THIS ANNOUNCEMENT CONTAINS INSIDE INFORMATION FOR THE PURPOSES
OF THE MARKET ABUSE REGULATION (EU) 596 / 2014 WHICH FORMS PART OF
UK LAW BY VIRTUE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION (WITHDRAWAL) ACT 2018
("MAR"). IN ADDITION, MARKET SOUNDINGS (AS DEFINED IN MAR)
WERE TAKEN IN RESPECT OF CERTAIN OF THE MATTERS CONTAINED IN THIS
ANNOUNCEMENT, WITH THE RESULT THAT CERTAIN PERSONS BECAME AWARE OF
SUCH INSIDE INFORMATION, AS PERMITTED BY MAR. UPON THE PUBLICATION
OF THIS ANNOUNCEMENT, THIS INSIDE INFORMATION IS NOW CONSIDERED TO
BE IN THE PUBLIC DOMAIN AND SUCH PERSONS SHALL THEREFORE CEASE TO
BE IN POSSESSION OF INSIDE INFORMATION.
Embargoed until 7am 8 November 2024
DCI ADVISORS
LTD
("DCI" or the
"Company")
NOTICE OF GENERAL MEETING TO APPROVE
THE PROPOSED MIGRATION OF THE COMPANY FROM THE BRITISH VIRGIN
ISLANDS TO GUERNSEY, THE ADOPTION OF NEW GUERNSEY ARTICLES OF
INCORPORATION, THE ADOPTION OF A MANAGEMENT INCENTIVE PLAN AND
RELATED MATTERS
1.
Introduction
The Company was admitted to trading
on AIM on 8 December 2005.
Dealings in the Ordinary Shares on
AIM were suspended on 1 July 2024 due to the delayed publication of
the Company's audited financial statements for the year ended 31
December 2023. It is anticipated that the suspension will be
lifted when the audited 2023 financial statements and the unaudited
interim results for the six months to 30 June 2024 are published,
which as notified by the Company is expected to be in December
2024.
The Company is convening the EGM to
consider a number of resolutions, details of which are set out in
the Circular published today and is also taking the opportunity to
remind Shareholders of the progress the Company has made since DCP,
the Company's former investment manager, was removed from that role
in March 2023.
2.
Management Update
Since DCP's Termination, DCI has
been internally managed by its joint managing directors, Nicolai
Huls and Nick Paris. Together with local teams in Greece,
Cyprus and Croatia, they have taken over the responsibilities of
managing the Company from DCP. This has involved managing the
Company's day-to-day operations and pursuing asset sales in order
to achieve the Realisation Strategy which was approved by
Shareholders in December 2021.
Following the Termination, the
Board's initial focus was to complete the audit for the year to 31
December 2022, stabilise the organisation by developing good
relations with all of DCI's service providers and sourcing
sufficient funds for DCI's operational expenses. This process
was more complicated than initially expected due to less funds
being available than the Board believed at the time of the
Termination, exacerbated by the discovery of outstanding invoices
that had not been disclosed to the Board nor to the Company's
external administrators by DCP, coupled with strong opposition to
the Termination from DCP and by the confusion of some service
providers as to whether they should continue to take instructions
from DCP or solely from DCI. These service providers were
repeatedly and firmly told that they should not take instructions
from DCP, despite DCP's best efforts to get them to follow their
instructions.
DCP's refusal to accept that its
management contract had been validly and justifiably terminated was
most visible for Shareholders by the announcement on 11 April 2023
that the Company had received notification that DCP had filed a
claim against the Company in the English High Court alleging
repudiatory breach of contract by the Company in relation to the
Termination. The Company still considers DCP's claim to be
opportunistic and without merit and has been defending the claim
vigorously. It is not expected that DCP's claim will be heard
in the High Court until late 2025 or early
2026.
Less visible to Shareholders has
been DCP's obstruction in handing over control of the Cypriot SPVs,
through which all of the Company's assets are held, to the DCI
board and its appointees. At Termination, DCP's employees
were still board members of these Cypriot SPVs and were signatories
to all of those SPVs bank accounts. Despite repeated
requests, DCP's employees refused to resign from these boards.
In May 2023 the Company successfully appointed additional
directors to the Cypriot SPVs boards so that DCI had a majority of
the board of each SPV, after which the DCP employees finally
resigned. After the SPV board changes were finalised, DCI was
finally able to obtain control over all SPVs and take control of
all of the individual bank accounts. This whole process took
more the six months.
Kilada Project,
Greece
DCI's day-to-day operations in
Greece were complicated by Zoniro's continued close relationship
with DCP. As background, Zoniro was responsible for managing
DCI's Greek assets on the ground on a day-to-day basis and
overseeing the construction of the Kilada Project. Due to its
continued close relationship with DCP, which it became apparent was
more important to it than its relationship with DCI, the Board had
no choice but to terminate the agreement with Zoniro and to replace
them with another service provider. These changes were done
without causing any significant delays to the development of
Kilada.
The Board has also focused on
creating good relations with its fellow minority shareholder in the
Kilada Project. This resulted in our joint venture partner at
Kilada agreeing to lend the Kilada Project up to €2.5m for its
continued development giving DCI additional time to raise further
capital to fund its share of the investment required to finalise
the completion of the 18-hole golf course and the Country
Club.
In Greece the Board's main focus
was, and remains, the continued development of Kilada. The
development continues to be supported by a strong local team who
have been able to achieve many milestones since the Termination.
The initial focus was on finalising the first 9-holes and
preparing further holes for grassing. The hard work was rewarded in December
2023 by the approval and payment of the first tranche of €1.5m of
the €6m Greek government grants to the Kilada Project. DCI
believes this is a recognition of the fact that the handover of the
management of the Kilada Project from DCP to DCI's current
management team happened smoothly. Another significant
milestone was reached when in August 2024 play occurred on the
initial 9-holes by invited players who all commented favourably on
the course and its layout.
The continued development of Kilada
continues to de-risk the development and has resulted in interest
from potential buyers. As previously announced, the Company signed
a Memorandum of Understanding in June granting exclusivity to a
potential buyer. While the exclusivity period has expired,
negotiations with the potential buyer continue and progress is
being made. The Board hopes to make a further announcement in
the coming months.
Livka Bay,
Croatia
A sale process commenced in April
2023 for DCI's Croatian asset, Livka Bay, with the assistance of
one of the main local property advisers in Croatia in order to find
a buyer for the entire site or a joint venture partner who would
inject equity to develop the hotel, villas and marina that had
already been permitted by the local government. Strong
interest was expressed for an outright purchase and the Company
selected a buyer who was willing to pay €22 million. The Sale
& Purchase Agreement to sell the Company's interest in Livka
Bay was signed and announced by the Company at the end of June 2024
and the transaction is progressing towards completion despite some
delays as the buyers have been assembling their funding to buy and
also develop the site. The price of €22 million is approximately 15
per cent. above its carrying value in the Company's 30 June 2023
balance sheet.
Aristo Developers,
Cyprus
In February 2023 a Greek investment bank was appointed to seek buyers for
Aristo Developers. Interest had been received from several
interested parties, in part because the Cypriot property market has
experienced positive developments as local tourism recovered from
Covid restrictions. Discussions continue to progress which
the Board anticipates will result in a disposal of the Company's
minority interest in Aristo Developers.
Other
Assets
Active marketing of the Company's
other assets, which comprise four undeveloped land lots in Greece
and Cyprus, continues and potential buyers have been identified and
approached. The Board believes that the Company will be in a
position to announce more exits in due course.
Litigation
Following the Termination, DCI
remains involved in legal disputes in the United Kingdom, the BVI
and Greece either with DCP or parties connected to DCP or its
founder and principal shareholder. In both the United Kingdom
and the BVI the Company is the defendant to legal actions. As
commented above, the litigation in the English High Court is not
expected to be heard until late 2025 or
early 2026. The litigation in BVI has been heard by the BVI
court and judgment is awaited.
As previously announced, DCI has
filed civil and criminal claims in Greece against 10
individuals/companies in order to seek to recover approximately €57
million in damages. Shareholders should note that the Board
believes that the €57 million claim may increase further based upon
the continuing investigations being undertaken into transactions
undertaken by DCP and its associates during its time as manager of
DCI. The Company's focus remains on defending DCI's position
while at the same time seeking to minimise the Company's legal
expenses and maximise the recovery of damages.
Shareholders are reminded that the
Company's legal claims against DCP and others in Greece have the
benefit of litigation funding from a third party. This means
that DCI's legal costs in Greece are capped and the Board believes
that DCI is well placed to pursue its action against DCP to the
benefit of Shareholders. As the majority of legal work on
these disputes has been carried out, Shareholders will be pleased
to note that the Board anticipates that DCI's legal expenses in
2024 will be considerably less than those incurred in
2023.
3.
The Migration
The Company is currently
incorporated under the laws of the BVI. The Board is
conscious that the BVI is increasingly regarded unfavourably by a
number of countries where the Company operates. After
discussing this issue with the Company's advisors, the Board
proposes to re-register the Company as a Guernsey non-cellular
company limited by shares and discontinue the Company in the
BVI. The Board has been advised that the choice of Guernsey
as the Company's new home should address the issues posed in
certain jurisdictions by DCI being incorporated in the
BVI.
The Directors considered a number of
alternatives for the domicile of the Company and selected Guernsey
for the following reasons:
·
Guernsey is politically and fiscally autonomous,
with a stable political and legal structure and is one of the
world's largest offshore finance centres;
·
Guernsey adheres to the highest standards of
international tax and regulatory principles and is committed to
ensuring that this continues;
·
Guernsey has a wealth of first-class fund service
providers, including administrators, auditors, legal advisers and
custodians;
·
the process of changing domicile from the British
Virgin Islands to Guernsey is relatively straightforward as the
existing corporate entity can migrate;
·
Guernsey has for some time been the domicile of
choice for non-UK companies listing on the main market of the
London Stock Exchange and AIM. More Guernsey companies are
listed on the London Stock Exchange than companies based in any
other non-UK jurisdiction; and
·
Shareholders will benefit from improved
protections as the Company will fall within the remit of the
Takeover Code.
The effect of the Migration is that
the Company will remain the same legal entity but will move its
seat of incorporation from the BVI to Guernsey. Upon
registration in Guernsey:
·
all property and rights to which the Company was
entitled immediately before that registration remain its property
and rights;
·
the Company will remain subject to all criminal
and civil liabilities, and all contracts, debts and other
obligations, to which it was subject immediately before that
registration;
·
all actions and other legal proceedings which
immediately before that registration could have been instituted or
continued by or against the Company may be instituted or continued
by or against it after that registration, and
·
a conviction, ruling, order or judgment in favour
of or against the Company before that registration may be enforced
by or against it after that registration.
One consequence of the Migration
will be that the Ordinary Shares will cease to be represented on
AIM by Depositary Receipts. Instead, DCI's Depository
Instrument will be cancelled and the Ordinary Shares represented by
the Depository Receipts will be distributed to Shareholders to be
held in Crest. Shareholders need take no action in this
regard as the process will be automatic. The Company's London
Stock Exchange ticker is not expected to change, however a new ISIN
will be issued which will be announced at the time.
Upon the Migration occurring, the
Company's registered office will be Mont
Crevelt, Bulwer Ave, House Guernsey GY2 4LH and its Company
Secretary is expected to become Orbitus Secretaries (Guernsey)
Limited.
The Board will remain the same upon
the Migration. Following the Migration and once the
suspension of the Company's shares from trading on AIM is lifted
the Company intends to appoint additional directors, (at least one
of whom will be a Guernsey resident).
4.
Investment objective and investment
policy
There will be no changes to the
existing investment objective or investment policy of the Company
which remains the Realisation Strategy. The Realisation
Strategy stated that the Board and DCP, as
the Company's investment manager at the time, aimed to realise all
of the Company's remaining investments by 31 December 2024.
As Shareholders will be aware, that
has not proved possible as DCP sold no assets in the 15-month
period up until their termination in March 2023 and six months was
then spent stabilising the Company. As a number of asset sale
initiatives are now underway, the Board
considers it is realistic to target agreements to be in place to
sell all of the Company's remaining investments by 31 December
2025, with the cash proceeds being largely received by 31 December
2026.
5.
City Code on Takeovers and Mergers
The Takeover Code is designed
principally to ensure that shareholders in an offeree company are
treated fairly and are not denied an opportunity to decide on the
merits of a takeover offer and that shareholders in the offeree
company of the same class are afforded equivalent treatment by an
offeror. The Takeover Code also provides an orderly framework
within which takeovers are conducted. In addition, it is
designed to promote, in conjunction with other regulatory regimes,
the integrity of the financial markets. The Takeover Code is
not concerned with the financial or commercial advantages or
disadvantages of a takeover. These are matters for the
offeree company and its shareholders. In addition, it is not
the purpose of the Takeover Code either to facilitate or to impede
takeovers. Nor is the Takeover Code concerned with those
issues, such as competition policy, which are the responsibility of
government and other bodies.
The Takeover Code has been developed
since 1968 to reflect the collective opinion of those
professionally involved in the field of takeovers as to appropriate
business standards and as to how fairness to offeree company
shareholders and an orderly framework for takeovers can be
achieved. The rules set out in the Takeover Code have a
statutory basis in relation to Guernsey.
On completion of the Migration, the
Takeover Code will apply to the Company whereas it does not
currently apply as the Company is domiciled in the BVI. In
particular, Shareholders should note the provisions of Rule 9 of
the Takeover Code. Under Rule 9 of the Takeover Code,
if:
(i) a person
acquires an interest in Ordinary Shares which, when taken together
with Ordinary Shares already held by him or persons acting in
concert with him, carry 30 per cent. or more of the voting rights
in the Company; or
(ii) a person who,
together with persons acting in concert with him, is interested in
not less than 30 per cent. and not more than 50 per cent. of the
voting rights in the Company acquires additional interests in
Ordinary Shares which increase the percentage of Ordinary Shares
carrying voting rights in which that person is
interested,
the acquirer and, depending on the
circumstances, its concert parties, would be required (except with
the consent of the Panel on Takeovers and Mergers) to make a cash
offer for the outstanding Ordinary Shares at a price not less than
the highest price paid for any interests in the Ordinary Shares by
the acquirer or its concert parties during the previous 12
months.
6.
Changes to the articles of association upon
Migration
As part of the migration process the
Company will be required to adopt the Guernsey Articles, a copy of
which is appended to the Circular as Appendix 1. The Guernsey
Articles are materially similar to the existing articles of
association and are drafted in a standard format appropriate for an
AIM listed Guernsey company and in conformity with Guernsey
companies law. In addition, the Guernsey Articles include a
mechanism for the return of capital to Shareholders as assets are
realised and cash becomes available for distribution, as described
further in paragraph ‎7 below.
7.
Return of capital to Shareholders
The Board has carefully considered
the potential mechanics for returning capital from asset sales to
Shareholders as part of the Realisation Strategy and the Company's
ability to do so. Having considered the various options for
returning cash to Shareholders, the Board proposes to adopt a B
Share Scheme whereby the Company will issue redeemable B Shares to
Shareholders pro rata to their shareholding, with such B Shares
then immediately being redeemed for cash and cancelled, without
further action being required by Shareholders. The Company
will not allot any fractions of B Shares and entitlements will be
rounded down to the nearest whole B Share. The Guernsey
Articles contain further details in relation to B
Shares.
Shareholders should take their own
tax advice as to the impact of their receiving the return of
capital via the issue of B Shares.
The advantages of returning capital
via the B Share Scheme rather than via a tender offer are as
follows:
(i) All
Shareholders would automatically participate in the redemption
process and they would be treated equally.
(ii) Subject to the
redomicile resolution being passed at the General Meeting,
Shareholders should not be required to take any further action to
give effect to future returns of capital pursuant to the B Share
Scheme.
(iii) It provides greater
certainty for the Company regarding the rate of return of capital
to Shareholders (unlike tender offers, capital returns under the B
Share Scheme would be mandatory and would apply to all Shareholders
on a pro rata basis).
No share certificates would be
issued in relation to the B Shares and the B Shares will not be
listed or admitted to trading on AIM or on any other securities or
investment exchange or trading platform.
The B Shares would be
non-transferable and will have limited rights. The rights and
restrictions attached to the B Shares are set out more fully in the
Guernsey Articles which are attached as Appendix 1to the Circular
and are available on the Company's website.
8.
Management Incentive Scheme
As Shareholders will note from the
above, since the Termination the Board has been actively
self-managing the Company and making significant progress towards
achieving asset sales and returns of capital as mandated by
Shareholders in December 2021. To date the joint Managing
Directors and their management team have been remunerated with
either base salaries or consultancy fees and discussions have been
held with several Shareholders about introducing a management
incentive scheme to encourage them to realise the Company's assets
in a timely manner and to reflect the heavy workload that this
involves. A summary of the proposed Incentive Scheme is
appended to this announcement and as Appendix 2 of the Circular and
Shareholders should note that the implementation of the Incentive
Scheme is conditional upon the passing of Resolution 3 at the EGM.
This is because all the Company's current Directors are eligible to
participate in the Incentive Scheme and as such there are no
independent directors able to give the necessary confirmations to
the Company's Nomad, Cavendish. Therefore, after discussion
with Cavendish it has been agreed that the Incentive Scheme will be
placed on the EGM agenda as an Ordinary Resolution.
Shareholders should note that the
Incentive Scheme has been designed to minimise the cost to the
Company and yet incentivise those eligible to benefit from the
Incentive Scheme which includes all three Directors plus other
members of the DCI team who support them. This is being
achieved by creating an ESOP which will be funded by a loan from
DCI of €2.5 million which will be used to acquire Ordinary Shares
in the secondary market. These Ordinary Shares will be
allocated to an individual ESOP participant as set out in the
Appendix. However, those Ordinary Shares will only vest to
each participant in the ESOP if the vesting criteria are
met.
The key vesting criteria include the
Company returning capital to Shareholders in excess of the
Company's market capitalisation as at the date of the Ordinary
Shares suspension on 1 July 2024 (€52.27 million) by 30 June
2027. As it is intended that DCI's loan to the ESOP will be
fully repaid to DCI from capital returned to Shareholders (which
will include the ESOP) before the ESOP's Ordinary Shares vest to
each participant, the cost to DCI should be restricted to the
opportunity cost of the €2.5 million loan to the ESOP before it is
repaid. The key vesting criteria are summarised in the
Appendix.
Shareholders should note that the loan from DCI to the ESOP
will only be made out of the net sale proceeds from selling the
Company's assets and not through taking on external
borrowing.
The Board believes that structuring
the Incentive Scheme in this manner more than adequately addresses
any concerns that Shareholders may have regarding the Incentive
Scheme and yet the Incentive Scheme will both reward the current
Directors and the Company's team for their efforts to date and
incentivise them to deliver the Realisation Strategy in a timely
manner yet maximising the proceeds returned by realising the
Company's assets for the best prices available.
The Directors of DCI, being Sean
Hurst, Nicholas Paris and Nicolai Huls are all potential
beneficiaries of the proposed new incentive scheme, and as such
will be excluded from voting on Resolution 3 in relation to the
ESOP.
The establishment of the new scheme
constitutes a related party transaction pursuant to Rule 13 of the
AIM Rules by virtue of it being out of the ordinary course of the
business, and therefore there are no independent directors to opine
on the terms of the scheme. The Company's nominated adviser,
Cavendish, having considered the terms of the new incentive scheme
consider it to be fair and reasonable insofar as the Company's
Shareholders are concerned.
Given the unusual nature of the
related party transaction, and the sensitivity of no directors
being in a position to opine on the transaction, Cavendish noted
that the transaction was being put to shareholder vote in
considering their opinion.
9.
Extraordinary General
Meeting
The Resolutions will be proposed at
the EGM to be held at 55 Athol Street, Douglas, Isle of Man IM1 1LA
on 12 December 2024 at 10am. The formal notice convening the
EGM is set out in the Circular.
Resolution 1, which shall be
proposed as a Special Resolution, relates to: (a) the
de-registering of the Company as a BVI company limited by shares
and the re-registering of the Company as a company limited by
shares under Guernsey law; and (b) the migration process and
affirmation of the name of the Company, the adoption of the
Guernsey Articles and the change of registered office of the
Company.
Resolution 2, which is conditional
upon the passing of Resolution 1, shall be proposed as an Ordinary
Resolution, relates to a general authority for the Company to make
repurchases of its Ordinary Shares. In accordance with standard
practice for listed companies, this authority will be limited to
14.99 per cent. of the issued share capital of the Company.
This authority will expire at the Company's annual general
meeting in 2025 and the Directors intend to apply for a further
authority at that meeting.
Resolution 3, which is conditional
on the passing of Resolution 1 shall be proposed as an Ordinary
Resolution, authorises the Company to create and fund the ESOP in
accordance with the ESOP rules summarised in Appendix 2 of the
Circular.
Shareholders should note that the
Migration will not happen immediately upon the passing of
Resolution 1 as several procedural steps will be required following
the passing of Resolution 1. The Company will make a further
announcement concerning the timetable for the Migration following
the conclusion of the EGM. It is the Board's objective that
the Migration completes before the end of the current calendar
year.
10.
Action to
be taken[1]
The Resolutions will be proposed at
the EGM to be held at 55 Athol Street,
Douglas, Isle of Man, IM1 1LA on 12
December 2024 at 10am.
Shareholders are encouraged to vote
by the return of a Form of Proxy or Form of Instruction (as
appropriate). Whether or not Shareholders propose to attend
the EGM, they should complete and return the Form of Proxy or Form
of Instruction (as appropriate) in accordance with the instructions
set out in the Circular.
The quorum for the EGM is two
Shareholders present in person or by proxy entitled to vote at the
EGM. In the event that a quorum is not achieved the EGM will be
adjourned until the same time on 19 December 2024, and the
adjourned EGM will be held at the same place as the original
meeting. Shareholders are requested to complete and return the
relevant Form of Proxy or Form of Instruction whether or not they
intend to attend the EGM. These forms can be returned to
Computershare by post using the enclosed pre-paid envelope. If you
have any queries regarding the EGM please contact Computershare
Investor Services PLC during normal business hours on +44 370 702
0000. Please note that Computershare Investor Services PLC can only
give procedural advice in relation to the EGM and is not authorised
to provide investment advice.
11.
Recommendation
The Board believes that approval of
the Resolutions is in the best interests of the Company and urges
Shareholders to vote in favour of them at the EGM.
Accordingly, the Board unanimously recommends that Shareholders
vote in favour of the Resolutions to be proposed at the EGM as they
intend to do, where able, in respect of the 2,884,487 Ordinary
Shares held by them, which represent 0.32 per cent. of the
Company's issued share capital, noting they are excluded from
voting on matters related to the ESOP.
Enquiries
DCI
Advisors Ltd
Nicolai Huls / Nick Paris, Managing
Directors
|
nickparis@dciadvisorsltd.com
+44 (0) 7738 470550
|
Cavendish Capital Markets (Nominated Adviser &
Broker)
James King / Jonny Franklin-Adams /
Edward Whiley / (Corporate Finance)
Pauline Tribe (Sales)
|
+44 (0) 20 7220 0500
|
FIM
Capital Limited (Administrator)
Lesley Lennon (Corporate
Governance)
|
llennon@fim.co.im
|
APPENDIX
SUMMARY OF THE INCENTIVE
SCHEME
Participation in the ESOP is open to
all DCI Directors and to members of the DCI team wheresoever
based.
1. The ESOP will
be funded by an interest free loan from DCI of €2.5 million to be
repaid to DCI from the distributions to Shareholders from future
returns of capital by DCI.
2. The Trustee of
the ESOP will acquire Ordinary Shares in the secondary market once
the loan has been received, up to the value of the loan ("the Plan
Shares").
3. Once the Plan
Shares are acquired by the ESOP, the Plan Shares in the ESOP will
be allocated to Plan Participants as set out
below. However, no Plan Shares will be
passed to a Plan Participant until they have vested in accordance
with the vesting criteria, as follows:
a. The Plan Shares
will only vest when a sum equal to the DCI market capitalisation at
the time of the ESOP's initial announcement (€52.27 million) is
returned to Shareholders. Receipt of its pro rata share of
this return of capital will enable the ESOP to repay the initial
loan from DCI in full.
b. The vesting
criteria are as follows (calculated on a sliding scale upwards from
€52.27 million):
i. For every €1 million of
capital returned above €52.27 million, 1% of the Plan Shares in the
ESOP will vest.
ii. It therefore requires an
additional €100 million of capital in excess of DCI's suspension
market capitalisation to be returned to Shareholders for 100% of
the Plan Shares to vest - i.e. a total of €152.27 million to be
returned to Shareholders.
c. Once
vested Plan Shares awarded to a Plan Participant
may not be sold by a Plan Participant (even after
they cease to be a DCI director (unless they are removed from
office by a vote of Shareholders at a general meeting of the
Company) or cease to be an employee or consultant). However,
if a takeover offer (under the Takeover Code) is made for DCI and
such offer is declared unconditional in all respects, all unvested
Plan Shares will automatically vest and the takeover offer may be
accepted and the lock up automatically falls away;
d. Capital
returned to Shareholders on the Plan Shares that have vested will
be released to Plan Participant (by the ESOP) on their vested Plan
Shares as follows:
i. Immediately on
vesting
25%
ii. 12 months after
vesting
25%
iii. 24 months after
vesting
25%
iv. On the
appointment of a liquidator to DCI, the remaining Ordinary Shares
will vest immediately.
v. If a liquidator is appointed
before all/any Plan Shares vest, vesting will occur as the
liquidator returns capital to shareholders but the capital returned
will be paid in full pro rata and there will be no phasing of
payments as set out in (i)-(iii) above.
4. It should be
noted that all Plan Shares held in the ESOP will receive capital
returns from DCI from the first capital distribution (i.e. before
any Plan Shares vest). Therefore the ESOP will receive
distributions before any Plan Shares have vested. These
distributions will be used by the ESOP to repay the DCI loan to the
ESOP. This means that when the suspension market
capitalisation of DCI (€52.27 million) has been returned to
Shareholders the ESOP will have received its pro rata share thus
repaying DCI's loan in full.
5. Any Plan Shares
that have not vested by 30 June 2027 will not be capable of vesting
and together with those Plan Shares still held by the ESOP (but not
allocated) will be cancelled at nil cost to DCI. The assets
attributable to the cancelled Plan Shares are effectively shared
amongst the other Ordinary Shares in issue (including any vested
Plan Shares).
6. However, if a
liquidator is appointed prior to 30 June 2027 at the instigation of
Shareholders and not the current Directors, all unvested Plan
Shares will vest on the liquidator's appointment.
It is the current intention of the
Board that, once the ESOP is established, they will award the Plan
Shares acquired by the ESOP as follows:
Sean
Hurst
10% of the Plan Shares owned by the ESOP.
Nicolai
Huls
40% of the Plan Shares owned by the ESOP.
Nicholas
Paris
40% of the Plan Shares owned by the ESOP.
10% of the Plan Shares owned by the ESOP will remain unallocated and
available for future allocation to members of the DCI
team.
DEFINITIONS
The following definitions
apply throughout this
announcement, unless the context
otherwise requires:
"AIM"
|
the AIM
Market of the London Stock Exchange;
|
"Aristo Developers"
|
Aristo Developers Limited, Cyprus;
|
"B
Shares"
|
has the meaning given in the
Guernsey Articles;
|
"Board" or "Directors"
|
the directors of the Company;
|
"BVI"
|
British Virgin Islands;
|
"Capital Proceeds"
|
the proceeds of realising the
Company's investments (net of all fees, costs and expenses payable
by the Company);
|
"Cavendish"
|
Cavendish Capital Markets
Limited;
|
"Circular"
|
the Company's circular to
shareholders dated 8 November 2024;
|
"Company" or "DCI"
|
DCI Advisors Ltd;
|
"CREST"
|
the computer-based system and
related facilities and procedures operated by Euroclear UK &
International Limited;
|
"DCP"
|
Dolphin Capital Partners
Limited;
|
"Depositary Interests"
|
de-materialised depositary interests
representing Ordinary Shares issues by the depositary,
Computershare Investor Services PLC, and settled in
CREST;
|
"ESOP"
|
the Employee Share Ownership Plan
being proposed as part of the Management
Incentive Scheme;
|
"Euroclear"
|
the system of paperless settlement
of trades and the holdings of shares without share certificates
administered by Euroclear Bank S.A.;
|
"Extraordinary General Meeting" or "EGM"
|
the extraordinary general meeting
of Shareholders to be held at 55
Athol Street, Douglas, Isle of Man Im1 1LA on
12 December 2024 at 10 a.m.., notice of
which is
set out in this
document;
|
"Form of Proxy"
|
the form of proxy enclosed with this document for use in connection with the
EGM;
|
"Guernsey Articles"
|
the amended memorandum and articles
of incorporation of the Company to be adopted at the EGM and upon
the re-registration of the Company in Guernsey;
|
"Incentive Scheme"
|
the proposed management incentive
scheme described more fully in Appendix 3 of the
Circular;
|
"Kilada Project" or "Kilada"
|
Kilada Country Club, Golf &
Residences, Greece;
|
"Livka Bay"
|
the development site owned by the
Company and located on the island of Å olta, Dalmatia,
Croatia;
|
"London Stock Exchange"
|
London Stock Exchange
plc;
|
"Migration"
|
the de-registration of the Company
in the BVI and the re-registration of the Company in Guernsey
pursuant to Guernsey law;
|
"Nomad"
|
Nominated Adviser as required by the
AIM Rules;
|
"Notice"
|
the notice
convening the EGM set out in the
Circular;
|
"Ordinary Resolution"
|
a resolution of the Shareholders
passed at the EGM by a simple majority of the votes recorded on a
show of hands or by way of a poll;
|
"Ordinary Shares"
|
ordinary shares of €0.01 each in the
Company and, save where the context requires otherwise, Depositary
Interests representing such ordinary shares;
|
"Proposals"
|
the proposals set out in the
Circular to be voted upon at the EGM;
|
"Realisation Strategy"
|
the Investing Policy &
Realisation Strategy which was approved by Shareholders in December
2021;
|
"Register"
|
the Company's register of
Shareholders;
|
"Resolutions"
|
the resolutions set out in the Notice;
|
"Shareholders"
|
the holders
of Ordinary
Shares;
|
"Special Resolution"
|
a resolution of the holders of not
less than 75% of the Ordinary Shares represented and voted at the
EGM;
|
"SPVs"
|
the special purpose vehicles
directly or indirectly owned by the Company;
|
"Takeover Code"
|
the UK City Code on Takeovers and
Mergers;
|
"Termination"
|
the termination of DCP's management
contract on 20 March 2023; and
|
"Zoniro"
|
Zoniro S.A..
|