TIDMMNTN TIDMMNTC
RNS Number : 3740U
Schiehallion Fund Limited (The)
28 March 2023
RNS Announcement
The Schiehallion Fund Limited
Regulated Information Classification: Annual Financial and Audit
Reports
Legal Entity Identifier: 213800NQOLJA1JCWXQ56
Results for the year to 31 January 2023
++ Neither the contents of the Managers' website nor the
contents of any website accessible from hyperlinks on the Managers'
website (or any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part
of, this announcement.
27 March 2023
For further information please contact:
Alex Blake, Baillie Gifford & Co
Tel: 0131 275 2000
Jonathan Atkins, Four Communications
Tel: 0203 920 0555 or 07872 495396
The following is the Preliminary Results Announcement for the
year to 31 January 2023 which was approved by the Board on 27 March
2023.
Chairperson's Statement
The Schiehallion Fund Limited (the 'Company' or 'Schiehallion')
seeks to generate capital growth for investors through long-term
minority investments in later stage private businesses that the
Company considers to have transformational growth potential and to
have the potential to become publicly traded.
The last year has been a period of great public market share
price volatility. Public market prices are incorporated into the
Company's private company valuation process and have, therefore,
impacted the Company's carrying values of its investments. The
Company's valuation policy is set out on page 14 of the Annual
Report and Financial Statements.
The Board meets quarterly with the Company's portfolio managers
and holds meetings to review the Company's investment valuations
twice a year. We also have regular contact with the Investment
Manager outside of formal Board meetings. Last week, I visited one
of the Company's larger investments and two potential investments
with the portfolio manager. The Investment Manager has a dedicated
Private Companies investment team, supported by a specialist
operations team that ensures that investments are monitored at all
stages. Details of the Investment Manager's resources are set out
on page 26.
The Board has complete confidence in the Investment Manager's
ability to scrutinise and oversee private company investments. In
the view of the Board which includes a director who has 40 years of
private equity and venture capital experience, the Investment
Manager has the most rigorous process of any investor in this area.
The Board is wholly committed to the aim of the company that seeks
to generate returns of three times capital over a rolling 10 year
period through long-term minority investments in later stage
private businesses.
Investment Performance
During the financial year to 31 January 2023, the Company's
ordinary share price and net asset value returned negative 56.6%
and negative 24.5%, respectively. Over the period from 27 March
2019 (launch date) to 31 January 2023, the Company's ordinary share
price and net asset value returned negative 8.0% and positive
19.8%, respectively.
During the financial year to 31 January 2023, the Company's C
share price and net asset value returned negative 58.5% and
negative 18.4%, respectively. During the period from admission to
trading on 26 April 2021 to 31 January 2023, the Company's C share
price and net asset value returned negative 60.5% and negative
20.0%, respectively.
Commentary on performance is included in the Investment
Manager's review.
Share Price Discount
In each of the Company's previous Annual Reports, I noted the
level of premium to net asset value at which the Company's shares
have traded and explained that investors should bear in mind that
shares bought at a high premium to net asset value can quickly lose
substantial value if the premium is eroded. Unfortunately, this
proved to be the case over the last 12 months as sentiment turned
against growth stocks and private company investments. The ordinary
shares derated from a 34.0% premium to net asset value at the start
of 2022 to a 23.0% discount to net asset value at the year end. The
C shares also derated from a 21.3% premium to net asset value to a
38.3% discount to net asset value over the same period.
Although there is no current intention to exercise the authority
to purchase the Company's shares, the Company will be seeking
authority to renew the buy-back authority for the ordinary shares
at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting (AGM). The Company is
also seeking authority at the AGM to purchase the Company's C
shares. No shares were bought back during the year ended 31 January
2023.
The Company has a general authority to issue further shares if
the Directors determine such issues to be in the best interests of
shareholders and the Company as a whole. At 31 January 2023, the
Company had authority, which was granted at the initial launch, to
issue a further 242.75 million shares. This authority expires at
the end of the period concluding immediately prior to the Annual
General Meeting to be held in 2024 (or, if earlier five years from
15 March 2019, the date the special resolution was passed).
Deployment of Capital
The C shares will convert into ordinary shares once at least 85
per cent. of the net placing proceeds of the C share issue have
been deployed. When the C shares were issued in April 2021, your
Board said it would be reasonable to expect that the C share
proceeds would be two-thirds invested within two years. As at 31
January 2023, approximately 79% of C share proceeds had been
invested in 25 companies. There is commentary on the Company's
portfolio in the Investment Manager's Review and Review of
Investments on pages 12 to 24 of the Annual Report and Financial
Statements.
Cost
The ongoing charges for the ordinary shares as at 31 January
2023 were 0.87%. Last year, the ongoing charges for the ordinary
shares were 0.89%.
The ongoing charges for the C shares as at 31 January 2023 were
0.71%. Last year, the ongoing charges, for the period from 26 April
2021 to 31 January 2022, for the C shares were 0.38%. Management
fees are not charged on cash and cash equivalents, so the ongoing
charges have risen as the C share proceeds have been deployed. As
at 31 January 2023, the C share capital has been 79% depoyed,
increasing from 60% in the previous year.
Earnings and Dividend
The Company's priority is to generate capital growth over the
long term. The Company therefore has no dividend target and will
not seek to provide shareholders with a particular level of
distribution. This period the net revenue return per ordinary share
was a negative 0.98 cents (year to 31 January 2022, negative 1.47
cents) and the net revenue return per C share was negative 0.35
cents (period to 31 January 2022, negative 0.28 cents). The Board
is recommending that no final dividend be paid.
Board
Members of the Board come from a broad variety of backgrounds
and the Board can draw on a very extensive pool of knowledge and
experience. Directors' biographies can be found on page 25 of the
Annual Report and Financial Statements.
The Board undertook an external evaluation during the year and
has considered its balance of skills, which was deemed to be
suitable for the Company. All the Directors are subject to annual
re-election at the AGM in May.
Annual General Meeting
The AGM will be held at 12 noon on Friday 12 May 2023 at the
offices of Alter Domus in Guernsey. Shareholders are reminded that
they are able to submit proxy voting forms before the applicable
deadline on Wednesday 10 May 2023 and also to direct any questions
for the Board or Manager in advance by email to
trustenquiries@bailliegifford.com or by calling 0800 917 2112.
(Please note that Baillie Gifford may record your call).
Information on the resolutions can be found on pages 67 and 68 of
the Annual Report and Financial Statements. The Directors consider
that all resolutions to be put to shareholders are in their and the
Company's best interests as a whole and recommend that shareholders
vote in their favour.
Investment Outlook
The past year has been characterised by geo-political
uncertainties, inflationary pressures, higher interest rates,
increased cost of borrowing, and a recessionary environment. The
macro context worsened the disruption caused by supply chains
stemming in part from the covid-19 pandemic. Although inflationary
pressures have begun to ease, these factors have collectively
contributed to a challenging economic and market environment.
Despite the considerable uncertainties, the Board and the
Investment Manager are optimistic about the outlook for the Company
with its focus on the long-term and investing in companies with
transformational potential. The Company solely invests in companies
with exceptional growth potential which are not widely accessible
in public markets. The potential of the companies in our portfolio
is generally dependent on their ability to take advantage of
opportunities. Therefore, the Board is positive about the growth
prospects of these companies, and the pipeline of private companies
that the Investment Manager has access to. The Board and the
Investment Manager are confident in the investment outlook for the
Company.
Dr Linda Yueh CBE
Chairperson
27 March 2023
Past performance is not a guide to future performance. For a
definition of terms used see Glossary of Terms and Alternative
Performance Measures at the end of this announcement.
Investment Managers' Review
The role of the annual Investment Managers' review is to look
both backwards and forwards. Looking backwards, we are disappointed
with what we delivered for shareholders over the last 12 months.
However, looking forward to 2023 and beyond, we feel a sense of
profound optimism for the portfolio and new opportunities.
Performance
Our aspiration is to generate a net return for the Company of
approximately three times invested capital over rolling 10 year
periods, measured on the basis of NAV total return on the
portfolio. During the year to 31 January 2023, the NAV total return
of the ordinary shares and the C shares was negative 24.5% and
negative 18.4% respectively. The path to long-term capital growth
is never straight, and periods of volatility and underperformance
are inevitable. However, even in this context, 2022 was a year in
which we stepped backwards rather than forwards. We are conscious
that this has been particularly felt by newer investors, who did
not experience the strong performance of the ordinary shares in the
previous two financial years.
Across The Schiehallion Fund, poor NAV performance was driven by
significant declines in the value of our holdings that had entered
the public markets, markdowns in the carrying values of our private
company investments due to reductions in the valuations of
comparable public companies and indices, and poor operational
performance from some portfolio companies. Pain for both ordinary
and C shareholders was exacerbated by share price swings from
significant premiums to NAV to discounts to NAV.
Portfolio
Whilst we can feel gloomy looking at investment returns over the
last 12 months, we only need to look at the companies in The
Schiehallion Fund to start feeling more optimistic. We believe
shareholder's capital is invested in some of the best private
companies in the world, capable of delivering outsized investment
returns over the long run. This is not without risk, or even in
some cases, controversy. As we exited 2022, the five largest
holdings were SpaceX, Scopely, ByteDance, Solugen, and Wise. It
would be hard to imagine a more diverse set of businesses than
those making money selling access to space, virtual in-game goods,
advertising, speciality chemicals, and foreign exchange. In each of
these companies, there are strong founders, robust competitive
advantages, and huge addressable markets. The average growth rate
of these companies was approximately 50% and three of the five are
profitable.
It is not just at the top end of the portfolio where the quality
of companies and the scale of potential upside gives us real
optimism. Looking at the whole portfolio, the average revenue
growth rate was just over 50% in the last 12 months. Holdings such
as Databricks are helping organisations use advances in AI to
improve their use of data to inform product development and
decision-making. Away, a direct-to-consumer luggage business, has
seen a significant upswing in its business after a tough time
during Covid-19. McMakler, a digital German real estate broker,
is weathering a tough operating environment but (we believe)
taking significant share from its competitors. We hope the extra
detail around portfolio companies included in the review of
investments on pages 17 to 24 in the Annual Report and Financial
Statements will help convey this excitement and optimism to
shareholders.
Of course, some companies met challenges in 2022.
Consumer-facing companies that saw leaps forward in demand in
2020-2022 saw growth rates come back as consumer spending
retrenched, and they started to lag those big increases. We saw
this in companies such as Affirm, Warby Parker, Masterclass and Pet
Circle. Epic Games faced another kind of challenge in a large fine
by the FTC for historical issues around online child protection and
payment practices. These issues have long since been rectified, but
it was nevertheless short of the standards we expect of our
companies.
Investing in late-stage private companies
We typically invest in late-stage private companies that are
scaling up and becoming profitable. At the stage we invest,
founders are no longer looking for the operational support
traditional venture capital firms offer. Instead, we provide
long-term patient capital to fund further expansion, often holding
businesses after they have listed on public markets, to capture
their full growth potential.
One of the benefits of investing in late-stage private companies
is that these companies tend to have well-established financing
teams and diversified banking relationships. This benefit was
evident during the recent uncertainty in the banking sector. We
engaged with all the private companies in our portfolios to help
better understand their banking relationships and any potential
impacts. The vast majority of investee companies had no material
exposure to Silicon Valley Bank. In addition, we were reassured by
the Federal Reserve's announcements that deposits would be
accessible and that affected companies were able to access their
deposits and continue with business as usual.
Deployment
2022 was also a frustrating year for deployment. Our universe
has no shortage of attractive companies, but we made fewer
investments in the last 12 months than in any year since inception.
Three factors drove this. Firstly, many good companies chose not to
raise due to adverse market conditions. Secondly, there was often a
mismatch between companies' valuation expectations and what we
believed reflected market conditions. This led to us walking away
from opportunities after deep diligence based on price. Finally, in
one notable instance where we found a good business at a compelling
price, misalignments uncovered in our legal due diligence process
caused us to walk away from the investment.
The net result was that deployment from the C-Share pool was
slower than anticipated.
During the year, we invested in two new companies, Kepler
Computing and Merlin Labs; further information on each is included
in the review of investments. We also added to existing investments
in Loft, Northvolt, Affirm, Brex, Databricks, Faire Wholesale,
Solugen, Tempus and Ver Se. As at 31 January 2023, approximately
79% of C share proceeds had been deployed.
Looking Forward
From a deployment perspective, 2023 has got off to a good start.
We are currently in deep diligence on companies in the US, China,
Italy, and Israel. In all these instances, price realism exists,
sometimes at valuations below previous rounds. We believe
normalising down rounds is essential for high-growth private
markets. Far from viewing it as a marker of failure, we applaud
those founders and boards willing to adjust their expectations to
market norms. We have more respect for those companies that raise
rounds at lower valuations than those that use artificial means to
maintain valuations set in an environment that no longer
exists.
Most of the capital we have deployed from Schiehallion has been
primary investment into companies. Companies create and issue new
shares, with the capital we use to buy them going directly onto the
companies' balance sheets. This is our preferred means of
investment as it gives companies extra resources to fund their
growth. Put another way, the investment itself favourably twists
the odds and magnitude of success. This contrasts with secondary
investment, where shares are bought from existing investors, with
none of the capital going to the company's benefit in the same
direct manner. Our preference has always been, and will continue to
be, for primary over secondary investment, but in the current
environment, we are seeing some compelling secondary opportunities
that are too good to ignore. Early investors at the end of their
fund life are coming under pressure to realise gains and return
capital to their clients. This is giving rise to a spike in the
supply of shares in private companies, with a corresponding decline
in the price at which we can buy these shares. We have been more
actively exploring this market in conjunction with our dealing
team. Though we have not yet transacted in this manner, we see it
as an extra string to our bow that, over time, has the potential to
broaden the opportunity set for The Schiehallion Fund.
We want to finish by thanking shareholders for their support in
2022. As we look into 2023, we see strong reasons for optimism for
both our existing holdings and new opportunities. Our proposition
around long-termism and alignment with companies is more relevant
today than it ever had been and we maintain our conviction that
this will lead to attractive returns for shareholders.
Peter Singlehurst
27 March 2023
Past performance is not a guide to future performance.
For a definition of terms used see Glossary of Terms and
Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this
announcement.
Valuing Private Companies
We hold our private company investments at 'fair value' i.e.,
the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to
transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market
participants at the measurement date. Valuations are adjusted both
during regular valuation cycles and on an ad hoc basis in response
to 'trigger events'. Our valuation process ensures that private
companies are valued in both a fair and timely manner.
The valuation process is overseen by a valuations committee at
Baillie Gifford which takes advice from an independent third party
(S&P Global). The valuations committee is independent from the
portfolio managers, as well as Baillie Gifford's Private Companies
Specialist team, with all voting members being from different
operational areas of the firm, and the portfolio managers only
receive final valuation notifications once they have been
applied.
We revalue private company investments on a three-month rolling
cycle, with one-third of the holdings reassessed each month. For
Schiehallion, and our investment trusts, the prices are also
reviewed twice per year by the respective boards and are subject to
the scrutiny of external auditors in the annual audit process.
Recent market volatility has meant that recent pricing has moved
much more frequently than would have been the case with the
quarterly valuations cycle.
Beyond the regular cycle, the valuations committee also monitors
each of the private company investments for certain 'trigger
events'. These may include changes in fundamentals; a takeover
approach; an intention to carry out an Initial Public Offering
('IPO'); or changes to the valuation of comparable public
companies.
The valuations committee also monitors relevant market indices
on a weekly basis and updates valuations in a manner consistent
with our external valuer's (S&P Global) most recent valuation
report where appropriate. When market volatility is particularly
pronounced the team do these checks daily. Any ad hoc change to the
fair valuation of any holding is implemented swiftly and reflected
in the next published NAV. There is no delay.
The Schiehallion Fund*
================================= =====
Instruments valued 451
Instruments held 74
Percentage of portfolio revalued
up to 4 times 18.9%
Percentage of portfolio revalued
5 or more times 81.1%
================================= =====
* Data reflecting year to 31 January 2023
During the year, most valuations have resulted in decreases.
Valuation movements
===================================== =======
Average movement per instrument (16.7%)
Average mark-down per instrument (28.1%)
Average movement at private company
level (28.5%)
Average mark-down at private company
level (40.6%)
------------------------------------- -------
Alternative performance measure, see Glossary of Terms and
Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this
announcement.
Share prices have decreased less than headline valuations
because Schiehallion typically holds preference stock, which
provides downside protection. The share price movement reflects a
probability weighted average of both the regular valuation, which
would be realised in an IPO, and the downside protected valuation,
which would normally be triggered in the event of a corporate sale
or liquidation.
Approach to Environmental, Social and Governance Considerations
(ESG)
The environmental, social and governance considerations at play
when Baillie Gifford's Private Companies Team researches late-stage
private companies.
ESG In Our Philosophy
Over our long-term horizon, we believe there is a convergence
between what is good for a business and what is good for the world
at large. The conventional wisdom that there is tension between
profitability and doing the right thing is based on short-term
thinking. Over our investment horizon, we believe profitability
depends not only on a company's ability to serve customers well but
also on its ability to do this without jeopardising its social
licence to operate.
As such, we don't break out consideration of a company's
role
in the broader system from our core investment work, under ESG
or any other rubric. These considerations are core to long-term
investing. It is the long-term nature of the growth ambition within
our investment philosophy that causes us to pay special attention
to the positive and/or negative externalities produced by a
company's operations. Over five-year-plus periods, these can have
profound impacts on a company's relationship with customers,
regulators and staff. They can hugely help or hinder the growth of
a business.
This is not about being a moral conscience for our clients.
Rather, it is a vital part of practising the philosophy that we
believe will grow the value of their capital over the long
term.
ESG In Our Process
The Private Companies Team structures our research into
potential investments by using a proprietary '10 Questions'
research framework. These questions aim to address issues such as
the scale of the opportunity, the competitive edge and potential
returns, whilst others focus specifically on ESG related
topics.
Question Four ('How does the company's culture help it achieve
the leadership's long-term business vision?') asks about the
stakeholders within a firm, the culture within the workplace, and
whether it cultivates a healthy organisational mindset capable of
delivering the mission. We have declined companies in the past
based on negative behaviours toward staff as part of this question.
Meanwhile, Question Five asks about external stakeholders ('Do the
company's customers like them?'). This question is geared towards
ecosystem impact in terms of opportunities and potential strengths,
not just uncovering risks. Question Six explores the E and S of ESG
in greater depth ('How do environmental and social factors create
opportunities and risks?').
Ultimately, this approach enables us to explore the inevitable
grey areas. Companies, like economies, are complex ecosystems.
Judging such a system as 'good' or 'bad' based on a single
metric or factor strikes us as profoundly unwise. Factors must be
weighed together. Consideration must be subjective and nuanced. The
key data points are inherently qualitative. We would be doing our
clients and our companies a disservice if we portrayed it as
anything else.
Our Stewardship Principles for Public Companies
Prioritisation of long-term value creation
We encourage company management and their boards to be ambitious
and focus their investments on long-term value creation. We
understand that it is easy for businesses to be influenced by
short-sighted demands for profit maximisation but believe these
often lead to sub-optimal long-term outcomes. We regard it as our
responsibility to steer businesses away from destructive financial
engineering towards activities that create genuine economic value
over the long run. We are happy that our value will often be in
supporting management when others do not.
A constructive and purposeful board
We believe that boards play a key role in supporting corporate
success and representing the interests of minority shareholders.
There is no fixed formula, but it is our expectation that boards
have the resources, cognitive diversity and information they need
to fulfil these responsibilities. We believe that a board works
best when there is strong independent representation able to
assist, advise and constructively test the thinking of
management.
Long-term focused remuneration with stretching targets
We look for remuneration policies that are simple, transparent
and reward superior strategic and operational endeavour. We believe
incentive schemes can be important in driving behaviour, and we
encourage policies which create alignment with genuine long-term
shareholders. We are accepting of significant pay-outs to
executives if these are commensurate with outstanding long-run
value creation, but plans should not reward mediocre outcomes. We
think that performance hurdles should be skewed towards long-term
results and that remuneration plans should be subject to
shareholder approval.
Fair treatment of stakeholders
We believe it is in the long-term interests of companies to
maintain strong relationships with all stakeholders, treating
employees, customers, suppliers, governments and regulators in a
fair and transparent manner. We do not believe in one-size-fits-all
governance and we recognise that different shareholder structures
are appropriate for different businesses. However, regardless of
structure, companies must always respect the rights of all equity
owners.
Sustainable business practices
We look for companies to act as responsible corporate citizens,
working within the spirit and not just the letter of the laws and
regulations that govern them. We believe that corporate success
will only be sustained if a business's long-run impact on society
and the environment is taken into account. Management and boards
should therefore understand and regularly review this aspect of
their activities, disclosing such information publicly alongside
plans for ongoing improvement.
* For a definition of terms used, see Glossary of Terms and
Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this
announcement.
List of Investments at 31 January 2023
2023
C shares 2023 2023 2022
2023
Ordinary
shares Total % of Total
value value value net value
Name Business Country US$'000 US$'000 US$'000 assets US$'000
Designs,
manufactures and
Space Exploration launches advanced
Technologies rockets and
Corp spacecraft United States 70,113 - 70,113 6.1 50,992
Online gaming
Scopely Inc company United States 60,223 - 60,223 5.2 47,918
Social media and
news aggregation
ByteDance Ltd company China 49,808 - 49,808 4.3 58,378
Combines enzymes and
metal catalysts to
Solugen Inc make chemicals United States - 47,881 47,881 4.2 28,129
Online platform to
send and receive
Wise PLC - Listed money United Kingdom 30,112 10,009 40,121 3.5 48,644
Lithium ion battery
Northvolt AB manufacturer Sweden 22,525 16,280 38,805 3.4 30,975
Corporate credit
Brex Inc cards for startups United States 11,292 24,441 35,733 3.1 15,709
Telephone voice,
data, text
Daily Hunt (Ver Se messaging,
Innovation and roaming
Limited) services India 32,032 - 32,032 2.8 33,236
Online platform
which provides
point of
Affirm Holdings Inc - sale consumer
Listed finance United States 14,437 17,427 31,864 2.8 57,033
Genki Forest
Technology
Group Holdings Non-alcoholic
Limited beverages China - 29,727 29,727 2.6 33,000
Online wholesale
Faire Wholesale Inc marketplace United States - 29,404 29,404 2.6 36,703
Epic Games Inc Video game developer United States 28,320 - 28,320 2.5 29,013
Online payment
Stripe Inc platform United States 27,943 - 27,943 2.4 45,046
Digital current
Chime Financial Inc account provider United States 7,417 19,294 26,711 2.3 44,357
European mobility
Flix SE provider Germany 13,309 13,356 26,665 2.3 21,865
McMakler GmbH Real estate services Germany - 24,621 24,621 2.1 28,583
Oncological records
aggregator and
diagnostic
Tempus Labs Inc testing provider United States 20,177 4,210 24,387 2.1 27,089
Data software
Databricks Inc solutions United States - 23,523 23,523 2.0 24,766
Online platform for
checking grammar,
spelling
and improving
written
Grammarly Inc communication United States - 22,353 22,353 1.9 45,002
Developer of
autonomous delivery
Nuro Inc vehicles United States 9,100 12,112 21,212 1.8 29,874
Warby Parker (JAND Online and physical
Inc) corrective eyewear
- Listed retailer United States 20,774 - 20,774 1.8 47,868
Provider of an
on-demand delivery
platform
designed to connect
consumers
Rappi Inc with local stores United States - 19,922 19,922 1.7 25,542
Workrise Technologies Jobs marketplace for
Inc the energy sector United States 17,073 - 17,073 1.5 25,026
Semiconductor
Kepler Computing Inc company United States - 15,919 15,919 1.4 -
Microbial seed
treatments to
increase crop
Indigo Agriculture yields and grain
Inc marketplace United States 15,839 - 15,839 1.4 16,958
Online property
Loft Holdings Ltd platform Brazil - 15,569 15,569 1.4 19,223
Autonomous flight
Merlin Labs Inc technology United States - 13,842 13,842 1.2 -
Marketplace for
truckers and
Convoy Inc shippers United States 9,165 4,210 13,375 1.2 17,185
Silicon photonic
PsiQuantum quantum computing United States - 13,195 13,195 1.1 15,000
Jiangxiaobai Holdings Producer of
Ltd alcoholic beverages China 12,892 - 12,892 1.1 14,187
Travel and lifestyle
Away (JRSK Inc) brand United States 12,355 - 12,355 1.1 11,920
Online security
Tanium Inc management United States 11,799 - 11,799 1.0 29,773
Pet Circle (Millell Pet food and
Pty Ltd) accessories Australia - 11,357 11,357 1.0 28,182
AI based software
Wayve Technologies for self-driving
Ltd cars United Kingdom - 9,728 9,728 0.8 16,267
Manufactures and
develops 3D
Carbon Inc printers United States 9,670 - 9,670 0.8 12,920
Financial software
Blockstream Corp Inc developer United States - 8,885 8,885 0.8 13,937
Computer chip
Graphcore Ltd developer United Kingdom 8,706 - 8,706 0.7 16,600
Online market place
for travel
Airbnb Inc - Listed accommodation United States 8,544 - 8,544 0.7 11,828
Cohesity Inc Data storage United States 8,033 - 8,033 0.7 11,930
Gene sequencing
equipment and
Illumina Inc - Listed consumables United States 7,355 - 7,355 0.6 9,396
Provider of
Honor Technology Inc home-care services United States 2,990 3,888 6,878 0.6 12,043
MasterClass (Yanka
Industries Online education
Inc) platform United States 6,487 - 6,487 0.6 8,542
Sustainable
direct-to-customer
footwear
Allbirds Inc - Listed brand United States 4,659 1,459 6,118 0.5 27,600
Oscar Health Inc - Healthcare insurance
Listed provider United States 3,157 - 3,157 0.3 5,508
Develops software
for cardiovascular
disease
diagnosis and
HeartFlow Inc treatment United States 2,029 - 2,029 0.2 11,413
Ginkgo Bioworks Genetic engineering
Holdings for industrial
* Inc - Listed applications United States 1,085 - 1,085 0.1 -
Zymergen Inc * -
Listed Synthetic biology United States - - - - 3,162
===================== ==================== =============== ========= ========== ========== ========= ==========
Total securities 559,420 412,612 972,032 84.3 1,148,322
============================================================ ========= ========== ========== ========= ==========
During the year Zymergen was taken over by Ginkgo Bioworks.
2023
Ordinary 2023 2022
shares
value
US$'000
C shares 2023 2023 Total
value
US$'000
Name value Total % of
US$'000 value net
US$'000 assets
US Treasury Bill 18/05/2023 - 23,112 23,112 2.0 -
US Treasury Bill 13/07/2023 - 22,874 22,874 2.0 -
US Treasury Bill 07/09/2023 - 22,870 22,870 2.0 -
US Treasury Bill 23/03/2023 - 22,801 22,801 2.0 -
US Treasury Bill 02/11/2023 - 22,630 22,630 2.0 -
US Treasury Bill 28/12/2023 - 22,510 22,510 1.9 -
US Treasury Bill 24/03/2022 - - - - 44,697
US Treasury Bill 16/06/2022 - - - - 44,738
US Treasury Bill 14/07/2022 - - - - 44,786
US Treasury Bill 08/09/2022 - - - - 44,782
US Treasury Bill 03/11/2022 - - - - 44,698
US Treasury Bill 29/12/2022 - - - - 44,515
------------------------------------- --------- ---------- ---------- --------- ----------
Total US Treasury Bills - 136,797 136,797 11.9 268,216
Cash 38,872 6,927 45,799 3.9 86,898
Other current assets and liabilities (684) (761) (1,445) (0.1) (30,924)
===================================== ========= ========== ========== ========= ==========
Net current assets 38,188 142,963 181,151 15.7 324,190
===================================== ========= ========== ========== ========= ==========
Net assets 597,608 555,575 1,153,183 100.0 1,472,512
===================================== ========= ========== ========== ========= ==========
Private
Listed company Net current Net
investments investments assets assets
Name % % % %
============ ============ =========== =======
31 January 2023 10.3 74.0 15.7 100.0
================== ============ ============ =========== =======
31 January 2022 14.3 63.7 22.0 100.0
================== ============ ============ =========== =======
Allocation of Net Assets
As at 31 January 2023
2023
Ordinary 2023 2023
shares C shares Total 2023 2022
Total
value value value % of net value
US$'000 US$'000 US$'000 assets US'000
========= ========= ========== ========= =========
Listed investments 90,123 28,895 119,018 10.3 211,039
Private company investments 469,297 383,717 853,014 74.0 937,283
US treasury bills - 136,797 136,797 11.9 268,216
Cash and cash equivalents 38,872 6,927 45,799 3.9 86,898
Net current assets (684) (761) (1,445) (0.1) (30,924)
============================ ========= ========= ========== ========= =========
Total net assets 597,608 555,575 1,153,183 100.0 1,472,512
============================ ========= ========= ========== ========= =========
* Alternative performance measure, see Glossary of Terms and
Alternative Performance Measures at the end of this
announcement.
Distribution of Net Assets
Ordinary Shares
Geographical Sectoral
As at As at As at As at
31 January 31 January 31 January 31 January
2023 2022 2023 2022
% % % %
================ ================= ================= ======= =============== ================= =================
Communication
China 10.6 9.1 Services 14.9 12.7
Consumer
Germany 2.2 1.3 Discretionary 11.6 14.6
Consumer
Sweden 3.8 3.0 Staples 4.8 3.9
United Kingdom 6.4 6.7 Financials 15.7 22.2
United States 65.2 69.4 Healthcare 5.5 7.0
India 5.4 4.2 Industrials 19.9 14.2
Net Current Information
Assets 6.4 6.3 Technology 21.0 18.7
Materials 0.2 0.4
Net Current
Assets 6.4 6.3
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
================ ================= ================= ======= =============== ================= =================
C Shares
Geographical Sectoral
As at As at As at As at
31 January 31 January 31 January 31 January
2023 2022 2023 2022
% % % %
================ ================= ================= ======= =============== ================= =================
Consumer
Germany 6.8 5.9 Discretionary 10.4 11.5
Consumer
Sweden 2.9 0.9 Staples 5.4 4.8
United Kingdom 3.6 4.2 Financials 12.8 6.1
United States 50.7 41.8 Healthcare 1.5 0.9
China 5.4 - Industrials 7.8 4.7
Information
Brazil 2.8 2.8 Technology 20.5 20.6
Australia 2.0 4.1 Materials 8.6 4.1
US Treasury
Bills 24.7 39.4 Real Estate 7.2 7.0
Net Current US Treasury
Assets 1.1 0.9 Bills 24.7 39.4
Net Current
Assets 1.1 0.9
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
================ ================= ================= ======= =============== ================= =================
The above sectoral distribution is not derived from any
index.
Statement of Comprehensive Income
For the year ended 31 For the year ended 31
January 2023 January 2022
===== ======================================= ======================================
Revenue Capital Total Revenue Capital Total
Notes US$'000 US$'000 US$'000 US$'000 US$'000 US$'000
============================== ===== ======== ================== ========= ======== ================== ========
(Losses)/gains on investments 7 - (311,938) (311,938) - 39,460 39,460
Currency losses - (17) (17) - (19) (19)
Income 2 2,800 - 2,800 362 - 362
Investment management fee 3 (8,931) - (8,931) (8,427) - (8,427)
Other administrative expenses 4 (1,233) - (1,233) (1,100) - (1,100)
============================== ===== ======== ================== ========= ======== ================== ========
Operating (loss) / profit
before finance
costs and taxation (7,364) (311,955) (319,319) (9,165) 39,441 30,276
============================== ===== ======== ================== ========= ======== ================== ========
Finance costs of borrowings (10) - (10) (7) - (7)
============================== ===== ======== ================== ========= ======== ================== ========
Operating (loss) / profit
before taxation (7,374) (311,955) (319,329) (9,172) 39,441 30,269
============================== ===== ======== ================== ========= ======== ================== ========
Tax on ordinary activities - - - - - -
============================== ===== ======== ================== ========= ======== ================== ========
(Loss)/profit and total
comprehensive
(loss)/income for the year (7,374) (311,955) (319,329) (9,172) 39,441 30,269
============================== ===== ======== ================== ========= ======== ================== ========
Total comprehensive
(loss)/income for
the year analysed as follows:
Attributable to ordinary
shareholders (4,923) (189,131) (194,054) (7,238) 51,460 44,222
Attributable to C shareholders (2,451) (122,824) (125,275) (1,934) (12,019) (13,953)
============================== ===== ======== ================== ========= ======== ================== ========
(Loss) / profit and total
comprehensive
(loss)/income for the year (7,374) (311,955) (319,329) (9,172) 39,441 30,269
============================== ===== ======== ================== ========= ======== ================== ========
(Loss)/earnings per ordinary
share 5 (0.98c) (37.79c) (38.77c) (1.47c) 10.46c 8.99c
Loss per C share 5 (0.35c) (17.55c) (17.90c) (0.28c) (1.72c) (2.00c)
============================== ===== ======== ================== ========= ======== ================== ========
The total column of this Statement represents the Statement of
Comprehensive Income of the Company. The supplementary revenue and
capital columns are prepared under guidance published by the
Association of Investment Companies.
All revenue and capital items in this statement derive from
continuing operations.
Statement of Financial Position
As at 31 January
2023 2023 2022 2022
Notes US$'000 US$'000 US$'000 US$'000
===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
Fixed assets
Investments held at fair value through
profit or loss 7 972,032 1,148,322
======================================= ===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
Current assets
US Treasury Bills 136,797 268,216
Cash and cash equivalents 45,799 86,898
Debtors 884 405
======================================= ===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
183,480 355,519
======================================= ===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
Current liabilities
Amounts falling due within one year (2,329) (31,329)
======================================= ===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
Net current assets 181,151 324,190
======================================= ===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
Net assets 1,153,183 1,472,512
======================================= ===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
Capital and reserves
Share capital 1,216,503 1,216,503
Capital reserve (51,536) 260,419
Revenue reserve (11,784) (4,410)
======================================= ===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
Shareholders' funds 1,153,183 1,472,512
======================================= ===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
Shareholders' funds - ordinary shares 597,608 791,663
Net asset value per ordinary share 119.42c 158.20c
Number of ordinary shares in issue 500,430,002 500,430,002
======================================= ===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
Shareholders' funds - C shares 555,575 680,849
Net asset value per C share 79.37c 97.26c
Number of C shares in issue 700,000,000 700,000,000
======================================= ===== ======== =========== ======== ===========
Statement of Changes in Equity
For the year ended 31 January 2023
Share Capital Revenue Shareholders'
capital reserve reserve funds
Notes US$'000 US$'000 US$'000 US$'000
------------------------------------------- ------ --------- --------- -------- -------------
Shareholders' funds at 1 February 2022 1,216,503 260,419 (4,410) 1,472,512
Ordinary shares issued - - - -
C shares issued - - - -
Total comprehensive loss - ordinary shares - (189,131) (4,923) (194,054)
Total comprehensive loss - C shares - (122,824) (2,451) (125,275)
Shareholders' funds at 31 January 2023 1,216,503 (51,536) (11,784) 1,153,183
--------------------------------------------------- --------- --------- -------- -------------
For the year ended 31 January 2022
Share Capital Revenue Shareholders'
capital reserve reserve funds
Notes US$'000 US$'000 US$'000 US$'000
--------------------------------------------- ------ --------- -------- -------- -------------
Shareholders' funds at 1 February 2021 480,340 220,978 4,762 706,080
Ordinary shares issued 41,361 - - 41,361
C shares issued 694,802 - - 694,802
Total comprehensive income/(loss) - ordinary
shares - 51,460 (7,238) 44,222
Total comprehensive loss - C shares - (12,019) (1,934) (13,953)
----------------------------------------------------- --------- -------- -------- -------------
Shareholders' funds at 31 January 2022 1,216,503 260,419 (4,410) 1,472,512
----------------------------------------------------- --------- -------- -------- -------------
The capital reserve includes investment holding gains of US$--
(2022 - US$255,767,0000).
Statement of Cash Flows
For the year ended For the year ended
31 January 2023 31 January 2022
===== ===================== ======================
Notes US$'000 US$'000 US$'000 US$'000
========================================== ===== ========== ========= =========== =========
Cash flows from operating activities
Operating (loss)/profit before taxation (319,329) 30,269
US Treasury Bills interest (1,618) (166)
Net losses/(gains) on investments 311,938 (39,460)
Currency losses 17 19
Changes in debtors and creditors (899) 879
========================================== ===== ========== ========= =========== =========
Net cash used in operating activities
* (9,891) (8,459)
========================================== ===== ========== ========= =========== =========
Cash flows from investing activities
Acquisitions of US Treasury Bills (161,229) (1,031,088)
Disposals of US Treasury Bills 294,266 840,039
Acquisitions of investments 7 (166,076) (474,843)
Disposals of investments 7 1,848 8,740
------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- --------- ----------- ---------
Net cash used in investing activities (31,191) (657,152)
========================================== ===== ========== ========= =========== =========
Cash flows from financing activities
Ordinary shares issued - 41,613
C shares issued - 694,802
------------------------------------------ ----- ---------- --------- ----------- ---------
Net cash inflow from financing activities - 736,415
========================================== ===== ========== ========= =========== =========
Net (decrease)/increase in cash and
cash equivalents (41,082) 70,804
Effect of exchange rate fluctuations
on cash and cash equivalents (17) (19)
Cash and cash equivalents at 1 February 86,898 16,113
========================================== ===== ========== ========= =========== =========
Cash and cash equivalents at 31 January 45,799 86,898
========================================== ===== ========== ========= =========== =========
* Cash from operations includes interest received of US$700.000 (2022 - US$1,000).
2023 2022
US$'000 US$'000
Cash and cash equivalents comprise the following:
Cash at bank 45,799 86,898
================================================== ======== ========
Notes to the Financial Statements
1. Principal Accounting Policies
The Financial Statements for the year to 31 January 2023 have
been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting
Standards ('IFRS').
2. Income
2023 2022
US$'000 US$'000
US Treasury Bills interest 1,618 166
Overseas interest 482 195
Deposit interest 700 1
--------------------------- -------- --------
Total income 2,800 362
--------------------------- -------- --------
3. Investment Management Fee
2023 2022
US$'000 US$'000
-------------------------- -------- --------
Investment management fee 8,931 8,427
Details of the Investment Management Agreement are set out on
page 27 of the Annual Report and Financial Statements. Under the
terms of the Investment Management Agreement and with effect from
the date the Company's ordinary shares were admitted to trading on
the Specialist Fund Segment of the Main Market of the London Stock
Exchange, the Investment Manager is entitled to an annual fee
(exclusive of VAT, which shall be added where applicable) of: 0.9%
on the net asset value excluding cash or cash equivalent assets up
to and including US$650 million; 0.8% on the net asset value
excluding cash or cash equivalent assets exceeding US$650 million
up to and including US$1.3 billion; and 0.7% on the net asset value
excluding cash or cash equivalent assets exceeding US$1.3 billion.
Management fees are calculated and payable quarterly.
Cash equivalents include US Treasury Bills.
4. Other Administrative Expenses
2023 2022
US$'000 US$'000
------------------------------------------ -------- --------
General administrative expenses 517 511
Administrator's fee 86 92
Auditor's remuneration for audit services 236 248
Directors' fees 394 249
1,233 1,100
------------------------------------------ -------- --------
In the year to 31 January 2023 there were no fees paid to the
Auditor, KPMG Channel Islands Limited, in respect of non-audit
services. In the year to 31 January 2022 non-audit fees paid to the
Auditor amounted to US$83,000 in respect of procedural services
related to the issuance of the Company's C shares. As these costs
related to the issuance of the C shares, they are capital in nature
and included within the costs of issuing shares
5. Earnings per Share
Year ended 31 January Year ended 31 January
2023 2022
Ordinary shares US$'000 c US$'000 c
---------------------------------------- ------------ --------- ------------ ---------
Revenue return on ordinary activities
after taxation (4,923) (0.98) (7,238) (1.47)
Capital return on ordinary activities
after taxation (189,131) (37.79) 51,460 10.46
---------------------------------------- ------------ --------- ------------ ---------
(Loss) / profit and total comprehensive
income for the (loss) / income
for the year (194,054) (38.77) 44,222 8.99
---------------------------------------- ------------ --------- ------------ ---------
Weighted average number of ordinary
shares in issue 500,430,002 491,934,440
---------------------------------------- ----------------------- -----------------------
Period from 27 April
Year ended 31 January 2021 to 31 January
2023 2022
C shares US$'000 c US$'000 c
---------------------------------------- ------------ --------- ------------ ---------
(Loss) / revenue return on ordinary
activities after taxation (2,451) (0.35) (1,934) (0.28)
Capital return on ordinary activities
after taxation (122,824) (17.55) (12,019) (1.72)
---------------------------------------- ------------ --------- ------------ ---------
Profit and total comprehensive
income (loss) / income for the
year / period (125.275) (17.90) (13,953) (2.00)
---------------------------------------- ------------ --------- ------------ ---------
Weighted average number of C
shares in issue 700,000,000 700,000,000
---------------------------------------- ----------------------- -----------------------
6. Ordinary Dividends
There were no dividends paid or proposed in respect of the year
to 31 January 2023 (2022 - US$nil).
7. Financial Instruments
Fair Value Hierarchy
The fair value hierarchy used to analyse the fair values of
financial assets is described below. The levels are determined by
the lowest (that is the least reliable or least independently
observable) level of input that is significant to the fair value
measurement for the individual investment in its entirety as
follows:
Level 1 - using unadjusted quoted prices for identical
instruments in an active market;
Level 2 - using inputs, other than quoted prices included within
Level 1, that are directly or indirectly observable (based
on market data); and
Level 3 - using inputs that are unobservable (for which market
data is unavailable).
The valuation techniques used by the Company are explained in
the accounting policies on page 50 of the Annual Report and
Financial Statements. Transfers between levels of the fair value
hierarchy take place when the criteria for recognition in another
level are met, such as the listing of an investment.
Level Level Level
1 2 3 Total
As at 31 January 2023 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Listed equities 119,018 - - 119,018
Private company ordinary shares/warrants - - 131,977 131,977
Private company preference shares* - - 708,914 708,914
Private company convertible promissory
notes - - 12,123 12,123
----------------------------------------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Total financial asset investments 119,018 - 853,014 972,032
----------------------------------------- -------- -------- -------- --------
Level Level Level
1 2 3 Total
As at 31 January 2022 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000 GBP'000
----------------------------------------- -------- -------- -------- ---------
Listed equities 211,039 - - 211,039
Private company ordinary shares/warrants - - 167,268 167,268
Private company preference shares* - - 765,207 765,207
Private company convertible promissory
notes - - 4,808 4,808
----------------------------------------- -------- -------- -------- ---------
Total financial asset investments 211,039 - 937,283 1,148,322
----------------------------------------- -------- -------- -------- ---------
* The investments in preference shares are not classified as
equity holdings as they include liquidation preference rights that
determine the repayment (or multiple thereof) of the original
investment in the event of a liquidation event such as a
take-over.
During the year ended 31 January 2023, investments with a fair
value (IPO price) of US$nil (2022 - US$197,699,000) were
transferred from Level 3 to Level 1 on becoming listed.
Investments in securities are financial assets held at fair
value through profit or loss. In accordance with IFRS 13, the table
above provides an analysis of these investments based on the fair
value hierarchy described above, which reflects the reliability and
significance of the information used to measure their fair
value.
Private
Listed company
securities securities* Total
US$'000 US$'000 US$'000
---------------------------------------- ----------- ------------ ---------
Cost of investments at 1 February
2022 147,488 752,024 899,512
Investment holding gains and losses
at 1 February 2022 63,551 185,259 248,810
----------------------------------------- ----------- ------------ ---------
Fair value of investments at 1 February
2022 211,039 937,283 1,148,322
Movements in the period:
Purchases at cost 25,795 113,068 138,863
Sales - proceeds (1,367) (1,848) (3,215)
- losses on takeover (13,633) - (13,633)
Changes in categorisation - - -
Changes in investment holding gains
and losses (102,816) (195,489) (298,305)
----------------------------------------- ----------- ------------ ---------
Fair value of investments at 31 January
2023 119,018 853,014 972,032
----------------------------------------- ----------- ------------ ---------
Cost of investments at 31 January
2023 158,283 863,244 1,021,527
Investment holding gains and losses
at 31 January 2023 (39,265) (10,230) (49,495)
----------------------------------------- ----------- ------------ ---------
Fair value of investments at 31 January
2023 119,018 853,014 972,032
----------------------------------------- ----------- ------------ ---------
* Includes holdings in preference shares, promissory notes, ordinary shares and warrants.
The purchases and sales proceeds figures above include
transaction costs of US$99,000 (2022 - US$99,000) and US$nil (2022
- US$nil) respectively.
8. Share capital
2023 2023 2022 2022
Number US$'000 Number US$'000
----------------------------------- ----------- -------- ------------ --------
Allotted, called up and fully paid
ordinary shares of US$1 each 500,430,002 521,701 500,430,002 521,701
Allotted, called up and fully paid
C shares of US$1 each 700,000,000 694,802 700,000,000 694,802
----------------------------------- ----------- -------- ------------ --------
By way of a special resolution dated 15 March 2019 the Directors
have a general authority to allot up to 720,000,000 ordinary shares
or C shares, such figure to include the ordinary shares issued at
the initial placing. 477,250,000 ordinary shares were issued at the
Company's initial placing. During the year to 31 January 2023, the
Company issued no ordinary and no C shares. In the period from 31
January 2023 to
24 March 2023 no further shares were issued. Consequently, the
Company has the authority to issue a further 219,570,000 ordinary
shares under the existing authority which expires at the end of the
period concluding immediately prior to the Annual General Meeting
of the Company to be held in 2024 (or, if earlier, five years from
the date of the resolution).
By way of a special resolution dated 18 March 2021, the
Directors have a general authority to allot up to 700,000,000 C
shares. On 26 April 2021, the Company issued 700,000,000 C shares
of US$1 each and raised net proceeds of US$694,802,000. The issue
costs of US$5,198,000 consisted of mainly broker commission
(US$4,066,000), legal fees (US$601,000) and listing fees
(US$396,000).
By way of an ordinary resolution passed on 12 May 2022, the
Directors of the Company have general authority to make market
purchases of up to 75,014,457 ordinary shares, being 14.99% of the
ordinary shares in issue. This authority will expire at the end of
the period concluding immediately prior to the second Annual
General Meeting of the Company to be held on 12 May 2023. No shares
have been bought back during the year ended 31 January 2023 hence
the authority remains at 75,014,457 ordinary shares.
Holders of ordinary shares have the right to receive income and
capital from assets attributable to such share class. Assets are
allocated through the appreciation and realisation of investments
acquired using the proceeds of the ordinary share issue. Ordinary
shareholders have the right to receive notice of general meetings
of the Company and have the right to attend and vote at all general
meetings.
Holders of C shares have the right to receive income and capital
from assets attributable to such share class. Assets are allocated
through the appreciation and realisation of investments acquired
using the proceeds of the C share issue. C shareholders have the
right to receive notice of general meetings of the Company and have
the right to attend and vote at all general meetings.
9. The financial information set out above does not constitute
the Company's statutory accounts for the year ended 31 January 2023
but is derived from those accounts.
10. The Annual Report and Financial Statements will be available
on the Managers' website schiehallionfund.com++ on or around 31
March 2023.
++ Neither the contents of the Managers' website nor the
contents of any website accessible from hyperlinks on the Managers'
website (or any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part
of, this announcement.
None of the views expressed in this document should be construed
as advice to buy or sell a particular investment.
Glossary of Terms and Alternative Performance Measures (APM)
An alternative performance measure is a financial measure of
historical or future financial performance, financial position, or
cash flows, other than a financial measure defined or specified in
the applicable financial reporting framework.
Total Assets
Total value of all assets held less current liabilities, other
than liabilities in the form of borrowings.
Net Asset Value
Also described as shareholder funds, net asset value ('NAV') is
the value of total assets less liabilities (including borrowings).
The NAV per share is calculated by dividing this amount by the
number of ordinary shares or C shares as applicable, in issue.
Net Current Assets
Net current assets comprise current assets less current
liabilities excluding borrowings.
Premium / (Discount) / (APM)
As stockmarkets and share prices vary, the Company's share price
is rarely the same as its NAV. When the share price is lower than
the NAV per share it is said to be trading at a discount. The size
of the discount is calculated by subtracting the share price from
the NAV per share and is usually expressed as a percentage of the
NAV per share. If the share price is higher than the NAV per share,
this situation is called a premium.
Ordinary shares 2023 2022
------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- -------- --------
Closing NAV per share (a) 119.42c 158.20c
Closing share price (b) 92.00c 212.00c
------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- -------- --------
Discount / Premium ((b - a) ÷ (a) expressed as a percentage) (23.0%) 34.0%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
C shares 2023 2022
------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- -------- --------
Closing NAV per share (a) 79.37c 97.26c
Closing share price (b) 49.00c 118.00c
------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- -------- --------
Discount / Premium ((b - a) ÷ (a) expressed as a percentage) (38.3%) 21.3%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- --------
Capital Deployed (APM)
Capital deployed reflects cumulative amounts invested since
inception of the Company.
Internal Rate of Return (IRR) (APM)
The IRR indicates the annualised rate of return for the
Company's investment portfolio.
Gross Multiple on Invested Capital (MOIC) (APM)
The MOIC expresses, as a multiple, how much return the Company
has made on investment realisations and income, relative to its
book cost.
Ongoing Charges (APM)
The total recurring expenses (excluding the Company's costs of
dealing in investments and borrowing costs) incurred by the Company
as a percentage of the average net asset value (with debt at fair
value).
Ordinary shares 2023 2022
US$'000 US$'000
------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- ---------
Investment management fee 5,166 6,816
Other administrative expenses 637 655
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Total expenses (*) (a) 5,803 7,471
------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- ---------
Average net asset value (with borrowings deducted at fair value) (b) 668,671 835,470
------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- ---------
Ongoing charges ((a) ÷ (b) expressed as a percentage) 0.87% 0.89%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
C shares 2023 2022
US$'000 US$'000
------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- ---------
Investment management fee 3,765 1,611
Other administrative expenses 596 445
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Total expenses (*) 4,361 2,056*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
Total expenses annualised * (a) 4,361 2,680*
------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- --------- ---------
Average net asset value (with borrowings deducted at fair value) (b) 617,439 697,793
------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- --------- ---------
Ongoing charges ((a) ÷ (b) expressed as a percentage) 0.71% 0.38%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------- ---------
* The total expenses above cover the period 26 April 2021 to 31
January 2022, a period of 280 days.
Leverage (APM)
For the purposes of the Alternative Investment Fund Managers
Directive, leverage is any method which increases the Company's
exposure, including the borrowing of cash and the use of
derivatives. It is expressed as a ratio between the Company's
exposure and its net asset value and can be calculated on a gross
and a commitment method. Under the gross method, exposure
represents the sum of the Company's positions after the deduction
of US dollar cash balances, without taking into account any hedging
and netting arrangements. Under the commitment method, exposure is
calculated without the deduction of sterling cash balances and
after certain hedging and netting positions are offset against each
other.
Average Revenue Growth Rate (APM)
Calculated by taking an average of the total of each investee
company's last 12 months revenue growth (as a percentage).
Average Movement at Private Company Level/Per Instrument
(APM)
Calculated by taking an average of all valuation movements (as a
percentage) by company and by line of share class.
Average Mark-Down at Private Company Level/Per Instrument
(APM)
None of the views expressed in this document should be construed
as advice to buy or sell a particular investment.
You can find up to date performance information about The
Schiehallion Fund on the Schiehallion Fund page of the Managers'
website at schiehallionfund.com++
The Schiehallion Fund Limited is managed by Baillie Gifford, the
Edinburgh based fund management group with around GBP billion under
management and advice in active equity and bond portfolios for
clients in the UK and throughout the world (as at -- March 2023).
The Administrator, Secretary and Designated Manager is Alter Domus
(Guernsey) Limited.
++ Neither the contents of the Managers' website nor the
contents of any website accessible from hyperlinks on the Managers'
website (or any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part
of, this announcement.
Past performance is not a guide to future performance. The value
of an investment and any income from it is not guaranteed and may
go down as well as up and investors may not get back the amount
invested. This is because the share price is determined by the
changing conditions in the relevant stock markets in which the
Company invests and by the supply and demand for the Company's
shares.
27 March 2023
For further information please contact:
Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation ('SFDR')
The EU Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation ('SFDR') does
not have a direct impact in the UK due to Brexit, however, it
applies to third-country products marketed in the EU. As
Schiehallion is marketed in the EU by the AIFM, Baillie Gifford
& Co Limited, via the National Private Placement Regime
('NPPR') the following disclosures have been provided to comply
with the high-level requirements of SFDR.
The AIFM has adopted Baillie Gifford & Co's Governance and
Sustainable Principles and Guidelines as its policy on integration
of sustainability risks in investment decisions.
More detail on the Investment Manager's approach to
sustainability can be found in the Governance and Sustainability
Principles and Guidelines document, available publicly on the
Baillie Gifford website bailliegifford.com.
Taxonomy Regulation
The Taxonomy Regulation establishes an EU-wide framework of
criteria for environmentally sustainable economic activities in
respect of six environmental objectives. It builds on the
disclosure requirements under the SFDR by introducing additional
disclosure obligations in respect of AIFs that invest in an
economic activity that contributes to an environmental
objective.
The Company does not commit to make sustainable investments as
defined under SFDR. As such, the underlying investments do not take
into account the EU criteria for environmentally sustainable
economic activities.
Alex Blake, Baillie Gifford & Co
Tel: 0131 275 2859
Jonathan Atkins, Director, Four Communications
Tel 0203 697 4200 or 07803 758810
- ends -
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FR JRMFTMTATBAJ
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March 28, 2023 02:00 ET (06:00 GMT)
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