
capital over the long term. Many of the large technology related
companies which have dominated market returns over the year do not
sit well with this approach, and so SAINTS has not owned them.
Consequently, the equity portfolio, which accounts for the major
part of your Company's assets, has lagged the market.
The second reason relates to SAINTS'
diversification of assets and in particular to its property
investments. These bring benefits in terms of diversifying sources
of return, spreading risk and boosting revenues, but will not
always keep pace with equities. This year, they have not done so,
and the return from the property portfolio has been
negative.
The Managers and your Board have a
long-term perspective and we would therefore encourage shareholders
to assess your Company's performance over the long term. SAINTS has
delivered a strong NAV return of 84.5% over the past five years,
handsomely outperforming the 72.7% average return of the Global
equity income sector and the 77.8% return of global equities as
measured by the Company's benchmark. It is noteworthy also that
SAINTS' property holdings have returned 39.2% over the past five
years, outperforming the property sector more generally.
The principal contributors to and
detractors from performance and the changes to the equity, property
and bond investments are explained in more detail in the Managers'
Review.
Borrowings
In recent years SAINTS' long term
borrowings have been refinanced and modestly increased at
advantageous interest rates. The cost of these borrowings in just
under 3% per annum.
The book value of the total
borrowings is £94.7m which, at the year end, was equivalent to
approximately 10.1% of shareholders' funds. The estimated market or
fair value of the borrowings was £68.2m, an increase from the
previous year's value of £65.5m.
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG)
It is important to emphasise that
the Board of SAINTS recognises the importance of considering
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) factors when making
investments, and in acting as a responsible steward of capital. We
consider that Board oversight of such matters is an important part
of our responsibility to shareholders, and SAINTS' ESG Policy is
available to view on the Company's website (saints-it.com).
The Board has been strongly
supportive of Baillie Gifford's approach and of their constructive
engagement with the companies you own, and with potential holdings,
in relation to crucially important challenges including climate
change. The Board is also supportive of OLIM's approach in relation
to property, and in particular of its consideration of
environmental factors including climate change in assessing the
suitability of SAINTS' investments. I would encourage shareholders
to read SAINTS' annual Stewardship Report which can also be
accessed on the Company's website (saints-it.com). There is also
further detail in the Managers' Review.
Issuance and buybacks
Over the year the Company has raised
£8.3m from new share issuance, at a premium to net asset value
prevailing from time to time in order to satisfy investor demand.
This is the ninth year in a row when the Company has been able to
issue shares. Such issuance serves the interests of existing
shareholders by enhancing net asset value, reducing costs per share
and helping further to improve liquidity. No shares were bought
back during the year.
The
Board and the Managers
In April 2023, it was announced that
Bronwyn Curtis would not be seeking re-election to the Board in
2024. It remains her intention not to do so, and she will step down
at the conclusion of this year's AGM. We thank her for her wise
contribution over many years of service as a Director and, more
recently, as the Senior Independent Director. At the Board's
request, Dame Mariot Leslie has agreed, subject to her re-election
as a Director, to take over as Senior Independent Director
following Bronwyn's retirement.
The Board, assisted by external
consultants, conducted a recruitment exercise during 2023 and in
November were pleased to announce Padmesh Shukla will be joining
the Board on 20 February 2024. Padmesh is the Chief Investment
Officer of the Transport For London Pension Fund, and has over 25
years of investment experience, including 12 years in his current
role at TFL. He was formerly head of Climate Change Financing at
the London Development Agency, and prior to that he had worked at
the World Bank, as a Researcher at Harvard and in real estate. He
is currently a member of the Church of England Pensions Investment
Committee. His appointment will fall to be ratified by shareholders
at the AGM in 2024.
It was announced at the beginning of
August that Ross Mathison had become deputy manager of SAINTS. Toby
Ross is today stepping back from his role as manager of SAINTS to
concentrate on his other responsibilities at Baillie Gifford. The
Board thanks Toby for his significant contribution to SAINTS in
recent years, and looks forward to continuing to work with James
Dow as manager and Ross Mathison in the coming years.
Outlook
The coming year will be full of
political uncertainty, with voters in countries representing half
the world's population going to the polls. However, in my
view, commentators tend to overemphasise the role of politics in
economic performance. Of course, there are occasional
outliers - France in 1981 and the UK in the autumn of 2022 come to
mind - but poor policy choices are generally corrected sooner than
later. And independent central banks, and the rule of law,
provide a degree of protection. The recent resilience of the world
economy has been encouraging. But the full force of higher interest
rates has yet to work its way through the system. As it does,
growth could become more challenging and corporate results may fall
below expectations. Whether the landing is soft or hard, it is
likely to be a year in which pricing power and balance sheet
strength are of growing importance. At the same time, both
the changing world and entrenched competitive advantages will
continue to present opportunities for secular growth at the company
level. And lower valuations will provide buying opportunities
across asset classes.
As a Board, we believe a long-term
approach based on investing globally for sustainable growth is the
best route to achieving SAINTS' aim of growing the dividend ahead
of inflation over time. As we look ahead, we also take considerable
comfort from the nature of SAINTS' investments, and from the
managers' emphasis on quality, on dependability and on growth far
out into the future. We are encouraged that, as is outlined further
in the Managers' Review, Baillie Gifford have continued to find new
and attractive opportunities, and we also believe that both the
quality and duration of SAINTS' property portfolio have been
enhanced over the past year.
SAINTS has been working for
individual investors for 150 years. It is built to help
shareholders' income keep pace with inflation, as well as providing
capital growth. And it is built for resilience.
AGM
The AGM will be held at 11.30am on
Thursday 4 April 2024 at Baillie Gifford's offices at Calton
Square, 1 Greenside Row, Edinburgh. The meeting will be followed by
a presentation from the managers. Shareholders are cordially
invited to attend the meeting and presentation.
I would remind shareholders that
they are able to submit proxy voting forms before the applicable
deadline and also to direct any questions or comments for the Board
in advance of the meeting through the Company's Managers, either by
emailing trustenquiries@bailliegifford.com or
calling 0800 917 2112 (Baillie Gifford may record your
call).
Finally, my fellow Directors and I
send you all our very best wishes for the year ahead.
Lord Macpherson of Earl's
Court
Chairman
14 February 2024
For a definition of terms see Glossary of Terms and
Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this
announcement
Source: LSEG/Morningstar/Baillie Gifford and relevant
underlying index providers. See disclaimer at the end of this
announcement.
Past performance is not a guide to future
performance.
Managers' review
During the past few years it seems
that some parts of the media have become, for want of a better
word, hysterical. Even the financial press, which used to be
renowned for walking a line between dry and tedious, has often
joined the fray of shouty headlines and breathless articles. This
is understandable. Technology has disrupted the business models of
traditional media channels. In a digital world, whoever
conjures the most shocking headlines will gather the most clicks.
And whoever accumulates the most clicks might be able to keep their
jobs.
The headlines blaring at investors
at the start of 2023 were alarming. Inflation was proving
"untameable", central banks were hiking "too aggressively", and an
economic "hard landing" was certain. Investor confidence
declined, and stock markets fell. By March, the mood had
changed. Inflation seemed to be peaking. Many of the grim
predictions at the start of the year, like crashing house prices
and tumbling profits, were swiftly forgotten. In their place
appeared two words promising great riches: "Artificial
Intelligence". The stock market began a triumphant rise,
which would continue until the summer.
Gloom then returned. Economic
data looked "hot", and inflation seemed persistent. Stocks
fell. By November, behold! The data looked more
friendly. Fears of war between the US and China, which had
generated dire forecasts only months earlier, now receded. The
stock market began another charge upwards, buoyed by a new hope:
interest rate reductions. Stock indices reached new heights at the
dawn of 2024. "Time to buy!" was the headline.
For the long-term investor, who is
earnestly attempting to grow their capital and income over a period
of many years, this hysteria is unhelpful. It is rather like
trying to hold a conversation at a dinner-party while being
repeatedly interrupted by a drunken guest, who veers endlessly
between loud euphoria and wallowing self-pity. An unfortunate
distraction.
Over the multi-year periods that
matter to serious savers and investors, stock prices and dividends
tend largely to follow company earnings. The key task for portfolio
managers, therefore, is to identify companies with strong prospects
of growing their earnings over many years. These prospects are
unlikely to be affected by the monthly mood swings of the
media. It is a job best done when sober.
We keep this long-term perspective
in mind when we look back at 2023. In the headlines it was a
year of enormous ups and downs. But what about the
investments in SAINTS' portfolio? Did they largely deliver
in-line with our long-term expectations for their growth in
earnings and dividends?
The short answer is: yes. The
more nuanced answer is that some grew faster while others saw
earnings fall. But in almost every case we are satisfied that their
long-term growth remains on-track. We expect this to drive
continued compounding in capital and dividends in the years ahead.
Here are some of the highlights.
Equity portfolio highlights
The total return from the equity
portfolio† last year was 13.9%.
One of the standouts from the
portfolio was Atlas Copco, the global compressor and industrial
tool business, based in Sweden. This well-managed company is
religiously focused on innovation to drive growth, and it is always
on the look-out for strong niche businesses to acquire. Revenues in
2023 increased 22%, of which 8% came from acquisitions. Operating
profit grew 23% and earnings per share rose by more than 30%.
The dividend was raised by 22%, while maintaining a prudent payout
ratio below 50%. Some of the strength in Atlas's growth last year
was cyclical, and we would not expect the company to continue
growing at these rates every single year. But taking a longer-term
perspective, we note that over the past five years the company has
compounded its earnings higher at an average rate of 10% a year,
while the dividend has grown by 12% a year. This is exactly
the sort of inflation-busting growth that drives real capital and
dividend appreciation for SAINTS' shareholders, over the long-term.
It's exactly the reason we invest almost 100% of SAINTS' NAV in
growing companies that pay dividends, and take a long-term mindset
amidst the noise of the markets.
Other strong performers in the
equity portfolio last year included Watsco, the heating,
ventilation and air conditioning distributor, and Fastenal, the
industrial equipment distributor. Again, both are companies
with terrific track records of entrepreneurship and growth, which
have compounded their earnings and dividends at inflation-beating
rates for many years. They continued to deliver in 2023, and we
remain optimistic about their potential for continued growth in the
years to come.
Novo Nordisk, the Danish
pharmaceutical company, was another highlight of the year.
Its pioneering medicine for appetite control, which its scientists
have spent years investigating, whilst running clinical trials of
thousands of patients to establish that it is both effective and
safe, has resulted in significant earnings growth at the
company. Since our investment in 2016 for SAINTS, it has been
a strong performer. Earnings have broadly doubled, as has its
dividend, meaning compound growth of about 10% per
year. In 2023 there was a continued flow of good data
from its clinical trials, showing reduced risk of heart attacks for
patients. This data is likely to drive continued uptake of its new
medicine, and revenue and profit growth in the years
ahead.
Our natural inclination is to let
winners run, to capture the true benefits of compounding. But we
are also mindful of diversification, so we trimmed the Novo Nordisk
holding a little during the year, to prevent it from dominating the
portfolio. It remains a large holding however, and we look
forward with optimism to its continued growth.
Of the almost 60 holdings in the
equity portfolio, we estimate that about a dozen saw a reduction in
profits compared with 2022. In most of these cases our
investigations suggest the root cause was cyclical and short-term
in nature. For example, Sonic Healthcare, the lab testing
company, and Roche, the pharmaceutical company, both saw their
earnings drop in 2023. In both cases this was due partly to the
wind-down of emergency COVID testing, which had lifted their
profits in the past couple of years. The waning of this temporary
boost does not undermine our view that both companies have good
long-term potential for earnings and dividends growth over the next
10 years.
Not all of our investments will, of
course be successful. We try hard to be patient, as
long-term managers, but sometimes it becomes apparent that our
investment case is simply wrong, and that growth is not
materialising to the extent we hoped. In these cases we will
divest, and put the capital to work in better companies. A small
number of holdings had a weak 2023 that could not be excused by any
cyclical headwind. In some cases our review of them led to a
re-evaluation of their future prospects. During the year we
divested from six holdings.
One of them was Want Want, the
Chinese rice cracker and soft drink manufacturer. It had been a
disappointing investment, with low earnings growth over a number of
years. At first we thought this was due to temporary input cost
pressure, impacting margins, and we patiently maintained our
investment while the company put in place a number of actions to
restore profits and growth. Over time, however, we recognised a
more concerning issue. The Board seemed to have become too
focused on short-term profits, which had made the company slow to
recognise changing consumer preferences in China. It had resisted a
shift towards modern distribution channels, and had failed to
develop key new products. After visiting the company in China
during 2023, and seeing limited prospects for change, we sold the
position.
We also sold SAINTS' holding in
Cullen Frost, the US regional bank. When we invested several
years ago our hope had been that continued growth in the population
of Texas, which like most 'SunBelt' states is experiencing steady
inflows of people, combined with the bank's huge deposit base and
strong brand, would allow Cullen Frost to grow its loan book and
earnings substantially. But progress has been frustratingly
slow, with intense competition in the local market. At the
start of 2023 the fragility of the US banking system was
highlighted by a series of local bank runs. Cullen Frost was not
directly affected, but it changed our view of the risk-reward
ratio: limited growth, with the potential for the equity to be
wiped out. We moved on.
National Instruments was the third
complete sale. This followed a very attractive bid for the
company, which caused the share price to shoot up. We saw
little advantage in waiting for the deal to complete, so divested
from the shares. It was a similar story at Silicon Motion,
where the share price rose following an acquisition approach. The
bid then became mired in regulatory issues and we decided to
divest, even though the share price was somewhat below the bid
price. The bid was later withdrawn and the share price fell,
so this has turned out to be a profitable decision.
The fifth divestment was Linea
Directa, the Spanish insurance company. The shares have proven to
be highly illiquid since we invested two years ago, which meant we
struggled to make this into the size of holding we envisaged. With
no plan in sight from the company to help improve liquidity, we
decided to divest the holding.
Finally, Rio Tinto. This has been a
longstanding holding, even by SAINTS' standards, dating back to the
days of RTZ in the 1980s. The company has a terrific
competitive position in its core business, built around the
low-cost iron ore mines of western Australia. The past decade
has been especially strong for its earnings and dividend growth,
with rising demand from Chinese customers combined with limited new
supply, driving the price of iron ore higher. But in the past
few years we have started to see the outlook deteriorate.
Mining companies, including Rio Tinto, are starting to invest huge
sums to bring on new mines, while demand in China risks plateauing
as parts of its economy mature. At the same time, the cost of
mining is starting to rise sharply. Iron ore is used in steel
mills, and the production of steel unfortunately results in huge
emissions of carbon dioxide. As steel mills are changing to
meet environmental goals, iron ore mines need to follow suit.
A prime example is Rio Tinto's investment in a new mine in Guinea,
where the output is more suited to low-carbon steel
production. Following a series of governance failings over
the years, we are concerned about the company's ability to manage
this investment, in a country that is fraught with political,
environmental and social risks. Our expectation is that the next
decade is likely to see the company's margins, profits and dividend
growth all put under serious pressure. We divested from the
shares.
New
purchases
The great attraction of long-term
equity investing, at least when done with sobriety, is the endless
stream of opportunities to invest shareholders' funds in companies
with strong prospects for growth. During the year we looked
at many different names, each with its own attractions. In
five cases we took the opportunity to invest in a new holding where
we believe the long-term results could be very rewarding. Often we
invested at a time when the markets felt miserable and others were
selling the shares and driving the price lower.
US-listed Home Depot is a DIY
retailer with a very strong culture of service and innovation. It
has a well-established brand with consumers and is building out its
service in the professional trade, which we expect to grow earnings
and dividends over the next 5 to 10 years. The stock market has
been fretting about the impact of high interest rates on the US
housing market, and by implication the company's sales. But having
followed the company for over 20 years, we know this is easily
over-played. Most US homeowners take 30-year fixed rate
mortgages, so the housing market is less sensitive to rates than
one might think. We see this as an opportunity to invest in
long-term growth at an attractive share price, and accordingly took
a holding in the shares.
Coloplast is a Danish manufacturer
of ostomy, incontinence, urology and wound care products, with
significant European and global market shares. Its product
engineering strengths in adhesives technology, combined with a
mindset of continuous innovation, have enabled the company to
develop profitable niche positions in markets with good prospects
of continued compounding: we are hopeful that earnings and
dividends will grow at an attractive rate for a very long time. A
strong commitment to the dividend alongside this growth make it a
good fit for the portfolio.
French-listed Eurofins Scientific is
a global lab business focused on testing related to food and the
environment. Over the past three decades, the company has invested
relentlessly in an industry-leading, internally developed
technology platform and created a global network of labs. Combined
with structural market growth, due to factors such as regulation,
we expect this to provide solid foundations for its earnings and
dividend growth, with rising returns on capital, during the next
decade and beyond.
Texas Instruments is the world's
largest supplier of 'analog chips': the semiconductors that deal
with real-world inputs such as sound, temperature and power. Its
dominant position is built on its low-cost business model, which
allows it to produce these chips at scale and price them
competitively. Over the years it has built up a huge library of
designs and many of these chips are still in production after
decades on the market, providing the company with very long-lived
and profitable revenue streams. In the decade ahead, we expect
growth to be driven by secular trends such as the digitisation of
industrial and automotive functions, the ongoing building of
datacenters and the energy transition. The company is well-managed,
it has a strong balance sheet, and is committed to paying a
progressive dividend. The market has been worrying about the
short-term impact on margins of the company's planned capacity
expansion, which has led to a decline in the valuation multiple
applied to the earnings. We took this as an opportunity to invest
SAINTS' capital.
UK-listed Diageo is the world's
largest spirits maker, with a dominant position in the US market,
and a broad portfolio of brands that are recognised and sold
globally including Johnnie Walker, Gordon's and Smirnoff. Our
research over the years has highlighted its world-leading marketing
and brand-building capabilities. We expect global consumption of
spirits to grow steadily in the next decade as consumers modify
their behaviour to drink 'less but better'. And thanks to Diageo's
expertise in marketing and brand-building, we believe the company
should be able to capture a large share of this growth. Combined
with a clear commitment to pay a resilient and steadily growing
dividend, we believe it can deliver many years of steady compound
growth. The shares have de-rated due to fears of a short-term
inventory overhang in the spirits industry, following post-COVID
restocking by bars and restaurants. We took this as an
opportunity to invest in the company.
Challenges
Although the equity portfolio
performed well operationally in 2023, in two respects it fell
short. First, we must acknowledge that the total return was
behind global equity markets, as measured by the FTSE All-World
Index (in sterling terms). This can be explained by the large
weight in the index of a small number of technology-related
companies, which delivered very large share price appreciation
during 2023. An example is Nvidia, the semiconductor
manufacturer, which has a strong position in the market for AI
('Artificial Intelligence') computing and whose share price rose
dramatically last year.
SAINTS' strategy is focused on the
steady, long-term compounding of earnings and dividends. Some
of these large technology companies, such as Microsoft and Apple,
are an excellent fit with this philosophy. We also have a
number of investments which should benefit from the growth expected
in Artificial Intelligence, including Microsoft but also names such
as TSMC, the semiconductor manufacturer that produces most of
Nvidia's chips. However, some of the largest tech companies see
wild swings in profits from year to year, and many of them do not
pay dividends. We do not invest in such companies, even if
this means that in some years we miss out on their share price
appreciation. We believe that over the long-term SAINTS'
approach will still perform well in terms of its core objective:
growing shareholders capital and income ahead of inflation, with
resilience across cycles.
Secondly, we must also observe that
dividends from the equity portfolio were broadly unchanged during
last year. Of the £23.0m of dividend revenue in the year,
revenue from the equity portfolio was essentially flat at £21.5m.
(The remaining £1.5m of dividends was from the infrastructure
equity portfolio.) Of course, we would prefer it if revenue
grew every year. But in 2023 there was a notable absence of
special dividends paid by the portfolio's holdings.
Typically, these account for about 5% of equity portfolio revenue,
with the other 95% coming from 'ordinary' regular dividends. In
2023 there were remarkably few special dividends paid out, perhaps
a function of economic uncertainty. The result was that,
although the portfolio's ordinary dividends grew at a mid-single
digit rate, the absence of special dividends resulted in total
dividends remaining flat, year-over-year. Our expectation is
that, going forward, normal growth will resume. Indeed, it
may even accelerate a touch in 2024, assuming special dividends
return.
In summary, as headlines blared and
markets gyrated in 2023, the vast majority of the holdings in
SAINTS' equity portfolio continued to deliver solid compounding of
earnings. We made five new investments during the year, while
divesting from six others. Total return performance fell a little
short of global markets during the year, although it remained
strong in absolute terms. Dividend income was flat, but we are
sanguine about this one-year pause given that the principal
underlying cause was the timing of special
dividends.
We continue the sober, but
ultimately very rewarding work of searching the world for
exceptional companies where we see strong prospects for long-term
growth.
Other investments
One of the advantages of the
investment trust structure is the ability, certainly for SAINTS, to
borrow at attractive, fixed rates over long periods of time.
We can then invest this funding in low-risk assets where we expect
the return to substantially beat the cost of borrowing. This
generates additional capital returns and income for
shareholders.
SAINTS currently has borrowings
totalling £95m. We believe this is prudent within the context of
the gross assets of the Company, which are around £1bn. The
average cost of borrowing is 3%, and the borrowings on average will
not mature until some time in the 2040s. The proceeds are
invested in a mixture of property, fixed income and
infrastructure-related assets where over time we expect returns to
significantly beat the cost of borrowing.
Infrastructure portfolio
SAINTS invests in infrastructure
assets through listed equity vehicles. In the short-term these
investments sometimes behave like equities, but over the long-term
we expect their performance to be dominated by the performance of
the underlying infrastructure assets. The portfolio proved
resilient in 2023, despite the headwind of sharply rising interest
rates. The total return during the year was 3%.
One notable standout was Greencoat
UK Wind, the windfarm owner and operator, which raised its
distribution by 12% thanks to elevated power prices. The
portfolio's holding in Terna, the Italian grid operator, was
another highlight: its ongoing capital investments to connect
renewable energy sources formed a bedrock for growth in its
regulated asset base, leading to rising earnings and in turn to
dividend growth of 8%. We see a similar growth opportunity at
Exelon, a new purchase for the infrastructure portfolio, which owns
grid infrastructure in mostly left-leaning States in the northeast
of the US: renewable upgrades should drive growth in its regulated
asset base and its future dividends.
The year was more challenging for
Chinese toll road operator Jiangsu Expressway, which owns most of
the major routes north of Shanghai. Over time we expect
traffic growth in and out of Shanghai to drive revenue and earnings
growth at the company. But last year it faced a slowing local
economy, and it merely held its dividend flat rather than
delivering the growth we were hoping for.
Broadly-speaking, however, it was a
solid year for the infrastructure portfolio.
Property portfolio
The property portfolio invests in a
small number of directly held assets. The portfolio had a
challenging year. The total return was -1.8%.
Given the circumstances - a
combination of rising interest rates and a weakening economy - it
is perhaps not surprising that property prices generally fell last
year. SAINTS' portfolio has not been immune from this, and the
performance of the portfolio has been comparable to that of the
broader commercial property sector. This is due in part to its
focus on strong covenants, long leases and inflation linked rents.
The manager, OLIM, has rightly steered clear of many of the
structurally-challenged areas of the market, notably the office
market, which has faced both cyclical challenges as well as
over-supply due to changing working practices.
Over the course of the year, the
manager made a number of sales and new purchases to avoid the worst
of these headwinds and further bolster the resilience and rental
growth prospects of the portfolio going forward. It is worth
noting that by the end of 2023, SAINTS' property portfolio was
essentially spread across three sectors, all of whose prospects
appear structurally sound: hotels and holiday homes;
supermarkets; and industrials. The tenants in these
properties are the likes of Aldi, Tesco and Premier Inn
(Whitbread), and the leases and covenants are of good
quality. We remain optimistic that long-term returns from
this portfolio will beat the cost of borrowing.
Bond portfolio
The bond portfolio had a strong
year. The total return was 9.5%.
Readers may wonder how bond holdings
can play a role in SAINTS, given the Company's focus on
inflation-beating growth. However, as the almost 10% return
from the bond portfolio showed last year, the right names can
deliver good real returns, substantially beating the cost of
SAINTS' borrowings, as well as being as a useful
diversifier.
The highlight here was the strength
of SAINTS' emerging market sovereign bond holdings. The
history of defaults among many emerging market countries is
surprisingly good. Large economies such as Brazil are
sufficiently diverse and robust that, as long as their institutions
manage them with sufficient fiscal prudence, which of course we
monitor, there is unlikely to be any serious risk of the government
defaulting on its debt. Despite this, these sovereign bonds
often trade at very high yields, far in excess of the risk of
default and SAINTS' cost of borrowing.
In our view, the real risk with
these bonds is not defaults, but inflation. Emerging markets
are prone to bouts of rising prices, which can devalue their
currency significantly. Which in turn can mean that a (say) 8%
yield in local currency can over time become much less valuable in
Sterling. For this reason, we often prefer to invest in US
dollar or Euro-denominated sovereign bonds from these countries.
These still pay attractive yields but without the same currency
risk.
In 2023, SAINTS earned attractive
yields from its portfolio of these bonds, whilst also enjoying some
capital appreciation. At the start of the year markets had been
worrying about inflation in many emerging economies. But central
banks in these countries often proved far swifter to raise rates
during 2022 than, by comparison, the Bank of England and US Federal
Reserve. Perhaps their history of inflation made EM central
banks a little more alert at the wheel, when inflation started to
rise. This drove good results in 2023 as inflation was tamed, and
their sovereign bond prices rose accordingly.
ESG
In previous years we have written
about the importance of environmental, social and governance
factors when investing in companies for the long-term. The
odds of returns compounding are significantly reduced if companies
ignore their impacts on wider stakeholders. Companies whose
operations result in significant damage to the environment, for
example, run a real risk of regulation hurting their future
earnings, or some of their customers simply abandoning them.
We pay close attention to this for every SAINTS' holding, indeed we
evaluate these risks using our own in-house developed framework, to
help avoid such problems and to maximise the odds of long-term
growth.
Earlier, we mentioned the case of
Rio Tinto. One of the factors influencing our decision to divest
was a lack of confidence in its ability to deal with the many risks
of investing large sums in Guinea, a country with many governance
challenges, for a project with significant reputational risk if its
environmental and social impacts are not well-managed. We
also noted the significant cost of changing its products, which
currently result in large carbon emissions by its
customers.
On the positive side, our research
into Novo Nordisk continues to suggest it is a company which
operates with very high standards, and well-equipped to manage its
impacts on stakeholders. As a healthcare company producing a
new drug that is in high demand, Novo Nordisk will undoubtedly be
subject to a high level of scrutiny in the years ahead. For
it to deliver the growth we expect of it, we are keen to see the
management and Board continuing to operate to the highest standard.
Speaking to observers of the company in the healthcare industry,
this certainly appears to be the case. We will continue to
engage with the senior management team to stress the importance of
setting a very high bar in terms of business practices - for
example around pricing, and data privacy of patients - so that the
company maximises the odds of delivering its potential growth in
the years ahead.
SAINTS in the year ahead
Shareholders may well have noted
that SAINTS' earnings in 2023 did not quite cover the recommended
full-year dividend. The earnings per share were 13.48p while
the dividend is to be 14.10p, meaning the coverage ratio is
96%. One of the factors in the Board's thinking, gaining
comfort with paying a slightly uncovered dividend, was the outlook
for 2024 and beyond.
In the equity portfolio, we expect
continued steady compounding in earnings and dividends from the
vast majority of SAINTS' equity investments. It is difficult
to predict the exact figure in any one year, but as a rule of thumb
we seek companies which have the prospect of growing their earnings
and dividends, on average over long periods of time, by 10% a year.
Of course, some do better and some do worse, and sometimes we will
make portfolio upgrades which weigh on near-term income: our
experience has been that for long-term success it is far better to
swap a troubled 5% yielder for a strong 2% yielder, and swallow the
short-term hit to income in pursuit of the long-term gain. All of
this said and done, we believe the equity portfolio should be able
to deliver dividend growth well ahead of UK inflation.
The macroeconomic outlook for 2024
is opaque. There are hopes that Chinese consumer spending
will bounce back at some point, but that was the hope at the start
of 2023, and in fact sentiment deteriorated last year. The US
economy looks stronger, but sceptics are warning that we have yet
to see the full impact of inflation and rate rises on business and
households. Europe meanwhile looks sluggish, but trading may
well improve if rates show clearer signs of
peaking.
SAINTS' holdings have been selected
for their structural growth potential across cycles, not as 'plays'
on the economy. So whatever the economic outcomes in 2024, we are
hopeful of continued growth in the earnings of the portfolio.
Microsoft for example has just reported very strong growth year on
year, driven by uptake of its AI products. Novo Nordisk has just
upgraded its growth estimate for 2024. And so on. Even
if the global economy proves troublesome in 2024, it is worth
remembering that our equity holdings have prudent payout ratios,
meaning they should have still ample capacity to deliver dividend
growth, even if their earnings growth proves a bit
soggy.
In conclusion we are optimistic that
revenues will grow in 2024, and that moving forward earnings growth
will restore coverage of the dividend while supporting continued
growth in returns to shareholders. Whatever the next set of
headlines in the media, euphoric or despondent, we believe SAINTS
owns a diverse portfolio of strong, well-managed, growing
companies, with the potential to help the Company meet its core
objectives: growing capital and income ahead of inflation,
and extending its record of 50 consecutive years of increases in
the dividend.
James Dow
Toby
Ross
Ross Mathison
Baillie Gifford & Co
14 February 2024
* NAV per share with borrowings at
fair value
† The equity portfolio here
corresponds to the global equity portfolio noted below.
Source: Baillie Gifford and
LSEG
List of investments as at 31
December 2023
Name
|
Business
|
2023
Value
£'000
|
2023
% of
total
Assets
|
Global
equities
|
|
|
|
Novo Nordisk
|
Pharmaceutical company
|
41,383
|
4.0
|
Watsco
|
Distributes air conditioning, heating and
refrigeration equipment
|
37,466
|
3.6
|
Microsoft
|
Computer software
|
37,315
|
3.6
|
Fastenal
|
Distribution and sales of industrial
supplies
|
31,673
|
3.1
|
Partners Group
|
Asset management
|
28,093
|
2.7
|
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing
|
Semiconductor manufacturer
|
27,554
|
2.7
|
Atlas Copco
|
Engineering
|
25,916
|
2.5
|
Procter & Gamble
|
Household product manufacturer
|
25,916
|
2.5
|
Apple
|
Consumer technology
|
25,128
|
2.4
|
Pepsico
|
Snack and beverage company
|
23,086
|
2.2
|
Schneider Electric
|
Electrical power products
|
22,822
|
2.2
|
Deutsche Boerse
|
Securities exchange owner/operator
|
22,716
|
2.2
|
Analog Devices
|
Integrated circuits
|
22,145
|
2.2
|
Carsales.com
|
Online marketplace for classified
car advertisements
|
21,546
|
2.1
|
United Parcel Service
|
Courier services
|
20,942
|
2.0
|
Roche
|
Pharmaceuticals and diagnostics
|
20,701
|
2.0
|
Sonic Healthcare
|
Laboratory testing
|
19,894
|
1.9
|
Wolters Kluwer
|
Information services and solutions
provider
|
19,113
|
1.9
|
Admiral
|
Car insurance
|
19,091
|
1.9
|
Experian
|
Credit scoring and marketing
services
|
18,829
|
1.8
|
Coca Cola
|
Beverage company
|
17,655
|
1.7
|
Intuit
|
Software
|
17,425
|
1.7
|
Nestlé
|
Food producer
|
17,007
|
1.7
|
Edenred
|
Voucher programme outsourcer
|
15,649
|
1.5
|
B3 S.A.
|
Securities exchange owner/operator
|
15,509
|
1.5
|
L'Oréal
|
Cosmetics
|
14,857
|
1.4
|
Arthur J Gallagher
|
Insurance broker
|
14,513
|
1.4
|
McDonald's
|
Fast food restaurants
|
13,703
|
1.3
|
Anta Sports
|
Sportswear manufacturer and retailer
|
12,995
|
1.3
|
Kuehne + Nagel
|
Worldwide freight forwarder
|
12,650
|
1.2
|
United Overseas Bank
|
Commercial banking
|
12,253
|
1.2
|
Cisco Systems
|
Data networking equipment
|
11,299
|
1.1
|
Valmet
|
Manufacturer of pulp and paper
machinery
|
10,754
|
1.0
|
SAP
|
Business software developer
|
10,465
|
1.0
|
NetEase
|
Online gaming company
|
10,127
|
1.0
|
Coloplast
|
Manufacturer of medical products
|
9,942
|
1.0
|
Albemarle
|
Producer of speciality and fine
chemicals
|
9,627
|
0.9
|
T. Rowe Price
|
Fund manager
|
9,144
|
0.9
|
Starbucks
|
Coffee retailer
|
9,129
|
0.9
|
Amadeus IT Group
|
Technology provider for the travel
industry
|
8,918
|
0.9
|
Texas Instruments
|
Semiconductor supplier
|
8,847
|
0.9
|
Medtronic
|
Medical devices company
|
8,735
|
0.9
|
USS
|
Second-hand car auctioneer
|
8,703
|
0.8
|
Diageo
|
International drinks company
|
8,067
|
0.8
|
Dolby Laboratories
|
Multimedia software
|
8,060
|
0.8
|
Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing
|
Securities exchange owner/operator
|
7,739
|
0.8
|
Midea Group
|
Appliance manufacturer
|
7,321
|
0.7
|
Kering
|
Luxury brand conglomerate
|
7,194
|
0.7
|
Cognex
|
Industrial automation
|
6,904
|
0.7
|
AVI
|
Staple foods manufacturer
|
6,880
|
0.7
|
Pernod Ricard
|
Global spirits manufacturer
|
6,853
|
0.7
|
Man Wah
|
Sofa designer and manufacturer
|
6,843
|
0.7
|
TCI
|
Producer of health-food products
|
6,333
|
0.6
|
Fevertree Drinks
|
Producer of premium mixer drinks
|
5,748
|
0.6
|
GlaxoSmithKline
|
Pharmaceuticals, vaccines and
consumer healthcare
|
5,430
|
0.5
|
Home Depot
|
Home improvement retailer
|
4,640
|
0.5
|
Hargreaves Lansdown
|
UK retail savings and investment
platform
|
4,612
|
0.4
|
Eurofins
|
Laboratory testing provider
|
4,581
|
0.4
|
Total global equities
|
|
888,440
|
86.3
|
Infrastructure equities
|
|
|
|
Greencoat UK Wind
|
UK wind farms
|
10,258
|
1.0
|
Terna
|
Electricity grid operator
|
5,993
|
0.6
|
BBGI Global Infrastructure
|
PFI/PPP fund
|
5,561
|
0.5
|
Assura
|
Primary healthcare property group
|
3,535
|
0.3
|
Jiangsu Expressway
|
Tollroad operator
|
2,938
|
0.3
|
Exelon
|
Grid and utility operator
|
869
|
0.1
|
Total Infrastructure
equities
|
|
29,154
|
2.8
|
Direct Property
|
See table below
|
66,350
|
6.4
|
Bonds
|
|
|
|
Euro denominated
|
Ivory Coast 6.625% 2048
|
1,421
|
0.1
|
|
|
|
|
US dollar denominated
|
Netflix 5.375% 2029
|
5,766
|
0.6
|
|
FMG Resources 6.125% 2032
|
4,390
|
0.4
|
|
Brazil 7.125% 20/01/2037
|
1,884
|
0.2
|
|
Dominican Republic 5.875% 30/01/2060
|
1,837
|
0.2
|
|
First Quantum Minerals 6.875% 2026
|
1,737
|
0.2
|
|
Mexico 5.75% 12/10/2110
|
1,591
|
0.1
|
|
First Quantum Minerals 7.5% 2025
|
1,341
|
0.1
|
|
Mercadolibre 3.125% 2031
|
981
|
0.1
|
|
|
19,527
|
1.9
|
|
|
|
|
Brazilian real denominated
|
Brazil CPI Linked 15/05/2045
|
5,721
|
0.6
|
|
|
|
|
Dominican peso denominated
|
Dominican Republic 9.75% 05/06/2026
|
731
|
0.1
|
|
|
|
|
Indonesian rupiah denominated
|
Indonesia 9% 15/03/2029
|
3,161
|
0.3
|
|
Indonesia 7.375% 15/05/2048
|
2,054
|
0.2
|
|
|
5,215
|
0.5
|
|
|
|
|
Mexican peso denominated
|
Mexico IL 4% 15/11/2040
|
3,184
|
0.3
|
|
|
|
|
Peruvian sol denominated
|
Peru 6.15% 12/08/2032
|
2,067
|
0.2
|
|
|
|
|
Total Bonds
|
|
37,866
|
3.7
|
Total Investments
|
|
1,021,810
|
99.2
|
Net Liquid
Assets
|
|
8,102
|
0.8
|
Total Assets (before deduction of borrowings)
|
|
1,029,912
|
100.0
|
Property portfolio
Location
|
Type
|
Tenant
|
2023
Value
£'000
|
2023
% of total
assets
|
2022
Value
£'000
|
Biggleswade
|
Warehouse
|
Sherwin-Williams UK Limited
|
5,700
|
0.5
|
6,500
|
Crawley*
|
Petrol Station and Convenience Store
|
Co-operative Group Food Limited
|
-
|
-
|
3,300
|
Denbigh
|
Supermarket
|
Aldi Stores Limited
|
4,800
|
0.5
|
5,300
|
Earley
|
Public House
|
Spirit Pub Company (Managed) Limited (Greene
King)
|
2,600
|
0.2
|
2,700
|
Gosport†
|
Supermarket
|
Aldi Stores Limited
|
5,550
|
0.5
|
-
|
Holyhead
|
Hotel
|
Premier Inn Hotels Limited
|
6,550
|
0.6
|
6,900
|
Kenilworth*
|
Nursing Home
|
Care UK Community Partnerships
Limited
|
-
|
-
|
5,000
|
New Romney
|
Holiday Village
|
Park Resorts Limited
|
19,250
|
1.9
|
19,250
|
Otford
|
Public House
|
Spirit Pub Company (Managed) Limited (Greene
King)
|
1,700
|
0.2
|
1,750
|
Pagham*
|
Convenience Store
|
Co-operative Group Food Limited
|
-
|
-
|
1,150
|
Prestatyn*
|
Public House
|
Stonegate Pub Company Limited
|
-
|
-
|
1,100
|
Ringwood†
|
Hotel
|
Premier Inn Hotels Limited
|
8,650
|
0.8
|
-
|
Southend-on-Sea
|
Warehouse
|
Booker Limited
|
7,900
|
0.8
|
9,400
|
Taunton
|
Bowling Alley
|
Mitchells & Butlers Retail (No.2) Limited
(sublet to Hollywood Bowl)
|
3,650
|
0.4
|
4,400
|
|
|
|
66,350
|
6.4
|
66,750
|
† Purchased during the year.
* Sold during the year.
Performance attribution
For
the year to 31 December 2023
Portfolio
breakdown
|
Average allocation
SAINTS
%
|
Average allocation
Benchmark
%
|
Total
return*
SAINTS
%
|
Total
return
Benchmark
%
|
Global equities
|
94.3
|
100.0
|
13.9
|
15.7
|
Infrastructure equities
|
2.9
|
|
3.0
|
|
Bonds
|
4.5
|
|
9.5
|
|
Direct property
|
8.3
|
|
(1.8)
|
|
Cash at bank
|
0.5
|
|
-
|
|
Borrowings at book value
|
(10.5)
|
|
3.0
|
|
Portfolio total return (borrowings at book
value)
|
|
|
13.0
|
|
Other items†
|
|
|
(0.5)
|
|
Fund total return (borrowings at book value)
|
|
|
12.5
|
|
Adjustment for change in fair value of
borrowings
|
|
|
(0.7)
|
|
Fund total return (borrowings at fair value)
|
|
|
11.8
|
|
*
Alternative performance measure - see Glossary of
Terms and Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this
announcement.
† Includes Baillie
Gifford and OLIM Property Limited management fees.
Source: Baillie Gifford and relevant
underlying index providers. See disclaimer at the end of this
announcement.
Past performance is not a guide to
future performance.
Income statement
|
2023
Revenue
£'000
|
2023
Capital
£'000
|
2023
Total
£'000
|
2022
Revenue
£'000
|
2022
Capital
£'000
|
2022
Total
£'000
|
Gains/(losses) on investments -
securities
|
-
|
91,351
|
91,351
|
-
|
(80,091)
|
(80,091)
|
Losses on investments - property
|
-
|
(6,054)
|
(6,054)
|
-
|
(5,114)
|
(5,114)
|
Currency gains
|
-
|
32
|
32
|
-
|
192
|
192
|
Income
|
30,078
|
-
|
30,078
|
30,043
|
-
|
30,043
|
Management fees
|
(1,031)
|
(3,094)
|
(4,125)
|
(980)
|
(2,940)
|
(3,920)
|
Other administrative expenses
|
(1,268)
|
-
|
(1,268)
|
(1,257)
|
-
|
(1,257)
|
Net return before finance costs and
taxation
|
27,779
|
82,235
|
110,014
|
27,806
|
(87,953)
|
(60,147)
|
Finance costs of
borrowings
|
(711)
|
(2,134)
|
(2,845)
|
(921)
|
(2,763)
|
(3,684)
|
Net return on ordinary activities before
taxation
|
27,068
|
80,101
|
107,169
|
26,885
|
(90,716)
|
(63,831)
|
Tax on ordinary
activities
|
(3,108)
|
977
|
(2,131)
|
(2,540)
|
790
|
(1,750)
|
Net return on ordinary activities after
taxation
|
23,960
|
81,078
|
105,038
|
24,345
|
(89,926)
|
(65,581)
|
Net return per ordinary share
|
13.48p
|
45.63p
|
59.11p
|
13.82p
|
(51.04p)
|
(37.22p)
|
The total column of the Income
Statement is the profit and loss account of the Company. The
supplementary revenue and capital columns are prepared under
guidance published by the Association of Investment
Companies.
All revenue and capital items in
these statements derive from continuing operations.
A Statement of Comprehensive Income
is not required as there is no other comprehensive
income.
The accompanying notes below are an
integral part of the Financial Statements.
Balance sheet
|
2023
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Investments - securities
|
955,460
|
|
869,837
|
|
Investments - property
|
66,350
|
|
66,750
|
|
|
|
1,021,810
|
|
936,587
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Debtors
|
3,549
|
|
3,213
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
7,340
|
|
4,184
|
|
|
10,889
|
|
7,397
|
|
Creditors
|
|
|
|
|
Amounts falling due within one year
|
(2,787)
|
|
(2,596)
|
|
Net current assets
|
|
8,102
|
|
4,801
|
Total assets less current
liabilities
|
|
1,029,912
|
|
941,388
|
Creditors
|
|
|
|
|
Amounts falling due after more than one
year
|
|
(94,728)
|
|
(94,714)
|
Net assets
|
|
935,184
|
|
846,674
|
Capital and reserves
|
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
|
44,579
|
|
44,188
|
Share premium account
|
|
186,100
|
|
178,189
|
Capital redemption reserve
|
|
22,781
|
|
22,781
|
Capital reserve
|
|
664,892
|
|
583,814
|
Revenue reserve
|
|
16,832
|
|
17,702
|
Shareholders' funds
|
|
935,184
|
|
846,674
|
Net asset value per ordinary
share*
|
|
524.5p
|
|
479.0p
|
Ordinary shares in issue (note 7)
|
|
178,315,943
|
|
176,750,943
|
*
See Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance
Measures at the end of this announcement.
The accompanying notes
below are an integral part
of the Financial Statements.
Statement of changes in
equity
For
the year ended 31 December 2023
|
Share
capital
£'000
|
Share
premium
account
£'000
|
Capital
redemption
reserve
£'000
|
Capital
reserve*
£'000
|
Revenue
reserve
£'000
|
Shareholders'
funds
£'000
|
Shareholders' funds at 1 January
2023
|
44,188
|
178,189
|
22,781
|
583,814
|
17,702
|
846,674
|
Shares issued
|
391
|
7,911
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
8,302
|
Net return on ordinary
activities
after taxation
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
81,078
|
23,960
|
105,038
|
Dividends paid in the year (note
5)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(24,830)
|
(24,830)
|
Shareholders' funds at 31 December 2023
|
44,579
|
186,100
|
22,781
|
664,892
|
16,832
|
935,184
|
For
the year ended 31 December 2022
|
Share
capital
£'000
|
Share
premium
account
£'000
|
Capital
redemption
reserve
£'000
|
Capital
reserve*
£'000
|
Revenue
reserve
£'000
|
Shareholders'
funds
£'000
|
Shareholders' funds at 1 January
2022
|
43,900
|
172,576
|
22,781
|
673,740
|
17,188
|
930,185
|
Shares issued
|
288
|
5,613
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
5,901
|
Net return on ordinary activities
after taxation
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(89,926)
|
24,345
|
(65,581)
|
Dividends paid in the year (note
5)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(23,831)
|
(23,831)
|
Shareholders' funds at 31 December 2022
|
44,188
|
178,189
|
22,781
|
583,814
|
17,702
|
846,674
|
* The
capital reserve as at 31 December 2023 includes unrealised
investment holding gains of £339,191,000 (31 December 2022 - gains
of £280,732,000).
The accompanying notes
below are an integral part
of the Financial Statements.
Cash flow statement
|
2023
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Net return on ordinary activities before
taxation
|
107,169
|
|
(63,831)
|
|
Adjustments to reconcile company
profit before tax to net cash flow from operating
activities
|
(Gains)/losses on investments -
securities
|
(91,351)
|
|
80,091
|
|
Losses on investments - property
|
6,054
|
|
5,114
|
|
Currency gains
|
(32)
|
|
(192)
|
|
Finance costs of borrowings
|
2,845
|
|
3,684
|
|
Other capital movements
|
|
|
|
|
Changes in debtors
|
(340)
|
|
507
|
|
Change in creditors
|
204
|
|
382
|
|
Other non-cash changes
|
62
|
|
239
|
|
Taxation
|
|
|
|
|
Overseas withholding tax
|
(2,126)
|
|
(1,761)
|
|
Cash from operations
|
|
22,485
|
|
24,233
|
Interest paid
|
|
(2,845)
|
|
(4,784)
|
Net cash inflow from operating
activities
|
|
19,640
|
|
19,449
|
Cash flows from investing activities
|
|
|
|
|
Acquisitions of investments -
securities
|
(109,728)
|
|
(74,593)
|
|
Acquisitions of investments -
property
|
(15,057)
|
|
(8,239)
|
|
Disposals of investments -
securities
|
115,394
|
|
62,783
|
|
Disposals of investments - property
|
9,403
|
|
11,275
|
|
Net cash inflow/(outflow) from
investing activities
|
|
12
|
|
(8,774)
|
Cash flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
|
Equity dividends
|
(24,830)
|
|
(23,831)
|
|
Shares issued
|
8,302
|
|
5,901
|
|
Loan notes drawn down
|
-
|
|
80,000
|
|
Debenture stock repaid
|
-
|
|
(80,000)
|
|
Costs of issuance of loan notes
|
-
|
|
(16)
|
|
Net cash outflow from financing
activities
|
|
(16,528)
|
|
(17,946)
|
Increase/(decrease) in cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
3,124
|
|
(7,271)
|
Exchange movements
|
|
32
|
|
192
|
Cash and cash equivalents at start of
year
|
|
4,184
|
|
11,263
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of
year
|
|
7,340
|
|
4,184
|
The accompanying notes
below are an integral part
of the Financial Statements.
Notes to the Financial
Statements
1. Basis of
Accounting
The Financial Statements for the
year to 31 December 2023 have been prepared in accordance with FRS
102 'The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and
Republic of Ireland' and on the basis of the accounting policies
set out in the Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year
ended 31 December 2023.
2.
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Income from investments
|
|
|
UK dividends
|
2,400
|
3,285
|
UK interest
|
174
|
360
|
Overseas
dividends
|
20,602
|
19,487
|
Overseas
interest
|
2,270
|
2,356
|
|
25,446
|
25,488
|
Other
income
|
|
|
Deposit
interest
|
151
|
49
|
Rental
income
|
4,451
|
4,475
|
Other
income
|
30
|
31
|
|
4,632
|
4,555
|
Total
income
|
30,078
|
30,043
|
Total income
comprises:
|
|
|
Dividends from
financial assets classified at fair value through profit or
loss
|
23,002
|
22,772
|
Interest from
financial assets designated at fair value through profit or
loss
|
2,444
|
2,716
|
Interest from
financial assets not at fair value through profit or
loss
|
151
|
49
|
Other income not from
financial assets
|
4,481
|
4,506
|
|
30,078
|
30,043
|
3. Baillie Gifford & Co
Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of Baillie Gifford & Co, has
been appointed as the Company's Alternative Investment Fund Manager
('AIFM') and Company Secretary. Baillie Gifford & Co Limited
has delegated investment management services to Baillie Gifford
& Co. Dealing activity and transaction reporting have been
further sub-delegated to Baillie Gifford Overseas Limited and
Baillie Gifford Asia (Hong Kong) Limited. The management of the
property portfolio has been delegated to OLIM Property
Limited.
The Investment Management Agreement
between the AIFM and the Company sets out the matters over which
the Managers have authority in accordance with the policies and
directions of, and subject to restrictions imposed by, the Board.
The Investment Management Agreement is terminable on not less than
six months' notice. Compensation fees would only be payable in
respect of the notice period if termination were to occur within a
shorter notice period. The annual management fee is 0.45% of the
first £500 million of total assets and 0.35% of the remaining total
assets, total assets being the value of all assets held (excluding
the property portfolio) less all liabilities, other than any
liability in the form of debt intended for investment purposes,
calculated on a quarterly basis. The Board is of the view that
calculating the fee with reference to performance would be unlikely
to exert a positive influence on performance.
The Property Management Agreement
sets out the matters over which OLIM Property Limited has
discretion and those matters which require Board approval. The
Property Management Agreement is terminable on three months'
notice. The annual fee is 0.5% of the value of the property
portfolio, subject to a minimum quarterly fee of £6,250.
|
2023
Revenue
£'000
|
2023
Capital
£'000
|
2023
Total
£'000
|
2022
Revenue
£'000
|
2022
Capital
£'000
|
2022
Total
£'000
|
Investment management fee
|
938
|
2,814
|
3,752
|
884
|
2,651
|
3,535
|
Property management fee
|
93
|
280
|
373
|
96
|
289
|
385
|
|
1,031
|
3,094
|
4,125
|
980
|
2,940
|
3,920
|
4.
|
2023
Revenue
|
2023
Capital
|
2023
Total
|
2022
Revenue
|
2022
Capital
|
2022
Total
|
Net return per ordinary
share
|
13.48p
|
45.63p
|
59.11p
|
13.82p
|
(51.04p)
|
(37.22p)
|
Revenue return per ordinary share is
based on the net revenue on ordinary activities after taxation of
£23,960,000 (2022 - £24,345,000) and on 177,707,094 (2022 -
176,207,530) ordinary shares of 25p, being the weighted average
number of ordinary shares in issue during the year.
Capital return per ordinary share is
based on the net capital gain for the financial year of £81,078,000
(2022 - net capital loss of £89,926,000), and on 177,707,094 (2022
- 176,207,530) ordinary shares, being the weighted average number
of ordinary shares in issue during the year.
There are no dilutive or potentially
dilutive shares in issue.
5.
|
2023
|
2022
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Amounts recognised as distributions in the
year:
|
|
|
|
|
Previous year's final (paid 13 April
2023)
|
3.67p
|
3.375p
|
6,487
|
5,937
|
First interim (paid 22 June 2023)
|
3.30p
|
3.25p
|
5,861
|
5,730
|
Second interim (paid 20 September
2023)
|
3.45p
|
3.40p
|
6,152
|
5,994
|
Third interim (paid 15 December
2023)
|
3.55p
|
3.50p
|
6,330
|
6,170
|
|
13.97p
|
13.525p
|
24,830
|
23,831
|
We also set out below the total
dividends paid and proposed in respect of the financial year, which
is the basis on which the requirements of section 1159 of the
Corporation Tax Act 2010 are considered. The revenue available for
distribution out of current year profits by way of dividend for the
year is £23,960,000 (2022 - £24,345,000).
|
2023
|
2022
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
Dividends paid and payable in respect of the
year:
|
|
|
|
|
First interim (paid 22 June 2023)
|
3.30p
|
3.25p
|
5,861
|
5,730
|
Second interim (paid 20 September
2023)
|
3.45p
|
3.40p
|
6,152
|
5,994
|
Third interim (paid 15 December
2023)
|
3.55p
|
3.50p
|
6,330
|
6,170
|
Current year's proposed final
dividend (payable 11 April 2024)
|
3.80p
|
3.67p
|
6,776
|
6,487
|
|
14.10p
|
13.82p
|
25,119
|
24,381
|
If approved, the recommended final
dividend on the ordinary shares will be paid on 11 April 2024 to
shareholders on the register at the close of business on 1 March
2024. The ex-dividend date is 29 February 2024. The Company's Registrar offers a Dividend Reinvestment Plan
and the final date for the receipt of elections for reinvestment of
this dividend is 19 March 2024.
6. Creditors - amounts
falling due after more than one year
|
2023
£'000
|
2022
£'000
|
£15m Series C 2.23% 25 June 2036
|
14,936
|
14,931
|
£40m Series A 3.12% 11 April 2045
|
39,897
|
39,892
|
£40m Series B 3.12% 11 April
2049
|
39,895
|
39,891
|
|
94,728
|
94,714
|
The main covenants for the loan
notes which are tested monthly are that net tangible assets shall
not fall below £120,000,000 and gross borrowings shall not exceed
40% of the Company's adjusted assets.
7. During the year, 1,565,000 (2022 -
1,150,000) shares were issued at a premium to net asset value
raising proceeds of £8,302,000 (2022 - £5,901,000). At 31 December
2023 the Company had authority to buy back 26,494,966 ordinary
shares and to allot 16,110,094 ordinary shares without application
of pre-emption rights in accordance with the authorities granted at
the AGM in April 2023. No shares were bought back during the
year.
8. During the year,
transaction costs on purchases amounted to £985,000 (2022-
£551,000) and £189,000 (2022 - £174,000) respectively.
9.
|
1 January
2023
£'000
|
Cash flows
£'000
|
Exchange movement
£'000
|
Other
non-cash
changes
£'000
|
31 December
2023
£'000
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
4,184
|
3,124
|
32
|
-
|
7,340
|
Loan notes due in more than one year
|
(94,714)
|
-
|
-
|
(14)
|
(94,728)
|
|
(90,530)
|
3,124
|
32
|
(14)
|
(87,388)
|
|
1 January
2022
£'000
|
Cash flows
£'000
|
Exchange movement
£'000
|
Cost of issuance*
£'000
|
Other
non-cash changes
£'000
|
31 December
2022
£'000
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
11,263
|
(7,271)
|
192
|
-
|
-
|
4,184
|
Debenture Stock due in less than one
year
|
(80,236)
|
80,000
|
-
|
-
|
236
|
-
|
Loan notes due in more than one year
|
(14,925)
|
(80,000)
|
-
|
223
|
(12)
|
(94,714)
|
|
(83,898)
|
(7,271)
|
192
|
223
|
224
|
(90,530)
|
*Cost of
issuance includes carried forward deferred expenses of
£207,000.
10. The financial information set
out above does not constitute the Company's statutory accounts for
the years ended 31 December 2023 or 2022 but is derived from those
accounts. Statutory accounts for 2022 have been delivered to the
registrar of companies, and those for 2023 will be delivered in due
course. The auditor has reported on those accounts; their reports
were (i) unqualified, (ii) did not include a reference to any
matters to which the auditor drew attention by way of emphasis
without qualifying their report and (iii) did not contain a
statement under section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act
2006.
11. The Report and Accounts will be
available on the SAINTS page of the Managers' website
saints-it.com‡
on or around 27 February 2024.
Glossary of Terms and Alternative
Performance Measures ('APM')
An alternative performance measure
is a financial measure of historical or future financial
performance, financial position, or cash flows, other than a
financial measure defined or specified in the applicable financial
reporting framework.
Total Assets
This is the Company's definition of
Adjusted Total Assets, being the total value of all assets held
less all liabilities (other than liabilities in the form of
borrowings).
Net
Asset Value
Net Asset Value (NAV) is the value
of total assets less liabilities (including borrowings). Net asset
value can be calculated on the basis of borrowings stated at book
value and fair value. An explanation of each basis is provided
below. The net asset value per share is calculated by dividing this
amount by the number of ordinary shares in issue excluding any
shares held in treasury.
Net
Asset Value (Borrowings at Book Value)
Borrowings are valued at adjusted
net issue proceeds. Book value approximates amortised
cost.
Net
Asset Value (Borrowings at Fair Value) (APM)
Borrowings are valued at an estimate
of their market worth. This indicates the cost to the Company of
repaying its borrowings under current market conditions. It is a
widely reported measure across the investment trust
industry.
|
31 December 2023
|
31 December 2022
|
Shareholders' funds (borrowings at book
value)
|
£935,184,000
|
£846,674,000
|
Add: book value of borrowings
|
£94,728,000
|
£94,714,000
|
Less: fair value of borrowings
|
(£68,155,000)
|
(£65,549,000)
|
Shareholders' funds (borrowings at fair
value)
|
£961,757,000
|
£875,839,000
|
Shares in issue at year end
|
178,315,943
|
176,750,943
|
Net asset value per ordinary share (borrowings
at fair value)
|
539.4p
|
495.5p
|
Premium/(discount) (APM)
As stockmarkets and share prices
vary, an investment trust's share price is rarely the same as its
NAV. When the share price is lower than the NAV per share it is
said to be trading at a discount. The size of the discount is
calculated by subtracting the share price from the NAV per share
and is usually expressed as a percentage of the NAV per share. If
the share price is higher than the NAV per share, this situation is
called a premium.
|
|
2023
NAV (book)
|
2023
NAV (fair)
|
2022
NAV (book)
|
2022
NAV (fair)
|
Closing NAV per share
|
|
524.5p
|
539.4p
|
479.0p
|
495.5p
|
Closing share price
|
|
535.0p
|
535.0p
|
508.0p
|
508.0p
|
Premium/(discount)
|
|
2.0%
|
(0.8%)
|
6.1%
|
2.5%
|
Ongoing Charges (APM)
The total expenses (excluding
borrowing costs) incurred by the Company as a percentage of the
average net asset value (with borrowings at fair value). The
ongoing charges have been calculated on the basis prescribed by the
Association of Investment Companies.
A reconciliation from the expenses
detailed in the Income Statement above is provided
below.
|
|
31 December 2023
|
31 December 2022
|
Investment management fee
|
|
£4,125,000
|
£3,920,000
|
Other administrative
expenses
|
|
£1,268,000
|
£1,257,000
|
Total expenses
|
(a)
|
£5,393,000
|
£5,177,000
|
Average daily cum-income net asset
value
(with borrowings at fair value)
|
(b)
|
£928,722,000
|
£877,093,000
|
Ongoing charges
|
(a) ÷ (b) (expressed as a
percentage)
|
0.58%
|
0.59%
|
Total Return (APM)
The total return is the return to
shareholders after reinvesting the net dividend on the date that
the share price goes ex-dividend.
|
|
2023
NAV
(book)
|
2023
NAV
(fair)
|
2023
Share
price
|
2022
NAV
(book)
|
2022
NAV
(fair)
|
2022
Share
price
|
Opening NAV per share/share price
|
(a)
|
479.0p
|
495.5p
|
508.0p
|
529.7p
|
528.4p
|
541.0p
|
Closing NAV per share/share price
|
(b)
|
524.5p
|
539.4p
|
535.0p
|
479.0p
|
495.5p
|
508.0p
|
Dividend adjustment factor*
|
(c)
|
1.027628
|
1.026683
|
1.027273
|
1.027330
|
1.026941
|
1.027687
|
Adjusted closing NAV per share/
share price
|
(d) = (b) x (c)
|
539.0p
|
553.8p
|
549.6p
|
492.1p
|
508.8p
|
522.1p
|
Total return
|
(d) ÷ (a) -1
|
12.5%
|
11.8%
|
8.2%
|
(7.1%)
|
(3.7%)
|
(3.5%)
|
* The dividend adjustment factor is
calculated on the assumption that the dividends paid out by the
Company are reinvested into the shares of the Company at the cum
income NAV/share price at the ex-dividend date.
Gearing (APM)
At its simplest, gearing is
borrowing. Just like any other public company, an investment trust
can borrow money to invest in additional investments for its
portfolio. The effect of the borrowing on the shareholders' assets
is called 'gearing'. If the Company's assets grow, the
shareholders' assets grow proportionately more because the debt
remains the same. But if the value of the Company's assets falls,
the situation is reversed. Gearing can therefore enhance
performance in rising markets but can adversely impact performance
in falling markets.
Potential gearing is the Company's
borrowings expressed as a percentage of shareholders'
funds.
|
31
December 2023
|
31
December 2022
|
Borrowings at book value
|
£94,728,000
|
£94,714,000
|
Shareholders' funds
|
£935,184,000
|
£846,674,000
|
Potential gearing
|
10%
|
11%
|
Equity gearing is the Company's
borrowings adjusted for cash, bonds and property expressed as a
percentage of shareholders' funds.
|
31 December
2023
|
31 December
2022
|
Borrowings at book value
|
£94,728,000
|
£94,714,000
|
Less: cash and cash
equivalents
|
(£7,340,000)
|
(£4,184,000)
|
Less: bond investments
|
(£37,866,000)
|
(£43,440,000)
|
Less: direct property
investments
|
(£66,350,000)
|
(£66,750,000)
|
Adjusted borrowings
|
(£16,828,000)
|
(£19,660,000)
|
Shareholders' funds
|
£935,184,000
|
£846,674,000
|
Equity gearing
|
(2%)
|
(2%)
|
Leverage (APM)
For the purposes of the Alternative
Investment Fund Managers (AIFM) Regulations, leverage is any method
which increases the Company's exposure, including the borrowing of
cash and the use of derivatives. It is expressed as a ratio between
the Company's exposure and its net asset value and can be
calculated on a gross and a commitment method. Under the gross
method, exposure represents the sum of the Company's positions
after the deduction of sterling cash balances, without taking into
account any hedging and netting arrangements. Under the commitment
method, exposure is calculated without the deduction of sterling
cash balances and after certain hedging and netting positions are
offset against each other.
Active Share (APM)
Active share, a measure of how
actively a portfolio is managed, is the percentage of the listed
equity portfolio that differs from its comparative index. It is
calculated by deducting from 100 the percentage of the portfolio
that overlaps with the comparative index. An active share of 100
indicates no overlap with the index and an active share of zero
indicates a portfolio that tracks the index.
Sustainable Finance Disclosure
Regulation ('SFDR')
The EU Sustainable Finance
Disclosure Regulation ('SFDR') does not have a direct impact in the
UK due to Brexit, however, it applies to third-country products
marketed in the EU. As SAINTS is marketed in the EU by the AIFM,
Baillie Gifford & Co Limited, via the National Private
Placement Regime ('NPPR') the following disclosures have been
provided to comply with the high-level requirements of
SFDR.
The AIFM has adopted Baillie Gifford
& Co's ESG Principles and Guidelines as its policy on
integration of sustainability risks in investment
decisions.
Baillie Gifford & Co believes
that a company cannot be financially sustainable in the long run if
its approach to business is fundamentally out of line with changing
societal expectations. It defines 'sustainability' as a
deliberately broad concept which encapsulates a company's purpose,
values, business model, culture, and operating
practices.
Baillie Gifford & Co's approach
to investment is based on identifying and holding high quality
growth businesses that enjoy sustainable competitive advantages in
their marketplace. To do this it looks beyond current financial
performance, undertaking proprietary research to build up an
in-depth knowledge of an individual company and a view on its
long-term prospects. This includes the consideration of
sustainability factors (environmental, social and/or governance
matters) which it believes will positively or negatively influence
the financial returns of an investment.
The likely impact on the return of
the portfolio from a potential or actual material decline in the
value of investment due to the occurrence of an environmental,
social or governance event or condition will vary and will depend
on several factors including but not limited to the type, extent,
complexity and duration of an event or condition, prevailing market
conditions and existence of any mitigating factors.
Whilst consideration is given to
sustainability matters, there are no restrictions on the investment
universe of the Company, unless otherwise stated within in its
Investment Objective & Policy. Baillie Gifford & Co can
invest in any companies it believes could create beneficial
long-term returns for investors. However, this might result in
investments being made in companies that ultimately cause a
negative outcome for the environment or society.
More detail on the Investment
Managers' approach to sustainability can be found in the ESG
Principles and Guidelines document, available publicly on the
Baillie Gifford website bailliegifford.com.
The underlying investments do not
take into account the EU criteria for environmentally sustainable
economic activities established under the EU Taxonomy
Regulation.
Third Party Data Provider
Disclaimer
No third party data provider
('Provider') makes any warranty, express or implied, as to the
accuracy, completeness or timeliness of the data contained herewith
nor as to the results to be obtained by recipients of the
data.
No Provider shall in any way be
liable to any recipient of the data for any inaccuracies, errors or
omissions in the index data included in this
document, regardless of cause, or
for any damages (whether direct or indirect) resulting therefrom.
No Provider has any obligation to update, modify or amend the data
or to otherwise notify a recipient thereof in the event that any
matter stated herein changes or subsequently becomes
inaccurate.
Without limiting the foregoing, no
Provider shall have any liability whatsoever to you, whether in
contract (including under an indemnity), in tort (including
negligence), under a warranty, under statute or otherwise, in
respect of any loss or damage suffered by you as a result of or in
connection with any opinions, recommendations, forecasts,
judgements, or any other conclusions, or any course of action
determined, by you or any third party, whether or not based on the
content, information or materials contained herein.
FTSE Index Data
Source: London Stock Exchange Group
plc and its group undertakings (collectively, the 'LSE Group'). ©
LSE Group 2024. FTSE Russell is a trading name of certain of the
LSE Group companies. 'FTSE®' 'Russell®', 'FTSE Russell®', is/are a
trade mark(s) of the relevant LSE Group companies and is/are used
by any other LSE Group company under license. All rights in the
FTSE Russell indexes or data vest in the relevant LSE Group company
which owns the index or the data. Neither LSE Group nor its
licensors accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the
indexes or data and no party may rely on any indexes or data
contained in this communication. No further distribution of data
from the LSE Group is permitted without the relevant LSE Group
company's express written consent. The LSE Group does not promote,
sponsor or endorse the content of this communication.
Automatic Exchange of
Information
In order to fulfil its legal
obligations under UK tax legislation relating to the automatic
exchange of information, The Scottish American Investment Company
P.L.C. is required to collect and report certain information about
certain shareholders.
The legislation requires investment
trust companies to provide personal information to HMRC on certain
investors who purchase shares in investment trusts. Accordingly,
The Scottish American Investment Company P.L.C. will have to
provide information annually to the local tax authority on the tax
residencies of a number of non-UK based certificated shareholders
and corporate entities.
Shareholders, excluding those whose
shares are held in CREST, who come on to the share register will be
sent a certification form for the purposes of collecting this
information. For further information, please see HMRC's Quick
Guide: Automatic Exchange of Information - information for account
holders gov.uk/government/publications/exchange-of-information-account-holders.
‡ Neither
the contents of the Managers' website nor the contents of any
website accessible from hyperlinks on the Managers' website (or any
other website) is incorporated into, or forms part of, this
announcement.
None of the views expressed in this
document should be construed as advice to buy or sell a particular
investment.
- ends
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