Whilst the world market continues
to be difficult and challenging, I am pleased to report that, as
laid out in the Chief Executive Officer's Strategic Report, we have
managed to successfully navigate through the numerous challenges
and with important new contracts, such as the airport security
project in the Democratic Republic of Congo ("DRC"), now in place
we have reached an important inflection point. Whilst the
significant long-term recurring revenues from the DRC contract and
others recently secured, are not reflected in the current period
revenue results of £9.1m the tremendous amount of work and effort
required to secure these contracts should be recognised.
We have now reached a point in our
growth strategy where going forward we will see profitable trading
and a significant increase in recurring revenues from multiple
customers in numerous locations, all from existing contracts and a
framework to build on this success.
Westminster Group PLC has changed
its accounting reference date and financial year end from 31
December to 30 June. These accounts are for 18-months to 30 June
2024 whereas the comparatives are for the 12-months to 31 December
2022, therefore the amounts presented in the financial statements
are not entirely comparable.
The reason for the change of
accounting reference date is to, inter alia, better align the
Group's reporting periods with the financial dynamics of the
long-term contracts signed within the managed services business
over recent times, along with targeted further growth in this
particular division.
Like many companies we have also
had to deal with increasing costs of energy, manpower and
equipment, which we have done with careful cash management and cost
reduction programmes.
Corporate
Conduct
As a company whose shares are
traded on the AIM market of the London Stock Exchange, we recognise
the importance of sound corporate governance throughout our
organisation, giving our shareholders and other stakeholders
including employees, customers, suppliers and the wider community
confidence in our business. We endeavour to deliver on our
corporate Vision and Mission Statements in an ethical and sensitive
manner irrespective of race, colour or creed. This is not only a
requirement of a well-run public company but makes good commercial
and business sense.
In my capacity as Chairman, I have
ultimate responsibility for ensuring the Board adopts and
implements a recognised corporate governance code in accordance
with our stock market status. Accordingly, the Board has adopted,
and is working to, the Quoted Companies Alliance (QCA) Corporate
Governance Code 2018. The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) has
responsibility for the implementation of governance throughout our
organisation, commensurate with our size of business and worldwide
operations.
The QCA Corporate Governance Code
2018 has ten key principles and we set out on our website how we
apply those principles to our business, and more detailed
information is provided in these accounts.
We operate worldwide with a focus
on emerging markets and in a sector where discretion,
professionalism and confidentiality are essential. It is important
that we maintain the highest standards of corporate conduct. The
Corporate Governance Report in this annual report sets out the
detailed steps that we undertake to ensure that our standards, and
those of our agents, can stand any scrutiny by Government or other
official bodies.
Corporate and Social
Responsibility
As a Group, we take our corporate
and social responsibilities very seriously, particularly as we
operate in emerging markets and in some cases in areas of poverty
and deprivation. As highlighted in the CEO Report we are building
on our environment, social and governance strategies. I am proud of
the support and assistance we as a business provide in many of the
regions in which we operate, and I would like to pay tribute to our
employees and other individuals and organisations for their
generous support and contributions to our registered charity, the
Westminster Group Foundation. We work with local partners and other
established charities to provide goods or services for the relief
of poverty or advancement of education or healthcare making a
difference to the lives of the local communities in which we
operate. For more information or to donate please visit
www.wg-foundation.org.
Employees and
Board
Our overriding priority however is
and has been the safety and wellbeing of our people around the
world and to continue to provide a valuable service to our
customers. To those ends, we put in place various precautionary
measures, including cost reductions and are undertaking regular
risk assessments for all areas of our business.
I would finally like to extend my
appreciation to our investors for their continued support and to
our strategic investors who are bringing their expertise to help
deliver value for all.
Rt. Hon Sir Tony Baldry DL
Chairman
5 November 2024
Chief Executive Officer's Report
Business
Description
The Westminster Group is a global
integrated security services company delivering niche security
solutions and long-term managed services to high growth and
emerging markets around the world, with a particular focus on long
term recurring revenue business.
Our target customer base is
primarily governments and governmental agencies, critical
infrastructure (such as airports, ports & harbours, borders and
power plants), and large-scale commercial organisations
worldwide.
We deliver our wide range of Land,
Sea and Air solutions and services through a number of operating
companies that are currently structured into two operating
divisions, Services and Technology, both primarily focused on
international business as follows:
Services
Division
Focusing on long term (typically
10 - 25 years) recurring revenue contracts such as the management
and operation of security solutions in airports, ports and other
such facilities, together with the provision of manpower,
consultancy and training services.
Technology
Division
Focusing on providing advanced
technology led security solutions encompassing a wide range of
surveillance, detection, tracking, screening and interception
technologies to governments and organisations worldwide.
In addition to providing our
business with a broad range of opportunities, these two divisions
offer cost effective dynamics and vertical integration with the
Technology Division providing vital infrastructure and complex
technology solutions and expertise to the Services Division. This
reduces both supplier exposure and cost and provides us with
increasing purchasing power. Our Services Division provides a
long-term business platform to deliver other cost-effective
incremental services from the Group.
We have a successful track record
of delivering a wide range of solutions to governments and
blue-chip organisations around the world. Our reputation grows with
each new contract delivered - this in turn underpins our strong
brand and provides a platform from which we can expand our
business.
Overview
We continue to battle against
probably one of the worst world economic and political backgrounds
in recent times and the period in question has been a time of both
challenges and achievements.
Challenges due to global
instability, largely as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine
and conflict in the Middle East, and the resulting global economic
turmoil and financial uncertainty, which continues to impact
governments and businesses spending plans with the inevitable
knock-on delays on contract awards. Like many companies we have
also had to deal with increasing costs which we have navigated with
careful cash management and cost reduction programmes.
In terms of achievements one of
the main highlights for the period was the finalisation of the
long-anticipated contract for DRC airports which was signed at a
formal ceremony in April 2024. Despite the transitional period
taking longer than anticipated due to the country's internal
procedures and bureaucratic processes and no revenues from this
contract being reflected in the reporting period, the 10+ year
contract is expected to generate revenues of circa US$10m in the
first 12 months of operation alone, with significant scope for
growth. This, together with existing and new contracts provides a
solid foundation for significant revenue and earnings growth for
2025 and beyond.
In view of the above I am pleased
to report therefore that, despite the global uncertainty and
economic challenges, our Services Division has performed well
whilst our Technology Division revenues were impacted and down on
the prior period. However, the strong performance of our various
services revenue streams demonstrates our strategy of building a
business built on a diverse base of recurring revenue streams from
multiple customers in different parts of the world, is on track and
underpins our confidence in our future growth and
performance. Accordingly, we have decided to take a prudent
look at our balance sheet and the carrying values of certain assets
such as the Sierra Queen and RiverFort debt etc. and mark these
down to market and take provisions in this period. We do however
expect to recognise values from such assets in future years.
Further information on this can be found in notes 18 and
28.
Accordingly, in the period we
delivered revenues of £9.1m of which £7.2m was from our Services
Division and £1.9m from our Technology Division. Gross margin
increased to 60%. Exceptional write downs amounted to £2.28m. The
Group's loss from operations was £1.93m. When adjusted for the
exceptional and non-cash items, depreciation and amortisation, the
Group
recorded an EBITDA^ loss from
underlying operations of £1.47m of which £1.30m are costs related
to project development, legal costs and project start-up
expenses.
In summary, despite reduced
technology sales in the period, we secured important new contracts
significantly increasing our annualised recurring revenue streams,
we continued to see important return customers demonstrating brand
loyalty, we continued to develop our pipeline of new large-scale
opportunities including some exciting new large-scale, long-term
prospects, we resolved a number of outstanding issues including a
prudent balance sheet review and we invested in our business
and new projects establishing a platform for profitable future
growth in the year and years ahead, as detailed in our Divisional
Review below.
Divisional Review
Services Division
Our Services Division and the
growing recurring revenue base we are building is a key element to
our future growth. The period in question delivered revenues of
circa £7.2m and these together with new contracts coming on stream
will provide significant growth, both in terms of revenues and
earnings, for 2025 and beyond, underpinning the strategy we have
been following.
Our aviation security business
continues to perform to expectations, and we are encouraged not
only by the performance of our current operations but also with the
various new opportunities we have and are developing, for which
much credit is due to our operational and business development
teams operating around the world.
A key development and expansion of
our aviation security business is the ratification of the
long-awaited contract for the Democratic Republic of Congo ("DRC")
airports which was signed at a formal ceremony in Kinshasa, DRC on
11 April 2024 during the UK - DRC Trade and Investment Mission, by
board representatives of both Westminster and the airport
authority, La Regie Des Voies Aeriennes ('RVA'), in the presence of
various government officials and dignitaries including Lord Popat,
the UK Prime Minister's Trade Envoy; John Humphrey, His Majesty's
Trade Commissioner for Africa; HE Alyson King OBE, HM Ambassador to
the DRC; and HE Ndolamb Ngokwey, Ambassador of the DRC to the
United Kingdom.
The contract, which is for an
initial period of 10 years, with a five-year renewal, thereafter,
is to provide comprehensive ground security operations, initially
at four international airports and one national airport in the DRC.
Despite the transitional period taking longer than anticipated due
to the country's internal procedures and bureaucratic processes we
are active on the ground undertaking various activities and based
on current international embarking passenger levels, the contract
is expected to generate revenues of circa US$10m in the first 12
months of operation alone. In addition, there is an opportunity
under the contract for further revenues, in due course, from
domestic traffic and cargo screening operations.
Westminster is providing the
investment and expertise required to upgrade security at the
airports. This not only includes the provision of advanced
detection, surveillance, and screening equipment, but also the
maintenance, training and various support services required to
ensure DRC's airport security is run to the highest international
standards. This enhancement in airport security will assist the
authorities in DRC in developing and maintaining world-class
airport security services, opening up the potential for growth in
air traffic by attracting new international carriers and commercial
enterprises to the region.
DRC is a key addition to our
international aviation security services, and we believe the
country has exciting growth potential. With a surface area
equivalent to that of Western Europe it is, by area, the largest
country in sub-Saharan Africa, the second largest in all of Africa,
and the 11th-largest in the world. It is also the most-populous
Francophone country in the world. Air travel is therefore an
important and a necessary requirement within this vast country. The
country is extremely rich in natural resources and has the
potential for sizeable economic growth. I look forward to
Westminster having a long-term presence in the country and in
playing our part in the successful growth and security of the
country's numerous airports.
Our West African airport operation
and collaboration with Summa is working well and has been a
positive development. With potential new airlines opening up new
routes including a new direct flight to the UK once again we expect
this contract to continue to be a valuable part of our
business.
During the period we continued to
provide post pandemic aviation security (AVSEC) training to staff
at a major UK airport and have secured contracts for AVSEC training
in other airports around the world, expanding our network of
potential managed services opportunities for the future.
Our $1.7million project to upgrade
security at two airports in Southeast Africa, funded by the
European Investment Bank (EIB), is now well underway with one
airport completed and the other well advanced. We are now in
discussions with the relevant authorities regarding moving to a
long-term managed services contract for these two airports, under a
new agreement, once the current installation works have been
completed.
I am pleased to report we have
made significant strides forward with several of the large-scale,
long-term managed services airports and ports opportunities each of
which, as and when secured, would provide multi-million-pound step
changes in annual revenues. It is always difficult to accurately
predict timing for such projects, which are complex and can involve
various bodies in bureaucratic processes however
we hope to finalise one such opportunity before
the end of 2024 or early in 2025.
Our guarding business is going
from strength to strength with a like for like increase of 48% in
guarding hours and the new contract to provide comprehensive
security concierge services announced in October 2024 will
significantly enhance this activity.
As previously reported, we have
been waiting for our client to resolve the land issues for the
construction of the new container port storage and inspection
complex in West Africa, for which Westminster have been contracted
to provide the screening operations under a contract, signed in
June 2021. However, this land issue is still unresolved and the
project remains in abeyance.
We announced in November 2022 that
the relationship with our local partners, Scanport, regarding our
Ghana port project had become increasingly strained and that we
were looking to resolve matters through mediation to include
accelerated receipt in recompense for early termination, which
would free up resources for the new large-scale projects.
This has now been fully resolved and dealt with in discontinued
items in the accounts
Technology Division
The Technology Division delivered
revenues of circa £1.9m in the period down from the previous
period, largely as a result of the global uncertainty. The
ongoing global economic situation continues to create challenges,
not just with increasing costs but significantly with some
economies suffering substantial currency devaluation, in turn
leading to currency restrictions and in some places civil unrest.
This has understandably led to some order delays, particularly with
larger capital-intensive projects. Not-with-standing these
challenges during the period we delivered products and services to
68 countries around the world. I am now happy to report the
situation is improving with visibility over a growing pipeline and
we fully expect some if not all of the delayed orders and backlog
to eventually be secured.
In addition to building our
international operations and to provide some resilience against
world events, we have been undertaking a strategy of developing a
significant UK presence with an enviable blue-chip client base,
such as the Palace of Westminster, Scottish Parliament, Tower of
London, UK Border Force, UK Prisons, to name but a few, all of
which are performing well and which provide resilient recurring
revenue streams. I am pleased to report we are discussing expanded
operations with such customers.
We have previously reported on the
opportunities for our business that we anticipate could arise from
the long-expected Martyn's Law legislation. Martyn's Law is named
after Martyn Hett, who at 29 years was killed in the Manchester
Arena terrorist attack in May 2017. Martyn's mother, Figen Murray,
has been a tireless campaigner and the force behind Martyn's Law
legislation that will require many businesses giving access to the
general public, to formally assess and take measures to address
terrorism risks for the first time. Martyn's Law is set to have a
profound and lasting effect on security provision in the UK -
encompassing Publicly Accessible Locations (PALs) and requiring
them to actively protect visitors and staff with appropriate levels
of security. The Home Office estimates that 650,000 UK businesses
could be affected by Martyn's Law, and this offers substantial
business opportunities for Westminster's extensive portfolio of
products and services. Whilst this was originally included in the
Kings Speech on 7 November 2023 the change of government delayed
progress. We are pleased to see the Bill was reintroduced following
the Kings speech on 17 July 2024 and is currently undergoing
Parliamentary scrutiny with cross party support and the expectation
is it will receive Royal Assent in the near future.
We have already assisted a number
of key-customers and landmark buildings with equipment and
solutions to prepare for the forthcoming legislation and we are
active in developing further opportunities and to be recognised as
a leading provider of solutions under the legislation.
Our German subsidiary, GLIS,
situated to the Southeast of Munich, is focussed on supplying
security technology and solutions to the European market.
Post Brexit the business is particularly well positioned to serve
the Group's EU clients.
The team continues to secure a
number of important new clients and is developing substantial
business opportunities in the region.
Our French business, Euro Ops,
continues to be a valuable strategic addition to the Group. The
company provides aviation focussed services such as humanitarian
flights and logistics, emergency flights, flight operations,
charter and storage management. The company has not only brought
new skills, services and revenues to the Group but provides greatly
improved access to Francophone countries for the wider Group
services.
In June 2024 Westminster were a
main sponsor and exhibitor at the counter terrorism exhibition in
London, CTX, Throughout the expo, we showcased our latest
innovations in security solutions, aimed at enhancing public safety
and counter-terrorism efforts worldwide. Westminster brought
together leading suppliers of advanced security technology
including Rohde & Schwarz, Linev, Apstec, Evolv, Detectachem,
and many others creating a unique stand for visitors from around
the world to see and experience a range of leading security
solutions. The event created a lot of interest in our solutions,
and we are currently in discussions with a number of high-profile
organisations as a direct result of that expo.
We have also once again begun
hosting various governmental and corporate clients at our
demonstration grounds and facilities in the UK. This is something
we did regularly pre-covid and which was an excellent way to build
customer relationships and secure meaningful business. During covid
this activity ceased for obvious reasons, and I am encouraged to
see various delegations once again visiting our operations in the
UK and would expect to see meaningful business being secured
accordingly.
Summary
We are making good progress on
delivering our strategy of building a resilient business based on
multiple revenue streams, many of which are from long-term
recurring revenue contracts, from multiple customers, in multiple
jurisdictions.
On a wider front, despite the
challenges we have continued to progress various existing and new
transformational large-scale managed services project opportunities
around the world which can and will provide step changes in growth
should they be secured. No two opportunities are the same and each
can have their own idiosyncrasies and challenges. As we have
previously advised, project opportunities of this size and nature,
particularly in emerging markets, are not only time-consuming and
involve complex negotiations with numerous commercial and political
bodies, but discussions can ebb and flow over many months, with
periods of intense activity which can be followed by long periods
of inactivity. It is however precisely because of such challenges
that competition is limited and the opportunities offer
transformational growth opportunities.
Whilst there is never certainty as
to timing or outcome of the many project opportunities we are
pursuing, we are making progress on a number of fronts, however due
to the nature of the projects and the numerous bodies involved it
is notoriously difficult to forecast timing of any contract award.
I know this can be frustrating at times but the upside of securing
such contracts with long-term, high margin recurring revenues is
worth the efforts. We obviously cannot provide regular updates or
details on contract negotiations, but we will provide market
updates on material developments when appropriate and in line with
our regulatory responsibilities.
In summary, despite the various
challenges and in some cases because of them, Westminster continues
to move forward.
Strategy
Our vision is to build a global
business with strong brand recognition delivering advanced security
solutions and long-term managed services, on Land, at Sea and in
the Air, primarily to high growth and emerging markets around the
world, with a particular focus on building multiple revenue
streams, many of which involve long term recurring revenue
business, from diverse sources in varying parts of the world,
providing a degree of resilience to external events and enhancing
shareholder value.
The Board considers strategy at
each regular Board Meeting and has from time to time 'off-site'
strategy days to review the Company's rolling five-year Strategic
Growth Plan and to consider new short-, medium- and long-term
strategies that could be implemented to achieve our goals and to
deal with changing global and economic issues.
As part of our strategy for
growth, we will also continue to improve and enhance our Board and
senior management team broadening our range of experience and
expertise. If we are to maximise the substantial growth
opportunities we are developing, particularly with our managed
services operations, it is essential we have the right strategies,
people, processes and systems in place to successfully deliver such
growth.
Whilst we still believe that the
opportunities we have been developing, primarily in emerging and
high growth markets, are what will deliver exponential growth over
the next few years, these can and do take time to develop and as we
have seen, can be disproportionately impacted by global, regional
and local events. Accordingly, one of the strategies we are now
developing is to balance some of that risk by building more core
business in the UK and developed world areas.
We are also looking to expand our
global footprint through the development of our agent network and
through strategic joint ventures (JVs) in key markets and regions,
and we believe that this strategy will enable the Company to expand
its sphere of operations in a controlled and cost-effective
way.
Due to the Company's share-price
concerns, the perceived current lack of liquidity, the cost of
capital and ongoing listing costs; concerns which are shared by
many listed companies of various sizes, the Board is undertaking a
strategic review on how to improve shareholder value. The results
of this review will be communicated to shareholders in due
course.
Our risk strategies are developed
from our Risk Committee who hold regular meetings and report to the
Audit Committee. Mitigation and risk strategies are then developed
to address potential risks, as we successfully did during the Covid
pandemic. Covid is of course not the first and will not be the last
external challenge for which we need to have strategies in place to
deal with. In 2014, the world experienced the West African Ebola
outbreak which caused huge problems for the region, and now the
Russian invasion of Ukraine has world-wide implications. I am
confident the strategies we have now and will further put in place,
together with our diverse business model, will help us not only
manage the challenges but seek new opportunities from
them.
Environment, Social, and
Governance (ESG) Strategy
The Westminster Group takes its
corporate and social responsibilities very seriously and recognises
that sustainability across our various business sectors is
important to us and our future growth, important to our
shareholders and wider stakeholders. The various ways in
which we currently monitor and undertake governance, including
environmental and social responsibilities of our business, are laid
out in the Corporate Governance Report.
We take our social
responsibilities very seriously including supporting the
communities in which we operate and, in this respect, have our own
registered charity - the Westminster Group Foundation - see
here www.wg-foundation.org.
Since 2007, the Westminster Group has assisted and been involved
with community work in Sierra Leone. This includes building new
schools, extending existing schools, providing school uniforms,
implementing water harvesting systems and solar panels, and through
the Ebola and COVID pandemics providing essential food supplies.
The latest school was completed September 2023 and is located at
Kono Town. In recognition of the support given by the Westminster
Group, it is named "Westminster Community Secondary School".
In July 2024, we also became a Corporate Member of Rotary in
Banbury, enabling our staff to volunteer to help Rotary in our
community
Our work on ESG includes
activities such as preparing detailed social environmental impact
reports for each airport in our new project in DRC. We take our
environmental responsibilities seriously and look to minimise our
carbon footprint, for example by use of electric vehicles where
possible. As an international business, travel has always featured
heavily in our business activities. One thing the recent pandemic
lockdowns have demonstrated is that some of this travel can be
replaced by remote meetings and conference by systems such as
Microsoft Teams and Zoom, which has now become commonplace and far
more accepted across the world. Accordingly, we intend to focus,
where possible, on reducing travel by continuing with remote
meetings. Where international travel is still necessary, we are
investigating carbon offset programmes. We are also working towards
ISO 14001 Environmental Management (EMS).
Performance
Indicators
The Group constantly monitors
various key performance indicators for factors affecting the
overall performance. At Group level, the revenues and gross margin
are monitored to give a constant view of the Group's operational
performance. A key focus for the Group is in building its recurring
revenue base from contracted income relating to its managed
services, maintenance and guarding contracts, and this is a key
metric being monitored. Employment is the single largest cost base
for the Group, the costs are strictly monitored to ensure best use
of resources. Days Sales Outstanding is used to measure the cash
conversion of revenue and identifies debtor aging
issues.
The Services Division measures its
performance in the four key areas of its deliverables - passengers
served in its airport operations, the number of days training
delivered by our training businesses and the number of guarding
hours delivered by our guarding businesses.
The Technology Division measures
its sales activity by reference to the number of enquiries received
per month and the number of orders received. The number of
countries served and number of return customers are monitored to
give a view on the performance of the division. The material
increases in guarding hours delivered is an indicator of the strong
growth by this part of our business
Group
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
Revenue
|
£9.1m
|
£8.5m
|
Gross Margin
|
60%
|
54%
|
Recurring Revenues as a % of
revenues
|
78%
|
58%
|
Days Sales Outstanding
|
53
|
30
|
Number of Employees
|
236
|
256
|
Average Employee Cost Per Head
annualised
|
£18,661
|
£17,016
|
Services Division
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
Passengers Served ('000)
|
188
|
124
|
Training Hours Delivered
|
6,808
|
5,906
|
Guarding Hours Delivered
|
85,408
|
38,508
|
Technology Division
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
Average Enquiries Per
Month
|
205
|
168
|
Average Number of Orders Per
Month
|
42
|
44
|
Number of Countries
Supplied
|
68
|
60
|
Number of Return
Customers
|
536
|
370
|
Current Trading &
Business Outlook
The business outlook is
encouraging. Despite the challenges of recent years and the ongoing
global instability and the resulting global economic turmoil and
financial uncertainty we have built a solid foundation for our
business and we will enter 2025 with greatly increased revenues
from contracts already secured.
Our work on the DRC contract is
progressing well as is the Southeast Africa airport project
bringing 5 more airports into our portfolio and significant ongoing
revenues for future years to come.
Our West African airport
operations and collaboration with Summa is working well and has
been a positive development. With potential new airlines opening up
new routes including a new direct flight to the UK once again, we
expect this contract to continue to be a valuable part of our
business.
We continue to invest in our
worldwide business development programmes in order to deliver on
our growth potential, particularly in our long-term major managed
services projects. We believe that we will secure one more
long-term managed services contract in the near future and have
every expectation of at least one more in 2025, each producing a
multi-million dollar step change in revenues.
Our training business continues to
secure new contracts around the world and our guarding business is
going from strength to strength.
As mentioned in the Divisional
Review above we believe the forthcoming Martyn's Law legislation
will become law in the near future which we believe is a
significant opportunity for our business and we look to build on
the work we have done preparing for this and the successful
contracts already secured which will place us in a strong position
to secure more meaningful business in 2025 and beyond.
We continue to have healthy
enquiry levels for our products and services from customers around
the world and are currently seeing an improvement in our technology
business. We traditionally secured one or two large-scale
multi-million USD Technology solution sales projects each year
although this has proved more challenging over the past couple of
years due to customer spending constraints. However, we do have
several potential projects in the pipeline, which despite ongoing
global turbulence, we have good reason to believe one or more may
materialise in 2025.
In June 2024 we secured a £1.5m
convertible loan note facility from a strategic investor to aid
growth, £1m of which has been drawn down in the period together
with a post period equity raise of £500k at 2.4p per share being
the current mid-market price and issue of 500k warrants at 10p
being a 400% premium to the current mid-market price from the same
investor demonstrating their confidence in the future growth of the
business.
In October 2024 we announced that
we had secured several contracts with a combined value of over $1.2
million, including a contract to provide comprehensive security
concierge services on an annual basis across a number of prominent
sites in the United Kingdom starting at circa £650,000 per annum in
the first year. The Company is additionally in discussions
regarding security solutions for some of the Customer's sites
elsewhere in the world, which we hope will result in additional
contracts.
In October 2024 Westminster was
also honoured with the prestigious "Best Global Aviation Security
Provider 2024" award during the London Political Summit &
Awards in recognition of the contribution made by Westminster to
aviation security around the world. The award was presented in the
UK Parliament, House of Commons by Her Excellency Fatima Maada Bio,
First Lady of Sierra Leone, who also served as a special guest
speaker at the event. This three-day summit brought together
influential political and business leaders from across Africa and
the UK and has already led to interest in Westminster's services
from a number of the attendees.
We are focussed on building a
resilient business based on multiple revenue streams, many of which
are from long-term recurring revenue contracts, from multiple
customers, in multiple jurisdictions, which is and will continue to
be a key growing strength of our business. We have a current order
book of circa £1m and annual recurring revenues of circa £14.3m
(including DRC estimates) with the potential to materially increase
this through additional new contracts in the year ahead.
Whilst remaining mindful global
events can still impact business outlook and despite the global
challenges and setbacks we have experienced, the foregoing
outlining the recovery and growth we are seeing in our various
businesses, together with our business model and the opportunities
we have been developing and investing in over the years underpin
our confidence for the future long-term growth and success of our
business.
Peter Fowler
Chief Executive Officer
5 November 2024
Chief Financial Officer's
Report
Revenue
30 June 2024 18 month revenues of
approximately £9.1m (12 months to 31 Dec 2022 restated: £8.5m) are
down due to a reduction in technology sales in the period due to
global instability and the resulting global economic turmoil and
financial uncertainty, causing governments and businesses to delay
capital-intensive spending. It is particularly noticeable that
large projects continued to be delayed awaiting confidence that the
world is returning back to more normal
times. 2022 has been restated to take into account discontinued
activities refer note 28.
Services revenues for the period
was strong at £7.2m (31 Dec 2022 restated: £5.3m). Services
particularly those relating to recurring revenue is a key element
to our future growth. Guarding revenues continued to be robust as
new jobs came on stream.
Westminster's Technology Division
revenues were down to £1.9m (31 Dec 2022: £3.2m) largely due to
lack of larger value solution sales although there are a number of
potential projects in the pipeline that may benefit future trading.
Gross Margin
Gross Margin Percent rose to 60%
(31 Dec 2022: 54%). This was primarily due to a mix effect as
higher margin Services increased against the decline in lower
margin (10% to 15%) Technology sales.
Operating Cost Base
When you take into account that
2024 is an 18-month period as opposed to 2022 which was 12 months
the run rate of group administrative costs reduced by 11%.
The actual number for 18 months was £7.4m (31 Dec 2022 (12 months):
£5.5m) in total. Strong cost reduction and tight control overcame
the general inflationary background.
Operational EBITDA^ from
underlying operations
The Group's loss from operations
was £1.9m (31 Dec 2022: £0.3m). When adjusted for the exceptional
and non-cash items and depreciation and amortisation, as set out
below, the Group recorded an EBITDA^ loss from underlying
operations of £1.5m (31 Dec 2022: £0.1m loss).
Reconciliation to EBITDA^ from underlying operations
before discontinued operations
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Loss from operations
|
(1,929)
|
(735)
|
Depreciation, amortisation and
impairment charges
|
389
|
252
|
Reported EBITDA
|
(1,540)
|
(483)
|
Share based expense
|
67
|
-
|
Exceptional items
|
-
|
-
|
EBITDA^ from operations
|
(1,473)
|
(483)
|
^ This is an Alternative
Performance Measure refer to Note 2 for further details
Finance Costs
Total finance costs for 30 June
2024 £0.2m (31 Dec 2022: £0.0m). There was an underlying cash
charge of £0.2m (31 Dec 2022: £0.0m).
Earnings Results for the
Period
The Group total loss before
taxation including discontinued activities was £4.4m (31 Dec 2022:
£0.4m). The Group loss after tax was £4.4m (31 Dec 2022:
£0.0m loss) and the loss per share was 1.32p (31 Dec 2022:
0.00p). Having reviewed a number of longstanding issues we
have decided for the purpose of the accounts write off or mark to
market as appropriate. We still believe that in the fullness
of time the assets will recover to close to their current true
levels. However, we feel with no concrete way of
demonstrating that, we have taken a sensible prudent approach at
this time. Further information can be found in notes 18 &
28.
Statement of Financial
Position
The Group's gross assets amounted
to £7.4m on 30 June 2024 compared with £10.0m on 31 December
2022. The main movement was funding the losses.
The Group's current assets
amounted to £3.8m on 30 June 2024 (31 Dec 2022: £5.6m) for the same
reasons as the change in total Group assets.
The Group's trade and other
receivables balance as at 30 June 2024 was £2.2m (31 Dec 2022:
£4.8m). Average days sales outstanding at the period-end were 53
(31 Dec 2022: 30). The 2022 debtor days were improved by the
large solution sale close to the period end. 2024 should be
compared to the similar level of 57 days at the end of
2021.
Cash and cash equivalents were
£1.0m at 30 June 2024 compared with £0.3m at 31 December 31 Dec
2022. Following the raising of a loan just before the year
end.
Trade and other payables were
£2.0m (31 Dec 2022: £2.5m) and average creditor days were 106 (31
Dec 2022: 51).
A deferred tax asset of £1.2m (31
Dec 2022: £1.3m) was held at the period end.
Total equity on 30 June 2024 stood
at a surplus of £3.1m (31 Dec 2022: £7.4m).
Key Performance
Indicators
The Key Performance Indicators by
which we measure performance of our business are set out in the
Chief Executive Officer's Report.
Equity Issues and Share
Options
There were no equity issues in the
period to 30 June 2024 (31 Dec 2022: Nil).
The Company has granted a total of
16,700,000 share options over ordinary shares of 0.1p each
("Ordinary Shares") in the Company with an exercise price of 1.95p
pence per Ordinary Share (being the closing middle market price of
an Ordinary Share on 12 January 2023). The new share options have
been awarded under the Company's 2017 Share Option Scheme to the
Directors plus certain UK based and overseas employees. As at
30 June 2024, 1,100,000 of these options had already lapsed leaving
15,600,000 outstanding.
Summary of Warrants
As at 30 June 2024 there were no
warrants outstanding. The 170,455 warrants
held by S P Angel lapsed on 31 January 2023 and the 3,499,222
warrants held by RiverFort lapsed on 21 January 2024.
Cash Flow Statement
During the period, the Group had
an operating cash outflow of £0.9m (31 Dec 2022: outflow £0.7m)
which arose from the loss and a favourable working capital movement
of £0.6m (31 Dec 2022: £0.6m adverse) primarily due to write offs
in discontinued operations offset by the loss.
During the period, the Group
raised nothing from the issue of new equity (31 Dec 2022:
Nil).
Reconciliation from adjusted EBITDA^ to normalised operating
cash flow
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Adjusted EBITDA^
|
(1,473)
|
(483)
|
Loss on
asset disposal
|
-
|
(4)
|
Net
changes in working capital
|
2,846
|
(569)
|
Movement on tax
|
41
|
354
|
Net
cash generated / (used) in underlying operating
activities
|
1,414
|
(702)
|
Net cash generated / (used) in
underlying operating activities is presented excluding exceptional
items, share options expense, and depreciation and
amortisation.
Principal risks and
uncertainties
The principal risk and
uncertainties facing the Group are outlined in the
accounts.
Going Concern
The assessment of Going Concern is
summarised in the Directors' Report.
Events after the Reporting
Period
These are fully set out in note
29.
Mark L W Hughes
Chief Financial Officer
5 November 2024
^ This is an Alternative
Performance Measure refer to Note 2 for further details
Westminster
Group PLC
Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income for the eighteen months ended 30
June 2024
|
|
Eighteen months to 30 June
2024
|
Restated
Twelve months to 31 December 2022
|
Continuing operations
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
REVENUE
|
3
|
9,051
|
8,579
|
Cost of sales
|
|
(3,660)
|
(3,936)
|
Gross profit
|
|
5,391
|
4,643
|
Operating expenses
|
|
(7,320)
|
(5,378)
|
(LOSS) / PROFIT FROM OPERATIONS
|
|
(1,929)
|
(735)
|
|
|
|
|
Analysis of operating loss
|
|
|
|
Profit from operations
|
|
(1,929)
|
(735)
|
Add back amortisation
|
10
|
72
|
56
|
Add back depreciation
|
11
|
317
|
196
|
Add back share-based
expense
|
|
67
|
-
|
Add back exceptional
items
|
|
-
|
-
|
EBITDA^ Profit/(loss) from underlying
operations
|
|
(1,473)
|
(483)
|
|
|
|
|
Other income / (losses)
|
18
|
(1,013)
|
-
|
Finance costs - net
|
4
|
(209)
|
(40)
|
Loss before tax
|
|
(3,151)
|
(775)
|
Tax
|
6
|
41
|
354
|
Loss for the period/year from continuing
operations
|
|
(3,110)
|
(421)
|
Discontinued operations loss after
tax for the year from discontinued operations
|
28
|
(1,263)
|
410
|
LOSS FOR THE PERIOD
|
|
(4,373)
|
(11)
|
|
|
|
|
LOSS AND TOTAL COMPREHENSIVE LOSS ATTRIBUTABLE
TO:
|
|
|
|
Members of the parent
entity
|
|
(4,249)
|
121
|
Non-controlling interests
|
|
(124)
|
(132)
|
LOSS FOR THE PERIOD
|
|
(4,373)
|
(11)
|
|
|
|
|
OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
|
|
|
|
Revaluation of freehold
property
|
|
205
|
-
|
Deferred tax on
revaluation
|
|
(51)
|
-
|
TOTAL COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
|
|
154
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
LOSS AND TOTAL COMPREHENSIVE LOSS FOR THE
PERIOD
|
|
(4,219)
|
(11)
|
|
|
|
|
LOSS AND TOTAL COMPREHENSIVE LOSS ATTRIBUTABLE
TO:
|
|
|
|
Members of the parent
entity
|
|
(4,095)
|
121
|
Non-controlling interests
|
|
(124)
|
(132)
|
LOSS AND TOTAL COMPREHENSIVE LOSS
|
|
(4,219)
|
(11)
|
|
|
|
|
Basic and diluted loss per share
from operations
|
8
|
(1.32p)
|
0.00p
|
The accompanying notes form part
of these financial statements.
^ This is an Alternative
Performance Measure refer to Note 2 for further details
Westminster
Group PLC
Consolidated
and Company Statements of Financial Position
As at 30 June 2024
|
|
Group
|
Group
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Goodwill
|
9
|
614
|
615
|
-
|
-
|
Other intangible assets
|
10
|
26
|
106
|
17
|
84
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
11
|
1,867
|
1,825
|
1,222
|
1,087
|
Investment in
subsidiaries
|
13
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Deferred tax asset
|
16
|
1,304
|
1,308
|
-
|
-
|
TOTAL NON-CURRENT ASSETS
|
|
3,811
|
3,854
|
1,239
|
1,171
|
Inventories
|
17
|
655
|
485
|
-
|
-
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
18
|
2,160
|
4,808
|
9,694
|
10,683
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
19
|
977
|
289
|
780
|
(59)
|
TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS
|
|
3,792
|
5,582
|
10,474
|
10,624
|
Non-current receivable
|
18
|
-
|
593
|
-
|
-
|
TOTAL ASSETS
|
|
7,603
|
10,029
|
11,713
|
11,795
|
Called up share capital
|
20
|
331
|
331
|
331
|
331
|
Share based payment
reserve
|
|
851
|
964
|
851
|
964
|
Revaluation reserve
|
|
293
|
139
|
293
|
139
|
Equity reserve on
convertible
|
|
22
|
-
|
22
|
-
|
Retained earnings:
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January
|
|
6,503
|
6,340
|
9,362
|
9,307
|
(Loss)/profit for the
year
|
|
(4,249)
|
121
|
(1,712)
|
(23)
|
Other changes in retained
earnings
|
|
239
|
42
|
180
|
78
|
At 31 December
|
|
2,493
|
6,503
|
7,830
|
9,362
|
(DEFICIT)/EQUITY ATTRIBUTABLE TO:
|
|
|
|
|
|
OWNERS OF THE COMPANY
|
|
3,990
|
7,937
|
9,327
|
10,796
|
NON-CONTROLLING INTEREST
|
|
(646)
|
(522)
|
-
|
-
|
TOTAL EQUITY
|
|
3,344
|
7,415
|
9,327
|
10,796
|
Borrowings
|
22
|
1,098
|
27
|
978
|
-
|
Deferred tax liability
|
|
-
|
-
|
51
|
-
|
TOTAL NON-CURRENT LIABILITIES
|
|
1,098
|
27
|
1,029
|
-
|
Borrowings
|
22
|
994
|
195
|
-
|
-
|
Contractual liabilities
|
23
|
120
|
80
|
-
|
-
|
Trade and other payables
|
23
|
2,047
|
2,312
|
1,357
|
999
|
TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES
|
|
3,161
|
2,587
|
1,357
|
999
|
TOTAL LIABILITIES
|
|
4,259
|
2,614
|
2,386
|
999
|
TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY AND LIABILITIES
|
|
7,603
|
10,029
|
11,713
|
11,795
|
The accompanying notes form part
of these financial statements. The Company has taken advantage of
the exemption under Section 408 of the Companies Act 2006 from
presenting its own profit and loss account. The Company made a loss
of £1,712,000 in 30 June 2024, (31 Dec
2022: £24,000 loss). The Group and
Company financial statements were approved by the Board and
authorised for issue on 5 November 2024 and signed on its behalf
by:
Peter
Fowler
Mark L W Hughes
Director
Director
Westminster
Group PLC
Company
Statement of Changes in Equity
For the eighteen months ended 30 June 2024
|
Called up share
capital
|
Share premium
account
|
Merger relief
reserve
|
Share based payment
reserve
|
Revaluation
reserve
|
Equity reserve on
convertible loan note
|
Retained
earnings
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
AS
AT 1 JANUARY 2023
|
331
|
-
|
-
|
964
|
139
|
-
|
9,362
|
10,796
|
Convertible loan note
issued
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
22
|
-
|
22
|
Share based payment
charge
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
67
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
67
|
Lapse of Share Options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(66)
|
-
|
-
|
66
|
-
|
Lapse of Warrants
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(114)
|
-
|
-
|
114
|
-
|
TRANSACTIONS WITH OWNERS
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(113)
|
-
|
22
|
180
|
294
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive expense
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,712)
|
(1,712)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revaluation of group
property
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
205
|
-
|
-
|
205
|
Deferred tax impact on
reserves
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(51)
|
-
|
-
|
(51)
|
Total other comprehensive income
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
154
|
-
|
-
|
154
|
Total comprehensive income/ (loss)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
154
|
-
|
(1,712)
|
(1,558)
|
AS
AT 30 JUNE 2024
|
331
|
-
|
-
|
851
|
293
|
22
|
7,830
|
9,327
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AS AT 1 JANUARY 2022
|
331
|
-
|
-
|
1,043
|
139
|
-
|
9,307
|
10,820
|
Lapse of Share Options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(79)
|
-
|
-
|
79
|
-
|
TRANSACTIONS WITH OWNERS
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(79)
|
-
|
-
|
79
|
-
|
Total comprehensive expense for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(24)
|
(24)
|
AS AT 31 DECEMBER 2022
|
331
|
-
|
-
|
964
|
139
|
-
|
9,362
|
10,796
|
Consolidated Cash Flow Statement
For the eighteen months ended 30 June 2024
|
|
Eighteen months to 30 June
2024
|
Twelve
months to 31 December 2022
|
|
|
Total
|
Total
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
PROFIT / (LOSS) AFTER TAX
|
|
(4,373)
|
(11)
|
Taxation
|
|
(41)
|
(354)
|
PROFIT / (LOSS) BEFORE TAX
|
|
(4,414)
|
(365)
|
Non-cash adjustments
|
24
|
2,975
|
252
|
Net changes in working
capital
|
24
|
574
|
(569)
|
NET
CASH USED IN OPERATING ACTIVITIES
|
|
(865)
|
(682)
|
INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
|
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
11
|
(27)
|
(111)
|
Purchase of intangible
assets
|
10
|
-
|
(12)
|
CASH INFLOW FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
|
|
(27)
|
(123)
|
CASHFLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
|
|
|
|
Convertible loan note
issued
|
|
1,000
|
-
|
Loan drawdown
|
|
1,225
|
200
|
Finance cost
|
|
(195)
|
(40)
|
Other loan repayments
|
|
(450)
|
(10)
|
CASH INFLOW FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
|
|
1,580
|
150
|
|
|
|
|
Net change in cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
688
|
(655)
|
CASH AND EQUIVALENTS AT BEGINNING OF PERIOD
|
|
289
|
944
|
|
|
|
|
CASH AND EQUIVALENTS AT END OF PERIOD
|
19
|
977
|
289
|
Company Cash Flow Statement
For the eighteen months ended 30 June 2024
|
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
|
Eighteen months to 30 June
2024
|
Twelve
months to 31 December 2024
|
|
Note
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
(LOSS)/PROFIT AFTER TAX
|
|
(1,712)
|
(23)
|
Other Non-cash
adjustments
|
24
|
222
|
121
|
Net changes in working
capital
|
24
|
1,348
|
(493)
|
NET
CASH (USED IN) /FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
|
|
(142)
|
(395)
|
INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
|
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
11
|
(18)
|
(26)
|
Purchase of intangible
assets
|
10
|
-
|
(13)
|
CASH OUTFLOW FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
|
|
(18)
|
(39)
|
CASHFLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
|
|
|
|
Convertible loan note
issued
|
15
|
1,000
|
-
|
Change in lease debt
|
|
-
|
(5)
|
Interest paid
|
|
(1)
|
-
|
CASH INFLOW / (USED) FROM FINANCING
ACTIVITIES
|
|
999
|
(5)
|
Net change in cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
839
|
(439)
|
CASH AND EQUIVALENTS AT BEGINNING OF PERIOD
|
|
(59)
|
380
|
CASH AND EQUIVALENTS AT END OF PERIOD
|
|
780
|
(59)
|
The accompanying notes form part
of these financial statements.
Notes to the
Financial Statements
1.
General information and nature of operations
Westminster Group PLC ("the
Company") was incorporated on 7 April 2000 and is domiciled and
incorporated in the United Kingdom and quoted on AIM. The
Group's financial statements for the eighteen months ended 30 June
2024 consolidate the individual financial statements of the Company
and its subsidiaries. The Group design, supply and provide on-going
advanced technology solutions and services to governmental and
non-governmental organisations on a global basis.
2.
Summary of significant accounting policies
Basis of preparation
The Group financial statements
have been prepared and approved by the Directors in accordance
with UK-adopted IAS. The Parent Company
has elected to prepare its financial statements in accordance
with UK-adopted IAS. The Company has
taken advantage of the exemption under Section 408 of the Companies
Act 2006 from presenting its own profit and loss
account.
The financial information is
presented in the Company's functional currency, which is British
pounds sterling ('GBP') since that is the currency in which the
majority of the Group's transactions are denominated.
Basis of measurement
The financial statements have been
prepared under the historical cost convention with the exception of
certain items which are measured at fair value as disclosed in the
accounting policies below.
Consolidation
(i) Basis of consolidation
The consolidated financial
statements comprise the financial statements of the Company and its
subsidiaries for the eighteen months ended 30 June 2024.
(ii) Subsidiaries
Where the company has control over
an investee, it is classified as a subsidiary. The company controls
an investee if all three of the following elements are present:
power over the investee, exposure to variable returns from the
investee, and the ability of the investor to use its power to
affect those variable returns. Control is reassessed whenever facts
and circumstances indicate that there may be a change in any of
these elements of control.
De-facto control exists in
situations where the company has the practical ability to direct
the relevant activities of the investee without holding the
majority of the voting rights. In determining whether de-facto
control exists the company considers all relevant facts and
circumstances, including:
· The
size of the company's voting rights relative to both the size and
dispersion of other parties
· who
hold voting rights
· Substantive potential voting rights held by the company and
by other parties
· Other contractual arrangements
· Historic patterns in voting attendance.
The consolidated financial
statements present the results of the company and its subsidiaries
("the Group") as if they formed a single entity. Intercompany
transactions and balances between group companies are therefore
eliminated in full.
The consolidated financial
statements incorporate the results of business combinations using
the acquisition method. In the statement of financial position, the
acquiree's identifiable assets, liabilities and contingent
liabilities are initially recognised at their fair values at the
acquisition date. The results of acquired operations are
included in the consolidated statement of comprehensive income from
the date on which control is obtained. They are deconsolidated from
the date on which control ceases.
(iii) Transactions eliminated on
consolidation
Intragroup balances and any
unrealised gains and losses or income and expenses arising from
intragroup transactions are eliminated in preparing the
consolidated financial statements.
(iv) Company financial statements
Investments in subsidiaries are
carried at cost less provision for any impairment. Dividend income
is recognised when the right to receive payment is
established.
Going concern
The Group made a loss during the
period of £4.4m (31 Dec 2022: Nil) of which continuing operations
were a loss of £3.1m (31 Dec 2022: £0.5m loss), The cash outflow
from operating activities during the eighteen months was £0.9m (31
Dec 2022: £0.7m).
The financial statements are
prepared on a going concern basis. In assessing whether the going
concern assumption is appropriate, management have taken into
account all relevant available information about the current and
future position of the Group, including new long-term contracts. As
part of its assessment, management have taken into account the
profit and cash forecasts, the continued support of the
shareholders and the Directors' and management's ability to affect
costs and revenues. Management regularly forecast results, the
financial position and cash flows for the Group.
The Directors have reviewed the
Group's resources at the date of approving the financial
statements, and their projections for future trading, which due to
winning incremental new business give a reasonable expectation that
the Group has adequate resources to continue in operational
existence for the foreseeable future, which for the avoidance of
doubt is at least 12 months from the date of signing the financial
statements. Thus, they continue to adopt the going concern basis of
accounting in preparing the financial statements.
Business combinations
The consideration transferred by
the Group to obtain control of a subsidiary is calculated as the
sum of the acquisition date fair values of assets transferred,
liabilities incurred, and the equity interests issued by the Group,
which includes the fair value of any asset or liability arising
from a contingent consideration arrangement. Acquisition costs are
expensed as incurred.
The Group recognises identifiable
assets acquired and liabilities assumed in a business combination
regardless of whether they have been previously recognised in the
acquiree's financial statements prior to the acquisition. Assets
acquired and liabilities assumed are generally measured at their
acquisition date fair values.
Foreign currency
Items included in the financial
statements of the Company are measured using the currency of the
primary economic environment in which the entity operates - 'the
functional currency'. The functional and presentation currency in
these financial statements is the Great British Pounds
(GBP).
Transactions in foreign currencies
are translated at the foreign exchange rate ruling at the date of
the transaction (spot exchange rate). Foreign exchange gains and
losses resulting from the settlement of such transactions and from
the re-measurement of monetary items at period-end exchange rates
are recognised in profit or loss. Non-monetary items measured at
historical cost are translated using the exchange rates at the date
of the transaction and not subsequently retranslated.
Foreign exchange gains and losses
are recognised in arriving at profit before interest and taxation
(see Note 5).
Segmental reporting
Operating segments are reported in
a manner consistent with the internal reporting provided to the
chief decision-maker. The chief decision-maker has been
identified as the Executive Board, at which level strategic
decisions are made.
An operating segment is a
component of the Group;
·
That engages in business activities from which it
may earn revenues and incur expenses,
·
Whose operating results are regularly reviewed by
the entity's chief operating decision maker to make decisions about
resources to be allocated to the segment and assess its
performance, and
·
For which discrete financial information is
available.
Revenue
Revenue recognition
Revenue represents income derived
from contracts for the provision of goods and services, over time
or at a point in time, by the Group to customers in exchange for
consideration in the ordinary course of the Group's
activities.
Performance Obligations
Upon approval by the parties to a
contract, the contract is assessed to identify each promise to
transfer either a distinct good or service or a series of distinct
goods or services that are substantially the same and have the same
pattern of transfer to the customer. Goods and services are
distinct and accounted for as separate performance obligations in
the contract if the customer can benefit from them either on their
own or together with other resources that are readily available to
the customer, and they are separately identifiable in the contract.
Transaction price
At the start of the contract, the
total transaction price is estimated as the amount of consideration
to which the Group expects to be entitled in exchange for
transferring the promised goods and services to the customer,
excluding sales taxes. Variable consideration, such as price
escalation, is included based on the expected value or most likely
amount only to the extent that it is highly probable that there
will not be a reversal in the amount of the cumulative revenue
recognised. The transaction price does not include estimates of
consideration resulting from contract modifications, such as change
orders, until they have been approved by parties to the contract.
The total transaction price is allocated to the performance
obligations identified in the contract in proportion to their
relative stand-alone selling prices. Given the nature of many of
the Group's products and services, which are designed and/or
manufactured under contract to customers' individual
specifications, there are typically no observable stand-alone
selling prices. Instead, stand-alone selling prices are typically
estimated based on expected costs plus contract margin consistent
with the Group's pricing principles.
Whilst payment terms vary from
contract to contract, an element of the transaction price may be
received in advance of delivery. The Group may therefore have
contract liabilities depending on the contracts in existence at a
period end. The Group's contracts are not considered to include
significant financing components on the basis that there is no
difference between the consideration and the cash selling
price.
Revenue recognition
Revenue is recognised as
performance obligations are satisfied as control of the goods and
services is transferred to the customer.
For each performance obligation
within a contract the Group determines whether it is satisfied over
time or at a point in time. Performance obligations are satisfied
over time if one of the following criteria is satisfied:
· The
customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefits provided
by the Group's performance as it performs;
· The
Group's performance creates or enhances an asset that the customer
controls as the asset is created or enhanced; or
· The
Group's performance does not create an asset with an alternative
use to the Group and it has an enforceable right to payment for
performance completed to date.
The Group has determined that most
of its contacts satisfy the overtime criteria, either because the
customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefits provided
by the Group's performance as it performs, or the Group's
performance does not create an asset with an alternative use to the
Group and it has an enforceable right to payment for performance
completed to date. For each performance obligation recognised
over time, the Group recognises revenue using an input method,
based on costs incurred in the period. Revenue and attributable
margin are calculated by reference to reliable estimates of
transaction price and total expected costs, after making suitable
allowances or technical and other risks. Revenue and associated
margin are therefore recognised progressively as costs are
incurred, and as risks have been mitigated or retired. The Group
has determined that this method appropriately depicts the Group's
performance in transferring control of the goods and services to
the customer.
If the overtime criteria for
revenue recognition is not met, revenue is recognised at the point
in time that control is transferred to the customer which is
usually when legal title passes to the customer and the business
has the right to payment.
When it is expected that total
contract costs will exceed total contract revenue, the expected
loss is recognised immediately as an expense.
Operating expenses
Operating expenses are recognised
in profit or loss upon utilisation of the service or at the date of
their origin. Expenditure for warranties is recognised and
charged against the associated provision when the related revenue
is recognised. Certain items have been disclosed as operating
exceptional due to their size and nature and their separate
disclosure should enable better understanding of the financial
dynamics.
Interest income and expenses
Interest income and expenses are
reported on an accruals basis using the effective interest
method.
Goodwill
Goodwill is stated after separate
recognition of identifiable intangible assets. It is calculated as
the excess of the sum of a) fair value of consideration
transferred, b) the recognised amount of any non-controlling
interest in the acquiree and c) acquisition date fair value of any
existing equity interest in the acquiree, over the acquisition date
fair value of identifiable net assets. If the
fair value of identifiable net
assets exceeds the sum calculated above, the excess amount (i.e.,
gain on a bargain purchase) is recognised in profit or loss
immediately. Goodwill is carried at cost less accumulated
impairment losses.
Property, plant and equipment
Plant and equipment, office
equipment, fixtures and fittings and motor vehicles are stated at
cost less accumulated depreciation and any recognised impairment
loss
.
Depreciation is charged so as to
write off the cost or valuation of assets to their residual value
over their estimated useful lives, using the straight-line method,
typically at the following rates. Where certain assets are specific
for a long-term contract and the customer has an obligation to
purchase the asset at the end of the contract they are depreciated
in accordance with the expected disposal / residual
value.
|
Rate
|
Freehold buildings
|
2%
|
Plant and equipment
|
7% to 25%
|
Office equipment, fixtures &
fittings
|
20% to 33%
|
Motor vehicles
|
20%
|
Freehold land is not depreciated.
Freehold property is held at valuation.
Leases
All leases that fall under IFRS 16
will be recorded on the balance sheet as liabilities, at the
present value of the future lease payments, along with an asset
reflecting the right to use the asset over the lease term. Rentals
payable under operating leases exempt from IFRS 16 are charged to
income on a straight-line basis over the term of the relevant
lease. At inception of a contract, the Group assesses whether a
contract is, or contains, a lease based on whether the contract
conveys the right to control the use of an identified asset for a
period of time in exchange for consideration.
The Group recognises a
right-of-use asset and a corresponding lease liability at the lease
commencement date. The lease liability is initially measured at the
present value of the following lease payments:
-
fixed payments;
-
variable payments that are based on index or rate;
-
the exercise price of any extension or purchase option if
reasonably certain it can be exercised; and
-
penalties for terminating the lease, if relevant.
The lease payments are discounted
using the interest rate implicit in the lease or, if that rate
cannot be readily determined, the Group's incremental borrowing
rate for that type of asset.
The right-of-use assets are
initially measured based on initial amount of the lease liability
adjusted for any lease payments made at or before the commencement
date, plus any initial direct costs. The right-of-use assets are
depreciated over the period of the lease term using the
straight-line method. The lease term includes periods covered by
the option to extend, if the Group is reasonably certain to
exercise that option. In addition, right-of-use assets may during
the lease term be reduced by any impairment losses, if any, or
adjusted for certain remeasurements of the lease
liability.
Impairment on non-financial assets
At each reporting date, the Group
reviews the carrying amounts of its non-current assets to determine
whether there is any indication that those assets have suffered an
impairment loss. If any such indication exists, the recoverable
amount of the asset is estimated in order to determine the extent
of the impairment loss (if any). The recoverable amount is the
higher of fair value less costs to sell and value in use. If
the recoverable amount of an asset is estimated to be less than its
carrying amount, the carrying amount of the asset is reduced to its
recoverable amount. An impairment loss is recognised as an expense
immediately, unless the relevant asset is carried at a revalued
amount, in which case the impairment loss is treated as a
revaluation decrease. Where an impairment loss subsequently
reverses, the carrying amount of the asset is increased to the
revised estimate of its recoverable amount, but so that the
increased carrying amount does not exceed the carrying amount that
would have been determined had no impairment loss been recognised
for the asset in prior years.
Financial instruments
Financial assets
The Group's financial assets
include cash and cash equivalents and loans and other receivables.
All financial assets are recognised when the Group becomes party to
the contractual provisions of the instrument. All financial assets
are initially recognised at fair value, plus transaction costs.
They are subsequently measured at amortised cost using the
effective interest method, less any impairment losses. Any changes
in carrying value are recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive
Income. Interest and other cash flows resulting from holding
financial assets are recognised in the Statement of Cash Flows when
received, regardless of how the related carrying amount of
financial assets is measured.
The Group recognises a loss
allowance for expected losses on financial assets that are measured
at amortised cost including trade receivables and contract assets.
The amount of expected credit losses is updated at each reporting
date to reflect changes in credit risk since initial recognition.
Cash and cash equivalents comprise
cash at bank and deposits and bank overdrafts. Bank overdrafts are
shown within borrowings in current liabilities unless a legally
enforceable right to offset exists.
The RiverFort sundry debtor is
classified at fair value through profit or loss and is re-measured
to fair value at the end of each reporting period. Gains and losses
arising from re-measurement are taken to profit or loss, as are
transaction costs incurred. Management review at each
reporting date the significant observable inputs and valuation
adjustments with respect to the fair value measurement of the
RiverFort debtor. The value of the Group's shares is observable in
an active market as quoted prices are available hence valuation is
within level 1 of the fair value hierarchy under IFRS 13, Fair
value measurement. The valuation technique has been changed to
mark-to-market.
Financial liabilities
The Group's financial liabilities
comprise trade and other payables and borrowings. All
financial liabilities are recognised initially at their fair value
and subsequently measured at amortised cost using the effective
interest method. Financial liabilities are derecognised when
they are extinguished, discharged, cancelled or expire.
Convertible loan notes with an
option that leads to a potentially variable number of shares, have
been accounted for as a host debt with an embedded derivative. The
embedded derivative is accounted for at fair value through profit
and loss at each reporting date. The host debt is recognised
initially at fair value, and subsequently measured at amortised
cost using the effective interest method.
Convertible loan notes which can
be converted to share capital at the option of the holder, and
where the number of shares to be issued does not vary with changes
in fair value, are considered to be a compound
instrument.
The liability component of a
compound instrument is recognised initially at the fair value of a
similar liability that does not have an equity conversion option.
The equity component is recognised initially at the difference
between the fair value of the compound instrument and fair value of
the liability component. Any directly attributable transaction
costs are allocated to the liability and equity
components.
Financial liabilities and equity
instruments issued by the Group are classified according to the
substance of the contractual arrangements entered into and the
definitions of a financial liability and an equity
instrument. An equity instrument is any contract that
evidences a residual interest in the assets of the Group after
deducting all of its liabilities.
Investments and loans in subsidiaries
Subsidiary fixed asset investments
are valued at cost less provision for impairment. The Group applies
the IFRS 9 simplified approach to measuring expected credit losses
which uses a lifetime expected loss allowance for all investment
and loans in subsidiaries.
Inventories
Inventories are stated at the
lower of cost and net realisable value. Costs of ordinarily
interchangeable items are assigned using the first in, first out
cost formula. Costs principally comprise of materials and bringing
them to their present location. Net realisable value represents the
estimated selling price less all estimated costs to completion and
costs to be incurred in marketing, selling and
distribution.
Taxation
The tax expense represents the sum
of the tax currently payable and deferred tax. Current and deferred
tax are recognised as an expense or income in profit or loss,
except in respect of items dealt with through equity, in which case
the tax is also dealt with through equity.
The tax currently payable is based
on taxable profit for the eighteen months. Taxable profit differs
from net profit as reported in the Statement of Comprehensive
Income because it excludes items of income or expense that are
taxable or deductible in other years and it further excludes items
that are never taxable or deductible. The Group's liability for
current tax is calculated by using tax rates that have been enacted
or substantively enacted by the balance sheet date.
Deferred tax is the tax expected
to be payable or recoverable on material differences between the
carrying amount of assets and liabilities in the financial
statements and the corresponding tax bases used in the computation
of taxable profit and is accounted for using the balance sheet
liability method. Deferred tax liabilities are recognised for all
taxable temporary differences and deferred tax assets are
recognised to the extent that it is probable that taxable profits
will be available against which deductible temporary differences
can be utilised. Such assets and liabilities are not recognised if
the temporary difference arises from the initial recognition of
goodwill or from the initial recognition (other than in a business
combination) of other assets and liabilities in a transaction which
affects neither the tax profit not the accounting
profit.
Cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents include
cash in hand, deposits held at call with banks, other short-term
highly liquid investments with original maturities of three months
or less, and bank overdrafts. Bank overdrafts are shown within
borrowings in current liabilities unless a legally enforceable
right to offset exists.
Equity, reserves and dividend payments
Share capital represents the
nominal value of shares that have been issued.
The share-based payment reserve
represents equity-settled share-based employee remuneration until
such share options are exercised or lapse. It also includes the
equity settled items such as warrants for services rendered
accounted for in accordance with IFRS 2.
The revaluation reserve within
equity comprises gains and losses due to the revaluation of
property, plant and equipment.
The equity reserve on the
convertible loan notes is the embedded derivative accounted for at
fair value.
Retained earnings include all
current and prior period retained profits and losses.
Dividend distributions payable to
equity shareholders are included in liabilities when the dividends
have been approved in a general meeting prior to the reporting
date.
Pensions
The Group operates a defined
contribution pension scheme for employees in the UK and is
operating under auto enrolment. Local labour in Africa benefit from
a termination payment on leaving employment. The expected value of
this is accrued on a monthly basis.
Share-based compensation (Employee Based
Benefits)
The Group operates an
equity-settled share-based compensation plan. The fair value of the
employee services received in exchange for the grant of options is
recognised as an expense over the vesting period, based on the
Group's estimate of awards that will eventually vest, with a
corresponding increase in equity as a share-based payment
reserve. For plans that include market-based vesting
conditions, the fair value at the date of grant reflects these
conditions and are not subsequently revisited.
Fair value is determined using
Black-Scholes option pricing models. Non-market based vesting
conditions are included in assumptions about the number of options
that are expected to vest. At each reporting date, the number of
options that are expected to vest is estimated. The impact of any
revision of original estimates, if any, is recognised in profit or
loss, with a corresponding adjustment to equity, over the remaining
vesting period.
The proceeds received when vested
options are exercised, net of any directly attributable transaction
costs, are credited to share capital (nominal value) and share
premium.
Share-based payments
The Group has two types of
share-based payments other than employee compensation.
Warrants issued for services
rendered which are accounted for in accordance with IFRS 2
recognising either the cost of the service if it can be reliably
measured or the fair value of the warrant (using Black-Scholes
option pricing models).
Warrants issued as part of Share
Issues have been determined as equity instruments under IAS
32. Since the fair value of the shares issued at the same
time is equal to the price paid, these warrants, by deduction, are
considered to have been issued at nil value.
Provisions
Provisions are recognised when the
Group has a present legal or constructive obligation as a result of
a past event which it is probable will result in an outflow of
economic benefits that can be reliably estimated.
SIGNIFICANT MANAGEMENT JUDGEMENTS IN APPLYING ACCOUNTING
POLICIES
The following are significant
management judgements in applying the accounting policies of the
Group that have the most significant effect on the financial
statements.
Items included in the financial
statements of each of the Group's entities are measured using the
currency of the primary economic environment in which the entity
operates ('the functional currency'). The Board has judged
that because most of the Group's costs and a substantial part of
its sales are situated in the UK.
Goodwill
Goodwill (note 9) has been tested
for impairment by considering its net present value for the
expected income stream in perpetuity at a discount rate judged to
be 5% based on the normal lending rate we are offered leases at,
which management consider is a good surrogate for cost of capital.
It was also established that 42% (31 Dec 2022: 20%) is the discount rate at which no impairment still would
be needed. The income is assumed to be flat and stable for
the purpose of this test. Goodwill which does not show a net
present value higher than its carrying cost will be
impaired.
Deferred tax asset
Deferred tax assets (note 16) are
recognised to the extent that it is probable that taxable profits
will be available against which deductible temporary differences
can be utilised. The Directors have prepared projections for the
next five years based on the best available evidence and have
concluded that this deferred tax asset will be utilised in the
future.
Subsidiary intercompany balances
Intercompany balances are stated
at full value if the subsidiary is continuing to trade, and a
reasonable projection indicates that the subsidiary will be able to
repay the balance at some time in the future. Dormant subsidiaries
owing money to the group are therefore fully impaired. The
Group will support subsidiaries to meet their obligations as and
when they fall due.
Debtors and Accrued Income
The collectability of debtor
balances, which include amounts due from various projects including
Ghana, have been reviewed in depth by management and the
collectability of each debt has been considered carefully. The
outcome of these reviews, as well as a more general exercise, is
that the carrying value of the debtors is stated at the amount owed
less a realistic provision for those debtors considered to be
uncollectable or needing impairment. The collectability of the debt
in relation to Ghana revolves around agreement with the
counterparty over the quantum and the payment terms due under the
contract for services rendered and early termination. Management
have taken a prudent approach to ensure the carrying value of the
amount owed is collectable. The accrued income has been
estimated based solely on the volume of containers passing through
the screening systems. Management believes the final income figure
could be in excess of the amount disclosed in the financial
statements.
Sundry Debtors
The collectability of sundry
debtor balances has been reviewed and considered by the executive
team. The carrying value of the sundry debtor in particular
RiverFort has been tested and it is considered to be fairly
stated.
The judgements involved in
determining the appropriate classification of the receivable being
a financial asset held at fair value through profit or loss include
the asset not being held for trading investment in an equity
instrument that is designated at fair value through other
comprehensive income at initial recognition. The contractual terms
of the sundry debt does not give rise on specified dates to cash
flows that are solely payments of principal and interest on the
principal amount outstanding. The RiverFort sundry debtor balance
is therefore measured at fair value and any gains and losses
recognised in the profit and loss as they arise.
Revalued freehold property
The freehold property is stated at
fair value. A full revaluation exercise was carried out as at 30
June 2024. The fair value is based on market value, being the
estimated amount for which a property could be exchanged on the
date of valuation between a willing buyer and a willing seller in
an arm's length transaction after proper marketing wherein the
parties had each acted knowledgeably, prudently and without
compulsion.
New standards, amendments and
interpretations
The following new standards have
been adopted as appropriate and where required the prior period's
figures have been restated.
IAS 1 Presentation of Financial
Statements
IAS 1 "Presentation of Financial
Statements" sets out the overall requirements for financial
statements, including how they should be structured, the minimum
requirements for their content and overriding concepts such as
going concern, the accrual basis of accounting and the
current/non-current distinction. The standard requires a complete
set of financial statements to comprise a statement of financial
position, a statement of profit or loss and other comprehensive
income, a statement of changes in equity and a statement of cash
flows. The amendments are effective for annual periods beginning on
or after January 1, 2023.
IAS 8 Accounting Policies, Changes
in Accounting Estimates and Errors
This standard is applied in
selecting and applying accounting policies, accounting for changes
in estimates and reflecting corrections of prior period errors. The
standard requires compliance with any specific IFRS applying to a
transaction, event or condition, and provides guidance on
developing accounting policies for other items that result in
relevant and reliable information. Changes in accounting policies
and corrections of errors are generally retrospectively accounted
for, whereas changes in accounting estimates are generally
accounted for on a prospective basis. The amendments are effective
for annual periods beginning on or after January 1,
2023.
IFRS 17 Insurance
Contracts
IFRS 17 requires insurance
liabilities to be measured at a current fulfilment value and
provides a more uniform measurement and presentation approach for
all insurance contracts. These requirements are designed to achieve
the goal of a consistent, principle-based accounting for insurance
contracts. IFRS 17 supersedes IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts as of 1
January 2023. This is not applicable to the Group.
Classification of Liabilities as
Current or Non-Current (Amendments to IAS 1)
IFRS 3 "Business Combinations"
outlines the accounting when an acquirer obtains control of a
business (e.g. an acquisition or merger). Such business
combinations are accounted for using the 'acquisition method',
which generally requires assets acquired and liabilities assumed to
be measured at their fair values at the acquisition date. The
amendments aim to promote consistency in applying the requirements
by helping companies determine whether, in the statement of
financial position, debt and other liabilities with an uncertain
settlement date should be classified as current (due or potentially
due to be settled within one year) or non-current. This will apply
for annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January
2023.
Deferred Tax Related to Assets and
Liabilities Arising from a Single Transaction - Amendments to IAS
12
Targeted amendments to IAS 12
Income Taxes clarify how companies should account for deferred tax
on certain transactions - e.g. leases and decommissioning
provisions. The amendments narrow the scope of the initial
recognition exemption (IRE) so that it does not apply to
transactions that give rise to equal and offsetting temporary
differences. As a result, companies will need to recognise a
deferred tax asset and a deferred tax liability for temporary
differences arising on initial recognition of a lease and a
decommissioning provision. This will apply for annual reporting
periods beginning on or after 1 January 2023.
International Tax Reform - Pillar
Two Model Rules (Amendments to IAS 12)
Application of the exception and
disclosure Effective 23 May 2023. This relates to Top up Tax
and is not applicable to the Group.
Standards amendments and interpretations in issue not yet
effective
Non-current Liabilities with
Covenants - Amendments to IAS 1 and Classification of Liabilities
as Current or Non-current - Amendments to IAS 1.
Under existing IAS 1 requirements,
companies classify a liability as current when they do not have an
unconditional right to defer settlement for at least 12 months
after the reporting date. The International Accounting Standards
Board (IASB) has removed the requirement for a right to be
unconditional and instead now requires that a right to defer
settlement must exist at the reporting date and have substance.
This will apply for annual reporting periods beginning on or after
1 January 2024.
Lease Liability in a Sale and
Leaseback - Amendments to IFRS 16.
This will impact how a
seller-lessee accounts for variable lease payments that arise in a
sale-and-leaseback transaction. The amendments introduce a new
accounting model for variable payments and will require
seller-lessees to reassess and potentially restate
sale-and-leaseback transactions entered into since 2019. It
is not applicable to the group at present. This will apply for
annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January
2024.
Supplier Finance Arrangements -
Amendments to IAS 7 and IFRS 7.
The amendments introduce two new
disclosure objectives - one in IAS 7 and another in IFRS 7 - for a
company to provide information about its supplier finance
arrangements that would enable users (investors) to assess the
effects of these arrangements on the company's liabilities and cash
flows, and the company's exposure to liquidity risk. This
will apply for annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1
January 2024.
IFRS S1 General Requirements for
Disclosure of Sustainability-related Financial Information and IFRS
S2 Climate-related Disclosures.
IFRS S1 is for
sustainability-related financial disclosures and IFRS S2 is for
climate-related disclosures. The two standards are designed to be
applied together. The standards are voluntary unless adopted
into national legislation. The UK is strongly considering adopting
the standards into the UK Sustainability Disclosure Standards (UK
SDS), currently being developed and due to be announced in July
2024. If adopted by the UK The standards are voluntary unless
adopted into national legislation. The UK is strongly considering
adopting the standards into the UK Sustainability Disclosure
Standards (UK SDS), currently being developed and due to be
announced in July 2024.
Lack of Exchangeability - Amendments
to IAS 21:
Under IAS 21 The Effects of Changes
in Foreign Exchange Rates, a company uses a spot exchange rate when
translating a foreign currency transaction. However, in rare
cases, it is possible that one currency cannot be exchanged into
another. This lack of exchangeability might arise when a government
imposes controls on capital imports and exports, for example, or
when it provides an official exchange rate but limits the volume of
foreign currency transactions that can be undertaken at that rate.
Consequently, market participants are unable to buy and sell
currency to meet their needs at the official exchange rate and turn
instead to unofficial, parallel markets. This amendment clarifies
when a currency is exchangeable into another currency; and how a
company estimates a spot rate when a currency lacks
exchangeability. This will apply for annual reporting periods
beginning on or after 1 January 2025.
IFRS 18 Presentation and Disclosure
in Financial Statements.
IFRS 18 promotes a more structured
income statement. In particular, it introduces a newly defined
'operating profit' subtotal and a requirement for all income and
expenses to be allocated between three new distinct categories
based on a company's main business activities. IFRS 18 will replace
IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements. This will apply for
annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January
2027.
Alternative performance measures (APM)
In the reporting of financial
information, the Directors have adopted the APM 'EBITDA profit from
underlying continuing and discontinued operations (APMs were
previously termed 'Non-GAAP measures'), which is not defined or
specified under International Financial Reporting Standards
(IFRS).
The Directors also look at recurring
revenue as a key performance indicator. This is revenue arising
from multi-year contracts.
These measures are not defined by
UK-adopted IAS and therefore may not be directly comparable with
other companies' APMs, including those in the Group's
industry.
APMs should be considered in
addition to, and are not intended to be a substitute for, or
superior to, UK-adopted IAS measurements.
Purpose
The Directors believe that the
adjusted EBITDA APM assists in providing additional useful
information on the underlying trends, performance and position of
the Group. This APM is also used to enhance the comparability of
information between reporting periods and business units, by
adjusting for non-recurring or uncontrollable factors which affect
UK-adopted IAS measures, to aid the user in understanding the
Group's performance.
Consequently, APMs are used by the
Directors and management for performance analysis, planning,
reporting and incentive setting purposes and this remains
consistent with the prior year.
The key APM that the Group has
focused on is as follows: EBITDA
profit from underlying continuing and discontinued
operations': This is the headline measure
used by management to measure the Group's performance and is based
on operating profit before the impact of financing costs, share
based payment charges, depreciation, amortisation, impairment
charges and exceptional items. Exceptional items relate to certain
costs that derive from events or transactions that fall within the
normal activities of the Group but which, individually or, if of a
similar type, in aggregate, are excluded by virtue of their size
and nature in order to reflect management's view of the performance
of the Group.
3.
Segment reporting
Operating segments
The Board considers the Group on a
Business Unit basis. Reports by Business Unit are used by the
chief decision-makers in the Group. The Business Units
operating during the eighteen months are the two operating
divisions; Services and Technology. This split of business segments
is based on the products and services each offer.
|
Managed
Services
|
Technology
|
Group and
Central
|
Group
Total
|
30/06/2024
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Supply of products
|
-
|
1,224
|
-
|
1,224
|
Supply and installation
contracts
|
-
|
16
|
-
|
16
|
Maintenance and services
|
6,725
|
497
|
-
|
7,222
|
Training courses
|
520
|
69
|
-
|
589
|
Revenue
|
7,245
|
1,806
|
-
|
9,051
|
|
|
|
|
|
Segmental underlying adjusted
EBITDA^ *
|
904
|
(892)
|
(1,434)
|
(1,473)
|
Share option expense
|
-
|
-
|
(67)
|
(67)
|
Other Income Losses
|
-
|
-
|
(1,013)
|
(1,013)
|
Discontinued operations
|
|
|
(1,263)
|
(1,263)
|
Depreciation &
amortisation
|
(208)
|
(32)
|
(149)
|
(389)
|
Segment operating result
|
696
|
(924)
|
(3,926)
|
(4,205)
|
Finance cost
|
-
|
-
|
(209)
|
(209)
|
Profit/ (loss) before tax
|
696
|
(924)
|
(4,135)
|
(4,414)
|
Income tax benefit /
(charge)
|
(10)
|
-
|
-
|
(10)
|
Profit/(loss) for the financial year
|
686
|
(924)
|
(4,135)
|
(4,424)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Segment assets
|
3,755
|
1,101
|
2,747
|
7,603
|
Segment liabilities
|
1,581
|
1,386
|
1,292
|
4,259
|
Capital expenditure
|
133
|
1
|
18
|
152
|
*Adjusted for discontinued
operations refer note 28.
^This is an Alternative
Performance Measure refer to Note 2 for further details
|
Managed
Services
|
Technology
|
Group
and Central
|
Group
Total
|
31 December 2022
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Supply of products
|
-
|
1,815
|
-
|
1,815
|
Supply and installation
contracts
|
-
|
1,080
|
-
|
1,080
|
Maintenance and services
|
4,905
|
338
|
-
|
5,243
|
Training courses
|
419
|
22
|
-
|
441
|
Revenue
|
5,324
|
3,255
|
-
|
8,579
|
|
|
|
|
|
Segmental underlying
EBITDA^
|
2,046
|
81
|
(2,609)
|
(483)
|
Depreciation &
amortisation
|
(108)
|
(22)
|
(122)
|
(252)
|
Segment operating result
|
1,937
|
59
|
(2,731)
|
(735)
|
Finance cost
|
-
|
-
|
(40)
|
(40)
|
Profit/ (loss) before tax
|
1,937
|
59
|
(2,771)
|
(775)
|
Income tax benefit /
(charge)
|
40
|
-
|
314
|
354
|
Continuing Profit/(loss) for the
financial period
|
1,977
|
59
|
(2,457)
|
(421)
|
Discontinued operations
|
353
|
|
57
|
410
|
Profit/(loss) for the financial
period
|
2,330
|
59
|
(2,400)
|
(11)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Segment assets
|
4,886
|
2,543
|
2,600
|
10,029
|
Segment liabilities
|
878
|
1,388
|
348
|
2,614
|
Capital expenditure
|
113
|
1
|
39
|
153
|
^ This is an Alternative
Performance Measure refer to Note 2 for further details
Geographical areas
The Group's international business
is conducted on a global scale, with agents present in all major
continents. The following table provides an analysis of the Group's
sales by geographical market, irrespective of the origin of the
goods/services.
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
UK and Europe
|
3,569
|
2,520
|
Africa
|
5,202
|
5,755
|
Middle East
|
232
|
68
|
Rest of World
|
48
|
236
|
Total
|
9,051
|
8,579
|
Some of the Group's assets are
located outside the United Kingdom where they are being put to
operational use on specific contracts.
Information about major customers
No single customer contributed
more than 10% of the Group revenue in 30 June 2024.
4. Finance
costs
|
Group
|
Group
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Finance cost on lease
liabilities
|
(14)
|
(6)
|
Interest payable on bank and other
borrowings
|
(195)
|
(34)
|
Total finance costs
|
(209)
|
(40)
|
5.
Loss from operations
The following items have been
included in arriving at the loss for the financial
period
|
Group
|
Group
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Staff costs (see Note 7)
|
6,606
|
4,356
|
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment
|
317
|
196
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
72
|
56
|
Operating lease rentals
payable
|
|
|
Short term Leases
|
196
|
158
|
Foreign exchange
loss/(gain)
|
265
|
344
|
Auditor's remuneration
Amounts payable in 30 June 2024
relate to PKF Littlejohn LLP in respect of audit and other
services. The local Audit in Sierra Leone is performed by Moore
Sierra Leone.
Audit services
|
Group
|
Group
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Statutory audit of parent and
consolidated financial statements
|
110
|
62
|
Review of Interim Results
|
-
|
2
|
- Statutory audit of subsidiaries of the company pursuant to
legislation
|
20
|
20
|
Total payable to PKF Littlejohn
UK
|
130
|
84
|
Local audit in Sierra Leone - Moore
Sierra Leone
|
19
|
19
|
Total fees
|
149
|
103
|
6.
Taxation
Analysis of tax charge / (credit)
in eighteen months
The Finance Act 2020 set the
Corporation Tax main rate at 19% for the financial year beginning 1
April 2020. Deferred taxes at the balance sheet date have been
measured using a 25% tax rate and reflected in these financial
statements.
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
Current period
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
UK Corporation tax on profits in the
period
|
-
|
-
|
Potential foreign corporation tax on
profits in the period
|
5
|
-
|
Deferred Tax (Note 16)
|
|
|
Foreign entity deferred
tax
|
(46)
|
(40)
|
Review of expected utilisation of
Losses
|
-
|
(314)
|
Tax
on losses
|
(41)
|
(354)
|
Deferred tax on property
revaluation
|
51
|
-
|
Tax
on losses and other comprehensive income
|
10
|
(354)
|
|
|
|
|
Group
|
Group
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Reconciliation of effective tax rate
|
|
|
Loss on ordinary activities before
tax
|
(4,414)
|
(365)
|
|
|
|
Loss on ordinary activities
multiplied by the standard rate of corporation tax in the UK of 24%
(31 Dec 2022: 19%)
|
(1,059)
|
(69)
|
Effects of:
|
|
|
Expenses not deductible for tax
purposes
|
424
|
94
|
Deferred tax movement (Note
16)
|
55
|
(355)
|
Release of losses
|
-
|
(24)
|
Unrecognised losses carried
forward
|
590
|
-
|
Total tax - credit
|
10
|
(354)
|
For further details on Tax refer
to Note 16.
7.
Employee costs
Employee costs for the Group during the period
Group
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Wages and salaries
|
5,819
|
3,822
|
Pension contributions
|
82
|
73
|
Social security costs
|
638
|
461
|
|
6,539
|
4,356
|
Share based payments
|
67
|
-
|
Net Cost
|
6,606
|
4,356
|
The Group operates a stakeholder
pension scheme. The Group made pension contributions
totalling £82,000 during the eighteen months (31 Dec 2022:
£73,000), and pension contributions totalling £23,000 were
outstanding at the period-end (31 Dec 2022: £83,000).
Details of the Directors'
remuneration are included in the Remuneration Committee Report. Key
management within the business are considered to be the Board of
Directors. The total Directors' remuneration during the eighteen
months was £940,000 (31 Dec 2022 twelve months: £635,000) and the
highest paid director received in the eighteen months remuneration
totalling £315,000 (31 Dec 2022 twelve months: £206,000) before any
share-based payments.
Average monthly number of people (including Executive
Directors) employed
Group
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
By function:
|
|
|
Sales
|
7
|
8
|
Operations
|
201
|
212
|
Administration
|
17
|
24
|
Management
|
11
|
12
|
|
236
|
256
|
8.
Loss per share
Earnings per share is calculated
by dividing the earnings attributable to ordinary shareholders by
the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during
the eighteen months.
For diluted earnings per share the
weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue is adjusted to
assume conversion of all dilutive potential ordinary shares. Only
those outstanding options that have an exercise price below the
average market share price in the eighteen months have been
included.
The weighted average number of
ordinary shares is calculated as follows:
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
'000
|
'000
|
Issued ordinary shares
|
|
|
Start of period
|
330,515
|
330,515
|
Effect of shares issued during the
period
|
-
|
-
|
Weighted average basic and diluted number of shares for
period
|
330,515
|
330,515
|
|
30/06/2024
|
30/06/2024
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
|
Continuing
Operations
|
Discontinued
Operations
|
Total
|
Total
|
Earnings
|
|
|
|
|
Loss and total comprehensive
expense
|
(3,110)
|
(1,263)
|
(4,373)
|
(11)
|
Loss per share (pence)
|
(0.94p)
|
(0.38p)
|
(1.32p)
|
0.00p
|
For the eighteen months ended 30
June 2024 and twelve months ended 31 Dec 2022 the issue of
additional shares on exercise of outstanding share options,
convertible loans and warrants would decrease the basic loss per
share and there is therefore no dilutive effect. Loss per share was
1.32p (31 Dec 2022: 0.00p).
9.
Goodwill
Group
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
Gross carrying amount at start of
period
|
|
1,378
|
1,377
|
Exchange rate movement
|
|
(1)
|
1
|
Gross carrying amount at end of
period
|
|
1,377
|
1,378
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated impairment at start of
period
|
|
(763)
|
(763)
|
Impairment charge for the
period
|
|
-
|
-
|
Accumulated impairment at end of
period
|
|
(763)
|
(763)
|
|
|
|
|
Carrying amount at start of
period
|
|
615
|
614
|
|
|
|
|
Carrying amount at end of period
|
|
614
|
615
|
The goodwill balance relates to
the acquisition of Longmoor Security Limited, Keyguard U.K Limited
and Euro-Ops SARL. The movement is because of an exchange
rate movement on Euro Ops where the goodwill is in
Euros.
The Group tests goodwill annually
for impairment, or more frequently if there are indications that
goodwill may be impaired. The recoverable amounts of the
cash-generating unit are determined from value in use
calculations. The key assumptions are discount rate (5%)
future revenues (assumed as flat) derived from the most recent 30
June 2024 financial budgets approved by management. The projection
assumes that the companies are held in perpetuity. A discount
rate of 42% (31 Dec 2022: 20%) would not
result in any impairment based on management's latest
forecast.
No reasonably possible change in any
of the estimates and assumptions used in the impairment test would
give rise to a material impairment.
10.
Other intangible assets
|
Group Website and
Software
|
Company Website and
Software
|
|
|
|
As
at 30 June 2024
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cost
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
412
|
377
|
Disposals
|
(8)
|
(8)
|
At
30 June 2024
|
404
|
369
|
|
|
|
Accumulated amortisation and impairment
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
306
|
293
|
Charge for the period
|
72
|
59
|
At
30 June 2024
|
378
|
352
|
|
|
|
Net
book value at 30 June 2024
|
26
|
17
|
|
|
|
As at 31 Dec 2022
|
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cost
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
400
|
364
|
Additions
|
12
|
13
|
At 31 December 2022
|
412
|
377
|
|
|
|
Accumulated amortisation and
impairment
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
250
|
244
|
Charge for the year
|
56
|
49
|
At 31 December 2022
|
306
|
293
|
|
|
|
Net book value at 31 December
2022
|
106
|
84
|
11.
Property, plant and equipment
Group
|
Freehold
property
|
Plant and
equipment
|
Office equipment, fixtures
and fittings
|
Motor
vehicles
|
Right of use
assets
|
Total
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30
June 2024
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cost or valuation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
1,131
|
783
|
1,078
|
72
|
165
|
3,229
|
Additions
|
7
|
2
|
3
|
15
|
125
|
152
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
(1)
|
-
|
(40)
|
(41)
|
Revaluation
|
205
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
205
|
At
30 June 2024
|
1,343
|
785
|
1,080
|
87
|
250
|
3,545
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated depreciation and impairment
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
105
|
606
|
555
|
50
|
88
|
1,404
|
Charge for the period
|
38
|
72
|
115
|
20
|
72
|
317
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
(3)
|
-
|
(40)
|
(43)
|
At
30 June 2024
|
143
|
678
|
667
|
70
|
120
|
1,678
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
book value at 30 June 2024
|
1,200
|
107
|
413
|
17
|
130
|
1,867
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
31
Dec 2022
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cost or valuation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
1,126
|
768
|
1,058
|
109
|
173
|
3,234
|
Additions
|
5
|
15
|
20
|
-
|
101
|
141
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(37)
|
(109)
|
(146)
|
At 31 December 2022
|
1,131
|
783
|
1,078
|
72
|
165
|
3,229
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated depreciation and impairment
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
81
|
557
|
496
|
77
|
128
|
1,339
|
Charge for the period
|
24
|
49
|
59
|
11
|
53
|
196
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(38)
|
(93)
|
(131)
|
At 31 December 2022
|
105
|
606
|
555
|
50
|
88
|
1,404
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net book value at 31 December
2022
|
1,026
|
177
|
523
|
22
|
77
|
1,825
|
Right of use assets (motor
vehicles) above have been created in accordance with IFRS 16.
Motor vehicles are leased for certain employees for lease terms
ranging between 3-5 years with fixed payments. The Group does not
purchase or guarantee the future value of lease
vehicles.
The freehold property was valued
professionally by White Commercial, Chartered Surveyors, as at 30
June 2024, which provided a valuation of £1,200,000 (previous
valuation £1,020,000). The valuation was made on the basis of
recent market transactions on arm's length terms and on an
alternative use basis. The Revaluation Reserve is not available for
distribution to shareholders.
Company
|
Freehold
property
|
Plant and
equipment
|
Office equipment, fixtures
and fittings
|
Right of use
assets
|
Total
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30
June 2024
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
Cost or valuation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
1,130
|
23
|
259
|
24
|
1,436
|
|
Additions
|
8
|
-
|
-
|
10
|
18
|
|
Revaluation
|
205
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
205
|
|
At
30 June 2024
|
1,343
|
23
|
259
|
34
|
1,659
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated depreciation and impairment
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2023
|
105
|
19
|
207
|
18
|
349
|
|
Charge for the period
|
38
|
3
|
31
|
16
|
88
|
|
At
30 June 2024
|
143
|
22
|
238
|
34
|
437
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
book value at 30 June 2024
|
1,200
|
1
|
21
|
-
|
1,222
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
31 Dec 2022
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
Cost or valuation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
1,126
|
23
|
237
|
100
|
1,486
|
|
Additions
|
4
|
-
|
22
|
-
|
26
|
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(76)
|
(76)
|
|
At 31 December 2022
|
1,130
|
23
|
259
|
24
|
1,436
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated depreciation and
impairment
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
81
|
18
|
184
|
70
|
353
|
|
Charge for the period
|
24
|
1
|
23
|
24
|
72
|
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(76)
|
(76)
|
|
At 31 December 2022
|
105
|
19
|
207
|
18
|
349
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net book value at 31 December
2022
|
1,025
|
4
|
52
|
6
|
1,087
|
|
The freehold property was valued
professionally by White Commercial, Chartered Surveyors, as at 30
June 2024, which provided a valuation of £1,200,000 (previous
valuation £1,020,000). The valuation was made on the basis of
recent market transactions on arm's length terms and on an
alternative use basis. The Revaluation Reserve is not available for
distribution to shareholders.
No depreciation has been charged
on the freehold land only building additions have been depreciated.
The difference between the net book value of the total freehold
property if depreciation, at 2%, had been charged as shown in the
financial statements is not materially different to the value the
asset is recorded at the balance sheet date.
The freehold property is stated at
valuation, the comparable historic cost and depreciation values are
as follows: This depreciation is charged on historical cost
only.
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Historical cost
|
815
|
808
|
|
|
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
|
|
At start of period
|
340
|
324
|
Charge for the period
|
16
|
16
|
At period end
|
356
|
340
|
|
|
|
Net
book value as at end of period
|
459
|
468
|
12.
Lease commitments
The Group accounts for operating
leases under IFRS 16. There are some leases of small value or
less than one-year duration which have been charged to expenses as
incurred, but the aggregate commitment of these leases is
immaterial.
Right to use assets
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
At start of period
|
|
89
|
106
|
Additions
|
|
126
|
30
|
Expensed in the period
|
|
(62)
|
(47)
|
As at end of period
|
|
153
|
89
|
|
|
|
|
Of which
|
|
|
|
Current Lease
|
|
33
|
62
|
Non-Current
|
|
120
|
27
|
|
|
153
|
89
|
13.
Investment in subsidiaries
All loans
relate to cash movements between Group companies and are repayable
on demand. Loans and other intercompany accounts are included in
the Company's respective current payables or receivables.
This is because they are more in the nature of current assets
and current liabilities than longer term
investments.
Company
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
Investments
|
Investments
|
Cost
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
At 1 January
|
389
|
389
|
Movement in Period
|
-
|
-
|
At 31 December
|
389
|
389
|
Accumulated impairment
|
|
|
At 1 January
|
(389)
|
(389)
|
Movement in Period
|
-
|
-
|
At 31 December
|
(389)
|
(389)
|
Investment in subsidiaries
|
-
|
-
|
A sum of £9,587,000 (31 Dec 2022:
£9,244,000) has been recognised in receivables as intercompany; as
well as £1,085,000 (31 Dec 2022: £630,000)
which has been recognised in
payables as intercompany.
14.
Subsidiary undertakings
The subsidiary undertakings at 30
June 2024 were as follows:
Name
|
Country of
incorporation
|
Principal activity
|
% of nominal ordinary share
capital and voting rights held
|
|
Westminster International
Limited
|
England
|
Advanced security technology,
(Technology Division)
|
100
|
|
|
Westminster Services Limited
(formerly Longmoor Security Limited)
|
England
|
Close protection training and
provision of security services (Managed Services)
|
100
|
|
|
|
Westminster Aviation Security
Services Limited
|
England
|
Managed services of airport security
under long term contracts. (Managed Services)
|
100
|
|
|
|
Sovereign Ferries Limited
|
England
|
Dormant
|
100
|
|
Westminster Operating
Limited
|
England
|
Special purpose vehicle which exists
solely for listing the 2013 CLN on the CISX. Year end 31 October.
Only transactions are intra group
|
100
|
|
|
Keyguard U.K Limited
|
England
|
Security and risk management
including manned guarding, mobile patrols, risk management and K9
services.
|
100
|
|
Longmoor (SL) Limited
|
Sierra
Leone
|
Security and terminal
guarding
|
100
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Facilities Operations Management
Limited
|
Sierra
Leone
|
Infrastructure management
|
100
|
|
Westminster Sierra Leone Limited
*
|
Sierra
Leone
|
Local infrastructure for airport
operations
|
49
|
|
Westminster Group GmbH
|
Germany
|
Dormant
|
100
|
|
GLIS Gesellschaft für Luftfahrt- und
Infrastruktur-Sicherheit GmbH
|
Germany
|
Managed Services
|
85
|
|
Westminster Sicherheit
GmbH
|
Germany
|
Dormant
|
85
|
|
Euro Ops SARL
|
France
|
Managed Services
infrastructure
|
100
|
|
Westminster Maritime Services
Limited #
|
England
|
Dormant
|
100
|
|
CTAC Limited
|
England
|
Dormant
|
100
|
|
Longmoor Security Services Limited
(formerly Westminster Aviation Security Services (ME)
Limited)
|
England
|
Dormant
|
100
|
|
Westminster Aviation Security
Services RDC SARLU
|
DRC
|
Managed services of airport security
under long term contracts. (Managed Services)
|
100
|
|
Westminster Liberia LLC
|
Liberia
|
Managed services of port security
under long term contracts. (Managed Services)
|
100
|
|
Subsidiary company registered
addresses:
England
Westminster House, Blacklocks Hill, Banbury, Oxfordshire, OX17 2BS,
United Kingdom.
Sierra Leone
49 Waterloo Street, Freetown,
Sierra Leone.
Germany
Chiemseestrasse
25, 83233 Bernau am Chiemsee, Germany.
France
17 Route de Sundhoffen, 68280 Andolsheim. France.
DRC
Cabinet Lohayo Ngola Patrick, Immeuble Mirlandsis. au No34 du
Boulevard Sendwe, Kinshasa DRC.
Liberia
Gbaintor Law Firm, Wroto Town. Sinkor,
Airfield, Monrovia, Liberia.
*
Consolidated due to de facto control. These results do not have a
material effect on the financial statements.
#
Westminster Maritime Services Limited was formerly known as
Westminster Facilities Management Limited & Westminster Managed
Services Limited.
15.
Financial instruments
Categories of financial assets and
liabilities.
The fair value of carrying amounts
presented in the Consolidated and Company statement of financial
position relate to the following categories of assets and
liabilities:
|
Group
|
Group
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Financial assets
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other receivables (note
18)
|
2,121
|
5,354
|
9,694
|
10,672
|
Cash and cash equivalents (note
19)
|
977
|
289
|
780
|
(59)
|
|
3,098
|
5,643
|
10,474
|
10,613
|
Financial liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Borrowings (note 22)
|
2,092
|
222
|
978
|
-
|
Trade and other payables (note
23)
|
4,139
|
2,312
|
2,335
|
999
|
|
6,231
|
2,534
|
3,313
|
999
|
See note 2 for a description of the
accounting policies for each category of financial
instruments. The fair values are presented in this note and
are the same as the carrying value. A description of the
Group's risk management and objectives for financial instruments is
given in note 26.
Convertible Loan Notes
The Group had the following
convertible loan notes outstanding during the year the key details
of which are set out below:
|
Secured Convertible Loan
Notes ("CLN")
|
Amount
|
£1m
|
Conversion Price
|
3p per share
|
Security
|
Secured fixed and
floating
|
Redemption Date
|
26 June 2027
|
Coupon
|
10%
|
Conversion Detail
|
The holder can convert at any time
after 26 June 2025.
|
|
Group
|
Group
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
At Start of Period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Fair value of new loans
issued
|
978
|
-
|
978
|
-
|
Amortised finance cost
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Interest paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
At End of Period
|
978
|
-
|
978
|
-
|
Analysis of movement in debt at
principal value (excluding IFRS impacts), memorandum
only
|
Group
|
Group
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
At Start of Period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
New issue
|
1,000
|
-
|
1,000
|
-
|
At End of Period
|
1,000
|
-
|
1,000
|
-
|
The convertible loan notes have
been separated into two components, the Host Debt Instrument and
the Embedded Derivative on initial recognition. The value of the
Host Debt Instrument will increase to the principal sum amount by
the date of maturity.
The effective interest cost of the
Notes is the sum of that increasing value in the period and the
interest paid to Noteholders.
Secured convertible loan notes
(CLN) are compound financial instruments that can be converted to
share capital at the option of the holder, and the number of shares
to be issued does not vary with changes in fair value.
16.
Deferred tax assets and liabilities
Deferred tax assets are recognised
to the extent that it is probable that taxable profits will be
available against which deductible temporary differences can be
utilised. The Group's projections show the expectation of
future profits, hence in 2018 a deferred tax asset was
recognised. Reviews performed since then, including as at 30
June 2024, confirmed those expectations.
The tax losses against which this
deferred tax asset is being recognised are in the group's holding
company and its principal UK based subsidiaries. Evidence, both
positive and negative, primarily the Group's projections of future
profits have been considered. The critical judgement has been
the timing of new contracts. The deferred tax asset is expected to
be used in the period up to the end of 2026.
The Group believes it has a total
potential deferred tax asset of £4,254,000 (31 Dec 2022:
£4,047,000). It has recognised a deferred tax asset of £1,304,000
(31 Dec 2022: £1,308,000) due to budgeted future profits of the
business beyond 30 June 2024 and the expected tax rate. There
remains £3,073,000 (31 Dec 2022: £2,739,000) of unrecognised
deferred tax asset.
Deferred tax assets and
liabilities have been calculated using the expected future tax rate
of 25% (31 Dec 2022: 25%). Any changes in the future would
affect these amounts proportionately.
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Opening balance as
at start of period
|
1,308
|
953
|
Deferred tax movement
|
(4)
|
355
|
Deferred tax asset as at end of
period
|
1,304
|
1,308
|
17.
Inventories
|
Group
|
Group
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Finished goods
|
655
|
485
|
-
|
-
|
|
655
|
485
|
-
|
-
|
The cost of inventories recognised
as an expense within cost of sales amounted to £992,000 (31 Dec
2022: £2,153,000). No reversal of previous write-downs was
recognised as a reduction of expense in 30 June 2024 or 31 December
2022.
18.
Trade and other receivables
|
Group
|
Group
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Trade receivables, gross
|
770
|
1,827
|
-
|
-
|
Allowance for credit
losses
|
(19)
|
(26)
|
-
|
-
|
Trade receivables
|
751
|
1,801
|
-
|
-
|
Amounts recoverable on
contracts
|
69
|
750
|
-
|
-
|
Intercompany receivables
|
-
|
-
|
9,587
|
9,244
|
Other receivables
|
1,301
|
2,211
|
107
|
1,428
|
Financial assets
|
2,121
|
4,762
|
9,694
|
10,672
|
Other taxes and social
security
|
9
|
15
|
-
|
-
|
Prepayments
|
30
|
31
|
-
|
11
|
Non-financial assets
|
39
|
46
|
-
|
11
|
Trade and other receivables
|
2,160
|
4,808
|
9,694
|
10,683
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-Current Receivable
|
-
|
593
|
-
|
-
|
The average credit period taken on
sale of goods in 30 June 2024 was 53 days (31 Dec 2022: 30 days).
An allowance has been made for estimated credit losses of £19,000
(31 Dec 2022: £26,000). This allowance has been based on the
knowledge of receivables at the reporting date together with
forecasts of future economic impacts and their collectability.
There are no expected credit losses on amounts recoverable on contracts.
Expected credit losses on
intercompany receivables assume that repayment of the loan is
demanded at the reporting date. If the subsidiary has sufficient
accessible highly liquid assets to repay the loan if demanded at
the reporting date, the expected credit loss is likely to be
immaterial. If the subsidiary could not repay the loan if demanded
at the reporting date, the Group consider the expected manner of
recovery to measure expected credit losses. This is a 'repay over
time' strategy (that allows the subsidiary time to pay),
non-trading subsidiaries will not be able to repay loans over time
and are therefore deemed to be impaired.
Other receivables include a sum of
£105,000 (31 Dec 2022: £1,118,000) due from the RiverFort Equity
Placing and Sharing Agreement. It is expected that it will be
recovered from the sale of shares currently still held by
RiverFort. The reduction from 2022 of £1,013,000 included in
other income / losses follows from the shares being marked to
market. No share sales have been made in 18 months to 30 June
2024. Other receivables also includes £1,053,000 (31 Dec
2022: £845,000) of pre-contract expenditure on managed services
contracts.
The following table provides an
analysis of trade receivables at the period end. The Group believes
that the balances are ultimately recoverable based upon a review of
past payment history and the current financial status of the
customers.
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Current
|
384
|
410
|
Not more than 3 months
|
342
|
1,166
|
More than 3 months
|
44
|
251
|
|
770
|
1,827
|
Allowances for Credit Losses
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Opening balance at 1
January
|
26
|
56
|
Amounts written off
|
(17)
|
(37)
|
Amounts provided
|
10
|
17
|
Currency movement
|
-
|
1
|
Written back (no longer
required)
|
-
|
(11)
|
Closing balance at 31 December
|
19
|
26
|
There are no significant expected
credit losses from financial assets that are neither past due nor
impaired.
At 30 June 2024
· £332,000 (31 Dec 2022: £1,313,000) of receivables were
denominated in US dollars,
· £6,000 (31 Dec 2022: £11,000) of receivables were denominated
in Euros,
· £1,000 (31 December 2022: Nil) of receivables were
denominated in Sierra Leone New Leone and
· nil
(31 Dec 2022: £71,000) were denominated in Ghanaian
Cedi.
The Directors consider that the
carrying amount of trade and other receivables approximates to
their fair value.
19.
Cash and cash equivalents
|
Group
|
Group
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash at bank and in hand
|
977
|
289
|
780
|
(59)
|
Bank overdraft
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
977
|
289
|
780
|
(59)
|
All the bank accounts of the Group
are set against each other where a right of offset exists in
establishing the cash position of the Group.
20.
Called up share capital
Group and Company
The total amount of issued and
fully paid shares is as follows:
Ordinary Share Capital
|
30 June
2024
|
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
|
Number
|
£'000
|
Number
|
£'000
|
At the start of the
period
|
330,514,660
|
331
|
330,514,660
|
331
|
At the period end
|
330,514,660
|
331
|
330,514,660
|
331
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total Share Capital
|
30 June
2024
|
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
|
Number
|
£'000
|
Number
|
£'000
|
Ordinary Share Capital
|
330,514,660
|
331
|
330,514,660
|
331
|
Deferred share capital
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
330,514,660
|
331
|
330,514,660
|
331
|
There were no equity issues in the
period.
21.
Share options and Warrants
|
|
|
Options
outstanding
|
Options outstanding as at 1 January
2023
|
|
8,692,500
|
Options awarded
|
|
|
16,700,000
|
Options waived
|
|
|
(6,781,250)
|
Lapsed during the period
|
|
|
(1,546,250)
|
Options outstanding as at 30 June 2024
|
|
17,065,000
|
The Company adopted the 2017 Share
Option Scheme on 21 September 2017 that provides for the granting
of both Enterprise Management Incentives and unapproved share
options (Westminster Group Individual Share Option Agreements). The
main terms of the option scheme are as follows:
· Although no special conditions apply to the options granted
in 2017, the model form agreement allows the Company to adopt
special conditions to tailor an option for any particular
employee.
· The
scheme is open to all full-time employees and Directors except
those who have a material interest in the Company.
· For
the purposes of this definition, a material interest is either
beneficial ownership of, or the ability to control directly, or
indirectly, more than 30% of the ordinary share capital of the
Company.
· The
Board determines the exercise price of options before they are
granted. It is provided in the scheme rules that options must be
granted at the prevailing market price in the case of EMI options
and must not be granted at an exercise price that is less than the
nominal value of a share.
· There is a limit that options over unissued shares granted
under the scheme and any discretionary share option scheme or other
option agreement adopted or entered into by the Company must not
exceed 10% of the issued share capital.
· Options can be exercised on the second anniversary of the
date of grant and may be exercised up to the 10th anniversary of
granting. Options will remain exercisable for a period of 40 days
if the participant is a "good leaver".
Options have subsequently been
granted on this basis.
The Company has the following
share options outstanding to its employees (including those on good
leaver terms). The weighted average exercise price at the reporting
date was 2.9p (31 Dec 2022: 17.6p). The average life of the
unexpired share options was 8.1 years (31 Dec 2022: 4.5
years).
As At
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31
December 2022
|
Grant date
|
Exercise price £
|
Number
outstanding
|
Average life outstanding
(years)
|
31 Dec
2022 number outstanding
|
31 Dec
2022 average life outstanding (years)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
01 July 2014
|
0.510
|
-
|
-
|
150,000
|
1.5
|
10 December 2014
|
0.285
|
-
|
-
|
2,187,500
|
1.9
|
09 October 2015
|
0.140
|
-
|
-
|
40,000
|
2.8
|
01 June 2018
|
0.130
|
1,465,000
|
3.9
|
5,565,000
|
5.4
|
08 November 2018
|
0.130
|
-
|
-
|
750,000
|
5.8
|
12 January 2024
|
0.020
|
15,600,000
|
8.5
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
17,065,000
|
8.1
|
8,692,500
|
4.5
|
During the period, 16,700,000
employee options were granted (31 Dec 2022: Nil), none were
exercised (31 Dec 2022: none), 6,781,250 were waived (31 Dec 2022:
none) and 1,546,250 lapsed (31 Dec 2022: 785,0000). The weighted
average price of the options lapsed in the period was 10.5p (31 Dec
2022: 23.4p). The weighted average exercise price of
exercisable options at the end of 30 June 2024 was 2.9p (31 Dec
2022 17.6p).
The Black-Scholes option-pricing
model is used to determine the fair value of share options at grant
date. The assumptions used to determine the fair values of share
options at grant dates were as follows:
For share options granted post IPO
the expected share price volatility was determined taking account
of the historic daily share price movements. The standard deviation
of the share price over the last year has been used to calculate
volatility. The volatility is 65%, interest risk free rate of 3.5%,
dividend of 0% and a life of 5 years.
The average expected term to
exercise used in the models is based on management's best estimate
for the effects of non- transferability, exercise restrictions and
behavioural conditions, forfeiture and historical experience. The
risk-free rate has been determined from market yields for
government gilts with outstanding terms equal to the average
expected term to exercise for each relevant grant.
Warrants
There are no warrants which are
still in force at the balance sheet date:
Movement in Warrants
|
As at
1/1/23
|
Lapsed
|
As at
30/06/24
|
Placing Commission
|
170,455
|
(170,455)
|
-
|
RiverFort EPSA
|
3,499,222
|
(3,499,222)
|
-
|
|
3,669,677
|
(3,669,677)
|
-
|
22.
Borrowings
|
Group
|
Group
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Non-current
|
|
|
|
|
Borrowings
|
1,098
|
27
|
978
|
-
|
Current
|
|
|
|
|
Borrowings
|
994
|
195
|
-
|
-
|
Total borrowings
|
2,092
|
222
|
978
|
-
|
Non-current lease debt
As described in Note 12, all leases
that fall under IFRS 16 are recorded on the balance sheet as
liabilities, at the present value of the future lease payments,
along with an asset reflecting the right to use the asset over the
lease term. The non-current lease debt is the part of that
debt which falls due after 12 months.
23.
Trade and other payables
|
|
Group
|
Group
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade payables
|
|
590
|
556
|
58
|
104
|
Accruals and other
creditors
|
|
1,458
|
1,757
|
214
|
260
|
Intercompany payables
|
|
-
|
-
|
1,085
|
630
|
Other loans
|
|
1,938
|
159
|
978
|
-
|
Finance lease creditor (IFRS
16)
|
|
153
|
62
|
-
|
5
|
Financial liabilities
|
|
4,139
|
2,534
|
2,335
|
999
|
Other taxes and social security
payable
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Contractual liabilities
|
|
120
|
80
|
-
|
-
|
Non-financial liabilities
|
|
120
|
80
|
-
|
-
|
Total trade and other payables
|
|
4,259
|
2,614
|
2,335
|
999
|
Shown on the balance sheet
as:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Long Term Borrowings
|
|
1,098
|
27
|
978
|
-
|
|
Short Term Borrowings
|
|
994
|
195
|
-
|
-
|
|
Contractual liabilities
|
|
120
|
80
|
-
|
-
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
2,047
|
2,312
|
1,357
|
999
|
|
|
|
4,259
|
2,614
|
2,335
|
999
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
principally comprise amounts outstanding for trade purchases and
ongoing costs, as well as payments received in advance on
contracts. The average credit period taken for trade purchases in
30 June 2024 was 106 days (31 Dec 2022: 51 days). The Directors
consider that the carrying value of trade payables approximates to
their fair value.
Contractual liabilities
relate to amounts received from customers at
period-end but not yet earned.
At 30 June 2024 £364,000 (31 Dec
2022: £194,000) of payables were denominated in US dollars, £8,000
(31 Dec 2022: £85,000) were denominated in Euros, Nil (31 Dec 2022:
£4,000) were denominated in Ghanaian Cedi and £1,000 (31 Dec 2022:
£39,000) were denominated in Sierra Leone Leones.
24.
Cash flow adjustments and changes in working
capital
The following non-cash flow
adjustments and adjustments for changes in working capital have
been made to loss before taxation to arrive at operating cash
flow:
Group
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
|
Total
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Adjustments:
|
|
|
Depreciation, amortisation and
impairment of non-financial assets
|
389
|
252
|
Finance costs
|
209
|
40
|
(Profit) / loss on disposal of
non-financial assets
|
(6)
|
(4)
|
(Increase)/decrease in Deferred Tax
Asset
|
4
|
-
|
Share-based payment
expenses
|
67
|
-
|
Non-cash transactions
|
2,312
|
(36)
|
Total adjustments
|
2,975
|
252
|
Net changes in working
capital:
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
|
Total
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
(Increase)/decrease in
inventories
|
(170)
|
196
|
Decrease/(increase) in trade and
other receivables
|
372
|
(485)
|
Decrease/(increase) in long term
receivables
|
593
|
(169)
|
Increase / (decrease) in contract
liabilities
|
40
|
(7)
|
(Decrease)/(increase) in trade and
other payables
|
(261)
|
558
|
Discontinued operations
|
-
|
(662)
|
Total changes in working
capital
|
574
|
(569)
|
Company
|
Company
|
Company
|
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Adjustments:
|
|
|
Depreciation, amortisation and
impairment of non-financial assets
|
147
|
121
|
Disposal of fixed Assets
|
8
|
-
|
Share-based payment
expenses
|
67
|
-
|
Total adjustments
|
222
|
121
|
|
|
|
Net
changes in working capital:
|
|
|
Decrease / (Increase) in trade and
other receivables
|
989
|
(853)
|
Increase in trade and other
payables
|
359
|
360
|
Total changes in working
capital
|
1,348
|
(493)
|
25.
Contingent assets and contingent liabilities
In February 2022, Clydesdale Bank
PLC trading as Yorkshire Bank offered the Group an overdraft and
other banking facilities. As a condition of these facilities
the Company entered into a multilateral charge and guarantee in
respect of bank overdrafts and other facilities of all companies
within the Group.
26.
Financial risk management
The Group is exposed to various
risks in relation to financial assets and liabilities. The main
types of risk are foreign currency risk, interest rate risk, credit
risk and liquidity risk.
The Group's risk management is
closely controlled by the Board and focuses on actively securing
the Group's short to medium term cash flows by minimising the
exposure to financial markets. The Group does not actively trade in
financial assets for speculative purposes, nor does it write
options. The most significant financial risks are currency risk and
interest rate risk.
Foreign currency sensitivity
The Group operates internationally
and is exposed to foreign exchange risk arising from various
currency exposures, primarily with respect to the Euro (EUR) and US
dollar (USD) but also the Sierra Leone New Leone (SLE). The Group's
policy is to match the currency of the order with the principal
currency of the supply of the equipment. Where it is not possible
to match those foreign currencies, the Group might consider hedging
exchange risk through a variety of hedging instruments such as
forward rate agreements, although no such transactions have ever
been entered into.
Group
|
Short-term exposure
USD
|
Short-term exposure
EUR
|
Short-term exposure
SLL
|
Short-term exposure
GHS
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
30
June 2024
|
|
|
|
|
Financial assets
|
332
|
6
|
1
|
-
|
Financial liabilities
|
(364)
|
(8)
|
1
|
-
|
Total exposure
|
(32)
|
(2)
|
2
|
-
|
31 December 2022
|
|
|
|
|
Financial assets
|
1,313
|
11
|
-
|
71
|
Financial liabilities
|
(194)
|
(85)
|
(39)
|
(4)
|
Total exposure
|
1,119
|
(74)
|
(39)
|
67
|
If the US dollar were to
depreciate by 10% relative to its period end rate, this would cause
a gain in profits to 30 June 2024 of £4,000
(31 Dec 2022: £124,000 Loss).
If the Euro were to depreciate by
10% relative to its period end rate, this would cause a gain in
profits to 30 June 2024 of an immaterial amount (31 Dec 2022:
£8,000 Gain).
If the Sierra Leonean Leone were
to depreciate by 10% relative to its period end rate, this would
cause a loss in profits to 30 June 2024 of an immaterial amount (31
Dec 2022: £4,000 Gain).
If the Ghanaian Cedi were to
depreciate by 10% relative to its period end rate, this would cause
no change in profits to 30 June 2024 (31 Dec 2022: £7,000
Loss).
Exposures to foreign exchange
rates vary during the period depending on the volume of overseas
transactions. Nonetheless, the analysis above is considered to be
representative of the Group's exposure to currency risk. Net
foreign currency denominated financial assets and liabilities are
immaterial for the Company.
Interest rate sensitivity
The interest rate on the
borrowings is fixed for the term of the loan. Therefore, no
calculation of interest rate sensitivity has been
undertaken.
Credit risk analysis
Credit risk refers to the risk
that a counterparty will default on its contractual obligations
resulting in financial loss to the Group. The Group has adopted a
policy of only dealing with creditworthy counterparties and where
possible working on a "cash with order".
The Group has a credit policy in
place and the exposure to credit risk is monitored on an ongoing
basis. Credit evaluations are performed on all customers
requiring credit over a certain amount. In the case of material
sales transactions, the Group usually demands an initial deposit
from customers and generally seeks to ensure that the balance of
funds is secured by way of a letter of credit or similar
instruments.
None of the Group's financial
assets are secured by collateral or other credit enhancements.
Details of allowance for credit losses are shown in note 18 of
these financial statements.
The Company has investments in and
amounts owing from subsidiary companies. The amounts owing
are held at fair value. For loans that are repayable on
demand, expected credit losses are based on the assumption that
repayment of the loan is demanded at the reporting date.
If the subsidiary has sufficient accessible
highly liquid assets in order to repay the loan if demanded at the
reporting date, the expected credit loss is likely to be
immaterial. If it does not, then an impairment will be
considered.
Liquidity risk analysis
Ultimate responsibility for
liquidity risk management rests with the Board of Directors, which
has established an appropriate liquidity risk management framework
for the management of the Group's short, medium and long-term
funding and liquidity management requirements. The Group manages
its liquidity needs by monitoring scheduled debt repayments for
long term financial liabilities as well as forecast cash flows due
in day-to-day business. Net cash requirements are compared to
borrowing facilities in order to determine headroom or any
shortfalls. This analysis shows if available borrowing facilities
are expected to be sufficient over the outlook period.
As at 30 June 2024, the Group's
financial liabilities have contractual maturities (including
interest payments, where
applicable) as summarised
below:
|
30 June
2024
|
31 Dec
2022
|
Group
|
Current (within 6
months)
|
6 to 12
months
|
Non-current (1-5
years)
|
Current
(within 6 months)
|
6 to 12
months
|
Non-current (1-5 years)
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Trade and other
payables
|
2,047
|
-
|
-
|
2,587
|
-
|
-
|
Total
|
2,047
|
-
|
-
|
2,587
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Company
|
Current (within 6
months)
|
6 to 12
months
|
Non-current (1-5
years)
|
Current
(within 6 months)
|
6 to 12
months
|
Non-current (1-5 years)
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Trade and other
payables
|
1,357
|
-
|
-
|
999
|
-
|
-
|
Total
|
1,357
|
-
|
-
|
999
|
-
|
-
|
27. Related Party Transactions
|
Balance
at 31 December
|
Movement
in Year
|
Balance
at 31 December
|
Movement in 18-month
period
|
Balance at 30 June
2024
|
|
2021
|
2022
|
2022
|
2024
|
2024
|
Group Loan
|
|
|
|
(97)
|
(97)
|
Westminster International
Limited
|
127
|
(713)
|
(586)
|
(456)
|
(1,042)
|
Westminster Services Limited
(formerly Longmoor Security Limited)
|
-
|
62
|
62
|
80
|
142
|
Westminster Aviation Security
Services Limited
|
4,762
|
(1,432)
|
3,330
|
(2,544)
|
786
|
Sovereign Ferries Limited
|
548
|
(2)
|
546
|
(546)
|
-
|
Westminster Operating
Limited
|
(174)
|
2,075
|
1,901
|
3,200
|
5,101
|
Keyguard U.K Limited
|
332
|
(10)
|
322
|
42
|
364
|
Longmoor (SL) Limited
|
(24)
|
2
|
(22)
|
1
|
(21)
|
Facilities Operations Management
Limited
|
1,499
|
24
|
1,523
|
(2)
|
1,521
|
Westminster Sierra Leone Limited
*
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Westminster Group GMBH
|
1,188
|
133
|
1,321
|
100
|
1,421
|
GLIS Gesellschaft für Luftfahrt- und
Infrastruktur-Sicherheit GmbH
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Westminster Sicherheit
GMBH
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Euro Ops SARL
|
187
|
51
|
238
|
83
|
321
|
Westminster Maritime Services
Limited
|
(21)
|
-
|
(21)
|
-
|
(21)
|
Longmoor Security Services Limited
(formerly Westminster Aviation Security Services (ME)
Limited)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
WASS DRC
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
27
|
27
|
|
8,424
|
190
|
8,614
|
(112)
|
8,502
|
Balances and transactions between
the Company and its subsidiaries, which are related parties, are
listed below:
The remuneration of the Directors,
who are the key management personnel of the Group, is set out in
the Remuneration Committee report as are details of pension
contributions for Directors.
In the period to 30 June 2024 fees
and expenses of nil (31 Dec 2022: £2,640) plus VAT were accrued to
Graham Binns Consulting Limited, a Limited Liability Partnership
under the control of Major General (Rtd) Graham Binns. On the 30
June 2024 Graham Binns Consulting Limited was owed £nil (31 Dec
2022: £nil).
Certain members of the Fowler
family, other than directors, have been employed by the Group on
normal arms-length terms for between 1 and 26 years. Their
remuneration, in aggregate, for the eighteen months ended 30 June
2024 was £286,878 (31 Dec 2022 twelve months: £176,718)
28.
Discontinued operations
At 30 September 2017 the Group took
the decision to dispose of its ferry operation in Sierra
Leone. The last vessel, the Sierra Queen, was sold in
February 2020 on extended terms. The Covid 19 pandemic and
subsequent issues with the boat has meant that despite having
reservation of title, personal and cross guarantees from the
purchaser, it is looking increasingly probable that all or part of
the remaining debt may be uncollectable. Prudently the group has
reserved £561,000 against all of the remaining debt.
We announced in November 2022 that
the relationship with our local partners, Scanport, regarding our
Ghana port project had become increasingly strained and that we
were looking to resolve matters through mediation to include
accelerated receipt in recompense for early termination, which
would free up resources for new large-scale projects expected in
2023. This was finally resolved in December 2023 and
remaining balances associated with the Ghana project amounting to
£702.000 have been written off.
Consolidated income
|
30/06/2024
|
31/12/2022
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
REVENUE
|
-
|
949
|
Cost of sales
|
-
|
(457)
|
Gross profit
|
-
|
492
|
Operating expenses
|
-
|
(139)
|
PROFIT FROM OPERATIONS
|
-
|
354
|
Other income / (losses)
|
(1,263)
|
-
|
Discontinued operations loss after
tax for the year from discontinued operations
|
(1,263)
|
354
|
|
|
|
Financial Position
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
-
|
872
|
Non-current Receivable
|
-
|
479
|
|
|
|
Cash Flow
|
|
|
PROFIT / (LOSS)
|
(1,263)
|
354
|
Movement on fixed assets
|
-
|
(66)
|
Net changes in working
capital
|
1,263
|
(541)
|
Changes in intercompany
balances
|
-
|
(55)
|
NET CASH USED IN OPERATING
ACTIVITIES
|
-
|
(309)
|
|
|
|
Opening cash
|
-
|
309
|
Closing cash
|
-
|
-
|
Cash outflow
|
-
|
(309)
|
29. Events after the Reporting
Period
On 1 November the group announced
that Pantheon A Family Office Limited were subscribing for
20,833,333 new ordinary shares of 0.01p each ('Subscription
Shares') at 2.4p. with 500,000 warrants exercisable at 10p per
share, valid for 3 years from the date of issue.