TIDMFDSA
RNS Number : 5022M
Fidessa Group PLC
31 July 2017
31st July 2017
Fidessa group plc
Interim results for the period ended 30th June 2017
Fidessa reports steady progress
2017 2016 Change At constant
currencies
*
Revenue GBP177.6m GBP158.3m +12% +2%
Profit before tax GBP25.4m GBP22.2m +14% -2%
Diluted earnings per
share 48.2p 40.9p +18%
Interim dividend per
share 15.3p 14.3p +7%
Cash GBP71.0m GBP66.9m +6%
* Constant currency variances are calculated by comparing 2017
results with 2016 results retranslated at the rates of exchange
prevailing during 2017 and excluding exchange gains and losses
within operating expenses from both years.
Highlights for the period ended 30th June 2017:
-- Solid revenue growth across all business lines and regions.
-- Constant currency profit before tax grew 2% excluding
one-time and duplicate costs associated with relocating main US
office from New York to Jersey City.
-- Good international spread with 66% of total revenue accounted for outside of Europe.
-- Continued strong growth in multi-asset revenue with five new derivatives deals signed.
-- Recurring revenue representing 88% of total revenue.
-- Strong cash generation with GBP71.0 million cash balance
after dividend payments of GBP30.1 million.
-- Interim dividend increased by 7% to 15.3 pence.
Commenting on these results, Chris Aspinwall, Chief Executive,
said:
"The first half of 2017 has seen little change in the market
conditions being faced by our customers, with political
uncertainty, structural and regulatory changes all continuing to
have an impact. However, many of these structural and regulatory
drivers are also generating opportunities for Fidessa, and the
delays in customer decision making noted during the first quarter
started to ease slightly during the second quarter. Overall, whilst
there remained clear evidence of stress within the market, levels
of new business activity remained generally high and, when combined
with the continued weakness of sterling, this enabled us to deliver
solid growth during the half. As noted in the 2016 preliminary
announcement, Fidessa incurred some one-time and duplicate costs in
respect of the relocation of its main US office from New York to
Jersey City, and this reduced the profit after tax margin by
approximately 0.5% during the first half. In line with previous
guidance we expect these costs to reduce the profit after tax
margin by around 1% for the full year.
Moving into the second half, whilst it remains unclear exactly
how our customers will be affected by the regulatory, structural
and political changes, we expect the opportunities we are seeing
will continue to develop. This is particularly in the areas of
derivatives trading, electronic trading and our customers' use of
equity correlated assets (ETFs, swaps, etc.). We also expect that
MiFID II will go ahead as planned although we believe there will be
some phasing in the way it is implemented during 2018.
Overall, we continue to believe that we are well positioned to
benefit from the opportunities that will arise in the markets as a
result of regulatory and structural change. We remain cash
generative providing strong support for our dividend policy, and
continue to expect that 2017 constant currency revenue growth will
be around the levels that we saw during 2016."
Commenting on the longer-term outlook, Chris Aspinwall
continued:
"Looking further ahead, although it is clear that uncertainty is
going to be a strong theme within our market for some time, we
believe that we are entering a period where opportunity is
returning. We expect this opportunity to arise both from customers
developing their businesses in response to market changes and also
as a result of other vendors struggling with the scale needed to
operate successfully in the increasingly complex environment. We
believe we will see further progress with our multi-asset
initiative and will continue to look at the possibility of
extending our asset class coverage further. We believe that across
all asset classes, the market is moving towards the increased use
of service-based solutions and that few vendors have the depth of
applications, operational expertise and the scale of infrastructure
needed to deliver these solutions. We are committed to playing an
increasingly important role in the markets as customers focus on
efficiency, transparency, compliance and performance, and expect
that this will provide us with significant opportunities for
further growth."
Finance review
For the six months to 30th June 2017, Fidessa achieved revenue
of GBP177.6 million, which represents growth on a reported basis of
12% (2016: GBP158.3 million and 9% growth) and on a constant
currency basis of 2%. Recurring revenue of GBP156.5 million grew
15% and represents 88% of total revenue (2016: GBP136.4 million, 8%
growth and 86% of total revenue).
Revenue for the sell-side business of GBP165.8 million grew 13%
(2016: GBP147.1 million and 9% growth) and for the buy-side
business revenue of GBP11.8 million grew 5% (2016: GBP11.3 million
and 5% growth). Within the sell-side business, equities revenue of
GBP143.5 million grew 12% (2016: GBP128.2 million) and derivatives
revenue of GBP22.3 million grew 18% (2016: GBP18.9 million), with
derivatives revenue now representing 13% of total revenue (2016:
12% of total revenue) and 12% of recurring revenue (2016: 11% of
recurring revenue).
Revenue grew in all regions and 66% of total revenue was
accounted for outside of Europe. The Americas grew 19% on a
reported basis (4% on a constant currency basis) and was the
largest region, accounting for 45% of total revenue. Europe grew 2%
on a reported basis (but declined 2% on a constant currency basis)
and accounted for 34% of total revenue. Asia grew 17% on a reported
basis (3% on a constant currency basis) and accounted for 21% of
total revenue. The currency tailwind in Europe reflects that over
25% of revenue for the region is denominated in currencies other
than sterling.
Foreign currency exchange rates created a significant tailwind
in the first half of 2017 compared to the first half of 2016.
Sterling was 11% weaker against the US dollar and currencies pegged
to the US dollar and 10% weaker against the Japanese yen. This has
resulted in an increased variance between headline growth rates and
constant currency growth rates. At current exchange rates, there
will be a small headwind in the second half of 2017 compared to the
second half of 2016 and accordingly the variance between headline
growth rates and constant currency growth rates is expected to
reduce for the full year. During the first half of 2017, 74% of
revenue was denominated in foreign currencies, predominantly US
dollars which accounted for 58% of revenue in the period.
As anticipated, during the first half of 2017 consolidations and
closures across the customer base continued but at a reduced level
of 2% compared to 4% in 2016 and a peak of 8%. Fidessa's current
expectation is that these will be around 2% for 2017 as a
whole.
Total operating expenses for the first half of 2017 grew 12% to
GBP152.8 million (2016: GBP136.5 million) with approximately
two-thirds of the increase attributable to foreign currency
exchange rate movements. The GBP16.3 million increase in operating
expenses includes a GBP10.2 million increase in total staff costs
and a GBP4.0 million increase in communications and data costs. The
average number of people employed during the first half of 2017 was
1,735 (first half of 2016: 1,745).
Relocation of our main US office from New York to Jersey City
remains on track for the second half. The strength of our balance
sheet enables us to fund the fit out of this facility ourselves,
rather than using financing. We anticipate a cash outflow, net of
landlord incentives, of approximately GBP12 million in relation to
this fit out during 2017 and approximately a 1% reduction in profit
after tax margin as a result of one-time and duplicate costs
associated with the move. During the first half of 2017 capital
expenditure for the fit out totalled GBP3.2 million and one-off
costs totalled GBP1.0 million, reducing profit after tax margin by
around 0.5%.
Development expenditure capitalised in the first half of GBP16.7
million grew 7% (2016: GBP15.6 million) and net capitalisation of
development expenditure of GBP2.8 million increased from
GBP1.1million in the first half of 2016. At 30th June 2017 core
development and research headcount of 517 was 9% higher than the
474 at 30th June 2016.
Profit before tax has increased 14% to GBP25.4 million (2016:
GBP22.2 million), being a profit before tax margin of 14.3% (2016:
14.0%) and has benefitted from the positive impact of foreign
currency exchange rate movements in the half. On a constant
currency basis, profit before tax declined 2%, however when
excluding the GBP1.0 million of costs associated with the Jersey
City move, profit before tax grew 2% on a constant currency
basis.
The effective rate of tax for the six months ended 30th June
2017 has reduced to 26.2% (2016: 28.9%). The tax rate for the first
half of 2017 has benefitted from a reduction in the UK and Japan
Corporation tax rates and a lower proportion of profits in higher
tax rate jurisdictions as a result of the one-time Jersey City move
costs. The tax rate for the first half of 2016 was negatively
impacted by the retrospective first time adoption of the research
and development expenditure credit regime ('RDEC').
Diluted earnings per share has increased during the first half
by 18% to 48.2 pence (2016: 40.9 pence).
Fidessa continues to be strongly cash generative, closing the
period with cash balances of GBP71.0 million (2016: GBP66.9
million) and no debt. During the period, dividends of GBP30.1
million (2016: GBP27.0 million) have been paid and capital
expenditure totalled GBP6.2 million (2016: GBP3.3 million).
An interim dividend of 15.3 pence (2016: 14.3 pence) has been
declared. It will be paid on 21st September 2017 to shareholders on
the register at the close of business on 25th August 2017, with an
ex-dividend date of 24th August 2017.
Market review
Introduction
The first half of 2017 has continued to see a challenging
environment for Fidessa's customers. Uncertainty has followed the
Brexit vote, the elections in Europe and the new US administration,
and this uncertainty is coupled with both structural and regulatory
change within the market. For the financial markets the first
quarter of 2017 showed unusually low volatility, intense
competition and increasing liquidity costs all of which impacted
Fidessa's customers, and resulted in some of the largest equity
trading firms posting revenue declines across the sector. With the
forthcoming implementation of MiFID II, some firms are also likely
to experience a period where they are unable to take on significant
new programmes whilst they complete the work necessary to comply
with the new regulations. Fidessa's April Interim Management
Statement noted that customers were taking longer to make decisions
than normal during the first quarter and Fidessa believes that
these pressures in the markets had a material impact on this.
Fidessa has noted that the delays in decision making have started
to ease slightly in the second quarter although is it too early to
know if this is part of a trend.
Despite the challenging environment, Fidessa has continued to
see opportunities due to the changing markets. MiFID II which,
among the many areas it touches, increases the focus on execution
and research by forcing the pricing for each to be unbundled
(separated) is one example. One effect of this is that firms have
to be more focused on execution quality and need to have platforms
and tools that can deliver fast, efficient, transparent and
measurable execution. This unbundling of execution and research is
also starting to be seen as best practice on a more global basis
and so is no longer only relevant for Europe. Another changing area
of the market is the large inflow of investment into Exchange
Traded Fund (ETF) products which have been growing at an
unprecedented rate. Whilst this creates challenges for some
buy-side firms that are seeing a resulting outflow from their
managed funds, it also creates opportunity as ETFs typically
require large and complex baskets to be managed and executed
efficiently. Some of these baskets may also contain foreign
equities and derivatives products and may require the use of
correlated assets adding further complexity to the trading
process.
Whilst the markets are challenging and the complex opportunities
require more technology, there remains a strong focus on cost
within Fidessa's customer base. As a result there is increasing
interest within larger firms, both in outsourcing technology to
third parties and also in making greater use of service-based
platforms. The drive for efficiency is also creating a push towards
greater integration and this, coupled with increasing demands from
regulators, is moving customers towards a smaller number of key
vendors.
As a result of the structural, market and cost drivers, Fidessa
has continued to make progress as customers continue to take a more
strategic approach. Whilst this approach often results in customers
making investments in key areas of their business, it does also
have the potential to cause some restructuring within Fidessa's
customer base resulting in Fidessa seeing some loss of business
through closures and consolidations. During the first half of 2017
the headwind from these closures and consolidations has reduced to
2% and whilst Fidessa expects further such activity in 2017, on the
basis of what is visible at this time, Fidessa believes it will see
a similar level of headwind for 2017 as a whole.
Although it is currently too early to say what the full
implications of Brexit will be, Fidessa believes that the global
nature of its trading platforms means that it will be less
susceptible to its effects, as key trading infrastructure is likely
to continue to operate on a cross-border basis. Fidessa already has
a legal presence within mainland Europe through its French
subsidiary, and will continue to monitor the situation as the
position becomes clearer.
The investments Fidessa has made to extend the range of asset
classes it supports, expand its regional coverage and build out its
global infrastructure have positioned it particularly well to help
its customers deal with the current challenging global market.
Fidessa believes that the value of its robust, service-based
platforms, and the importance of its multi-asset strategy, will
become increasingly clear as firms adapt to the new market
landscape.
Sell-side trading
Across its sell-side business, Fidessa has continued to make
steady progress. Whilst the challenges facing Fidessa's customers
are well documented, increasing clarity around both regulation and
the shape firms will need to be to address the structural changes
coming to the markets, are creating an increased number of
opportunities.
While MiFID II touches a wide number of different areas, one of
its key elements is the unbundling of pricing for research and
execution. From Fidessa's perspective this has put a lot more
emphasis on execution quality, where firms have to be much clearer
about the execution service they provide, how it is priced and the
value that has been derived from it. Across the industry there has
been talk of a potential "arms race" as firms look to improve the
execution service they offer to their customers and use new tools
and technology in order to deliver this service. Fidessa believes
that its vision of providing a global, scalable, fully managed
platform that allows customers to plug in and trade any listed
instrument anywhere in the world in a systematic way, combined with
a range of execution tools, fits well with the direction of the
industry. During the first half Fidessa has continued to expand its
electronic execution service, which is also being recognised across
the industry with a series of awards. These included the Waters
Sell-side Technology Award for Best Front Office Execution Platform
and the CTA Intelligence US Award for Best Trading and Execution
Technology.
In addition to its core execution platform, Fidessa also helps
its customers achieve better execution through a number of
different tools. Fidessa's Optimised Trading initiative provides a
range of tools targeted directly at this space. These include the
Order Performance Monitor which gives brokers insight into their
orders and executions in real time and Fidessa Prospector which
monitors a range of live and historical data to provide context and
help identify liquidity. These tools have been well received as
they roll out to customers across the regions and Fidessa expects
that more customers will adopt these tools during the second half
as MiFID II approaches. Fidessa has also continued to win awards
for these tools with Prospector being voted Best New Product in the
annual Fund Technology & WSL (Wall Street Letter) Awards.
In the 2016 preliminary results announcement, Fidessa noted that
research published by the Tabb Group in the fourth quarter of 2016
indicated that the FCM (Futures Commission Merchant) community
believe they have weathered the worst of the storm, and that the
tide of the business will rise over time. Fidessa noted it was
seeing some evidence of this improvement in market conditions
within its pipeline at the time and, during the first half, five
new derivatives deals were signed with a good pipeline continuing
into the second half. Fidessa's vision of bringing high quality
workflow and execution to derivatives trading is resonating across
multiple segments of the market including both global and regional
firms. Fidessa expects that it will be able to broaden the appeal
of its derivatives offering into regional tier two and potentially
tier three firms as well as to a wider range of CTFs (commodity
trading firms) and buy-side firms. The continued expansion of the
customer base means that Fidessa's derivatives business remains on
track to make a positive contribution to Fidessa's overall
profitability within two years.
Within the regions, Asia has continued to deliver solid growth
helped by a robust performance from Japan. Fidessa has continued to
add to the Chinese brokers that use its service out of Hong Kong,
with Sinolink Securities the latest firm to go live. Sinolink is
listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange and has extensive business
operations across China. This growing network of Chinese brokers
using Fidessa for their international business gives Fidessa a
strong position in this market and provides the opportunity to
develop relations into mainland China in the future. In Japan
Fidessa has continued to make good progress with the delivery of
additional platforms for domestic customers, but is also seeing
increased interest from foreign brokers looking to develop a local
market presence as part of their global offering.
With the changing market conditions, Fidessa continues to
investigate the potential for further extending the range of asset
classes it supports. This has involved looking at the rates segment
of the fixed income market and Fidessa has maintained its strategy
of building out its execution capability and supporting derivatives
of the rates products. Fidessa also continues to investigate other
opportunities within the FICC segment. In addition to this, Fidessa
is seeing opportunity for expansion into smaller asset classes such
as convertible bonds with increased interest in other equity
correlated assets such as swaps, ETFs and options. All of these
assets fit easily against Fidessa's vision of a global, multi-asset
execution platform and also create the opportunity to leverage
Fidessa's workflow and infrastructure capability.
Buy-side trading
Fidessa's buy-side customers have continued to face difficult
market conditions, with the move towards passive investment
strategies, such as ETFs, presenting a particular challenge for
active funds. The impending arrival of MiFID II is also a key focus
and touches on a number of areas within buy-side firms. One of
these is the requirement for research costs to be unbundled from
trading fees which creates the requirement for much more formal
management of all the activities carried out with executing
brokers.
Fidessa has been working closely with its buy-side customers
throughout the first half to help them make changes to their
processes to meet the MiFID II timescales. At the same time,
Fidessa has continued its extensive MiFID II programme which will
deliver capabilities, such as new transaction reporting tools,
storage of data for "best execution" and an enhanced commission
calculator to handle research unbundling.
Whilst compliance is only becoming higher profile, the demands
made on compliance teams continue to grow. As well as preparing for
MiFID II, these teams need to deal with increased data management,
growing rule sets and a customer base which is more willing to move
funds from one asset manager to another and expects fast
on-boarding. To assist customers with this, Fidessa has introduced
new enhancements to its Sentinel Portfolio Compliance solution
empowering these teams to better code, test and consolidate rules,
on-board and terminate accounts more quickly and control and manage
breaches more efficiently.
Although the growth of ETFs and the corresponding outflow from
managed funds creates challenges for many buy-side firms, it also
creates some opportunities for Fidessa. ETFs typically consist of
large and complex baskets of instruments which need to be correctly
managed, for example ensuring that when the underlying holdings
within an ETF are considered, the investment portfolio it is used
in remains correctly weighted/distributed. Fidessa's Portfolio
Studio gives asset managers the capabilities they need to manage
these complex instruments, as well as a powerful and flexible means
to rapidly test the impact of potential investment strategies in a
structured, auditable environment.
Fidessa's network of execution venues has continued to expand in
2017, with a particular focus on fixed income venues for the
buy-side. A partnership with InvestSoft, a fixed income and risk
analytics provider, will help Fidessa deliver sophisticated
execution tools and data analysis for fixed income markets to the
user's desktop. Fidessa expects that there will be a general trend
towards the greater use of execution tools across the buy-side, and
is well positioned to leverage its experience in the sell-side to
meet this growing demand.
With a customer base and product set that covers both the
buy-side and sell-side, Fidessa has continued to leverage its
position and deliver innovative solutions in the post-trade space.
Fidessa is committed to lowering costs and increasing the speed and
reliability of post-trade operations by providing services and
infrastructure that enable all parties to implement timely,
efficient, exception-based processing across asset classes and
markets. Although closures in the market have affected the number
of confirmations, the customer base for Fidessa's Affirmation
Management Service (AMS), which targets this space, has continued
to grow. Initially targeting the equities and fixed income
segments, this growth has been both organic and driven by a number
of bi-lateral partnerships with other service providers. Fidessa is
also working with a number of tier-one asset managers and clearing
brokers to target the derivatives post trade workflow, providing
structure, rigour and control in what is currently very much a
manually operated process. AMS for derivatives is expected to go
live in the second half of the year.
Regulation
Regulation continues to be a key focus across Fidessa's customer
base, with attention centred on the imminent implementation of
MiFID II in Europe and the uncertainty in America following the US
election.
In Europe, Fidessa has worked closely with its customers and has
an extensive MiFID II platform development programme in place. The
programme will deliver enhanced controls, increased transparency,
regulatory order and trade data, compliance monitoring and SI
quoting capabilities. Fidessa is already in the process of rolling
out the core building blocks of this programme to its customer base
in preparation to meet the planned MiFID II go-live date of 3rd
January 2018. However, despite the short amount of time remaining
before the go-live date, there is still considerable regulatory
discussion ongoing and it is expected that some rules may yet be
changed or adjusted prior to go-live. Areas that are particularly
relevant to Fidessa's customers are in the rules surrounding SIs
(Systematic Internalisers) and the implementation of research
unbundling. In particular the current rules around SIs have the
potential to make the execution landscape considerably more
complex, and Fidessa's customers are still working through the
implications of this and how it might affect their business. As a
result, Fidessa expects that the MiFID II programme will have a
long tail, and that market changes and additional elements will
continue to be required well into 2018. This is expected to provide
opportunities for Fidessa to deploy new services to assist its
customers in meeting their MiFID II obligations over this longer
period.
In the US, Fidessa is expecting to see a period of regulatory
uncertainty. In particular Fidessa noted in the 2016 preliminary
announcement that following the unanimous approval of a proposal to
move forward with Regulation Automated Trading (RegAT) by the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), work on the definition
of RegAT was not finalised before the US election as had originally
been planned. The new administration has indicated a desire to
review regulation generally and make significant structural
alterations to the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act
of 2010 (the "Dodd-Frank Act"). At this time Fidessa does not
believe that RegAT will go ahead in its original form and expects
that in the short term, there may be a slowdown in the drafting of
new regulations, whilst others that are already in progress, such
as the Consolidate Audit Trail (CAT), may continue as planned.
Fidessa also believes that most large firms will continue to look
for best practice when managing their risk and workflow, and so may
adopt some MiFID II principles, particularly around research
unbundling, as their global standard.
Fidessa continues to believe that in order to meet their
regulatory and best practice obligations, firms in all regions will
be under increasing pressure to have tighter integration of all
their electronic flow and to ensure that workflow across all the
regulated asset classes is well managed. Fidessa expects that this
will drive more customers towards its solutions as they find this
is the most cost effective way to achieve this requirement.
Outlook
Whilst it remains unclear exactly how its customers will be
affected by the regulatory, structural and political changes,
Fidessa expects that the opportunities it is seeing will continue
to develop. This is particularly in the areas of derivatives
trading, electronic trading and its customers' use of equity
correlated assets (ETFs, swaps, etc.). Fidessa also expects that
MiFID II will go ahead as planned although it believes that there
will be some phasing in the way it is implemented during 2018.
Overall, Fidessa continues to believe that it is well positioned
to benefit from the opportunities that will arise in the markets as
a result of regulatory and structural change. Fidessa remains cash
generative providing strong support for its dividend policy, and
expects that 2017 constant currency revenue growth will be around
the levels seen during 2016.
Looking further ahead, although it is clear that uncertainty is
going to be a strong theme within the markets for some time,
Fidessa believes that it is entering a period where opportunity is
returning. Fidessa expects this opportunity to arise both from
customers developing their businesses in response to market changes
and also as a result of other vendors struggling with the scale
needed to operate successfully in the increasingly complex
environment. Fidessa believes that it will see further progress
with its multi-asset initiative and will continue to look at the
possibility of extending its asset class coverage further. Fidessa
believes that across all asset classes, the market is moving
towards the increased use of service-based solutions and that few
vendors have the depth of applications, operational expertise and
the scale of infrastructure needed to deliver these solutions.
Fidessa is committed to playing an increasingly important role in
the markets as customers focus on efficiency, transparency,
compliance and performance, and expects that this will provide it
with significant opportunities for further growth.
Enquiries:
Chris Aspinwall, Chief Ed Bridges, FTI Consulting
Executive LLP
Andy Skelton, Chief Financial
Officer
www.fidessa.com
Tel:: +44 (0) 20 7105 Tel: +44 (0) 20 3727
1000 1000
Email: eu.info@fidessa.com
Consolidated interim income statement
for the six months ended 30th June 2017
2017 2016 2016
6 months to 6 months to 12 months to
30(th) June 30(th) June 31(st) December
unaudited unaudited audited
Note GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Revenue 5 177,603 158,340 331,935
Operating expenses 6 (152,783) (136,460) (283,919)
Other operating income 388 169 454
Operating profit 5 25,208 22,049 48,470
Finance income 184 192 350
Profit before income tax 25,392 22,241 48,820
Total income tax expense 8 (6,658) (6,426) (13,066)
Profit for the period attributable to owners 18,734 15,815 35,754
------------ ------------ ----------------
Basic earnings per share 9 48.8p 41.4p 93.5p
Diluted earnings per share 9 48.2p 40.9p 92.3p
Consolidated interim statement of comprehensive income
for the six months ended 30th June 2017
2017 2016 2016
6 months to 6 months to 12 months to
30(th) June 30(th) June 31(st) December
unaudited unaudited audited
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Profit for the period from the income statement 18,734 15,815 35,754
Other comprehensive income
Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss:
Exchange differences arising on translation of foreign operations (793) 4,279 4,778
Total comprehensive income for the period 17,941 20,094 40,532
------------ ------------ ----------------
Consolidated interim balance sheet
at 30th June 2017
2017 2016 2016
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
Note GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Assets
Non-current assets
Property, plant and equipment 20,471 22,088 20,570
Intangible assets 96,065 91,986 93,465
Deferred tax assets 10,079 8,600 9,925
Other receivables 1,670 2,408 2,000
---------- ---------- ----------
Total non-current assets 128,285 125,082 125,960
---------- ---------- ----------
Current assets
Trade and other receivables 11 88,999 82,711 83,132
Cash and cash equivalents 70,989 66,917 95,152
---------- ---------- ----------
Total current assets 159,988 149,628 178,284
---------- ---------- ----------
Total assets 288,273 274,710 304,244
---------- ---------- ----------
Equity
Issued capital 3,865 3,846 3,858
Share premium 34,593 33,289 34,153
Merger reserve 17,938 17,938 17,938
Cumulative translation
adjustment 6,450 6,744 7,243
Retained earnings 91,645 86,997 101,885
---------- ---------- ----------
Total equity 154,491 148,814 165,077
---------- ---------- ----------
Liabilities
Non-current liabilities
Other payables 12 11,564 9,479 10,557
Provisions 1,786 2,721 2,078
Deferred tax liabilities 6,519 6,312 6,314
---------- ---------- ----------
Total non-current liabilities 19,869 18,512 18,949
---------- ---------- ----------
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables 12 104,911 96,776 113,169
Provisions 1,391 939 1,309
Current income tax liabilities 7,611 9,669 5,740
---------- ---------- ----------
Total current liabilities 113,913 107,384 120,218
---------- ---------- ----------
Total liabilities 133,782 125,896 139,167
---------- ---------- ----------
Total equity and liabilities 288,273 274,710 304,244
---------- ---------- ----------
Consolidated interim statement of changes in shareholders'
equity
Issued Share Merger Translation Retained Total
Note capital premium reserve reserve earnings equity
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Balances at 1(st)
January 2016 (audited) 3,827 31,825 17,938 2,465 97,395 153,450
--------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------
Total comprehensive
income for the period
Profit for the period - - - - 15,815 15,815
Other comprehensive
income - - - 4,279 - 4,279
--------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------
- - - 4,279 15,815 20,094
Transactions with
owners
Issue of shares
- exercise of options 19 1,464 - - - 1,483
Employee share incentive
charges 6 - - - - 379 379
Current tax recognised
direct to equity - - - - 464 464
Deferred tax recognised
direct to equity - - - - 274 274
Purchase of shares
by employee share
trusts - - - - (327) (327)
Dividends paid 10 - - - - (27,003) (27,003)
--------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------
Balances at 30(th)
June 2016 (unaudited) 3,846 33,289 17,938 6,744 86,997 148,814
--------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------
Total comprehensive
income for the period
Profit for the period - - - - 19,939 19,939
Other comprehensive
income - - - 499 - 499
--------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------
499 19,939 20,438
Transactions with
owners
Issue of shares
- exercise of options 12 864 - - - 876
Employee share incentive
charges - - - - 1,361 1,361
Current tax recognised
direct to equity - - - - 231 231
Deferred tax recognised
direct to equity - - - - (468) (468)
Purchase of shares
by employee share
trusts - - - - (685) (685)
Dividends paid 10 - - - - (5,490) (5,490)
--------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------
Balances at 31(st)
December 2016 (audited) 3,858 34,153 17,938 7,243 101,885 165,077
--------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------
Total comprehensive
income for the period
Profit for the period - - - - 18,734 18,734
Other comprehensive
income - - - (793) - (793)
--------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------
- - - (793) 18,734 17,941
Transactions with
owners
Issue of shares
- exercise of options 7 440 - - - 447
Employee share incentive
charges 6 - - - - 1,515 1,515
Current tax recognised
direct to equity - - - - 128 128
Deferred tax recognised
direct to equity - - - - (42) (42)
Purchase of shares
by employee share
trusts - - - - (474) (474)
Dividends paid 10 - - - - (30,101) (30,101)
--------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------
Balances at 30(th)
June 2017 (unaudited) 3,865 34,593 17,938 6,450 91,645 154,491
--------- --------- --------- ------------ ---------- ---------
Consolidated interim cash flow statement
for the six months ended 30th June 2017
2017 2016 2016
6 months 6 months 12 months
to to to
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
Note GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Cash flows from operating
activities
Profit before income
tax for the period 25,392 22,241 48,820
Adjustments for:
Staff costs - share incentives 6 1,515 379 1,740
Depreciation of property,
plant and equipment 6 5,606 5,841 12,085
Amortisation of product
development 6 13,901 14,534 27,477
Amortisation of acquired
intangibles 6 243 365 730
Amortisation of other
intangible assets 6 120 111 219
Profit on sale of property,
plant and equipment 6 - (34) (48)
Finance income (184) (192) (350)
Cash generated from operations
before changes in working
capital 46,593 43,245 90,673
Movement in trade and
other receivables (5,537) (10,829) (10,842)
Movement in trade and
other payables (7,124) 1,039 12,600
---------- ---------- ----------
Cash generated from operations 33,932 33,455 92,431
Income tax paid (4,651) (4,150) (12,065)
---------- ---------- ----------
Net cash generated from
operating activities 29,281 29,305 80,366
---------- ---------- ----------
Cash flows from investing
activities
Purchase of property,
plant and equipment (6,037) (3,283) (6,948)
Proceeds from sale of
property, plant and equipment - 236 94
Purchase of other intangible
assets (151) (58) (157)
Product development capitalised 6 (16,726) (15,638) (30,424)
Interest received on
cash and cash equivalents 184 192 350
Net cash used in investing
activities (22,730) (18,551) (37,085)
---------- ---------- ----------
Cash flows from financing
activities
Proceeds from shares
issued 447 1,483 2,359
Purchase of shares by
employee share trusts (474) (343) (1,012)
Proceeds from sale of
shares by employee share
trusts - 16 -
Dividends paid 10 (30,101) (27,003) (32,493)
---------- ---------- ----------
Net cash used in financing
activities (30,128) (25,847) (31,146)
---------- ---------- ----------
Net (decrease)/increase
in cash and cash equivalents (23,577) (15,093) 12,135
Cash and cash equivalents
at 1(st) January 95,152 78,314 78,314
Effect of exchange rate
fluctuations on cash
held (586) 3,696 4,703
---------- ---------- ----------
Cash and cash equivalents
at end of period 70,989 66,917 95,152
---------- ---------- ----------
Notes to the condensed consolidated interim financial
statements
1 Reporting entity
Fidessa group plc (the "Company") is a company incorporated in
England and Wales. These condensed consolidated interim financial
statements of the Company as at and for the six months ended 30(th)
June 2017 comprise the Company and its subsidiaries (together the
"Group"). These condensed consolidated interim financial statements
are presented in Pounds Sterling, rounded to the nearest
thousand.
The information relating to the year ended 31(st) December 2016
is an extract from the audited financial statements for that year.
Those financial statements have been reported on by the Company's
auditor and delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The report of
the auditor was (i) unqualified, (ii) did not include a reference
to any matters to which the auditor drew attention by way of
emphasis without qualifying their report, and (iii) did not contain
a statement under section 498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act
2006.
The consolidated financial statements of the Group as at and for
the year ended 31(st) December 2016 are available at
www.fidessa.com/investor-relations/reports or upon request from the
Company's registered office at Dukes Court, Duke Street, Woking,
Surrey GU21 5BH.
These condensed consolidated interim financial statements are
unaudited but have been reviewed by KPMG LLP and its report is set
out below.
Consistent with the information in the most recent annual
report, the Group continues to have significant financial
resources, no debt, trade profitably and be strongly cash
generative. Therefore, after considering the Group's financial
forecasts and potential commitments for the foreseeable future, a
period of not less than 12 months from the date of this report, the
Board is satisfied that the Group's funding and liquidity position
means the going concern basis of preparation is appropriate in
preparing these condensed consolidated interim financial
statements.
2 Statement of compliance
These condensed consolidated interim financial statements have
been prepared in accordance with the Disclosure and Transparency
Rules of the Financial Conduct Authority and with the International
Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS) IAS 34 Interim Financial
Reporting as adopted by the EU. They do not include all of the
information required for full annual financial statements and
should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial
statements of the Group as at and for the year ended 31(st)
December 2016.
The condensed consolidated interim financial statements were
approved by the Board of Directors on 28(th) July 2017.
3 Significant accounting policies and recent accounting developments
The accounting policies and presentation applied by the Group in
these condensed consolidated interim financial statements are the
same as those applied by the Group in its consolidated financial
statements as at and for the year ended 31(st) December 2016. The
presentation of research and development expenditure credit regime
'RDEC' balances in the balance sheet and cash flow for the six
months ended 30(th) June 2016 have been amended, as described in
note 12. There are no new standards effective for the first time in
the current financial period with significant impact on the Group's
consolidated results or financial position.
IFRS15, 'Revenue from contracts with customers', is effective
for annual periods beginning on or after 1st January 2018, with
early adoption permitted. It establishes a comprehensive framework
for determining whether, how much and when revenue should be
recognised and it replaces existing revenue recognition guidance,
including IAS 18 Revenue. Depending on the particular contractual
arrangements in place, application of the new standard may change
the amount of revenue recognised on a contract and/or its timing,
and the timing of the recognition of contract costs compared with
current accounting policies. The Group is currently performing a
detailed assessment of the impact resulting from the application of
IFRS15 and will disclose additional information before it adopts
IFRS15.
IFRS16, 'Leases', was published in January 2016 and will become
effective in January 2019. IFRS16 introduces a single, on-balance
sheet lease accounting model for lessees. The Group has started to
assess the potential impact of the adoption of IFRS16 on its
consolidated financial statements.
4 Estimates
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with IFRSs
requires management to make estimates, judgements and assumptions
that affect the application of policies and reported amounts of
assets and liabilities, income and expenses. The estimates and
associated assumptions take account of the circumstances and facts
at the period end, historical experience of similar situations and
other factors that are believed to be reasonable and relevant, the
results for which form the basis of making the judgements about
carrying values of assets and liabilities that are not readily
available from other sources. Actual results may ultimately differ
from these estimates.
In preparing these condensed consolidated interim financial
statements, the significant judgements made by management in
applying the Group's accounting policies and the key sources of
estimation uncertainty were in the same areas as those that applied
to the consolidated financial statements as at and for the year
ended 31(st) December 2016.
The key foreign exchange rates used in the preparation of these
financial statements are:
Currency Closing rate Average rate
---------- ---------------------------- -------------------------------------
30(th) 30(th) 31(st) 6 months 6 months
June June December to 30(th) to 30(th) % change
2017 2016 2016 June June
2017 2016
---------- ------- ------- ---------- ----------- ----------- -----------
United
States
dollar 1.30 1.34 1.24 1.27 1.42 11%
---------- ------- ------- ---------- ----------- ----------- -----------
Japanese
yen 145.95 137.14 144.12 142.19 157.65 10%
---------- ------- ------- ---------- ----------- ----------- -----------
With the exception of the above and sterling, no other currency
comprised more than 5% of Group revenue.
5 Segment reporting
Fidessa is structured into two business units: Sell-side and
Buy-side. The Sell-side business unit provides solutions and tools
to support the trading of cash equities and derivatives globally.
The solutions are scalable from the largest to the smallest
operations in the sector. The Buy-side business unit provides the
systems to cover every stage of the investment process for all
asset classes. The systems are used by the largest investment
managers in the world, as well as some of the boutiques and hedge
funds. Both business units leverage the connectivity and market
data infrastructure.
The Operating Board monitors the performance of the business
units and the overall group. It monitors operating profit adjusted
to exclude amortisation of acquired intangibles and product
development capitalisation and amortisation, which is not an IFRS
measure. Finance income, assets and liabilities are not reported by
business unit.
No single external customer accounts for 5% or more of revenue.
Recurring revenue reflects the periodic fees for software and
related services that is charged on a rental or subscription basis.
Non-recurring revenue comprises the consultancy fees for
implementation, configuration and ongoing support activity.
Six months ended 30(th)
June 2017 (unaudited) Sell-side Buy-side Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Recurring revenue 146,792 9,750 156,542
Non-recurring revenue 19,040 2,021 21,061
---------- --------- ---------
Total revenue from external
customers 165,832 11,771 177,603
---------- --------- ---------
Inter-business unit revenue - 3,004 3,004
Operating profit as monitored
by the Operating Board 19,077 2,586 21,663
Amortisation of acquired
intangibles (243)
Product development capitalised 16,726
Product development amortised (13,901)
Research and development
expenditure grant 963
---------
Operating profit 25,208
Finance income 184
---------
Profit before income tax 25,392
---------
Six months ended 30th
June 2016 (unaudited) Sell-side Buy-side Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Recurring revenue 127,560 8,830 136,390
Non-recurring revenue 19,516 2,434 21,950
---------- --------- ---------
Total revenue from external
customers 147,076 11,264 158,340
---------- --------- ---------
Inter-business unit revenue - 3,141 3,141
Operating profit as monitored
by the Operating Board 18,204 2,293 20,497
Amortisation of acquired
intangibles (365)
Product development capitalised 15,638
Product development amortised (14,534)
Research and development
expenditure grant 813
---------
Operating profit 22,049
Finance income 192
---------
Profit before income tax 22,241
---------
12 months ended 31(st)
December 2016 (audited) Sell-side Buy-side Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Recurring revenue 269,211 18,594 287,805
Non-recurring revenue 39,649 4,481 44,130
---------- --------- ---------
Total revenue from external
customers 308,860 23,075 331,935
---------- --------- ---------
Inter-business unit revenue - 6,282 6,282
Operating profit as monitored
by the Operating Board 39,588 5,015 44,603
Amortisation of acquired
intangibles (730)
Product development capitalised 30,424
Product development amortised (27,477)
Research and development
expenditure grant 1,650
---------
Operating profit 48,470
Finance income 350
---------
Profit before income tax 48,820
---------
Revenue is attributed to a country based on the ownership of the
customer contract and where the work is being performed. The
revenue by region is detailed below.
2017 2016 2016
6 months 6 months 12 months
to to to
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Europe 60,316 59,161 120,031
Americas 79,142 66,677 142,575
Asia 38,145 32,502 69,329
Total revenue 177,603 158,340 331,935
---------- ---------- ----------
Within the regional analysis the following individual countries
have attributed revenue accounting for 10% or more of total
revenue.
2017 2016 2016
6 months 6 months 12 months
to to to
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
UK 60,316 59,161 120,031
USA 69,566 58,656 125,347
Hong Kong 23,375 20,255 42,814
6 Operating expenses
2017 2016 2016
6 months 6 months 12 months
to to to
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Staff costs - salaries 76,414 68,504 142,113
Staff costs - social security 6,349 5,667 11,121
Staff costs - pension 3,262 3,003 6,117
Staff costs - share incentives 1,515 379 1,740
Staff costs - medical
insurance 3,957 3,822 8,112
Staff costs - other benefits 286 226 503
---------- ---------- ----------
Total staff costs 91,783 81,601 169,706
Subcontractors 982 790 1,661
Depreciation of property,
plant and equipment 5,606 5,841 12,085
Amortisation of other
intangible assets 120 111 219
Amortisation of acquired
intangibles 243 365 730
Capitalisation of product
development (16,726) (15,638) (30,424)
Amortisation of product
development 13,901 14,534 27,477
Research and development
expenditure grant (963) (813) (1,650)
Communications and data 29,436 25,455 53,474
Operating lease rentals
- property 11,670 10,296 21,298
Operating lease rentals
- plant and machinery 28 56 142
Profit on sale of property,
plant and equipment - (34) (48)
Exchange loss / (gain) 716 (514) (1,149)
Other operating expenses 15,987 14,410 30,398
---------- ---------- ----------
Total operating expenses 152,783 136,460 283,919
---------- ----------
Other operating income of GBP388,000 (six months to 30(th) June
2016: GBP169,000; year to 31(st) December 2016: GBP454,000)
represents income from sublet offices space.
Included in total staff costs are the direct costs of research
and development of GBP23,116,000 (six months to 30(th) June 2016:
GBP20,203,000; year to 31(st) December 2016: GBP39,726,000) which
includes the amount capitalised above.
Included in total operating expenses are one-time and duplicate
costs associated with the relocation of Fidessa's main US office
from New York to Jersey City of GBP1,029,000 (six months to 30(th)
June 2016: GBPnil; year to 31(st) December 2016: GBPnil).
7 Staff numbers
The average number of people employed (including directors)
during the period was as follows:
2017 2017
Six months Six months 2016
to to Year to
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
Number Number Number
unaudited unaudited audited
Europe 863 853 851
The Americas 541 555 554
Asia 331 337 334
------------ ------------ ----------
Total average staff numbers
in the year 1,735 1,745 1,739
------------ ------------ ----------
The number of people employed (including directors) at the end
of each period was as follows:
2017 2016 2016
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
Number Number Number
unaudited unaudited audited
Delivery 487 523 497
Support 324 325 325
Core development and research 517 474 519
Operations 154 154 152
Sales 55 54 56
Marketing 39 43 37
Management and administration 151 155 150
----------- ----------- -----------
Total staff numbers at
end of period 1,727 1,728 1,736
----------- ----------- -----------
8 Income tax expense
The charge for tax for the six months to 30th June 2017 has been
calculated based on the estimate of the weighted average annual
income tax rate expected for the full year. Differences between the
anticipated effective tax rate and the statutory rate include, but
are not limited to, the effect of tax rates in foreign
jurisdictions, non-deductible expenses, tax incentives, tax
deductions not recognised in the income statement and under or over
provisions in previous periods.
The total tax charge for the six months to 30th June 2017 is
GBP6,658,000 (six months to 30th June 2016: GBP6,426,000). The tax
charge equates to an effective tax rate of 26.2% (six months to
30th June 2016: 28.9%, 12 months to 31st December 2016: 26.8%).
In 2016, the Group adopted the RDEC regime. As a result,
research and development tax credits previously reported within the
income tax expense are replaced by 'above the line' research and
development grants. The grants are shown as deferred income as they
are earned and are subsequently credited to income as a reduction
in operating expenses over the period that the related development
costs are amortised. A corresponding other receivable is recognised
at the time the grant is earned and will subsequently be offset
against tax payable.
In the six months ended 30 June 2017, grants totalling
GBP963,000 (six months to 30th June 2016: GBP813,000, 12 months to
31st December 2016: GBP1,650,000) have been credited to income as a
reduction to operating expenses (note 6).
9 Earnings per share
Earnings per share have been calculated by dividing profit
attributable to owners by the weighted average number of shares in
issue during the period, details of which are below. The diluted
earnings per share have been calculated using an average share
price of 2447p (six months to 30th June 2016: 2206p, 12 months to
31st December 2016: 2299p).
2017 2016 2016
6 months 6 months 12 months
to to to
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Profit attributable to
owners 18,734 15,815 35,754
---------- ---------- ----------
2017 2016 2016
6 months 6 months 12 months
to to to
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
Number Number Number
'000 '000 '000
Weighted average number
of shares in issue 38,617 38,369 38,455
Weighted average number
of shares held by employee
share trusts (244) (212) (220)
---------- ---------- ----------
Number of shares used
to calculate basic earnings
per share 38,373 38,157 38,235
Dilution due to share
incentives 502 548 519
---------- ---------- ----------
Number of shares used
to calculate diluted earnings
per share 38,875 38,705 38,754
---------- ---------- ----------
2017 2016 2016
6 months 6 months 12 months
to to to
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
Pence Pence Pence
Basic earnings per share 48.8p 41.4p 93.5p
Diluted earnings per share 48.2p 40.9p 92.3p
10 Dividends
The dividends paid in the periods covered by these condensed
consolidated interim financial statements are detailed below.
Dividend Dividend
per share value
Pence GBP'000
2015 interim dividend paid
15(th) September 2015 13.1 4,991
2015 final dividend paid 10(th)
June 2016 25.4 9,742
2015 special dividend paid
10(th) June 2016 45.0 17,261
2016 interim dividend paid
on 14(th) September 2016 14.3 5,489
2016 final dividend paid on
8(th) June 2017 28.2 10,855
2016 special dividend paid
on 8(th) June 2017 50.0 19,246
A 2017 interim dividend of 15.3 pence per share, amounting to an
expected dividend payment of GBP5,900,000 was declared by the
directors at their meeting on 28(th) July 2017. This interim
dividend will be payable on 21(st) September 2017 to shareholders
on the register at the close of business on 25(th) August 2017,
with an ex-dividend date of 24(th) August 2017. These condensed
consolidated interim financial statements do not reflect this
dividend payable.
11 Trade and other receivables
2017 2016 2016
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Current assets
Trade receivables 70,522 67,793 66,747
Prepayments 11,507 9,418 10,698
Accrued revenue 1,243 1,671 1,573
Other receivables - RDEC 4,748 3,471 3,056
Other receivables 979 358 1,058
---------- ---------- ----------
Total trade and other
receivables 88,999 82,711 83,132
---------- ---------- ----------
2017 2016 2016
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Non-current assets
Other receivables - deposits 1,670 2,408 2,000
---------- ---------- ----------
12 Trade and other payables
Current liabilities 2017 2016 2016
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Trade payables 6,762 4,066 6,814
Accrued expenses 29,823 26,150 34,532
Other liabilities 4,905 4,317 3,518
Deferred revenue 56,919 56,648 61,812
Deferred income - RDEC 2,059 1,490 1,878
Other taxes and social
security 4,443 4,105 4,615
---------- ---------- ----------
Total current trade and
other payables 104,911 96,776 113,169
---------- ---------- ----------
Non-current liabilities 2017 2016 2016
30(th) 30(th) 31(st)
June June December
unaudited unaudited audited
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
Accrued expenses 531 1,055 1,260
Deferred income - RDEC 2,884 1,168 2,336
Other liabilities 8,149 7,256 6,961
Total non-current trade
and other payables 11,564 9,479 10,557
---------- ---------- ----------
In the results for the six months ended 30(th) June 2016, grants
earned but not recognised in respect of RDEC were credited against
capitalised product development costs in intangible assets. The
presentation was amended in the results for the year ended 31(st)
December 2016 to show grants earned not recognised as deferred
income. The comparative numbers in the balance sheet and cash flow
for the six months ended 30(th) June 2016 have also been updated to
reflect this revised presentation.
Risk factors
As with all businesses, the Group is affected by certain risks,
not wholly within its control, which could have a material impact
on the Group's performance and could cause actual results to differ
materially from forecast and historic results. A summary of these
risks, which have not materially changed and are described in more
detail on pages 10 to 13 of the 2016 annual report, is as
follows:
(a) Economic conditions including instability in the world's financial markets.
(b) Service issues including failure of software and/or services
for individual or multiple customers.
(c) Security and data issues including unauthorised access to
and/or sabotage of systems and premises.
(d) Legal risks including contractual and intellectual property claims.
(e) Employee risks including loss of key employees and skills shortages.
(f) Financial risks including foreign exchange on transactions
or balances that are denominated in a foreign currency or collapse
of financial institutions holding Fidessa's cash deposits.
(g) Bribery, corruption and fraud.
(h) Regulatory issues affecting Fidessa and/or its customers.
Responsibility statement of the directors in respect of the
interim financial report
We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:
(a) the condensed set of financial statements, which has been
prepared in accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting',
gives a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial
position and profit or loss of the undertakings included in the
consolidation as a whole as required by DTR 4.2.4 R of the
disclosure and transparency rules;
(b) the interim management report includes a fair review of the
information required by DTR 4.2.7 R of the disclosure and
transparency rules; and
(c) the interim management report includes a fair review of the
information required by DTR 4.2.8 R of the disclosure and
transparency rules.
By order of the Board
Andy Skelton
Chief Financial Officer
28th July 2017
Independent review report to Fidessa group plc
Conclusion
We have been engaged by the company to review the condensed set
of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report for the
six months ended 30th June 2017 which comprises the Condensed
Consolidated Interim Income Statement, the Condensed Consolidated
Interim Statement of Comprehensive Income, the Condensed
Consolidated Interim Balance Sheet, the Condensed Consolidated
Interim Statement of Changes in Shareholders' Equity, the Condensed
Consolidated Interim Cash Flow Statement and the related
explanatory notes.
Based on our review, nothing has come to our attention that
causes us to believe that the condensed set of financial statements
in the half-yearly financial report for the six months ended 30th
June 2017 is not prepared, in all material respects, in accordance
with IAS 34 Interim Financial Reporting as adopted by the EU and
the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules ("the DTR") of the
UK's Financial Conduct Authority ("the UK FCA").
Scope of review
We conducted our review in accordance with International
Standard on Review Engagements (UK and Ireland) 2410 Review of
Interim Financial Information Performed by the Independent Auditor
of the Entity issued by the Auditing Practices Board for use in the
UK. A review of interim financial information consists of making
enquiries, primarily of persons responsible for financial and
accounting matters, and applying analytical and other review
procedures. We read the other information contained in the
half-yearly financial report and consider whether it contains any
apparent misstatements or material inconsistencies with the
information in the condensed set of financial statements.
A review is substantially less in scope than an audit conducted
in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) and
consequently does not enable us to obtain assurance that we would
become aware of all significant matters that might be identified in
an audit. Accordingly, we do not express an audit opinion.
Directors' responsibilities
The half-yearly financial report is the responsibility of, and
has been approved by, the directors. The directors are responsible
for preparing the half-yearly financial report in accordance with
the DTR of the UK FCA.
As disclosed in note two, the annual financial statements of the
Group are prepared in accordance with International Financial
Reporting Standards as adopted by the EU. The directors are
responsible for preparing the condensed set of financial statements
included in the half-yearly financial report in accordance with IAS
34 as adopted by the EU.
Our responsibility
Our responsibility is to express to the company a conclusion on
the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly
financial report based on our review.
The purpose of our review work and to whom we owe our
responsibilities
This report is made solely to the company in accordance with the
terms of our engagement to assist the company in meeting the
requirements of the DTR of the UK FCA. Our review has been
undertaken so that we might state to the company those matters we
are required to state to it in this report and for no other
purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept
or assume responsibility to anyone other than the company for our
review work, for this report, or for the conclusions we have
reached.
John Bennett KPMG LLP
for and on behalf of KPMG LLP 1 Forest Gate
Chartered Accountants Brighton Road
28th July 2017 Crawley
RH11 9PT
This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
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