TIDMIPF
RNS Number : 6493V
International Personal Finance Plc
25 July 2018
International Personal Finance plc
Half-year Financial Report for the six months ended 30 June
2018
This announcement contains inside information
International Personal Finance plc specialises in providing
unsecured consumer credit to more than two million customers across
11 markets. We operate the world's largest home credit business and
a leading fintech business, IPF Digital.
Key highlights
Ø Good Group operating and financial performance
o Credit issued growth of 2%
o Well-managed credit quality - group annualised impairment
to revenue ratio of 25.5%
o Group profit before tax from ongoing businesses increased
by GBP12.6m to GBP56.5m after restating the 2017 PBT
on an IFRS 9 basis
Ø European home credit - good financial performance
o As expected, challenging market landscape drove credit
issued contraction of 6%
o Improved post-field collections supported GBP4.4m higher
profit under IFRS 9 to GBP60.2m
Ø Mexico home credit - investment in expansion delivering growth
o Return to customer growth driven by geographic expansion
and micro-business channel
o 3% increase in customer numbers and 7% growth in credit
issued
o Good profit growth to GBP7.4m
Ø IPF Digital - very good progress and P&L investment significantly
reduced
o Excellent execution delivered strong credit issued growth
of 25%
o Established markets delivered good growth and improved
profitability
o New markets delivered strong growth, improved impairment
and lower start-up losses
Ø Funding position further strengthened; dividend maintained
o Good progress extending and diversifying funding: Issued
new 4-year Swedish Krona 450m (GBP38.6m) 2022 bond and
GBP17.6m of new bank funding added including two new
banks
o GBP211m of headroom on debt facilities increased from
GBP189m at 31 December 2017
o Equity to receivables of 43.5% post-IFRS 9 implementation
o Proposed interim dividend maintained at 4.6 pence per
share
Group key statistics (continuing H1 2017 H1 2017 H1 2018 YOY change
operations) reported IFRS 9 IFRS 9 IFRS 9 at
CER
Customers (000s) 2,395 2,395 2,247 (6.2%)
Credit issued (GBPm) 616.0 616.0 632.2 2.2%
Revenue (GBPm) 400.8 409.3 418.9 2.5%
Annualised impairment % revenue 26.4% 27.9%(#) 25.5% 2.4%*
Annualised cost-income ratio 43.3% 44.3%(#) 45.7% (1.4%)*
PBT from ongoing businesses
(GBPm) 37.6 43.9 56.5 -
Statutory PBT (GBPm) 43.0 49.3 56.5 -
Statutory EPS (pence) 13.6 15.5 16.7 -
---------------------------------- ---------- --------- -------- -----------
Excluding Slovakia and Lithuania. * since the 2017 year-end (#)
as at 2017 year end
Chief Executive Officer, Gerard Ryan, commented:
"I am pleased to report that we delivered a good financial
performance and made excellent progress against our strategic
objectives. Group profit before tax increased by GBP12.6m to
GBP56.5m reflecting profit growth in our home credit operations and
IPF Digital's established markets together with significantly
reduced start-up losses within IPF Digital's new markets. We also
strengthened our funding position and while we expect the
regulatory and competitive landscape to remain challenging, we are
on track to deliver good returns from our European home credit
operations, achieve our medium-term growth strategy in Mexico home
credit and IPF Digital, and continue to deliver long-term value for
our key stakeholders."
Group performance overview
The performance reporting in this report compares the 2018
actual half-year performance against the 2017 numbers adjusted for
IFRS 9 because the Board believes that this provides the most
relevant comparison of performance trends. More detail on IFRS 9
can be found below, and a full reconciliation of the 2017 profit
and loss account between the reported numbers and the IFRS 9
numbers is set out later in this report.
We continued to perform well against our strategy in the first
half of the year which resulted in 2% credit issued growth and a
GBP7.2m (15%) increase in profit before tax to GBP56.5m (statutory
profit before tax increase, IAS 39 2017 to IFRS 9 2018 is
GBP13.5m). This increase in profit comprised GBP12.6m from our
ongoing businesses partially offset by a GBP5.4m reduction in the
contribution from Slovakia and Lithuania which reported a profit in
the first half of 2017 when they were being wound down. We are in
the process of liquidating the home credit businesses in Slovakia
and Lithuania, and this did not result in any profit and loss
account charge or credit during the first half of 2018.
The increase in profit from our ongoing businesses of GBP12.6m
comprised an increase in like-for-like profit before tax of
GBP7.3m, a benefit of GBP4.5m from lower new business investment
and a GBP0.8m gain from stronger FX rates. The like-for-like
performance reflects profit growth delivered by our home credit
operations and IPF Digital's established markets. The lower new
business investment comprises GBP5.1m within IPF Digital's new
markets and central functions where start-up losses were
significantly reduced year-on-year, partially offset by increased
new business investment in Mexico home credit of GBP0.6m.
The table below details the performance of each of our business
segments, highlighting the impact of investment in new business
growth and slightly stronger FX rates against sterling to provide a
better understanding of like-for-like performance:
H1 2017 Like-for-like New business Stronger H1 2018
IFRS profit investment / weaker IFRS 9
9 movement movement FX rates profit
profit
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------ -------- -------------- ------------- ---------- --------
European home credit 55.8 2.6 - 1.8 60.2
Mexico home credit 5.7 3.2 (0.6) (0.9) 7.4
IPF Digital (10.5) 1.8 5.1 (0.1) (3.7)
Central costs (7.1) (0.3) - - (7.4)
------------------------ -------- -------------- ------------- ---------- --------
Profit before taxation
ongoing businesses 43.9 7.3 4.5 0.8 56.5
Slovakia and Lithuania 5.4 (5.6) - 0.2 -
Profit before taxation
from
continuing operations 49.3 1.7 4.5 1.0 56.5
------------------------ -------- -------------- ------------- ---------- --------
In line with our plan, we delivered a 2% increase in credit
issued led by our IPF Digital and Mexico home credit businesses,
offset partially by a 6% contraction in European home credit. This
resulted in an increase in average net receivables of 6% and 2%
growth in revenue. Credit quality and good collections were
maintained across the Group, and impairment as a percentage of
revenue was 25.5% compared to 27.9% at the 2017 year end. Our
investments in driving growth and longer-term efficiency, together
with modest yield compression, resulted in a 1.4 ppt increase in
the cost-income ratio to 45.7% since the year end.
Market overview
Current forecasts for our markets suggest modest GDP growth in
2018, with low but increasing inflation and subdued interest rates
and our expectation is that these relatively stable conditions will
continue to support growth in demand for consumer credit in our
markets.
The rapid increase in mobile device usage and internet
penetration continues to influence the way that consumers access
credit with a growing number of consumers preferring to take out
loans online which has supported growth in the provision of remote
digital loans by both fintech lenders including IPF Digital, and
banks. We are continuing to take advantage of the growth in digital
borrowing by investing in our digital consumer credit businesses
and offering Provident-branded digital loans.
Demand for lending via digital platforms continues to increase
the overall scale of the market and has led to an intensely
competitive operating landscape in Europe. Our home credit offering
continues to play an important role in the consumer credit space
providing access to regulated credit to people who might otherwise
be financially excluded. This business model, with the involvement
of an agent at the customer's home, allows us to gain a unique and
greater understanding of their financial circumstances and
propensity to repay. As a result, we are able to lend with more
confidence to creditworthy customers where a remote lending
business cannot.
Strategy update
Our strategy segments our operations into 'growth' and 'returns'
focused businesses, and is centred on delivering sustainable
growth, enhancing profitability and making efficient use of
capital. To deliver this strategy, we continued to modernise the
business through investment in technology and developing our people
and their capabilities.
Growth businesses - IPF Digital and Mexico home credit
IPF Digital continues to grow strongly and is making excellent
progress against its strategic objectives of building scale in new
markets, providing great customer experience through innovation and
achieving break-even following the investment phase.
Our new markets delivered year-on-year credit issued growth in
the first half of 33% which combined with continuing strong growth
of 20% in our established markets, resulted in 25% growth for the
digital business as a whole. This strong momentum combined with
continuous improvement in credit quality parameters in our new
markets is driving strong net revenue growth and improving
financial performance in line with our expectations.
A key element of our digital strategy is providing great
customer experience. We aim to deliver this by continuously
developing and improving our products and processes, and making the
customer journey as simple, fast and frictionless as possible. We
continue to invest in our central functions and cutting-edge
technology to support this critical element of our strategy.
In Mexico, we are leveraging the significant growth
opportunities for our home credit business through expanding our
geographic footprint, building our micro-business channel 'Negocio'
and improving operational efficiency and customer penetration rates
in selected longer-established branches. Our expansion programme
continued with the opening of five new branches in Q2 which will
support future customer and credit issued growth. This completes
our branch opening programme for the current year. Our
micro-business channel now serves around 20,000 customers, compared
to 16,000 at the year end, and we expect further growth in the
second half of the year.
Returns businesses - European home credit
We continue to improve the sustainability of our European home
credit businesses by creating more modern, efficient and better
credit quality operations. Our businesses provide excellent service
to customers and continue to generate the cash and capital to fund
growth opportunities and returns to shareholders, notwithstanding
the fact that we saw a larger reduction in customer numbers than we
would have wished. The reduction is, in large part, driven by
regulatory changes to debt to income ratios and also an increasing
customer preference for digital loans. To meet the growing demand
for digital loan offerings among traditional home credit customers,
we continue to leverage the value of our well-recognised Provident
brand name with an online Provident digital offering. As planned,
this offering was launched in the Czech Republic in June 2018 and
around 18,000 customers are already using this channel in
Poland.
We remain focused on improving the efficiency of our operations
through investment in technology. We continued the roll-out of our
agent mobile technology which will improve the customer experience,
make the role of the agent more efficient and facilitate cost
reductions. This technology is now being used by around 9,000
agents in Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary, and is currently
in its testing phase in Romania.
Performance review
European home credit
As we set out in our 2017 full-year announcement, we
consolidated our Northern and Southern European home credit
businesses into one reporting segment - European home credit.
Our European home credit businesses produced a robust trading
performance and delivered a GBP4.4m increase in profit before tax
(on an IFRS 9 basis) to GBP60.2m in the first half of 2018. This
increase reflects an improvement in like-for-like profit of GBP2.6m
driven by an increase in net revenue with better impairment more
than offsetting lower revenue, together with a GBP1.8m benefit from
stronger FX rates.
H1 2017 H1 2018 Change Change Change
IFRS 9 IFRS 9 at CER
GBPm GBPm GBPm % %
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Customer numbers (000s) 1,333 1,132 (201) (15.1)
Credit issued 378.8 367.7 (11.1) (2.9) (5.5)
Average net receivables 565.0 568.9 3.9 0.7 (2.3)
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Revenue 258.9 250.1 (8.8) (3.4) (5.9)
Impairment (63.5) (44.9) 18.6 29.3 30.4
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Net revenue 195.4 205.2 9.8 5.0 2.0
Finance costs (17.8) (18.0) (0.2) (1.1) 1.6
Agents' commission (28.1) (27.2) 0.9 3.2 5.9
Other costs (93.7) (99.8) (6.1) (6.5) (3.5)
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Profit before taxation 55.8 60.2 4.4 7.9
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
As expected, competition and regulatory tightening impacted
customer numbers and credit issued growth which contracted
year-on-year by 15% and 6% respectively. Our move to serve better
quality customers allows us to lend slightly larger and longer-term
loans and, as a result, average net receivables reduced by only 2%
and, together with a modest contraction in revenue yield, revenue
reduced by 6%.
The quality of the loan portfolio in European home credit is
very good. As reported in our 2016 full-year results announcement
and following a review of the most effective collections processes,
we began to transfer the management of very slow paying customers
from our field sales and service teams to our central debt recovery
teams. We are pleased to report that this process has improved the
effectiveness of recovering payments from these customers. The
other factors impacting impairment were good returns from debt
sales, lower underlying impairment in Romania, where there was no
repeat of the disruption that adversely impacted collections in the
first half of 2017, and our focus on serving higher quality
customers who are eligible to be served with larger, longer-term
loans. Together these factors resulted in a 3.2 ppt improvement in
annualised impairment as a percentage of revenue to 17.6% since the
2017 year end.
We are investing in digitising our European home credit
businesses to create more modern operations and deliver sustainable
cost efficiencies. The cost-income ratio increased by 1.8 ppts
since the 2017 year end to 41.6% driven by a modest contraction in
revenue yields and the investment in both our Provident-branded
digital offering and agent mobile technology. We expect this ratio
to improve during the second half of the year as we begin to
realise the efficiency benefits from these investments.
We will continue to operate our European home credit businesses
in line with our strategy to deliver a high level of service to our
customers while optimising returns. Operationally, our focus will
be on reducing customer contraction, improving cost-efficiencies
and as announced on 13 July 2018, we expect to deliver a better
financial performance for the year as a whole than our original
expectations.
Mexico
Our home credit business in Mexico delivered a GBP1.7m
improvement in profit before tax (on an IFRS 9 basis) to GBP7.4m in
the first half of the year. This comprises like-for-like profit
growth of GBP3.2m delivered by our established branches, increased
investment in future growth of GBP0.6m through geographical
expansion and Negocio, the micro-business channel, together with a
GBP0.9m adverse impact from weaker FX rates.
H1 2017 H1 2018 Change Change Change
IFRS 9 IFRS 9 at CER
GBPm GBPm GBPm % %
------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Customer numbers (000s) 841 865 24 2.9
Credit issued 131.2 129.1 (2.1) (1.6) 6.5
Average net receivables 147.5 144.1 (3.4) (2.3) 5.1
------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Revenue 106.3 103.5 (2.8) (2.6) 5.4
Impairment (35.7) (34.1) 1.6 4.5 (3.6)
------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Net revenue 70.6 69.4 (1.2) (1.7) 6.3
Finance costs (5.9) (5.0) 0.9 15.3 9.1
Agents' commission (14.1) (13.5) 0.6 4.3 (3.1)
Other costs (44.9) (43.5) 1.4 3.1 (3.8)
------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Profit before taxation 5.7 7.4 1.7 29.8
------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Established branches 8.0 10.0 2.0 25.0
Expansion and micro-business (2.3) (2.6) (0.3) (13.0)
------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Profit before taxation 5.7 7.4 1.7 29.8
------------------------------ -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
We were pleased to return to customer growth attracting 37,000
more new customers since the 2017 year end compared to no growth
last year, when our focus was on repeat lending to existing
customers. Against strong comparative numbers, we delivered a 7%
increase in credit issued driven by the branches that we have
opened since 2016 and our micro-business lending channel.
Average net receivables increased by 5% which flowed into
revenue growth at the same rate. The collections performance was in
line with 2017 and annualised impairment as a percentage of revenue
was 35.9%, marginally better than the 2017 year end.
Costs were well-managed in our established branches where we are
focused on improving operational leverage and this resulted in a
modest reduction in costs year-on-year. In line with our growth
strategy, we invested in expanding our geographic footprint with
the opening of five new branches in Q2 2018 and growing our
micro-business channel, which drove a 4% increase in other costs to
GBP43.5m at constant exchange rates (actual reduction of GBP1.4m).
Overall, the increase in investment was in line with revenue
growth, therefore the cost-income ratio was maintained at the 2017
year-end level of 40.0%. As previously mentioned, the geographic
expansion undertaken in the first half concludes our branch opening
programme for the current year.
There are significant growth opportunities for our home credit
business in Mexico through expanding our geographic footprint and
micro-business loans channel, and improving customer penetration
rates in selected established branches. In the second half of the
year, we will focus on quality growth and expect to deliver an
increased credit issued growth rate of between 12% and 15% for the
year as a whole. As we accelerate growth in the second half, we now
expect customer growth to be higher than our original plan and this
will have a greater drag on net revenue recognition under IFRS 9.
This investment will drive long-term profitable growth as the
benefits will flow through from repeat lending although it will
have a modest negative impact on current year profit.
IPF Digital
Robust demand for IPF Digital's offering and a strong
operational performance resulted in a significant year-on-year
reduction in start-up losses. Losses before tax in the first half
of the year were GBP3.7m, which is a GBP6.8m improvement (on an
IFRS 9 basis) on the same period in 2017. This result was driven by
significantly reduced losses in our new markets where we delivered
strong top-line growth, improved impairment and cost-leverage
combined with improved profitability in the established
markets.
H1 2017 H1 2018 Change Change Change
IFRS 9 IFRS 9 at CER
GBPm GBPm GBPm % %
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Customer numbers
(000s) 221 250 29 13.1
Credit issued 106.0 135.4 29.4 27.7 25.4
Average net receivables 128.7 189.6 60.9 47.3 44.4
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Revenue 44.1 65.3 21.2 48.1 45.4
Impairment (21.1) (23.6) (2.5) (11.8) (8.8)
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Net revenue 23.0 41.7 18.7 81.3 79.7
Finance costs (3.4) (5.0) (1.6) (47.1) (47.1)
Other costs (30.1) (40.4) (10.3) (34.2) (32.9)
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Loss before taxation (10.5) (3.7) 6.8 64.8
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Excellent execution of delivering our digital offering,
particularly our credit line product, resulted in a 25% increase in
credit issued to GBP135.4m. This growth, combined with the good
momentum achieved in 2017, resulted in an increase in average net
receivables of 44% and a similar increase in revenue.
The benefits of our strategy to invest in building scale in IPF
Digital are now starting to be realised. Development of our score
cards and credit settings in the new markets was the key driver of
a 5.9 ppt improvement in annualised impairment as a percentage of
revenue to 39.8% since the year end. Positive cost-leverage trends,
particularly in our new markets, resulted in a 2.3 ppt reduction in
the cost-income ratio to 59.5%. The strong operational performance
was driven by a significant reduction in start-up losses in the new
markets and improved profitability in our established markets,
offset partially by further investment in head office
capabilities.
The profitability of IPF Digital is segmented as follows:
H1 2017 H1 2018 Change Change
IFRS IFRS 9
9 GBPm GBPm %
GBPm
--------------------- -------- -------- ------- -------
Established markets 8.5 10.5 2.0 23.5
New markets (14.8) (8.3) 6.5 43.9
Head office costs (4.2) (5.9) (1.7) (40.5)
--------------------- -------- -------- ------- -------
IPF Digital (10.5) (3.7) 6.8 64.8
--------------------- -------- -------- ------- -------
Established markets
H1 2017 H1 2018 Change Change Change
IFRS IFRS 9 at CER
9 GBPm GBPm % %
GBPm
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Customer numbers (000s) 141 151 10 7.1
Credit issued 63.7 78.3 14.6 22.9 20.3
Average net receivables 93.8 126.6 32.8 35.0 31.9
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Revenue 27.9 37.4 9.5 34.1 30.8
Impairment (5.0) (8.1) (3.1) (62.0) (50.0)
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Net revenue 22.9 29.3 6.4 27.9 26.3
Finance costs (2.4) (3.1) (0.7) (29.2) (29.2)
Other costs (12.0) (15.7) (3.7) (30.8) (29.8)
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Profit before taxation 8.5 10.5 2.0 23.5
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Our established markets delivered a good financial performance
reporting a GBP2.0m improvement in first-half profit before tax to
GBP10.5m. Our customer relationship management, enhanced pricing
strategies and increased customer acquisition investment drove
demand for our digital offerings, particularly in Finland, and our
credit line product helped to deliver faster-than-expected credit
issued growth of 20% in these markets. This flowed through to a 32%
increase in average net receivables and a similar rate of revenue
growth.
Credit quality continued to be well-managed and impairment as a
percentage of revenue at 22.0% compares to 20.6% at the 2017 year
end.
New markets
H1 2017 H1 2018 Change Change Change
IFRS IFRS 9 at CER
9 GBPm GBPm % %
GBPm
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Customer numbers (000s) 80 99 19 23.8
Credit issued 42.3 57.1 14.8 35.0 33.1
Average net receivables 34.9 63.0 28.1 80.5 78.5
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Revenue 16.2 27.9 11.7 72.2 71.2
Impairment (16.1) (15.5) 0.6 3.7 4.9
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Net revenue 0.1 12.4 12.3 - -
Finance costs (1.0) (1.9) (0.9) (90.0) (90.0)
Other costs (13.9) (18.8) (4.9) (35.3) (35.3)
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Loss before taxation (14.8) (8.3) 6.5 43.9
------------------------- -------- -------- ------- ------- --------
Our new markets, where we are working to develop each market's
processes to optimise lending and collections, delivered
year-on-year credit issued growth of 33%. This was enabled by our
investment in brand building and the introduction of tiered
pricing, in addition to enhanced customer relationship management
and product improvements. Our Australian business doubled credit
issued and we saw continued strong rates of growth in Poland and
Spain. Average net receivables grew by 79% which delivered a 71%
increase in revenue.
As part of our new market development, we continually make
changes to our score cards and credit settings. This enables us to
assess how a portfolio is performing before choosing to tighten
credit settings to drive improvement in impairment or relax them to
deliver higher levels of growth. This dynamic process is critical
to improving our lending decisions and, as expected, has been key
to delivering the improving impairment trends in our new markets.
Annualised impairment as a percentage of revenue improved by 20.1
ppts to 64.6% since the year end and we expect to see further
improvement in the second half of the year as these markets grow
and mature. Investment in marketing and customer relationship
management increased other costs by 35% to GBP18.8m, however, the
growth and economies of scale generated from this activity resulted
in a 6.4 ppt improvement in the cost-income ratio to 64.2%.
IPF Digital represents a significant long-term growth
opportunity for the Group and is continuing to develop in line with
our plans. Looking ahead, we expect IPF Digital to continue to
deliver good credit issued growth and a further improvement in the
financial performance in the second half of the year as we continue
to build scale in our new markets and generate returns in our
established markets. We firmly believe that we will deliver a
maiden profit for the division as a whole in 2019.
Regulatory update
As previously reported, a proposal to implement an APR cap at
18% for existing and new consumer lending is being debated in the
Romanian Parliament. In order to achieve a more balanced outcome
which is in the best interests of customers and market
participants, we, together with our trade associations and banks,
are actively engaged in this discussion by providing evidence to
decision makers of the potential unintended consequences on
consumers. We expected that an APR cap would have been enacted
before this half-year results announcement, however, it is now
understood that the parliamentary debate will continue in the
Autumn to enable Government stakeholders to better understand the
impacts of the proposal. If the legislation is enacted as currently
proposed, it would have a material adverse effect on our Romanian
business. Additionally, and again as previously reported, our
Romanian business has now moved to the Special Registry under the
auspices of the National Bank of Romania (NBR). As expected, the
NBR is considering the introduction of debt-to-income limits.
Although details of the official proposals have yet to be
published, we are engaged in discussions with stakeholders through
our trade associations with the aim of achieving a balanced
outcome. We anticipate the limits coming into effect later this
year and expect them to result in a reduction in sales volumes.
The Romanian business had net receivables as at 31 December 2017
of GBP76.6m (under IFRS 9) and we currently expect to generate a
profit before tax in Romania of around GBP13m in 2018, before any
impact from the APR cap proposal and/or debt-to-income limits. In
the event that either or both proposals is or are enacted, we will
assess the impact and update the market accordingly in our Q3
trading and/or full year results announcement.
There has been no update from the Polish Ministry of Justice on
its proposal, published in December 2016, to reduce the existing
non-interest price cap in Poland.
Taxation
The taxation charge on profit for the first six months of 2018
has been based on an expected effective tax rate of 34%.
As previously reported, our home credit business in Poland
appealed decisions received in January 2017 from the Polish Tax
Chamber (the upper tier of the Polish tax authority) with respect
to the 2008 and 2009 financial years. The decisions for both years
involve a transfer pricing challenge relating to an intra-group
arrangement with a UK entity, together with a challenge to the
timing of taxation of home collection fee revenues. In order to
appeal these decisions, with which we strongly disagree, it was
necessary to pay the amounts assessed. The payment is not a
reflection of our view on the merits of the case and, accordingly,
it has been recognised as a non-current financial asset of GBP35.1m
(comprising tax and associated interest) in our Group financials.
During 2017 we initiated a process with the UK tax authority aimed
at ensuring that the intra-group arrangement is taxed in accordance
with international tax principles and, in response, the Polish
court has stayed the hearings of the 2008 and 2009 appeals pending
resolution of this process. The 2010 and 2011 financial years are
being audited by the tax authorities in Poland currently. In the
event that the Polish tax authority were to issue decisions for
these years following the same reasoning as the decisions for 2008
and 2009 we would need to pay c. GBP43m in order to appeal the
cases. In this eventuality we would seek to include these years
also in the existing process with the UK and Polish tax
authorities. All subsequent financial years remain open to future
audit.
Funding and balance sheet
We further strengthened our debt funding position in the first
half of 2018. In June, we issued a Swedish Krona 450m (GBP38.6m)
senior unsecured floating rate bond due in 2022 under our existing
Euro medium-term note programme. This forms part of our funding
strategy to support the long-term growth of the business by
diversifying sources of debt funding, and extending the debt
maturity profile beyond the main Eurobond maturity in 2021. In
addition, we put in place GBP17.6m of new bank funding including
facilities provided by two new banks in Romania and Poland.
At June 2018 we had total debt facilities of GBP864.6m
(GBP584.1m bonds and GBP280.5m bank facilities) and borrowings of
GBP653.6m, with headroom on undrawn debt facilities of GBP211m. Of
our committed funding, GBP47.6m now extends beyond the Eurobond
maturity in 2021 and we plan to continue to extend the debt
maturity profile further. We repaid total bonds of GBP37.0m which
matured in the first half of 2018, and have further bond maturities
of GBP27.6m in Q4 2018 and GBP14.9m in December 2019.
Our balance sheet remains robust, with an equity to receivables
capital ratio at 30 June 2018 of 43.5% compared with 42.2% at
December 2017. This is stated after the one-time reduction in the
accounting value of receivables at the start of the year arising
from the implementation of IFRS 9 which totalled GBP130.5m or 12.3%
of the accounting value of the receivables portfolio under the old
accounting standard. This impact has been charged to equity in
accordance with the transitional rules included in IFRS 9. The
impact of this reduction on net assets was partially mitigated by
an increase in the deferred tax asset reflecting the fact that,
under IFRS 9, net revenue is recorded more slowly in the financial
statements than under the old accounting standard and hence the
timing difference between the financial statements and the tax
returns is larger. The impact of IFRS 9 on the opening balance
sheet is summarised below.
Reported Transitional IFRS 9
impact
1 January 1 January
2018 2018
GBPm GBPm GBPm
---------------------- ----------- ------------- -----------
Receivables 1,056.9 (130.5) 926.4
Deferred tax 93.0 24.8 117.8
Other net assets (653.0) - (653.0)
---------------------- ----------- ------------- -----------
Net assets 496.9 (105.7) 391.2
---------------------- ----------- ------------- -----------
Equity % receivables 47.0% 42.2%
---------------------- ----------- ------------- -----------
Dividend
The Board is pleased to declare an unchanged interim dividend of
4.6 pence per share. The dividend will be paid on 5 October 2018 to
shareholders on the register at the close of business on 7
September 2018. The shares will be marked ex-dividend on 6
September 2018.
Principal risks and uncertainties
We operate a formal risk management process, the details of
which are set out on page 37 of the Financial Statements for the
year ended 31 December 2017. A summary of these risks is included
in Note 2 of this half-year Financial Report.
Outlook
We are focused on serving our customers responsibly within a
regulatory and competitive landscape that we expect will remain
challenging. We will continue to improve the sustainability of our
European home credit businesses by investing to create a more
modern, efficient and higher credit quality operation that provides
a good service to customers. These businesses deliver good returns
for shareholders and fund growth opportunities in our Mexico home
credit and IPF Digital operations. We expect credit issued growth
in Mexico home credit to accelerate in the second half of the year
alongside higher customer growth than our original plan. This will
result in a drag on net revenue recognition under IFRS 9 and
therefore we now expect slightly lower profit growth in the current
year from this market. In IPF Digital we expect to deliver further
strong customer and credit issued growth and an improved financial
performance as we increase the scale of our business, particularly
in our new markets. At Group level and as announced on 13 July
2018, we now expect to exceed the 2018 profit before tax consensus
of GBP99.4m by approximately 10% as a result of stronger than
expected post-field collections in our European home credit
businesses.
Alternative Performance Measures
This half-year Financial Report provides alternative performance
measures (APMs) which are not defined or specified under the
requirements of International Financial Reporting Standards. We
believe these APMs provide stakeholders with important additional
information on our business. To support this we have included an
accounting policy note on APMs in the notes to this Financial
Report, a glossary indicating the APMs that we use, an explanation
of how they are calculated and why we use them, and a
reconciliation of the APMs we use to a statutory measure, where
relevant.
IFRS 9
IFRS 9 is a new accounting standard that addresses accounting
for financial instruments and the main impact on the Group is a
change to the methodology used to account for amounts receivable
from customers. The key change is a shift from incurred loss to
expected loss impairment accounting. Under IFRS 9, we are required
to record impairment charges at the inception of a loan based on
the losses that are expected to be incurred and this results in
negative net revenue at the start of a loan. The new standard
became effective on 1 January 2018.
Implementation of the standard results in changes in the
recognition of revenue and impairment and, as a consequence, the
accounting value of the Group's receivables portfolio. The one-time
reduction in the accounting value of receivables has been charged
to equity in accordance with the transition rules of IFRS 9 and
further details on this are set out in the funding and balance
sheet section of this report. The ongoing impact on profit before
tax of our reporting segments varies according to the stage of
development of a business. If a reporting segment's receivables
portfolio is stable in terms of size and credit quality, IFRS 9
will not have a significant impact on net revenue generation. This
is because for every new loan issued where impairment is booked on
origination, there is another older loan that reports higher net
revenue than under the current accounting standard. However, if a
reporting segment's receivables portfolio is growing, net revenue
and profit will be lower in the earlier months under IFRS 9. This
is because impairment booked on originating loans will be larger
than the benefit arising from lower impairment on the older loans,
due to portfolio growth.
The profit before taxation impact that IFRS 9 would have had on
our 2017 half-year reporting is summarised below.
H1 2017 H1 2017
reported IFRS 9 IFRS 9
profit impact profit
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------------------- ---------- --------- --------
European home credit 47.6 8.2 55.8
Mexico home credit 5.3 0.4 5.7
IPF Digital (8.2) (2.3) (10.5)
Central costs (7.1) - (7.1)
------------------------------------------- ---------- --------- --------
Profit before taxation ongoing businesses 37.6 6.3 43.9
Slovakia and Lithuania 5.4 - 5.4
Profit before taxation from continuing
operations 43.0 6.3 49.3
------------------------------------------- ---------- --------- --------
In addition to the overall impact of IFRS 9 on our reporting
segments set out above, the application of the new accounting model
results in lower seasonal fluctuations in impairment charges and
profit before tax than under the old accounting standard. Under IAS
39, 42% of European home credit 2017 profit before tax was reported
in the first half of the year whereas under IFRS 9, 50% would have
been reported for the same period.
In the condensed consolidated interim financial information
included within this half-year Financial Report, the Group has
elected not to restate comparatives on initial application of IFRS
9 and, as such, 2017 comparatives are as previously reported.
Note
This report has been prepared solely to provide additional
information to shareholders to assess the Group's strategies and
the potential for those strategies to succeed. The report should
not be relied on by any other party or for any other purpose. The
report contains certain forward-looking statements. These
statements are made by the directors in good faith based on the
information available to them up to the time of their approval of
this report but such statements should be treated with caution due
to the inherent uncertainties, including both economic and business
risk factors, like-for-like any such forward-looking information.
Percentage change figures for all performance measures, other than
profit before taxation and earnings per share, unless otherwise
stated, are quoted after restating prior year figures at a constant
exchange rate (CER) for 2018 in order to present the like-for-like
performance variance.
Investor relations and media contacts
International Personal Finance Rachel Moran
plc +44 (0)7760 167637 / +44 (0)113
285 6798
FTI Consulting Neil Doyle
+44 (0)20 3727 1141 / +44 (0)7771
978 220
Laura Ewart
+44 (0)20 3727 1160 / +44 (0)7711
387085
We will host a live webcast of our half-year results
presentation at 09:00hrs (BST) today, Wednesday 25 July 2018, which
can be accessed at www.ipfin.co.uk.
A copy of this statement can be found on the Group's website -
www.ipfin.co.uk.
Legal Entity Identifier: 213800II1O44IRKUZB59
International Personal Finance plc
Condensed consolidated interim financial information for the six
months ended 30 June 2018
Consolidated income statement
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
Notes GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Revenue 4 418.9 400.8 825.8
Impairment 4 (102.5) (109.9) (201.1)
Revenue less impairment 316.4 290.9 624.7
----------- ----------- ------------
Finance costs (28.0) (27.1) (55.2)
Other operating costs (67.3) (66.7) (135.2)
Administrative expenses (164.6) (154.1) (328.7)
Total costs (259.9) (247.9) (519.1)
----------- ----------- ------------
Profit before taxation - continuing
operations 4 56.5 43.0 105.6
Tax expense - UK - - (0.7)
- Overseas (19.2) (12.9) (29.9)
------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Total pre-exceptional tax expense 5 (19.2) (12.9) (30.6)
------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ------------
Profit after pre-exceptional
taxation - continuing operations 37.3 30.1 75.0
------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Exceptional tax expense - - (30.0)
------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Profit after taxation - continuing
operations 37.3 30.1 45.0
------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Loss after taxation - discontinued
operations 8 - (7.7) (8.4)
------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Profit after taxation attributable
to owners of the Company 37.3 22.4 36.6
------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Earnings per share - continuing operations pre-exceptional
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
Notes pence pence pence
--------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Basic 6 16.7 13.6 33.7
Diluted 6 15.9 13.0 32.4
--------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
The notes to the financial information are an integral part of
this consolidated financial information.
Earnings per share - continuing operations
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
Notes pence pence pence
--------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Basic 6 16.7 13.6 20.2
Diluted 6 15.9 13.0 19.5
--------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Earnings per share - including discontinued operations
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
Notes pence pence pence
--------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Basic 6 16.7 10.1 16.5
Diluted 6 15.9 9.7 15.8
--------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Dividend per share
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
Notes pence pence pence
------------------ ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Interim dividend 7 4.6 4.6 4.6
Final dividend 7 - - 7.8
------------------ ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Total dividend 4.6 4.6 12.4
------------------ ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
The notes to the financial information are an integral part of
this consolidated financial information.
Dividends paid
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
Notes GBPm GBPm GBPm
----------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Interim dividend of 4.6
pence
(2017: interim dividend
of 4.6 pence) per share 7 - - 10.2
Final 2017 dividend of 7.8
pence
(2017: final 2016 dividend
of 7.8 pence) per share 7 17.4 17.4 17.4
----------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Total dividends paid 17.4 17.4 27.6
----------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- -------------
Profit after taxation attributable to
owners of the Company 37.3 22.4 36.6
----------- ----------- -------------
Other comprehensive income
Items that may subsequently be reclassified
to income statement
Exchange (losses)/gains on foreign currency
translations (30.4) 37.8 51.3
Net fair value (losses)/gains - cash
flow hedges (1.2) 1.8 (2.5)
Tax credit/(charge) on items that may
be reclassified 0.2 (0.4) 0.2
Items that will not subsequently be
reclassified to income statement
Actuarial gains on retirement benefit
asset 3.3 2.2 10.3
Tax charge on items that will not be
reclassified (0.6) (0.4) (1.9)
----------- ----------- -------------
Other comprehensive (expense)/income
net of taxation (28.7) 41.0 57.4
--------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- -------------
Total comprehensive income for the period
attributable to owners of the Company 8.6 63.4 94.0
--------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- -------------
The notes to the financial information are an integral part of
this consolidated financial information.
Consolidated balance sheet
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
Notes GBPm GBPm GBPm
---------------------------------- ------ ---------- ---------- ------------
Assets
Non-current assets
Goodwill 9 23.9 23.9 24.4
Intangible assets 10 33.9 34.9 33.1
Property, plant and equipment 11 19.2 24.3 23.2
Deferred tax assets 116.8 118.9 103.1
Non-current tax asset 12 35.1 36.0 37.0
Retirement benefit asset 15 6.5 - 2.1
235.4 238.0 222.9
---------- ---------- ------------
Current assets
Amounts receivable from customers
- due within one year 715.4 863.1 866.9
- due in more than one
year 172.9 147.1 190.0
---------- ---------- ------------
13 888.3 1,010.2 1,056.9
Derivative financial instruments 5.9 3.0 10.4
Cash and cash equivalents 33.6 32.3 27.4
Other receivables 24.4 30.2 19.3
Current tax assets 8.6 11.5 5.7
---------------------------------- ------ ---------- ---------- ------------
960.8 1,087.2 1,119.7
---------- ---------- ------------
Total assets 4 1,196.2 1,325.2 1,342.6
---------- ---------- ------------
Liabilities
Current liabilities
Borrowings 14 (32.1) (73.9) (79.6)
Derivative financial instruments (5.3) (12.6) (4.8)
Trade and other payables (127.7) (133.0) (145.7)
Current tax liabilities (22.3) (5.0) (7.4)
---------------------------------- ------ ---------- ---------- ------------
(187.4) (224.5) (237.5)
---------- ---------- ------------
Non-current liabilities
Retirement benefit obligation 15 - (6.0) -
Deferred tax liabilities (3.6) (7.3) (10.1)
Borrowings 14 (618.6) (610.4) (598.1)
---------------------------------- ------ ---------- ---------- ------------
(622.2) (623.7) (608.2)
---------- ---------- ------------
Total liabilities 4 (809.6) (848.2) (845.7)
---------------------------------- ------ ---------- ---------- ------------
Net assets 386.6 477.0 496.9
---------------------------------- ------ ---------- ---------- ------------
Equity attributable to owners
of the Company
Called-up share capital 23.4 23.4 23.4
Other reserve (22.5) (22.5) (22.5)
Foreign exchange reserve 29.6 46.5 60.0
Hedging reserve (2.2) 2.5 (1.2)
Own shares (45.5) (48.8) (47.6)
Capital redemption reserve 2.3 2.3 2.3
Retained earnings 401.5 473.6 482.5
---------------------------------- ------ ---------- ---------- ------------
Total equity 386.6 477.0 496.9
---------------------------------- ------ ---------- ---------- ------------
The notes to the financial information are an integral part of
this consolidated financial information.
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
Unaudited
--------------------------------------------------------
Called-up Other Other Retained Total
share reserve reserves* earnings equity
capital
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------------- ---------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------
At 1 January 2017 23.4 (22.5) (38.7) 467.3 429.5
Comprehensive income
Profit after taxation for
the period - - - 22.4 22.4
Other comprehensive income/(expense)
Exchange gains on foreign
currency translation (note
18) - - 37.8 - 37.8
Net fair value gains - cash
flow hedges - - 1.8 - 1.8
Actuarial gains on retirement
benefit obligation - - - 2.2 2.2
Tax charge on other comprehensive
income - - (0.4) (0.4) (0.8)
---------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------
Total other comprehensive
income - - 39.2 1.8 41.0
Total comprehensive income
for the period - - 39.2 24.2 63.4
---------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------
Transactions with owners
Share-based payment adjustment
to reserves - - - 1.4 1.4
Shares granted from treasury
and employee trust - - 2.0 (2.0) -
Dividends paid to Company
shareholders - - - (17.3) (17.3)
---------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------
At 30 June 2017 23.4 (22.5) 2.5 473.6 477.0
---------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------
At 1 July 2017 23.4 (22.5) 2.5 473.6 477.0
Comprehensive income
Profit after taxation for
the period - - - 14.2 14.2
Other comprehensive income/(expense)
Exchange gains on foreign
currency translation (note - - 13.5 - -
18)
Net fair value losses - cash
flow hedges - - (4.3) - (4.3)
Actuarial gains on retirement
benefit asset - - - 8.1 8.1
Tax credit/(charge) on other
comprehensive income - - 0.6 (1.5) (0.9)
---------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------
Total other comprehensive
income - - 9.8 6.6 16.4
Total comprehensive income
for the period - - 9.8 20.8 30.6
---------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------
Transactions with owners
Share-based payment adjustment
to reserves - - - (0.4) (0.4)
Shares granted from treasury
and employee trust - - 1.2 (1.2) -
Dividends paid to Company
shareholders - - - (10.3) (10.3)
-------------------------------------- ---------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------
At 31 December 2017 23.4 (22.5) 13.5 482.5 496.9
-------------------------------------- ---------- --------- ----------- ---------- --------
Balance at 1 January 2018
as originally presented 23.4 (22.5) 13.5 482.5 496.9
Change in accounting policy - - - (105.7) (105.7)
------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
Restated at 1 January 2018 23.4 (22.5) 13.5 376.8 391.2
Comprehensive income
Profit after taxation for
the period - - - 37.3 37.3
Other comprehensive (expense)/income
Exchange losses on foreign
currency translation (note
18) - - (30.4) - (30.4)
Net fair value losses - cash
flow hedges - - (1.2) - (1.2)
Actuarial gains on retirement
benefit asset - - - 3.3 3.3
Tax credit/(charge) on other
comprehensive income - - 0.2 (0.6) (0.4)
------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
Total other comprehensive
(expense)/income - - (31.4) 2.7 (28.7)
Total comprehensive (expense)/income
for the period - - (31.4) 40.0 8.6
------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
Transactions with owners
Share-based payment adjustment
to reserves - - - 4.2 4.2
Shares granted from treasury
and employee trust - - 2.1 (2.1) -
Dividends paid to Company
shareholders - - - (17.4) (17.4)
-------------------------------------- ------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
At 30 June 2018 23.4 (22.5) (15.8) 401.5 386.6
-------------------------------------- ------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
* Includes foreign exchange reserve, hedging reserve, own shares
and capital redemption reserve.
Consolidated cash flow statement
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
Notes GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Cash flows from operating activities
Continuing operations
Cash generated from operating
activities 17 93.4 92.8 143.6
Finance costs paid (38.5) (36.3) (54.7)
Income tax paid (5.4) (68.4) (94.0)
Discontinued operations - (2.7) (2.7)
----------- ----------- ------------
Net cash generated from/(used
in) in operating activities 49.5 (14.6) (7.8)
----------- ----------- ------------
Cash flows used in investing
activities
Continuing operations
Purchases of intangible assets 10 (9.4) (7.4) (14.9)
Purchases of property, plant
and equipment 11 (2.0) (4.7) (10.1)
Proceeds from sale of property,
plant and equipment - - 0.7
Discontinued operations
Disposal of subsidiary, net
of cash and cash equivalents 8 - 3.0 3.0
Net cash used in investing
activities (11.4) (9.1) (21.3)
Net cash generated from/(used
in) operating and investing
activities 38.1 (23.7) (29.1)
----------- ----------- ------------
Cash flows from financing activities
Continuing operations
Proceeds from borrowings 76.1 34.7 92.5
Repayment of borrowings (89.7) (6.3) (53.2)
Dividends paid to Company
shareholders 7 (17.4) (17.4) (27.6)
Net cash (used in)/generated
from financing activities (31.0) 11.0 11.7
----------- ----------- ------------
Net increase/(decrease) in
cash and cash equivalents 7.1 (12.7) (17.4)
Cash and cash equivalents at
beginning of period 27.4 43.4 43.4
Exchange (losses)/gains on
cash and cash equivalents (0.9) 1.6 1.4
-------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Cash and cash equivalents at
end of period 33.6 32.3 27.4
-------------------------------------- ------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Notes to the condensed consolidated interim financial
information for the six months ended 30 June 2018
1. Basis of preparation
This unaudited condensed consolidated interim financial
information for the six months ended 30 June 2018 has been prepared
in accordance with the Disclosure and Transparency Rules ('DTR') of
the Financial Conduct Authority and with IAS 34 'Interim Financial
Reporting' as adopted by the European Union. This condensed
consolidated interim financial information should be read in
conjunction with the Annual Report and Financial Statements ('the
Financial Statements') for the year ended 31 December 2017, which
have been prepared in accordance with International Financial
Reporting Standards ('IFRSs') as adopted by the European Union.
This condensed consolidated interim financial information was
approved for release on 25 July 2018.
This condensed consolidated interim financial information does
not comprise statutory accounts within the meaning of Section 434
of the Companies Act 2006. The Financial Statements for the year
ended 31 December 2017 were approved by the Board on 1 March 2018
and delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The Financial
Statements contained an unqualified audit report and did not
include an emphasis of matter paragraph or any statement under
Section 498 of the Companies Act 2006. The Financial Statements are
available on the Group's website (www.ipfin.co.uk).
The Board has reviewed the budget for the year to 31 December
2018 and the forecasts for the two years to 31 December 2020 which
include projected profits, cash flows, borrowings and headroom
against facilities. The Group's committed funding through a
combination of bonds and committed bank facilities, combined with a
successful track record of accessing debt funding markets, is
sufficient to fund the planned growth of our existing operations
and new markets for the foreseeable future. Taking these factors
into account the Board has a reasonable expectation that the Group
has adequate resources to continue in operation for the foreseeable
future. For this reason the Board has adopted the going concern
basis in preparing this Half-year Financial Report.
The amendments relating to the IFRS 9 'Financial Instruments'
standard are mandatory for the first time for the financial year
beginning 1 January 2018. Please see note 20 for further
information
All other accounting policies adopted in this condensed
consolidated interim financial information are consistent with
those adopted in the Financial Statements for the year ended 31
December 2017 and are detailed in those Financial Statements.
The following standards, interpretations and amendments to
existing standards are not yet effective and have not been early
adopted by the Group:
-- IFRS 16 'Leases' (for more detail see below);
-- IFRIC 22 'Foreign Currency Transactions and Advance Consideration';
-- Amendments to IAS 40 'Transfers of investment property';
-- IFRS 2 (amendment) 'Classification and Measurement of Share-based
Payment Transactions'; and
-- IFRIC23 'Uncertainty over Income Tax Treatments'.
IFRS 16 Leases
IFRS 16, which has not yet been endorsed by the EU, introduces a
comprehensive model for the identification of lease arrangements
and accounting treatments for both lessors and lessees. IFRS 16
will supersede the current lease guidance including IAS 17 Leases
and the related interpretations when it becomes effective for
accounting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2019. The Group
expects to adopt IFRS 16 for the year ending 31 December 2019. No
decision has been made about whether to use any of the transitional
options in IFRS 16.
IFRS 16 distinguishes leases and service contracts on the basis
of whether an identified asset is controlled by a customer.
Distinctions of operating leases (off balance sheet) and finance
leases (on balance sheet) are removed for lessee accounting, and is
replaced by a model where a right-of-use asset and a corresponding
liability have to be recognised for all leases by lessees (i.e. all
on balance sheet) except for short-term leases and leases of low
value assets.
The right-of-use asset is initially measured at cost and
subsequently measured at cost (subject to certain exceptions) less
accumulated depreciation and impairment losses, adjusted for any
remeasurement of the lease liability. The lease liability is
initially measured at the present value of the lease payments that
are not paid at that date. Subsequently, the lease liability is
adjusted for interest and lease payments, as well as the impact of
lease modifications, amongst others. Furthermore, the
classification of cash flows will also be affected because
operating leases under IAS 17 are presented as operating cash
flows, whereas under the IFRS 16 model, the lease payments will be
split into a principal and interest portion which will be presented
as operating and financing cash flows respectively. Furthermore,
extensive disclosures are required by IFRS 16.
As at 30 June 2018, the Group has non-cancellable operating
lease commitments of GBP27.8 million. IAS 17 does not require the
recognition of any right-of-use asset or liability for future
payments for these leases. A preliminary assessment indicates that
these arrangements will meet the definition of a lease under IFRS
16, although some of them will qualify as low value or short-term
leases upon the application of IFRS 16. The Group is in the process
of assessing the impact of recognising a right-of-use asset and a
related lease liability in the Group Financial Statements. It is
not practicable to provide a reasonable estimate of the financial
effect until this review has been completed.
Alternative Performance Measures
In reporting financial information, the Group presents
alternative performance measures, 'APMs' which are not defined or
specified under the requirements of IFRS.
The Group believes that these APMs, which are not considered to
be a substitute for or superior to IFRS measures, provide
stakeholders with additional helpful information on the performance
of the business. The APMs are consistent with how the business
performance is planned and reported within the internal management
reporting to the Board. Some of these measures are also used for
the purpose of setting remuneration targets.
Each of the APMs used by the Group is set out later in this
report including explanations of how they are calculated and how
they can be reconciled to a statutory measure where relevant.
The Group reports percentage change figures for all performance
measures, other than profit or loss before taxation and earnings
per share, after restating prior year figures at a constant
exchange rate. The constant exchange rate, which is an APM,
retranslates the previous year measures at the average actual
periodic exchange rates used in the current financial year. These
measures are presented as a means of eliminating the effects of
exchange rate fluctuations on the year-on-year reported
results.
The Group makes certain adjustments to the statutory measures in
order to derive APMs where relevant. The Group's policy is to
exclude items that are considered to be significant in both nature
and/or quantum and where treatment as an adjusted item provides
stakeholders with additional useful information to assess the
year-on-year trading performance of the Group.
2. Principal risks and uncertainties
We operate a formal risk management process, the details of
which are set out on page 37 of the Financial Statements for the
year ended 31 December 2017. Details of our principal risks can be
found on pages 36 to 43 of the Financial Statements and are
summarised below:
-- the risk that we suffer losses or fail to optimise profitable
growth due to a failure to operate in compliance with, or
effectively anticipate changes in, all applicable laws and
regulations, or a regulator interpreting these in a different
way;
-- the risk that we suffer losses or fail to optimise profitable
growth through not responding to the competitive environment
or failing to ensure our proposition meets customer needs;
-- the risk that we suffer additional taxation or financial
penalties associated with failure to comply with tax legislation
or adopting an interpretation of the law that cannot be sustained;
-- the risk that we suffer losses or fail to optimise profitable
growth due to a failure to develop and maintain effective
technology solutions or manage change in an effective manner;
-- the risk that our strategy is impacted by not having sufficient
depth and quality of people or being unable to retain key
people and treat them in accordance with our values and ethical
standards;
-- the risk that we suffer losses or fail to optimise profitable
growth due to a failure of our systems, suppliers or processes
or due to the loss, theft or corruption of information;
-- the risk that we suffer financial or reputational damage
due to our methods of operation, ill-informed comment or
malpractice;
-- the risk that we suffer financial loss as a result of a failure
to identify and adapt to changing economic conditions adequately;
-- the risk of personal accident to, or assault of, our agents
or employees;
-- the risk that we suffer financial loss if our customers fail
to meet their contracted obligations; and
-- the risk of insufficient availability of funding, unfavourable
pricing, a breach of debt facility covenants; or that performance
is significantly impacted by interest rate or currency movements,
or failure of a banking counterparty.
3. Related parties
The Group has not entered into any material transactions with
related parties in the first six months of the year.
4. Segment analysis
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- -----------------
Revenue
European home credit 250.1 250.7 504.7
Mexico home credit 103.5 106.0 217.0
Digital 65.3 44.1 104.1
Revenue - continuing operations 418.9 400.8 825.8
Discontinued operations - 3.7 3.7
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- -----------------
Revenue 418.9 404.5 829.5
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- -----------------
Impairment
European home credit 44.9 63.5 91.1
Mexico home credit 34.1 35.8 75.6
Digital 23.6 18.8 42.9
Slovakia and Lithuania (0.1) (8.2) (8.5)
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- -----------------
Impairment - continuing operations 102.5 109.9 201.1
Discontinued operations - 2.6 2.6
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- -----------------
Impairment 102.5 112.5 203.7
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- -----------------
The 2017 comparatives in the notes to the condensed interim
financial information are based on IAS39 (the old accounting
standard for revenue and impairment) and therefore differ from
those used in the performance review. A reconciliation is included
in note 20 of this report.
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ --------------
Profit before taxation
European home credit 60.2 47.6 114.3
Mexico home credit 7.4 5.3 14.7
Digital (3.7) (8.2) (11.7)
Slovakia and Lithuania - 5.4 3.2
UK costs(1) (7.4) (7.1) (14.9)
------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Profit before taxation - continuing
operations 56.5 43.0 105.6
Discontinued operations - (7.2) (2.7)
------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
Profit before taxation 56.5 35.8 102.9
------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ------------
(1) Although UK costs are not classified as a separate segment
in accordance with IFRS 8 'Operating Segments', they are shown
separately in order to provide a reconciliation to profit before
taxation.
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- ---------------
Segment assets
European home credit 676.9 818.5 822.3
Mexico home credit 201.2 244.6 220.3
Digital 242.1 189.0 231.9
Slovakia and Lithuania 0.4 1.4 0.9
UK(2) 75.6 71.7 67.2
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- ---------------
Total - continuing operations 1,196.2 1,325.2 1,342.6
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- ---------------
Segment liabilities
European home credit 259.9 388.6 332.0
Mexico home credit 156.1 193.9 145.2
Digital 185.4 163.1 157.0
Slovakia and Lithuania 6.9 8.5 7.7
UK(2) 201.3 94.1 203.8
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- ---------------
Total - continuing operations 809.6 848.2 845.7
-------------------------------------------- ------------ -------------- ---------------
(2) Although the UK is not classified as a separate segment in
accordance with IFRS 8 'Operating Segments', it is shown separately
above in order to provide a reconciliation to consolidated total
assets and liabilities.
5. Tax expense
The underlying taxation charge on profit for the first six
months of 2018 has been based on an expected effective tax rate for
the full year of 34% (30 June 2017: 30%).
The Group is currently subject to a tax audit with respect to
Provident Polska for the years 2008-2011. Audits of 2010 and 2011
are ongoing, whilst for 2008 and 2009 decisions were received in
January 2017 and have been appealed. Further details are set out
above. The Group is also subject to audits in Mexico (regarding
2015) and Slovakia (regarding 2014-15), all of which are still at
the information gathering stage.
In late 2017 the European Commission opened a state aid
investigation into the Group Financing Exemption contained in the
UK controlled foreign currency rules, which was introduced in 2013.
The UK authorities do not accept that the rules constitute state
aid. In common with other UK-based international companies whose
arrangements are in line with current controlled foreign currency
rules, the Group may be affected by the outcome of this
investigation. The Group is monitoring developments.
6. Earnings per share
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
pence pence pence
----------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ------------
Basic EPS - continuing operations
pre-exceptional tax 16.7 13.6 33.7
Dilutive effect of awards (0.8) (0.6) (1.3)
----------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ------------
Diluted EPS - continuing
operations pre-exceptional
tax 15.9 13.0 32.4
----------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ------------
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
pence pence pence
----------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ------------
Basic EPS - continuing operations 16.7 13.6 20.2
Dilutive effect of awards (0.8) (0.6) (0.7)
----------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ------------
Diluted EPS - continuing
operations 15.9 13.0 19.5
----------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ------------
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
pence pence pence
------------------------------------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Basic EPS - including discontinued
operations 16.7 10.1 16.5
Dilutive effect of awards (0.8) (0.4) (0.7)
------------------------------------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Diluted EPS - including
discontinued operations 15.9 9.7 15.8
------------------------------------ ----------- ----------- ------------
Basic earnings per share ('EPS') from pre-exceptional continuing
operations is calculated by dividing the earnings attributable to
shareholders of GBP37.3m (30 June 2017: GBP30.1m, 31 December 2017:
GBP75.0m) by the weighted average number of shares in issue during
the period of 222.8m which has been adjusted to exclude the
weighted average number of shares held in treasury and by the
employee trust (30 June 2017: 222.2m, 31 December 2017:
222.4m).
Basic earnings per share ('EPS') from continuing operations is
calculated by dividing the earnings attributable to shareholders of
GBP37.3m (30 June 2017: GBP30.1m, 31 December 2017: GBP45.0m) by
the weighted average number of shares in issue during the period of
222.8m which has been adjusted to exclude the weighted average
number of shares held in treasury and by the employee trust (30
June 2017: 222.2m, 31 December 2017: 222.4m).
Basic earnings per share ('EPS') including discontinued
operations is calculated by dividing the earnings attributable to
shareholders of GBP37.3m (30 June 2017: GBP22.4m, 31 December 2017:
GBP36.6m) by the weighted average number of shares in issue during
the period of 222.8m which has been adjusted to exclude the
weighted average number of shares held in treasury and by the
employee trust (30 June 2017: 222.2m, 31 December 2017:
222.4m).
For diluted EPS the weighted average number of shares has been
adjusted to 234.1m (30 June 2017: 231.5m, 31 December 2017: 231.4m)
to assume conversion of all dilutive potential ordinary share
options relating to employees of the Group.
7. Dividends
The final dividend for 2017 of 7.8 pence per share was paid to
shareholders on 11 May 2018 at a total cost to the Group of
GBP17.4m. The directors propose an interim dividend in respect of
the financial year ended 31 December 2018 of 4.6 pence per share
payable to shareholders who are on the register at close of
business on 7 September 2018. This will amount to a total dividend
payment of GBP10.3m based upon the number of shares in issue and
ranking for dividends as at 30 June 2018. This dividend is not
reflected as a liability in the balance sheet as at 30 June
2018.
8. Discontinued operations
On 28 June 2017, we announced the completion of the sale of
Group's home credit business in Bulgaria in order to focus our
resources on our larger home credit and rapidly-growing digital
businesses. Losses of GBP7.7m are included in the income statement
in respect of Bulgaria for the half-year ended 30 June 2017. These
costs can be analysed as follows:
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Revenue - 3.7 3.7
Impairment - (2.6) (2.6)
-------------------------------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Revenue less impairment - 1.1 1.1
Finance costs - (0.2) (0.2)
Other operating costs - (0.7) (0.7)
Administrative expenses - (2.9) (2.9)
-------------------------------- ----------- ---------- ------------
Trading losses - (2.7) (2.7)
Write-off of assets - (4.5) (5.2)
Loss before taxation - (7.2) (7.9)
Taxation charge - (0.5) (0.5)
Loss - discontinued operations - (7.7) (8.4)
-------------------------------- ----------- ---------- ------------
9. Goodwill
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
Net book value at start of
period 24.4 23.3 23.3
Exchange adjustments (0.5) 0.6 1.1
Net book value at end of period 23.9 23.9 24.4
--------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
10. Intangible assets
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
Net book value at start of
period 33.1 32.6 32.6
Additions 9.4 7.4 14.9
Impairment (0.4) - (3.3)
Amortisation (8.0) (5.1) (11.4)
Exchange adjustments (0.2) 0.2 0.5
Disposal of subsidiary - (0.2) (0.2)
--------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
Net book value at end of period 33.9 34.9 33.1
--------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
11. Property, plant and equipment
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
Net book value at start of
period 23.2 23.4 23.4
Exchange adjustments (0.7) 1.3 0.9
Additions 2.0 4.7 10.1
Disposals (0.4) (0.1) (0.7)
Depreciation (4.9) (4.8) (10.3)
Disposal of subsidiary - (0.2) (0.2)
--------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
Net book value at end of period 19.2 24.3 23.2
--------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
As at 30 June 2018 the Group had GBP3.8m of capital expenditure
commitments with third parties that were not provided for (30 June
2017: GBP5.7m, 31 December 2017: GBP8.4m).
12. Non-current tax asset
Non-current tax asset includes an amount of GBP35.1m in respect
of the tax paid to the Polish Tax Authority, see note 14 for
further details.
13. Amounts receivable from customers
All lending is in the local currency of the country in which the
loan is issued. The currency profile of amounts receivable from
customers is as follows:
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
Polish zloty 328.3 378.9 393.3
Czech crown 61.4 82.1 83.3
Euro* 152.2 120.3 148.4
Hungarian forint 122.6 149.8 162.7
Romanian leu 67.9 87.1 93.4
Mexican peso 144.4 183.8 165.1
Australian dollar 11.5 8.2 10.7
Total receivables 888.3 1,010.2 1,056.9
------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
*Includes receivables in Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania and
Spain.
Amounts receivable from customers are held at amortised cost and
are equal to the expected future cash flows receivable discounted
at the average effective interest rate ('EIR') of 109% (30 June
2017: 101%, 31 December 2017: 99%). All amounts receivable from
customers are at fixed interest rates. The average period to
maturity of the amounts receivable from customers is 9.7 months (30
June 2017: 8.5 months, 31 December 2017: 9.1 months).
The Group has one class of loan receivable and no collateral is
held in respect of any customer receivables. The Group does not use
an impairment provision account for recording impairment losses
and, therefore, no analysis of gross customer receivables less
provision for impairment is presented.
The comparative numbers for 2017 are based on the old accounting
standard for revenue and impairment (IAS39). Further details on the
impact of implementing IFRS9 are included in the funding and
balance sheet section of this report and in note 20.
14. Borrowings
The maturity of the Group's bond and bank borrowings is as
follows:
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------ ---------- ---------- ------------
Repayable
- in less than one year 32.1 73.9 79.6
---------- ---------- ------------
- between one and two years 159.6 29.5 15.2
- between two and five years 459.0 580.9 582.9
618.6 610.4 598.1
---------- ---------- ------------
Total borrowings 650.7 684.3 677.7
------------------------------ ---------- ---------- ------------
Borrowings is stated net of deferred debt issuance costs of
GBP2.9m (June 2017: GBP3.2m; December 2017 GBP3.3m).
The maturity of the Group's bond and bank facilities is as
follows:
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------ ---------- ---------- ------------
Repayable
- on demand 19.6 15.1 19.9
- in less than one year 72.8 83.5 113.5
- between one and two years 203.8 49.8 68.1
- between two and five years 568.4 675.7 665.5
Total facilities 864.6 824.1 867.0
------------------------------ ---------- ---------- ------------
As outlined previously, the Group's home credit company in
Poland, Provident Polska, has been subject to tax audits in respect
of the Company's 2008 and 2009 financial years. The 2010 and 2011
financial years are currently being audited by the tax authorities
in Poland, and all subsequent years up to and including 2017 remain
open to future audit. Provident Polska has appealed decisions made
by the Polish Tax Chamber, to the District Administrative Court,
for the 2008 and 2009 financial years and has paid the amounts
assessed of GBP35.1 million (comprising tax and associated
interest) which was necessary in order to make the appeals. As
noted above, the 2008 and 2009 tax audit decisions are the subject
of a process involving the UK tax authority aimed at ensuring that
the intra-group arrangement is taxed in accordance with
international tax principles and as a result the court hearings
have been stayed.
In order to appeal any potential future decisions for 2010 and
subsequent years, further payments may be required. There are
significant uncertainties in relation to the amount and timing of
such cash outflows. However, in the event that audits are opened,
and similar decisions are reached for each of these subsequent
financial years, further amounts of up to c. GBP128 million may be
required to be funded (including approximately GBP43 million for
the 2010 and 2011 years on which audits have commenced).
15. Retirement benefit asset/(obligation)
The amounts recognised in the balance sheet in respect of the
retirement benefit asset/(obligation) are as follows:
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
----------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
Equities 11.9 23.6 11.7
Bonds 10.1 10.1 10.2
Index-linked gilts 9.0 8.3 8.5
Diversified growth funds 11.5 - 11.6
Other 0.9 1.0 0.2
---------- ---------- ------------
Total fair value of scheme
assets 43.4 43.0 42.2
Present value of funded defined
benefit obligations (36.9) (49.0) (40.1)
----------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
Net asset/(obligation) recognised
in the balance sheet 6.5 (6.0) 2.1
----------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------
The charge recognised in the income statement in respect of
defined benefit pension costs is GBPnil (6 months ended 30 June
2017: GBP0.1m, 12 months ended 31 December 2017: GBP0.2m).
16. Fair values of financial assets and liabilities
IFRS 7 requires disclosure of fair value measurements of
derivative financial instruments by level of the following fair
value measurement hierarchy:
-- quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical
assets or liabilities (level 1);
-- inputs other than quoted prices included within level 1 that
are observable for the asset or liability, either directly
(that is, as prices) or indirectly (that is, derived from
prices) (level 2); and
-- inputs for the asset or liability that are not based on observable
market data (that is, unobservable inputs) (level 3).
All of the Group's derivative financial instruments held at fair
value fall into hierarchy level 2 (30 June 2017 and 31 December
2017: all of the Group's derivative financial instruments held at
fair value fell into hierarchy level 2). The fair value of
derivative financial instruments has been calculated by discounting
expected future cash flows using interest rate yield curves and
forward foreign exchange rates prevailing at the relevant period
end.
Except as detailed in the following table, the carrying value of
financial assets and liabilities recorded at amortised cost, which
are all short-term in nature, are a reasonable approximation of
their fair value:
Carrying value Fair value
------------------------------------- -------------------------------------
Unaudited Unaudited Audited Unaudited Unaudited Audited
30 June 30 June 31 December 30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017 2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------- ---------- ---------- -------------
Financial
assets
Amounts receivable
from customers 888.3 1,010.2 1,056.9 1,263.3 1,405.0 1,433.0
888.3 1,010.2 1,056.9 1,263.3 1,405.0 1,433.0
---------- ---------- ------------- ---------- ---------- -------------
Financial
Liabilities
Bonds 581.2 580.1 590.0 553.5 528.3 567.8
Bank borrowings 69.5 104.2 87.7 69.5 104.2 87.7
650.7 684.3 677.7 623.0 632.5 655.5
-------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------- ---------- ---------- -------------
The fair value of amounts receivable from customers has been
derived by discounting expected future cash flows (as used to
calculate the carrying value of amounts due from customers), net of
agent collection costs, at the Group's weighted average cost of
capital.
The fair value of the bonds has been calculated by reference to
their market value.
The carrying value of bank borrowings is deemed to be a good
approximation of their fair value. Bank borrowings can be repaid
within six months if the Group decides not to roll over for further
periods up to the contractual repayment date. The impact of
discounting would therefore, be negligible.
17. Reconciliation of profit after taxation to cash generated
from operating activities
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
Six months Six months Year
ended ended ended
30 June 30 June 31 December
2018 2017 2017
GBPm GBPm GBPm
-------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ------------
Profit after taxation from continuing
operations 37.3 30.1 45.0
Adjusted for
Tax charge 19.2 12.9 60.6
Finance costs 28.0 27.1 55.2
Share-based payment charge/(credit) 2.2 1.4 (0.2)
Amortisation of intangible
assets (note 10) 8.0 5.1 11.4
Loss on disposal of property,
plant and equipment 0.4 0.1 -
Impairment of intangible assets
(note 10) 0.4 - 3.3
Depreciation of property, plant
and equipment (note 11) 4.9 4.8 10.3
Changes in operating assets
and liabilities
Amounts receivable from customers (0.4) (16.7) (65.9)
Other receivables (7.6) (5.2) 2.0
Trade and other payables (1.7) 12.0 20.2
Retirement benefit asset (1.1) (0.9) (0.9)
Derivative financial instruments 3.8 22.1 2.6
-------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ------------
Cash generated from continuing
operating activities 93.4 92.8 143.6
-------------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- ------------
18. Foreign exchange rates
The table below shows the average exchange rates for the
relevant reporting periods and closing exchange rates at the
relevant period ends.
Average Closing Average Closing Average Closing
Year
H1 June H1 June 2017 December
2017
2018 2018 2017 2017
-------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- ----------
Polish zloty 4.8 4.9 4.9 4.8 4.8 4.7
Czech crown 29.0 29.3 31.0 29.8 30.3 28.4
Euro 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.1 1.1 1.1
Hungarian
forint 356.5 368.3 358.8 350.8 351.4 346.9
Romanian leu 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.2 5.2 5.2
Mexican peso 26.6 27.3 24.1 22.9 24.5 26.3
Australian
dollar 1.8 1.8 1.7 1.7 1.7 1.7
-------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- ----------
The GBP30.4m exchange loss on foreign currency translations
shown within the consolidated statement of comprehensive income
arises on retranslation of net assets denominated in currencies
other than sterling, due to the change in foreign exchange rates
against sterling between December 2017 and June 2018 shown in the
table above.
19. Contingent Liability Note
The Group's home credit company in Poland, Provident Polska, has
been subject to tax audits in respect of the company's 2008 and
2009 financial years. During these audits the Polish tax
authorities have challenged an intra-group arrangement with a UK
entity, and the timing of the taxation of home collection fee
revenues.
These audits culminated with decisions being received from the
Polish Tax Chamber (the upper tier of the Polish tax authority) in
January 2017. Provident Polska appealed these decisions to the
District Administrative Court, but had to pay the amounts assessed
totalling GBP35.1 million (comprising tax and associated interest)
which was necessary in order to make the appeals. The Company
strongly disagrees with the interpretation of the tax authority
having received legal opinions from leading advisors as to the
strength of our case. As noted above, the 2008 and 2009 tax audit
decisions are the subject of a process involving the UK tax
authority aimed at ensuring that the intra-group arrangement is
taxed in accordance with international tax principles and as a
result the court hearings have been stayed.
The directors have received strong external legal advice, and
note that during a previous tax audit by the same tax authority,
the Company's treatment of these matters was accepted as
correct.
Therefore the payments of the sums outlined above are not a
reflection of the directors' view on the merits of the case, and
accordingly the payments made in January 2017 have been recognised
as a non-current financial asset in these Financial Statements
given the uncertainties in relation to the timing of any repayment
of such amounts.
The 2010 and 2011 financial years are currently being audited by
the tax authorities in Poland. In the event that the Polish tax
authorities were to issue decisions following the same reasoning as
for 2008 and 2009 around a further GBP43 million would become
payable. In this eventuality we would seek to include these years
also in the existing process with the UK and Polish tax
authorities.
In addition, all subsequent years remain open to future audit,
meaning that there are further significant uncertainties in
relation to the amount and timing of potential additional future
payments in relation to these periods. In the event that audits are
opened in respect of some or all of these open periods, and similar
decisions are reached, further amounts may be required to be paid,
the timing of which would be dependent upon the timing of decisions
made by the Polish tax authorities for these later periods. Further
details on this are set out in note 14.
20. Changes in Accounting Policies - IFRS 9 'Financial
Instruments'
This note explains the impact of the adoption of IFRS 9
Financial Instruments on the Group's financial statements and also
discloses the new accounting policies that have been applied from 1
January 2018, where they are different to those applied in prior
periods.
Classification and measurement
With respect to the classification and measurement of financial
assets, the number of categories of financial assets under IFRS 9
has been reduced compared to IAS 39. Under IFRS 9 the
classification of financial assets is based both on the business
model within which the asset is held and the contractual cash flow
characteristics of the asset. There are three principal
classification categories for financial assets that are debt
instruments: (i) amortised cost, (ii) fair value through other
comprehensive income (FVTOCI) and (iii) fair value through profit
or loss (FVTPL). Equity instruments in the scope of IFRS 9 are
measured at fair value with gains and losses recognised in profit
or loss unless an irrevocable election is made to recognise gains
or losses in other comprehensive income.
There is no impact on the classification and measurement of the
following financial assets held by the Group: derivative financial
instruments; cash and cash equivalents; other receivables and
current tax assets.
There is no change in the accounting for any financial
liabilities.
Hedge accounting
On initial application of IFRS 9, an entity may choose, as its
accounting policy, to continue to apply the hedge accounting
requirements of IAS 39 instead of the hedge accounting requirements
of IFRS 9. The Group has elected to apply the IAS 39 hedge
accounting requirements.
Impact on the financial statements
IFRS 9 was adopted without restating comparative information.
The reclassifications and the adjustments arising from the new
impairment rules are therefore not reflected in the balance sheet
as at 31 December 2017, but are recognised in the opening balance
sheet on 1 January 2018.
The following table shows the adjustments recognised for each
individual line item. The adjustments are explained in more detail
below.
Audited IFRS 9 impact Restated
1 January 1 January 1 January
2018 2018 2018
GBPm GBPm GBPm
----------------------------------- ---------- -------------- ----------
Assets
Non-current assets
Goodwill 24.4 - 24.4
Intangible assets 33.1 - 33.1
Property, plant and equipment 23.2 - 23.2
Deferred tax assets 103.1 24.8 127.9
Non-current tax asset 37.0 - 37.0
Retirement benefit asset 2.1 - 2.1
222.9 24.8 247.7
---------- -------------- ----------
Current assets
Amounts receivable from customers
- due within one year 866.9 (107.0) 759.9
- due in more than one
year 190.0 (23.5) 166.5
---------- -------------- ----------
1,056.9 (130.5) 926.4
Derivative financial instruments 10.4 - 10.4
Cash and cash equivalents 27.4 - 27.4
Other receivables 19.3 - 19.3
Current tax assets 5.7 - 5.7
------------------------------------ ---------- -------------- ----------
1,119.7 (130.5) 989.2
---------- -------------- ----------
Total assets 1,342.6 (105.7) 1,236.9
---------- -------------- ----------
Liabilities
Current liabilities
Borrowings (79.6) - (79.6)
Derivative financial instruments (4.8) - (4.8)
Trade and other payables (145.7) - (145.7)
Current tax liabilities (7.4) - (7.4)
------------------------------------ ---------- -------------- ----------
(237.5) - (237.5)
---------- -------------- ----------
Non-current liabilities
Deferred tax liabilities (10.1) - (10.1)
Borrowings (598.1) - (598.1)
------------------------------------ ---------- -------------- ----------
(608.2) - (608.2)
---------- -------------- ----------
Total liabilities (845.7) - (845.7)
------------------------------------ ---------- -------------- ----------
Net assets 496.9 (105.7) 391.2
------------------------------------ ---------- -------------- ----------
Equity attributable to owners
of the Company
Called-up share capital 23.4 - 23.4
Other reserve (22.5) - (22.5)
Foreign exchange reserve 60.0 - 60.0
Hedging reserve (1.2) - (1.2)
Own shares (47.6) - (47.6)
Capital redemption reserve 2.3 - 2.3
Retained earnings 482.5 (105.7) 376.8
------------------------------------ ---------- -------------- ----------
Total equity 496.9 (105.7) 391.2
------------------------------------ ---------- -------------- ----------
IFRS 9 replaces the provisions of IAS 39 that relate to the
recognition, classification and measurement of financial assets and
financial liabilities, impairment of financial assets and hedge
accounting.
The adoption of IFRS 9 Financial Instruments from 1 January 2018
resulted in changes in accounting policies and adjustments to the
amounts recognised in the financial statements. The new accounting
policies are set out within this note. In accordance with the
transitional provisions of IFRS 9 (7.2.15) and (7.2.26),
comparative figures have not been restated.
The total impact on the Group's retained earnings as at 1
January 2018 is as follows:
1 January
2018
GBPm
Closing retained earnings 31 December - IAS 39 482.5
---------------------------------------------------------- ----------
Increase in impairment provisions for amounts receivable
from customers (130.5)
Increase in deferred tax asset relating to impairment
provisions 24.8
---------------------------------------------------------- ----------
Adjustment to retained earnings from adoption of
IFRS 9 on 1 January 2018 (105.7)
---------------------------------------------------------- ----------
Opening retained earnings 1 January - IFRS 9 376.8
---------------------------------------------------------- ----------
Impairment
The impairment model under IFRS 9 reflects expected credit
losses, as opposed to only incurred credit losses under IAS 39.
Under the impairment approach in IFRS 9, it is not necessary for a
credit event to have occurred before credit losses are recognised.
Instead, an entity always accounts for expected credit losses and
changes in those expected credit losses. The amount of expected
credit losses should be updated at each reporting date. The new
impairment model will apply to the Group's financial assets that
are measured at amortised cost, namely amounts receivable from
customers.
Determining an increase in credit risk since initial
recognition
IFRS 9 requires the recognition of 12 month expected credit
losses (the expected credit losses from default events that are
expected within 12 months of the reporting date) if credit risk has
not significantly increased since initial recognition (stage 1) and
lifetime expected credit losses for financial instruments for which
the credit risk has increased significantly since initial
recognition (stage 2) or which are credit impaired (stage 3).
When determining whether the risk of default has increased
significantly since initial recognition the Group considers both
quantitative and qualitative information based on the Group's
historical experience.
The approach to identifying significant increases in credit risk
is consistent across the Group's products. In addition, as a
backstop, the Group considers that a significant increase in credit
risk occurs when an asset is more than 30 days past due.
Financial instruments are moved back to stage 1 once they no
longer meet the criteria for a significant increase in credit
risk.
Definition of default and credit impaired assets
The Group defines a financial instrument as in default, which is
fully-aligned with the definition of credit-impaired, when it meets
one or more of the following criteria:
-- Quantitative criteria: the customer is more than 90 days
past due on their contractual payments in home credit and
60 days past due on their contractual payments in IPF Digital;
-- Qualitative criteria: indication that there is a measurable
movement in the estimated future cash flows from a group
of financial assets. For example, if prospective legislative
changes are considered to impact the collections performance
of customers.
The default definition has been applied consistently to model
the probability of default (PD), exposure at default (EAD) and loss
given default (LGD) throughout the Group's expected credit loss
calculations.
An instrument is considered to no longer be in default (i.e. to
have cured) when it no longer meets any of the default
criteria.
Forward-looking information
Under IFRS 9 macroeconomic overlays are required to include
forward-looking information when calculating expected credit
losses. The short-term nature of our lending means that the
portfolio turns over quickly, and as a result, any changes in the
macroeconomic environment will have very little impact on our
amounts receivable from customers.
Where extreme macroeconomic scenarios are experienced, we will
use management judgement to identify, quantify and apply any
required approach.
Modelling techniques
We have calculated PD, EAD, LGD and cash flow projections based
on the most recent collections performance, including management
overlays where we deem that historic performance is not
representative of future collections performance.
In some markets, the most recent impairment parameters are not
considered to be representative of expected future performance due
to changes in operational performance. Therefore an overlay has
been applied to increase certain parameters at both 1 January 2018
and 30 June 2018.
Under IFRS 9, the breakdown of receivables by stage is as
follows:
Unaudited Unaudited
30 June 2018 1 January
GBPm 2018
GBPm
----------------------------------- -------------- -----------
Amounts receivable from customers
Stage 1 605.6 627.5
Stage 2 101.5 101.5
Stage 3 181.2 197.4
Amounts receivable from customers 888.3 926.4
----------------------------------- -------------- -----------
Alternative performance measures
This financial report provides alternative performance measures
(APMs) which are not defined or specified under the requirements of
International Financial Reporting Standards. We believe these APMs
provide readers with important additional information on our
business. To support this we have included a reconciliation of the
APMs we use, where relevant, and a glossary indicating the APMs
that we use, an explanation of how they are calculated and why we
use them.
APM Closest Reconciling Definition and purpose
equivalent items to
statutory statutory
measure measure
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Income statement measures
--------------------------------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
IFRS 9 2017 IAS 39 2017 Not applicable The performance reporting in
comparative comparative this report compares the 2018
actual half-year performance
against the 2017 numbers adjusted
for IFRS 9 because the Board
believes that this provides the
most relevant comparison of performance
trends. A full reconciliation
of the 2017 profit and loss account
between the reported numbers
and the IFRS 9 numbers is set
out below.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Credit issued None Not applicable Credit issued is the principal
growth (%) value of loans advanced to customers
and is an important measure of
the level of lending in the business.
Credit issued growth is the period-on-period
change in this metric which is
calculated by retranslating the
previous half-year's credit issued
at the average actual exchange
rates used in the current financial
year. This ensures that the measure
is presented having eliminated
the effects of exchange rate
fluctuations on the
period-on-period reported results.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Average net None Not applicable Average net receivables are the
receivables average amounts receivable from
(GBPm)* customers
translated at the average monthly
actual exchange rate. This measure
is presented to illustrate the
change in amounts receivable
from customers on a consistent
basis with revenue growth.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Profit before Profit before Not applicable Profit before tax from ongoing
tax from ongoing tax from operations incorporates profits
operations* continuing from European home credit, Mexico
operations home credit, IPF Digital and
Central Costs. Profit before
tax from ongoing operations plus
profit before tax from Slovakia
and Lithuania equals profit before
tax from continuing operations.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Average net None Not applicable Average net receivables growth
receivables is the period-on-period change
growth at constant in average net receivables which
exchange rates is calculated by retranslating
(%)* the previous half-year's average
net receivables at the average
actual exchange rates used in
the current financial year. This
ensures that the measure is presented
having eliminated the effects
of exchange rate fluctuations
on the period-on-period reported
results.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Revenue growth None Not applicable The period-on-period change in
at revenue which is calculated by
constant exchange retranslating the previous half-year's
rates (%)* revenue at the average actual
exchange rates used in the current
financial year. This measure
is presented as a means of eliminating
the effects of exchange rate
fluctuations on the period-on-period
reported results.
Revenue yield None Not applicable Revenue yield is reported revenue
(%)* divided by average net receivables
and is an indicator of the gross
return being generated from average
net receivables.
Impairment None Not applicable Impairment as a percentage of
as a revenue is reported impairment
percentage divided by reported revenue and
of represents a measure of credit
revenue (%)* quality that is used across the
business. This measure is reported
on a rolling annual basis (annualised).
Cost-income None Not applicable The cost-income ratio is other
ratio (%)* costs divided by reported revenue.
Other costs represent all operating
costs with the exception of amounts
paid to agents as collecting
commission. This measure is reported
on a rolling annual basis
(annualised). This is useful
for comparing performance across
markets.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Pre-exceptional Profit before Exceptional Profit before tax and exceptional
profit before tax items items. This is considered to
tax (GBPm)* be an important measure where
exceptional items distort the
operating performance of the
business.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Effective tax Effective Exceptional Total tax expense for the Group
rate tax items and excluding exceptional tax items
before exceptional rate their divided by profit before tax
items (%) tax impact and exceptional items. This measure
is an indicator of the ongoing
tax rate for the Group.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Pre-exceptional Earnings Items identified Earnings per share before the
earnings per per as exceptional impact of exceptional items.
share share items This is considered
(pence) to be an important measure where
exceptional items distort the
operating performance of the
business.
Like-for-like None Not applicable The period-on-period change in
profit profit adjusted for the impact
growth or contraction of exchange
(GBPm)* rates and, where appropriate,
investment in new business development
opportunities. The impact of
exchange rates is calculated
by retranslating the previous
period's profit at the current
year's average exchange rate.
This measure is presented as
a means of reporting like-for-like
profit movements.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Balance sheet and returns measures
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Equity to receivables None Not applicable Total equity divided by amounts
ratio receivable from customers, this
(%) is a
measure of balance sheet strength.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Headroom (GBPm) Undrawn None Headroom is an alternative term
external for undrawn external bank facilities.
bank
facilities
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Other measures
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
Customers None Not applicable Customers that are being served
by our agents or through our
money transfer product in the
home credit business and customers
that are not in default in our
digital business.
----------------------- -------------- ----------------- ----------------------------------------------
*The 2017 comparative APM has been restated in the performance
review as if IFRS9 had been implemented in that year because the
Board believes that this provides the most relevant comparison of
performance trends.
Reconciliation of 2017 reported numbers under IAS39 restated
under IFRS 9
The performance reporting in this report compares the 2018
actual half-year performance against the 2017 numbers adjusted for
IFRS 9 because the Board believes that this provides the most
relevant comparison of performance trends. A full reconciliation of
the 2017 profit and loss account between the reported numbers and
the IFRS 9 numbers is set out below:
European home credit
H1 2017 IFRS 9 H1 2017
IAS39 Impact IFRS 9
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Average net receivables 645.0 (80.0) 565.0
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Revenue 250.7 8.2 258.9
Impairment (63.5) - (63.5)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Net revenue 187.2 8.2 195.4
Finance costs (17.8) - (17.8)
Agents' commission (28.1) - (28.1)
Other costs (93.7) - (93.7)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Profit before tax 47.6 8.2 55.8
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Mexico home credit
H1 2017 IFRS 9 H1 2017
IAS39 Impact IFRS 9
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Average net receivables 168.9 (21.4) 147.5
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Revenue 106.0 0.3 106.3
Impairment (35.8) 0.1 (35.7)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Net revenue 70.2 0.4 70.6
Finance costs (5.9) - (5.9)
Agents' commission (14.1) - (14.1)
Other costs (44.9) - (44.9)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Profit before tax 5.3 0.4 5.7
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
IPF Digital
H1 2017 IFRS 9 H1 2017
IAS39 Impact IFRS 9
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Average net receivables 138.6 (9.9) 128.7
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Revenue 44.1 - 44.1
Impairment (18.8) (2.3) (21.1)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Net revenue 25.3 (2.3) 23.0
Finance costs (3.4) - (3.4)
Other costs (30.1) - (30.1)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Loss before tax (8.2) (2.3) (10.5)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
IPF Digital - Established markets
H1 2017 IFRS 9 H1 2017
IAS39 Impact IFRS 9
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Average net receivables 97.8 (4.0) 93.8
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Revenue 27.9 - 27.9
Impairment (5.5) 0.5 (5.0)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Net revenue 22.4 0.5 22.9
Finance costs (2.4) - (2.4)
Other costs (12.0) - (12.0)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Profit before tax 8.0 0.5 8.5
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
IPF Digital - New markets
H1 2017 IFRS 9 H1 2017
IAS39 Impact IFRS 9
GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Average net receivables 40.8 (5.9) 34.9
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Revenue 16.2 - 16.2
Impairment (13.3) (2.8) (16.1)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Net revenue 2.9 (2.8) 0.1
Finance costs (1.0) - (1.0)
Other costs (13.9) - (13.9)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Loss before tax (12.0) (2.8) (14.8)
------------------------- -------- -------- --------
Constant exchange rate reconciliations
The period-on-period change in IFRS 9 profit and loss accounts
is calculated by retranslating the 2017 half-year's IFRS 9 profit
and loss account at the average actual exchange rates used in the
current year.
H1 2018
GBPm European Mexico IPF Digital Lithuania Central Group
home credit home credit & Slovakia costs
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- --------
Customers 1,132.0 865.0 250.0 - - 2,247.0
Credit issued 367.7 129.1 135.4 - - 632.2
Average net receivables 568.9 144.1 189.6 - - 902.6
Revenue 250.1 103.5 65.3 - - 418.9
Impairment (44.9) (34.1) (23.6) 0.1 - (102.5)
Net revenue 205.2 69.4 41.7 0.1 - 316.4
Finance costs (18.0) (5.0) (5.0) - - (28.0)
Agents' commission (27.2) (13.5) - - - (40.7)
Other costs (99.8) (43.5) (40.4) (0.1) (7.4) (191.2)
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- --------
Profit/(loss) before
tax 60.2 7.4 (3.7) - (7.4) 56.5
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- --------
H1 2017 performance, restated for IFRS 9, at average H1 2017
foreign exchange rates
GBPm European Mexico IPF Digital Lithuania Central Group
home credit home credit & Slovakia costs
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- --------
Customers 1,333.0 841.0 221.0 1.2 - 2,396.2
Credit issued 378.8 131.2 106.0 - - 616.0
Average net receivables 565.0 147.5 128.7 - - 841.2
Revenue 258.9 106.3 44.1 - - 409.3
Impairment (63.5) (35.7) (21.1) 8.2 - (112.1)
Net revenue 195.4 70.6 23.0 8.2 - 297.2
Finance costs (17.8) (5.9) (3.4) - - (27.1)
Agents' commission (28.1) (14.1) - (0.4) - (42.6)
Other costs (93.7) (44.9) (30.1) (2.4) (7.1) (178.2)
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- --------
Profit/(loss) before
tax 55.8 5.7 (10.5) 5.4 (7.1) 49.3
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- --------
Foreign exchange movements
GBPm European Mexico IPF Digital Lithuania Central Group
home credit home credit & Slovakia costs
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- ------
Credit issued 10.4 (10.0) 2.0 - - 2.4
Average net receivables 17.5 (10.4) 2.6 - - 9.7
Revenue 6.8 (8.1) 0.8 - - (0.5)
Impairment (1.0) 2.8 (0.6) (0.5) - 0.7
Net revenue 5.8 (5.3) 0.2 (0.5) - 0.2
Finance costs (0.5) 0.4 - (0.3) - (0.4)
Agents' commission (0.8) 1.0 - 0.1 - 0.3
Other costs (2.7) 3.0 (0.3) 0.9 - 0.9
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- ------
Profit/(loss) before
tax 1.8 (0.9) (0.1) 0.2 - 1.0
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- ------
H1 2017 performance, restated for IFRS 9, at average H1 2018
foreign exchange rates
GBPm European Mexico IPF Digital Lithuania Central Group
home credit home credit & Slovakia costs
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- --------
Credit issued 389.2 121.2 108.0 - - 618.4
Average net receivables 582.5 137.1 131.3 - - 850.9
Revenue 265.7 98.2 44.9 - - 408.8
Impairment (64.5) (32.9) (21.7) 7.7 - (111.4)
Net revenue 201.2 65.3 23.2 7.7 - 297.4
Finance costs (18.3) (5.5) (3.4) (0.3) - (27.5)
Agents' commission (28.9) (13.1) - (0.3) - (42.3)
Other costs (96.4) (41.9) (30.4) (1.5) (7.1) (177.3)
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- --------
Year-on-year movement at constant exchange rates
% European Mexico IPF Digital Lithuania Central Group
home credit home credit & Slovakia costs
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- -------
Credit issued (5.5%) 6.5% 25.4% (100.0%) - (6.2%)
Average net receivables (2.3%) 5.1% 44.4% - - 2.2%
Revenue (5.9%) 5.4% 45.4% - - 6.1%
Impairment (30.4%) 3.6% 8.8% - - 2.5%
Net revenue 2.0% 6.3% 79.7% (98.7%) - (8.0%)
Finance costs (1.6%) (9.1%) 47.1% (98.7%) - 6.4%
Agents' commission (5.9%) 3.1% - (100.0%) - 1.8%
Other costs 3.5% 3.8% 32.9% (100.0%) - (3.7%)
------------------------- ------------- ------------- ------------ ------------ -------- -------
Responsibility statement
The following statement is given by each of the directors:
namely; Dan O'Connor, Chairman; Gerard Ryan, Chief Executive
Officer; Justin Lockwood, Chief Financial Officer; Tony Hales,
senior independent non-executive director; John Mangelaars,
non-executive director; Richard Moat, non-executive director and
Cathryn Riley, non-executive director.
The directors confirm that to the best of their knowledge:
-- the condensed consolidated interim financial information
has been prepared in accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial
Reporting' as adopted by the European Union;
-- the half-year Financial Report includes a fair review of
the information required by DTR 4.2.7 (indication of important
events during the first six months and description of principal
risks and uncertainties for the remaining six months of the
year); and
-- the half-year Financial Report includes a fair review of
the information required by DTR 4.2.8 (disclosure of related
parties' transactions and changes therein).
The directors are responsible for the maintenance and integrity
of the Company's website. Legislation in the United Kingdom
governing the preparation and dissemination of financial statements
may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.
Independent review report to the members of International
Personal Finance plc
We have been engaged by the company to review the condensed
consolidated interim financial information in the half-year
Financial Report for the six months ended 30 June 2018 which
comprises the consolidated income statement, the consolidated
statement of other comprehensive income, the consolidated balance
sheet, the consolidated statement of changes in equity, the
consolidated cash flow statement and related notes 1 to 20. We have
read the other information contained in the half-year Financial
Report and considered whether it contains any apparent
misstatements or material inconsistencies with the information in
the condensed consolidated interim financial information.
This report is made solely to the company 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. Our work has been undertaken so that we might state to the
company those matters we are required to state to it in an
independent review 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 formed.
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 Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's
Financial Conduct Authority.
As disclosed in note 1, the annual financial statements of the
group are prepared in accordance with IFRSs as adopted by the
European Union. The condensed consolidated interim financial
information included in this half-year Financial Report has been
prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34,
"Interim Financial Reporting," as adopted by the European
Union.
Our responsibility
Our responsibility is to express to the Company a conclusion on
the condensed consolidated interim financial information in the
half-year Financial Report based on our review.
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 United Kingdom. A review of interim financial information
consists of making inquiries, primarily of persons responsible for
financial and accounting matters, and applying analytical and other
review procedures. A review is substantially less in scope than an
audit conducted in accordance with International Standards on
Auditing (UK and Ireland) 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.
Conclusion
Based on our review, nothing has come to our attention that
causes us to believe that the condensed consolidated interim
financial information in the half-year Financial Report for the six
months ended 30 June 2018 is not prepared, in all material
respects, in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34
as adopted by the European Union and the Disclosure and
Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct
Authority.
Deloitte LLP
Statutory Auditor
Leeds, United Kingdom
25 July 2018
This information is provided by RNS, the news service of the
London Stock Exchange. RNS is approved by the Financial Conduct
Authority to act as a Primary Information Provider in the United
Kingdom. Terms and conditions relating to the use and distribution
of this information may apply. For further information, please
contact rns@lseg.com or visit www.rns.com.
END
IR LLFVDDEISFIT
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 25, 2018 02:00 ET (06:00 GMT)
International Personal F... (LSE:IPF)
Historical Stock Chart
From Apr 2024 to May 2024
International Personal F... (LSE:IPF)
Historical Stock Chart
From May 2023 to May 2024