TIDMIPO
RNS Number : 6795Y
IP Group PLC
07 March 2017
("IP Group" or "the Group" or "the Company")
IP Group plc Annual Results Release
IP Group plc (LSE: IPO), the developer of intellectual
property-based businesses, today announces its annual financial
results for the year ended 31 December 2016.
Portfolio highlights
-- Overall net increase in fair value of portfolio, excluding
net investment, of GBP6.5m (2015: GBP86.2m)
-- Strong second half portfolio fair value increase of GBP31.4m
follows GBP24.9m reduction in first half
-- Fair value of portfolio: GBP614.0m (2015: GBP552.2m)
-- Capital provided to portfolio companies and projects: GBP69.7m (2015: GBP115.9m)
-- Portfolio cash realisations: GBP14.7m (2015: GBP0.6m)
-- Group's portfolio companies raised approximately GBP230m of new capital during the year
-- Oxford Nanopore completed GBP100m private financing
-- Diurnal reports positive headline data from European Infacort(R) Phase III pivotal study
Financial and operational highlights
-- Net assets GBP768.7m (2015: GBP781.9m)
-- Hard NAV GBP706.5m (2015: GBP714.3m)
-- Return on Hard NAV of negative GBP7.6m (2015: positive GBP84.0m)
-- Loss for the year GBP14.8m (2015: profit GBP75.1m)
-- Gross cash and deposits GBP112.3m (2015: GBP178.8m)
-- Acquisition of Parkwalk Advisors Ltd, the UK's largest EIS
growth fund manager focused on university spin-outs
Alan Aubrey, Chief Executive of IP Group, said: "2016 was
another productive year for the Group that saw our portfolio
companies record impressive commercial progress and raise a total
of approximately GBP230m. The first half of the year saw major
commercial developments in our key assets across all four of the
sectors in which we operate; Healthcare, Technology, Cleantech,
Biotech and we recorded successful exits from three companies. That
strong operational performance continued in the second half of the
year which also saw significant fundraisings from three of our
largest portfolio companies as well as the acquisition of Parkwalk
Advisors.
"We believe the fundamentals of the business remain strong; the
Group is well-capitalised with a robust balance sheet and our
portfolio is well diversified with a broad range of early to mature
businesses across four sectors. Geographically, we also have a
developing operation in the US, a healthy pipeline of new
opportunities and our most valuable portfolio company holdings are
making excellent commercial progress. All of these factors combine
to ensure that the Group remains well positioned for the future and
give us continued confidence for this year and beyond."
For more information, please contact:
IP Group plc www.ipgroupplc.com
Alan Aubrey, Chief
Executive Officer +44 (0) 20 7444 0050
Greg Smith, Chief
Financial Officer
Liz Vaughan-Adams, +44 (0) 20 7444 0062/+44
Communications (0) 7979 853802
Charlotte Street Partners
Andrew Wilson +44 (0) 7810 636995
Further information on IP Group is available on our website:
www.ipgroupplc.com
Notes
(i) Nature of announcement
This Annual Results Release was approved by the directors on 6
March 2017.
The financial information set out in this Annual Results Release
does not constitute the company's statutory accounts for 2016 or
2015. Statutory accounts for the years ended 31 December 2016 and
31 December 2015 have been reported on by the Independent Auditor.
The Independent Auditor's Reports on the Annual Report and
Financial Statements for 2016 and 2015 were unqualified, did not
draw attention to any matters by way of emphasis, and did not
contain a statement under 498(2) or 498(3) of the Companies Act
2006. Statutory accounts for the year ended 31 December 2015 have
been filed with the Registrar of Companies. The statutory accounts
for the year ended 31 December 2016 will be delivered to the
Registrar following the Company's annual general meeting.
The 2016 Annual Report and Accounts will be published in April
2017 and a copy will be posted on the Group's website
(www.ipgroupplc.com). In accordance with Listing Rule 9.6.1 a copy
of the Annual Report and Accounts will also be submitted to the
National Storage Mechanism on or around this date and will be
available for inspection at: www.Hemscott.com/nsm.do from that
time.
Throughout this Annual Results Release the Group's holdings in
portfolio companies reflect the undiluted beneficial equity
interest excluding debt, unless otherwise explicitly stated.
(ii) Forward looking statements
This Annual Report and Accounts may contain forward looking
statements. These statements reflect the Board's current view, are
subject to a number of material risks and uncertainties and could
change in the future. Factors which could cause or contribute to
such changes include, but are not limited to, the general economic
climate and market conditions, as well as specific factors relating
to the financial or commercial prospects or performance of
individual companies within the Group's portfolio.
Strategic Report
Chairman's summary
IP Group enjoyed an extremely productive year in 2016. The first
half of the year saw major commercial developments in our key
assets across all four of the sectors in which we operate and we
recorded successful exits from three companies. That strong
operational performance continued in the second half of the year
which also saw significant fundraisings from three of our largest
portfolio companies as well as a corporate acquisition. These
achievements took place against a backdrop of general uncertainty
following the outcomes of both the UK's referendum on its
membership of the EU and the US presidential election.
Since the publication of our half-year report, it has been
pleasing to see the UK Government, and other governments around the
world, acknowledge the continued importance of supporting
scientific innovation. IP Group was founded on the belief that
modern economies need to not only support fundamental scientific
research but also to commercially leverage this innovation through
the creation of significant businesses that contribute to
employment and economic growth. As such, in today's increasingly
dynamic world, the fundamental driver of our business - the need
for the commercialisation of science - remains as strong as
ever.
As we begin 2017, it is worth noting that the Group remains
well-capitalised with a strong balance sheet and that our portfolio
is well diversified with a broad range of early to mature
businesses across four sectors. Geographically, we also have a
burgeoning operation in the US and a healthy pipeline of new
opportunities. I would like to stress that our most valuable
portfolio company holdings are making excellent commercial
progress. We are fortunate to be able to call on an extremely
experienced management team who have weathered a number of business
cycles. All of these factors combine to ensure that the Group
remains well positioned for the future.
Key events
Of the many highlights in 2016, I would like to draw your
attention to both exits and fundraisings. On the former, the Group
recorded the second largest cash exit in its history with the sale
of its entire holding in Tracsis plc in March 2016. The Group was a
founder shareholder in Tracsis, which was spun out of the
University of Leeds in 2004 and, following eight successful
acquisitions, is now a profitable business with turnover in excess
of GBP30m, employing more than 600 people. The sale resulted in net
cash proceeds of GBP13.1m, bringing total proceeds from Tracsis to
date to GBP14.3m and representing a multiple of approximately 38
times the Group's investment of GBP0.4m.
On the point of fundraisings, it is noteworthy that our
portfolio companies raised over GBP230m of new capital this year
with almost GBP200m of that falling into the second half of the
year, a remarkable achievement given the prevailing economic
climate. Our most valuable spin-out company, Oxford Nanopore,
raised GBP100m. Other significant fund raisings including
AIM-quoted Ceres Power's GBP20m placing.
Acquisition
In December, the Group announced that it had agreed to acquire
Parkwalk Advisors Ltd, the UK's leading university spin-out focused
EIS fund manager, for an initial consideration of GBP10m (up to a
maximum of GBP20m over three years, subject to the achievement of
certain business performance targets). Parkwalk has been a
long-term co-investment partner of IP Group, having co-invested
over GBP17m in 14 investment rounds during 2015/2016 alone. The
primary reason for the Group's acquisition of Parkwalk was to
further secure access to this increasingly important source of
financing for early-stage technology companies and we believe
Parkwalk's strong links to leading institutional wealth managers
and university partners will be beneficial to the Group. In
addition, it is a profitable business and is immediately accretive
to IP Group's operating results. The acquisition completed on 31
January 2017 and I'm delighted to welcome the Parkwalk team to the
Group.
Financial performance
In terms of financial performance, the Group's objective is to
generate long-term value for its stakeholders and the Group's
portfolio has delivered strong growth to date. Since inception in
2001, the Group has generated a gross realised and unrealised
internal rate of return (IRR) on its portfolio of approximately 19%
and an annualised return on Hard NAV per share of approximately 14%
since the end of 2003, the year in which the Group was admitted to
AIM. However, it remains important to consider that portfolio
company valuations and therefore results can fluctuate from year to
year and this was the case in 2016. The Group's net assets
excluding goodwill and intangibles ("Hard NAV") were broadly
unchanged at GBP706.5m (2015: GBP714.3m) with the fair value of the
portfolio increasing to GBP614.0m (2015: GBP552.2m) although the
Group recorded an overall loss for the year of GBP14.8m (2015:
profit of GBP75.1m). The Group ended the year with gross cash of
GBP112.3m (2015: GBP178.8m).
Summary
In summary, 2016 was another extremely productive year for the
Group despite challenging circumstances of external uncertainty,
particularly in the second half of the year. As ever, we are
grateful for the continued hard work and commitment from our staff,
academic partners and portfolio companies. I would also like to
extend the Board's thanks to all of our stakeholders for their
continued support. IP Group remains as excited as ever about
evolving great ideas into world-changing businesses and we look
forward to further developing the Group, its partnerships and its
spin-out companies in 2017 and beyond.
Mike Humphrey
Chairman
Operational review
2016 was another productive year for the Group that saw our
portfolio companies record impressive commercial progress but also
raise a total of approximately GBP230m (2015: approximately
GBP300m). In addition, Oxford Sciences Innovation plc ("OSI") and
Cambridge Innovation Capital plc ("CIC"), the dedicated university
commercialisation vehicles in which the Group has a strategic
holding, completed significant capital raises of GBP230m and GBP75m
respectively.
The total fair value of the Group's portfolio, which now
comprises holdings in 90 companies, increased by 11.3% in 2016 to
GBP614.0m (2015: GBP552.2m), representing a net fair value
increase, excluding net investment, of GBP6.5m (2015: GBP86.2m).
This increase was driven primarily by a number of larger private
company transactions towards the end of 2016, which were partially
offset by reductions in the share prices of a number of our quoted
portfolio companies. The latter were impacted by a generally weaker
appetite for listed small-cap and biotech assets despite generally
reporting positive commercial and technical progress during the
year.
The key positive contributors to the increase in fair value in
2016 were Oxford Nanopore Technologies Limited (GBP33.8m), OSI
(GBP8.0m), Tissue Regenix Group plc (GBP5.2m) and Mirriad
Advertising Limited (GBP4.9m).
The most significant fair value reductions were seen in the
Group's AIM-quoted portfolio companies including Diurnal Group plc
(GBP10.3m), Avacta Group plc (GBP9.9m), hVivo plc (GBP7.2m) and
Xeros Technology Group plc (GBP3.2m). In addition, six private
companies each saw fair value reductions of GBP1-2m as a result of
financing rounds, anticipated financing rounds or progress towards
milestones that was not in line with the Group's expectations,
totalling GBP7.9m.
During 2016, the Group provided GBP58.8m of incubation, seed and
development capital to 55 portfolio companies (2015: GBP75.9m
capital; 53 companies) as well participating in significant
financings for its strategic holdings OSI (GBP7.5m) and CIC
(GBP3.4m).
Cash realisations from the portfolio increased significantly
during 2016 to GBP14.7m (2015: GBP0.6m) largely as a result of the
second largest exit in the Group's history with the sale of our
entire holding in Tracsis plc.
Significant portfolio company transactions and developments
Notable highlights in the portfolio in 2016 included:
In Healthcare, Oxford Nanopore Technologies Limited announced a
GBP100m fundraising in December, led by new investor GT Healthcare,
a pan-Asian fund with special reach in China. Nanopore, which has
designed and sells the world's only portable DNA/RNA sequencer,
plans to use the funds to expand its commercial operations across a
range of territories, including in Asia. It also announced a number
of key developments including announcing a new pipeline product,
SmidgION, the smallest ever sequencing device that can be plugged
into a smartphone and is expected in 2017.
In Technology, we exited Tracsis plc, as noted above, while the
division's most valuable company holding, Actual Experience plc,
announced a five-year framework agreement with Vodafone, adding to
the contract wins announced during 2015 which included a major
three-year partnership with Verizon.
In Cleantech, Ceres Power Holdings plc completed a GBP20m
fundraising and secured development agreements with a number of
leading OEMs including Honda, Nissan and Cummins.
In Biotech, there was excellent commercial progress from Diurnal
Group plc which now has two products in Phase 3 studies, Infacort
and Chronocort, for the treatment of the childhood and adult forms
of adrenal insufficiency, respectively. Modern Biosciences plc, a
drug discovery and development operation, continued to make good
progress during 2016 and expects the outcome of ongoing Phase 1a
studies for MBS2320, a novel agent for the treatment of rheumatoid
arthritis, during 2017.
More detail on the performance of the assets in our four
sectors, Healthcare, Technology, Cleantech and Biotech, is
contained in the portfolio review.
The US
In the US, the Group signed agreements with the University of
Washington and The Johns Hopkins University. Both universities have
consistently ranked in the top ten of all US universities with
regards to the quantum of their annual R&D budgets (2016:
$1.1bn and $2.1bn, respectively) and are known for the quality and
breadth of their technical output. Having now moved beyond the
initial pilot phase agreements with our existing university
partners, Columbia University, University of Pennsylvania and
Princeton University, the Group continues to focus on building on
the progress achieved with them to date.
Our US team, which comprised eleven FTEs at the end of 2016,
continues to develop an exciting portfolio of companies. IP Group's
first two portfolio companies from US university partners, Exyn
Technologies (University of Pennsylvania) and Uniformity Labs
(Princeton University), raised a combined GBP5.4m ($6.8m) in new
post seed financing rounds via private placement of ordinary
shares. The Uniformity Labs transaction completed at the end of
2016 while the Exyn transaction closed in early 2017. Following
completion of the financing rounds, IP Group's combined undiluted
beneficial holdings in Exyn Technologies and Uniformity Labs were
valued at GBP7.9m ($9.9m). The Group committed a further GBP2.9m
($3.7m) to Exyn Technologies and Uniformity Labs as part of these
funding rounds which included both new and existing US and UK based
investors.
During the year, notable incubation financings were also
completed for two spin-out companies from the University of
Pennsylvania, two spin-out companies from Princeton University and
one spin-out company from Columbia University. The Group has also
provided further incubation funding to pursue additional
opportunities from our Federal Lab initiative through FedImpact
LLC, including the spin-out of MobilION Systems, Inc. from the
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
Outlook
The Board continues to believe the fundamentals of the business
remain strong although, as ever, it is important to consider the
Group as a long-term business where results can fluctuate from year
to year. The strength of IP Group's portfolio, however, combined
with the opportunities we continue to see, give us continued
confidence for the current year and beyond.
Portfolio review
Overview
At 31 December 2016, the value of the Group's portfolio had
increased to GBP614.0m, from GBP552.2m in 2015, reflecting a net
investment of GBP55.0m and the fair value movements set out below.
The portfolio consists of interests in 90 companies (79 UK and 11
US), strategic holdings in three multi-sector platform businesses
as well as a further 20 de minimis holdings (2015: 82, 3, 15). Of
these 90 holdings, the ten most valuable portfolio companies
account for 76% of the total value (2015: 75%).
During the year to 31 December 2016, the Group provided
pre-seed, seed and post-seed capital totalling approximately
GBP69.7m to its portfolio companies, including investments in two
of its multi-sector platform holdings Oxford Sciences Innovation
plc (GBP7.5m) as part of its recent GBP230m financing and Cambridge
Innovations Capital plc (GBP3.4m) as part of its GBP75m financing
round. Excluding multi-sector platform investments, this GBP58.8m
represents a 23% decrease on the equivalent GBP75.9m provided to
portfolio companies in 2015 and results from fewer of the Group's
largest holdings seeking finance in 2016. The Directors continue to
believe that the Group's ability to utilise its capital to maintain
its equity interests in its most promising companies will
contribute to significant potential fair value increases in the
portfolio over the medium to long term.
In contrast to the decreased level of capital deployed into
portfolio company opportunities, the Group increased the rate of
new spin-out opportunity formation. The Group deployed capital for
the first time into 20 companies or projects during the year (2015:
14). With 13 of the opportunities being sourced from the UK (2015:
10), and seven from the US (2015: four), both geographies
demonstrated a consistent pipeline of opportunities. Three
companies were sold during the period (2015: four), while a further
four companies, with a total historic cost of GBP4.8m, were closed
or fully provided against.
During the year, cash proceeds from the realisation of
investments increased to GBP14.7m (2015: GBP0.6m). The proceeds
were primarily driven by the disposal of interests in Tracsis plc,
Gold Standard Simulations Limited and Summit Therapeutics plc, as
well as deferred consideration from the 2014 disposal of Rock
Deformation Research Limited, whilst prior year realisations
predominantly arose from the cash received on the wind-up of CH4e
Limited.
Performance summary
A summary of the Income Statement gains and losses which are
directly attributable to the portfolio is as follows:
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------------- ------ ------
Unrealised gains on the revaluation
of investments 56.6 115.3
Unrealised losses on the revaluation
of investments (50.3) (29.0)
Effects of movement in exchange
rates 0.7 0.1
---------------------------------------- ------ ------
Change in fair value of equity and
debt investments 7.0 86.4
Loss on disposals of equity investments (0.5) (0.2)
---------------------------------------- ------ ------
Net portfolio gains 6.5 86.2
---------------------------------------- ------ ------
The most significant contributors to unrealised gains on the
revaluation of investments comprised Oxford Nanopore Technologies
Limited (GBP33.8m), Oxford Sciences Innovation Plc (GBP8.0m),
Tissue Regenix plc (GBP5.2m), and Mirriad Advertising Limited
(GBP4.9m). The major contributors to the unrealised losses on the
revaluation of investments were Diurnal Group plc (GBP10.3m),
Avacta Group plc (GBP9.9m), and hVivo plc (GBP7.2m).
The performance of the Group's holdings in companies quoted on
AIM saw a net unrealised fair value decrease of GBP36.1m while the
Group's holdings in unquoted companies experienced a net fair value
increase of GBP43.1m. Excluding the net amount invested during the
year, the Group's listed portfolio decreased in fair value by
18.0%, versus an increase in the FTSE AIM All Share index of
14.3%.
Since the year end, i.e. between 31 December 2016 and 3 March
2017, the fair value of the Group's holdings in companies whose
shares are listed on the AIM market experienced a net fair value
increase of GBP9.9m.
Investments and realisations
The Group's overall rate of capital deployment decreased during
2016, with a total of GBP58.8m being deployed across 55 new and
existing projects (2015: GBP75.9m; 53 projects), excluding the
GBP7.5m and GBP3.4m strategic investments into OSI and CIC (2015:
GBP40.0m; GBPnil).
The average level of capital deployed per company decreased from
GBP2.1m to GBP1.2m in 2016. Excluding the Group's participation in
Oxford Nanopore Technologies Limited's 2015 and 2016 financing
rounds, as well as the Group's participation in the Oxford Sciences
Innovation plc's 2015 and 2016 financing rounds, the average
investment per company was GBP0.7m in 2016 (2015: GBP1.2m).
Cash investment analysis by 2016 2015
company stage GBPm GBPm
----------------------------- ----- -----
Focus 39.0 60.0
Development 10.8 10.7
Early stage 9.0 5.2
Total 58.8 75.9
----------------------------- ----- -----
Multi-sector platforms 10.9 40.0
----------------------------- ----- -----
Total purchase of equity and
debt investments 69.7 115.9
----------------------------- ----- -----
Cash proceeds from sales of
equity investments 14.7 0.6
----------------------------- ----- -----
Net investment 55.0 115.3
----------------------------- ----- -----
Early-stage companies include both incubation and seed
opportunities. Incubation opportunities comprise businesses or
pre-incorporation projects that are generally at a very early stage
of development, at most within three years since the Group's first
financing, and have received at least one stage of funding.
Opportunities at this stage usually involve capital of less than
GBP0.2m from IP Group, predominantly allowing for proof of concept
work to be carried out. Seed businesses are those that have
typically received financing of up to GBP1m in total, primarily
from the Group, in order to continue towards agreed commercial and
technology milestones and to enable the recruitment of management
teams and early commercial engagement.
Portfolio companies which are classed as being in the Focus
stage are those portfolio companies (excluding multi-sector
platform companies) in which the Group's holding has a fair value
in excess of GBP4.0m.
The Development stage group includes other businesses to which
the Group has provided in excess of GBP0.5m as principal investor,
or in excess of GBP1.0m of funding in conjunction with other
significant investors. Although each business can vary
significantly in its rate and manner of development, such
additional funding is generally used to progress towards key
milestones and commercial validation, to build senior level
capability in the business and to attract experienced non-executive
directors to their boards.
The multi-sector platform companies in which the Group has taken
a strategic stake operate a similar business model of sourcing and
developing university spin-outs, typically from a single
institution.
Those companies which either do not progress beyond the
incubation stage within three years of the Group's initial funding
and/or whose value has subsequently fallen to below GBP0.1m but
remain as an operating business are classed as de minimis
holdings.
The Group has continued to contribute to the development of its
post-seed businesses with a number announcing further financings
supported by the Group and/or IP Venture Fund ("IPVF"), the
dedicated follow-on venture capital fund managed by the Group. With
IPVF approaching the end of its term, the amount the fund invested
into existing Group portfolio businesses during the year was
GBP0.2m (2015: GBPnil).
Since its inception in May 2013, IP Venture Fund II ("IPVFII"),
the GBP30m venture capital successor fund to IP Venture Fund, has
invested alongside the Group in 27 companies spun-out from IP
Group's university partnerships and other collaborations. At 31
December 2016, IPVFII had invested GBP10.6m into spin-out companies
from incubation stage through seed and post-seed stage (2015:
GBP8.2m), with an investment ratio of 30:70 (IP Venture Fund II: IP
Group). Further, IP Group holds a 33% interest in IP Venture Fund
II. In complying with IFRS 10, the Group consolidates the assets,
liabilities and results of IPVFII. In order to reflect meaningful
information to its shareholders, the detailed sectoral analysis
tables included in this Portfolio review reflect the Group's
economic interest in portfolio company holdings, including an
estimate of its "look through" interest via IPVFII, which as noted
above is calculated as one third of IPVFII's holdings in such
companies. The minority interest ownership, i.e. that element of
IPVFII's holdings that is attributable to external limited
partners, is reflected in a separate section within those
tables.
During the year, 19 opportunities received initial incubation or
seed funding (2015: 13) and one company received initial post-seed
funding (2015: one), while the Group received founder equity in one
further new spin-out company under the terms of its university
agreements. During the period six existing incubation projects
progressed to seed or post-seed stage (2015: five).
The 20 new opportunities included the following, and some
further discussion of new opportunities is included in portfolio
analysis - by sector below:
-- Microbiotica Limited is a newly formed spin-out company from
the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute ("the Sanger Institute")
established to commercialise the Sanger Institute's ground-breaking
research into the role of the human microbiome in disease.
-- Heliochrome Limited (University of Cambridge) is developing
perovskite-based light-emitting devices for next generation
displays. They enhance the colour quality and enable flexible
design of displays, bringing visual experience to the next
level;
-- Lumiode Inc (Columbia University) is a New York City-based
semiconductor start-up building the next generation of microdisplay
technologies for head-worn, high brightness, augmented reality
systems.
Portfolio analysis by stage of company maturity
At 31 December 2016, the Group's portfolio fair value of
GBP614.0m was distributed across stages of company maturity as
follows:
As at 31 December 2016 As at 31 December 2015
-----------------------
Fair value Number Fair Value Number
Stage GBPm % % GBPm % %
----------------------- ---------- ----- --- ---- ---------- ----- --- ----
Focus 473.3 86% 19 21% 435.8 86% 18 22%
Development 57.0 10% 32 36% 57.6 11% 34 41%
Early-stage 20.3 4% 39 43% 13.2 3% 30 37%
Total 550.6(1) 100% 90 100% 506.6(1) 100% 82 100%
----------------------- ---------- ----- --- ---- ---------- ----- --- ----
Multi-sector platforms 62.5 - 3 - 45.2 - 3 -
De minimis holdings 0.9 - 20 - 0.4 - 15 -
----------------------- ---------- ----- --- ---- ---------- ----- --- ----
614.0 - 113 - 552.2 - 100 -
----------------------- ---------- ----- --- ---- ---------- ----- --- ----
(1.) Total fair value includes GBP9.2m (2015: GBP8.5m)
attributable to minority interests represented by third party
limited partners in the consolidated fund, IPVFII.
Of the 90 companies in the Group's portfolio, 76% (2015: 75%) of
the fair value resides in the ten most valuable companies and the
Group's holdings in these businesses are valued at a total of
GBP418.2m (2015: GBP414.0m).
The total value of the Group's 90 portfolio companies (excluding
multi-sector platforms and de minimis holdings), calculated by
reference to the Group's holding in such companies and grossed up
to reflect their total value, is now in excess of GBP2.7bn, or
approximately GBP3.3bn including the Group's three holdings in
multi-sector platform companies (Oxford Sciences Innovation plc,
Cambridge Innovation Capital plc and Frontier IP Group plc).
Portfolio analysis by sector
The Group funds spin-out companies based on a wide variety of
scientific research emerging from leading research intensive
institutions and does not limit itself to funding companies from
particular areas of science. The Group splits its core opportunity
evaluation and business building team into four specialist
divisions, Biotech, Cleantech, Healthcare and Technology. Where the
Group invests in businesses that cannot be classified within these
divisions, primarily those portfolio companies which also invest in
other opportunities, they are recorded in a separate sector as
shown below. Together these five sectors make up the university
partnership business segment. An update on the other two operating
segments is included in the financial review below.
As at 31 December 2016 As at 31 December 2015
-------------
Fair value Number Fair Value Number
Sector GBPm % % GBPm % %
------------- ---------- ----- --- ---- ---------- ----- --- ----
Healthcare 328.0 60% 27 29% 277.6 55% 27 33%
Technology 93.6 17% 31 36% 91.6 18% 27 33%
Cleantech 76.9 14% 20 22% 69.0 14% 19 23%
Biotech 52.1 9% 12 13% 68.4 13% 9 11%
------------- ---------- ----- --- ---- ---------- ----- --- ----
Total 550.6(1) 100% 90 100% 506.6(1) 100% 82 100%
------------- ---------- ----- --- ---- ---------- ----- --- ----
Multi-sector
platforms 62.5 - 3 - 45.2 - 3 -
De minimis
holdings 0.9 - 20 - 0.4 - 15 -
------------- ---------- ----- --- ---- ---------- ----- --- ----
614.0 - 113 - 552.2 - 100 -
------------- ---------- ----- --- ---- ---------- ----- --- ----
(1.) Total fair value includes GBP9.2m (2015: GBP8.5m)
attributable to minority interests represented by third party
limited partners in the consolidated fund, IPVFII.
As can be seen from the table, the Group's portfolio by number
of companies is well diversified across its four main sectors. By
fair value, however, the portfolio is currently more concentrated
in the healthcare sector, largely as a result of the relative
valuations of the Group's holdings in Oxford Nanopore Technologies
Limited, hVIVO plc and Tissue Regenix Group plc.
A more detailed analysis of each sector follows.
Portfolio review Healthcare
Purpose
IP Healthcare finds and supports innovations to improve health
outcomes and that are sustainable in a world where the funding of
healthcare is subject to fundamental change.
Review of the year
Oxford Nanopore
As in 2015, the largest amount of capital, GBP19.5m, was
contributed to Oxford Nanopore, the Group's most valuable portfolio
company holding. Oxford Nanopore has developed the world's first
and only nanopore DNA/RNA sequencer and has a goal to enable the
analysis of any living thing, by any person, in any environment.
The company's first product is a portable, real time device, the
MinION. With 512 nanopores available for sequencing in each
consumable Flow Cell, the MinION is complemented by the larger
PromethION (144,000 pores presented as 48 Flow Cells for modular,
on-demand sequencing). PromethION is currently being released into
early access. In a market whose traditional technologies are
notable for being expensive, large instruments where read lengths
may be very short or data only available after some days, nanopore
sequencing stands to disrupt the market with its unique combination
of long read lengths, portability/scalability, real-time data,
low-cost and ease of use.
To date, more than 110 publications describing various
applications of nanopore sequencing have been released. The rate of
publication increasing in late 2016 as newly released versions of
the technology yielded increasing amounts of high-fidelity data.
The release of 'R9.4', the company's newest nanopore, in the
autumn, delivered higher yields and higher accuracy data to users
of its technology. This led to the release in December of the first
set of human genomes and the first large plant genome datasets
created using MinION. These are considered a landmark in terms of
new market possibilities and potential customer bases for the
company. In 2017, the Company's CTO reported achieving 20 Gb of
data from a single MinION Flow Cell in internal use, following the
release of software updates that optimise performance. The
significant implications for the competitive position of the
MinION, progressing it from an emerging, disruptive technology to
one that has novel properties and can outperform many existing
systems.
The majority of current users of Oxford Nanopore's technology
are scientific researchers, using devices for research into areas
such as pathogens/antimicrobial resistance, environment, cancer
research, human genetics research or a broad range of aspects of
general genome research. The DNA sequencing market for this
research market has been estimated at approximately $2-3 billion
per annum based on relatively low penetration of potential users;
Oxford Nanopore management has always stated that it aims to
establish its technology in a very broad user base.
As research markets become more established for the company, it
is now preparing to access 'applied markets'. Instead of being
interested in performing experiments, applied users may want an
answer to a biological question that is either actionable or has
inherent value. Potential applied markets include healthcare
(diagnostics/oncology/reproductive health), industrial supply chain
monitoring (food/water), industrial inspection (pest control/
environmental/ customs) or Agricultural (surveillance of
livestock/fish/crops) and many of these are potentially billion
dollar markets in their own right. Oxford Nanopore believes that
different products, commercial structures and mechanisms are
required to open up and develop sales in these markets. The Company
has created a fully owned company, Metrichor Ltd, to provide end to
end analysis solutions for applied markets.
Further, DNA extraction and preparation for sequencing has
traditionally been a barrier to wider adoption, as it has been time
consuming, complex and expensive. Having already reduced library
preparation (extracted DNA to instrument) to a 10-minute process
with minimal skill or consumables required, Oxford Nanopore has
recently released VolTRAX, a USB-powered, automated library
preparation device to early users. It is designed to offer
consistent, hands-off processes in any environment that would
normally be performed by a person in a lab, facilitating wider
adoption.
In terms of the competitive landscape, during 2016, US-based
Pacific Biosciences of California, Inc. filed a complaint with the
US International Trade Commission alleging that the company is
infringing a granted US patent. This followed a similar action by
Illumina that was settled by the parties earlier in 2016. On 3
November, the Company issued a statement that said, in its opinion,
the action by Pacific Biosciences was "...without merit". Oxford
Nanopore has an intellectual property portfolio of more than 500
issued patents and patent applications, in over 120 patent
families. These cover all aspects of nanopore sensing including
fundamental patents for nanopore sensing, and patents relating to
DNA-sequencing.
The company has a product pipeline that is designed not only to
extend existing customer usage but to create new markets for
biological analysis technology. For example, Oxford Nanopore is
developing an ultra-portable smartphone sequencer SmidgION, as well
as Project Zumbador, the development of a universal, low-cost,
integrated sample and library preparation device for inexpert
users. The company intends to use the proceeds from its GBP100m
December private financing, which valued the business at GBP1.25bn,
to expand its commercial operations across a range of territories,
including in Asia.
Other significant portfolio company updates
Looking to our larger publicly listed holdings, the year was
mixed. Tissue Regenix has made good commercial progress with US
sales, the announcement of Group Purchasing Organisation contracts
with US healthcare providers and ongoing success in its clinical
development programmes, and the company's share price increased
during the year. Meanwhile the hVIVO plc share price performed
disappointingly. The company carried out three exploratory studies
on the drug PrEP-001, with the results published in January 2017
showing mixed success. While two of the exploratory studies did not
meet their primary endpoints, they provided valuable insights for
PrEP-001 and build on the profile of the drug following the
previously reported positive proof of concept trials in flu and the
common cold.
For the smaller publicly listed holdings, the year was equally
mixed. A patent litigation, which was settled in December, for
Medaphor Group plc put severe downward pressure on the share price
following its successful acquisition and placing early in the year,
resulting in a net fair value decrease of GBP2.5m for the year.
Ixico plc's share price, however, performed reasonably well
following board changes and disclosure of its income generating
patient stratification programme in partnership with Biogen.
During the year, Oxford Nanopore aside, highlights in the
private portfolio included:
-- Creavo Medical Technologies Limited (previously Quantum
Imaging Limited) - successful product development leading to award
of VitalScan CE Mark in November 2016. The successful receipt of
the CE mark means that the device has started a large scale,
multi-centre clinical trial at four of the UK's major A&E
departments, followed by second stage trials at three centres in
the US.
-- Oxehealth Limited - completion of a GBP2.5m financing
concurrent with strengthening its board and the executive as the
company entered into its first material commercial engagement with
Hanwha Techwin and the successful completion of a trial of its
Oxecam patient safety monitoring software at Broadmoor Mental
Health Hospital. Oxehealth was also one of five finalists competing
for the TechCrunch Startup Battlefield finals at TechCrunch Disrupt
London, having been shortlisted from over 500 entries and
successfully making it through the preliminary round.
-- Genomics plc - Appointed as Analysis Partner for the Genomics
England GENE consortium and, working alongside the Wellcome Trust
Centre for Human Genetics, was the first to Sequence Multiple Human
Genomes using hand-held Nanopore Technology demonstrating the
potential for wide-scale whole-genome sequencing in humans using
nanopore approaches.
Working with the New Business and Partnerships team, IP
Healthcare also completed or approved five new grub investments,
ensuring a steady pipeline of high-growth opportunities as we head
into 2017 and beyond.
Year to 31 December
2016
--------------- -------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Fair Fair
value value
Group of Group of Group
stake holding holding
at at Net at
31 December 31 December investment/ 31 December
Fair
value
movement
and fees
settled
Quoted/ 2016(i) 2015 (divestment) in equity 2016
Company
name Description Unquoted % GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------- -------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Enabling the
analysis
of any living
thing, by any
person, in any
environment.
Developer
of the portable,
real time,
Oxford long-read,
Nanopore low cost MinION
Technologies nanopore DNA/RNA
Limited sequencer Unquoted 19.6% 193.0 19.5 33.8 246.3
--------------- -------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
World leader
in human models
hVIVO plc of viral disease Quoted 16.7% 29.0 - (7.2) 21.8
--------------- -------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Tissue Regenerative
Regenix dCELL(R) soft
Group plc tissue body parts Quoted 13.6% 15.5 - 5.2 20.7
--------------- -------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Creavo
Medical
Technologies Quantum cardiac
Limited(ii) imaging technology Unquoted 48.1% 6.5 - - 6.5
--------------- -------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Medical devices
to improve the
safety and
efficiency
Alesi Surgical of laparoscopic
Limited surgery Unquoted 58.8% 6.5 - (1.2) 5.3
--------------- -------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Platform for
analysis
and interpretation
Genomics of genomic sequence
plc data Unquoted 19.0% 4.9 - - 4.9
--------------- -------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Other companies (21 companies) 17.3 3.3 (2.9) 17.7
------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Value not attributable
to equity holders 4.9 0.6 (0.7) 4.8
------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Total(iii) 277.6 23.4 27.0 328.0
------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
(i) Represents the Group's undiluted beneficial economic equity
interest (excluding debt) including the portion of IPVFII's stake
attributable to the Group. Voting interest is below 50%.
(iI) Formerly known as Quantum Imaging Limited.
(iii) Total now excludes investments classified as De minimis
holdings; 2015 comparatives have been restated.
Portfolio review Technology
Purpose
The aim of the Technology division is to "shape the future" by
commercialising innovative technologies derived from our partner
research institutions. The division covers a broad spectrum of
scientific fields from advanced materials, through the various
disciplines of chemical, mechanical, electrical and electronic
engineering, to information and communications technologies,
including both hardware and software.
Review of the year
In March 2016, the Technology division was responsible for the
second largest exit in the history of IP Group. The sale of the
Group's stake in Tracsis plc yielded proceeds of GBP13.1m after
fees, which, when taken with dividends and other proceeds received
to date, reflects a multiple of approximately 38 times the GBP0.4m
that IP Group had historically invested in the company. IP Group
was the first investor in Tracsis when it originally spun-out from
the University of Leeds and supported the company throughout its
early stages of growth. We are proud of all that has been achieved
in building a successful company that we believe will continue to
return value to shareholders.
Elsewhere in the portfolio, the division's most valuable asset,
Actual Experience plc, announced two new major partnership deals.
The first, a 5-year framework agreement with Vodafone, was signed
in March, followed by a 3-year framework agreement with Proquire,
the procurement arm of Accenture plc, in November. Whilst it takes
time to gather momentum with such huge partner organisations, the
agreements announced so far represent major milestones and we
believe that they will yield significant financial benefit for
Actual Experience in the medium term.
Positive developments continue apace at remote haptic feedback
pioneer Ultrahaptics. The University of Bristol spin-out is
increasingly being considered as one of the UK's most promising
early-stage technology start-ups. A list of prestigious industry
awards has accompanied growing revenue as customers pay for
integration of the Ultrahaptics technology into cars and consumer
electronics devices. We expect more significant commercial progress
in 2017 and are optimistic that early royalty revenue will begin to
flow during the year.
We are also pleased with the commercial progress made during the
year at Mirriad, an exciting company with an innovative, patented
computer vision technology that can retrospectively insert
advertising and branded products into existing video content. The
company has begun to see encouraging levels of adoption with some
key, high-value customers and anticipates rapid growth in 2017.
It has been a challenging year for some of the division's quoted
assets, with both Revolymer plc and Applied Graphene Materials plc
in particular suffering from considerable share price headwinds. We
do not believe that the price movement in the year necessarily
reflects the underlying progress over the same period at either
company, and, indeed, both have seen worthwhile commercial
developments during the year, so we are hopeful that both
businesses will become more valuable in 2017 and beyond.
Year to 31 December
2016
------------- ---------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Fair Fair
value value
Group of Group of Group
stake holding holding
at at Net at
31 December 31 December investment/ 31 December
Fair
value
movement
and fees
settled
Quoted/ 2016(i) 2015 (divestment) in equity 2016
Company
name Description Unquoted % GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------- ---------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Optimising the
Actual human experience
Experience of networked
plc applications Quoted 24.9% 23.8 - (0.4) 23.4
------------- ---------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Resource optimisation
software for
Tracsis the transport
plc industry Quoted - 14.6 (14.6) - -
------------- ---------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Native in-video
advertising
Mirriad allowing
Advertising post-production
Limited ad placement Unquoted 38.9% 4.5 4.0 4.9 13.4
------------- ---------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Contactless
Ultrahaptics haptic technology
Holdings "feeling without
Limited(ii) touching" Unquoted 33.8% 7.9 - - 7.9
------------- ---------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Applied
Graphene Producer of
Materials speciality graphene
plc materials Quoted 20.8% 6.0 2.0 (2.2) 5.8
------------- ---------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Equipment, materials
and software
Uniformity for additive
Labs Inc manufacturing Unquoted 25.1% 0.2 2.5 2.4 5.1
------------- ---------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Self-powered,
Perpetuum wireless sensing
Limited technology Unquoted 29.2% 3.4 0.7 - 4.1
------------- ---------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Other companies (24
companies) 28.8 7.5 (4.8) 31.5
------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Value not attributable
to equity holders 2.4 - - 2.4
------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Total(iii) 91.6 2.1 (0.1) 93.6
------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
(i) Represents the Group's undiluted beneficial economic equity
interest (excluding debt) including the portion of IPVFII's stake
attributable to the Group. Voting interest is below 50%.
(ii) Formerly known as Ultrahaptics Limited.
(iii) Total now excludes investments classified as De minimis
holdings; 2015 comparatives have been restated.
Portfolio review Cleantech
Purpose
IP Cleantech finds, funds and builds outstanding, science-based
businesses that mitigate the impacts of climate change and other
environmental challenges.
Review of the year
2016 has been a mixed year, with commercial progress in key
assets offset by challenging capital market conditions; public
capital markets in particular were affected at various times by
political uncertainty. Most notably, the outcome of the US
presidential election impacted sentiment towards the prospects for
many cleantech companies around the world. However, against this
backdrop, IP Cleantech completed several funding rounds, which is
testament to the strength of our portfolio and reputation.
Ceres Power Holdings plc, our fuel cell company, has had a
successful year. Its strategy is to provide technology to leading
corporate OEMs who have the brands and balance sheets to take the
Ceres technology to mass markets. The company's key objective for
the year was to secure development agreements and it exceeded
expectations in signing up 3 leading OEMs: Honda, Nissan and
Cummins.
The Honda agreement was announced in January. Honda produces
over six million power products a year and is a world leader in
small generators and engines. Ceres was then approached by Nissan,
which was looking for a robust, flexible fuel cell technology as a
range extender for electric vehicles. In June the two companies
announced an agreement to develop Ceres's first automotive system.
In September Ceres secured the third contract, with global power
systems company Cummins, to develop a power system for use in data
centres, a rapidly-growing market that already accounts for around
2% of global electricity consumption. Following this strong
commercial progress, the company raised GBP20.0m in October. This
new capital will provide the financial strength to move from
development to commercial programmes while maintaining technology
leadership.
Our off-grid solar business, Azuri, had a successful 2016 and
has now deployed over 40,000 home systems in Africa. The company
raised GBP8.0m in November and continues to innovate. In April,
Azuri launched Homesmart, using machine-learning algorithms to
maximise the duration of light output from its products in response
to customer behaviour and climatic conditions. In December, it
launched the first complete pay-as-you-go solar satellite TV system
in Kenya.
Xeros Technology Group plc also made strong commercial progress;
this progress did not appear to have been reflected in the
company's share price during the year, which remains relatively
volatile. The company continued to expand its commercial laundry
business, broadening its product offerings and partnering with
eLaundry to launch a laundry-as-a-service offer. Beyond laundry,
Xeros is making strides in the leather industry, completing a
successful full-scale trial with a leading leather tannery.
However, despite the strong commercial performance of Ceres and
Xeros in particular, the overall Cleantech portfolio performance
for the year from a fair value perspective has been disappointing.
We are, nonetheless, confident about the portfolio and the sector
in the long term. The sector received a boost in December, with the
announcement of Breakthrough Energy Ventures ("BEV"). BEV is a $1bn
Cleantech fund backed by 20 of the world's richest entrepreneurs,
including Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, Vinod Khosla and Jack Ma. This
commitment from high profile figures is a vote of confidence and IP
Cleantech is planning to collaborate with BEV and other
recently-formed Cleantech funds in Europe in 2017.
Year to 31 December
2016
------------------ ----------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Fair Fair
value value
Group of Group of Group
stake holding holding
at at Net at
31 December 31 December investment/ 31 December
Fair
value
movement
and fees
settled
2016(i) 2015 (divestment) in equity 2016
Company Quoted/
name Description Unquoted % GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------ ----------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Polymer bead,
near-waterless
cleaning for
Xeros Technology commercial
Group plc laundry Quoted 11.5% 23.4 - (3.2) 20.2
------------------ ----------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
World leading
developer of
Ceres Power next generation
Holdings fuel cell
plc technology Quoted 25.5% 12.2 6.6 (0.8) 18.0
------------------ ----------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
New methodology
for achieving
First Light extreme
Fusion intensity
Limited cavity collapse Unquoted 34.9% 13.9 - - 13.9
------------------ ----------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Pay-as-you-go
solar power
for off-grid
customers in
Azuri Technologies rural emerging
Limited markets Unquoted 34.6% 1.6 2.9 1.0 5.5
------------------ ----------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Other companies (16
companies) 16.6 3.3 (3.0) 16.9
------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Value not attributable
to equity holders 1.3 0.9 0.2 2.4
------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Total(ii) 69.0 13.7 (5.8) 76.9
------------------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
(i) Represents the Group's undiluted beneficial economic equity
interest (excluding debt) including the portion of IPVFII's stake
attributable to the Group. Voting interest is below 50%.
(ii) Total now excludes investments classified as De minimis
holdings; 2015 comparatives have been restated.
Portfolio review Biotech
Purpose
The aim of the Biotech division is to support the discovery and
development of breakthrough therapeutics, achieved either by
in-house development of proprietary products licensed directly into
the Group or via the more conventional development and financing of
portfolio companies.
Review of the year
The most valuable and advanced of the Group's biotech assets is
Diurnal Group plc, which was floated successfully on AIM towards
the very end of 2015. A spin-out from the University of Sheffield,
Diurnal has two products in Phase 3 studies, Infacort and
Chronocort, for the treatment of the childhood and adult forms of
adrenal insufficiency, respectively. During 2016, the company made
excellent progress, initiating a pivotal European Phase 3 for
Chronocort, announcing positive results from its European Phase 3
Infacort study and moving its next product, a native oral
testosterone product for testosterone deficiency, into Phase 1.
Unfortunately, due in our view to low trading volumes and selling
by minority shareholders, the shares have not performed as well as
the company, but we remain confident of the company's fundamental
positioning, with regulatory approval of Infacort and potential
first sales expected in 2017, along with the initiation of Phase 3
studies for both products in the US.
Avacta Group plc, the Biotech division's other listed biotech
asset, continues to develop its Affimer platform in the therapeutic
space, demonstrating that the technology has the ability to create
high-affinity binders for a range of therapeutically important
targets, including the checkpoint proteins in cancer. The company's
poor share price performance during the year did not appear to be
consistent with a number of strong commercial updates.
The Group's other key biotech asset is Modern Biosciences plc
("MBS"), a drug discovery and development operation. MBS has
continued to make good progress during 2016 with MBS2320, a novel
agent for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis ("RA"). MBS2320 is
unique amongst RA drugs in its mechanism of action which appears to
not only reduce the inflammation associated with RA, but to also
potentially reverse some of the bone damage that this inflammation
causes. MBS2320 is partnered with Janssen Biotech Inc. and MBS
expects the outcome of ongoing Phase 1a studies during 2017. MBS is
a majority-owned subsidiary of the Group and, hence, its results
are consolidated in the Group financials rather than being included
in the portfolio valuation.
Elsewhere, Asterion Limited continues to develop its recombinant
growth hormone fusion for the treatment of acromegaly-related
growth disorder towards clinical trials, helped by a GBP2.4m
Medical Research Council grant. Asterion represents the Group's
second majority-controlled drug discovery asset. Glythera Limited
continues to make headway in the area of antibody-drug conjugates
("ADCs"), demonstrating that its Permalink technology has
significant safety advantages over current methods of making ADCs
for the treatment of cancer.
Year to 31 December
2016
----------- ----------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Fair Fair
value value
Group of Group of Group
stake holding holding
at at Net at
31 December 31 December investment/ 31 December
Fair
value
movement
and fees
settled
2016(i) 2015 (divestment) in equity 2016
Company Quoted/
name Description Unquoted % GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
----------- ----------------------- ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Diurnal Novel treatments
Group plc of hormone deficiency Quoted 45.0% 39.6 - (10.3) 29.3
Avacta Bio-therapeutic
Group plc affimer technology Quoted 23.1% 21.1 - (9.9) 11.2
Other companies(ii) (10
companies) 7.7 4.1 (0.2) 11.6
------------------------------------ ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Value not attributable
to equity holders - - - -
------------------------------------ ---------- ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
Total(ii) 68.4 4.1 (20.4) 52.1
------------------------------------------------ ------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ------------
(i) Represents the Group's undiluted beneficial economic equity
interest (excluding debt) including the portion of IPVFII's stake
attributable to the Group. Voting interest is below 50%.
(ii) Simm Investments Limited has been reclassified from
Multi-sector platforms to Biotech; 2015 comparatives have been
restated.
(iii) Total now excludes investments classified as De minimis
holdings; 2015 comparatives have been restated.
Financial review
Statement of comprehensive income
Overall the Group recorded a loss for the year of GBP14.8m
(2015: profit of GBP75.1m) and a Return on Hard NAV, i.e. on the
Group's net assets excluding goodwill and intangible assets, of
negative GBP7.6m (2015: positive GBP84.0m).
A summary analysis of the Group's financial performance is
provided below:
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Net portfolio gains (1.) 6.5 86.2
Change in fair value of limited and limited
liability partnership interests (0.3) 0.4
Fair value loss on contingent value rights (1.4) -
Licensing income 0.2 8.1
Other income 2.6 3.6
Amortisation of intangible assets(1) (5.6) (7.3)
Administrative expenses - Modern Biosciences (1.4) (2.5)
Administrative expenses - other consolidated
portfolio companies (1.1) (0.3)
Administrative expenses - performance based
staff incentives and share based payments
charge (1.5) (3.4)
Administrative expenses - all other expenses (13.0) (11.0)
Acquisition costs (0.4) -
Net finance income 0.6 1.3
--------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
(Loss)/profit for the year (14.8) 75.1
--------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Other comprehensive income 0.1 0.1
--------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Total comprehensive (loss)/income for the
period (14.7) 75.2
--------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Exclude:
--------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Amortisation of intangible assets and amortisation
of Oxford Equity Rights asset 5.6 7.3
--------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Share based payment charge 1.5 1.5
--------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Return on Hard NAV (7.6) 84.0
--------------------------------------------------- ------ ------
1. Defined in the Portfolio review section
Net portfolio gains consist primarily of realised and unrealised
fair value gains and losses from the Group's equity and debt
holdings in spin-out businesses. A detailed analysis of fair value
gains and losses is provided in the Portfolio review, above.
Other income comprises fund management fees, corporate finance
fee income and other fees typically chargeable to its portfolio
companies for services including executive search and selection,
legal and administrative support. Other income for the year
decreased to GBP2.6m (2015: GBP3.6m). The decrease was primarily
due to lower fund management fees due to the end of the investment
period for North East Technology Fund ("NETF") in December 2015,
resulting in a lower management fee being charged in the current
year. Additionally, there was a lower level of corporate finance
fee income, reflecting the lower level of investment into the
portfolio in 2016. In 2016 we settled approximately half of these
fees via the receipt of equity in portfolio companies, which we
believe aligns IP Capital with value creation in the portfolio
companies that are the subject of its mandates.
Fund management fees are received from the Group's three managed
funds, two of which also have the potential to generate performance
fees from successful investment performance (IP Venture Fund and
the NETF). The results of the Group's third managed fund, IPVFII,
are consolidated into those of the Group and accordingly the fund
management fees received are not reflected in the statement of
comprehensive income.
As described in the portfolio review, the results of the Group's
drug development subsidiary, MBS, are consolidated into those of
the Group. MBS continues to make good progress in its lead MBS2320
programme, partnered with Janssen Biotech, Inc. The timing of
payments under this partnership are linked to the development of
the programme and none were scheduled or paid during the year. All
development costs are expensed to the income statement as they are
incurred. MBS continued to benefit from the recovery of a
proportion of the OsteoRx costs through a Biomedical Catalyst
grant, with the net expense being reflected in the statement of
comprehensive income. The Group intends to continue developing a
small number of early-stage therapeutic assets.
Included within the Group's administrative expenses are costs in
respect of a small number of other portfolio companies. Typically,
the Group owns a non-controlling interest in its portfolio
companies however, in certain circumstances the Group will take a
controlling stake and hence consolidate the results of a portfolio
company into the Group's financial statements. The administrative
expenses included in the Group's results for such companies
primarily comprise staff costs, R&D and other operating
expenses.
Other central administrative expenses, excluding
performance-based staff incentives and share based payments
charges, have increased to GBP13.0m during the period (2015:
GBP11.0m), as a result of increases in staffing costs and other
overhead costs as we continue to build our teams, most notably in
the US.
Administrative expenses resulting from performance-based staff
incentives and share-based payment charges decreased significantly
to GBP1.5m during the period (2015: GBP3.4m), as the Group's return
on Hard NAV during the period is below the minimum threshold for
any payments to be awarded under the Group's Annual Incentive
Scheme. The full current year cost therefore relates to the IFRS 2
share-based payments charge attributable to the Group's Long-Term
Incentive Plan and Deferred Bonus Share Plan awards schemes. This
non-cash charge reflects the fair value of services received from
employees, measured by reference to the fair value of the
share-based payments at the date of award, but has no net impact on
the Group's total equity or "net assets".
Statement of financial position
The Group ended the period with net assets attributable to
shareholders of GBP768.4m, representing a decrease of GBP12.0m from
the position at 1 January 2016 (GBP780.4m). As described above,
this decrease in net assets resulted from the GBP14.8m loss in the
year. "Hard" net assets, i.e. those excluding goodwill and other
intangible assets, totalled GBP706.5m at 31 December 2016 (2015:
GBP714.3m). Based on the Group's shares in issue at 31 December
2016 of 565,221,967, this represents 125.0p per share (2015:
564,648,168 shares; 126.5p)
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
--------------------------- ------ ------
Total Equity or Net Assets 768.7 781.9
Exclude:
Goodwill (57.1) (57.1)
Other intangible assets (5.1) (10.5)
--------------------------- ------ ------
Hard NAV 706.5 714.3
--------------------------- ------ ------
Hard NAV per share 125.0p 126.5p
--------------------------- ------ ------
At 31 December 2016, the Group held gross cash and deposits of
GBP112.3m (2015: GBP178.8m) and a diversified portfolio of equity
and debt investments in 90 private and publicly listed technology
companies (2015: 82).
The value of the Group's holdings in portfolio companies
increased to GBP614.0m at year end (2015: GBP552.2m) after net fair
value gains of GBP6.5m (2015: GBP86.2m) and net investment of
GBP55.0m (2015: GBP115.3m). The Portfolio review above contains a
detailed description of the Group's portfolio of equity and debt
investments including key developments and movements during the
year.
The Group's statement of financial position includes goodwill of
GBP57.1m (2015: GBP57.1m) and acquired intangible assets of GBP5.1m
(2015: GBP10.5m). GBP38.7m (2015: GBP38.7m) of the goodwill and
substantially all of the acquired intangible asset value arose as a
result of the Group's acquisition of Fusion IP in 2014. The
remainder of the goodwill balance arose from historical
acquisitions of IP Assist Services Limited (university partnership
business, GBP16.3m; 2015: GBP16.3m) and Top Technology Ventures
Limited (venture capital fund management business, GBP2.1m; 2015:
GBP2.1m). Goodwill is tested at least annually for impairment, as
described in note 11. The intangible assets are separately
identifiable assets resulting from Fusion IP's agreements with its
partner universities. The fair value of the intangible assets is
amortised on a straight-line basis over each partnership's useful
economic life.
Due to the nature of its activities, the Group has limited
current assets or current liabilities other than its cash and
short-term deposit balances, which are considered in more detail
below.
Cash, cash equivalents and short-term deposits ("Cash")
The principal constituents of the movement in Cash during the
year are summarised as follows:
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------------------------- ------ -------
Net Cash (used)/generated by operating activities
(excluding cash flows from deposits) (11.4) 2.3
Net Cash used in investing activities (55.2) (114.6)
Issue of share capital - 178.8
Drawdown of debt facility - 14.9
Effect of foreign exchange rate changes 0.1 0.1
Movement during period (66.5) 81.5
-------------------------------------------------- ------ -------
At 31 December 2016, the Group's Cash totalled GBP112.3m, a
decrease of GBP66.5m from a total of GBP178.8m at 31 December 2015
predominantly due to net investment in the Group's spin-out
companies and operating expenses.
Cash used in operations has increased from the comparable period
in 2015, most significantly due to the receipt of GBP11m of
payments under MBS's agreement with Janssen Biotech in 2015 (GBP3m
of which had been recognised in debtors as at 31 December
2014).
The Group's net cash used in investing activities decreased
during 2016, reflecting a reduction in the level of investment
(2016: GBP69.7m; 2015: GBP115.9m) and significant realisations in
the year, most notably the disposal of Tracsis plc for GBP13.1m
bringing total cash realisations to GBP14.7m (2015: GBP0.6m). As
described in the Portfolio review, above, the Group allocated a
total of GBP58.8m across 55 portfolio companies during the period
(2015: GBP75.9m; 53 companies) and GBP10.9m across two multi-sector
platform investments (2015: GBP40m; one multi-sector platform
investments).
The Group made a GBP0.1m contribution to IP Venture Fund during
2016 (2015: GBPnil), which made its final investment during the
period (2015: none). The Group received no distributions in the
year (2015: GBP0.6m).
In 2015 the Group secured a GBP30m, 8-year debt facility from
the European Investment Bank ("the EIB"). The facility is to be
disbursed in two tranches, with the first tranche of GBP15m having
been drawn down in December 2015 and the second tranche is
anticipated to be drawn in 2017. The facility provides IP Group
with an additional source of long-term capital and represents an
evolution in the Group's capital structure to support its future
growth and development.
It remains the Group's policy to place cash that is surplus to
near-term working capital requirements on short-term and overnight
deposits with financial institutions that meet the Group's treasury
policy criteria or in low-risk treasury funds rated "A" or above.
The Group's treasury policy is described in detail in note 2 to the
Group financial statements alongside details of the credit ratings
of the Group's cash and deposit counterparties.
At 31 December 2016, the Group recognised GBP9.8m of loans
(2015: GBP7.1m) from the Limited Partners of IPVFII, a fund raised
during 2013 that is consolidated by the Group. These loans are
repayable only upon IPVFII generating sufficient returns to repay
the Limited Partners. A further GBP15.0m of non-current liabilities
are recognised which arise from the Group's use of the EIB debt
facility described above.
At 31 December 2016, the Group had a total of GBP1.1m (2015:
GBP1.3m) held in US Dollars to meet the short-term working capital
requirements of its US operations, including capital anticipated to
be required by new and existing spin-out company opportunities.
Taxation
The Group's business model seeks to deliver long-term value to
its stakeholders through the commercialisation of fundamental
research carried out at its partner universities. To date, this has
been largely achieved through the formation of, and provision of
services and development capital to, spin-out companies formed
around the output of such research. The Group primarily seeks to
generate capital gains from its holdings in spin-out companies over
the longer-term but has historically made annual net operating
losses from its operations from a UK tax perspective. Capital gains
achieved by the Group would ordinarily be taxed upon realisation of
such holdings, however, since the Group's activities, including its
activities in the US, are substantially trading in nature, the
Directors continue to believe that the Group qualifies for the
Substantial Shareholdings Exemption ("SSE"). This exemption
provides that gains arising on the disposal of qualifying holdings
are not chargeable to UK corporation tax and, as such, the Group
has continued not to recognise a provision for deferred taxation in
respect of uplifts in value on those equity holdings that meet the
qualifying criteria. Gains arising on sales of non-qualifying
holdings would ordinarily give rise to taxable profits for the
Group, to the extent that these exceed the Group's operating losses
from time to time. The Group's unrecognised deferred tax assets and
liabilities are set out in note 9 to the financial statements.
In the Autumn Statement 2016, the UK Government announced its
intention to make certain changes to the SSE regime, principally
from the Group's perspective, to remove the requirement for the
investing entity (in this case, IP Group) to be a sole trading
entity or member of a trading group and extending the minimum 10%
holding period to any 12-month period in the six years prior to
disposal. These changes are anticipated to be substantively enacted
in the Finance Bill 2017 to apply from 1 April 2017. The Group
welcomed these changes and the directors anticipate that they will
have a favourable impact on the Group, giving greater certainty
over the exemption of qualifying gains under SSE, and increasing
the Group's flexibility over the timing of future portfolio company
disposals.
The Autumn Statement also included proposals to restrict
companies' use of brought forward losses. Under the proposed plan,
the amount of profit that can be mitigated by brought forward
losses will be restricted to 50% of the amount of profits in excess
of GBP5m. The Directors do not currently consider that these
proposed changes will result in the recognition of a deferred tax
liability in respect of any unrealised gains that do not qualify
for SSE, but note that such liabilities may arise in the
future.
Risk Management
"A robust and effective risk management framework is essential
for the Group to achieve its strategic objectives and to ensure
that the directors are able to manage the business in a sustainable
manner, which protects its employees, partners, shareholders and
other stakeholders. Ongoing consideration of, and regular updates
to, the policies intended to mitigate risk enable the effective
balancing of risk and reward."
Governance
Overall responsibility for the risk framework and definition of
risk appetite rests with the Board, who through regular review of
risks ensure that risk exposure is matched with an ability to
achieve the Group's strategic objectives. Risk identification,
using a structured risk framework, is carried out primarily by the
management team with non-executive review being carried out by the
audit and risk committee.
Risk management process
Ranking of the Group's risks is carried out by combining the
economic, operational or environmental impact of risks and the
likelihood that they may occur. Those risks that are considered to
pose the greatest threat to the Group and score the highest are
identified as 'principal risks'. The operations of the Group, and
the implementation of its objectives and strategy, are subject to a
number of principal risks and uncertainties. Were more than one of
the risks to occur together, the overall impact on the Group may be
compounded.
The design and ongoing effectiveness of the key controls over
the Group's principal risks are documented using an 'assurance
map', which includes an assessment of the net risk impact and
likelihood post mitigating controls. The key controls over the
Group's identified principal risks are reviewed by management, the
audit and risk committee and the Board at least twice a year.
However, the Group's risk management programme can only provide
reasonable, not absolute, assurance that principal risks are
managed to an acceptable level.
During 2016 we have continued to build on our existing risk
management framework, enhancing risk management and internal
control processes. This included the creation on a Risk Council in
the latter part of the year, to support the Executive Committee and
Board in their risk management responsibilities. In addition to our
permanent risk management activities, our priority for 2017 is to
enhance risk management within our front line operations, supported
by a programme of activity including an external risk review of the
group's US operations.
Summary of principal risks and mitigants
A summary of the principal risks affecting the Group and the
steps taken to manage these is set out below.
Risk and Risk Developments during
description Impact Mitigation trend the year Strategy KPI
------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- --------- ------------------------ -------- ---------------------
1 It may The success The Group No change The Group Develop Change
be difficult of those has significant announced Deliver in fair
for the portfolio balance sheet the proposed value of
Group and companies and managed acquisition equity
its early-stage which funds capital of Parkwalk and debt
companies require to deploy Advisors investments.
to attract significant in attractive Ltd, the UK's Total equity
capital. funding portfolio leading ("net assets").
The Group's in the opportunities. university Profit/loss
operations future The Group spin-out attributable
are reliant may be operates focused EIS fund to equity
on capital influenced a corporate manager. holders.
markets, by the finance function The acquisition
particularly market's which carries reinforces
those in appetite out fundraising IP Group's
the UK. for mandates access
As the investment for portfolio to a diversified
Group's in early companies. pool
operations, stage The Group of capital for
and the companies, maintains co-funding
operations which may close the earlier
of the not be relationships stages
majority sufficient. with a wide of the
of its Failure variety of portfolio.
portfolio of co-investors The Group hosted
companies, companies that focus investor
are based within on companies relations
in the the Group's at differing roadshows
UK, the portfolio stages of in the UK and US
financial may make development.
and operational it more The Group
performance difficult frequently
of the for the forecasts
Group and Group or cash requirements
particularly its of the portfolio
the ability spin-out and ensures
of its companies all capital
portfolio to raise allocations
companies additional are compliant
to attract capital. with budgetary
development limits, treasury
capital policy guidelines
is influenced and transaction
by the authorisation
general controls.
economic
climate
and trading
conditions
in the
UK.
------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- --------- ------------------------ -------- ---------------------
2 The returns Portfolio The Group's No change The Group's Deliver Change
and cash company staff have portfolio in fair
proceeds failure significant companies raised value of
from the directly experience approximately equity
Group's impacts in sourcing, GBP230m of and debt
early-stage the Group's developing capital. investments.
companies value and and growing The Group Purchase
can be profitability. early-stage maintained of equity
very uncertain. At any technology board and debt
The following time, a companies representation investments.
risks are large to significant on approximately Proceeds
typically proportion value, including 80% from the
associated of the use of the of companies by sale of
with Group's Group's number. equity
early-stage portfolio systematic 2016 saw investments.
companies: value may opportunity significant
-- may be accounted evaluation volatility in
not be for by and business equity
able to one, or building markets,
secure very few, methodologies particularly
later rounds companies, within delegated around the timing
of funding; which could board of the Brexit
-- may exacerbate authorities. referendum.
not be the impact Members of
able to of any the Group's
source impairment senior team
or retain or failure often serve
appropriately of one as non-executive
skilled or more directors
staff; of these or advisers
-- competing companies. to portfolio
technologies Oxford companies
may enter Nanopore to help identify
the market; is an example and remedy
-- technology of such critical
can be a portfolio issues promptly.
materially company Support on
unproven that has operational,
and may the potential legal and
fail; -- to materially company
IP may impact secretarial
be infringed, the Group's matters is
copied results. offered to
or stolen; The value minimise
-- may of the failures
be more Group's due to common
susceptible in-house administrative
to cyber drug discovery factors.
crime; company The Group
and -- MBS may has spin-out
other be company holdings
administrative, significantly across different
taxation impacted sectors managed
or compliance by a negative by experienced
issues clinical sector-specialist
may lead trial result. teams to
to company Cash reduce the
failure. realisations impact of
from the a single
Group's company failure
portfolio or sector
through demise. The
trade sales Group maintains
and IPOs significant
could vary cash balances
significantly and seeks
from year to employ
to year. a capital
efficient
process deploying
low levels
of initial
capital to
enable
identification
and mitigation
of potential
failures
at the earliest
possible
stage.
------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- --------- ------------------------ -------- ---------------------
3 Universities Termination Dedicated No change Completed Create Number
or other or non-renewal New Business agreements of new
research-intensive of arrangements & Partnerships with two portfolio
institutions through team to service additional companies.
may terminate failure existing US university
their partnerships to perform partnerships partners.
or other obligations and source The Group
collaborative may result new announced
relationships in the opportunities. the proposed
with the loss of The Group acquisition
Group. exclusive continues of Parkwalk
The Group's rights. to consider Advisors
business, The loss and, where Ltd. Parkwalk's
results of exclusive appropriate, investment
of operations rights enter into vehicles include
and prospects may limit new and the
are at the Group's innovative University of
least partially ability partnerships Cambridge
dependent to secure and Enterprise Funds,
on competitive attractive collaborations the University of
advantage IP with research Oxford Innovation
gained opportunities institutions. Funds and the
from access to The Group University
to leading commercialise. has been of Bristol
scientific This could able to source Enterprise
research potentially opportunities Funds. The
through have a through Directors
partnerships material non-exclusive believe that
and other adverse relationships Parkwalk's
collaborative effect and other strong links to
arrangements on the sources. university
with research-intensive Group's Members of partners will be
institutions long-term the Group's beneficial
and commercial business, senior team to the Group.
partners results work closely Completed
such as of operations, with partner seed investments
Oxford performance institutions with
Sciences and prospects. to ensure both Oxford
Innovation With several that each Sciences
plc, Technikos new entrants commercial Innovation and
LLP and to our relationship Cambridge
Cambridge market, is mutually Innovation Capital
Innovation this may beneficial as co-investors,
Capital. reduce and productive. demonstrating
The Group our The Group's the value of our
may be opportunities track record strategic
unable to create in IP stakes in these
to recreate new spin-out commercialisation partners.
these elements businesses. may make
of its the Group
competitive a partner
advantage of choice
in other for other
geographies institutions,
in which acting as
it may a barrier
seek to to entry
operate to competitors.
(such as
the US).
------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- --------- ------------------------ -------- ---------------------
4 The Group Loss of Senior team No change The Group Develop Total equity
may lose key executives succession continues Deliver ("net
key personnel and employees plans are to promote an assets").
or fail of the in place open Number
to attract Group or and updated culture of of new
and integrate an inability regularly. communication portfolio
new personnel. to attract, The Group's and provides an companies.
The industry retain corporate inspiring
in which and integrate culture and and challenging
the Group appropriately values are workplace
operates skilled well-articulated where people are
is a specialised and experienced and consistently given
area and staff could promoted. autonomy to do
the Group have an The Group their
requires adverse carries out jobs. We are
highly effect regular market fully
qualified on the comparisons supportive of
and experienced Group's for staff flexible
employees. competitive and executive working and have
There is advantage, remuneration enabled
a risk business, and seeks employees with
that the financial to offer technology
Group's condition, a balanced to work
employees operational incentive flexibly.
could be results package The Group also
approached and/or comprising continues
and solicited future a mix of to dedicate
by competitors prospects. salary, benefits, resources
or other performance-based to remuneration
technology-based long-term and
companies incentives incentivisation.
and organisations, and benefits Staff
or could such as flexible attrition
otherwise working and increased
choose salary sacrifice slightly during
to leave arrangements. the
the Group. The Group year, albeit at
Given the encourages 4%,
relatively staff development it remained at
small size and inclusion low
of the through coaching absolute levels.
Group, and mentoring Approximately
its operations and carries 45% of staff
are reliant out regular have
on a small objective been with the
number setting and Company
of key appraisal. for at least
individuals. five
Scaling years.
the team,
particularly
into foreign
jurisdictions
such as
the US,
presents
an additional
potential
risk.
------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- --------- ------------------------ -------- ---------------------
5 Macroeconomic The UK's Management No change Macroeconomic Develop Change
conditions recession team receives and Deliver in fair
may negatively has had regular capital geopolitical value of
impact (and may market and conditions equity
the Group's continue economic remain uncertain and debt
ability to have) updates from in investments.
to achieve an adverse the Group's the UK, Europe Total equity
its strategic effect capital markets and ("net
objectives. on trading team and the rest of the assets").
Adverse conditions its brokers. world. Profit/loss
macroeconomic and Six-monthly Both the Brexit attributable
conditions availability budget and referendum to equity
could reduce of capital capital and the US holders.
the opportunity in the allocation presidential
to deploy UK, process and election were a
capital particularly monitoring source
into opportunities for smaller against agreed of uncertainty
or may businesses. budget. Regular in
limit the The success oversight the year, with
ability of those of upcoming negotiations
of such portfolio capital around the exit
portfolio companies requirements from
companies which require of portfolio the EU likely to
to raise significant from both be
third party external the Group a source of
funds, funding and third volatility
develop may be parties. through 2017 and
profitable influenced 2018.
businesses by the
or achieve market's
increases appetite
in value for investment
or exits. in early
Political stage
uncertainty, companies,
including which may
impacts not be
from Brexit sufficient.
or similar A significant
scenarios, proportion
could have of the
a number Group's
of potential portfolio
impacts, value is
including held in
changes companies
to the quoted
labour on the
market AIM market
available and decreases
to the in values
Group for to this
recruitment market
or regulatory could result
environment in a material
in which fair value
the Group impact
operates. to the
portfolio
as a whole.
------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- --------- ------------------------ -------- ---------------------
6 There Changes University Decreased Proposed changes Create Total equity
may be could result partners to Deliver ("net assets").
changes in universities are incentivised UK Substantial
to, impacts and researchers to protect Shareholding
from, or no longer their IP Exemption rules
failure being able for exploitation reduce
to comply to own, as the the level of
with, legislation, exploit partnership uncertainty
government or protect agreements around the
policy intellectual share returns exemption
and regulation. property between of disposal gains.
There may on attractive universities, Ongoing focus on
be unforeseen terms. academic regulatory
changes Changes founders compliance
in, or to tax and the Group. including
impacts legislation The Group third party
from, government or the utilises reviews.
policy, nature professional UK Government has
regulation of the advisers committed to
or legislation Group's as appropriate university
(including activities, to support funding and has
taxation in particular its monitoring emphasised
legislation). in relation of, and response the importance of
This could to the to changes science and
include Substantial in, tax, innovation.
changes Shareholder insurance Specialist
to funding Exemption, or other therapeutics
levels may adversely legislation. advisory panel
or to the affect The Group continually
terms upon the Group's has internal consulted.
which public tax position policies Increased
monies and accordingly and procedures focus on cyber
are made its value to ensure security
available and operations. its compliance including further
to universities Regulatory with applicable development of the
and research changes FCA regulations Group's controls
institutions or breaches and these using
and the could are subject the UK
ownership ultimately to external Government's
of any lead to review. MBS 'ten steps'
resulting withdrawal utilises approach
intellectual of regulatory an experienced and review of the
property. permissions specialist Cyber Essentials
for the advisory regime
Group's panel covering and how this
FCA-authorised all aspects applies
subsidiary of clinical to the Group.
resulting trial design
in loss and delivery.
of fund The Group
management maintains
contracts, D&O, professional
reputational indemnity
damage and clinical
or fines. trial insurance
A material policies.
adverse The Group
event could reviews its
occur during data and
an MBS cyber-security
clinical processes
trial. with its
A data external
security outsourced
or cyber IT provider
breach and applies
could occur the UK
or the Government's
Group could 'ten steps'
otherwise framework.
fail to
adhere
to data
protection
regulations.
------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------- --------- ------------------------ -------- ---------------------
Viability statement
The Directors have carried out a robust assessment of the
viability of the Group over a three-year period to December 2019,
considering its strategy, its current financial position and its
principal risks.
The strategy and associated principal risks underpin the Group's
three-year financial plan and scenario testing, which the Directors
review at least annually. The three-year plan is built using a
bottom up model. The three-year plan makes certain assumptions
about the level of capital deployed into, and realisations from,
its portfolio of companies, the financial performance (and
valuation) of the underlying portfolio companies, the Group's
utilisation of its debt finance facility and ability to raise
further capital, and the level of the Group's net overheads.
To assess the impact of the Group's principal risks on the
prospects of the Group, the plan is stress-tested by modelling
several severe but plausible downside scenarios as part of the
Board's review of the principal risks of the business. These
scenarios envisage the impact of adverse outcomes in the Group's
principal risk areas, primarily through reducing the fair value of
the Group's portfolio company interests, reducing the amount of
capital that the Group can raise, lowering the deployment of
capital and decreasing portfolio company divestment proceeds. The
scenarios also consider the impact of available mitigating
actions.
Based on this assessment, the Directors have a reasonable
expectation that the Group will continue to operate and meets its
liabilities, as they fall due, up to December 2019.
STRATEGIC REPORT APPROVAL
The Strategic Report as set out above has been approved by the
Board.
CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL INFORMATION
The financial information set out below has been extracted from
the Annual Report and Accounts of IP Group plc for the year ended
31 December 2016 and is an abridged version of the full financial
statements, not all of which are reproduced in this
announcement.
DIRECTORS' RESPONSIBILITIES STATEMENT
The responsibility statement set out below has been reproduced
from the Annual Report and Accounts, which will be published in
April 2017, and relates to that document and not this
announcement.
Each of the directors confirms to the best of their
knowledge:
- The Group financial statements have been prepared in
accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs)
as adopted by the European Union and Article 4 of the IAS
Regulation and give a true and fair view of the assets,
liabilities, financial position and profit and loss of the
Group.
- The Annual Report and Accounts includes a fair review of the
development and performance of the business and the financial
position of the group and the parent company, together with a
description or the principal risks and uncertainties that they
face.
ON BEHALF OF THE
BOARD
Alan Aubrey
Mike Humphrey
Chairman Chief Executive
Officer
6 March 2017
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
For the year ended 31 December 2016
2016 2015
Note GBPm GBPm
----------------------------------------- ---- ------ ------
Portfolio return and revenue
Change in fair value of equity and debt
investments 14 7.0 86.4
Loss on disposal of equity investments (0.5) (0.2)
Change in fair value of limited and
limited liability partnership interests 22 (0.3) 0.4
Change in fair value of contingent value
right 16 (1.4) -
Other portfolio income - 0.2
Licensing income 0.2 8.1
Revenue from services and other income 2.6 3.4
----------------------------------------- ---- ------ ------
7.6 98.3
Administrative expenses
Research and development costs (1.0) (2.0)
Share-based payment charge 21 (1.5) (1.5)
Change in fair value of Oxford Equity
Rights asset - (1.3)
Amortisation of intangible assets 12 (5.6) (6.0)
Acquisition costs (0.4) -
Other administrative expenses (14.5) (13.7)
----------------------------------------- ---- ------ ------
(23.0) (24.5)
Operating (loss)/profit 7 (15.4) 73.8
Finance income - interest receivable 1.1 1.3
Finance costs - interest payable (0.5) -
(Loss)/profit before taxation (14.8) 75.1
Taxation 9 - -
----------------------------------------- ---- ------ ------
(Loss)/profit for the year (14.8) 75.1
----------------------------------------- ---- ------ ------
Other comprehensive income
Exchange differences on translating
foreign operations 0.1 0.1
----------------------------------------- ---- ------ ------
Total comprehensive (loss)/income for
the period (14.7) 75.2
----------------------------------------- ---- ------ ------
Attributable to:
Equity holders of the parent (13.5) 73.9
Non-controlling interest (1.2) 1.3
----------------------------------------- ---- ------ ------
(14.7) 75.2
Earnings per share
Basic (p) 10 (2.39) 13.66
Diluted (p) 10 (2.39) 13.63
----------------------------------------- ---- ------ ------
Consolidated statement of financial position
As at 31 December 2016
2016 2015
Note GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
ASSETS
Non-current assets
Intangible assets:
Goodwill 11 57.1 57.1
Acquired intangible assets 12 5.1 10.5
Property, plant and equipment 0.2 0.2
Portfolio:
Equity investments 14 594.9 543.1
Debt investments 14 19.1 9.1
Limited and limited liability partnership
interests 22 4.2 4.4
Contingent value rights 16 - 1.4
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
Total non-current assets 680.6 625.8
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
Current assets
Trade and other receivables 15 2.6 3.2
Deposits - 70.0
Cash and cash equivalents 112.3 108.8
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
Total current assets 114.9 182.0
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
Total assets 795.5 807.8
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
EQUITY AND LIABILITIES
Equity attributable to owners of the
parent
Called up share capital 19 11.3 11.3
Share premium account 504.7 504.7
Merger reserve 12.8 12.8
Retained earnings 239.6 251.6
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
Total equity attributable to equity
holders 768.4 780.4
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
Non-controlling interest 0.3 1.5
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
Total equity 768.7 781.9
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables 17 2.1 3.9
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
Non-current liabilities
EIB debt facility 18 14.9 14.9
Loans from limited partners of consolidated
funds 18 9.8 7.1
Total equity and liabilities 795.5 807.8
-------------------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
Approved by the Board of Directors and authorised for issue on 6
March 2017 and signed on its behalf by:
Greg Smith
Chief Financial Officer
Alan Aubrey
Chief Executive Officer
Consolidated statement of cash flows
For the year ended 31 December 2016
2016 2015
Note GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------------------- ---- ------ -------
Operating activities
Operating (loss)/profit for the period (15.4) 73.8
Adjusted for:
Change in fair value of equity and debt
investments 14 (7.0) (86.4)
Change in fair value of limited and
limited liability partnership interests 0.3 (0.4)
Change in fair value of contingent value
right 1.4 -
Loss on disposal of equity investments 0.5 0.2
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment 0.1 0.1
Amortisation of intangible non-current
assets 12 5.6 6.0
Change in fair value of Oxford equity
rights asset - 1.3
Fees settled in the form of equity (0.4) (0.7)
Share-based payment charge 1.5 1.5
Other portfolio income classified as
investing activities cash flows - (0.1)
Changes in working capital
Decrease in trade and other receivables 0.2 2.2
(Decrease)/Increase in trade and other
payables (1.8) 1.9
Increase in non-current liabilities 2.7 2.2
Net cash flow to deposits 70.0 (40.0)
Other operating cash flows
Net interest received 0.9 0.7
-------------------------------------------- ---- ------ -------
Net cash inflow/(outflow) from operating
activities 58.6 (37.7)
-------------------------------------------- ---- ------ -------
Investing activities
Purchase of property, plant and equipment (0.1) -
Purchase of equity and debt investments 14 (69.7) (115.9)
Investment in limited and limited liability
partnerships (0.1) -
Proceeds from sale of equity investments 14.7 0.6
Distributions from limited and limited
liability partnerships - 0.6
Other portfolio income - 0.1
-------------------------------------------- ---- ------ -------
Net cash outflow from investing activities (55.2) (114.6)
-------------------------------------------- ---- ------ -------
Financing activities
Proceeds from the issue of share capital - 178.8
Proceeds from drawdown of EIB facility 18 - 14.9
Net cash inflow from financing activities - 193.7
-------------------------------------------- ---- ------ -------
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and
cash equivalents 3.4 41.4
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning
of the year 108.8 67.3
Effect of foreign exchange rate changes 0.1 0.1
-------------------------------------------- ---- ------ -------
Cash and cash equivalents at the end
of the year 112.3 108.8
-------------------------------------------- ---- ------ -------
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
For the year ended 31 December 2016
Attributable to equity holders
of the parent
-----------------------------------------------------------
Non-
Share Share Merger Retained controlling Total
capital premium(i) reserve(ii) earnings(iii) Total interest(iv) equity
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
---------------- -------- ----------- ------------ -------------- ------ ------------- -------
At 1 January
2015 9.6 327.6 12.8 176.2 526.2 - 526.2
Comprehensive
income - - - 73.9 73.9 1.3 75.2
Issue of equity 1.7 177.1 - - 178.8 0.2 179.0
Equity settled
share based
payments - - - 1.5 1.5 - 1.5
---------------- -------- ----------- ------------ -------------- ------ ------------- -------
At 1 January
2016 11.3 504.7 12.8 251.6 780.4 1.5 781.9
Comprehensive
income - - - (13.5) (13.5) (1.2) (14.7)
Equity-settled
share-based
payments - - - 1.5 1.5 - 1.5
---------------- -------- ----------- ------------ -------------- ------ ------------- -------
At 31 December
2016 11.3 504.7 12.8 239.6 768.4 0.3 768.7
---------------- -------- ----------- ------------ -------------- ------ ------------- -------
(i.) Share premium - Amount subscribed for share capital in
excess of nominal value, net of directly attributable issue
costs.
(ii.) Merger reserve - Amount subscribed for share capital in
excess of nominal value in relation to the qualifying acquisition
of subsidiary undertakings.
(iii.) Retained earnings - Cumulative net gains and losses
recognised in the consolidated statement of comprehensive income
net of associated share-based payments credits.
(iv.) Non-controlling interest - Share of profits attributable
to the Limited Partners of IP Venture Fund II LP - a consolidated
fund which was created in May 2013, as well as the equity invested
in partially owned subsidiaries that is held by third parties.
Notes to the consolidated financial information
1. Accounting Policies
Basis of preparation
The consolidated financial information is based on the Group
financial statements, which have been prepared in accordance with
International Financial Reporting Standards ("IFRS") and the
International Financial Reporting Interpretations Committee's
interpretations as adopted by the European Union, and with those
parts of the Companies Act 2006 applicable to companies reporting
under IFRS. This release does not include all of the information
required for full annual financial statements. Copies of the 2016
Annual Report and Accounts will be published on the Group's website
and will be available upon request.
The financial statements are prepared on a going concern basis,
as the directors are satisfied that the Group and parent Company
have the resources to continue in business for the foreseeable
future. In making this assessment, the directors have considered a
wide range of information relating to present and future
conditions, including future projections of profitability, cash
flows and capital resources.
The accounting policies are consistent with those applied by the
Group in its 2015 annual report and accounts. No new standards,
interpretations and amendments effective for the first time from 1
January 2016 have had a material effect on the Group's financial
statements.
2. Financial Risk Management
As set out in the Principal risks and uncertainties section
above, the Group is exposed, through its normal operations, to a
number of financial risks, the most significant of which are
market, liquidity and credit risks.
In general, risk management is carried out throughout the Group
under policies approved by the Board of Directors. The following
further describes the Group's objectives, policies and processes
for managing those risks and the methods used to measure them.
Further quantitative information in respect of these risks is
presented throughout these financial statements.
(a) Market risk
(i) Price risk
The Group is exposed to equity securities price risk as a result
of the equity and debt investments, and investments in Limited
Partnerships held by the Group and categorised as at fair value
through profit or loss.
The Group mitigates this risk by having established investment
appraisal processes and asset monitoring procedures which are
subject to overall review by the Board. The Group has also
established corporate finance and communications teams dedicated to
supporting portfolio companies with fundraising activities and
investor relations.
The Group holds investments which are publicly traded on AIM (17
companies) and investments which are not traded on an active
market.
The net increase in fair value of the Group's equity and debt
investments during 2016 of GBP6.5m represents a 1.2% change against
the opening balance (2015: net increase of GBP86.2m, 25%) and a
similar increase or decrease in the prices of quoted and unquoted
investments is considered to be reasonably possible. The table
below summarises the impact of a 1% increase/decrease in the price
of both quoted and unquoted investments on the Group's post-tax
profit for the year and on equity.
2016 2015
---------------------- ----------------------- -----------------------
Quoted Unquoted Total Quoted Unquoted Total
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
---------------------- ------ -------- ----- ------ -------- -----
Equity investments
and investments in
limited partnerships 1.6 4.6 6.2 2.0 3.6 5.6
---------------------- ------ -------- ----- ------ -------- -----
(ii) Interest rate risk
The EIB debt facility bears interest at a fixed rate of 1.98%
with an additional variable spread equal to the six month GBP Libor
rate as at the first date of each six-month interest period. The
first GBP15.0m tranche was disbursed on 17 December 2015 and the
average floating interest rate (including the fixed element) for
2016 was 2.66% (2015: 2.48%).
The other primary impact of interest rate risk to the Group is
the impact on the income and operating cash flows as a result of
the interest-bearing deposits and cash and cash equivalents held by
the Group.
(iii) Concentrations of risk
The Group is exposed to concentration risk via the significant
majority of the portfolio being UK based companies and thus subject
to the performance of the UK economy. The Group is increasing its
operations in the US and the determination of the associated
concentrations is determined by the number of investment
opportunities that management believe represent a good
investment.
The Group mitigates this risk, in co-ordination with liquidity
risk, by managing its proportion of fixed to floating rate
financial assets. The table below summarises the interest rate
profile of the Group.
2016 2015
-------------------------- --------------------------------- ---------------------------------
Fixed Floating Interest Fixed Floating Interest
rate rate free Total rate rate free Total
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------------- ----- -------- -------- ------ ----- -------- -------- ------
Financial assets
Equity investments - - 594.9 594.9 - - 543.1 543.1
Debt investments 0.2 - 18.9 19.1 0.2 - 8.9 9.1
Limited and limited
liability partnership
interests - - 4.2 4.2 - - 4.4 4.4
Contingent value
rights - - - - - - 1.4 1.4
Deposits - - - - 70.0 - - 70.0
Cash and cash
equivalents 30.0 82.3 - 112.3 - 108.8 - 108.8
Trade receivables - - 2.3 2.3 - - 3.0 3.0
Other receivables - - 0.3 0.3 - - 0.2 0.2
-------------------------- ----- -------- -------- ------ ----- -------- -------- ------
30.2 82.3 620.6 733.1 70.2 108.8 561.0 740.0
-------------------------- ----- -------- -------- ------ ----- -------- -------- ------
Financial liabilities
Trade payables - - (0.7) (0.7) - - (0.7) (0.7)
Other accruals
and deferred income - - (1.4) (1.4) - - (3.2) (3.2)
EIB debt facility - (14.9) - (14.9) - (14.9) - (14.9)
Loans from limited
partners of consolidated
funds - - (9.8) (9.8) - - (7.1) (7.1)
- (14.9) (11.9) (26.8) - (14.9) (11.0) (25.9)
-------------------------- ----- -------- -------- ------ ----- -------- -------- ------
At 31 December 2016, if interest rates had been 1% higher/lower,
post-tax profit for the year, and other components of equity, would
have been GBP0.8m (2015: GBP1.1m) higher/lower as a result of
higher interest received on floating rate cash deposits.
(b) Liquidity risk
The Group seeks to manage liquidity risk, to ensure sufficient
liquidity is available to meet foreseeable needs and to invest cash
assets safely and profitably. The Group's Treasury Management
Policy asserts that at any one point in time no more than 60% of
the Group's cash and cash equivalents will be placed in fixed-term
deposits with a holding period greater than three months.
Accordingly, the Group only invests working capital in short-term
instruments issued by reputable counterparties. The Group
continually monitors rolling cash flow forecasts to ensure
sufficient cash is available for anticipated cash requirements.
(c) Credit risk
The Group's credit risk is primarily attributable to its
deposits, cash and cash equivalents, debt investments and trade
receivables. The Group seeks to mitigate its credit risk on cash
and cash equivalents by making short-term deposits with
counterparties, or by investing in treasury funds with an "AA"
credit rating or above managed by institutions. Short-term deposit
counterparties are required to have most recently reported total
assets in excess of GBP5bn and, where applicable, a prime
short-term credit rating at the time of investment (ratings are
generally determined by Moody's or Standard & Poor's). Moody's
prime credit ratings of "P1", "P2" and "P3" indicate respectively
that the rating agency considers the counterparty to have a
"superior", "strong" or "acceptable" ability to repay short-term
debt obligations (generally defined as having an original maturity
not exceeding 13 months). An analysis of the Group's deposits and
cash and cash equivalents balance analysed by credit rating as at
the reporting date is shown in the table below. All other financial
assets are unrated.
2016 2015
Credit rating GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------------------- ----- -----
P1 76.7 126.3
P2 35.6 52.5
Total deposits and cash and cash equivalents 112.3 178.8
--------------------------------------------- ----- -----
The Group has no significant concentration of credit risk, with
exposure spread over a large number of counterparties and
customers. The Group has detailed policies and strategies which
seek to minimise these associated risks including defining maximum
counterparty exposure limits for term deposits based on their
perceived financial strength at the commencement of the deposit.
The maximum single counterparty limit for deposits at 31 December
2016 was GBP50m (2015: GBP50m).
The Group's exposure to credit risk on debt investments is
managed in a similar way to equity price risk, as described
earlier, through the Group's investment appraisal processes and
asset monitoring procedures which are subject to overall review by
the Board.
The maximum exposure to credit risk for debt investments,
receivables and other financial assets is represented by their
carrying amount.
3. Significant Accounting Estimates and Judgements
The directors make judgements and estimates concerning the
future. Estimates and judgements are continually evaluated and are
based on historical experience and other factors, such as
expectations of future events, and are believed to be reasonable
under the circumstances. Actual results may differ from these
estimates. The estimates and assumptions, which have the most
significant effects on the carrying amounts of the assets and
liabilities in the financial statements, are discussed below.
(i) Valuation of unquoted equity investments
The judgements required, in order to determine the appropriate
valuation methodology of unquoted equity investments, have a
significant risk of causing a material adjustment to the carrying
amounts of assets and liabilities. These judgements include making
assessments of the future earnings potential of portfolio
companies, appropriate earnings multiples to apply, and
marketability and other risk discounts.
(ii) Impairment of goodwill
The Group is required to test, at least annually, whether
goodwill has suffered any impairment. The recoverable amount is
determined using a number of value-in-use and
fair-value-less-costs-to-sell calculations. The use of these
methods requires the estimation of future cash flows, and the
selection of a suitable discount rate, in order to calculate the
present value of these cash flows as well as the selection of
applicable and reasonable multiples.
Discussion of sensitivity analyses is included in the relevant
note for each of the above estimates and judgements.
4. Revenue from Services
All revenue from services is derived from either the provision
of advisory and venture capital fund management services or the
licensing of internally developed therapeutic compounds.
5. Operating Segments
For both the year ended 31 December 2016 and the year ended 31
December 2015, the Group's revenue and profit/loss before taxation
were derived almost entirely from its principal activities within
the UK. Though the Group has initiated operations in the US, the
associated revenues and costs are currently immaterial and
accordingly, no additional geographical disclosures are given. For
management reporting purposes, the Group is currently organised
into three operating segments: (i) the commercialisation of
intellectual property via the formation of long-term partner
relationships with universities; (ii) the management of venture
funds focusing on early-stage UK technology companies; and (iii)
the in-licensing of drugable intellectual property from research
intensive institutions. These activities are described in further
detail in the Strategic report above.
Venture
University capital
partnership fund In-licensing
business management activity Consolidated
Year ended 31 December 2016 GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE
INCOME
Portfolio return and revenue
Change in fair value of equity
and debt investments 7.0 - - 7.0
Loss on disposal of equity
investments (0.5) - - (0.5)
Change in fair value of limited
and limited liability partnership
interests (0.3) - - (0.3)
Change in fair value of contingent
value right (1.4) (1.4)
Other portfolio income
Licensing income 0.2 - - 0.2
Revenue from services and
other income 0.8 0.9 - 1.7
Revenue from fund management
services - 0.9 - 0.9
Amortisation of intangible
assets (5.6) - - (5.6)
Acquisition costs (0.4) - - (0.4)
Administrative expenses (14.9) (0.7) (1.4) (16.9)
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
Operating loss (15.1) 1.1 (1.4) (15.4)
Finance income - interest
receivable 0.6 - - 0.6
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
Loss before taxation (14.5) 1.1 (1.4) (14.8)
Taxation - - - -
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
Loss for the year (14.5) 1.1 (1.4) (14.8)
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION
Assets 778.4 10.9 6.2 795.5
Liabilities (26.5) (0.1) (0.2) (26.8)
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
Net assets 751.9 10.8 6.0 768.7
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
Other segment items
Capital expenditure 0.1 - - 0.1
Depreciation (0.1) - - (0.1)
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
Venture
University capital
partnership fund In-licensing
business management activity Consolidated
Year ended 31 December 2015 GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE
INCOME
Portfolio return and revenue
Change in fair value of equity
and debt investments 86.4 - - 86.4
Gain on disposal of equity
investments (0.2) - - (0.2)
Change in fair value of limited
and limited liability partnership
interests 0.4 - - 0.4
Other portfolio income 0.2 - - 0.2
Licensing income 0.1 - 8.0 8.1
Revenue from services and
other income 0.9 1.1 - 2.0
Revenue from fund management
services - 1.4 - 1.4
Change in fair value of Oxford
Equity Rights asset (1.3) - - (1.3)
Amortisation of intangible
assets (6.0) - - (6.0)
Administrative expenses (13.9) (0.8) (2.5) (17.2)
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
Operating profit 66.6 1.7 5.5 73.8
Finance income - interest
receivable 1.3 - - 1.3
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
Profit before taxation 67.9 1.7 5.5 75.1
Taxation - - - -
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
Profit for the year 67.9 1.7 5.5 75.1
----------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION
Assets 788.8 11.3 7.7 807.8
Liabilities (25.5) (0.1) (0.3) (25.9)
-------------------------------- ------ ----- ----- ------
Net assets 763.3 11.2 7.4 781.9
-------------------------------- ------ ----- ----- ------
Other segment items
Capital expenditure - - - -
Depreciation (0.1) - - (0.1)
-------------------------------- ------ ----- ----- ------
6. Auditor's Remuneration
Details of the auditor's remuneration are set out below:
2016 2015
GBP'000s GBP'000s
-------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Fees payable to the Company's auditor for
the audit of the Company's annual accounts 74 73
The audit of the Company's subsidiaries,
pursuant to legislation 87 87
-------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Total fees for audit services 161 160
Audit-related assurance services 21 20
-------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Total assurance services 182 180
Tax compliance services - -
Taxation advisory services - -
All other services 18 -
-------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Total non-assurance services - -
-------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
200 180
-------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
7. Operating Profit
Operating profit has been arrived at after charging:
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------------- ----- ------
Amortisation of intangible assets (5.6) (6.0)
Depreciation of tangible assets (0.1) (0.1)
Employee costs (see note 8) (9.5) (10.3)
Operating leases - property (0.5) (0.4)
Loss on disposal of equity investments (0.5) (0.2)
--------------------------------------- ----- ------
8. Employee Costs
Employee costs (including directors) comprise:
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
----------------------------------------- ----- -----
Salaries 7.0 5.5
Defined contribution pension cost 0.4 0.3
Share-based payment charge (see note 21) 1.5 1.5
Other bonuses accrued in the year - 2.2
Social security 0.6 0.8
----------------------------------------- ----- -----
9.5 10.3
----------------------------------------- ----- -----
The average monthly number of persons (including Executive
Directors) employed by the Group during the year was 70, all of
whom were involved in management and administration activities
(2015: 64). Details of the Directors' remuneration can be found in
the Directors' Remuneration Report in the full Annual Report and
Accounts.
9. Taxation
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
------------ ----- -----
Current tax - -
------------ ----- -----
Deferred tax - -
------------ ----- -----
The Group primarily seeks to generate capital gains from its
holdings in spin-out companies over the longer-term but has
historically made annual net operating losses from its operations
from a UK tax perspective. Capital gains achieved by the Group
would ordinarily be taxed upon realisation of such holdings,
however, since the Group's activities, including its activities in
the US, are substantially trading in nature, the Directors continue
to believe that the Group qualifies for the Substantial
Shareholdings Exemption ("SSE"). This exemption provides that gains
arising on the disposal of qualifying holdings are not chargeable
to UK corporation tax and, as such, the Group has continued not to
recognise a provision for deferred taxation in respect of uplifts
in value on those equity holdings that meet the qualifying
criteria. Gains arising on sales of non-qualifying holdings would
ordinarily give rise to taxable profits for the Group, to the
extent that these exceed the Group's operating losses from time to
time.
The amount for the year can be reconciled to the profit per the
statement of comprehensive income as follows:
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Profit before tax (14.8) 75.1
---------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Tax at the UK corporation tax rate of 20.0%
(2015: 20.3%) (3.0) 15.2
Expenses not deductible for tax purposes 0.9 1.4
Fair value movement on investments qualifying
for SSE (1.3) (18.8)
Movement on share-based payments 0.1 (0.6)
Unrecognised other temporary differences - 1.3
Movement in tax losses arising not recognised 3.3 1.5
---------------------------------------------- ------ ------
Total tax charge - -
---------------------------------------------- ------ ------
At 31 December 2016, deductible temporary differences and unused
tax losses, for which no deferred tax asset has been recognised,
totalled GBP141.7m (2015: GBP105.5m). An analysis is shown
below:
2016 2015
---------------- ----------------
Deferred Deferred
Amount tax Amount tax
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------- ------ -------- ------ --------
Share-based payment costs
and other temporary differences 14.1 2.4 6.0 1.1
Unused tax losses 127.6 21.7 99.5 17.9
--------------------------------- ------ -------- ------ --------
141.7 24.1 105.5 19.0
--------------------------------- ------ -------- ------ --------
At 31 December 2016, deductible temporary differences and unused
tax losses, for which a deferred tax asset/(liability) has been
recognised, totalled GBPnil (2015: GBPnil). An analysis is shown
below:
2016 2015
Deferred Deferred
Amount tax Amount tax
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
----------------------------- ------ -------- ------ --------
Temporary timing differences 2.6 0.4 (4.4) (0.8)
Unused tax losses (2.6) (0.4) 4.4 0.8
----------------------------- ------ -------- ------ --------
- - - -
----------------------------- ------ -------- ------ --------
10. Earnings per Share
2016 2015
Earnings GBPm GBPm
----------------------------------- ------ -----
Earnings for the purposes of basic
and dilutive earnings per share (13.5) 73.9
----------------------------------- ------ -----
2015
2016 Number
Number of
Number of shares of shares shares
---------------------------------------------- ----------- -----------
Weighted average number of ordinary shares
for the purposes
of basic earnings per share 565,056,171 540,681,647
Effect of dilutive potential ordinary shares:
Options or contingently issuable shares - 1,237,274
---------------------------------------------- ----------- -----------
Weighted average number of ordinary shares
for the purposes
of diluted earnings per share 565,056,171 541,918,921
---------------------------------------------- ----------- -----------
Potentially dilutive ordinary shares include contingently
issuable shares arising under the Group's LTIP arrangements, and
options issued as part of the Group's Sharesave schemes and
Deferred Bonus Share Plan (for annual bonuses deferred under the
terms of the Group's annual incentive scheme). As the Group made a
loss for the period the potentially dilutive shares outstanding at
the period end are not considered when calculating the diluted
earnings per share.
11. Goodwill
GBPm
-------------------- ----
At 1 January 2016 57.1
-------------------- ----
At 31 December 2016 57.1
-------------------- ----
The Group conducts annual impairment tests on the carrying value
of goodwill, based on the recoverable amount of the CGUs to which
the goodwill has been allocated. The goodwill allocated to each CGU
is summarised in the table below. A number of both value-in-use and
fair-value-less-costs-to-sell calculations are used to assess the
recoverable values of the CGUs, details of which are specified
below.
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
--------------------------- ----- -----
University partnership CGU 55.0 55.0
Fund management CGU 2.1 2.1
--------------------------- ----- -----
57.1 57.1
--------------------------- ----- -----
Impairment review of venture capital fund management CGU
The key assumptions of the DCF model used to assess the value in
use, and the range of multiples applied in calculating the
fair-value-less-costs-to-sell based on a percentage of assets under
management are shown below:
2016 2015
-------------------------------------- -------- -------
Discount rate 9%-11% 9%-11%
Number of funds under management 4 3
Management fee 2%-3.25% 2%-3.5%
Cost inflation 1.5% 2%
Percentage of assets under management 2%-7.5% 2%-7%
-------------------------------------- -------- -------
A number of different value-in-use models were assessed in order
to evaluate the recoverable value of the CGU, none of which
resulted in an impairment being required.
Impairment review of the university partnership CGU
The key assumptions of the DCF models used to assess the value
in use are shown below.
For the purposes of impairment testing, the university
partnership CGU comprises those elements connected with the Group's
university partnership business. The Directors consider that for
each of the key variables which would be relevant in determining a
recoverable value for the university partnership CGU, there is a
range of reasonably possible alternative values. The key variable
ranges are set out below:
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
Number of spin-out companies per year 10-15 10-15
Annual investment rate GBP40-GBP75m GBP40m-GBP60m
Rate of return achieved 15%-22% 18%-22%
Initial equity stake acquired by the Group
under the university partnership 12%-30% 15%-35%
Proportion of spin-out companies failing 38%-54% 32%-45%
Weighted average holding period (years) 4-6 3-5
Dilution rates prior to exit as a result
of financing for spin-out companies 40%-60% 40%-60%
Proportion of IPO exits 25%-35% 25%-35%
IPO exit valuations GBP30m-GBP40m GBP30m-GBP40m
Proportion of disposal exits 25%-32% 28%-32%
Disposal valuations GBP25m-GBP35m GBP25m-GBP35m
Discount rate 9%-11% 9%-11%
------------------------------------------- ------------- -------------
When determining the key variables, management has, where
possible and appropriate, used historical performance data as a
basis. In instances where the forecasted volumes and scale of
activity do not align with the Group's prior performance,
management applies its judgement in determining said variables. A
number of different value-in-use models were assessed in order to
evaluate the recoverable value of the CGU, none of which resulted
in an impairment being required.
12. Intangible Assets
GBPm
------------------------- -----
Cost
At 1 January 2016 21.4
------------------------- -----
Additions 0.2
------------------------- -----
At 31 December 2016 21.6
------------------------- -----
Accumulated amortisation
At 1 January 2016 10.9
------------------------- -----
Charge for the year 5.6
------------------------- -----
At 31 December 2016 16.5
------------------------- -----
Net book value
At 31 December 2016 5.1
------------------------- -----
At 31 December 2015 10.5
------------------------- -----
The intangible assets represent contractual arrangements and
memorandums of understanding with four UK universities acquired
through acquisition of a subsidiary. The contractual arrangements
have fixed terms and, consequently, the intangible assets have a
finite life which align with the remaining terms which, at the end
of the period, range from 14 months to 19 months. The individual
contractual arrangements are amortised in a straight line over the
remainder of their terms with the expense being presented directly
on the primary statements.
13. Categorisation of Financial Instruments
At fair value
through
profit or loss
-----------------------
Designated Loans
Held for upon initial and
trading recognition receivables Total
Financial assets GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------ -------- ------------- ------------ -----
At 31 December 2016
Equity investments - 594.9 - 594.9
Debt investments - 19.1 - 19.1
Other financial assets - - - -
Limited and limited liability
partnership interests - 4.2 - 4.2
Trade and other receivables - - 2.6 2.6
Deposits - - - -
Cash and cash equivalents - - 112.3 112.3
------------------------------ -------- ------------- ------------ -----
Total - 618.2 114.9 733.1
------------------------------ -------- ------------- ------------ -----
At 31 December 2015
Equity investments - 543.1 - 543.1
Debt investments - 9.1 - 9.1
Other financial assets - - - -
Contingent value rights - 1.4 - 1.4
Limited and limited liability
partnership interests - 4.4 - 4.4
Trade and other receivables - - 3.2 3.2
Deposits - - 70.0 70.0
Cash and cash equivalents - - 108.8 108.8
------------------------------ -------- ------------- ------------ -----
Total - 558.0 182.0 740.0
------------------------------ -------- ------------- ------------ -----
All financial liabilities are categorised as other financial
liabilities and recognised at amortised cost.
The Group does not consider that any change in fair value of
financial assets in the year is attributable to credit risk (2015:
GBPnil).
All net fair value gains in the year are attributable to
financial assets designated at fair value through profit or loss on
initial recognition (2015: all net fair value gains attributable to
financial assets designated at fair value through profit or loss on
initial recognition).
All interest income is attributable to financial assets not
classified as fair value through profit and loss.
14. Investment Portfolio
Level Level
1 Level 2 3
------------ -------------------------- ------------
Equity Equity Unquoted Equity
investments investments debt investments
in quoted in unquoted investments in unquoted
spin-out spin-out in spin-out spin-out
companies companies companies companies Total
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------
At 1 January 2016 201.3 308.6 9.1 33.2 552.2
Investments during
the year 10.9 50.9 6.2 1.7 69.7
Transaction-based
reclassifications
during the year - 0.7 (0.7) - -
Other transfers between
hierarchy levels during
the year - (39.8) 6.7 33.1 -
Disposals (15.0) (0.2) (0.1) - (15.3)
Fees settled via equity - 0.4 - - 0.4
Change in fair value
in the year(i) (36.1) 47.4 (2.1) (2.2) 7.0
------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------
At 31 December 2016 161.1 368.0 19.1 65.8 614.0
------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------
At 1 January 2015 138.2 193.2 4.0 14.5 349.9
Investments during
the year 26.2 82.3 7.1 0.3 115.9
Transaction-based
reclassifications
during the year 2.3 (1.4) (0.9) - -
Other transfers between
hierarchy levels during
the year 24.6 (50.9) 0.1 26.2 -
Disposals - - (0.3) (0.5) (0.8)
Fees settled via equity - 0.7 - - 0.7
Change in fair value
in the year(i) 10.0 84.7 (0.9) (7.3) 86.5
------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------
At 31 December 2015 201.3 308.6 9.1 33.2 552.2
------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------ ------------ ------
i. (i) The change in fair value in the year includes a gain of
GBP0.7m (2015: GBP0.1m) in exchange differences on translating
foreign currency investments, which is entirely attributable to
Level 2 equity.
The Group's policy is to classify equity investments in unquoted
spin-out companies as Level 2 where prices have been determined
from recent investments in the last twelve months. The impact of
changing the qualifying criteria for Level 2 to be determined from
recent investments in the last six months would mean 4.4% (2015:
29.9%) of the equity investments in unquoted spin-out companies
would be re-classed to Level 3.
Fair values of unquoted spin-out companies classified as Level 3
in the fair value hierarchy have been determined, in part or in
full, by valuation techniques that are not supported by observable
market prices or rates. Investments in 32 (2015: 21) companies have
been classified as Level 3 and the individual valuations for each
of these have been arrived at using a variety of valuation
techniques and assumptions.
Where fair values are based upon the most recent market
transaction, but that transaction occurred more than twelve months
prior to the balance sheet date, the investments are classified as
Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy. The fair values of investments
categorised as Level 3 are analysed on a monthly basis to determine
business factors which may make the most recent investment rate no
longer a representation of fair value.
There are no identified unobservable inputs to which the Level 3
fair values would be materially sensitive. This is represented by
the fact that if the fair value of all Level 3 investments were to
decrease by 10%, the net assets figure would decrease by GBP6.6m
(2015: GBP3.3m), with a corresponding increase if the unobservable
inputs were to increase by 10%.
For assets and liabilities that are recognised at fair value on
a recurring basis, the Group determines whether transfers have
occurred between levels in the hierarchy by re-assessing
categorisation (based on the lowest level input that is significant
to the fair value measurement as a whole) at the end of each
reporting period. Transfers between tiers are then made as if the
transfer took place on the first day of the period in question,
except in the cases of transfers between tiers based on an initial
public offering ("IPO") of an investment wherein the changes in
value prior to the IPO are calculated and reported in tier 2, and
those changes post are attributed to tier 1.
If the assumptions used in the valuation techniques for the
Group's holding in each company are varied by using a range of
possible alternatives, there is no material difference to the
carrying value of the respective spin-out company. The effect on
the consolidated statement of comprehensive income for the period
is also not expected to be material.
Transfers between Level 2 and Level 1 occur when a previously
unquoted investment undertakes an initial public offering,
resulting in its equity becoming quoted on an active market. In the
current period, transfers of this nature amounted to GBPnil.
Transfers between Level 1 and Level 2 would occur when a quoted
investment's market becomes inactive, or the portfolio company
elects to delist. There has been one such instance in the current
period which amounted to GBPnil (2015: GBPnil).
Transfers between Level 3 and Level 2 occur when an investment
which previously had a most recent investment of over twelve months
ago undertakes an investment, resulting in an observable market
rate. In the current period, transfers of this nature amounted to
GBP7.3m (2015: GBP2.1m).
Transfers between Level 2 and Level 3 occur when an investment's
recent investment becomes more than twelve months old, with the
price being deemed unobservable. In the current period, transfers
of this nature amounted to GBP45.3m (2015: GBP28.4m).
Fair value changes in Level 3 investments have been a loss of
GBP2.2m (2015: GBP7.3m) in the period, recognised within change in
fair value of equity and debt investments in the condensed
consolidated statement of comprehensive income.
Change in fair value in the year
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
------------------ ------ ------
Fair value gains 57.3 115.4
Fair value losses (50.3) (29.0)
------------------ ------ ------
7.0 86.4
------------------ ------ ------
The Company's interests in subsidiary undertakings are listed in
note 2 to the Company's financial statements.
15. Trade and Other Receivables
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
------------------ --------------------------- -----
Trade debtors 2.3 3.0
Prepayments 0.3 0.2
Other receivables - -
------------------ --------------------------- -----
2.6 3.2
------------------ --------------------------- -----
The Directors consider the carrying amount of trade and other
receivables to approximate their fair value. All receivables are
interest free, repayable on demand and unsecured.
16. Contingent Value Rights
As a result of the disposal of Proximagen Group plc in August
2012, the Group received contingent consideration, in the form of
contingent value rights ("CVRs"), based upon future net revenues of
two associated drug programmes. In line with the Group's policies,
these have previously been recognised as financial assets at fair
value through profit and loss. The Group re-evaluated the
likelihood of receiving the contingent consideration in relation to
the CVRs at the reporting date and no longer consider that it is
realisable. The financial asset has been fair valued at GBPnil
(2015: GBP1.4m) and the associated fair value movement has been
charged to the consolidated statement of comprehensive income. The
Group considers this asset to be Level 3 in the fair value
hierarchy throughout the current and previous financial years.
17. Trade and Other Payables
2016 2015
Current liabilities GBPm GBPm
----------------------------------- ----- -----
Trade payables 0.7 0.7
Social security expenses 0.3 0.2
Other accruals and deferred income 1.1 3.0
----------------------------------- ----- -----
2.1 3.9
----------------------------------- ----- -----
18. Borrowings
2016 2015
Non-current liabilities GBPm GBPm
------------------------------------------- ----- -----
EIB debt facility 14.9 14.9
Loans drawn down from the Limited Partners
of consolidated funds 9.8 7.1
24.7 22.0
------------------------------------------- ----- -----
Loans drawn down from the Limited Partners of consolidated
funds
The loans from Limited Partners of consolidated funds are
interest free and repayable only upon the applicable funds
generating sufficient returns to repay the Limited Partners.
Management anticipates that the funds will generate the required
returns and consequently recognises the full associated
liabilities.
EIB debt facility
On 8 July 2015 the Group secured a GBP30m, 8-year debt facility
from the European Investment Bank. The facility is to be disbursed
in two tranches. The Group will use the proceeds to continue to
fund UK university spin-out companies as they develop and mature. A
non-utilisation fee of 0.15% is charged over the undrawn element of
the facility, which in 2016 was GBPnil (2015: GBPnil).
The first tranche of GBP15.0m was drawn down on 16 December
2015. There were GBP0.1m of initial transaction costs incurred in
the arrangement of the facility. This balance was set against the
loan amount and is to be subsequently amortised over the term of
the loan. The associated charge to the statement of comprehensive
income for 2016 was GBPnil (2015: nil). The capital is repayable in
ten equal payments over a five-year period with the first payment
due on 7 January 2019.
The drawn down element of the facility bears interest at a fixed
rate of 1.98% with an additional variable spread equal to the six
month GBP Libor rate as at the first date of each six-month
interest period. The first GBP15.0m tranche was disbursed on 17
December 2015 and the average floating interest rate (including the
fixed element) for 2016 was 2.66% (2015: 2.48%). The interest
charged in 2016 was GBP0.4m (2015: GBPnil).
The Group must ensure that the ratio between the value of the
portfolio along with the value of the Group's cash net of any
outstanding liabilities, and the outstanding debt facility does not
fall below 6:1. The Group must maintain that the amount of
unencumbered funds freely available to the Group is not less than
GBP15.0m. The Group is also required to maintain a separate bank
account which must at any date maintain a minimum balance equal to
that of all payments due to the EIB in the forthcoming six
months.
19. Share Capital
2016 2015
----------------- -----------------
Issued and fully paid: Number GBPm Number GBPm
---------------------------- ----------- ---- ----------- ----
Ordinary Shares of 2p each
At 1 January 564,648,168 11.3 479,524,397 9.6
Issued under share placings - - 83,388,888 1.7
Issued under employee share
plans 573,799 - 1,734,883 -
---------------------------- ----------- ---- ----------- ----
At 31 December 565,221,967 11.3 564,648,168 11.3
---------------------------- ----------- ---- ----------- ----
The Company has one class of ordinary shares with a par value of
2p ("Ordinary Shares") which carry equal voting rights, equal
rights to income and distributions of assets on liquidation, or
otherwise, and no right to fixed income.
In April 2016, the Group issued 457,877 new Ordinary Shares in
order to settle the 2013 LTIP scheme for which the vesting
conditions were fully achieved and consequently the resulting
shares became issuable to the Group's employees. The Group issued
101,622 new Ordinary Shares in order to settle the exercise of
certain options that had been issued under the Group's Deferred
Bonus Share Plan ("DBSP", see Note 21). Finally, in November 2016,
the Group issued 14,300 new Ordinary Shares in order to settle the
exercise of options by a former Group employee.
20. Operating Lease Arrangements
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------- ----- -----
Payments under operating leases
recognised in the statement
of comprehensive income for the
year 0.5 0.4
--------------------------------- ----- -----
At the reporting date, the Group had outstanding commitments for
future minimum lease payments under non-cancellable operating
leases, which fall due as follows:
2016 2015
GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------------- ----- -----
Within one year 0.6 0.3
In the second to fifth years inclusive 3.1 0.1
--------------------------------------- ----- -----
3.7 0.4
--------------------------------------- ----- -----
Operating lease payments represent rentals and other charges
payable by the Group for its office properties. Leases are
negotiated for an average term of five years and rentals are fixed
for an average of one year.
In December 2016 the Group entered into a lease for new head
office premises with an initial rent free period of twelve months
and a total 5-year commitment of GBP3.1m in lease and service
charge payments.
21. Share-Based Payments
In 2016, the Group continued to incentivise employees through
its LTIP and AIS. Both are described in more detail in the
Directors' Remuneration Report in the full Annual Report and
Accounts.
Deferred Bonus Share Plan ("DBSP")
Awards made to employees under the Group's AIS above a certain
threshold include 50% deferred into IP Group equity through the
grant of nil-cost options under the Group's DBSP. The number of
nil-cost options granted under the Group's DBSP is determined by
the share price at vesting date. The DBSP options are subject to
further time-based vesting over two years (typically 50% after year
one and 50% after year two).
An analysis of movements in the DBSP options outstanding is as
follows:
2016 2015
------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
At 1 January 187,869 362,608
AIS deferral shares award during the year 781,148 -
Exercised during the year (101,622) (174,739)
Lapsed during the year (29,400) -
------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
At 31 December 837,995 187,869
------------------------------------------ --------- ---------
No associated expense has been incurred for the 2016 AIS as the
financial performance targets were not achieved.
Long-Term Incentive Plan ("LTIP")
Awards under the LTIP take the form of conditional awards of
ordinary shares of 2p each in the Group which vest over the
prescribed performance period to the extent that performance
conditions have been met. The Remuneration Committee imposes
objective conditions on the vesting of awards and these take into
consideration the guidance of the Group's institutional investors
from time to time.
The 2016 LTIP awards were made on 16 May 2016. The awards will
ordinarily vest on 31 March 2019, to the extent that the
performance conditions have been met. The awards are based on the
performance of the Group's Hard NAV and Total Shareholder Return
("TSR"). Both performance measures are combined into a matrix
format to most appropriately measure performance relative to the
business, as shown in the Directors' Remuneration Report within the
Group's 2016 Annual Report and Accounts. The total award is subject
to an underpin based on the relative performance of the Group's TSR
to that of the FTSE 250 index, which can reduce the awards by up to
50%. The 2015 LTIP matrix is designed such that up to 100% of the
award (prior to the application of the underpin) will vest in full
in the event of both Hard NAV increasing by 15% per year on a
cumulative basis, from 1 January 2016 to 31 December 2018, and TSR
increasing by 15% per year on a cumulative basis from the date of
award to 31 March 2019, using an industry-standard average price
period at the beginning and end of the performance period. Further,
the matrix is designed such that 30% of the award shall vest (again
prior to the application of the underpin) if the cumulative
increase is 8% per annum for both measures over their respective
performance periods ("threshold performance"). A straight-line
sliding scale is applied for performance between the distinct
points on the matrix of vesting targets.
The 2015 LTIP awards were made on 21 May 2015. The awards will
ordinarily vest on 31 March 2018, to the extent that the
performance conditions have been met. The awards are based on the
performance of the Group's Hard NAV and Total Shareholder Return
("TSR"). Both performance measures are combined into a matrix
format to most appropriately measure performance relative to the
business, as shown in the Directors' Remuneration Report within the
Group's 2016 Annual Report and Accounts. The total award is subject
to an underpin based on the relative performance of the Group's TSR
to that of the FTSE 250 index, which can reduce the awards by up to
50%. The 2015 LTIP matrix is designed such that up to 100% of the
award (prior to the application of the underpin) will vest in full
in the event of both Hard NAV increasing by 15% per year on a
cumulative basis, from 1 January 2015 to 31 December 2017, and TSR
increasing by 15% per year on a cumulative basis from the date of
award to 31 March 2018, using an industry-standard average price
period at the beginning and end of the performance period. Further,
the matrix is designed such that 30% of the award shall vest (again
prior to the application of the underpin) if the cumulative
increase is 8% per annum for both measures over their respective
performance periods ("threshold performance"). A straight-line
sliding scale is applied for performance between the distinct
points on the matrix of vesting targets.
The 2014 LTIP award was made on 31 March 2014. The awards will
ordinarily vest on 31 March 2017, to the extent that the
performance conditions have been met. The awards are based on the
performance of the Group's Hard NAV and Total Shareholder Return
("TSR"). Both performance measures are combined into a matrix
format to most appropriately measure performance relative to the
business, as shown in the Directors' Remuneration Report within the
Group's 2016 Annual Report and Accounts. The total award is subject
to an underpin based on the relative performance of the Group's TSR
to that of the FTSE 250 index, which can reduce the awards by up to
50%. The 2014 LTIP matrix is designed such that up to 100% of the
award (prior to the application of the underpin) will vest in full
in the event of both Hard NAV increasing by 15% per year on a
cumulative basis, from 1 January 2014 to 31 December 2016, and TSR
increasing by 15% per year on a cumulative basis from the date of
award to 31 March 2017, using an industry-standard average price
period at the beginning and end of the performance period. Further,
the matrix is designed such that 30% of the award shall vest (again
prior to the application of the underpin) if the cumulative
increase is 8% per annum for both measures over their respective
performance periods ("threshold performance"). A straight-line
sliding scale is applied for performance between the distinct
points on the matrix of vesting targets.
The 2013 LTIP awards vested on 31 March 2016 and thereafter
shares in IP Group were issued via the Group's employee benefit
trust to the relevant members of the Group's staff accordingly. The
table below sets out the performance measures relating to the 2013
LTIP awards and the actual performance achieved.
Target Actual
Performance condition performance performance
---------------------------- ------------- ------------
Hard NAV (at 31 Dec 2015)(i) 8%: GBP624m GBP714.3m
15%: GBP712m (15.2% p.a.
growth)
---------------------------- ------------- ------------
Annual TSR(ii) 8%: 180p 175.1p
(share price) 15%: 217p (7.2% p.a.
growth
---------------------------- ------------- ------------
Comparative TSR(ii) FTSE 250 IP Group
+29% +22%
---------------------------- ------------- ------------
i. Hard NAV target increased by Committee to reflect GBP21.7m
Fusion IP net assets acquired in 2014 and GBP276.1m net proceeds of
the Group's placings in 2014 and 2015.
ii. TSR performance shown reflects the Group's one-month average
share price to 26 February 2016. Actual performance period is the
one-month average to 31 March 2016.
The performance measures were achieved in full however the
underpin was only partially achieved, as a result 57.6% of the 2013
LTIP awards vested on 31 March 2015.
The movement in the number of shares conditionally awarded under
the LTIP is set out below:
2016 2015
----------------------------------- --------- -----------
At 1 January 3,378,595 3,650,493
Forfeited during the year (493,959) (39,876)
Vested during the year (457,877) (1,552,144)
Notionally awarded during the year 3,188,078 1,320,122
----------------------------------- --------- -----------
At 31 December 5,614,837 3,378,595
----------------------------------- --------- -----------
The fair value of LTIP shares notionally awarded during 2016 was
calculated using Monte Carlo pricing models with the following key
assumptions:
2016 2015
------------------------------------------ -------- --------
Share price at date of award GBP1.558 GBP2.188
Exercise price GBPnil GBPnil
Fair value at grant date GBP0.41 GBP0.78
Expected volatility (median of historical
50-day moving average) 31% 32%
Expected life (years) 2.83 2.83
Expected dividend yield 0% 0%
Risk-free interest rate 1.0% 1.0%
------------------------------------------ -------- --------
Former Fusion IP LTIP
In 2014, three former employees of Fusion IP plc were each
conditionally awarded 1,000,000 shares in Fusion IP plc under the
Fusion IP LTIP. As part of the arrangements for the acquisition of
Fusion IP plc, the Fusion IP LTIP awards were converted into awards
over IP Group shares at the same conversion price per share as the
scheme of arrangement was undertaken (0.446 IP Group plc shares for
every Fusion IP plc share). The awards will vest on 31 December
2017 provided certain performance conditions are met which relate
to, inter alia, the growth in value of Fusion IP plc's net asset
value ("Fusion NAV") from the date of acquisition and the continued
employment of the individual by the Group. In summary, if Fusion
NAV growth of 10% per annum is achieved then 30% of an award shall
vest. Maximum vesting will occur if Fusion NAV growth of 20% per
annum is achieved with straight-line vesting between 30% and 100%
if Fusion NAV growth of 10%-20% per annum is achieved. No vesting
shall occur if Fusion NAV growth of less than 10% is achieved.
The movement in the number of shares conditionally awarded under
the Former Fusion IP LTIP is set out below:
2016 2015
--------------- --------- ---------
At 1 January 1,338,000 1,338,000
At 31 December 1,338,000 1,338,000
--------------- --------- ---------
Fair value charge
The fair value charge recognised in the statement of
comprehensive income during the year in respect of all share-based
payments, including the DBSP, LTIP and Former Fusion IP LTIP, was
GBP1.5m (2015: GBP1.5m).
22. Limited and Limited Liability Partnership Interests
GBPm
------------------------------------- -----
At 1 January 2015 4.6
Additions during the year -
Realisations in the year (0.6)
Change in fair value during the year 0.4
------------------------------------- -----
At 1 January 2016 4.4
Additions during the year 0.1
Realisations in the year -
Change in fair value during the year (0.3)
------------------------------------- -----
At 31 December 2016 4.2
------------------------------------- -----
The Group considers interests in Limited and Limited Liability
Partnerships to be Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy throughout
the current and previous financial years. If the assumptions used
in the valuation techniques for the Group's holding in each company
are varied by using a range of possible alternatives, there is no
material difference to the carrying value of the respective
spin-out company. The effect on the consolidated statement of
comprehensive income for the period is also not expected to be
material.
23. Related Party Transactions
The Group has various related parties arising from its key
management, subsidiaries, equity stakes in portfolio companies and
management of certain Limited Partnership funds.
a) Limited Partnerships
The Group manages a number of investment funds structured as
Limited Partnerships. Group entities have a Limited Partnership
interest (see note 1) and act as the general partners of these
Limited Partnerships. The Group therefore has power to exert
significant influence over these Limited Partnerships. The
following amounts have been included in respect of these Limited
Partnerships:
2016 2015
Statement of comprehensive income GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------- ----- -----
Revenue from services 0.9 1.3
---------------------------------- ----- -----
2016 2015
Statement of financial position GBPm GBPm
----------------------------------- ----- -----
Investment in limited partnerships 2.8 3.1
Amounts due from related parties 0.2 -
----------------------------------- ----- -----
b) Key management personnel
i) Key management personnel transactions
Key management had investments in the following spin-out
companies as at 31 December 2016:
Number Number Number
of of shares of
shares acquired/ shares
held at (disposed) held at
Director/Company 1 January in 31 December
Secretary Company name 2016 the period 2016 %
----------------- ----------------------------- ---------- ----------- ------------ -----
Alan Aubrey Accelercomm Limited - 333 333 0.3%
Alesi Surgical Limited 18 - 18 0.2%
Amaethon Limited -
A Shares 104 - 104 3.1%
Amaethon Limited -
B Shares 11,966 - 11,966 1.0%
Amaethon Limited -
Ordinary shares 21 - 21 0.3%
Avacta Group plc(v) 202,761 - 202,761 0.3%
Boxarr Limited 1,732 - 1,732 0.3%
Capsant Neurotechnologies
Limited 11,631 - 11,631 0.8%
Cloud Sustainability
Limited 26 - 26 0.4%
Crysalin Limited 1,447 - 1,447 0.1%
Diurnal Group plc 15,000 - 15,000 <0.1%
EmDot Limited 15 - 15 0.9%
Empiricom Technologies
Limited - 119,965,724 119,965,724 17.3%
Getech Group plc 15,000 - 15,000 <0.1%
Gunsynd plc 767,310 - 767,310 <0.1%
hVivo plc 37,160 - 37,160 <0.1%
Ilika plc 69,290 - 69,290 <0.1%
Karus Therapeutics
Limited 223 - 223 <0.1%
Microbiotica Limited - 3,750 3,750 <0.1%
Mirriad Advertising
Limited 33,333 - 33,333 <0.1%
MDL 2016 Limited -
Ordinary shares 3,226 - 3,226 0.4%
MDL 2016 Limited -
A shares 229 - 229 0.5%
Modern Biosciences
plc 1,185,150 - 1,185,150 1.7%
Modern Water plc 519,269 - 519,269 0.7%
Cronin Group plc 2,172,809 - 2,172,809 0.4%
Oxford Nanopore Technologies
Limited 101,208 - 101,208 0.4%
Oxtox Limited 25,363 (25,363) - 0.0%
Perachem Holdings plc 108,350 - 108,350 0.8%
Revolymer plc 88,890 - 88,890 0.1%
Salunda Limited 53,639 - 53,639 <0.1%
Structure Vision Limited 212 - 212 1.0%
Surrey Nanosystems
Limited 453 - 453 0.3%
Tissue Regenix Group
plc 2,389,259 - 2,389,259 0.3%
Xeros Technology Group
plc 40,166 - 40,166 <0.1%
Zeetta Networks Limited 212 212 424 <0.1%
----------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------- ------------ -----
Amaethon Limited -
Mike Townend A Shares 104 - 104 3.1%
Amaethon Limited -
B Shares 11,966 - 11,966 1.0%
Amaethon Limited -
Ordinary shares 21 - 21 0.3%
Applied Graphene Materials
plc - 7,619 7,619 <0.1%
Avacta Group plc(v) 9,314 10,687 20,001 <0.1%
Capsant Neurotechnologies
Limited 11,282 - 11,282 0.8%
Cloud Sustainability
Limited 25 - 25 0.4%
Creavo Technologies
Limited(i) 117 - 117 <0.1%
Crysalin Limited 1,286 - 1,286 0.1%
Diurnal Group plc 15,000 - 15,000 <0.1%
EmDot Limited 14 - 14 0.8%
Getech Group plc 20,000 - 20,000 <0.1%
hVivo plc 37,160 - 37,160 <0.1%
Ilika plc 10,000 - 10,000 <0.1%
Mirriad Advertising
Limited 25,000 - 25,000 <0.1%
Mode Diagnostics Limited 1,756 - 1,756 0.1%
Modern Biosciences
plc 1,185,150 - 1,185,150 1.7%
Modern Water plc 575,000 - 575,000 0.7%
Cronin Group plc 932,944 - 932,944 0.2%
Oxford Advanced Surfaces
Limited 5,000 - 5,000 0.2%
Oxford Nanopore Technologies
Limited 30,967 - 30,967 0.1%
Oxtox Limited 25,363 (25,363) - 0.0%
Perachem Holdings plc 113,222 - 113,222 0.8%
Revolymer plc 35,940 29,000 64,940 <0.1%
Structure Vision Limited 212 - 212 1.0%
Surrey Nanosystems
Limited 404 - 404 0.2%
Tissue Regenix Group
plc 1,950,862 - 1,950,862 0.3%
Tracsis plc 25,430 (25,430) - 0.0%
Ultrahaptics Holdings
Limited(iv) 35 - 35 <0.1%
Xeros Technology Group
plc 35,499 - 35,499 <0.1%
----------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------- ------------ -----
Greg Smith Alesi Surgical Limited 2 - 2 <0.1%
Avacta Group plc(v) 3,904 - 3,904 <0.1%
Capsant Neurotechnologies
Limited 896 - 896 <0.1%
Cloud Sustainability
Limited 8 - 8 0.1%
Crysalin Limited 149 - 149 <0.1%
Diurnal Group plc 15,000 - 15,000 <0.1%
EmDot Limited 4 - 4 0.2%
Encos Limited 5,671 - 5,671 0.3%
Getech Group plc 8,000 - 8,000 <0.1%
hVivo plc 61,340 - 61,340 <0.1%
Perachem Holdings plc(ii) 4,830 - 4,830 <0.1%
Mirriad Advertising
Limited 16,667 - 16,667 <0.1%
MDL 2016 Limited -
Ordinary shares 361 - 361 <0.1%
MDL 2016 Limited -
A shares 28 - 28 <0.1%
Modern Biosciences
plc 313,425 - 313,425 0.5%
Modern Water plc 7,250 - 7,250 <0.1%
Oxford Nanopore Technologies
Limited 1,581 - 1,581 <0.1%
Revolymer plc 4,500 - 4,500 <0.1%
Summit Therapeutics
plc 798 - 798 <0.1%
Surrey Nanosystems
Limited 88 - 88 <0.1%
Tissue Regenix Group
plc 50,000 - 50,000 <0.1%
Xeros Technology Group
plc 1,392 - 1,392 <0.1%
----------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------- ------------ -----
David
Baynes Alesi Surgical Limited 4 - 4 <0.1%
Arkivum Limited 377 - 377 <0.1%
Creavo Technologies
Limited(i) 46 - 46 <0.1%
Diurnal Group plc 73,000 - 73,000 0.1%
Mirriad Advertising
Limited 16,667 - 16,667 <0.1%
Oxford Nanopore Technologies
Limited 155 19 174 <0.1%
Ultrahaptics Holdings
Limited(iv) 26 - 26 <0.1%
Zeetta Networks Limited 212 212 424 <0.1%
----------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------- ------------ -----
Angela
Leach Alesi Surgical Limited 2 - 2 <0.1%
Avacta Group plc(v) 1,897 - 1,897 <0.1%
Boxarr Limited 102 - 102 <0.1%
Capsant Neurotechnologies
Limited 1,858 - 1,858 0.1%
Cloud Sustainability
Limited 10 - 10 0.1%
Creavo Technologies
Limited(i) 23 - 23 <0.1%
Cronin Group plc 68,101 - 68,101 <0.1%
Diurnal Group plc 11,500 - 11,500 <0.1%
Gunsynd plc(iii) 7,990 - 7,990 <0.1%
First Light Fusion
Limited 17 - 17 <0.1%
Getech Group plc 2,083 - 2,083 <0.1%
hVivo plc 25,903 - 25,903 <0.1%
Mirriad Advertising
Limited 16,667 - 16,667 <0.1%
MDL 2016 Limited -
Ordinary Shares 606 - 606 <0.1%
MDL 2016 Limited -
A Shares 102 - 102 0.2%
Modern Water plc 15,570 - 15,570 <0.1%
Modern Biosciences
plc 322,923 - 322,923 0.5%
Oxford Nanopore Technologies
Limited 1,721 61 1,782 <0.1%
Revolymer plc 4,500 - 4,500 <0.1%
Structure Vision Limited 21 - 21 0.1%
Surrey Nanosystems
Limited 90 - 90 <0.1%
Tissue Regenix Group
plc 329,172 (52,381) 276,791 <0.1%
Ultrahaptics Holdings
Limited(iv) 5 - 5 <0.1%
Xeros Technology Group
plc 5,666 - 5,666 <0.1%
----------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------- ------------ -----
i. Creavo Technologies Limited was formerly known as Quantum Imaging Limited.
ii. Boxarr Limited was formerly known as Plexus Planning Limited
iii. Gunsynd plc was formerly known as Evocutis plc
iv. Ultrahaptics Holdings Limited was formerly known as Ultrahaptics Limited
v. Avacta Group plc had a share consolidation during the year 100:1
ii) Key management personnel compensation
Key management personnel compensation comprised the
following:
2016 2015
GBP000s GBP000s
-------------------------------- -------- --------
Short-term employee benefits(1) 1,489 1,890
Post-employment benefits(2) 71 89
Other long-term benefits - -
Termination benefits - -
Share-based payments(3) 623 550
Total 2,183 2,529
(1) Represents key management personnel's base salaries,
benefits including cash in lieu of pension where relevant, and the
cash settled element of the Annual Incentive Scheme.
(2) Represents employer contributions to defined contribution
pension and life assurance plans
(3) Represents the accounting charge for share based payments,
reflecting LTIP and DBSP options currently in issue as part of
these schemes. See note 21 for a detailed description of these
schemes.
c) Portfolio companies
The Group earns fees from the provision of business support
services and corporate finance advisory to portfolio companies in
which the Group has an equity stake. Through the lack of control
over portfolio companies these fees are considered arms-length
transactions. The following amounts have been included in respect
of these fees:
2016 2015
Statement of comprehensive income GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------- ----- -----
Revenue from services 1.6 2.0
---------------------------------- ----- -----
2016 2015
Statement of financial position GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------- ----- -----
Trade receivables 0.7 1.5
-------------------------------- ----- -----
d) Subsidiary companies
Subsidiary companies that are not 100% owned either directly or
indirectly by the parent Company have intercompany balances with
other Group companies totalling as follows:
2016 2015
Statement of financial position GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------- ----- -----
Intercompany balances with other
Group companies 10.7 10.5
--------------------------------- ----- -----
These intercompany balances represent funding loans provided by
Group companies that are interest free, repayable on demand and
unsecured.
24. Capital Management
The Group's key objective when managing capital is to safeguard
the Group's ability to continue as a going concern so that it can
continue to provide returns for shareholders and benefits for other
stakeholders.
The Group sets the amount of capital in proportion to risk. The
Group manages the capital structure, and makes adjustments to it,
in light of changes in economic conditions and the risk
characteristics of its underlying assets. In order to maintain or
adjust the capital structure, the Group may adjust the amount of
issued new shares or dispose of interests in more mature portfolio
companies.
During 2016, the Group's strategy, which was unchanged from
2015, was to maintain healthy cash and short-term deposit balances
that enable it to provide capital to all portfolio companies, as
determined by the Group's investment committee, whilst having
sufficient cash reserves to meet all working capital requirements
in the foreseeable future.
The Group has an external debt facility with associated
covenants that are described in Note 18.
25. Capital Commitments
Commitments to university partnerships
A number of the Group's partnerships with research intensive
universities in the UK include certain arrangements to provide seed
capital to spin-out companies arising from such universities. As at
31 December 2016, the balances were as follows:
Year of Original Invested Remaining
commencement commitment to date commitment
Partnership of partnership GBPm GBPm GBPm
----------------------------- ---------------- ----------- -------- -----------
University of Southampton(i) 2002 5.0 3.6 1.4
King's College London(ii) 2003 5.0 1.8 3.2
University of York -
CNAP(iii) 2003 0.8 0.2 0.6
University of Leeds(iv) 2005 4.2 1.1 3.1
University of Bristol(v) 2005 5.0 1.1 3.9
University of Surrey(vi) 2006 5.0 0.5 4.5
University of York(iii) 2006 5.0 0.2 4.8
Queen Mary University
of London(vii) 2006 5.0 0.7 4.3
University of Bath(viii) 2006 5.0 0.2 4.8
University of Glasgow(ix) 2006 5.0 1.6 3.4
University of Manchester(x) 2013 7.5 0.2 7.3
----------------------------- ---------------- ----------- -------- -----------
52.5 11.2 41.3
---------------------------------------------- ----------- -------- -----------
(i.) Under the terms of an agreement entered into in 2002
between the Group, the University of Southampton and certain of the
University of Southampton's subsidiaries, IP2IPO Limited agreed to
make GBP5.0m available for the purposes of making investments in
University of Southampton spin-out companies.
(ii.) Under the terms of an agreement entered into during 2003
between the Group and King's College London ("KCL") and King's
College London Business Limited (formerly KCL Enterprises Limited),
the Group agreed to make GBP5.0m available for the purposes of
making investments in spin-out companies. Under the terms of this
agreement, KCL was previously able to require the Company to make a
further GBP5.0m available for investments in spin-out companies on
the tenth anniversary of the partnership. However, the 2003
agreement was terminated and replaced by a revised agreement
between the same parties on 12 November 2010. Under the revised
agreement, the Group agreed to target investing the remaining
commitment of GBP3.2m over a three-year period; KCL cannot,
however, require the Group to make any additional funds available.
Other changes effected by the revised agreement included the
removal of the Group's automatic entitlement to initial partner
equity in every spin-out company and/or a share of KCL's licensing
fees from intellectual property commercialisation and to the
termination rights of the parties.
(iii.) In 2003, the Group entered into an agreement with the
University of York. The agreement relates to a specialist research
centre within the University of York, the Centre for Novel
Agricultural Products ("CNAP"). The Group has committed to invest
up to a total of GBP0.8m in spin-out companies based on CNAP's
intellectual property. In 2006, the Group extended its partnership
with the University of York to cover the entire university. The
Group has committed to invest GBP5.0m in University of York
spin-outs over and beyond the GBP0.8m commitment as part of the
Group's agreement with CNAP. The agreement with the University of
York was amended during 2013 so as to alter the process by which
the Group evaluates commercialisation opportunities and the level
of initial partner equity the Group is entitled to as a result.
Further, the Group's automatic entitlement to share in any of the
University of York's proceeds from out-licensing has been removed
from the agreement.
(iv.) The Group extended its partnership with the University of
Leeds in July 2005 by securing the right with associated
contractual commitment to invest up to GBP5.0m in University of
Leeds spin-out companies. This agreement was varied in March 2011
to, amongst other things, remove the Group's entitlement to a share
of out-licensing income generated by the University of Leeds except
in certain specific circumstances where the Group is involved in
the relevant out-licensing opportunity. Under the terms of the
variation agreement, subject to quality and quantity of the
investment opportunities, the Group, IP Assist Services Limited and
the University of Leeds have agreed to target annual investments of
at least GBP0.7m in aggregate and, subject to earlier termination
or the parties otherwise agreeing alternative target, to review
this target on 30 April 2017.
(v.) In December 2005, the Group entered into an agreement with
the University of Bristol. The Group has committed to invest up to
a total of GBP5.0m in University of Bristol spin-out companies.
(vi.) Under the terms of an agreement entered into in 2006
between the Group and the University of Surrey, the Group has
committed to invest up to a total of GBP5.0m in spin-out companies
based on the University of Surrey's intellectual property.
(vii.) In July 2006, the Group entered into an agreement with
Queen Mary University of London ("QM") to invest in QM spin-out
companies. The Group has committed to invest up to a total of
GBP5.0m in QM spin-out companies. The agreement was amended in
January 2014, primarily to remove the Group's entitlement to
licence fees save where it is involved in the development or
licensing of the relevant IP and, in most cases, to replace the
Group's automatic entitlement to a share of the initial equity in
any spin-out company with an equivalent warrant exercisable at the
seed stage of the relevant company.
(viii.) In September 2006, the Group entered into an agreement
with the University of Bath to invest in University of Bath
spin-out companies. The Group has committed to invest up to a total
of GBP5.0m in University of Bath spin-out companies. The agreement
with the University of Bath was amended during 2009 so as to remove
the Group's automatic entitlement to a share of the initial equity
or licence fees (as applicable) received by the University of Bath
from the commercialisation of its intellectual property in the
event that the Group and its employees have not been actively
involved in developing the relevant opportunity.
(ix.) In October 2006, the Group entered into an agreement with
the University of Glasgow to invest in University of Glasgow
spin-out companies. The Group has committed to invest up to a total
of GBP5.0m in University of Glasgow spin-out companies.
(x.) In February 2013, the Group entered into a
commercialisation agreement with the University of Manchester.
Initially the Group had agreed to make available an initial
facility of up to GBP5.0m to provide capital to new proof of
principle projects (excluding graphene projects) intended for
commercialisation through spin-out companies. During January 2014,
the Group extended its agreement to include funding for graphene
projects; increased the capital commitment by a further GBP2.5m,
bringing the total to GBP7.5m; and extended the agreement to
2019.
Commitments to limited partnerships
Pursuant to the terms of their limited partnership agreements,
the Group has committed to invest the following amounts into
limited partnerships as at 31 December 2016:
Year of Original Invested Remaining
commencement commitment to date commitment
Partnership of partnership GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------ ---------------- ----------- -------- -----------
IP Venture Fund 2006 3.1 3.0 0.1
IP Venture Fund II L.P. 2013 10.0 3.9 6.1
------------------------ ---------------- ----------- -------- -----------
13.1 6.9 6.2
----------------------------------------- ----------- -------- -----------
26. Post Balance Sheet Events
Effective 31 January 2017, the Group acquired 100% of the shares
of Parkwalk Advisors Limited, the UK's leading university spin-out
focussed EIS fund manager. This business will be consolidated in
the Group's results from the date of acquisition. The total maximum
consideration payable is GBP20m over a three-year period. The
initial consideration comprises GBP5m of cash, GBP2.5m in the form
of newly-issued IP Group ordinary shares and a further GBP2.5m of
cash payable in two equal instalments over two years, subject to
certain conditions. The remaining GBP10m consideration is payable
as GBP5m in cash and GBP5m in IP Group ordinary shares over a
three-year period, subject to the acquired company achieving
certain business performance targets. The Group is in the process
of finalising the acquisition accounting and can therefore not
provide any other reliable disclosure in line with IFRS 3 at this
stage.
This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
END
FR GMGGFZVKGNZZ
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 07, 2017 02:01 ET (07:01 GMT)
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