TIDMMER
RNS Number : 9969N
Mears Group PLC
27 May 2020
27 May 2020
Mears Group PLC
("Mears" or "the Group" or "the Company")
Audited Final Results for the year ended 31 December 2019
Solid full year results with a significant repositioning of the
business; managing Covid-19 in the current year
Mears Group PLC, a leading provider of services to the Housing
sector in the UK, announces its audited financial results for the
year ended 31 December 2019.
Financial Highlights
2019 2018 Change
Group revenue GBP982.6m GBP869.8m +13%
Group revenue from continuing activities* GBP905.1m GBP771.9m +17%
Normalised profit for the year before
tax* GBP37.3m GBP36.8m +1%
Reported profit for the year before
tax* GBP25.2m GBP27.4m (8%)
(Loss) / profit on discontinued activities
(including impairment) GBP(87.1m) GBP1.1m
Diluted EPS 18.80p 21.78p (14%)
Normalised diluted EPS* 27.26p 27.70p (2%)
Average daily net debt GBP114.4m GBP113.2m
* On continuing activities, stated before exceptional costs and
amortisation of acquisition intangibles. The normalised diluted EPS
amount is further adjusted to reflect a full tax charge.
Strategic highlights
-- Successful mobilisation of the Asylum Accommodation and Support contract ('AASC')
-- Integration of the MPS Housing business following its acquisition in November 2018
-- Exit from UK Domiciliary Care and the repositioning of our Housing with Care offering
-- Ongoing exit from Development
-- Unwinding and cancellation of the property acquisition facility
David Miles, Chief Executive Officer of Mears, commented:
" I am pleased with the progress of the Group in 2019. We have
achieved a solid set of results in a year of political and economic
uncertainty, along with delivering a significant repositioning of
the business into a more simplified structure as the UK's leading
provider of housing solutions.
" 2020 has brought challenges that were unforeseeable only a few
weeks ago. Mears is committed to maintaining services to its
clients and customers, sustaining its high level of employee
skills, motivation and experience and being prudent in respect of
cash management. The Board will continue to navigate the current
difficult circumstances with a concerted focus on short term
operational and financial management but also with a determination
to preserve sufficient resource with the requisite expertise for
the Company to prosper in the medium term when more normal economic
conditions return."
For further information, contact:
Mears Group PLC
David Miles, Chief Executive Officer Tel: +44(0)7778 220 185
Andrew Smith, Finance Director Tel: +44(0)7712 866 461
Alan Long, Executive Director Tel: +44(0)7979 966 453
www.mearsgroup.co.uk
Buchanan
Mark Court/Charlotte Slater Tel: +44(0)20 7466 5000
mears@buchanan.uk.com
About Mears
Mears currently employs around 7,500 people and provides
services in every region of the UK. In partnership with our Housing
clients, we maintain, repair and upgrade the homes of hundreds of
thousands of people in communities from remote rural villages to
large inner city estates. Mears has extended its activities to
provide broader housing solutions to solve the challenge posed by
the lack of affordable housing and to provide accommodation and
support for the most vulnerable.
We focus on long-term outcomes for people rather than short-term
solutions, and invest in innovations that have a positive impact on
people's quality of life and on their communities' social, economic
and environmental wellbeing. Our innovative approaches and market
leading positions are intended to create value for our customers
and the people they serve while also driving sustainable financial
returns for our providers of capital, especially our
shareholders
For further information, please visit www.mearsgroup.co.uk.
Chairman's Statement
Covid-19
The UK today is unimaginably different from the conditions which
prevailed throughout 2019. As at the date of this announcement, the
degree and speed with which normal activity can return remains very
unclear.
For Mears, the 'lockdown' introduced by the Government some
weeks ago has required us to react in a number of ways. We have had
detailed discussions with all of our customers about the basis on
which we can continue to work and deliver a service to them. Most
of our customers have treated Mears as a valued partner, evidence
of the close working relationships which we have developed with
them. While some of our activities have continued at pre-Covid
levels, in others, especially our regular maintenance work, we have
agreed with customers to defer much work and undertake only an
emergency service. In due course, we would expect to build on those
relationships and to agree a path back towards normal levels of
service.
In arriving at new ways of working, our primary focus has been
the safety and well-being of our staff and of the individual
clients to whom we provide housing and care services. We have
sought to offer as much support as we can to our workforce. We have
regrettably found it necessary to place some staff into the
Government's furlough arrangements for a period of time whilst
directing top-up payments to support those lowest paid and setting
up a staff hardship fund. We understand that the Group's success
depends upon the commitment and engagement of our staff. I am
pleased to put on record our recognition of that dedication and
commitment and our thanks to them all, especially those who have
given of their time and effort to support clients and their
families through difficult times.
We have also enjoyed the support of other stakeholders. Our
banking partners have all agreed to provide additional facilities
to the Group should they be needed and we thank them for their
flexibility. These arrangements will also be reviewed in due
course. We will continue to keep a careful watch on our cash
position as the emergency continues and as we proceed to a gradual
recovery toward normality. That cash position has been improved by
the Board's decision not to declare a final dividend in respect of
the 2019 year. It remains the Board's intention to adopt a
progressive dividend policy once it is confident that activity
levels and the Group's financial position make it prudent so to
do.
Once this crisis has passed, there will need to be a major
programme of economic restructuring and recovery. Mears is
determined that, working closely with our customers, we will be
able to play a full and effective part in supporting the
communities which we serve across the country.
The culture of our business and the quality and commitment of
our staff, has enabled Mears to quickly, responsibly and
effectively adapt to today's crisis. The robust nature of our
business model and the essential services that we deliver, mean
that we can be confident about our future and our contribution to
the recovery of the UK as a whole.
Results
The Group reported revenues for the year of GBP982.6m (2018:
GBP869.8m), an increase of 13%, driven by the acquisition of MPS
Housing ('MPS') and revenue from the Asylum Accommodation and
Support contract ('AASC'). The Group's continuing revenues for the
year (excluding standalone Domiciliary Care which is classified
within discontinued activities - see below and the Finance Review)
increased by 17% from GBP771.9m to GBP905.1m. Profit on continuing
activities before tax, exceptional costs and the amortisation of
acquisition intangibles increased to GBP37.3m (2018: GBP36.8m).
Normalised diluted earnings per share reduced very slightly to
27.26p (2018: 27.70p).When including the results from discontinued
operations, which included the impairment of intangibles, the Group
reported a statutory loss of GBP66.0m and similarly a diluted loss
per share of 59.77p
The Group reported strong cash performance on a spot basis, with
EBITDA to operating cash conversion of over 100% resulting in year
end net debt reducing to GBP51.0m (2018: GBP65.9m). Average daily
net debt for the year, excluding the property acquisition facility,
was GBP114.4m, falling short of the target set at the start of the
year of GBP105.0m as a consequence of working capital demands
within the development business and timing of payments on the
asylum contracts.
Strategy
Late in 2018, just before my appointment to the Board, Mears
took two important strategic steps with the acquisition of MPS and
the successful award of the three AASC contracts. Much of the focus
in 2019 was in ensuring that these new activities were effectively
mobilised and integrated into the Group's activities, which
required very significant effort across the Group. I am pleased
that we were able to start 2020 with much of this work successfully
completed with MPS and the asylum contracts progressively becoming
part of business as usual at Mears.
An important part of my work during my first year as Chairman
has been in understanding, evaluating and debating the Group's
strategy with the executive team, with the Board collectively and
with shareholders.
Following this assessment, we concluded, in particular, that
-- Activities were insufficiently focused and some did not
contribute adequately to shareholder value
-- Indebtedness was too high and efforts needed to be made to reduce it significantly
-- Market forecasts were not always matched by corporate performance
-- There was an imbalance on the Board with insufficient
representation from the corporate sector
The Board resolved during the course of 2019 to make a number of
changes to address these issues. The first of these was the
decision to refocus our housing development activity so as to
progressively and significantly reduce the amount of our own
capital utilised in that area. I am pleased that we have succeeded
to reduce our future commitments here although the working capital
held within the business remains significant. It is expected to
decline during 2020 and 2021, although the pace at which it does so
will be determined to some degree by the buoyancy of the UK housing
market as a whole. In conjunction with this reduced focus on
capital intensive housing activity, the property acquisition
facility, which was introduced in 2017 to enable the Group to
acquire and build portfolios of properties prior to their disposal
to long term funding partners, was paid down during 2019 and has
now been cancelled.
Mears takes pride in its ability to provide the housing
requirements of a wide range of customers, including many who are
vulnerable and some who have long term health needs. The Group has
for many years been a major provider of domiciliary care services
to public sector customers across Great Britain. Mears should be
proud of its achievements of improving service delivery and the pay
and conditions of the workforce in this business. Regrettably,
however, the sector remains severely structurally underfunded and
it has proved impossible for the Group to generate an adequate
financial return. Accordingly, the Board resolved progressively to
exit our domiciliary care activities and the business in England
and Wales was sold in January 2020. We intend to exit our Scottish
domiciliary care business when circumstances permit. We shall
continue to provide housing with care solutions for our clients
where we can do so in a way which creates value for the business
and for our customers.
While year-end debt was lower in 2019 than in the previous year,
less progress was made in reducing the Group's average net
indebtedness during the year. It remains a clear objective for the
Group to reduce its debt position. However, one consequence of the
current public health emergency will be a delay to the achievement
of the desired debt reduction.
The Board is working on the Group's future strategy, based on
our vision to be the UK's most respected and trusted provider of
housing solutions. We will continue to evaluate our portfolio of
businesses to ensure that they fit with that vision and provide a
sound basis for sustainable growth in shareholder value.
Board developments
As prefigured in my statement in last year's report, there have
been a number of changes to the non-executive composition of the
Mears Board during the course of 2019. We were joined in July by
Jim Clarke, an experienced non-executive director with a long and
successful career as the chief financial officer at a number of
listed companies. In September, Chris Loughlin joined the Board.
Chris has been Chief Executive Officer at Pennon Group plc since
2016 and was previously CEO of South West Water for 10 years. Both
Jim and Chris have made effective contributions to the Board and
its committees since their appointment and I look forward to
working with them closely during 2020.
At the end of the year, Liz Corrado stood down as a
non-executive director to focus on her other work. Jason Burt also
stood down from the Board with effect from the end of March 2020.
He has taken up a new role within Mears advising on health and
safety matters. We thank both Liz and Jason for their work on the
Board and look forward to a continuing relationship with Jason in
his new role.
Amanda Hillerby, the Board's employee director was on maternity
leave for much of 2019. She stood down from the Board in February
of this year, consequent on the completion of the sale of the
Group's Domiciliary Care business in England and Wales. We thank
Amanda for her work on the Board. Preparations are underway to
recruit a new employee director during 2020.
With these changes, the Board now has a balance of non-executive
directors with experience in both the commercial and not-for-profit
sectors, reflecting the balance of our ownership and our customer
base. I will continue to keep that balance, and the capabilities
around the Board table, under review so as to ensure that the Board
continues to have what it needs for effective leadership of the
Group.
Relationships with shareholders
I spent a considerable period of time in the first half of 2019
in discussion with the Group's largest shareholders, representing
between them over 80% of the Company's share capital by value. I
found these discussions very valuable in helping me to appreciate
shareholders' views. I shall continue to maintain contact with
shareholders during 2020 and as the Group continues to develop.
People
In my first year or so as Chairman, I have made a number of
visits to different parts of the business to get to understand in
more detail how the operations are run and managed and to talk to
staff about their concerns and aspirations. I visited operations in
Gloucester, Scotland, Enfield, Rotherham, Lambeth, Milton Keynes,
Birmingham and Northampton and I attended the Group's annual
conference. I am very grateful to all those who arranged these
visits and to the staff who took the time to talk to me and help me
learn what Mears does on the ground across the country. I intend to
continue to visit operations as circumstances permit.
When recruiting staff at Mears, we look for people who share our
vision and values and who want to make a positive difference to the
communities we serve. For the second year running we have been
recognised by The Sunday Times as one of the best 25 Big Companies
to work for in the UK. This recognises our commitment to training
and support for our staff, exemplified by the very large number of
apprenticeship schemes that we ran in 2019.
ESG
Mears' commitment to creating Social Value and to making a
positive difference to the lives of the people and communities whom
we serve has been a consistent feature since the business was
formed in 1988. The Group's commitment to Social Value was further
underlined in 2019 by the creation of a new body, the Customer
Scrutiny Board. This group consists of nine Mears resident customer
representatives, is chaired by Terrie Alafat and sponsored by the
Centre for Public Scrutiny. This new body will examine Mears'
processes and delivery, advising the Group on ways in which it
might work more effectively to improve the customer experience. We
look forward to stimulating and constructive discussions with this
new voice of the customer.
Summary
Mears' focus on housing solutions and its strong social value
culture are valuable qualities and mark the Group out from many of
its peers. They are exemplified by our staff and their attitude to
their jobs and I am grateful to them for all their efforts in
2019.
2020 has brought challenges that were unforeseeable only a few
weeks ago. Mears is committed to maintaining services to clients
and customers, sustaining its high level of employee skills,
motivation and experience and being highly prudent when managing
cash. The Board will continue to navigate the current difficult
circumstances with a sharp focus on short term operational and
financial management but also with a determination to preserve
skills and expertise necessary for it to prosper when more normal
economic conditions return.
Chief Executive Review
I am pleased with the progress of the Group in 2019. We have
achieved a solid set of results in a year of political and economic
uncertainty, along with delivering a significant internal and
external repositioning of the business into a more simplified
structure as the UK's leading provider of housing solutions. We
have made excellent progress on all our key projects in the year,
notably the mobilisation of the Asylum contract and the integration
of MPS. Strategically, we have taken steps to focus the business
solely on the UK housing sector, selling our English and Welsh
Domiciliary Care businesses in February 2020; the Group is in the
process of selling the Scottish Care operation and is winding down,
over a sensible time frame, its Development activities. The housing
sector will benefit from the numerous Government initiatives to
deal with and provide good quality homes and I look forward with
optimism to the future, as do our workforce, who once again have
rated Mears as one of the top 25 UK Big Companies to work for in
The Sunday Times survey.
The issues surrounding the impact of Covid-19 and the Group's
responses to date have been covered earlier. I am confident that
our approach is solid and that we have the right relationships with
employees, suppliers and clients to get the best outcomes
possible.
Financial performance
The Group has delivered a solid financial performance. Results
for 2019 include the reporting of standalone Domiciliary Care
within discontinued activities, whilst the residual Housing with
Care business remains within continuing activities. In addition,
the adoption of the new accounting standard, IFRS 16 'Leases', has
materially changed the shape of the reported figures for the
current year, whilst making no adjustments to the comparative
figures. The Group is mindful of the requirement to ensure that
non-statutory measures do not receive undue prominence, however for
the purposes of my review, figures are reported on continuing
activities only and before the impact of IFRS 16. This is the
format which the Directors believe is most easily understood by the
Group's stakeholders and forms the basis upon which the senior team
manage the business. The 'Finance Review' provides a detailed
reconciliation between statutory and non-statutory measures.
With the planned full exit from standalone Domiciliary Care, the
Group will, moving forwards, only report a single operating segment
of Housing which is aligned to the Group's strategy to focus only
on housing based services. The Housing division is currently
sub-divided into three activities: Maintenance, Management and
Development. Maintenance and Management are core activities to the
Group, while Development is being wound down in line with the
Group's strategy. To assist our stakeholders to properly understand
the trading results for the current year, an additional category of
'Housing with Care' is included in the analysis. From 2020, this
will be absorbed into the Management category. It should be
recognised that some opportunities require a full asset management
service which does not slot easily into a single category. In such
cases, revenue and profit are assigned to the predominant
category.
2019 2018
--------------------------------------- --------------------------------------
Split of Split of
divisional divisional
Revenue contribution* Margin Revenue contribution* Margin
-------------- ---------- --------------- ------- ---------- --------------- -------
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
Maintenance 660.7 30.5 4.6% 578.7 28.0 4.8%
Management 186.0 11.8 6.3% 135.4 8.5 6.3%
Development 39.5 (2.9) (7.3%) 39.1 1.1 2.8%
Housing with
Care 18.9 2.0 10.6% 18.7 1.5 8.0%
-------------- ---------- --------------- ------- ---------- --------------- -------
Total 905.1 41.4 4.6% 771.9 39.1 5.1%
-------------- ---------- --------------- ------- ---------- --------------- -------
*Divisional contribution is defined within Finance Review, and
is stated on continuing activities before the impact of IFRS
16.
The Housing division reported revenues of GBP905.1m (2018:
GBP771.9m), an increase of 17%. Whilst contribution increased from
GBP39.1m to GBP41.2m, operating margins reduced from 5.1% to 4.6%,
as expected. An explanation of the key movements is detailed
below:
Maintenance
-- Maintenance includes the acquired MPS business which
delivered revenues of GBP118.7m (2018: GBP9.0m). The pre-existing
Maintenance business saw revenues reduce to GBP542.0m (2018:
GBP569.7m) following our previously stated decision to exit a small
number of contracts. The Group has taken a more robust stance on a
number of contractual relationships over the last two years and, as
contracts have come up for extension or expiry, the Group
reconsidered the balance between risk and reward.
-- The Maintenance business, excluding the impact of MPS,
maintained its operating margin at 4.8%. This margin falls short of
historic norms and management continue to target operating margins
of in excess of 5.0%. The MPS business generated an operating
margin of 3.6% which is in-line with the expectations at the time
of the acquisition. Actions are in place to grow operating margins
towards the target of 5.0% in 2020.
-- There remain good quality opportunities to grow our core
Maintenance revenues with both existing and new customers. We have
an excellent track record of securing work at the right margins and
we continue our long-term approach to bidding on the right terms,
which continues to serve us well. As a result, often opportunities
that have been missed in an earlier procurement process re-present
themselves to the Group.
Management
-- Management revenues reported strong growth, underpinned by
the new AASC contract which delivered revenues of GBP48.8m. The
annualised run rate on exiting 2019 was in excess of GBP100m on
AASC. The transition period continued to the end of March 2020, at
which point we are expecting to have reached a steady-state. The
AASC contract reported a positive contribution in the year.
-- The Group's partnership with The Ministry of Housing,
Communities and Local Government in running the National Planning
Portal reported strong revenue growth, increasing from GBP3.1m to
GBP7.5m. This service commenced in 2015 and while it generated
operating losses for the initial period, the Group is now seeing a
positive return on its investment. The National Planning Portal is
an excellent business and we continue to evaluate opportunities for
its development.
-- The Management business, when excluding the good progress
made by our flagship Key Worker and National Planning Portal
activities, has reported a small revenue reduction, reflecting the
increasing focus on large scale contract opportunities and a
reduced emphasis on a number of the emergency housing solutions
where profitability, working capital and risk are not proportionate
with the management time involved. The success of the Asylum and
Key Worker contracts improves the quality of the sales mix in this
area and encourages the Group to be increasingly selective.
Development
-- The Development business experienced a slowdown in private
sales in the second half of 2018 and this trend continued in 2019.
The Group has communicated its plan to exit from all development
work which carries a requirement for the Group to utilise its own
Balance Sheet. Development, nonetheless, remains an important
in-house capability and the Group is delivering a small amount of
new build work within the Maintenance division on a contracting
basis. Sales activity in 2019 has remained slow with the sale of 36
units and closing stock of 34 completed units. The senior team
anticipates some reduction in the number of unsold completed units
during 2020 and would hope that this results in a small unwind in
the working capital. The outcome depends in part on external
factors outside the Group's control. The Development business
delivered an operating loss of GBP2.9m in 2019 which is marginally
worse than our original forecast of a GBP2.5m loss. The Group will
complete the remaining sites whilst maintaining a balance between
profitability and managing the working capital absorbed in this
part of the business.
Progress on key objectives
I am pleased to report another year of excellent progress, where
the business has performed well against its key objectives,
notably:
-- Successful mobilisation of the Asylum Accommodation and Support contract
-- Integration of the MPS Housing business following its acquisition in November 2018
-- Exit from Domiciliary Care and the repositioning of our Housing with Care offering
-- Ongoing exit from Development
-- Unwinding and cancellation of the Property acquisition facility
Mobilisation of AASC
The Group was delighted to be awarded three of the seven
regional AASC contracts, being Scotland, Northern Ireland and the
North East of England. With a total contract value estimated at
GBP1 billion over a ten year term, this was the largest ever
awarded to Mears and exemplifies the progress made by the Group
over recent years. The mobilisation of the work commenced in
January 2019 and all three contracts were fully operational by
September 2019.
Mears has made an immediate impact, transitioning an inherited
housing portfolio which included some unresolved legacy issues,
towards an improving mix of quality and longevity. Mears has a
clear plan to continue this migration over the next two years.
Early indications are that volumes may exceed tendered assumptions,
which is positive for Mears. The mobilisation has proceeded well.
This remains an area of intensive focus. Mears remains on-track to
deliver in line with its original plan.
Integration of MPS Housing
2019 saw an intensive period of integration, migrating all
operations onto the front-line Mears Contract Management system.
Each contract migration brought an alignment of back office
processes and controls. The Mears systems provide significantly
improved visibility of both operational and financial performance.
Further detail on the financial performance of MPS is included in
the Financial Review. Good progress has been made to date, although
the transaction has absorbed more working capital than originally
envisaged. Further improvements in place so the MPS business to
deliver its target operating margin of 5% in 2020. A key element of
this transaction was to identify and deliver synergies, especially
in back office functions. All staff restructuring was concluded
within the year, delivering efficiencies in line with our original
guidance.
Repositioning of Care
Mears entered the Care market in 2008 and we are extremely proud
of our achievements in terms of improving service delivery and
workforce pay and conditions. However, the financial returns in
standalone Domiciliary Care were insufficient and not reflective of
the risks associated with the service delivery. Disappointingly,
over the last ten years there has been little change in how Care is
procured. The continued underfunding and lack of progress in
Central Government policy development has led to short-term
decision making which is rarely positive for commissioners,
providers or service users.
Following the Group's decision to exit standalone Domiciliary
Care, the Group completed the sale of the England and Wales
Domiciliary Care business shortly after the 2019 year end. Further
details of this transaction are included within the 'Finance
Review'. In addition, Mears expects to complete the disposal of its
Scotland Domiciliary Care business in the coming months. Full
provision for both costs of closure and disposal have been
recognised within the 2019 results, in addition to the impairment
of the goodwill asset.
The Group will seek to extend its capability for services
classified as Housing with Care. Whilst these activities are
relatively small, delivering annual revenues of circa GBP19m, they
generate operating margins above the Group's average level. The
activities are an important extension to the Housing Management
service and an area which offers strong growth. The Group's ability
to support vulnerable customers, many of whom have a care
requirement, has been central to its success in Housing, as
evidenced by our success in securing the Asylum contract. This
continued bespoke skill set with a deep understanding of the
challenges faced by our service users will underpin future
success.
Housing Development
At the start of 2019, the Group made a clear strategic decision
to reduce its exposure to new build housing development activities,
which had absorbed significant working capital. The stated
objective was to oversee the controlled unwinding over the coming
three years, whilst seeking opportunities to accelerate that
process where appropriate. To maximise working capital efficiency,
the timing of the build-out and sales has been aligned where
possible although this inevitably pushes out the end date. Whilst
Development has reported an increase in working capital absorption
in the year, driven by an increase in inventories, the unwinding of
this area of the business is a continuing strategic and operational
focus.
The Group continues to explore ways in which it can contribute
to its clients' housing development needs. This remains an
important in-house capability and will place the Group in an
advantageous position on a number of forthcoming tender
opportunities. As stated previously, the Group will not engage in
new build activities which utilise the Group's Balance Sheet.
Property acquisition facility
The property acquisition facility of GBP30.0m was introduced in
2017 to enable the Group to acquire and build portfolios of
properties prior to disposal to a long term funding partner. This
provided the Group with an ability to accelerate the flow of
properties into its Housing Management operations together with an
additional profit opportunity at the point of transfer. The funding
requirement is high, relative to our resources, and the flow of
profits irregular. Whilst the property acquisition facility has
been useful, the Board committed to eliminate this facility as the
underlying assets were sold, a course of action which was completed
in November 2019.
Strategy and outlook
The housing market will see continued growth given the
well-publicised shortage of housing and this Government's
commitment to infrastructure development. The forthcoming housing
White Paper will tighten standards around compliance, tenant
consultation and what constitutes a Decent Home in the 21(st)
Century. Investment in specialist retirement housing and support
services is also inevitable and plays very much to our strengths.
Mears has already taken steps to be ahead of changes in
regulations, through for example the set-up of an independent
Customer Scrutiny Board that will report directly into the Group
Board. Our track record of excellent governance and compliance
means we will benefit from future legislation.
Mears is now a leading Registered Social Landlord. The Group is
responsible for the management of over 10,000 homes, helping tackle
the major challenges of homelessness and asylum seekers, in
addition to providing accommodation for key workers. We see
significant opportunity to grow this part of the business
sustainably and are investing in management and IT to ensure that
happens.
The Group has secured new orders with a contract value of
GBP220m at a bid conversion rate of 39% which is above our target
conversion rate of 33% although the total bidding activity of
GBP570m is lower than our expectations for 2019 and the historic
norm of around GBP1.0bn per annum. The Group has an active bid
pipeline of new opportunities. The level of bidding was low in 2019
due to the timing of tenders and our selectivity criteria; in 2020
we expected the contract value of bids and rebids to be in excess
of GBP1bn, of which 65% is rebids with which we have a strong track
record. The outbreak of Covid-19 may delay a number of these
re-bids.
As previously reported, the next two years is to be a
particularly important period of tendering for the Group with
around GBP240m of annualised revenues being subject to rebid. Our
contracts at Rotherham, Brighton and Crawley have all reached the
end of the re-bidding process and it is pleasing that we expect to
retain a contractual relationship with all these customers albeit
at a lower annual revenue of GBP35m (2019: GBP55m). Our contracts
at Lambeth, North Lanarkshire, Milton Keynes, Leeds and Tower
Hamlets, with an annual value of GBP155m, are at different stages
of the bid process although we remain confident that we will retain
these key customer relationships.
The order book is valued at GBP2.5bn (2018: GBP2.9bn), adjusted
to exclude the secured work attached to standalone Domiciliary
Care. The reduction in order book in the year was anticipated given
the large increase in the prior year following the success in
securing the Asylum contract. The high number of existing contracts
expiring and subject to rebid provides an opportunity to increase
the order book value during 2020. The impact of Covid-19 may impact
on the timing of new bids in 2020.
Finance Review
This section provides further key information in respect of the
financial performance and financial position of the Group to the
extent not already covered in detail within the 'Chief Executive
Review'.
Alternative performance measures ('APM')
APMs used by the Group are detailed below to provide a
reconciliation for each non-IFRS measure to its IFRS equivalent and
an explanation as to why management considers the APM to provide a
better understanding as to the Group's underlying performance. The
APMs are used externally to meet both investor and banking
requirements and also used when reporting financial performance
internally. We ensure however that statutory disclosures get equal
prominence in the announcement.
The Group defines normalised results as excluding the
amortisation of acquisition intangibles and exceptional costs and
adjusted to reflect a full tax charge and these results are used
for reporting profit and EPS measures. This aids consistency when
comparing to historical results and enables performance to be
evaluated before non-recurring items. Investors typically require
results to be reported before the amortisation of acquired
intangibles and the Group's adjusted earnings measure reflects
this. The adjusted results reflect an 18% corporation tax charge.
The Directors believe this provides a better reflection of
management performance and provides no incentive for the Group to
participate in schemes where the primary intention is to reduce the
tax charge.
A reconciliation between the normalised results and the
statutory measurement is detailed below for both 2019 and 2018.
2019 Statutory Amortisation Normalised
(continuing Exceptional of acquired Full tax result for
activities) costs intangibles charge year
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- --------- ------------
Sales revenue 905,084 - - - 905,084
Cost of sales (686,874) - - - (686,874)
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- --------- ------------
Gross profit 218,210 - - - 218,210
Total administrative
costs (184,772) 2,018 10,122 - (172,632)
Operating profit 33,438 2,018 10,122 - 45,578
Share of profits
of associates 895 - - - 895
Finance income 1,097 - - - 1,097
Finance costs (10,229) - - - (10,229)
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- --------- ------------
Profit for the
year before
tax 25,201 2,018 10,122 - 37,341
Tax expense (3,976) (363) - (2,382) (6,721)
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- --------- ------------
Profit / (loss)
for the year 21,225 1,655 10,122 (2,382) 30,620
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- --------- ------------
Earnings per
share
Basic 18.90p 1.50p 9.16p (2.16)p 27.40p
Diluted 18.80p 1.49p 9.11p (2.14)p 27.26p
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- --------- ------------
2018 Statutory Amortisation Normalised
(continuing Exceptional of acquired Full tax result for
activities) costs intangibles charge year
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- ----------- ------------
Sales revenue 771,861 - - - 771,861
Cost of sales (586,933) - - - (586,933)
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- ----------- ------------
Gross profit 184,928 - - - 184,928
Total administrative
costs (155,230) 5,657 3,738 - (145,835)
Operating profit 29,698 5,657 3,738 - 39,093
Share of profits
of associates - - - - 0
Finance income 1,153 - - - 1,153
Finance costs (3,474) - - - (3,474)
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- ----------- ------------
Profit for the
year before
tax 27,377 5,657 3,738 - 36,772
Tax expense (3,740) (1,315) - (1,861) (6,916)
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- ----------- ------------
Profit / (loss)
for the year 23,637 4,342 3,738 (1,861) 29,856
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- ----------- ------------
Earnings per
share
Basic 21.91p 4.16p 3.58p (1.78)p 27.87p
Diluted 21.78p 4.13p 3.56p (1.77)p 27.70p
---------------------- ------------- ------------ ------------- ----------- ------------
In addition, following the adoption of IFRS 16 'Leases', the
Group has reported financial performance both before and after this
change. This is considered particularly relevant for 2019 given
that the comparative number has not been adjusted for this change,
making analytical review between the two years difficult.
2019 2018
Impact Normalised
Statutory of IFRS (before the Statutory
(continuing 16 impact of (continuing
activities) IFRS 16) activities)
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- -------------
Sales revenue 905,084 - 905,084 771,861
Cost of sales (686,874) (4,404) (691,278) (586,933)
---------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- -------------
Gross profit 218,210 (4,404) 213,806 184,928
Total administrative
costs (184,772) (712) (185,484) (155,230)
---------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- -------------
Operating profit 33,438 (5,116) 28,322 29,698
Share of profits
of associates 895 - 895 -
Finance income 1,097 - 1,097 1,153
Finance costs (10,229) 6,054 (4,175) (3,474)
---------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- -------------
Profit for the year
before tax 25,201 924 26,139 27,377
---------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- -------------
The divisional performance reported in the Chief Executive
Review figures are reported on continuing activities only, and
before the impact of IFRS 16. This is the format which is most
easily understood by the Group's stakeholders and forms the basis
upon which the senior team manage the business. The divisional
contribution also includes the share of profit of associates. A
reconciliation between this alternative performance measure and the
statutory measurement is detailed below:
2019 2018
Normalised Impact
(before the of IFRS Statutory Statutory
impact of 16 (continuing (continuing
IFRS 16) activities) activities)
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- -------------
Operating profit 28,322 5,116 33,438 29,698
Exceptional costs 2,018 2,018 5,657
Amortisation of acquisition
intangibles 10,122 10,122 3,738
----------------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- -------------
Operating profit
before exceptional
costs and the amortisation
of acquisition intangibles 40,462 5,116 45,578 39,093
Share of profits
of associates 895 - 895 -
----------------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- -------------
Divisional contribution
as reported in Chief
Executive Review 31,357 5,116 46,473 39,093
----------------------------- ------------- --------- ------------- -------------
In addition to the alternative performance measures detailed
above, and for completeness, the table below details the combined
financial performance in respect of both continuing and
discontinued activities:
2019 2018
Statutory Statutory Statutory Statutory Statutory Statutory
(continuing (discontinued (all activities) (continuing (discontinued (all activities)
activities) activities) GBP'000 activities) activities) GBP'000
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------- ------------- --------------- ----------------- ------------- --------------- -----------------
Sales revenue 905,084 77,521 982,605 771,861 97,982 869,843
Cost of sales (686,874) (61,411) (748,285) (586,933) (75,892) (662,825)
---------------- ------------- --------------- ----------------- ------------- --------------- -----------------
Gross profit 218,210 16,110 234,320 184,928 22,090 207,018
Total
administrative
costs (184,772) (103,204) (287,976) (155,230) (21,038) (176,268)
---------------- ------------- --------------- ----------------- ------------- --------------- -----------------
Operating
profit 33,438 (87,094) (53,656) 29,698 1,052 30,750
Share of
profits
of associates 895 - 895 - - -
Finance income 1,097 - 1,097 1,153 1 1,154
Finance costs (10,229) (77) (10,306) (3,474) - (3,474)
---------------- ------------- --------------- ----------------- ------------- --------------- -----------------
Profit for the
year before
tax 25,201 (87,171) (61,970) 27,377 1,053 28,430
Tax expense (3,976) (100) (4,076) (3,740) 135 (3,606)
---------------- ------------- --------------- ----------------- ------------- --------------- -----------------
Profit / (loss)
for the year 21,225 (87,271) (66,046) 23,637 1,188 24,825
---------------- ------------- --------------- ----------------- ------------- --------------- -----------------
Earnings per
share
Basic 18.90p (78.99)p (60.09)p 21.91p 1.14p 23.05p
Diluted 18.80p (78.57)p (59.77)p 21.78p 1.13p 22.91p
---------------- ------------- --------------- ----------------- ------------- --------------- -----------------
Change in accounting standard; IFRS 16 'Leases'
The new leasing standard, IFRS 16 Leases, was effective from 1
January 2019 and has had a significant impact on the Group's
Balance Sheet, principally due to the use of leased vehicles and
residential property for the operational delivery of Maintenance
and Management services. The Group has adopted the modified
retrospective transition method. Under this method, the asset is
calculated as if IFRS 16 had always been applied, however the
liability is calculated as if all leases started on 1 January 2019,
which has resulted in no change to comparative numbers but an
adjustment to the Reserves of the Group.
Under IFRS 16, a lessee recognises its right to use a leased
asset and a lease liability representing its obligation to make
lease payments. The depreciation cost of the newly recognised
'right of use' lease asset is charged to profit within cost of
sales or administrative costs, whilst the interest cost of the
newly recognised lease liability is charged to finance costs. On
the basis that depreciation is required to be charged on a
straight-line basis, whilst the interest element is charged on a
reducing balance basis, this results in a higher charge being
applied to the income statement in the early years of a lease, with
this impact reversing over the later years.
IFRS 16 has impacted upon a number of commonly used performance
metrics including PBT, EBIT and EBITDA. The effect of the
application of IFRS 16 on these measures within the results for
2019 is detailed below:
Year ended
Year ended 31 December
31 December 2019 before Year ended
2019 as impact of 31 December
reported IFRS 16 2018 (restated)
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ----------------
Profit for the year before tax 25,201 26,130 27,377
Amortisation of acquisition intangibles 10,122 10,122 3,738
Add net finance charge 9,132 3,087 2,321
---------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ----------------
EBIT 44,455 39,339 33,436
Add depreciation and amortisation 43,737 8,176 8,213
EBITDA 88,192 47,515 41,649
---------------------------------------- ------------ ------------ ----------------
The change to IFRS 16 has no impact on the lifetime
profitability of the contracts and there are no cash flow impacts.
The impact of this standard in the year has been to reduce the
reported profit before tax for 2019 by GBP0.93m. Moving forward, it
is expected to have a negative impact in respect of operating
profit in the short term given the high number of new leases, with
a term of five to ten years, being taken on in support of the
Asylum contract.
The impact of IFRS 16 on the Group resulted in the recognition
of a right of use asset and an associated lease obligation at 1
January 2019, being the point of transition, and movements during
2019 are detailed below:
Right of use asset Lease obligation
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------- ------------------ ----------------
Lease liability as at 1 January
2019 - (1,269)
Impact of IFRS 16 188,461 (191,348)
-------------------------------- ------------------ ----------------
Adjusted balance at 1 January
2019 188,461 (192,617)
New leases 112,139 (112,139)
Depreciation (35,561) -
Finance cost - (6,072)
Lease payments - 41,483
-------------------------------- ------------------ ----------------
Closing balance at 31 December
2019 265,039 (269,345)
-------------------------------- ------------------ ----------------
The lease obligation at 31 December 2019 has been categorised
into four asset types:
Lease obligation
at 31 December
2019
GBP'000
--------------------- ----------------
Residential property (236,910)
Office property (9,355)
Vehicles (22,577)
Office equipment (503)
(269,345)
--------------------- ----------------
In respect of residential property, the Group enjoys nominations
and other contractual agreements with its customers which ensures a
high level of occupancy. The Group will often retain an option to
cancel the lease and the Group follows a disciplined approach to
mitigate other associated risks such as indexation, market rent
levels, void properties and end of lease obligations. Whilst the
commitment is measurable under IFRS 16, it is not considered
appropriate to treat these lease obligations in the same way as
other debt instruments. Therefore where we make references to net
debt, we are not including lease obligations under IFRS 16 within
that.
Given the number of new residential property leases being
adopted in support of the Asylum contract, the lease obligation
attached to residential property is expected to increase
significantly from the current level. It is not possible to provide
a precise estimate of the Balance Sheet impact given the different
mix of leases lengths and the fluctuation in the internal borrowing
rate, but an additional lease obligation in the order of GBP100m is
possible.
Importantly, the Group's banking covenants are not affected by
this accounting change as these are 'frozen' and are based on
accounting standards at the time the facility agreements came into
force. The Group's bank facility runs to 2022 which provides ample
time for the banking community to properly digest the impact of
IFRS 16 on our performance metrics.
Discontinued activities
To provide some context, the Group's Care activities, reported
against 2019 revenue, is summarised below:
Revenue
2019
GBP'000
------------------------------ -------
England and Wales Domiciliary
Care 55,687
Scotland Domiciliary Care 21,834
Housing with Care 19,273
96,794
------------------------------ -------
During the year, Mears reviewed its options around Care.
Strategically, the Group has taken steps to focus the business on
the housing sector. Whilst the ability to care for vulnerable
service users is at the heart of the Group's service offering, the
majority of the Group's Care operations related to standalone
Domiciliary Care which provides the Group with no opportunities
beyond the single revenue stream from those service users.
Once the decision was taken to dispose of our stand-alone
Domiciliary Care activities, the presentation of the financial
performance is different. The Domiciliary Care assets are presented
separately in the Balance Sheet as held for sale and are measured
at the lower of carrying amount and fair value less costs to sell.
As a result, the Group has impaired both the Care goodwill and
fixed assets to reflect the recoverable amount. Similarly,
liabilities attached to the disposal group are also disclosed
separately on the face of the Balance Sheet and where appropriate,
provisions made to reflect closure costs and disposal related
transaction costs. The carrying value of the Care disposal group at
the Balance Sheet date is detailed below:
2019
GBP'000
Assets of disposal group 11,185
Liabilities related to assets classified
as held for sale (5,892)
------------------------------------------- ---------
Net assets of disposal group 5,293
------------------------------------------- ---------
The standalone Care activities have been reported as
discontinued in the results for the year and an aggregate loss
before tax on discontinued activities, including the impairment of
goodwill and fixed assets, is reported of GBP87.2m and this is
detailed in note 10 to the Financial Statements. The impairment of
goodwill and fixed assets are non-cash items.
During the fourth quarter of 2019, in preparation for the
disposal, the Group completed the closure of a small number of
England-based branches, with annual revenues of around GBP21.0m and
typically a low profit contribution.
In January 2020, the Group announced the disposal of the England
and Wales Domiciliary Care business for cash consideration of
GBP4.0m payable on completion, and a further GBP1.0m of deferred
consideration receivable over the coming twelve months. In the year
ended 31 December 2019, the activities subject to the disposal
generated revenues of circa GBP34.7m. The disposal resulted in
around 1,500 employees leaving the Group across 18 branches. The
Group is actively seeking a buyer for its Scotland Domiciliary Care
business. In the year ended 31 December 2019, these Scotland
activities generated revenues of GBP21.8m with 1,000 employees
across a network of 16 branches. The Board expects to complete the
disposal of the remaining Domiciliary Care business during
2020.
The Extra Care and Supported Living activities remain core to
the Group's Housing with Care strategy and are reported within the
Housing segment and continuing activities. The retention of these
capabilities is expected to facilitate other value generating
opportunities in the future.
Acquisitions
The Group completed one small acquisition during the period,
being the acquisition of certain business assets from a property
management company for consideration of GBP1.3m, which provided the
Group access to around 125 landlords and 680 properties within the
North East region of the Asylum contract. The intangible asset
attached to this small bolt-on relates entirely to supplier
relationships and will be amortised over the next 20 months.
In late 2018, Mears completed the acquisition of certain
business assets and contracts from the property maintenance
business of Mitie, with the acquired business branded as MPS
Housing. The initial cash consideration was GBP22.5m and contingent
consideration, based upon future profitability during the 24 months
following completion, was estimated at GBP2.0m. Given the proximity
of the transaction to the 2018 year end, the Directors had not
concluded their assessment of the assets and liabilities acquired
and a provisional estimate was included within the 2018 results.
During 2019, the assessment of assets and liabilities acquired were
finalised, resulting in an increase in the intangible assets
recognised of GBP5.4m. In addition, there is an increase in the
value of goodwill of GBP6.7m.
Having reviewed the profitability of the acquired business in
the first year, and the forecast for the remainder of the earn-out
period, the Directors believe that no further consideration will
become payable in respect of the MPS transaction and the liability
has been released.
Acquisition intangibles and amortisation
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------- --------- --------
Carrying value at 1 January 28,651 9,585
Recognised on acquisitions during the
year 1,300 23,500
Amortisation of acquisition intangibles (10,122) (4,434)
Carrying value at 31 December 19,829 28,651
----------------------------------------- --------- --------
A charge for amortisation of acquisition intangibles of GBP10.1m
(2018: GBP3.7m) arose in the year. The charge has increased
significantly on the prior year following the acquisition of MPS in
late 2018. The remaining unamortised value of GBP19.8m (2018:
GBP28.6m), relating to order book, customer relationships and
supplier relationships will be written off over the period to 2023,
being their estimated lives.
Exceptional items
Exceptional items are items which are considered outside normal
operations. They are material to the results of the Group either
through their size or nature. These items have been disclosed
separately on the face of the Income Statement to provide a better
understanding as to the underlying performance of the Group.
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------- --------- ---------
Litigation costs 2,018 1,549
Costs of restructure - 3,584
Acquisition related cost - 524
-------------------------- --------- ---------
2,018 5,657
-------------------------- --------- ---------
The legal costs relate to a dispute in respect of a lease on a
property in the course of construction. The property required
completion by September 2018. The construction of the property was
not completed by the contractual date and the property is not
compliant with fire safety regulations leaving the Group no option
but to refuse to enter into the lease and defend its position
robustly. The Group will not compromise the safety of tenants for
any reason. Mears has incurred litigation costs of GBP1.6m in 2018
and GBP2.1m in 2019. The Directors are not expecting any further
costs to be incurred on this matter and have reached a successful
outcome to this litigation, however the claimant has gone into
administration and therefore the Group's ability to recover these
legal expenses is considered to be at risk. Given the size of this
single item, and the unique circumstances of the matter in dispute,
the Directors believe it should be accounted for as an exceptional
item, which is consistent with the treatment in the prior year.
Net finance charge
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------- -------- --------
Finance costs on bank loans
and overdrafts (3,753) (3,251)
Other interest income 261 316
Interest on lease obligations (6,072) (81)
Net interest income relating
to pension assets 432 695
(9,132) (2,321)
------------------------------- -------- --------
A net finance charge of GBP9.1m has been recognised in the year
(2018: GBP2.3m). Following the adoption of IFRS 16, an interest
charge of GBP6.2m has been charged against the newly recognised
lease obligation, being applied over time on a reducing balance
basis. The finance cost in respect of bank borrowings edged higher
to GBP4.1m (2018: GBP3.5m), reflecting the associated level of
debt. The net finance costs also includes a net credit generated
from defined benefit pension accounting of GBP0.4m (2018:
GBP0.7m).
The Group holds interest rate swaps on a core debt of GBP70m,
fixing the interest rates in the range of 0.84% to 0.96%. The
remaining debt is subject to a variable LIBOR rate. The Group pays
a margin of 120-220bps over and above these rates, subject to a
ratchet mechanism.
Tax expense
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Current tax on continuing activities recognised
in income statement 4,275 (1,164)
Deferred tax on continuing activities recognised
in income statement (299) 4,905
Current tax on discontinued activities
recognised in income statement 100 (135)
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total tax expenses recognised in income
statement 4,076 3,606
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Profit before tax on continuing activities
and before the amortisation of acquired
intangibles 35,323 31,115
Effective current tax rate on continuing
activities 12.1% (3.7%)
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Taxes paid / (received) 2,991 (691)
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
The headline UK corporation tax rate for the year was 19.0%
(2018: 19.0%). The total tax charge for the year relating to
continuing operations was GBP4.1m (2018: GBP3.6m) resulting in an
effective current tax rate of 12.1% (2018: (3.7%)). The key
reconciling items to the headline rate were the utilisation of
brought forward losses where the deferred tax impact had not
previously been recognised, an annual corporation tax deduction in
respect of share options and adjustments in respect of the prior
year estimated tax charge. The tax credit reported in 2018 was
generated through the impact of IFRS 15, resulting in a large
credit, offset against the unwinding of the deferred tax balance
recognised on transition to the new standard.
The Group pays Corporation Tax under the Quarterly Instalment
Payment regime which has historically resulted in the payment of
50% of the Group's tax liability in the second half of the current
year, and then the balancing 50% in the first half of the following
year. The Group enjoyed a tax credit in 2018 following the adoption
of IFRS 15. This resulted in no corporation tax payable in the
first half of 2019. The GBP3.0m cash outflow in the year reflects
half of the estimated tax liability for 2019 with the balance being
settled in 2020. The Quarterly Instalment Payment regime is due to
change during 2020, and the Group will be required to settle its
full liability in the current year. The result of this is that in
2020, the Group is due to pay both the remainder of its tax
liability for 2019 and a full payment in respect of 2020.
Mears does not engage in inappropriate or aggressive tax
planning arrangements. Where appropriate, the Group takes advantage
of available statutory tax reliefs. The tax position in any
transaction is aligned with the commercial reality and any tax
planning undertaken is consistent with the spirit as well as the
letter of tax law. In situations where material uncertainty exists
around a given tax position, the Group engages with expert advisers
and, where appropriate, advance clearance is sought from HMRC in
order to establish the most appropriate treatment. We value our low
risk assessment from HMRC and will continue to work to maintain
this status through continual review of our controls and
processes.
Earnings per share (EPS)
2019 2018 (as Change
restated)
Diluted earnings per share* 18.80p 21.78p (14%)
Normalised diluted earnings per
share* 27.26p 27.70p (2%)
--------------------------------- ------- ----------- -------
*continuing activities
The statutory diluted earnings per share shows a reduction of
14% to 18.80p, predominantly due to the increased amortisation of
acquisition intangibles charge following the acquisition of MPS.
The comparative figure of 21.78p includes the restatement to
exclude the discontinued Care activities.
The Group's headline measure is normalised diluted EPS, which
showed a reduction of 2% to 27.26p (2018: 27.70p). The adoption of
IFRS 16 resulted in a reduction in earnings by GBP0.8m and a 3%
reduction in the normalised diluted EPS. On a pre-IFRS 16 basis,
the headline measure would have increased by 1% to 27.98p.
Normalised earnings are based upon continuing activities before
the amortisation of acquisition intangibles together with an
adjustment to reflect a tax charge of 18.0% (2018: 18.0%). We
believe that this normalised diluted EPS measure better allows the
assessment of operational performance, the analysis of trends over
time, the comparison of different businesses and the projection of
future performance. Whilst normalised earnings have increased in
2019 compared to 2018, the weighted average number of shares has
increased to 111.1m (2018: 105.1m). The increase is due to the
issue of 6.8 million shares in November 2018 in relation to the
acquisition of MPS, the effect of which is pro-rated for the
part-year in 2018, but which impacts upon the full year in
2019.
Cash flow and net debt Year to 31 Year to 31 Year to
December December 31 December
2019 as reported 2019 before 2018
impact of
IFRS 16
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------- ------------------- -------------- --------------
EBITDA 88,192 47,515 41,649
Cash inflow from operating activities
before taxes paid 100,250 59,585 3,290
Cash conversion % 114% 125% 8%
--------------------------------------- ------------------- -------------- --------------
Total average daily net debt
(operating)* (114,400) (114,400) (113,200)
--------------------------------------- ------------------- -------------- --------------
*Excludes property acquisition
facility
Net debt (operating) at 31 December (50,986) (50,986) (65,904)
Net debt (property acquisition
facility) at 31 December - - (15,000)
--------------------------------------- ------------------- -------------- --------------
Total net debt at 31 December (50,986) (50,986) (80,904)
--------------------------------------- ------------------- -------------- --------------
Mears has always fostered a strong 'cash culture', whereby the
Group operations understand that invoicing and cash collection are
intrinsically linked and that works are not complete until the
sales cycle is completed.
The net debt at the year end was GBP51.0m (2018: GBP65.9m). The
property acquisition utilised at the year end was GBPnil (2018:
GBP15.0m). Positively, the Group reported an operating cash inflow
from operating activities, as a proportion of EBITDA, of 114%
(2018: 8%). Whilst this is a pleasing output for a key date in the
financial calendar, the focus remains on performance over the
365-day period.
The average daily net debt for the year, excluding the property
acquisition facility, was GBP114.4m (2018: GBP113.2m), falling
short of the GBP105.0m target set at the start of 2019. The main
elements of this shortfall relate to Asylum and Development and
discussed in greater detail below. This is reflected in the average
daily net debt for the fourth quarter being GBP126.1m.
The average month end trade receivable and trade payable balance
split by Housing sub-division is detailed below which better
reflects performance and progression during the year:
2019 2018
------------ -------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------
Receivables Payables Net working Receivables Payables Net working
capital capital
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
Maintenance 159.3 (126.2) 33.1 162.2 (127.7) 34.5
Management 29.8 (24.3) 5.5 21.0 (19.3) 1.7
Development 33.4 (8.7) 24.7 21.2 (5.6) 15.6
---------------- ------------ --------- ------------ -------------- --------- -------------
*The Maintenance figures for 2018 reflect the single month of
December 2018 which is annualised for the purposes of this
analysis
The core activities of Maintenance and Management absorb
relatively low levels of working capital when compared to the size
of the business and the profit generated. The Maintenance
activities delivered a reduction in working capital utilisation,
reducing from GBP34.5m to GBP33.1m. The MPS activities have now
completed their migration onto the Mears operating platform which
moving forward will provide excellent visibility and control over
working capital management. The MPS activities have been absorbed
into the pre-existing Maintenance business. At a contract level,
the trade receivables balances attached to the acquired MPS
business remain too high and this is an area for focus in 2020. The
MPS contract mechanisms are identical to that of the pre-existing
Maintenance business, and the MPS working capital position should
mirror this.
The average working capital absorbed in Management increased
from GBP1.7m to GBP5.5m, reflecting the mobilisation of the AASC
contract. Whilst this is an increase of GBP3.8m, the averaging
methodology reflects only a part-year impact from Asylum as the
contract fully mobilised in September 2019. The full year impact of
Asylum results in a permanent increase in working capital
absorption by GBP10.0m, and is a key factor in the average daily
net debt for the second half of 2019 being higher than the first
half.
The average working capital absorbed within the Development
activity increased to GBP24.7m (2018: GBP15.6m) driven by the
increase in the inventories balance. Much of this deterioration
occurred during the fourth quarter of 2018 and therefore the more
relevant comparison is against the 2018 year end position which
absorbed GBP21.2m of working capital, indicating that a further
GBP3.5m of working capital has been absorbed during 2019. The
majority of the working capital absorbed in Development, based on
the current build profile, will unwind 2021.
A summary of the consolidated cash flow is detailed below
together with explanations in respect of the major movements.
2019 Note
Before the
2019 impact of
Reported IFRS 16 2018 Reported
GBPm GBPm GBPm
--------------------------------- ---------- ------------ -------------- -----
Operating profit 25.2 26.1 27.4
Net finance costs 9.1 3.1 2.3
Amortisation of acquisition
intangibles 10.1 10.1 3.7
Depreciation and amortisation 43.8 8.2 8.2
--------------------------------- ---------- ------------ -------------- -----
EBITDA 88.2 47.5 41.6 1
Other adjustments 1.0 1.0 0.2
Change in inventories (6.3) (6.3) (11.0)
Change in operating receivables 5.0 5.0 (15.4)
Change in operating payables 12.3 11.7 (12.1)
--------------------------------- ---------- ------------ -------------- -----
Cash inflow from operating
activities 100.3 59.0 3.3
Taxes paid (3.0) (3.0) 0.7 2
Cash outflow from discontinued
operations (3.6) (3.6) (3.7) 3
Capital expenditure (11.5) (11.5) (10.2) 4
Cash flows relating to property
acquisition activity (7.2) (7.2) 2.6 5
Acquisitions (1.3) (1.3) (37.9) 6
Issue of shares - - 22.1
Dividends (13.8) (13.8) (13.1) 7
Interest paid (9.5) (3.4) (3.2) 1
Discharge of lease liability (35.4) (0.3) (0.5) 1
Change in net debt 14.9 14.9 (40.1)
Opening net debt (65.9) (65.9) (25.8)
--------------------------------- ---------- ------------ -------------- -----
Closing net debt (51.0) (51.0) (65.9) 8
--------------------------------- ---------- ------------ -------------- -----
The major movements in the year are:
1. The significant increase in the reported EBITDA reflects the
adoption of the new accounting standard, IFRS 16 'Leases' which has
increased depreciation by GBP35.1m and net finance costs by
GBP6.0m. Whilst IFRS 16 changes the shape of the cash flow
statement, it is cash flow neutral. The increase in EBITDA is
negated by an increase in interest paid and the discharge of lease
liability.
2. The Group pays Corporation Tax under the Quarterly Instalment
Payment regime. This means that the Group is required to pay half
of the estimated corporation tax liability during 2019 and then the
balancing 50% in the first half of 2020. The Group enjoyed a tax
credit in 2018 following the adoption of IFRS 15. This resulted in
no corporation tax payable in the first half of 2019. The GBP3.0m
cash outflow in the year reflects half of the estimated tax
liability for 2019 with the balance being settled in 2020.
3. As reported earlier, the standalone Domiciliary Care
activities have been reported as discontinued in the results for
the year and an aggregate loss on discontinued activities before
tax is reported of GBP87.2m. However, a significant proportion of
this loss relates to the impairment of goodwill and fixed assets,
both of which are non-cash items. A cash outflow of GBP1.4m relates
to the discontinued Care activities. In addition, an outflow of
GBP2.2m in legal and other professional costs in relation to the
previously discontinued M&E activity based in the UAE.
4. Tangible fixed asset additions were GBP9.7m (2018: GBP8.7m)
and IT development costs were GBP3.0m (2018: GBP3.1m) however the
cash flow statement only reports the cash flows attached to this
expenditure and therefore a small difference from the balance sheet
additions which are recognised on an accruals basis.
5. The Group cancelled its property acquisition facility. During
the year, assets to the value of GBP7.8m were sold and the loan
balance of GBP15.0m was repaid, a net outflow of GBP7.2m. Deferred
consideration was attached to one property asset sale of GBP4.6m
and which is included within other receivables; this is due to be
settled in September 2020.
6. The acquisition of GBP1.3m relates to certain business assets
acquired, providing the Group access to circa 125 landlords and 680
properties within the North East region of the Asylum contract. The
outflow in 2018 is in respect of the MPS acquisition of GBP26.7m
and the deferred consideration payable in respect of Omega
acquisition of GBP11.1m.
7. The GBP13.8m dividend outflow for 2019 relates entirely to
payments to Mears shareholders comprising the final dividend for
2018 of 8.85p (2017: 8.55p) per share, paid in July 2019, and an
interim dividend for 2019 of 3.65p (2018: 3.55p) per share paid in
October 2019. The 2018 dividend outflow of GBP12.5m includes
GBP0.6m paid to third parties in respect of non-controlling
interests.
8. The statutory cash flow statement reports a cash balance at
31 December 2019 of GBP73.1m (2018: GBP27.9m). Whilst this
disclosure complies with accounting standards, it is not a fair
reflection of the Group's funding arrangement. The Group has a
revolving credit facility to the value of GBP170m. The Group makes
drawdowns against that facility, meaning the cash balance and loan
balance are inextricably linked. The closing net debt at 31
December 2019 of GBP51.0m comprises a cash balance of GBP73.0m and
an associated drawdown of (GBP124.0m)
Balance Sheet
A summary of the Group Balance Sheet is detailed below together
with explanations in respect of the most significant balances and
the major movements.
Reported Discontinued All activities 2018 Note
2019 2019
GBPm GBPm GBPm GBPm
------------------------------- --------- ------------- --------------- -------- -----
Goodwill and intangible
assets 151.8 - 151.8 228.6 1
Property, plant and equipment 26.3 2.8 29.1 25.0 2
Investments 0.5 - 0.5 -
Right of use asset 264.6 - 264.6 0.0 3
Inventories 36.0 - 36.0 29.8 4
Trade receivables 162.9 7.9 170.8 178.2 4
Assets held for resale
- property - - - 12.4 5
Net Assets for resale -
Care activities 5.3 (5.3) - -
Trade payables (including
provisions) (202.9) (3.8) (206.7) (186.9) 4
Operating net debt (51.1) 0.1 (51.0) (65.9)
Property acquisition facility - - - (15.0) 5
Deferred consideration - - - (2.0) 6
Other payables (4.9) - (4.9) (5.0) 7
Lease obligations (269.3) (2.0) (271.3) (0.9) 3
Net pension 2.1 - 2.1 13.6 8
Taxation (2.3) 0.3 (2.0) (1.6)
------------------------------- --------- ------------- --------------- -------- -----
Net assets 119.0 - 119.0 210.3
------------------------------- --------- ------------- --------------- -------- -----
The major movements in the year were:
1. The carrying value of goodwill of GBP123.3m (2018: GBP203.8m)
is not amortised but is reviewed for impairment on an annual basis
or more frequently where there is an indication of impairment.
Following the decision to exit standalone Domiciliary Care, the
goodwill was impaired by GBP80.5m, reflecting a valuation for
Domiciliary Care based on fair value less selling costs rather than
the previous 'value in use' basis. A reassessment of the fair value
of assets acquired in respect of the MPS acquisition resulted in an
increase in goodwill of GBP6.7m.
The net carrying value of identifiable acquisition intangibles
at 31 December 2019 was GBP19.8m (2018: GBP28.7m), which relates to
order book, customer relationships and supplier relationships
valued on acquisition. Following the reassessment of the fair value
of assets acquired in respect of the MPS acquisition, both the 2019
figures and the 2018 comparative reflect an increase of the
identifiable intangible by GBP5.4m which will be amortised over the
next four years. In addition, the Group completed the acquisition
of certain business assets from a property management company for
consideration of GBP1.3m, which provided the Group access to around
125 landlords and 680 properties within the North East region of
the Asylum contract. The intangible identified relates entirely to
supplier relationships and will be amortised over the next 20
months. During the year, amortisation of acquired intangibles was
charged of GBP10.1m, reducing the net carrying value to
GBP19.8m.
Intangible assets also included the capitalisation of
expenditure incurred on developing our in-house IT platform.
Additions in the year amounted to GBP3.0m (2018: GBP3.1m) with a
carrying value of GBP8.8m (2018: GBP8.4m), which is amortised over
five years. The Group has made significant investment in our IT
systems over a number of years and we are expecting to see a
reduction in our development expenditure moving forwards.
2. Group capital expenditure was higher in the year at GBP9.7m
(2018: GBP8.7m), reflecting the additional leasehold improvement
costs attached to the new Asylum contract. Included within
additions during the year is GBP1.1m (2018: GBP3.6m) regarding the
development of 70 modular homes which are currently under
construction and which, upon completion, will be used to deliver a
homelessness solution within our Housing Management activities. The
homes are expected to be completed in September 2020 at a total
cost of GBP6.0m. Mears is looking for a long term funder to acquire
these properties upon completion, to reduce net debt. Other
significant capital spend items include IT hardware and other
office equipment.
3. The new leasing standard, IFRS 16 Leases, is effective from 1
January 2019 and has had a significant impact on the Group's
Balance Sheet. Under IFRS 16, a lessee recognises its right to use
a leased asset and a lease liability representing its obligation to
make lease payments. Additional detail in respect of this
significant change is included earlier and in the notes to the
Financial Statements.
4. Trade receivables and inventories decreased to GBP198.9m
(2018: GBP208.0m). This reduction is predominantly accounted for by
the reclassification of the trade receivables attached to the
standalone Domiciliary Care activities to 'Assets classified as
held for sale'. The balance attached to the continuing activities
is broadly consistent between the two years. Trade payables
reported an increase to GBP202.9m (2018: GBP192.5m). The previous
year reported a significant reduction, and part of the increase in
2019 reflects some timing difference with the prior year. The
mobilisation of the Asylum contract has also caused an increase in
this item.
5. As detailed previously, the Group cancelled its property
acquisition facility, resulting in a cash outflow of GBP15.0m to
repay the funding line. The disposal of the assets brought a cash
inflow of GBP7.8m together with a deferred consideration of GBP4.6m
which is due to be received in September 2020 and is included
within other receivables.
6. The balance at 31 December 2018 relates to the contingent
consideration in respect of the acquisition of MPS. Having reviewed
the profitability of the acquired business in the first year, and
the forecast for the remainder of the earn-out period, the
Directors believe that no further consideration will become payable
in respect of this transaction.
7. Other payables predominantly relates to provisions for
expected losses in relation to the insurance captive which manages
the Group's insurance risks. Insurances losses are settled as
claims are agreed which is typically across multiple periods and
the provision is therefore showing within non-current liabilities
on the Balance Sheet.
8. The Group participates in two principal Group pension schemes
(2018: two) together with a further 28 (2018: 28) individual
defined benefit schemes where the Group has received Admitted Body
status in a Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS). The accounting
treatment for these schemes follows the guidelines set for defined
benefit schemes. This treatment does not present the commercial
reality for a number of our LGPS arrangements, where the Group
holds back-to-back indemnities from its clients in respect of both
its exposure to changes in pension contribution rates and to future
deficit risk.
The pension disclosure is split on the face of the Balance Sheet
between non-current assets and non-current liabilities. In
addition, the pension guarantee assets are reported separately from
their associated liabilities which complies with accounting
standards but is not reflective of the contractual nature.
The table below provides an alternative categorisation to assist
stakeholders in better understanding the Group's pension risks.
Where the Group enjoys a back to back indemnity with its Local
Authority and Housing Association clients, it is classed within
'limited-risk'. For other LGPS arrangements, whilst the Group does
not benefit from an indemnity, the risks associated with these
schemes matches the time horizon of the underlying contract which,
whilst not removing all risks, does reduce the period over which a
deficit can arise. This second category has been identified in the
table below as 'medium-term risk'. The Group schemes are standard
defined benefit arrangements where the Group is ultimately
responsible for any deficit resulting from movements in discount
rates, interest rates, mortality rates and investment performance.
This last category has been classified as 'long-term risk'.
Group LGPS
schemes schemes LGPS schemes
(no indemnity) (no indemnity) (indemnified)
long-term medium-term limited-risk Total
risk risk
-------------------------- ----------------- --------------- --------------- --------
Number of schemes 2 13 15 30
Scheme assets GBPm 163.2 51.7 251.8 466.7
Scheme liabilities
GBPm (156.4) (53.4) (274.0) (483.8)
Surpluses not recognised
GBPm - (2.7) (1.9) (4.6)
Guarantee asset GBPm - - 23.8 23.8
-------------------------- ----------------- --------------- --------------- --------
Net surplus/(deficit)
GBPm 6.8 (4.4) (0.3) 2.1
-------------------------- ----------------- --------------- --------------- --------
The key actuarial assumptions underpinning the valuations
include the discount rate, set at 2.10% (2018: 2.95%) and long-term
RPI, estimated at 2.90% (2018: 3.15%). The net discount rate (being
the discount rate less inflation), reduced from a negative (0.20%)
in December 2018 to a negative (0.80%), resulting in an increase in
scheme obligations by circa 15%. Positively, UK equities and gilts
increased by a similar proportion in the period, offsetting much of
the increase in liabilities.
Principal accounting policies
Basis of preparation
The consolidated financial statements of the Group have been
prepared in accordance with IFRS as adopted by the European Union
and with those parts of the Companies Act 2006 applicable to
companies reporting under IFRS and therefore the consolidated
financial statements comply with Article 4 of the EU International
Accounting Standards (IAS) Regulation. The financial statements are
prepared under the historical cost convention as modified by the
revaluation of derivative financial instruments and share-based
payments.
The most significant change in accounting policies from the
previous year was the introduction of IFRS 16 'Leases' for which
the impact of introduction has been disclosed in note 3. The
accounting policies remain otherwise unchanged from the previous
year except for the modification of a number of standards with
effect from 1 January 2019. Changes include Amendments to IFRS 9,
IAS 28 and IAS 19 as well as Annual Improvements 2015-2017 (which
made minor amendments to IFRS 3, IFRS 11, IAS 12 and IAS 23). The
adoption of these amendments had no material effect on the Group's
financial statements.
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with UK
Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (UK GAAP) requires the use
of estimates and judgements that affect the reported amounts of
assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and
the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the year.
Although these estimates are based on the Directors' best knowledge
of the amounts, actual results may ultimately differ from those
estimates. The most significant estimates made by the Directors in
these financial statements are set out in 'Use of judgements and
estimates'.
Mears Group PLC is incorporated and domiciled in England and
Wales (registration number 3232863). Its registered office and
principal place of business is 1390 Montpellier Court, Gloucester
Business Park, Brockworth, Gloucester GL3 4AH. Mears Group PLC's
shares are listed on the London Stock Exchange.
Impact of COVID-19
The uncertainty as to the future impact on the Group of the
recent COVID-19 outbreak has been considered as part of the Group's
adoption of the going concern basis. The Board has completed an
assessment as to the impact to the Group in the event of a
significant deterioration in revenues and productivity. This
extreme downside scenario is currently considered unlikely; however
it is difficult to predict the overall outcome and impact of
COVID-19 at this stage. The Board believes that in this extreme
downside scenario, there is a risk that the Group's funding
requirement could exceed its existing committed debt
facilities.
Only the specific downside scenario would indicate the existence
of a material uncertainty which may cast significant doubt on the
Group's ability to continue as a going concern. The Consolidated
Financial Statements do not include the adjustments that would
result if the Group was unable to continue as a going concern. On
this basis, the Directors are satisfied that the Group has adequate
resources to meet its obligations as they fall due and, for this
reason, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing
the Group's 2019 financial statements.
Basis of consolidation
The Consolidated Balance Sheet includes the assets and
liabilities of the Company and its subsidiaries and is made up to
31 December 2019. Entities for which the Group has the ability to
exercise control over financial and operating policies are
accounted for as subsidiaries. Control is achieved where the
Company has existing rights that give it the current ability to
direct the activities that affect the Company's returns and
exposure or rights to variable returns from the entity. Interests
acquired in entities are consolidated from the effective date of
acquisition and interests sold are consolidated up to the date of
disposal.
All significant intercompany transactions and balances between
Group enterprises, including unrealised profits arising from
intra-group transactions, are eliminated on consolidation; no
profit is taken on sales between Group companies.
Non-controlling interests in the net assets of consolidated
subsidiaries are identified separately from the Group's equity
therein. Non-controlling interests consist of the amount of those
interests at the date of the original business combination and the
non-controlling shareholders' share of changes in equity since the
date of the combination. Total comprehensive income is attributed
to non-controlling interests even if this results in the
non-controlling interest having a deficit balance.
A joint venture is a joint arrangement whereby the parties that
have joint control have the rights to the net assets of the
arrangement. Investments in joint ventures are accounted for using
the equity method of accounting. Under this method, the Group's
share of post-acquisition profits or losses is recognised in the
Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss; the cost of the
investment in a given joint venture, together with the Group's
share of that entity's post-acquisition changes to shareholders'
funds, is included in investments within the Consolidated Balance
Sheet.
New accounting standards
IFRS 16 'Leases'
IFRS 16 'Leases' replaces IAS 17 'Leases' for accounting periods
commencing on or after 1 January 2019. The adoption of this
standard has resulted in the Group recognising a right of use asset
and related lease liability in connection with all former operating
leases except for those identified as low-value or having a
remaining lease term of less than 12 months from the date of
initial application.
The new standard has been applied using a modified retrospective
approach, with the cumulative effect of adopting IFRS 16 being
recognised in equity as an adjustment to the opening balance of
retained earnings for the current period. Prior periods have not
been restated.
Instead of performing an impairment review on the right of use
assets at the date of initial application, the Group has relied on
its historical assessment as to whether leases were onerous
immediately before the date of initial application of IFRS 16.
On transition to IFRS 16, the weighted average incremental
borrowing rate applied to lease liabilities recognised under IFRS
16 was 3.26%.
The Group has benefited from the use of hindsight for
determining the lease term when considering options to extend and
terminate leases.
Further details of the effects of the transition to IFRS 16 are
provided in note 3.
Leased assets
From 1 January 2019, where an asset is subject to a lease, the
Group recognises a right of use asset and a lease liability on the
balance sheet. The right of use asset is measured at cost, which
matches the initial measurement of the lease liability and any
costs expected at the end of the lease, such as dilapidations, and
then depreciated on a straight-line basis over the lease term.
The lease liability is measured at the present value of the
future lease payments discounted using the Group's incremental
borrowing rate. Lease payments include fixed payments, variable
payments based on an index and payments arising from options
reasonably certain to be exercised.
The Group has elected to account for short-term leases and
leases of low-value assets using the practical expedients. Instead
of recognising a right of use asset and a lease liability, the
payments in relation to these are recognised as an expense in
profit or loss on a straight-line basis over the lease term.
On the statement of financial position, right of use assets and
lease liabilities are presented separately.
Prior to 1 January 2019, the Group applied the requirements of
IAS 17 'Leases'. The economic ownership of a leased asset was
transferred to the lessee if they bore substantially all the risks
and rewards related to the ownership of the leased asset. Where
that was the case, the treatment was broadly in line with the new
policy above.
All other leases were treated as operating leases. Payment on
operating lease agreement was recognised as an expense on a
straight-line basis over the lease term. Associated costs, such as
maintenance and insurance, were expensed as incurred.
Revenue
Revenue is recognised in accordance with IFRS 15 'Revenue from
Contracts with Customers'. IFRS 15 provides a single,
principles-based, five-step model to be applied to all sales
contracts as outlined below. It is based on the transfer of control
of goods and services to customers and replaces the separate models
for goods, services and construction assets. The detail below sets
out the principal types of contract and how the revenue is
recognised in accordance with IFRS 15.
The Group's contract portfolio has been assessed by operating
segment. The contracts with customers in Housing have a wide
variation of goods and services being provided to customers with
differing performance obligations and levels of complexity. In
Care, there is a single performance obligation within all contracts
and the segment follows a single revenue recognition methodology.
None of the Group's contracts are considered to have a significant
financing component.
Schedule of rates (SOR) contracts
These contracts are primarily for repairs and maintenance
services. Revenue is derived using a fixed pricing schedule, which
allows each job to be identified and valued. This pricing schedule
is referred to as the SOR, which determines the transaction price.
Each work order represents a performance obligation and as the
customer controls the asset being enhanced through the works, the
performance obligation is satisfied over time. The stage of
completion of the work order is assessed and an appropriate
proportion of the expected transaction price recognised in
revenue.
Lump sum contracts
Lump sum contracts may involve delivering a range of goods and
services, typically repairs, maintenance and capital works;
however, there is a single fixed lump sum payment per period which
represents the transaction price. The obligation within a lump sum
contract is deemed to be being available to deliver the goods and
services in the scope of the contract, not the actual performance
of the individual works orders themselves. Therefore revenue will
be recognised on a straight-line basis as performance obligations
are being met over time.
Contracting
For contracting projects, the contract states the scope and
specification of the construction works to be carried out, for a
fixed price. Mears is continuously satisfying this single
performance obligation as cost is incurred, determining progress
against the performance obligation on an input basis. The customer
controls the site or output as the work is being performed on it
and therefore revenue is recognised over time where there is an
enforceable right to payment for works completed to date and the
work completed does not create an asset with an alternative use to
the Group. An assessment is made of costs incurred to date and the
costs required to complete the project. If a project is not deemed
to be profitable, the unavoidable costs of fulfilling the contract
are provided for immediately. This category also includes
construction contracts where an end customer has not yet been
identified and the revenue is recognised at the point of sale of
the property, rather than over time.
Variable consideration
The Group's Housing revenue includes elements of variable
consideration. Where there is uncertainty in the measurement of
variable consideration, at both the start of the contract and
subsequently, management will consider the facts and circumstances
of the contract in determining either the most likely amount of
variable consideration when the outcome is binary, or the expected
value based on a range of possible considerations. Included within
this assessment will be the extent to which there is a high
probability that a significant reversal in variable consideration
revenues will not occur once the uncertainty is subsequently
resolved. This assessment will include consideration of the
following factors: the total amount of the variable consideration;
the proportion of consideration susceptible to judgements of
customers or third parties, for example key performance indicators;
the length of time expected before resolution of the uncertainty;
and the Group's previous experience of similar contracts.
Property income
Where the Group is acting as principal, lessor operating lease
revenue is recognised in revenue on a straight-line basis over the
tenancy.
Where the Group is providing a management service, Mears
recognises revenue as an agent (the net management fee) on a
straight-line basis. Where significant initial costs are required
to make good the housing to perform Housing Management activities,
the costs directly attributable to the initial upgrade will be
recognised as costs incurred to fulfil a contract and held within
current assets, to the extent that it is determined that costs are
recoverable.
Where the Group is providing an accommodation and support
service, revenue is recognised at a point in time for each night
that the accommodation is occupied. These types of contracts
typically include elements of variable consideration in the form of
key performance indicators and revenue arising from these elements
is recognised in line with the Group's other variable
consideration.
Where the Group enters into arrangements with customers for the
provision of housing an assessment is made as to whether this
income is recognised under IFRS 15 or IFRS 16. The contract between
the Group and the customer is deemed to contain a lease where the
contract conveys the right to control an identified asset for a
period of time in exchange for consideration. In this instance, the
rental income is recognised on a straight line basis over the life
of the lease. All such sub-leased residential property leases are
classified as operating leases. Revenue in respect of sub-leased
residential property is disclosed separately in note 1.
Professional services
Revenue represents amounts recoverable from clients for
professional services provided during the year. Revenue is
recognised either at a point in time, where the performance
obligation is completed instantaneously such as processing a
planning application, or over time, where the services are
delivered over time. For this latter category, revenue is
recognised by reference to the stage of completion of the actual
services provided at the reporting date, as a proportion of the
total services to be provided.
Care services
The stand-alone selling prices for providing care are overtly
stated in the contract, and the method of application of the rate
of charge is on a unit of time basis, usually expressed as a rate
per visit. Revenue will be recognised in respect of this single
performance obligation, by reference to the chargeable rate and
time for completed care visits in the period.
From time to time, care contracts with customers include a fixed
fee per period for performing a consistent scope of care services.
For these contract types, the revenue recognition is consistent
with lump sum contracts above.
There is a shift towards rewarding providers of care on the
basis of achievement of specific outputs achieved and moving away
from the traditional input-based, per-hour measurement. Care
outputs are either achieved or not achieved and are determined by
service user. Revenue will be recognised when the specific
performance obligation has been satisfied.
Mobilisation
Where a contract includes a mobilisation element, consideration
is initially given to whether the mobilisation element contains any
discrete performance obligations. If this is the case, an element
of the total contract price is allocated to those performance
obligations and recognised either at a point in time or over time,
depending on the nature of the performance obligation. Mobilisation
income is included in the revenue category to which the contract
relates.
Where amounts are received for mobilisation elements that are
not performance obligations, these amounts are allocated to the
performance obligations in the contract to which they relate.
Business combinations
Business combinations are accounted for using the acquisition
method. The acquisition method involves the recognition at fair
value of all identifiable assets and liabilities, including
contingent liabilities of the subsidiary at the acquisition date,
regardless of whether or not they were recorded in the financial
statements of the subsidiary prior to acquisition. On initial
recognition, the assets and liabilities of the subsidiary are
included in the Consolidated Balance Sheet at their fair values,
which are also used as the bases for subsequent measurement in
accordance with the Group accounting policies. Goodwill is stated
after separating out identifiable intangible assets. Goodwill
represents the excess of acquisition cost over the fair value of
the Group's share of the identifiable net assets of the acquired
subsidiary at the date of acquisition.
Where applicable, the consideration for an acquisition includes
any assets or liabilities arising from a contingent consideration
arrangement, measured at fair value at the acquisition date.
Subsequent changes in such fair values are adjusted against the
cost of acquisition where they result from additional information
obtained up to one year from the acquisition date about facts and
circumstances that existed at the acquisition date. All other
subsequent changes in the fair value of contingent consideration
classified as an asset or liability are recognised in accordance
with IFRS 9 in the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss.
Costs relating to acquisitions in the year have been
expensed.
For transactions with non-controlling parties that do not result
in a change of control, the difference between the fair value of
the consideration paid and the amount by which the non-controlling
interest is adjusted is recognised in equity.
Any business combinations prior to 1 January 2010 were accounted
for in accordance with the standards in place at the time, which
differ in the following respects: transaction costs directly
attributable to the acquisition formed part of the acquisition
costs; contingent consideration was recognised if, and only if, the
Group had a present obligation, the economic outflow was more
likely than not and a reliable estimate was determinable; and
subsequent adjustments to the contingent consideration were
recognised as part of goodwill.
Goodwill
Goodwill arises on the acquisition of subsidiaries and
represents any excess of the cost of the acquired entity over the
Group's interest in the fair value of the entity's identifiable
assets and liabilities acquired and is capitalised as a separate
item. Goodwill is recognised as an intangible asset.
Under the business combinations exemption of IFRS 1, goodwill
previously written off directly to reserves under UK GAAP is not
recycled to the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss on
calculating a gain or loss on disposal.
Impairment
For the purposes of assessing impairment, assets are grouped at
the lowest levels for which there are separately identifiable cash
flows: cash-generating units (CGUs). As a result, some assets are
tested individually for impairment and some are tested at CGU
level. Goodwill is allocated to those CGUs that are expected to
benefit from synergies of the related business combination and
represent the lowest level within the Group at which management
monitors the related cash flows.
Goodwill or CGUs that include goodwill and those intangible
assets not yet available for use are tested for impairment at least
annually. All other individual assets or CGUs are tested for
impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate
that the carrying amount may not be recoverable.
An impairment loss is recognised in the Consolidated Statement
of Profit or Loss for the amount by which the asset's or CGU's
carrying amount exceeds its recoverable amount. The recoverable
amount is the higher of fair value, reflecting market conditions
less costs to sell, and value in use based on an internal
discounted cash flow evaluation. Impairment losses recognised for
CGUs, to which goodwill has been allocated, are credited initially
to the carrying amount of goodwill. Any remaining impairment loss
is charged pro-rata to the other assets in the CGU. With the
exception of goodwill, all assets are subsequently reassessed for
indications that an impairment loss previously recognised may no
longer exist.
For the partial disposal of a CGU, goodwill is allocated
proportionately to the branches acquired based on operating
profit.
Intangible assets
In accordance with IFRS 3 (Revised) 'Business Combinations', an
intangible asset acquired in a business combination is deemed to
have a cost to the Group of its fair value at the acquisition date.
The fair value of the intangible asset reflects market expectations
about the probability that the future economic benefits embodied in
the asset will flow to the Group. Where an intangible asset might
be separable, but only together with a related tangible or
intangible asset, the group of assets is recognised as a single
asset separately from goodwill where the individual fair values of
the assets in the Group are not reliably measurable. Where the
individual fair values of the complementary assets are reliably
measurable, the Group recognises them as a single asset provided
the individual assets have similar useful lives. Intangible assets
are amortised over the useful economic life of those assets.
Development costs incurred on software development are
capitalised when all the following conditions are satisfied:
-- completion of the software module is technically feasible so
that it will be available for use;
-- the Group intends to complete the development of the module
and use it;
-- the software will be used in generating probable future
economic benefits;
-- there are adequate technical, financial and other resources
to complete the development and to use the software; and
-- the expenditure attributable to the software during its
development can be measured reliably.
Costs incurred making intellectual property available for use
(including any associated borrowing costs) are capitalised when all
of the following conditions are satisfied:
-- completion of the data set is technically feasible so that it
will be available for use;
-- the Group intends to complete the preparation of the data and
use it;
-- the data will be used in generating probable future economic
benefits;
-- there are adequate technical, financial and other resources
to complete the data set and to use it; and
-- the expenditure attributable to the intellectual property
during its development can be measured reliably.
Development costs not meeting the criteria for capitalisation
are expensed as incurred. Careful judgement by management is
applied when deciding whether the recognition requirements for
development costs have been met. This is necessary as the economic
success of any development is uncertain and may be subject to
future technical problems at the time of recognition. Judgements
are based on the information available at each balance sheet date.
In addition, all internal activities related to the research and
development of new software are continually monitored by
management.
The cost of an internally generated intangible asset comprises
all directly attributable costs necessary to create, produce and
prepare the asset to be capable of operating in the manner intended
by management. Directly attributable costs include employee costs
incurred on software development.
Amortisation commences upon completion of the asset and is shown
within other administrative expenses. Until the asset is available
for use on completion of the project, the assets are subject to
impairment testing only. Development expenditure is amortised over
the period expected to benefit.
The identifiable intangible assets and associated periods of
amortisation are as follows:
Order book - over the period of the order book, typically three
years
Client relationships - over the period expected to benefit,
typically five years
Supplier relationships - over the period expected to benefit,
typically two years
Development expenditure - over four to five years, straight line
Intellectual property - over the period of usefulness of the
intellectual property, typically five years
The useful economic life of intangible assets are reviewed
annually and amended if appropriate.
Employee benefits
Retirement benefit obligations
The Group operates both defined benefit and defined contribution
pension schemes as follows:
i) Defined contribution pensions
A defined contribution plan is a pension plan under which the
Group pays fixed contributions to an independent entity. The Group
has no legal obligations to pay further contributions after payment
of the fixed contribution.
The contributions recognised in respect of defined contribution
plans are expensed as they fall due. Liabilities and assets may be
recognised if underpayment or prepayment has occurred and are
included in current liabilities or current assets as they are
normally of a short-term nature.
The assets of the schemes are held separately from those of the
Group in an independently administered fund.
ii) Defined benefit pensions
The Group contributes to defined benefit schemes which require
contributions to be made to separately administered funds.
A defined benefit plan is a pension plan that defines an amount
of pension benefit that an employee will receive on retirement,
usually dependent on one or more factors such as age, years of
service and salary. The legal obligations for any benefits from
this kind of pension plan remain with the Group, even if plan
assets for funding the defined benefit plan have been set
aside.
Scheme liabilities are measured using the projected unit funding
method, applying the principal actuarial assumptions at the balance
sheet date. Assets are measured at market value. In accordance with
IFRIC 14, the asset that is recognised is restricted to the amount
by which the IAS 19 (Revised) service cost is expected, over the
lifetime of the scheme, to exceed funding contributions payable in
respect of accruing benefits.
Where the Group has a contractual obligation to make good any
deficit in its share of a Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS)
but also has the right to recover the costs of making good any
deficit from the Group's client, the fair value of that guarantee
asset has been recognised and disclosed. The right to recover costs
is limited to exclude situations where the Group causes the scheme
to incur service costs in excess of those which would have been
incurred were the members employed within Local Government. The
right to recover costs is also limited to situations where the cap
on employer contributions payable by the Group is not set so as to
contribute to reducing the deficit in the scheme. Movements in the
guarantee asset are taken to the Consolidated Statement of Profit
or Loss and to the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income
to match the movement in pension assets and liabilities.
In prior years, the Group recognised the guarantee assets within
the balance of the overall pension liability. The Group now
recognises the pension liability and guarantee assets separately on
the face of the Consolidated Balance Sheet. This change has
resulted in a restatement of the Consolidated Balance Sheet for the
year ended 31 December 2018.
Actuarial gains and losses are taken to the Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income as incurred. For this purpose,
actuarial gains and losses comprise both the effects of changes in
actuarial assumptions and experience adjustments arising because of
differences between the previous actuarial assumptions and what has
actually occurred.
Other movements in the net surplus or deficit are recognised in
the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss, including the current
service cost, any past service cost and the effect of curtailments
or settlements. The net interest cost is also charged to the
Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss. The amount charged to the
Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss in respect of these plans
is included within operating costs.
The Group's contributions to the scheme are paid in accordance
with the rules of the scheme and the recommendations of the scheme
actuary.
Use of judgements and estimates
The preparation of financial statements requires management to
make estimates and judgements that affect the reported amounts of
assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and
liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the
reported amounts of income and expenditure during the reported
period. The estimates and associated judgements are based on
historical experience and various other factors that are believed
to be reasonable under the circumstances, the results of which form
the basis of making judgements about carrying values of assets and
liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources.
The estimates and underlying judgements are reviewed on an
ongoing basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in
the period in which the estimate is revised if the revision affects
only that period, or in the period of the revision and future
periods if the revision affects both current and future
periods.
In the preparation of these consolidated financial statements,
estimates and judgements have been made by management concerning
the selection of useful lives of property, plant and equipment,
provisions necessary for certain liabilities, when to recognise
revenue on long-term contracts, actuarial judgements, discount
rates used within impairment reviews, the underlying share price
volatility for valuing equity-based payments and other similar
evaluations. Actual amounts could differ from those estimates.
Critical judgements in applying the Group's accounting
policies
Revenue recognition
The estimation techniques used for revenue and profit
recognition in respect of contracting and variable consideration
contracts require judgements to be made about the stage of
completion of certain contracts and the recovery of work in
progress, mobilisation costs and contract assets. Each contract is
treated on its merits and subject to a regular review of the
revenue and costs to complete that contract.
In particular, judgements have been made in the recognition of
revenue in respect of mobilisation under the Group's Asylum
Accommodation and Support Contract (AASC). There are a number of
contractual requirements for the mobilisation and some of these
have been judged to represent performance obligations in accordance
with IFRS 15 'Revenue from Contracts with Customers'. The key
judgements have been around whether the customer is able to benefit
from the mobilisation element in isolation and this has resulted in
the recognition of GBP4.1m (2018: GBPnil) of revenue in respect of
this particular mobilisation.
Acquisition accounting
In 2018, the Group acquired the entire share capital of MPM
Housing Limited and MPS Housing Limited. The Directors included a
provisional assessment of the fair value of the net assets acquired
in the financial statements for the year ended 31 December 2018.
During 2019, management finalised this assessment, making
adjustments to the provisional amounts within the measurement
period as defined by IFRS 3. Management has made a judgement that
the adjustments recognised to assets and liabilities reflect new
information about facts and circumstances that were in existence at
the acquisition. In making this judgement management considered the
nature and timing of the circumstances giving rise to the
adjustment. In addition, a judgement has been made to assess the
period over which the identifiable intangible assets arising on
this acquisition are to be amortised, being the period that
management believe the Group will benefit.
Leased assets
Where leased assets are subject to extension or termination
options, judgements are required in determining whether it is
reasonably certain that these options will be exercised, in order
to identify the appropriate lease term at the inception of the
lease. Management considers all facts and circumstances including
their past practice and business plans in making this judgement on
a lease by lease basis.
Key sources of estimation uncertainty
Contract recoverability
Determining future contract profitability requires estimates of
future revenues and costs to complete. In making these assessments
there is a degree of inherent uncertainty. The Group utilises the
appropriate expertise in determining these estimates and has
well-established internal controls to assess and review the
expected outcome.
Acquisition accounting
The acquisition of MPM Housing Limited and MPS Housing Limited
has been accounted for in accordance with IFRS 3 'Business
Combinations'. The Group has allocated part of the purchase price
totalling GBP22.1m to identifiable intangible assets. On
acquisition, intangible assets are valued at fair value using the
income method. The valuation process is based on associated
cashflows in respect of the order book acquired and is also
dependent on assumptions about economic factors and business
strategy. The excess of value transferred to the seller in return
for control of the acquired business resulted in the recognition of
goodwill of GBP10.7m. This goodwill is allocated and tested for
impairment as part of the Housing CGU.
Impairment of goodwill
Determining whether goodwill is impaired requires an estimate of
the value in use of the CGUs to which goodwill has been allocated.
The value-in-use calculation involves an estimate of the future
cash flows of the CGUs and also the selection of appropriate
discount rates to calculate present values. Future cash flows are
estimated using the current one-year budget forecast, extrapolated
for a future growth rate. The estimated growth rates are based on
past experience and knowledge of the individual sector's markets.
The impairment of goodwill during 2019 was significant and was
estimated based on the sale value of the English domiciliary care
business which was disposed of after the period end and the
Directors' expectation of the sale value relating to the Scottish
domiciliary care business.
Leased assets
Estimation is required in calculating the appropriate discount
rate to use when recognising the present value of future lease
payments as a lease obligation. The Group undertook a synthetic
credit rating exercise which determined a credit rating of BB+ for
Mears Group PLC by reference to the consolidated results of the
Group for the year ended 31 December 2018. Given the cross
guarantees in place across the Group, it was considered appropriate
to use a single credit rating across all Group entities. Using the
Thomson Reuters EIKON database, a yield curve was built that can be
used to determine appropriate incremental borrowing rates for the
varying lease tenors. In order to build an appropriate yield curve,
we have calculated a proxy GBP BB+ yield curve for a range of
maturities by interpolating yields at the mid-point between BBB and
BB rated GBP corporate bond yields.
The sensitivity of the lease liability to the assumptions used
in these estimations is indicated in note 24.
Defined benefit assets
Scheme assets for LGPS have been estimated by rolling forward
the published asset position from the previous year using market
index returns over the period. This is considered to provide a good
estimate of the fair value of the scheme assets and the values will
be updated to actuals each time a triennial valuation takes
place.
Defined benefit liabilities
A number of key estimates have been made, which are given below,
and which are largely dependent on factors outside the control of
the Group:
-- inflation rates;
-- mortality;
-- discount rate; and
-- salary and pension increases.
Details of the particular estimates used are included in the
pensions note. Sensitivity analysis for these key estimates is
included in note 32.
Where the Group has a contractual obligation to make good any
deficit in its share of an LGPS but also has the right to recover
the costs of making good any deficit from the Group's client, the
fair value of that asset has been recognised and disclosed. The
right to recover costs is limited to exclude situations where the
Group causes the scheme to incur service costs in excess of those
which would have been incurred were the members employed within
Local Government. The Directors have made judgements in respect of
whether any of the deficit is as a result of such situations.
The right to recover costs is also limited to situations where
the cap on employer contributions to be suffered by the Group is
not set so as to contribute to reducing the deficit in the scheme.
The Directors, in conjunction with the scheme actuaries, have made
judgements in respect of the predicted future service cost and
contributions to the scheme to reflect this in the fair value of
the asset recognised.
Property, plant and equipment
Items of property, plant and equipment are stated at historical
cost, net of depreciation. Historical cost includes expenditure
that is directly attributable to the acquisition of the items.
Subsequent costs are included in the asset's carrying amount or
recognised as a separate asset, as appropriate, only when it is
probable that future economic benefits associated with the item
will flow into the Group and the cost of the item can be measured
reliably. All other repairs and maintenance are charged to the
Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss during the financial
period in which they are incurred.
Freehold land is not depreciated. Depreciation on other assets
is calculated to write down the cost less estimated residual value
over their estimated useful economic lives. The rates generally
applicable are:
Freehold buildings - 2% p.a., straight line
Leasehold improvements - over the period of the lease, straight
line
Plant and machinery - 25% p.a., reducing balance
Fixtures, fittings and equipment - 25% p.a., reducing balance
Motor vehicles - 25% p.a., reducing balance
Residual values are reviewed annually and updated if
appropriate. The carrying value is reviewed for impairment in the
period if events or changes in circumstances indicate the carrying
value may not be recoverable. An asset's carrying value is written
down immediately to its recoverable amount if the asset's carrying
amount is greater than its estimated recoverable amount.
Gains and losses on disposals are determined by comparing the
proceeds with the carrying amount and are recognised within
administrative expenses in the Consolidated Statement of Profit or
Loss.
Investment property
Included within right of use assets are certain properties
classified as investment properties in accordance with IAS 40.
These properties are held primarily in order to earn rentals. The
Group has chosen to apply the cost model to all investment property
and therefore measurement is in line with IFRS 16 as described in
the Leased assets accounting policy.
Properties that generate rents but are primarily held for the
provision of social benefits are not considered to meet the
definition of investment property.
Assets held for sale
Non-current assets (or disposal groups) are classified as held
for sale if their carrying amount will be recovered principally
through a sale transaction rather than through continuing use and a
sale is considered highly probable. They are measured at the lower
of their carrying amount and fair value less costs to sell, except
for assets such as deferred tax assets, assets arising from
employee benefits, financial assets and investment property that
are carried at fair value.
An impairment loss is recognised for any initial or subsequent
write-down of the asset (or disposal group) to fair value less
costs to sell. A gain is recognised for any subsequent increases in
fair value less costs to sell of an asset (or disposal group), but
not in excess of any cumulative impairment loss previously
recognised. A gain or loss not previously recognised by the date of
the sale of the non-current asset (or disposal group) is recognised
at the date of derecognition.
Non-current assets (including those that are part of a disposal
group) are not depreciated or amortised while they are classified
as held for sale. Interest and other expenses attributable to the
liabilities of a disposal group classified as held for sale
continue to be recognised.
Non-current assets classified as held for sale and the assets of
a disposal group classified as held for sale are presented
separately from the other assets in the balance sheet. The
liabilities of a disposal group classified as held for sale are
presented separately from other liabilities in the balance
sheet.
A discontinued operation is a component of the entity that has
been disposed of or is classified as held for sale and that
represents a separate major line of business or geographical area
of operations, is part of a single co-ordinated plan to dispose of
such a line of business or area of operations, or is a subsidiary
acquired exclusively with a view to resale. The results of
discontinued operations are presented separately in the statement
of profit or loss.
Inventories
Inventories are stated at the lower of cost and net realisable
value. Cost is the actual purchase price of materials.
Work in progress
Work in progress is included in inventories after deducting any
foreseeable losses and payments on account not matched with
revenue. Work in progress represents costs incurred on speculative
construction projects where a customer has not yet been identified.
Work in progress is stated at the lower of cost and net realisable
value. Cost comprises materials, direct labour and any
subcontracted work that has been incurred in bringing the
inventories and work in progress to their present location and
condition.
Contract assets
Contract assets are included in trade and other receivables and
represent revenue recognised in excess of the total of payments on
account and amounts invoiced.
Trade receivables
Trade receivables represent amounts due from customers in
respect of invoice. They are initially measured at their
transaction price and subsequently remeasured at amortised
cost.
Retention assets represent amounts held by customers for a
period following payment of invoices, to cover any potential
defects in the work. Retention assets are included in trade
receivables and are therefore initially measured at their
transaction price.
Provisions
A provision is recognised where there is uncertainty about the
timing or amount of future expenditure required to settle an
obligation. The amount recognised is the Directors' best estimate
of the expenditure required to settle the obligation.
Financial instruments
Financial assets and liabilities are recognised in the
Consolidated Balance Sheet when the Group becomes party to the
contractual provisions of the instrument. The principal financial
assets and liabilities of the Group are as follows:
Financial assets, loans and receivables
Assets generated from goods or services transferred to customers
are presented as either receivables or contract assets, in
accordance with IFRS 15. The assessment of impairment of
receivables or contract assets is in accordance with IFRS 9
'Financial Instruments'.
All of Mears' cash flows from customers are solely payments of
principal and interest, and do not contain a significant financing
component. Financial assets generated from all of the Group's
revenue streams are therefore initially measured at their fair
value, which is considered to be their transaction price (as
defined in IFRS 15) and are subsequently remeasured at amortised
cost.
Mears recognises a loss allowance for expected credit losses
(ECL) on financial assets subsequently measured at amortised cost
using the 'simplified approach'. Individually significant balances
are reviewed separately for impairment based on the credit terms
agreed with the customer. Other balances are grouped into credit
risk categories and reviewed in aggregate.
Trade receivables, contract assets and cash at bank and in hand
are non-derivative financial assets with fixed or determinable
payments that are not quoted in an active market. Trade receivables
and contract assets are initially recorded at fair value net of
transaction costs, being invoiced value less any provisional
estimate for impairment should this be necessary due to a loss
event. Trade receivables are subsequently remeasured at invoiced
value, less an updated provision for impairment. Any change in
their value through impairment or reversal of impairment is
recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss.
Cash and cash equivalents include cash at bank and in hand and
bank deposits available with no notice or less than three months'
notice from inception that are subject to an insignificant risk of
changes in value. Bank overdrafts are presented as current
liabilities to the extent that there is no right of offset with
cash balances. The Group considers its revolving credit facility to
be an integral part of its cash management.
Following initial recognition, financial assets are subsequently
remeasured at amortised cost using the effective interest rate
method.
Financial liabilities
The Group's financial liabilities are overdrafts, trade and
other payables including contingent consideration, and interest
rate swaps. They are included in the Consolidated Balance Sheet
line items 'Short-term borrowings and overdrafts', 'Trade and other
payables', 'Financial liabilities' and 'Other liabilities'.
All interest related charges are recognised as an expense in
'Finance costs' in the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss
with the exception of those that are directly attributable to the
construction of a qualifying asset, which are capitalised as part
of that asset.
Bank and other borrowings are initially recognised at fair value
net of transaction costs. Gains and losses arising on the
repurchase, settlement or cancellation of liabilities are
recognised respectively in finance income and finance costs.
Borrowing costs are recognised as an expense in the period in which
they are incurred with the exception of those which are directly
attributable to the construction of a qualifying asset, which are
capitalised as part of that asset.
Trade payables on normal terms are not interest bearing and are
stated at their fair value on initial recognition and subsequently
at amortised cost.
Contingent consideration is initially recognised at fair value
and is subsequently measured at fair value through the Consolidated
Statement of Profit or Loss.
Derivative financial instruments
The Group uses derivative financial instruments to hedge its
exposure to interest rate risks arising from operational and
financing activities.
Derivative financial instruments are recognised initially and
subsequently at fair value, with mark-to-market movements
recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss except
where cash flow hedge accounting is applied.
The fair value of interest rate swaps is the estimated amount
that the Group would receive or pay to terminate the swap at the
balance sheet date, taking into account current interest rates and
the current creditworthiness of the swap counterparties.
In accordance with its treasury policy, the Group does not hold
or issue derivative financial instruments for trading purposes.
Hedge accounting for interest rate swaps
Where an interest rate swap is designated as a hedge of the
variability in cash flows of an existing or highly probable
forecast loan interest payment, the effective part of any valuation
gain or loss on the swap instrument is recognised in 'Other
comprehensive income' in the hedging reserve. The cumulative gain
or loss is removed from equity and recognised in the Consolidated
Statement of Profit or Loss at the same time as the hedged
transaction. The ineffective part of any gain or loss is recognised
in the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss immediately.
When a hedging instrument or hedge relationship is terminated
but the hedged transaction is still expected to occur, the
cumulative gain or loss at that point remains in equity and is
recognised in accordance with the above policy when the transaction
occurs. If the hedged transaction is no longer probable, the
cumulative unrealised gain or loss recognised in equity is
recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss
immediately.
Accounting for taxes
Income tax comprises current and deferred taxation.
Current tax assets and/or liabilities comprise those obligations
to, or claims from, fiscal authorities that are unpaid at the
balance sheet date. They are calculated according to the tax rates
and tax laws applicable to the accounting periods to which they
relate, based on the taxable profit for the year.
Where an item of income or expense is recognised in the
Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss, any related tax generated
is recognised as a component of tax expense in the Consolidated
Statement of Profit or Loss. Where an item is recognised directly
to equity or presented within the Consolidated Statement of
Comprehensive Income, any related tax generated is treated
similarly.
Deferred taxation is the tax expected to be repayable or
recoverable on differences between the carrying amounts of assets
and liabilities in the financial statements and corresponding tax
bases used in the computation of taxable profit and is accounted
for using the balance sheet liability method.
Deferred taxation liabilities are generally recognised on all
taxable temporary differences in full with no discounting. Deferred
taxation assets are recognised to the extent that it is probable
that taxable profits will be available against which deductible
temporary differences can be utilised. However, deferred tax is not
provided on the initial recognition of goodwill, nor on the initial
recognition of an asset or liability, unless the related
transaction is a business combination or affects tax or accounting
profit.
Deferred taxation is calculated using the tax rates and laws
that are expected to apply in the period when the liability is
settled or the asset is realised, provided they are enacted or
substantively enacted at the balance sheet date. The carrying value
of deferred taxation assets is reviewed at each balance sheet date
and reduced to the extent that it is no longer probable that
sufficient taxable profits will be available against which taxable
temporary differences can be utilised. Deferred tax is charged or
credited to either the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss,
the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income or equity to the
extent that it relates to items charged or credited. Deferred tax
relating to items charged or credited directly to equity is also
credited or charged to equity.
Exceptional costs
Exceptional costs are disclosed on the face of the Consolidated
Statement of Profit or Loss where these are material and considered
necessary to explain the underlying financial performance of the
Group. They are either one-off in nature or necessary elements of
expenditure to derive future benefits for the Group which have not
been capitalised in the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
Costs of restructure are only considered to be exceptional where
the restructure is transformational and the resultant cost is
significant.
Acquisition costs are only considered to be exceptional where
the acquisition and the resultant cost are significant.
Share-based employee remuneration
All share-based payment arrangements that were granted after 7
November 2002 and had not vested before 1 January 2005 are
recognised in the consolidated financial statements in accordance
with IFRS 2.
The Group operates equity-settled and cash-settled share-based
remuneration plans for its employees. All employee services
received in exchange for the grant of any share-based remuneration
are measured at their fair values. These are indirectly determined
by reference to the fair value (excluding the effect of
non-market-based vesting conditions) of the share options awarded.
Their value is determined at the date of grant and is not
subsequently remeasured unless the conditions on which the award
was granted are modified. The fair value at the date of the grant
is calculated using the Black Scholes option pricing model and the
cost is recognised on a straight-line basis over the vesting
period. Adjustments are made to reflect expected and actual
forfeitures during the vesting period. For Save As You Earn (SAYE)
plans, employees are required to contribute towards the plan. This
non-vesting condition is taken into account in calculating the fair
value of the option at the grant date.
All share-based remuneration is ultimately recognised as an
expense in the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss. For
equity-settled share-based payments there is a corresponding credit
to the share-based payment reserve; for cash-settled share-based
payments the Group recognises a liability at the balance sheet
date.
Upon exercise of share options, the proceeds received net of any
directly attributable transaction costs up to the nominal value of
the shares issued are allocated to share capital, with any excess
being recorded as share premium.
Dividends
Dividend distributions payable to equity shareholders are
included in 'Current financial liabilities' when the dividends are
approved in a general meeting prior to the balance sheet date.
Nature and purpose of each reserve in equity
Share capital is determined using the nominal value of shares
that have been issued.
Share premium represents the difference between the nominal
value of shares issued and the total consideration received.
Equity-settled shared-based employee remuneration is credited to
the share-based payment reserve until the related share options are
exercised. Upon exercise the share-based payment reserve is
transferred to retained earnings.
The hedging reserve represents the effective part of any gain or
loss on a cash flow hedge which has not been removed from equity
and recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss.
The merger reserve relates to the unrealised element of the
difference between the nominal value and total consideration in
respect of the acquisition of Supporta plc and Morrison Facilities
Services Limited where the Company was entitled to the merger
relief offered by the Companies Act 2006.
Segment reporting
Segment information is presented in respect of the Group's
operating segments based on the format that the Group reports to
its chief operating decision maker.
The Group considers that the chief operating decision maker
comprises the Executive Directors of the business.
New standards and interpretations not yet applied
A number of standards have been modified with effect for
accounting periods commencing on or after 1 January 2020. These
include Amendments to IFRS 3 - definition of a business, Amendments
to IAS 1 and IAS 8 on the definition of material and Amendments to
IFRS 9, IAS 39 and IFRS 7 - interest rate benchmark reform. None of
these amendments are expected to have a material effect on the
Group's financial statements.
Consolidated statement of profit or loss
For the year ended 31 December 2019
2019 2018
Note GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Continuing operations
Sales revenue 1 905,084 771,861
Cost of sales (686,874) (586,933)
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Gross profit 218,210 184,928
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Other administrative expenses (172,632) (145,835)
Exceptional costs 8 (2,018) (5,657)
Amortisation of acquisition intangibles 14 (10,122) (3,738)
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Total administrative costs (184,772) (155,230)
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Operating profit before exceptional costs and amortisation
of acquisition intangibles 2 45,578 39,093
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Operating profit 2 33,438 29,698
Share of profits of associates 895 -
Finance income 5 1,097 1,153
Finance costs 5 (10,229) (3,474)
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Profit for the year before tax, exceptional costs
and amortisation of acquisition intangibles 37,341 36,772
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Profit for the year before tax 25,201 27,377
Tax expense 9 (3,976) (3,740)
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Profit for the year from continuing operations 21,225 23,637
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Discontinued operations
(Loss)/profit from discontinued operations 10 (87,171) 1,053
Tax (charge)/credit on discontinued operations 9 (100) 135
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
(Loss)/profit for the year after tax from discontinued
operations (87,271) 1,188
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
(Loss)/profit for the year from continuing and discontinued
operations (66,046) 24,825
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Attributable to:
Owners of Mears Group PLC (66,388) 24,064
Non-controlling interest 342 761
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
(Loss)/profit for the year (66,046) 24,825
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Earnings per share - from continuing operations
Basic 12 18.90p 21.91p
Diluted 12 18.80p 21.78p
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
Earnings per share - from continuing and discontinued
operations
Basic 12 (60.09)p 23.05p
Diluted 12 (59.77)p 22.91p
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- --------- ---------
The accompanying accounting policies and notes form an integral
part of this preliminary announcement.
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
For the year ended 31 December 2019
2019 2018
Note GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- -------- --------
(Loss)/profit for the year (66,046) 24,825
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- -------- --------
Other comprehensive expense:
Which will be subsequently reclassified to the Consolidated
Statement of Profit or Loss:
Cash flow hedges:
-- losses arising in the year 27 (145) -
-- reclassification to the Consolidated Statement
of Profit or Loss 27 49 325
Increase/(decrease) in deferred tax asset in respect
of cash flow hedges 28 18 (45)
Which will not be subsequently reclassified to the
Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss:
Actuarial loss on defined benefit pension scheme 32 (11,288) (9,431)
Increase in deferred tax asset in respect of defined
benefit pension schemes 28 2,145 1,792
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- -------- --------
Other comprehensive expense for the year (9,221) (7,359)
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- -------- --------
Total comprehensive (expense)/income for the year (75,267) 17,466
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- -------- --------
Attributable to:
Owners of Mears Group PLC (75,609) 16,705
Non-controlling interest 342 761
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- -------- --------
Total comprehensive (expense)/income for the year (75,267) 17,466
------------------------------------------------------------ ---- -------- --------
Total comprehensive (expense)/income for the year attributable
to owners of Mears Group PLC arises from:
Continuing operations 11,677 15,516
Discontinued operations (87,286) 1,189
---------------------------------------------------------------- -------- ------
Total comprehensive (expense)/income for the year attributable
to owners of Mears Group PLC (75,609) 16,705
---------------------------------------------------------------- -------- ------
The accompanying accounting policies and notes form an integral
part of this preliminary announcement
Consolidated balance sheet
As at 31 December 2019
2019 2018 (restated) 2017 (restated)
Note GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Assets
Non-current
Goodwill 13 123,204 203,766 193,642
Intangible assets 14 28,642 37,012 17,266
Property, plant and equipment 15 26,326 24,956 22,037
Right of use assets 16 264,576 - -
Investments accounted for using the equity method 17 536 - -
Pension and other employee benefits 32 6,871 17,368 27,308
Pension guarantee assets 32 23,810 16,947 7,026
Deferred tax asset 28 3,310 4,500 4,314
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
477,275 304,549 264,567
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Current
Assets classified as held for sale 18 11,185 12,442 13,941
Inventories 19 36,045 29,751 18,705
Trade and other receivables 21 162,838 170,854 153,912
Current tax assets - 609 111
Cash and cash equivalents 27 72,909 27,876 24,770
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
282,977 241,532 211,439
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Total assets 760,252 546,081 476,006
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Equity
Equity attributable to the shareholders of Mears
Group PLC
Called up share capital 29 1,105 1,105 1,036
Share premium account 82,224 82,224 60,204
Share-based payment reserve 2,421 2,021 1,469
Hedging reserve 27 (124) (46) (326)
Merger reserve 12,956 46,214 46,214
Retained earnings 20,496 79,189 100,897
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Total equity attributable to the shareholders
of Mears Group PLC 119,078 210,707 209,494
Non-controlling interest (85) (427) 96
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Total equity 118,993 210,280 209,590
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Liabilities
Non-current
Long-term borrowing and overdrafts 27 124,047 78,780 50,559
Pension and other employee benefits 32 28,593 20,749 11,992
Deferred tax liabilities 28 4,995 8,610 7,098
Financial liabilities 23 39 15 79
Lease liabilities 24 228,588 892 -
Other payables 26 4,700 6,586 5,036
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
390,962 115,632 67,738
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Current
Borrowings related to assets classified as held
for sale 27 - 15,000 13,941
Short-term borrowing and overdrafts 27 - 15,000 -
Trade and other payables 22 202,366 185,813 184,484
Financial liabilities 23 119 41 253
Lease liabilities 24 40,757 377 -
Provisions 25 504 3,938 -
Current tax liabilities 659 - -
Liabilities related to assets classified as
held for sale 10 5,892 - -
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Current liabilities 250,297 220,169 198,678
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Total liabilities 641,259 335,801 266,416
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
Total equity and liabilities 760,252 546,081 476,006
-------------------------------------------------- ---- -------- --------------- ---------------
The financial statements were approved and authorised for issue
by the Board of Directors and were signed on its behalf on 6 May
2020.
D J Miles A C M Smith
Director Director
Company number: 03232863
The accompanying accounting policies and notes form an integral
part of this preliminary announcement
Consolidated cash flow statement
For the year ended 31 December 2019
2019 2018
Note GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Operating activities
Result for the year before tax 25,201 27,377
Adjustments 30 64,032 14,519
Change in inventories (6,294) (11,045)
Change in trade and other receivables 4,971 (15,426)
Change in trade, other payables and provisions 12,340 (12,135)
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Cash inflow from operating activities of continuing
operations before taxation 100,250 3,290
Taxes paid (2,991) 691
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Net cash inflow from operating activities of continuing
operations 97,259 3,981
Net cash outflow from operating activities of discontinued
operations (1,943) (3,337)
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Net cash inflow from operating activities 95,316 644
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Investing activities
Additions to property, plant and equipment (8,513) (7,282)
Additions to other intangible assets (3,011) (3,089)
Proceeds from disposals of property, plant and equipment 46 144
Net cash inflow in respect of property for resale 7,824 1,499
Payments on acquisitions, net of cash acquired (1,300) (31,685)
Net cash disposed of with subsidiary - (26)
Loans made to other entities (non-controlled) (48) (139)
Interest received 363 389
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Net cash outflow from investing activities of continuing
operations (4,639) (40,189)
Net cash outflow from investing activities of discontinued
operations (841) (385)
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Net cash outflow from investing activities (5,480) (40,574)
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Financing activities
Proceeds from share issue 1 22,089
(Repayment of)/receipts from borrowings related to
assets classified as held for sale (15,000) 1,059
Acquisition of non-controlling interests - (6,163)
Net movement in revolving credit facility 30,267 43,221
Discharge of lease liabilities (35,411) (479)
Interest paid (9,843) (3,602)
Dividends paid - Mears Group shareholders (13,811) (12,539)
Dividends paid - non-controlling interests - (550)
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Net cash (outflow)/inflow from financing activities
of continuing operations (43,797) 43,036
Net cash outflow from financing activities of discontinued
operations (854) -
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Net cash (outflow)/inflow from financing activities (44,651) 43,036
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of year 27,876 24,770
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents 45,185 3,106
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Cash and cash equivalents, end of year (including
discontinued) 73,061 27,876
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
The Group considers its revolving credit facility
to be an integral part of its cash management:
-- cash and cash equivalents 73,061 27,876
-- revolving credit facility (124,047) (93,780)
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
Cash and cash equivalents, including revolving credit
facility (50,986) (65,904)
----------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- --------
The accompanying accounting policies and notes form an integral
part of these financial statements.
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
For the year ended 31 December 2019
Attributable to equity shareholders of the
Company
-----------------------------------------------------------
Share-
Share based Non-
Share premium payment Hedging Merger Retained controlling Total
capital account reserve reserve reserve earnings interest equity
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- ------------ --------
At 1 January 2018 1,036 60,204 1,469 (326) 46,214 100,897 96 209,590
----------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- ------------ --------
Impact of change
in accounting
policies - - - - - (26,342) - (26,342)
Adjusted balance
at 1 January 2018 1,036 60,204 1,469 (326) 46,214 74,555 96 183,248
Net result for
the year - - - - - 24,064 761 24,825
Other comprehensive
income - - - 280 - (7,639) - (7,359)
----------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- ------------ --------
Total comprehensive
income for the
year - - - 280 - 16,425 761 17,466
----------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- ------------ --------
Deferred tax on
share-based payments - - - - - 14 - 14
Issue of shares 69 22,020 - - - - - 22,089
Share option charges - - 552 - - - - 552
Changes in non
controlling interests - - - - - 734 (734) -
Dividends - - - - - (12,539) (550) (13,089)
----------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- ------------ --------
At 1 January 2019 1,105 82,224 2,021 (46) 46,214 79,189 (427) 210,280
----------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- ------------ --------
Impact of change
in accounting
policies - - - - - (2,418) - (2,418)
Adjusted balance
at 1 January 2019 1,105 82,224 2,021 (46) 46,214 76,771 (427) 207,862
Net result for
the year - - - - - (66,388) 342 (66,046)
Other comprehensive
income - - - (78) - (9,143) - (9,221)
----------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- ------------ --------
Total comprehensive
income for the
year - - - (78) - (75,531) 342 (75,267)
----------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- ------------ --------
Deferred tax on
share-based payments - - - - - (191) - (191)
Share option charges - - 400 - - - - 400
Transfer of realised
profits - - - - (33,258) 33,258 - -
Dividends - - - - - (13,811) - (13,811)
----------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- ------------ --------
At 31 December
2019 1,105 82,224 2,421 (124) 12,956 20,496 (85) 118,993
----------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------- ------------ --------
The accompanying accounting policies and notes form an integral
part of these financial statements.
Notes to the preliminary announcement
For the year ended 31 December 2019
1. Revenue
The Group's revenue disaggregated by pattern of revenue
recognition is as follows:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------- -------- --------
Revenue from contracts with customers
Schedule of rates contracts 421,564 304,536
Contracting and variable consideration 176,720 226,175
Lump sum contracts 134,660 107,156
Rental income 98,012 62,192
Professional services 21,524 13,325
Care services 19,237 18,631
Other 916 409
--------------------------------------- -------- --------
872,633 732,424
Lease income 32451 39,437
--------------------------------------- -------- --------
905,084 771,861
--------------------------------------- -------- --------
All of the above categories fall exclusively within the Housing
segment.
A total of GBP0.6m of revenue was recognised in respect of the
balance of contract liabilities at the start of the year (2018:
GBP0.3m).
Schedule of rates and care service revenue is typically invoiced
between one and 30 days from completion of the performance
obligation. Contracting and variable consideration revenue is
typically invoiced based on the stage of completion of the overall
contract. Lump sum revenue is typically invoiced monthly in
arrears. Rental income is typically invoiced monthly in advance.
Professional services revenue is typically invoiced monthly in
arrears. Payment terms for revenue invoiced are typically 30 to 60
days from the date of invoice.
2. Segment reporting
Segment information is presented in respect of the Group's
operating segments. Segments are determined by reference to the
internal reports reviewed by the Executive Directors.
The Group had two operating segments during the year:
-- Housing - services within this sector comprise a full housing
management service predominantly to Local Authorities and other
Registered Social Landlords as well as Care services directly
related to Housing provision; and
-- Care - services within this sector comprise personal care
services to people in their own homes. This segment was classified
as discontinued during the year.
All of the Group's activities are carried out within the United
Kingdom and the Group's principal reporting to its chief operating
decision maker is not segmented by geography.
The principal financial measures used by the chief operating
decision maker to review the performance of the Group are those of
revenue growth and operating margin in the core division of
Housing. The operating result utilised within the key performance
measures is stated before amortisation of acquisition intangibles
and costs relating to the long-term incentive plans. Whilst the
Strategic Review includes reference to a number of subcategories of
activities, this has been included to assist stakeholders in
understanding the Group's business model. The key decision around
the allocation of resources is made at the Housing segment
level.
There was an element of Housing with Care revenue disclosed
within the Care segment in 2018 which, following changes in the
business structure has been reclassified as within the Housing
segment in 2019.
2019 2018
Housing Care Housing Care
(continuing) (discontinued) (continuing) (discontinued)
Operating segments GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------- ------- ------- ------------- ------------------ ------------- ------------------
Revenue 905,084 77,521 771,861 97,982
---------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------------ ------------- ------------------
Operating result before exceptional
costs, amortisation of acquisition
intangibles and long-term incentive
plans 45,978 (6,532) 39,645 1,748
---------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------------ ------------- ------------------
Operating margin before exceptional
costs amortisation of acquisition
intangibles and long-term incentive
plans 5.08% (8.43)% 5.14% 1.78%
---------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------------ ------------- ------------------
Long-term incentive plans (400) - (552) -
---------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------------ ------------- ------------------
Operating result before exceptional
costs and amortisation of acquisition
intangibles 45,578 (6,532) 39,093 1,748
Exceptional costs (2,018) (80,562) (5,657) -
Amortisation of acquisition
intangibles (10,122) - (3,738) (696)
Operating profit/(loss) 33,438 (87,094) 29,698 1,052
Net finance (costs)/income (8,237) (77) (2,321) 1
Tax (expense)/credit (3,976) (100) (3,740) 135
---------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------------ ------------- ------------------
Profit/(loss) for the year 21,225 (87,271) 23,637 1,188
---------------------------------------------- ------------- ------------------ ------------- ------------------
All revenue and all non-current assets arise within the United
Kingdom. All of the revenue reported is external to the Group. No
revenue in respect of a single customer comprises more than 8% of
the total revenue reported.
In addition, the following disclosures have been provided in
respect of segmental analysis required by IFRS 8 'Operating
Segments':
2019 2018
------------------------------ ------------------------------
Housing Care Total Housing Care Total
Operating segments GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------- --------- -------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
Segment assets 749,424 10,828 760,252 422,890 123,191 546,081
Segment liabilities (635,724) (5,535) (641,259) (298,362) (37,439) (335,801)
Property, plant and equipment
additions 9,032 382 9,414 8,059 642 8,701
Depreciation 41,011 2,796 43,807 5,146 658 5,804
Amortisation of acquisition
intangibles 10,122 - 10,122 3,738 696 4,434
Amortisation of other intangibles 2,570 - 2,570 2,409 - 2,409
Profit/(loss) before tax 25,201 (87,171) (61,970) 27,377 1,053 28,430
---------------------------------- --------- -------- --------- --------- -------- ---------
3. Changes in accounting policies
As detailed in the principal accounting policies, IFRS 16
'Leases' has been adopted from 1 January 2019. The impact to
retained earnings as a result of this change is detailed below:
Retained
earnings
GBP'000
----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
Retained earnings as previously stated at 31 December 2018 79,189
Impact of recognition of right of use assets 190,242
Impact of recognition of operating lease liabilities (193,193)
Impact of restatement on Deferred tax asset 533
Retained earnings as restated at 1 January 2019 76,771
----------------------------------------------------------- ---------
The change to IFRS 16 has no impact on the lifetime expenditure
on leased assets and there are no cash flow impacts. The impact of
this standard has been to decrease the operating result for 2019 by
GBP0.9m. Moving forward, it is expected to have a neutral impact in
respect of operating profit.
The following is a reconciliation of total operating lease
commitments at 31 December 2018 (as disclosed in the financial
statements to 31 December 2018) to the lease liabilities recognised
at 1 January 2019 (all activities):
GBP'000
----------------------------------------------------------------- --------
Total operating lease commitments disclosed at 31 December
2018 184,172
Discounted using incremental borrowing rate of 3.26% (8,282)
------------------------------------------------------------------ --------
Discounted operating lease commitments 175,890
Recognition exemptions:
- Present value of leases with remaining lease term of less
than 12 months (29,264)
------------------------------------------------------------------ --------
146,626
Present value of lease excluded from operating lease commitments
at 31 December 2018 37,496
Impact of indexation on leases 9,071
------------------------------------------------------------------ --------
Operating lease liabilities 193,193
Finance lease obligations 1,269
Total lease liabilities recognised under IFRS 16 at 1 January
2019 194,462
------------------------------------------------------------------ --------
4. Operating costs
Operating costs, relating to continuing activities, include the
following:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Share-based payments 400 552
Depreciation 41,011 5,379
Amortisation of acquisition intangibles 10,122 3,738
Amortisation of other intangibles 2,547 2,409
Loss on disposal of subsidiary - 44
Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment 179 37
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Fees payable for audit and non-audit services during the year
were as follows:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Fees payable to the auditor for the audit of the Group's
financial statements 71 55
Other fees payable to the auditor in respect of:
* auditing of accounts of subsidiary undertakings
pursuant to legislation 315 325
* other audit related fees 9 9
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total auditor's remuneration 395 389
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
5. Finance income and finance costs
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Interest charge on overdrafts and short-term loans (3,541) (2,958)
Interest charge on hedged items (effective hedges) (49) (325)
Interest on lease obligations (6,072) (81)
Other interest (211) (2)
------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Finance costs on bank loans, overdrafts and finance leases (9,873) (3,366)
Interest charge on defined benefit obligation (356) (78)
Unwinding of discounting - (30)
------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total finance costs (10,229) (3,474)
------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Interest income resulting from short-term bank deposits 48 34
Interest income resulting from defined benefit asset 788 773
Other interest income 261 346
------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Finance income 1,097 1,153
------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Net finance charge (9,132) (2,321)
------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Gains and losses on hedged items recognised in other comprehensive
income
Losses arising in the year (145) -
Reclassification to the Consolidated Statement of Profit
or Loss 49 325
------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Changes in mark-to-market of interest rate swaps (effective
hedges) (96) 325
------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
6. Employees
Staff costs during the year were as follows:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------- -------- --------
Wages and salaries 203,576 170,752
Social security costs 20,123 16,587
Other pension costs 9,120 9,497
---------------------- -------- --------
232,819 196,836
---------------------- -------- --------
The average number of employees of the Group during the year
was:
2019 2018
---------------------- ----- -----
Site workers 3,796 3,382
Carers 724 726
Office and management 2,370 2,181
---------------------- ----- -----
6,890 6,289
---------------------- ----- -----
Remuneration in respect of Directors was as follows:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Emoluments 1,499 1,507
Gains made on the exercise of share options - -
Pension contributions to personal pension schemes 130 121
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
1,629 1,628
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
During the year contributions were paid to personal pension
schemes for four Directors (2018: three).
During the year no Directors (2018: none) exercised share
options.
7. Share-based employee remuneration
As at 31 December 2019 the Group maintained six share-based
payment schemes for employee remuneration.
Details of the share options outstanding are as follows:
2019 2018
------------------ -----------------
Weighted Weighted
average average
exercise exercise
Number price Number price
'000 p '000 p
--------------------------- ------- --------- ------ ---------
Outstanding at 1 January 2,752 265 2,938 287
Granted 1,704 216 530 237
Forfeited/lapsed (1,128) 333 (583) 323
Exercised (3) 26 (133) 297
--------------------------- ------- --------- ------ ---------
Outstanding at 31 December 3,325 217 2,752 265
--------------------------- ------- --------- ------ ---------
The weighted average share price at the date of exercise for
share options exercised during the period was 358p. At 31 December
2019, 0.3m options had vested and were still exercisable at prices
between 1p and 266p. These options had a weighted average exercise
price of 1p and a weighted average remaining contractual life of
2.6 years.
The fair values of options granted were determined using the
Black Scholes option pricing model. Significant inputs into the
calculation include the market price at the date of grant and
exercise prices. Furthermore, the calculation takes into account
the future dividend yield, the share price volatility rate and the
risk-free interest rate.
The underlying expected share price volatility was determined by
reference to historical data. The Company expects the volatility of
its share price to reduce as it matures. The risk-free interest
rate was determined by the implied yield available on a zero-coupon
Government bond at the date of grant. Adjustments are made to
reflect expected and actual forfeitures during the vesting period
due to failure to satisfy service conditions. In the case of the
SAYE scheme, the expected forfeitures take account of the
requirement to save throughout the life of the scheme. There were
1.7m options granted during the year and 1.1m options that lapsed
during the year. The market price at 31 December 2019 was 294p and
the range during 2019 was 223p to 365p.
All share-based employee remuneration will be settled in equity.
The Group has no legal obligation to repurchase or settle the
options.
The Group recognised the following expenses related to
share-based payments:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Giving rise to share-based payment reserve:
* SAYE 93 307
* Share Plan 307 245
* MIP - -
Giving rise to liabilities:
* MIP - -
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
400 552
-------------------------------------------- -------- --------
All-employee share incentive plan
Options are exercisable at a price equal to the average quoted
market price of the Company's shares on the three dealing days
prior to the date of grant. The vesting period is three years. If
the options remain unexercised after a period of ten years from the
date of grant, the options expire. Options are forfeited if the
employee leaves Mears before the options vest. All options issued
under this plan have vested or were forfeited.
Unapproved Company Share Option Plan (CSOP)
Options are exercisable at nominal value. The vesting period is
three years. If the options remain unexercised after a period of
ten years from the date of grant, the options expire. Options are
forfeited if the employee leaves Mears before the options vest.
With the introduction of the LTIP in 2008, the Remuneration
Committee has decided that no further awards will be made under the
unapproved CSOP. All options issued under this plan have vested or
were forfeited.
Save As You Earn (SAYE) scheme
Options are available to all employees. Options are granted for
a period of three years. Options are exercisable at a price based
on the quoted market price of the Company's shares at the time of
invitation, discounted by up to 20%. Options are forfeited if the
employee leaves Mears Group before the options vest, which impacts
on the number of options expected to vest. If an employee stops
saving but continues in employment, this is treated as a
cancellation, which results in an acceleration of the share-based
payment charge.
Management Incentive Plan (MIP)
The MIP was introduced in 2013 following shareholder approval.
The award of options is offered to a small number of key senior
management. The MIP is a share-based payment plan which is settled
through a combination of cash and shares. No further issues will be
made under this plan and the remaining options vest in 2019.
Executive Incentive Plan (EIP)
The EIP was introduced in June 2018 following shareholder
approval. The award of options is offered to key senior management
subject to performance conditions as detailed each year in the
Remuneration Report of the Company's Annual Reports &
Accounts.
8. Exceptional costs
Exceptional costs incurred in the period which are considered
non-trading or non-recurring in nature are detailed below:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------ -------- --------
Costs of restructure - 3,584
Costs of acquisition - 524
Exceptional legal costs 2,018 1,549
------------------------ -------- --------
2,018 5,657
------------------------ -------- --------
The costs of restructure relate to the rationalisation of the
Group's central services and largely comprise non-recurring staff
costs.
The costs of acquisition relate to the acquisition of MPM
Housing Limited and MPS Housing Limited, as detailed in note
31.
Exceptional legal costs were incurred in respect of a property
lease. Given the size of this item and unique circumstance of the
dispute, the Directors believe this should be treated as an
exceptional item to better reflect the underlying financial
performance.
9. Tax expense
Tax recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Profit or
Loss
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
United Kingdom corporation tax 4,204 (894)
Adjustment in respect of previous periods 71 (270)
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total current tax recognised in Consolidated Statement of
Profit or Loss 4,275 (1,164)
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Deferred taxation charge:
* on defined benefit pension obligations (40) 125
* on share-based payments 46 (116)
* on accelerated capital allowances 233 38
* on amortisation of acquisition intangibles (1,882) (710)
* on short-term temporary timing differences (52) (167)
* on corporate tax losses 1,770 (60)
* impact of change in statutory tax rates - -
* impact of transition to new accounting standards 53 5,985
Adjustment in respect of previous periods (427) (190)
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total deferred taxation recognised in Consolidated Statement
of Profit or Loss (299) 4,905
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total tax expense recognised in Consolidated Statement of
Profit or Loss on continuing operations 3,976 3,740
Total tax credit recognised in Consolidated Statement of
Profit or Loss on discontinued operations 100 (135)
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total tax expense recognised in Consolidated Statement of
Profit or Loss 4,076 3,606
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
The charge for the year can be reconciled to the result for the
year as follows:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
Profit for the year on continuing operations before tax 25,201 27,377
(Loss)/profit for the year on discontinued operations before
tax (87,171) 1,053
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Result for the year before tax (61,970) 28,430
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Result for the year multiplied by standard rate of corporation
tax in the United Kingdom for the period of 19.0% (2018:
19.0%) (11,774) 5,402
Effect of:
* expenses not deductible for tax purposes 496 260
* goodwill impairment 15,658 -
* income not subject to tax (135) (159)
* tax relief on exercise of share options 120 (24)
* temporary timing differences not recognised in
deferred tax 67 203
* tax losses not previously recognised in deferred tax - (1,616)
* adjustment in respect of prior periods (356) (460)
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Actual tax expense 4,076 3,606
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Deferred tax is recognised on both temporary and permanent
differences between the treatment of items for tax and accounting
purposes. Deferred tax on the amortisation of acquisition
intangibles is a permanent difference and arises because no tax
relief is due on this kind of amortisation.
Tax losses generated in previous years which are expected to be
utilised against future profits are recognised as a deferred tax
asset and a subsequent charge arises as those losses are utilised.
No deferred tax asset is recognised in respect of losses of
GBP28.9m (2018: GBP29.0m) across several entities in the Group as
it is not expected that they will be eligible to be utilised
against profits in the future.
Deferred tax is also recognised on short-term temporary timing
differences, primarily relating to provisions. These differences
are expected to reverse in the following year and arise because tax
relief is only available when the costs are incurred.
Capital allowances represent tax relief on the acquisition of
property, plant and equipment and are spread over several years at
rates set by legislation. These differ from depreciation, which is
an estimate of the use of an item of property, plant and equipment
over its useful life. Deferred tax is recognised on the difference
between the remaining value of such an asset for tax purposes and
its carrying value in the accounts.
The following tax has been charged to other comprehensive income
or equity during the year:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Deferred tax (credit)/charge recognised in other comprehensive
income
* on defined benefit pension obligations (2,145) (1,792)
* on cash flow hedges (18) 45
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total deferred tax credit recognised in other comprehensive
income (2,163) (1,747)
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Deferred tax recognised directly in equity
Deferred tax credit:
* on share-based payments 191 (14)
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total deferred tax recognised in equity 191 (14)
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total tax
Total current tax 4,275 (1,163)
Total deferred tax (2,171) 3,008
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
10. Discontinued activities
During the year, the Group classified its Domiciliary Care
business as a disposal group in accordance with IFRS 5. The assets
of the Domiciliary Care business are presented separately on the
face of the Statement of Financial Position and are measured at the
lower of carrying amount and fair value less costs to sell. As a
result, the Group has impaired both the Care goodwill and fixed
assets to reflect the recoverable amount.
Part of the disposal group, in the form of one of the Group's
subsidiaries, Mears Care Limited, was subsequently sold on 31
January 2020. The remainder of the disposal group, in the form of
another subsidiary, Mears Care (Scotland) Limited, is expected to
be sold during 2020.
The results of the operations which have been included in the
Consolidated Financial Statements are as follows:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Revenue and profits
Sales revenue 77,521 97,982
Cost of sales (61,411) (75,892)
Administrative expenses (22,642) (21,038)
Impairment of intangibles (80,562) -
Finance (costs)/income (77) 1
----------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
(Loss)/profit for the year before tax on discontinued operations (87,171) 1,053
Tax on discontinued operations (100) 135
----------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Loss for the year after tax on discontinued operations (87,271) 1,188
----------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Statement of Financial Position
Assets of disposal group 11,185 -
Liabilities related to assets classified as held for sale (5,892) -
Net assets of disposal group 5,293 -
---------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
The major classes of assets and liabilities classified as held
for sale at 31 December 2019 are as follows:
GBP'000
------------------------------------ --------
Property, plant and equipment 2,824
Pension guarantee assets 57
Deferred tax asset 280
Trade and other receivables 7,872
Cash and cash equivalents 152
Trade and other payables (3,756)
Pension and other employee benefits (57)
Lease liabilities (2,064)
Current tax liabilities (15)
------------------------------------ --------
Net assets held for sale 5,293
------------------------------------ --------
11. Dividends
The following dividends were paid on ordinary shares in the
year:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
Final 2018 dividend of 8.85p (2018: final 2017 dividend
of 8.55p) per share 9,778 8,860
Interim 2019 dividend of 3.65p (2018: interim 2018 dividend
of 3.55p) per share 4,033 3,679
------------------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
13,811 12,539
------------------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
Following the uncertainty surrounding COVID-19, the Board
believes that it is not appropriate to declare a final dividend in
respect of the 2019 year.
12. Earnings per share
Basic (continuing
Basic (continuing) Basic (discontinued) and discontinued)
-------------------- ---------------------- --------------------
2019 2018 2019 2018 2019 2018
p p p p p p
-------------------------------------- --------- --------- ----------- --------- ---------- --------
Earnings per share 18.90 21.91 (78.99) 1.14 (60.09) 23.05
Effect of amortisation of acquisition
intangibles 9.16 3.58 - 0.67 9.16 4.25
Effect of full tax adjustment (2.16) (1.78) 1.17 (0.31) (0.99) (2.22)
Effect of exceptional costs 1.50 4.16 - - 1.50 4.16
-------------------------------------- --------- --------- ----------- --------- ---------- --------
Normalised earnings per share 27.40 27.87 (77.82) 1.37 (50.42) 29.24
-------------------------------------- --------- --------- ----------- --------- ---------- --------
Diluted (continuing
Diluted (continuing) Diluted (discontinued) and discontinued)
---------------------- ------------------------ ---------------------
2019 2018 2019 2018 2019 2018
p p p p p p
-------------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------ ---------- ----------- --------
Earnings per share 18.80 21.78 (78.57) 1.13 (59.77) 22.91
Effect of amortisation of acquisition
intangibles 9.11 3.56 - 0.66 9.11 4.22
Effect of full tax adjustment (2.14) (1.77) 1.16 (0.43) (0.98) (2.20)
Effect of exceptional costs 1.49 4.13 - - 1.49 4.13
-------------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------ ---------- ----------- --------
Normalised earnings per share 27.26 27.70 (77.41) 1.36 (50.15) 29.06
-------------------------------------- ---------- ---------- ------------ ---------- ----------- --------
A normalised EPS is disclosed in order to show performance
undistorted by the amortisation of acquisition intangibles and
exceptional costs. The Group defines normalised earnings as
excluding the amortisation of acquisition intangibles and
exceptional costs and adjusted to reflect a full tax charge. The
profit attributable to shareholders before and after adjustments
for both basic and diluted EPS is:
Normalised Normalised Normalised (continuing
(continuing) (discontinued) and discontinued)
---------------------- ---------------------- ----------------------
2019 2018 2019 2018 2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------- --------- ----------- -------- ------------ --------- -----------
Profit/(loss) attributable to
shareholders: 20,883 22,877 (87,271) 1,187 (66,388) 24,064
* amortisation of acquisition intangibles 10,122 3,738 - 696 10,122 4,434
* full tax adjustment (2,382) (1,861) 1,289 (449) (1,093) (2,310)
* exceptional costs 1,655 4,342 - - 1,655 4,342
---------------------------------------------- --------- ----------- -------- ------------ --------- -----------
Normalised earnings 30,278 29,096 (85,982) 1,434 (55,704) 30,530
---------------------------------------------- --------- ----------- -------- ------------ --------- -----------
The calculation of EPS is based on a weighted average of
ordinary shares in issue during the year. The diluted EPS is based
on a weighted average of ordinary shares calculated in accordance
with IAS 33 'Earnings per Share', which assumes that all dilutive
options will be exercised. The additional normalised basic and
diluted EPS use the same weighted average number of shares as the
basic and diluted EPS.
2019 2018
Million Million
---------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Weighted average number of shares in issue: 110.49 104.40
* dilutive effect of share options 0.58 0.65
---------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Weighted average number of shares for calculating diluted
earnings per share 111.07 105.05
---------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
13. Goodwill
Goodwill
arising
on Purchased
consolidation Goodwill Total
(restated) (restated) (restated)
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------------- -------------- ----------- -----------
Gross carrying amount
At 1 January 2018 193,236 406 193,642
Additions on acquisition 2,916 515 3,431
Reassessment of fair value of assets acquired (636) 7,329 6,693
-------------------------------------------------------- -------------- ----------- -----------
At 1 January 2019 195,516 8,250 203,766
Assets classified as held for sale (80,562) - (80,562)
At 31 December 2019 114,954 8,250 123,204
-------------------------------------------------------- -------------- ----------- -----------
Accumulated impairment losses
At 1 January 2018, at 1 January 2019 and at 31 December
2019 - - -
-------------------------------------------------------- -------------- ----------- -----------
Carrying amount
At 31 December 2019 114,954 8,250 123,204
-------------------------------------------------------- -------------- ----------- -----------
At 31 December 2018 195,516 8,250 203,766
-------------------------------------------------------- -------------- ----------- -----------
Goodwill on consolidation arises on the excess of cost of
acquisition over the fair value of the net assets acquired on
purchase of a company.
In the prior year, the Group acquired certain business assets
and contracts from the Mitie property services division. During the
current year, the Group reassessed the fair value of the net assets
acquired. The table below provides a summary of the movements on
reassessment:
GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------------- --------
Intangible assets recognised 5,442
Trade receivables and contract assets (4,946)
Other receivables (2,394)
Trade and other payables 67
Provisions (2,962)
Deferred tax recognised in respect of provisions (1,000)
Deferred tax recognised in respect of intangible assets (900)
-------------------------------------------------------- --------
Reassessment of fair value of assets acquired (6,693)
Goodwill 6,693
-------------------------------------------------------- --------
The increase to intangible assets acquired represents an
increase to the assessment of the value of the order book acquired.
The adjustment to trade receivables represents the write down of
invoices and retentions not recoverable. The adjustment to other
receivables represents a re-assessment of amounts owed by the
vendor in respect of certain contracts managed on their behalf. The
adjustment to other payables represents accruals and provision for
costs not previously provided in respect of contractual
obligations. The reduction in the deferred tax asset results from
the change in nature of certain provisions.
Goodwill of GBP6.7m has been recognised on reassessment of the
fair value of the net assets acquired. An acquisition intangible
asset of GBP5.4m has also been recognised as disclosed in note
14.
Purchased goodwill arises on the excess of cost of acquisition
over the fair value of the net assets acquired on the purchase of
the trade and assets of a business by the Group.
Goodwill is not amortised but is reviewed for impairment on an
annual basis or more frequently if there are any indications that
goodwill may be impaired. Goodwill acquired in a business
combination is allocated to groups of cash-generating units (CGUs)
according to the level at which management monitors that goodwill.
Goodwill is carried at cost less accumulated impairment losses.
The carrying value of goodwill is allocated to the following
CGUs:
Goodwill
arising
on Purchased
consolidation goodwill Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------- -------------- --------- --------
Housing 95,865 8,250 104,115
Care 19,089 - 19,089
-------- -------------- --------- --------
114,954 8,250 123,204
-------- -------------- --------- --------
An asset is impaired if its carrying value exceeds the unit's
recoverable amount, which is based on value in use. At 31 December
2019 impairment reviews were performed by comparing the carrying
value with the value in use for the CGUs to which goodwill has been
allocated.
The Housing CGU's value in use is calculated from the
Board-approved one-year budgeted cash flows and extrapolated cash
flows for the next four years discounted at a post-tax discount
rate of 8.5% over a five-year period with a terminal value. The
impairment reviews incorporated a terminal growth assumption of
1.7%, in line with the UK long-term growth rate.
The Care CGU's value in use is calculated from a detailed
business plan deriving cash flows over a five-year review period,
discounted at a post-tax discount rate of 8.5% over a five-year
period with a terminal value. The impairment review incorporated a
terminal growth assumption of 2.5%, which, whilst marginally higher
than the UK long-term growth rate of 1.7%, is supported by the
underlying demographics underpinning strong organic growth in adult
social care.
The estimated growth rates are based on knowledge of the
individual CGU's sector and market and represent the Directors'
base level expectations for future growth. Changes to revenue and
direct costs are based on past experience and expectation of future
changes within the markets of the CGUs. All CGUs have the same
access to the Group's treasury function and borrowing arrangements
to finance their operations.
The Directors consider that reasonably possible changes in these
key assumptions would not cause a CGU's carrying amount to exceed
its recoverable amount.
The rates used were as follows:
Volume
Post-tax Pre-tax growth Terminal
discount discount rate (years growth
rate rate 1-5) rate
-------- --------- --------- ------------ --------
Housing 8.50% 10.36% - 1.70%
Care 8.50% 10.36% 2.00% 2.50%
-------- --------- --------- ------------ --------
14. Other intangible assets
Acquisition intangibles Other intangibles
------------- -------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------
Total
Order acquisition Total Total
Client book Supplier intangibles Development Intellectual other intangibles
relationships (restated) relationships (restated) expenditure property intangibles (restated)
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ----------- -----------
Gross carrying
amount
At 1 January
2018 72,597 27,967 - 100,564 16,899 224 17,123 117,687
Additions - 18,058 - 18,058 3,089 - 3,089 21,147
Reassessment 10,841 (5,399) - 5,442 - - - 5,442
Disposals - - - - (12) - (12) (12)
----------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ----------- -----------
At 1 January
2019 83,438 40,626 - 124,064 19,976 224 20,200 144,264
Additions - - 1,300 1,300 3,022 - 3,022 4,322
Reclassification (460) (412) 872 - - - - -
Disposals - - - - - (224) (224) (224)
Assets classified
as held for
sale (16,991) (22,444) - (39,435) - - - (39,435)
----------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ----------- -----------
At 31 December
2019 65,987 17,770 2,172 85,929 22,998 - 22,998 108,927
----------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ----------- -----------
Accumulated
amortisation
At 1 January
2018 63,707 27,272 - 90,979 9,218 224 9,442 100,421
Amortisation
charge for
period 3,227 1,207 - 4,434 2,409 - 2,409 6,843
Reassessment 57 (57) - - - - - -
Disposals - - - - (12) - (12) (12)
----------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ----------- -----------
At 1 January
2019 66,991 28,422 - 95,413 11,615 224 11,839 107,252
Amortisation
charge for
period 5,270 4,635 217 10,122 2,570 - 2,570 12,692
Reclassification (460) (412) 872 -
Disposals - - - - - (224) (224) (224)
Assets classified
as held for
sale (16,991) (22,444) - (39,435) - - - (39,435)
----------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ----------- -----------
At 31 December
2019 54,810 10,201 1,089 66,100 14,185 - 14,185 80,285
----------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ----------- -----------
Carrying amount
At 31 December
2019 11,177 7,569 1,083 19,829 8,813 - 8,813 28,642
----------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ----------- -----------
At 31 December
2018 16,447 12,204 - 28,651 8,361 - 8,361 37,012
----------------- ------------- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- ------------ ----------- -----------
During the year, the fair value of the assets acquired from the
Mitie property services division in the prior year were reassessed
resulting in an increase to acquisition intangibles of GBP5.4m.
Development expenditure is an internally developed intangible
asset and relates largely to the development of the Group's Housing
job management system and the national Planning Portal website.
Development expenditure is amortised over its useful economic life
of 5.0 years. The weighted average remaining economic life of the
asset is 3.4 years (2018: 3.6 years).
Intellectual property is amortised over its useful economic
life, typically 5.0 years.
Amortisation of development expenditure is included within other
administrative expenses. Amortisation of acquisition intangibles is
presented separately.
15. Property, plant and equipment
Fixtures,
Plant fittings Assets
Freehold Leasehold and and Motor under
property improvements machinery equipment vehicles construction Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------- --------- ------------- ---------- ---------- --------- ------------- --------
Gross carrying amount
At 1 January 2018 788 16,060 2,989 49,954 1,275 - 71,066
Additions - 2,366 286 2,456 - 3,593 8,701
Acquisition of subsidiary 254 - - - - - 254
Disposals (110) - (170) (1,770) (274) - (2,324)
Disposal of subsidiary - (2) - (91) - - (93)
-------------------------- --------- ------------- ---------- ---------- --------- ------------- --------
At 1 January 2019 932 18,424 3,105 50,549 1,001 3,593 77,604
Additions - 5,050 253 2,962 16 1,133 9,414
Disposals - (383) (425) (5,091) (9) - (5,908)
Transferred to disposal
group (110) (594) - (980) - - (1,684)
At 31 December 2019 822 22,497 2,933 47,440 1,008 4,726 79,426
-------------------------- --------- ------------- ---------- ---------- --------- ------------- --------
Depreciation
At 1 January 2018 20 10,065 2,205 35,507 1,232 - 49,029
Provided in the year 5 1,170 229 4,388 12 - 5,804
Acquisition of subsidiary 7 - - - - - 7
Eliminated on disposals (5) - (170) (1,713) (256) - (2,144)
Disposal of subsidiary - - - (48) - - (48)
-------------------------- --------- ------------- ---------- ---------- --------- ------------- --------
At 1 January 2019 27 11,235 2,264 38,134 988 - 52,648
Provided in the year 19 2,077 222 4,683 3 - 7,004
Eliminated on disposals - (353) (373) (4,959) (9) - (5,694)
Transferred to disposal
group - (135) - (723) - - (858)
At 31 December 2019 46 12,824 2,113 37,135 982 - 53,100
-------------------------- --------- ------------- ---------- ---------- --------- ------------- --------
Carrying amount
At 31 December 2019 776 9,673 820 10,305 26 4,726 26,326
-------------------------- --------- ------------- ---------- ---------- --------- ------------- --------
At 31 December 2018 905 7,189 841 12,415 13 3,593 24,956
-------------------------- --------- ------------- ---------- ---------- --------- ------------- --------
16. Right of use asset
Fixtures,
Investment Motor fittings
property Property vehicles and equipment Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------- ---------- -------- --------- -------------- --------
Gross carrying amount
At 1 January 2018 - - - - -
Additions - - - - -
Disposals - - - - -
At 1 January 2019 - - - - -
Recognised on transition
to IFRS 16 24,293 142,251 23,402 295 190,241
Additions - 101,053 11,693 388 113,134
Disposals - - - - -
Transferred to disposal
group - (2,450) (194) (131) (2,775)
At 31 December 2019 24,293 240,854 34,901 552 300,600
--------------------------- ---------- -------- --------- -------------- --------
Depreciation
At 1 January 2018 - - - - -
Provided in the year - - - - -
Eliminated on disposals - - - - -
At 1 January 2019 - - - - -
Provided in the year 1,517 22,302 12,795 189 36,803
Eliminated on disposals - - - - -
Transferred to disposal
group - (634) (95) (50) (779)
At 31 December 2019 1,517 21,668 12,700 139 36,024
--------------------------- ---------- -------- --------- -------------- --------
Carrying amount
At 31 December 2019 22,776 219,186 22,201 413 264,576
--------------------------- ---------- -------- --------- -------------- --------
At 31 December 2018 - - - -
--------------------------- ---------- -------- --------- -------------- --------
Investment property included above represents properties held by
the Group primarily to earn rentals, rather than for use in the
Group's other activities. The amount included in 'lease income' in
note 1 in respect of these properties is GBP3.0m (2018: GBP3.1m).
Direct operating expenses arising from investment property that
generated rental income during the period was GBP3.2m (2018:
GBP4.3m). The carrying value of the right of use asset in respect
of investment property is considered to be approximately equal to
its fair value.
17. Investments
The subsidiary undertakings within the Group at 31 December 2019
are shown below:
Proportion
held Country of registration Nature of business
----------------------------------- ---------- ----------------------- ---------------------
3c Asset Management Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Careforce Group Plc 100% England and Wales Dormant
Coulter Estates Limited 100% Scotland Dormant
Evolve Housing Limited 50% England and Wales Dormant
Heatherpark Community Services
Limited 100% Scotland Dormant
Helcim Group Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Helcim Homes Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
ILS Group Limited 100% Scotland Dormant
ILS Trustees Limited 100% Scotland Dormant
Independent Living Services
(ILS) Limited 100% Scotland Dormant
Jackson Lloyd Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Laidlaw Scott Limited 100% Scotland Dormant
Housing management
Let to Birmingham Limited 100% England and Wales services
Manchester Working Limited 80% England and Wales Maintenance services
Mears Extra Care Limited 100% England and Wales Provision of care
Mears Care (Northern Ireland)
Limited 100% Northern Ireland Dormant
Mears Care (Scotland) Limited 100% Scotland Provision of care
Mears Care Limited 100% England and Wales Provision of care
Mears Community Care Agency
Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Mears Decorating Services Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Mears Direct Limited 80% England and Wales Dormant
Mears Energy Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Mears Estates Limited 100% England and Wales Grounds maintenance
Mears Facility Management Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Mears Home Improvement Limited 100% England and Wales Maintenance services
Mears Homecare Limited 100% England and Wales Provision of care
Mears Homes Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Housing management
Mears Housing Management Limited 100% England and Wales services
Mears Housing Management (Holdings) Intermediate holding
Limited 100% England and Wales company
Mears Housing Portfolio (Holdings) Intermediate holding
Limited 100% England and Wales company
Mears Housing Portfolio (London)
Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Mears Housing Portfolio 1 Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Mears Housing Portfolio 3 Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Mears Housing Portfolio 4 Limited 100% England and Wales Property acquisition
Mears Insurance Company Limited 99.99% Guernsey Insurance services
Mears Learning Limited 90% England and Wales Non-trading
Mears Limited 100% England and Wales Maintenance services
Mears Modular Homes Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Mears New Homes Limited 90% England and Wales House building
Mears Scotland (Housing) Limited 100% Scotland Dormant
Mears Scotland (Services) Limited 66.67% Scotland Dormant
Mears Scotland LLP 66.67% Scotland Maintenance services
Mears Social Housing Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Mears Wales Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
MHM Property Services Limited 100% England and Wales Maintenance services
Morrison Facilities Services
Limited 100% Scotland Maintenance services
MPM Housing Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
MPS Housing Limited 100% England and Wales Maintenance services
Nurseplus Limited 100% Scotland Dormant
Housing management
O&T Developments Limited 100% England and Wales services
Housing registered
Omega Housing Limited 100% England and Wales provider
Planning Portal Limited 75% England and Wales Dormant
Housing registered
Plexus UK (First Project) Limited 100% England and Wales provider
PortalPlanQuest Limited 75% England and Wales Professional services
PS Business Services Limited 100% Scotland Dormant
PS Payroll Services Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Scion Group Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Scion Property Services Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Scion Technical Services Limited 100% England and Wales Maintenance services
Supporta Limited 100% England and Wales Dormant
Housing management
Tando Homes Limited 100% England and Wales services
Housing management
Tando Property Services Limited 100% England and Wales services
Terraquest Solutions Limited 100% England and Wales Professional services
----------------------------------- ---------- ----------------------- ---------------------
All subsidiary undertakings with the exception of Evolve Housing
Limited, Manchester Working Limited and MPM Housing Limited prepare
accounts to 31 December. Evolve Housing Limited prepares accounts
to 30 June in line with its historical accounting reference date.
Manchester Working Limited prepares accounts to 31 March in line
with the minority shareholder. MPM Housing Limited prepares
accounts to 30 September as it is expected to be dissolved
shortly.
The Group includes the following five trading subsidiaries with
non-controlling interests: Manchester Working Limited, Mears
Learning Limited, Mears New Homes Limited, Mears Scotland LLP and
PortalPlanQuest Limited. The table below sets out selected
financial information in respect of those subsidiaries:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Revenue and profits
Revenue 111,622 112,612
Expenses and taxation (112,780) (108,835)
----------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Profit for the year (1,158) 3,777
Other comprehensive expense - -
----------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Total comprehensive income (1,158) 3,777
----------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Profit for the year allocated to non-controlling interests 342 761
----------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Total comprehensive expense allocated to non-controlling
interests - -
----------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Net assets
Non-current assets 1,918 314
Current assets 53,641 58,633
Current liabilities (20,914) (24,825)
Non-current liabilities (36,221) (33,887)
----------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Total assets less total liabilities (1,576) 235
----------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Equity shareholders' funds (1,491) 662
Non-controlling interests (85) (427)
----------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Total equity (1,576) 235
----------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
The Group held investments in the following joint ventures and
associates at 31 December 2019:
Proportion
held Country of registration Nature of business
----------------------------------- ---------- ----------------------- --------------------
Asert LLP 50% England and Wales Dormant
Pyramid Plus South LLP 30% England and Wales Maintenance services
Sapphire Homes London Limited 50% England and Wales Property acquisition
Sapphire Homes London No. 1 Limited 50% England and Wales Property acquisition
Sapphire Homes London No. 2 Limited 50% England and Wales Property acquisition
Sapphire Homes London No. 3 Limited 50% England and Wales Dormant
Sapphire Homes London No. 4 Limited 50% England and Wales Dormant
Sapphire Homes London No. 5 Limited 50% England and Wales Dormant
Sapphire Homes London No. 6 Limited 50% England and Wales Dormant
Talking Assets Limited 50% England and Wales Dormant
YourMK LLP 50% England and Wales Maintenance services
----------------------------------- ---------- ----------------------- --------------------
The carrying amount of the above joint ventures and associates
was GBP0.5m (2018: GBPnil).
The following UK subsidiaries will take advantage of the audit
exemption set out within Section 479A of the Companies Act 2006 for
the year ended 31 December 2019, except MPM Housing Limited, which
will take the same exemption for the period ended 30 September
2020:
Registration
number
-------------------------------------------- ------------
3c Asset Management Limited 02859913
Careforce Group PLC 05201238
Let to Birmingham Limited 08757503
Mears Estates Limited 03720903
Mears Home Improvement Limited 03716517
Mears Housing Management (Holdings) Limited 04726480
Mears Housing Portfolio (Holdings) Limited 10908305
Mears Housing Portfolio (London) Limited 10953521
Mears Housing Portfolio 1 Limited 10953330
Mears Housing Portfolio 3 Limited 10953300
Mears Housing Portfolio 4 Limited 10952906
MHM Property Services Limited 07448134
MPM Housing Limited 03528320
O&T Developments Limited 05692853
Scion Group Limited 03905442
Scion Technical Services Limited 03671450
Tando Homes Limited 09260353
Tando Property Services Limited 07405761
-------------------------------------------- ------------
18. Assets classified as held for sale
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------- -------- --------
Property held for sale - 12,442
Assets of disposal group 10,828 -
------------------------- -------- --------
10,828 12,442
------------------------- -------- --------
During the year, the Group disposed of its remaining property
held for sale and did not renew the separate rolling credit
facility in respect of these properties.
During the year, the Directors made a decision to sell the
Group's domiciliary care business. As such, the assets of the
business are classified as part of a disposal group held for sale.
The related liabilities of the disposal group are also presented
separately on the face of the statement of financial position.
Further detail of the major classes of assets and liabilities are
provided in note 10.
19. Inventories
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------- -------- --------
Materials and consumables 7,068 5,951
Work in progress 28,977 23,800
-------------------------- -------- --------
36,045 29,751
-------------------------- -------- --------
The Group consumed inventories totalling GBP686.9m during the
year (2018: GBP586.9m). No items are being carried at fair value
less costs to sell (2018: GBPnil).
20. Construction contracts
Revenue of GBP60.6m (2018: GBP39.1m) relating to construction
contracts has been included in the Consolidated Statement of Profit
or Loss.
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Contract costs incurred 58,544 34,557
Recognised gross profits 1,377 4,542
Recognised gross losses - -
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
59,921 39,099
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Balances outstanding comprise:
due from customers for construction contract work 6,849 3,907
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
21. Trade and other receivables
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Current assets:
* trade receivables 36,749 59,481
* contract assets on non-construction contracts 110,263 94,801
* prepayments and accrued income 6,111 8,315
* other debtors 9,715 8,257
----------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total trade and other receivables 162,838 170,854
----------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Included in other debtors is GBP4.6m (2018: GBPnil) relating to
deferred consideration on disposal of a subsidiary.
Trade receivables are normally due within 30 to 60 days and do
not bear any effective interest rate. All trade receivables and
accrued income are subject to credit risk exposure. Housing
customers are typically Local Authorities and Housing Associations
where credit risk is minimal.
The ageing analysis of trade receivables is as follows:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Neither impaired nor past due 30,364 48,573
Less than three months past due but not impaired 4,237 5,826
More than three months past due but not impaired 2,148 5,082
------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total trade and other receivables 36,749 59,481
------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
22. Trade and other payables
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Trade payables 125,054 100,663
Accruals and contract liabilities 48,582 58,330
Social security and other taxes 21,989 20,348
Contract liabilities for non-construction contract work - 613
Other creditors 6,741 5,859
-------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
202,366 185,813
-------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Due to the short duration of trade payables, management
considers the carrying amounts recognised in the Consolidated
Balance Sheet to be a reasonable approximation of their fair
value.
Included in other creditors is GBPnil (2018: GBP2.0m) relating
to contingent consideration on acquisitions.
23. Financial liabilities
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------- -------- --------
Current liabilities:
* interest rate swaps 119 41
Non-current liabilities:
* interest rate swaps 39 15
---------------------------- -------- --------
Total financial liabilities 158 56
---------------------------- -------- --------
24. Lease liabilities
Following the introduction of IFRS 16 'Leases', as described in
the accounting policies, lease liabilities are now separately
presented on the face of the statement of financial position as
shown below:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------ -------- --------
Current 40,757 377
Non-current 228,588 892
269,345 1,269
------------ -------- --------
The Group had not committed to any leases which had not
commenced at 31 December 2019.
The Group has elected not to recognise a lease liability for
short term leases. Payments made under such leases are expensed on
a straight-line basis. The expense relating to payments not
included in the measurement of the lease liability is as
follows:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------ -------- --------
Short-term leases 39,582 30,247
------------------ -------- --------
The portfolio of short-term leases to which the Group is
committed at the end of the reporting period is not dissimilar to
the portfolio to which the above disclosure relates.
The reconciliation between the opening and closing lease
liabilities is as shown below:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------- -------- --------
Lease liability as at 1 January 1,269 663
Impact of IFRS 16 191,348 -
Adjusted balance at 1 January 192,617 663
Inception of new leases 112,139 1,085
Interest on lease liabilities 6,072 81
Lease payments (41,483) (560)
---------------------------------- -------- --------
Lease liability as at 31 December 269,345 1,269
---------------------------------- -------- --------
The Group's lease liabilities are subject to changes in certain
key assumptions in estimating the incremental borrowing rates (IBR)
used to calculate the liabilities. The impact of an increase in all
IBRs by 0.1% is a GBP2.7m reduction in the lease liability and a
GBP0.1m reduction in profit before tax.
25. Provisions
A summary of the movement in provisions during the year is shown
below:
Onerous
contract Other
provisions provisions Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- --------
At 1 January 2019 - - -
Reassessment arising from adjustments
to fair value of assets acquired 2,778 184 2,962
Revised balance at 1 January
2019 2,778 184 2,962
Utilised during the year (2,458) - (2,458)
At 31 December 2019 320 184 504
----------------------------------------- ----------- ----------- --------
All provisions arise as a result of the acquisition of MPS
Housing Limited on 30 November 2018. During the year, a
reassessment of the fair value of assets acquired was undertaken,
resulting in changes to the amounts of provisions provided in the
prior year. The utilisation of provisions in the year resulted from
the expected liabilities being settled.
Onerous contract provisions relate to contracts where a future
loss is anticipated as a result of contractual obligations entered
into by MPS Housing Limited. The amounts are uncertain as they
depend on the timing and extent of managements' cost reduction
plans for each of these contracts.
Debt and income provisions relate to both billed and unbilled
income recognised up to the balance sheet date, where there remains
significant uncertainty about the amount that will ultimately be
collected from customers. The amounts are inherently uncertain and
depend on a range of factors for each customer.
Other provisions relate to a variety of matters including
provisions for dilapidations of leased offices and late costs.
Management have provided based on best estimates of the expected
costs to be incurred.
In all cases, the provisions at 31 December 2019 are expected to
be utilised within one year.
26. Long-term other liabilities
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------- -------- --------
Other creditors 4,700 6,586
---------------- -------- --------
27. Financial instruments
The Group uses a limited number of financial instruments
comprising cash and liquid resources, borrowings, interest rate
swaps and various items such as trade receivables and trade
payables that arise directly from its operations. The main purpose
of these financial instruments is to finance the Group's
operations. The Group seeks to finance its operations through a
combination of retained earnings and borrowings and investing
surplus cash on deposit. The Group uses financial instruments to
manage the interest rate risks arising from its operations and
sources of finance but has no interests in the trade of financial
instruments.
Categories of financial instruments
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Financial assets
Amortised cost
Trade receivables 36,749 59,481
Other debtors 9,715 8,257
Cash at bank and in hand 72,909 27,876
---------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
119,373 95,614
---------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Financial liabilities
Fair value (level 2)
Interest rate swaps - effective (158) (56)
Fair value (level 3)
Contingent consideration in respect of acquisitions - (2,000)
Amortised cost
Borrowings related to assets held for sale - (15,000)
Bank borrowings and overdrafts (124,047) (93,780)
Trade payables (125,054) (100,663)
Lease liabilities (269,345) (1,269)
Other creditors (11,441) (10,445)
---------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
(530,045) (223,213)
---------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
(410,672) (127,599)
---------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
The IFRS 13 hierarchy level categorisation relates to the extent
the fair value can be determined by reference to comparable market
values. The classifications range from level 1, where instruments
are quoted on an active market, through to level 3, where the
assumptions used to arrive at fair value do not have comparable
market data.
The fair values of interest rate swaps have been calculated by a
third party expert discounting estimated future cash flows on the
basis of market expectations of future interest rates (level
2).
The amount of contingent consideration payable is generally
determined by future expected profits of the acquired businesses.
The fair values of contingent consideration have been calculated by
the Directors by reference to expected future income and
expenditure in respect of the acquired businesses.
There have been no transfers between levels during the year.
Fair value information
The fair value of the Group's financial assets and liabilities
is as disclosed above and approximates to the book value.
Financial risk management
The Group's activities expose it to a variety of financial
risks: market risk (including interest rate risk and price risk);
credit risk; and liquidity risk. The main risks faced by the Group
relate to the availability of funds to meet business needs and the
risk of credit default by customers. The Group's overall risk
management programme focuses on the unpredictability of financial
markets and seeks to minimise potential adverse effects on the
Group's financial performance.
Risk management is carried out under policies and guidelines
approved by the Board of Directors.
Borrowing facilities
The Group's borrowing facilities are drawn on as required to
manage its cash needs. Banking facilities are reviewed regularly
and extended and replaced in advance of their expiry.
The Group had total borrowing facilities of GBP170.0m with
Barclays Bank PLC, HSBC Bank PLC and the Bank of Ireland, of which
GBP125.0m was utilised at 31 December 2019.
The facilities comprise a committed four-year GBP160.0m
revolving credit facility and an unsecured overdraft facility of
GBP10.0m. The undrawn amounts at 31 December 2019 were a GBP35.0m
revolving credit facility and an overdraft facility of GBP10.0m.
During the year, the Group elected not to renew its property
acquisition credit facility of GBP30.0m which had previously been
utilised to acquire and build portfolios for resale.
Interest rate risk management
The Group finances its operations through a mixture of retained
profits and bank borrowings from major banking institutions at
floating rates of interest based on LIBOR. The Group's exposure to
interest rate fluctuations on borrowings is managed through the use
of interest rate swaps; hence the fixed rate borrowings relate to
floating rate loans where the interest rate has been fixed by a
hedging arrangement. The fair value of interest rate exposure on
financial liabilities of the Group as at 31 December 2019 was:
Interest rate
--------------------------------------
Fixed Floating Zero Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Financial liabilities - 2019 70,000 55,000 - 125,000
----------------------------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Financial liabilities - 2018 70,000 40,000 - 110,000
----------------------------- -------- -------- -------- --------
The Group's policy is to accept a degree of interest rate risk,
provided the effects of the various potential changes in rates
remain within certain prescribed parameters.
Accordingly, at 31 December 2019 the Group had hedged the first
GBP70.0m of the GBP170.0m total borrowing facilities by entering
into interest rate swap arrangements with Barclays Bank PLC and
HSBC Bank PLC. The arrangement with Barclays Bank PLC consists of
two GBP15.0m swap contracts expiring in August 2021, with quarterly
maturity, matching the underlying facility. The arrangement with
HSBC Bank PLC consists of three swap contracts totalling GBP40.0m
expiring in December 2020, with quarterly maturity, matching the
underlying facility.
The maturity of the interest rate swap contracts is as
follows:
2019 2018
--------------------- ---------------------
Average Average
Nominal applicable Nominal applicable
amount interest amount interest
hedged rates hedged rates
GBP'000 % GBP'000 %
--------------------- -------- ----------- -------- -----------
Within one year 40,000 0.84% - -
One to two years 30,000 0.96% 40,000 0.84%
Two to five years - - 30,000 0.96%
More than five years - - - -
--------------------- -------- ----------- -------- -----------
Effective interest rates
Interest rate swaps with fair value liabilities of GBP0.2m
(2018: GBP0.1m) and average remaining lives of one year and five
months have been accounted for in financial liabilities.
The Group's overall average cost of debt, including effective
interest rate swaps, is 2.6% as at 31 December 2019 (2018: 2.5%).
Excluding these swaps the average is 2.6% (2018: 2.3%).
Cash flow hedging reserve
The cash flow hedging reserve comprises all gains and losses
arising from the valuation of interest swap contracts which are
effective hedges and mature after the year end. These are valued on
a mark-to-market basis, accounted for through the Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income and recycled through the
Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss when the hedged item
affects the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss.
Movements during the year were:
GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------
At 1 January 2018 (326)
Amounts transferred to the Consolidated Statement of Profit or
Loss 325
Revaluations during the year -
Deferred tax movement (45)
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------
At 1 January 2019 (46)
Amounts transferred to the Consolidated Statement of Profit or
Loss 49
Revaluations during the year (145)
Deferred tax movement 18
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------
At 31 December 2019 (124)
--------------------------------------------------------------- -------
At 31 December 2019 the Group had minimal exposure to movements
in interest rates as the remaining interest rate risk was offset by
the Group's cash and short-term deposits.
If the interest rates had been 0.5% higher or lower and all
other variables were held constant, the Group's profit before
taxation for the year ended 31 December 2019 and reserves would
decrease or increase, respectively, by GBP0.4m (2018: GBP0.4m).
Liquidity risk management
The Group seeks to manage liquidity risk by ensuring sufficient
liquidity is available to meet foreseeable needs and to invest cash
assets safely and profitably.
Management monitors rolling forecasts of the Group's liquidity
reserve (comprising undrawn borrowing facilities and cash and cash
equivalents) on the basis of expected cash flows. This is generally
carried out at a local level in the operating companies of the
Group in accordance with the practice and limits set by the Group.
These limits vary by location and take into account the liquidity
and nature of the market in which the entity operates.
The quantum of committed borrowing facilities of the Group is
regularly reviewed and is designed to exceed forecast peak gross
debt levels. For short-term working capital purposes, the Group
utilises bank overdrafts as required. These facilities are
regularly reviewed and are renegotiated ahead of their expiry
date.
The table below shows the maturity profile of the Group's
financial liabilities:
Within Over 5
1 year 1-2 years 2-5 years years Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------- -------- --------
2019
Non-derivative financial liabilities
Bank borrowings 54,047 - 70,000 - 124,047
Trade and other payables 131,795 4,700 - - 136,495
Lease liabilities 40,757 33,054 50,565 144,969 269,345
Derivative financial liabilities
Interest rate swaps - effective 119 39 - - 158
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------- -------- --------
2018
Non-derivative financial liabilities
Borrowings related to assets held for
sale 15,000 - - - 15,000
Bank borrowings 23,780 - 70,000 - 93,780
Trade and other payables 104,522 6,586 - - 111,108
Lease liabilities 377 892 1,269
Deferred and contingent consideration
in respect of acquisitions 2,000 - - - 2,000
Derivative financial liabilities
Interest rate swaps - effective 41 15 - - 56
-------------------------------------- -------- --------- --------- -------- --------
The Group has disclosed core bank borrowings of GBP70.0m as due
in two to five years. Whilst the amounts borrowed could be repaid
each quarter, the Group's intention is to align core bank
borrowings with its interest rate swaps.
Credit risk management
The Group's credit risk is primarily attributable to its trade
receivables, contract assets and work in progress.
Trade receivables are normally due within 30 to 60 days. Trade
and other receivables included in the Consolidated Balance Sheet
are stated net of a bad debt provision which has been estimated by
management following a review of individual receivable accounts.
There is no Group-wide rate of provision and provision made for
debts that are overdue is based on prior default experience and
known factors at the balance sheet date. Receivables are written
off against the bad debt provision when management considers that
the debt is no longer recoverable.
Housing customers are typically Local Authorities and Housing
Associations. The nature of both of these customers means that
credit risk is minimal. Other trade receivables contain no specific
concentration of credit risk as the amounts recognised represent a
large number of receivables from various customers.
The Group continually monitors the position of major customers
and incorporates this information into its credit risk controls.
External credit ratings are obtained where appropriate.
Details of the ageing of trade receivables are shown in note
21.
Deferred and contingent consideration
The table below shows the movements in deferred consideration
receivable:
Total
GBP'000
-------------------------------------- --------
At 1 January 2018 and 1 January 2019 -
Increase due to disposals in the year 4,618
At 31 December 2019 4,618
---------------------------------------- --------
The entire balance above is expected to be received within one
year.
The table below shows the movements in deferred and contingent
consideration payable:
Deferred Contingent Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------- -------- ---------- --------
At 1 January 2018 11,163 - 11,163
Increase due to new acquisitions in the year - 2,000 2,000
Paid in respect of acquisitions (11,163) - (11,163)
--------------------------------------------- -------- ---------- --------
At 1 January 2019 - 2,000 2,000
Released on reassessment - (2,000) (2,000)
At 31 December 2019 - - -
--------------------------------------------- -------- ---------- --------
Contingent consideration represents an estimate of future
consideration likely to be payable in respect of acquisitions.
Contingent consideration is discounted for the likelihood of
payment and for the time value of money. Contingent consideration
becomes payable based on the profitability of acquired businesses
or, in the case of one specific acquisition, the utilisation of
certain timing differences in respect of corporation tax. The fair
value of contingent consideration is estimated by forecasting
future profits and utilising the forecast to determine the likely
contingent consideration payable.
Capital management
The Group's objectives when managing capital are:
-- to safeguard the Group's ability to continue as a going
concern, so that it can continue to provide returns for
shareholders and benefits for other stakeholders;
-- to provide an adequate return to shareholders by pricing
products and services commensurately with the level of risk;
and
-- to maintain an optimal capital structure to reduce the cost
of capital.
The Group sets the amount of capital in proportion to risk. The
Group manages the capital structure and makes adjustments to it in
light of changes in economic conditions and the risk
characteristics of the underlying assets. In order to maintain or
adjust the capital structure, the Group may adjust the amount of
dividends paid to shareholders, return capital to shareholders,
issue new shares or sell assets to reduce debt.
The capital structure of the Group consists of net debt as
disclosed below and equity as disclosed in the Consolidated
Statement of Changes in Equity.
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------------------- --------- --------
The Group considers its revolving credit facility to be
an integral part of its cash management:
* cash at bank and in hand 73,061 27,876
* revolving credit facility (124,047) (93,780)
--------------------------------------------------------------- --------- --------
Cash and cash equivalents, including revolving credit facility (50,986) (65,904)
--------------------------------------------------------------- --------- --------
28. Deferred taxation
Deferred tax is calculated on temporary differences under the
liability method.
Deferred tax assets
The following deferred tax assets were recognised by the Group
as at 31 December 2019:
Short-term
Pension Share-based Cash flow temporary
scheme payments hedges Tax losses differences Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------- -------- ----------- --------- ---------- ------------ --------
At 1 January 2018 1,032 477 56 1,157 1,592 4,314
Impact of change in accounting
policies - - - - 6,013 6,013
----------------------------------- -------- ----------- --------- ---------- ------------ --------
Adjusted balance at 1 January
2018 1,032 477 56 1,157 7,605 10,327
----------------------------------- -------- ----------- --------- ---------- ------------ --------
(Debit)/credit to Consolidated
Statement of Profit or Loss (66) 116 - 250 (5,853) (5,553)
Debit to Consolidated Statement
of Changes in Equity - 14 - - - 14
(Debit)/credit to Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income (243) - (45) - - (288)
At 1 January 2019 723 607 11 1,407 1,752 4,500
Impact of change in accounting
policies - - - - 533 533
----------------------------------- -------- ----------- --------- ---------- ------------ --------
Adjusted balance at 1 January
2019 723 607 11 1,407 2,285 5,033
----------------------------------- -------- ----------- --------- ---------- ------------ --------
(Debit)/credit to Consolidated
Statement of Profit or Loss 92 (45) - (1,343) (330) (1,626)
Debit to Consolidated Statement
of Changes in Equity - (191) - - - (191)
(Debit)/credit to Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income 356 - 18 - - 374
Assets classified as held for
sale - - - - (280) (280)
At 31 December 2019 1,171 371 29 64 1,675 3,310
----------------------------------- -------- ----------- --------- ---------- ------------ --------
In accordance with IFRS 2 'Share-based Payment', the Group has
recognised an expense for the consumption of employee services
received as consideration for share options granted. A tax
deduction will not arise until the options are exercised. The tax
deduction in future periods is dependent on the Company's share
price at the date of exercise. The estimated future tax deduction
is based on the options' intrinsic value at the balance sheet
date.
The cumulative amount credited to the Consolidated Statement of
Profit or Loss is limited to the tax effect of the associated
cumulative share-based payment expense. The excess has been
credited directly to equity. This is presented in the Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income.
In addition to those recognised, unused tax losses totalling
GBP28.9m (2018: GBP29.0m) have not been recognised as the Directors
do not consider that it is probable that they will be
recovered.
Deferred tax liabilities
The following deferred tax liabilities were recognised by the
Group as at 31 December 2019:
Pension Acquisition Cash flow
scheme intangibles hedges Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------- -------- ------------ --------- --------
At 1 January 2018 5,277 1,821 - 7,098
(Credit)/debit to Consolidated Statement of
Profit or Loss 58 (842) - (784)
Debit to Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income (2,035) - - (2,035)
Resulting from business combinations - 4,331 - 4,331
------------------------------------------------- -------- ------------ --------- --------
At 1 January 2019 3,300 5,310 - 8610
(Credit)/debit to Consolidated Statement of
Profit or Loss 56 (1,882) - (1,826)
Debit to Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income (1,789) - - (1,394)
At 31 December 2019 1,567 3,428 - 4,995
------------------------------------------------- -------- ------------ --------- --------
Intangible assets acquired as part of a business combination are
capitalised at fair value at the date of the acquisition and
amortised over their useful economic lives. The UK tax regime
calculates tax using the individual financial statements of the
members of the Group and not the consolidated accounts. Hence, the
tax base of acquisition intangible assets arising on consolidation
is GBPnil. Furthermore, no UK tax relief is available on the
majority of acquisition intangibles within individual entities, so
the tax base of these assets is also GBPnil. The estimated tax
effect of this GBPnil tax base is accounted for as a deferred tax
liability which is released over the period of amortisation of the
associated acquisition intangible asset.
29. Share capital and reserves
Classes of reserves
Share capital represents the nominal value of shares that have
been issued.
Share premium represents the difference between the nominal
value of shares issued and the total consideration received.
Share-based payment reserve represents employee remuneration
which is credited to the share-based payment reserve until the
related share options are exercised. Upon exercise the share-based
payment reserve is transferred to retained earnings.
The cash flow hedging reserve comprises all gains and losses
arising from the valuation of interest swap contracts which are
effective hedges and mature after the year end. These are valued on
a mark-to-market basis, accounted for through the Consolidated
Statement of Comprehensive Income and recycled through the
Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss when the hedged item
affects the Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss.
The merger reserve relates to the difference between the nominal
value and total consideration in respect of acquisitions, where the
Company was entitled to the merger relief offered by the Companies
Act 2006. During the year, GBP33.3m (2018: GBPnil) of this reserve
was transferred to retained earnings following the impairment of
the goodwill associated with the original merger reserve.
Share capital
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Allotted, called up and fully paid
At 1 January 110,487,586 (2018: 103,567,091) ordinary shares
of 1p each 1,105 1,036
Issue of 2,873 (2018: 133,164) shares on exercise of share
options - 1
Issue of nil (2018: 6,787,331) shares as a placement - 68
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
At 31 December 110,490,459 (2018: 110,487,586) ordinary
shares of 1p each 1,105 1,105
------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
During the year 2,873 (2018: 133,164) ordinary 1p shares were
issued in respect of share options exercised. In addition, the
Group raised funds through a placement of nil (2018: 6,787,331)
ordinary 1p shares.
30. Notes to the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement
The following non-operating cash flow adjustments have been made
to the result for the year before tax:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Depreciation 41,011 5,379
Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment 179 37
Profit on disposal of subsidiary - 44
Amortisation 12,669 6,147
Share-based payments 400 552
IAS 19 pension movement 209 (656)
Finance income (363) (389)
Finance cost 9,927 3,405
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Total 64,032 14,519
-------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Movements in financing liabilities during the year are as
follows:
Borrowings
relating
Revolving to assets
credit held Finance Operating
facility for resale leases leases Total
---------------------------------------- --------- ----------- ------- --------- --------
At 1 January 2018 50,559 13,941 844 - 65,344
Inception of new leases - - 903 - 903
Cash inflows/(outflows) 43,221 1,059 (479) - 43,801
---------------------------------------- --------- ----------- ------- --------- --------
At 1 January 2019 93,780 15,000 1,268 - 110,048
---------------------------------------- --------- ----------- ------- --------- --------
Impact of change in accounting policies - - - 191,348 191,348
Adjusted balance at 1 January 2019 93,780 15,000 1,268 191,348 301,396
---------------------------------------- --------- ----------- ------- --------- --------
Inception of new leases - - - 112,139 112,139
Cash inflows/(outflows) 30,267 (15,000) (179) (35,231) (20,143)
---------------------------------------- --------- ----------- ------- --------- --------
At 31 December 2019 124,047 - 1,089 268,256 393,392
---------------------------------------- --------- ----------- ------- --------- --------
31. Acquisitions and disposals
On 13 September 2019 the Group disposed of Mears Housing
Portfolio 2 Limited ('MHP 2'), a subsidiary that had been part of
the Group's property acquisition business. MHP 2's sole asset was a
development site with a carrying value of GBP12.0m. The company was
sold for GBP6.9m of cash plus GBP4.6m of deferred consideration,
payable twelve months following the sale.
In addition, on 8 August 2019, the Group completed the
acquisition of certain business assets from Live Estates Limited, a
property management company for consideration of GBP1.3m in cash,
which provided the Group access to around 125 landlords and 680
properties within the North East region of the Asylum Accommodation
and Support contract. As a result of this transaction, an
intangible asset of GBP1.3m was recognised in respect of the
supplier relationships acquired. This intangible asset is being
amortised over two years from acquisition.
32. Pensions
Defined contribution schemes
The Group operates a defined contribution Group personal pension
scheme for the benefit of certain employees. The Group contributes
to personal pension schemes of certain Directors and senior
employees. The Group operates a stakeholder pension plan available
to all employees. During the year, the Group contributed GBP5.7m
(2018: GBP4.0m) to these schemes.
IAS 19 'Employee Benefits'
The Group contributes to 30 (2018: 30) principal defined benefit
schemes on behalf of a number of employees which require
contributions to be made to separately administered funds.
These pension schemes are operated on behalf of Mears Limited,
Mears Care Limited, Morrison Facilities Services Limited and their
subsidiary undertakings. The assets of the schemes are administered
by trustees in funds independent from the assets of the Group.
In certain cases, the Group will participate under Admitted Body
status in the Local Government Pension Scheme. The Group will
contribute for a finite period up until the end of the particular
contract. The Group is required to pay regular contributions as
detailed in the scheme's schedule of contributions. In some cases,
these contributions are capped and any excess can be recovered from
the body from which the employees originally transferred. Where the
Group has a contractual right to recover the costs of making good
any deficit in the scheme from the Group's client, the fair value
of that asset has been recognised as a separate pension guarantee
asset. Certain judgements around the value of this asset have been
made and are discussed in the judgements and estimates disclosure
within the accounting policies.
The disclosures in respect of the two (2018: two) Group defined
benefit schemes and the 28 (2018: 28) other defined benefit schemes
in this note have been aggregated.
Costs and liabilities of the schemes are based on actuarial
valuations. The latest full actuarial valuations for the schemes
were updated to 31 December 2019 by qualified independent actuaries
using the projected unit funding method.
The principal actuarial assumptions at the balance sheet date
are as follows:
2019 2018
-------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
Rate of increase of salaries - first year 2.90% 2.00%
Rate of increase of salaries - second year 2.90% 3.15%
Rate of increase of salaries - long term 2.90% 3.15%
Rate of increase for pensions in payment - based on CPI
with a cap of 5% 1.95% 2.20%
Rate of increase for pensions in payment - based on RPI
with a cap of 5% 2.85% 3.05%
Rate of increase for pensions in payment - based on CPI
with a cap of 3% 1.75% 1.90%
Rate of increase for pensions in payment - based on RPI
with a cap of 3% 2.35% 2.45%
Discount rate 2.10% 2.95%
Retail prices inflation 2.90% 3.15%
Consumer prices inflation 1.90% 2.15%
Life expectancy for a 65-year-old male 22.4 years 22.3 years
Life expectancy for a 65-year-old female 24.6 years 24.5 years
-------------------------------------------------------- ---------- ----------
The amounts recognised in the Consolidated Balance Sheet and
major categories of plan assets are:
2019 2018
-------------------------------- ------------------------------- -------------------------------
Group Other Group Other
schemes schemes Total schemes schemes Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Equities - quoted 47,745 178,526 226,271 29,567 153,190 182,757
Equities - unquoted - 14,924 14,924 - 13,927 13,927
Bonds - quoted 92,763 65,003 159,846 93,562 58,113 151,675
Bonds - unquoted - 1,836 1,836 - 2,106 2,106
Property - quoted 3,783 7,934 11,717 4,352 6,215 10,567
Property - unquoted - 6,853 6,853 - 5,875 5,875
Cash 18,959 28,388 47,347 25,391 29,348 54,739
-------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Group's estimated asset share 163,250 303,464 466,714 152,872 268,774 421,646
Present value of funded scheme
liabilities (156,379) (327,460) (483,839) (136,548) (282,368) (418,916)
-------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Funded status 6,871 (23,996) (17,125) 16,324 (13,594) 2,730
Scheme surpluses not recognised
as assets - (4,597) (4,597) - (6,111) (6,111)
-------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Pension asset/(liability) 6,871 (28,593) (21,722) 16,324 (19,705) 3,381
-------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Pension guarantee assets - 23,810 23,810 - 16,947 16,947
-------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
The amounts recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Profit
or Loss are as follows:
2019 2018
---------------------------- ----------------------------
Group Other Group Other
schemes schemes Total schemes schemes Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
---------------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Current service cost 1,989 2,391 4,380 2,091 3,483 5,574
Past service cost - 150 150 150 - 150
Settlement and curtailment - - - - (234) (234)
Administration costs 277 - 277 121 - 121
---------------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Total operating charge 2,266 2,541 4,807 2,362 3,249 5,611
Net interest (512) 80 (432) (730) 34 (696)
---------------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Total charged to the result
for the year 1,754 2,621 4,375 1,632 3,283 4,915
---------------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Past service cost above includes a charge of GBP150,000 (2018:
GBPnil) in respect of the Group's estimate of the impact on Local
Government Pension Schemes of the recent 'McCloud' judgement in
respect of historical age discrimination.
Past service cost above includes a charge of GBPnil (2018:
GBP150,000) in respect of the Group's estimate of the impact of GMP
equalisation, following the recent Lloyds Banking Group ruling.
Cumulative actuarial gains and losses recognised in equity are
as follows:
2019 2018
---------------------------- ----------------------------
Group Other Group Other
schemes schemes Total schemes schemes Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
On TUPE transfer of employees - - - - (21,303) (21,303)
Return on plan assets in excess
of that recorded in net interest 8,623 37,766 46,389 (7,270) (19,427) (26,697)
Actuarial gain/(loss) arising
from changes in demographic
assumptions 717 - 717 (5,601) 221 (5,380)
Actuarial (loss)/gain arising
from changes in financial assumptions (18,481) (40,329) (58,810) 7,197 17,293 24,490
Actuarial gain arising from
liability experience (957) (1) (958) (3,967) (676) (4,643)
Effects of limitation of recognisable
surplus - 1,393 1,393 - 24,102 24,102
--------------------------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Total gains and losses recognised
in equity (10,098) (1,171) (11,269) (9,641) 210 (9,431)
--------------------------------------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Changes in the present value of the defined benefit obligations
are as follows:
2019 2018
---------------------------- ----------------------------
Group Other Group Other
schemes schemes Total schemes schemes Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------ -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Present value of obligations
at 1 January 136,548 282,368 418,916 132,591 324,920 457,511
Liabilities related to assets
classified as held for sale - (3,105) (3,105) - - -
Current service cost 1,989 2,391 4,380 2,241 3,483 5,724
Past service cost - 150 150 - - -
Scheme administration costs - - - - - -
Interest on obligations 3,958 7,812 11,770 3,560 7,499 11,059
Plan participants' contributions 301 894 1,195 321 1,064 1,385
Benefits paid (5,138) (5,505) (10,643) (4,536) (5,751) (10,287)
Contract transfer - (79) (79) - (31,907) (31,907)
Settlements - - - - (2,062) (2,062)
Actuarial gain arising from
changes in demographic assumptions (717) - (717) 5,601 (221) 5,380
Actuarial loss arising from
changes in financial assumptions 18,481 42,533 61,014 (7,197) (15,333) (22,530)
Actuarial loss/(gain) arising
from liability experience 957 1 958 3,967 676 4,643
------------------------------------ -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Present value of obligations
at 31 December 156,379 327,460 483,839 136,548 282,368 418,916
------------------------------------ -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Changes in the fair value of the plan assets are as follows:
2019 2018
---------------------------- ----------------------------
Group Other Group Other
schemes schemes Total schemes schemes Total
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------ -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Fair value of plan assets at
1 January 152,872 285,721 438,593 157,325 352,553 509,878
Assets classified as held for
sale - (3,171) (3,171) - - -
Expected return on plan assets 4,470 7,851 12,321 4,290 7,653 11,943
Employer's contributions 2,399 1,767 4,166 2,863 2,707 5,570
Plan participants' contributions 301 894 1,195 321 1,064 1,385
Benefits paid (5,138) (5,505) (10,643) (4,536) (5,751) (10,287)
Scheme administration costs (277) - (277) (121) - (121)
Contract transfer - (253) (253) - (53,210) (53,210)
Settlements - - - - (1,828) (1,828)
Return on plan assets above/(below)
that recorded in net interest 8,623 39,970 48,593 (7,270) (17,467) (24,737)
------------------------------------ -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Fair value of plan assets at
31 December 163,250 327,274 490,524 152,872 285,721 438,593
------------------------------------ -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
History of experience gains and losses is as follows:
Group schemes
-----------------------------------------------------
2019 2018 2017 2016 2015
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Fair value of scheme assets 163,250 152,872 157,325 149,529 116,512
Net present value of defined benefit
obligations (156,379) (136,548) (132,591) (137,721) (111,327)
----------------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Net surplus 6,871 16,324 24,734 11,808 5,185
----------------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Experience adjustments arising on scheme
assets
Amount 8,623 (7,270) 3,942 27,129 (4,984)
Percentage of scheme assets 5.3% (4.8%) 2.5% 18.1% (4.3%)
Experience adjustments arising on scheme
liabilities
Amount 957 3,967 28 (1,000) (5,193)
Percentage of scheme liabilities 0.6% 2.9% 0.0% (0.7%) (4.7%)
----------------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Other schemes
-----------------------------------------------------
2019 2018 2017 2016 2015
GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Fair value of scheme assets 327,274 285,721 352,553 422,691 352,690
Net present value of defined benefit
obligations (327,460) (282,368) (324,920) (410,258) (333,839)
----------------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Net (deficit)/surplus (186) 3,353 27,633 12,433 18,851
Asset value not recognised as surplus (4,597) (6,111) (30,025) (15,747) (19,988)
----------------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Net deficit (4,783) (2,758) (2,392) (3,314) (1,137)
----------------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Experience adjustments arising on scheme
assets
Amount 39,970 (17,467) (4,314) 59,020 (7,406)
Percentage of scheme assets 12.2% (6.1%) (1.2%) 14.0% (2.1%)
Experience adjustments arising on scheme
liabilities
Amount 1 676 (31,447) (1,714) (819)
Percentage of scheme liabilities 0.0% 0.2% (9.7%) (0.4%) (0.2%)
----------------------------------------- --------- --------- --------- --------- ---------
Funding arrangements are agreed for each of the Group's defined
benefit pension schemes with their respective trustees. The
employer's contributions expected to be paid during the financial
year ending 31 December 2019 amount to GBP4.0m.
Each of the schemes manages risks through a variety of methods
and strategies to limit downside in falls in equity markets,
movement in inflation and movement in interest rates.
The Group's defined benefit obligation is sensitive to changes
in certain key assumptions. The sensitivity analysis below shows
how a reasonably possible increase or decrease in a particular
assumption, in isolation, results in an increase or decrease in the
present value of the defined benefit obligation as at 31 December
2019.
Decrease Increase
GBP'000 GBP'000
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Rate of inflation - decrease/increase by 0.1% (10,508) 10,724
Rate of increase in salaries - decrease/increase by 0.1% (3,944) 4,000
Discount rate - decrease/increase by 0.1% 10,084 (10,303)
Life expectancy - decrease/increase by 1 year (18,257) 18,283
--------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
33. Capital commitments
The Group had no capital commitments at 31 December 2019 or at
31 December 2018.
34. Contingent liabilities
The Group has guaranteed that it will complete certain Group
contracts that it has commenced. At 31 December 2019 these
guarantees amounted to GBP19.3m (2018: GBP18.7m).
The Group has a legacy guarantee in place in respect of the
performance of an M&E project delivered by a former subsidiary,
Haydon Mechanical and Electrical Company LLC ('Haydon LLC'). The
guarantee, with a limit of GBP2.8m (GBP3.9m), will fall away once
the final account is agreed at which point the associated guarantee
will be released.
The Group had no other contingent liabilities at 31 December
2019 or at 31 December 2018.
35. Events after the reporting period
As described in note 10, the Group disposed of Mears Care
Limited, one of its subsidiaries for GBP4m cash including GBP1m of
deferred consideration, on 30 January 2020. The assets and
liabilities of this entity were classified as held for sale at the
year end and included in the disposal group.
Over the first three months of 2020, the Covid-19 outbreak has
increasingly impacted on businesses across the world.
36. Related party transactions
Identity of related parties
The Group has a related party relationship with its pension
schemes, its subsidiaries and its Directors.
Pension schemes
Details of contributions to pension schemes are set out in note
32 to this preliminary announcement.
Subsidiaries
The Group has a central treasury arrangement in which all
subsidiaries participate. The Directors do not consider it
meaningful to set out details of transfers made in respect of this
treasury arrangement between companies, nor do they consider it
meaningful to set out details of interest or dividend payments made
within the Group.
Transactions with key management personnel
The Group has identified key management personnel as the
Directors of Mears Group PLC.
Key management personnel held the following percentage of voting
shares in Mears Group PLC:
2019 2018
% %
---------- ---- ----
Directors 0.3 0.3
---------- ---- ----
Key management personnel's compensation is as follows:
2019 2018
GBP'000 GBP'000
------------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
Salaries including social security costs 1,634 1,778
Contributions to defined contribution pension schemes 130 121
Share-based payments - 100
------------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
1,764 1,999
------------------------------------------------------ -------- --------
Further details of Directors' remuneration are disclosed within
the Remuneration Report.
Dividends totalling GBP0.04m (2018: GBP0.04m) were paid to
Directors during the year.
Transactions with other related parties
During the year the Group made additional loans to YourMK LLP,
an entity in which the Group is a 50% member, totalling GBP0.1m
(2018: GBP0.1m). At 31 December 2019, the Group was owed GBP0.5m
(2018: GBP0.5m) by YourMK LLP.
During the year the Group provided maintenance services to
Pyramid Plus South LLP, an entity in which the Group is a 30%
member, totalling GBP6.5m (2018: GBP0.5m). At 31 December 2019,
GBP0.8m (2018: GBP0.5m) was due to the Group in respect of these
transactions.
37. Restatement of prior year Consolidated Balance Sheet
The Group has made a minor amendment to the presentation of its
net pension liabilities in the current year. Previously, where a
guarantee was in place for some or all of any deficit on each
scheme, the guarantee asset was offset with the pension liability
in the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
The guarantee asset is now presented separately in non-current
assets while the pension deficit before any guarantee asset is
shown in non-current liabilities. This change is shown in the table
below:
As originally
As restated presented
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------- ----------- -------------
Consolidated balance sheet as at 31 December 2018
Non-current assets
Pension and other employee benefits 17,368 17,368
Pension guarantee assets 16,947 -
Non-current liabilities
Pension and other employee benefits (20,749) (3,802)
-------------------------------------------------- ----------- -------------
Net pension assets 13,566 13,566
-------------------------------------------------- ----------- -------------
The Group has also made a minor amendment to the presentation of
its provisions. These arise as a result of the acquisition of MPS
Housing Limited on 30 November 2018 and are now disclosed
separately in the Consolidated Balance Sheet, rather than
aggregated with other accruals. This change is shown in the table
below:
As originally
As restated presented
GBP'000 GBP'000
-------------------------------------------------- ----------- -------------
Consolidated balance sheet as at 31 December 2018
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables 188,553 192,491
Provisions 3,938 -
192,491 192,491
-------------------------------------------------- ----------- -------------
31. Publication of Non Statutory Accounts
The results have been extracted from the audited financial
statements of the Group for the year ended 31 December 2019. The
results do not constitute statutory accounts within the meaning of
Section 434 of the Companies Act 2006. Whilst the financial
information included in this announcement has been computed in
accordance with the principles of International Financial Reporting
Standards ("IFRS") as adopted by the EU, IFRIC interpretations and
Companies Act 2006 that applies to companies reporting under IFRS,
this announcement does not of itself contain sufficient information
to comply with IFRS. The Group will publish full financial
statements that comply with IFRS. The audited financial statements
incorporate an unqualified audit report. The Auditor's report on
these accounts does contain an emphasis of matter in relation to
the fact that a material uncertainty in respect of the impact of
Covid-19 and which is detailed within the Basis of preparation at
the beginning of the Principal Accounting Policies section earlier
in this document.
Statutory accounts for the year ended 31 December 2018, which
incorporated an unqualified auditor's report, have been filed with
the Registrar of Companies. The Auditor's report on these accounts
did not draw attention to any matters by way of emphasis and did
not contain statements under S498(2) or (3) Companies Act 2006.
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
FR ZZGZKRVGGGZM
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