12 June
2024
Safestore Holdings
plc
("Safestore", "the Company"
or "the Group")
Interim
results for the 6 months ended 30 April 2024
Robust performance in the
first half, building on strong foundations, with continued
strategic progress
Key Measures
|
6 months ended 30 April
2024
|
6 months ended 30 April
2023
|
Change1
|
Change-CER2
|
Underlying and Operating Metrics- total
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue3
|
£109.2m
|
£110.1m
|
(0.8%)
|
(0.3%)
|
Underlying
EBITDA4
|
£67.1m
|
£69.7m
|
(3.7%)
|
(3.3%)
|
Closing Occupancy (let sq ft-
million)5
|
6.129
|
6.124
|
0.1%
|
n/a
|
Closing Occupancy (% of
MLA)6
|
74.4%
|
76.7%
|
(2.3ppts)
|
n/a
|
Average Storage
Rate7
|
£30.16
|
£30.58
|
(1.4%)
|
(0.8%)
|
REVPAF (£)8
|
£26.74
|
£28.28
|
(5.4%)
|
(4.9%)
|
Adjusted Diluted EPRA Earnings per
Share9
|
21.2p
|
23.7p
|
(10.5%)
|
n/a
|
Free Cash
flow10
|
£41.0m
|
£31.9m
|
28.5%
|
n/a
|
EPRA NTA per
Share11
|
£10.03
|
£9.12
|
10.0%
|
n/a
|
Underlying and Operating Metrics-
like-for-like12
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
£107.0m
|
£107.9m
|
(0.8%)
|
(0.3%)
|
Storage Revenue
|
£90.6m
|
£92.1m
|
(1.8%)
|
(1.2%)
|
Ancillary Revenue
|
£16.4m
|
£15.8m
|
4.2%
|
4.6%
|
Underlying EBITDA
|
£66.7m
|
£69.0m
|
(3.3%)
|
(2.8%)
|
Closing Occupancy (let sq ft-
million)
|
5.949
|
6.049
|
(1.6%)
|
n/a
|
Closing Occupancy (% of
MLA)
|
76.9%
|
78.5%
|
(1.6ppts)
|
n/a
|
Average Occupancy (let sq ft-
million)
|
5.960
|
6.055
|
(1.6%)
|
n/a
|
Average Storage Rate
|
30.55
|
30.70
|
(0.5%)
|
0.1%
|
REVPAF (£)
|
£27.86
|
£28.24
|
(1.3%)
|
(0.8%)
|
|
Statutory Metrics
|
|
|
|
|
Operating
Profit13
|
£186.3m
|
£114.9m
|
62.1%
|
n/a
|
Profit before Income
Tax13
|
£173.7m
|
£103.4m
|
68.0%
|
n/a
|
Diluted Earnings per
Share
|
71.5p
|
42.7p
|
67.4%
|
n/a
|
Dividend per Share
|
10.0p
|
9.9p
|
1.0%
|
n/a
|
Cash Inflow from Operating
Activities
|
£45.4m
|
£36.3m
|
25.1%
|
n/a
|
Basic net assets per
share
|
£9.35
|
£8.48
|
10.2%
|
n/a
|
|
|
|
|
|
Highlights
Resilient Financial performance
· Group revenue down 0.8% and in CER down 0.3%
· H1
2023 revenue included £1.0m of insurance premium tax relating to
the sale of customer goods insurance not repeated in 2024.
Excluding this, revenue at CER grew 0.7%.
· Group like-for-like revenue in CER down 0.3%
· Adjusted Diluted EPRA EPS, down 10.5% at 21.2p (H1 2023:
23.7p)
· Dividend increase to 10.0p (H1 2023: 9.9p)
· Investment property value increased 5.8%, with net gain of
£121.7m (H1 2023: gain of £47.3m)
· Strong cash generation with free cash flow increase of 28.5%
to £41.0m (H1 2023: £31.9m)
· Statutory profit before income tax of £173.7m up from £103.4m
in H1 2023
· Adjusted Diluted EPRA Earnings per Share for the full year
expected to be in the lower half of the range of consensus
estimates
Operational and Strategic Progress
· Consistent like-for-like operational performance driven by
continued rate growth
o Like-for-like revenue down 0.3% in CER
§ UK down
1.5%
§ Paris
up 1.4%
§ Spain
up 2.4%
§ Benelux
up 13.5%
o Like-for-like industry leading 7.4% increase in REVPAF over
the last 3 years.
o Like-for-like average storage rate for the period up 0.1% in
CER
§ UK down
0.2% to £30.45 (H1 2023: £30.51)
§ Paris
down 0.6% to €41.78 (H1 2023: €42.02)
§ Spain
down 0.8% to €36.71 (H1 2023: €37.00)
§ Benelux
up 10.2% to €22.37 (H1 2023: €20.28)
o Like-for-like closing occupancy down 1.6ppts at 76.9% (H1
2023: 78.5%)
§ UK down
2.6ppts at 75.6% (H1 2023: 78.2%)
§ Paris
up 1.0ppts at 81.1% (H1 2023: 80.1%)
§ Spain
up 3.6ppts at 77.7% (H1 2023: 74.1%)
§ Benelux
up 2.5ppts to 80.0% (H1 2023: 77.5%)
· Enquiries for the Group consistently well above pre-covid
levels in all markets, with 39% enquiry growth over the last five
years
· Openings of 259,700 sq ft in the year to date and post-period
end of new capacity across six stores (including satellite stores)
in Eastleigh, London- Paddington Park West, Madrid- South 2,
Almere, Aalsmeer, and Rotterdam
· Continue to expand portfolio of stores with a focus on key
metropolitan areas with development and extension pipeline of 30
stores and 1.5m sq ft representing c. 18% of the existing
portfolio
· New
development or extension sites in the period secured in London / SE
England and the Netherlands adding 263,250 sq ft of future MLA at
London- Kingston, Welwyn Garden City, St Albans, Hemel Hempstead
and Randstad- Utrecht
· Acquired the freehold interests of two stores in Utrecht and
London- Paddington Park West and lease
extensions completed for one store in London- Bermondsey
Strong and Flexible Balance Sheet
· 5.8%
increase in property valuation (including investment properties
under construction)
· 5.4%
increase in EPRA basic NTA per share to £10.03 (FY 2023:
£9.52)
· On
30 April 2024, the Group completed the financing of its RCF
accordion option for £100m. This increased the facility to
£500m
· Group loan-to-value ratio ("LTV"14) at 25.7% (FY
2023: 25.4%) and interest cover ratio ("ICR"15) at 5.0x
(FY 2023: 6.7x)
· Ample liquidity with unutilised bank facilities of £245.4m at
30 April 2024 (FY 2023: £197.0m)
· 68%
of debt at fixed interest rates with weighted average term of 4.7
years following refinancing of €51m USPP in May 2024
Frederic Vecchioli, Safestore's Chief Executive Officer,
commented:
"We have delivered robust operating performance in difficult
market conditions and have continued to demonstrate the value of
our strategy of focusing on REVPAF to optimise returns from our
assets.
Our track record has delivered market leading returns with
revenue growing 49.3% since pre-pandemic as we grew occupied space
by 31.8% and increased rental rates by 14.7% and ancillary revenue
by 33.3% across all of our markets. During the period our central
pricing approach has meant that we have been able to adapt our
approach across our different markets to enable optimisation of
revenue.
In the UK, despite a challenging economic backdrop, we have
seen solid like-for-like revenue performance with broadly flat
average storage rates and a small occupancy decline. We have
delivered strong like-for-like revenue growth in our other markets
demonstrating the value of our diversified approach led by our
Benelux markets with 13.5% like-for-like revenue
increases.
In addition, we continue to grow income through our store
development programme. In the period new stores and developments,
generated an additional £2.2m of revenue, with particularly strong
performance in Spain as we leverage the Oh My Box! operating
platform.
So far this year we opened six new stores from our
development programme, adding 3% to our available rental area. The
programme has a further 30 stores, including six in the second half
of 2024, which will add 1.5m sq ft of new space when open. These
development projects are concentrated, like our existing stores, in
the major metropolitan areas in our markets with 94% in the largest
cities such as London, Paris, Amsterdam / Randstad, Barcelona and
Madrid. We have a clear track record of delivering 10%+ cash
returns on new stores and so we are confident that this programme
will be accretive on stabilisation after a short period where
earnings are impacted.
Overall, we remain confident in our operating model and
believe the market across Europe continues to have favourable
supply / demand dynamics as reflected in the increase in value of
our properties of 5.8% since the October year
end.
The business continues to be highly cash generative with free
cash flow of £41.0m in the period enabling us to both partially
finance our development programme and to declare a 10.0p per share
interim dividend to be paid in August.
As we look forward to the rest of the year, we expect to see
trading move back into growth in the UK, notwithstanding the
current short-term economic uncertainties, with continued growth in
Europe leading to overall EPS for the full year in the lower half
of consensus forecasts.
Finally, I would like to thank all of our colleagues across
our stores and head office whose hard work and customer focus has
enabled our results and continued success.
Notes
We prepare our financial statements using IFRS. However, we
also use a number of adjusted measures in assessing and managing
the performance of the business. These measures are not defined
under IFRS and they may not be directly comparable with other
companies' adjusted measures and are not intended to be a
substitute for, or superior to, any IFRS measures of performance.
These include like-for-like figures, to aid in the comparability of
the underlying business as they exclude the impact on results of
purchased, sold, opened or closed stores; and constant exchange
rate (CER) figures are provided in order to present results on a
more comparable basis, removing FX movements. These metrics have
been disclosed because management review and monitor performance of
the business on this basis. We have also included a number of
measures defined by EPRA, which are designed to enhance
transparency and comparability across the European Real Estate
sector, see notes 9 and 11 below and "Non-GAAP financial
information" in the notes to the financial
statements.
1 - Where reported amounts are presented either to the
nearest £0.1m or to the nearest 10,000 sq ft, the effect of
rounding may impact the reported percentage
change.
2 - CER is Constant Exchange Rates (Euro denominated results
for the current period have been retranslated at the exchange rate
effective for the comparative period. Euro denominated
results for the comparative period are translated at the exchange
rates effective in that period. This is performed in order to
present the reported results for the current period on a more
comparable basis).
3 - H1 2023 Revenue included £1.0m of insurance premium tax
relating to the sale of customer goods insurance not repeated in FY
2024 due to a change in the way customer goods protection is
provided in the UK. Excluding this, revenue at CER grew 0.7%. Cost
of goods sold in H1 2023 included 1.0m of additional costs
similarly not repeated in FY 2024
4 - Underlying EBITDA is defined as Operating Profit before
exceptional items, share-based payments, corporate transaction
costs, change in fair value of derivatives, gain/loss on investment
properties, variable lease payments, depreciation and the share of
associate's depreciation, interest and tax. Underlying EBITDA
therefore excludes all leasehold rent charges. Underlying profit
before tax is defined as underlying EBITDA less leasehold rent,
depreciation charged on property, plant and equipment and net
finance charges relating to bank loans and cash.
5 - Occupancy excludes offices but includes bulk tenancy. As
at 30 April 2024, closing occupancy includes 18,000 sq ft of bulk
tenancy (30 April 2023: 18,000 sq ft).
6 - MLA is Maximum Lettable Area. At 30 April 2024, Group MLA
was 8.23m sq ft (30 April 2023: 7.99m sq ft).
7 - Average Storage Rate is calculated as the revenue
generated from self-storage revenues divided by the average square
footage occupied during the period in question.
8 - Revenue per Available Square Foot ("REVPAF") is an
alternate performance measure used by the business and is
considered by management as the best KPI of economic performance of
a mature self-storage asset as it is the net outcome of the
occupancy/rate mix plus ancillary sales. It is calculated by
dividing revenue for the period by weighted average available
square feet for the same period.
9 - Adjusted Diluted EPRA EPS is based on the European Public
Real Estate Association's definition of Earnings and is defined as
profit or loss for the period after tax but excluding corporate
transaction costs, change in fair value of derivatives, gain/loss
on investment properties and the associated tax impacts. The
Company then makes further adjustments for the impact of
exceptional items, IFRS 2 share-based payment charges, exceptional
tax items, and deferred tax charges. This adjusted earnings is
divided by the diluted number of shares. The IFRS 2 cost is
excluded as it is written back to distributable reserves and is a
non-cash item (with the exception of the associated National
Insurance element). Therefore, neither the Company's ability to
distribute nor pay dividends are impacted (with the exception of
the associated National Insurance element). The financial
statements will disclose earnings on a statutory, EPRA and Adjusted
Diluted EPRA basis and will provide a full reconciliation of the
differences in the financial year in which any LTIP awards may
vest.
10 - Free cash flow is defined as cash flow before investing
and financing activities but after leasehold rent
payments.
11 - EPRA's Best Practices Recommendations
guidelines for Net Asset Value ("NAV") metrics are EPRA Net
Tangible Assets ("NTA"), EPRA Net Reinstatement Value ("NRV") and
EPRA Net Disposal Value ("NDV"). EPRA NTA is considered to be the
most relevant measure for the Group's business which provides
sustainable long term progressive returns and is now the primary
measure of net assets. The basis of calculation, including a
reconciliation to reported net assets, is set out in note
14.
12 - Like-for-like adjustments remove the impact of the 2024
openings and post-period end openings at Eastleigh, South Madrid 2,
Almere, Aalsmeer, and Rotterdam, the 2023 acquisition of Apeldoorn
and the 2023 openings of Wigan, London-Morden, Ellesmere Port,
North Barcelona, South Barcelona, Central Barcelona 3, South
Madrid, North Madrid, East Madrid, and
Amersfoort.
13 - Operating profit increased by £71.4m to £186.3m (30
April 2023: £114.9m) compared to last year, principally as a result
of an increase the gain on Investment properties of £74.4m to
£121.7m (30 April 2023: £47.3m).
14 - LTV ratio is Loan-to-Value ratio,
which is defined as net debt (excluding lease liabilities) as a
proportion of the valuation of investment properties and investment
properties under construction (excluding lease liabilities). At 30
April 2024, the Group LTV ratio was 25.7%. (31 October 2023:
25.4%)
15 - ICR is interest cover ratio and is calculated as the
ratio of underlying EBITDA after leasehold rent to underlying
finance charges.
16 - As at the date of publication, the consensus of 12
analysts' forecasts of Adjusted EPRA EPS was
46.1p.
Reconciliations between underlying metrics and statutory
metrics can be found in the financial review and financial
statements sections of this announcement.
Summary
Following three years of market
outperformance during which like-for-like revenue increased by
26.9% and REVPAF by 7.4%, we have delivered a robust financial
performance in the first half of the financial year, against a
backdrop of challenging economic conditions, particularly in the
UK, resulting in revenue down slightly by 0.8% to £109.2m (H1 2023:
£110.1m). This was driven by broadly stable like-for-like revenue
at CER (down 0.3%), the negative impact of adverse currency
exchange rate (0.6%), increases in revenue from new stores and
developments (1.0%) less the impact of changes in customer goods
protection and insurance in the UK (1.0% impact).
Profit before income tax increased
to £173.7m from £103.4m in 2023 as a result of a gain on the
revaluation of investment properties of £126.1m (H1 2023: gain of
£51.7m) partially offset by a decrease in underlying trading
performance of £2.6m.
Our operational performance across
the UK has been resilient in the current economic environment with
like-for-like revenue of £78.6m, down 1.5% from £79.8m in the prior
period. Average storage rate, driven by our industry leading
digital marketing platform, enquiry generation and store team
conversion, has again performed well, particularly considering the
strength of the prior year performance, maintaining a steady
like-for-like rate of £30.45 (H1 2023: £30.51). Like-for-like
closing occupancy at the period-end was down 2.6ppts at 75.6% (H1
2023: 78.2%). New stores and developments contributed a further
incremental £0.3m of revenue in the period.
In Paris, our trading performance
was steady with like-for-like revenue growing by 1.4%. This was
driven by our like-for-like average occupancy increasing by 1.1%
compared to the prior year with closing occupancy growing by
1.0ppts to 81.1% (H1 2023: 80.1%). Average like-for-like storage
rate was down 0.6% at €41.78 (H1 2023: €42.02).
Our Spanish business, which was
acquired in December 2019, contributed €2.0m of like-for-like
revenue, up 2.4% compared to the prior year. This was driven by
like-for-like average occupancy growth of 1.1% compared to the
prior year despite the impact of our neighbouring new store
openings in Barcelona, offset by a reduction in the average
like-for-like storage rate of 0.8% to €36.71 (H1 2023: €37.00) but
with growth in ancillary revenue a continued focus. Closing
like-for-like occupancy was up 3.6ppts at 77.7% (H1 2023: 74.1%).
We continue to grow our Spanish business and new stores and
developments added an incremental €0.8m of revenue in the period.
We have 12 stores in Spain including post-period end openings with
a further four in the pipeline bringing benefits of additional
operational leverage.
Our Belgium and Netherlands
(together "Benelux") businesses, which were acquired in 2022,
contributed €6.0m of like-for-like revenue, up 13.5% compared to
the prior year. This was driven by like-for-like average rate
growth of 7.0% in the Netherlands and 13.5% in Belgium compared to
the prior year, with the average like-for-like storage rate
increasing to €21.14 and €23.60 respectively (H1 2023: €19.76 and
€20.80) coupled with an increase in like-for-like average occupancy
of 2.1%. Closing like-for-like occupancy was up 1.6ppts in the
Netherlands up 3.4ppts in Belgium at 80.6% and 79.3% respectively
(H1 2023: 79.0% and 75.9%). We now have 20 stores in the Benelux
including post-period end openings with a further three in the
pipeline.
Group underlying EBITDA of £67.1m
decreased 3.3% at CER on the prior year and 3.7% on a reported
basis, reflecting the impact of the 2.1% strengthening of the
average Sterling to Euro exchange rate, compared to the prior
period, on the profit earned on our Paris, Spain and Benelux
businesses. Adjusted diluted EPRA EPS decreased by 10.5% in the
period to 21.2p (H1 2023: 23.7p).
During the year to date we have
opened 259,700 sq ft of new space across six stores, including
post-period end openings. We continue to expand our portfolio of
stores with a focus on key metropolitan areas and have a pipeline
of 1.5m sq ft of new stores and developments which will add 18% to
our existing asset base.
Our property portfolio valuation
(excluding investment properties under construction) has increased
by £157.7m since October 2023 to £2,838.8m. The increase comprises
a revaluation gain of £129.5m (equivalent to 4.8% of the valuation
at October 2023), £46.0m of additions and reclassifications, less
an unfavourable currency impact of £17.8m. The Group's external valuers,
Cushman & Wakefield Debenham Tie Leung Limited ("C&W"),
valued 30% of the portfolio at April 2024 with a Directors'
valuation being carried out, with the assistance of C&W, on the
remaining 70%.
Reflecting the Group's solid
trading performance, the Board is pleased to recommend an interim
dividend of 10.0p per share (H1 2023 9.9p).
Outlook
We remain focused on further
optimising the Group's operational performance and continuing to
grow in all of our geographies. Our development pipeline represents
18% of our existing MLA and our balance sheet strength and
flexibility provide us with the opportunity to consider further
self-funded selective development and acquisition opportunities in
all of our markets.
As disclosed in our 2023 full year
results, we expect the development pipeline and associated
financing to be dilutive to earnings in the 2024 financial year
before becoming highly accretive in future years as the stores
stabilise. We believe that, on stabilisation, an incremental
£30-£35 million of EBITDA will be added by the 30 projects in the
pipeline together with the stores opened in the last 18
months.
Our business model has proven to
be highly resilient as we navigate the current economic backdrop.
We believe the Group is strongly positioned with low leverage at
25.7% LTV, 68% fixed-rate debt, strong operating margins and the
potential for material earnings growth through the opening of our
pipeline space together with our existing stores, all supported by
our 25-year track record of delivering market leading operational
performance.
Since 30 April 2024, UK trading
has been slightly improving with domestic like for like occupancy
now flat year-on-year and business occupancy improving 0.90ppts
since 30 April 2024 to (3.6%) year-on-year, with Paris, Spain and
Benelux trading consistently with the first half. New store
openings are trading in line with expectations.
For
further information, please contact:
Safestore Holdings PLC
|
|
Frederic Vecchioli, Chief
Executive Officer
|
020 8732 1500
|
Simon Clinton, Chief Financial
Officer
|
|
www.safestore.com
|
|
|
|
Instinctif Partners
|
|
Guy Scarborough
|
020 7457 2020
|
Joe Quinlan
|
|
A conference call for analysts will
be held at 9:30am today.
For dial-in details of the
presentation please contact:
Guy Scarborough (guy.scarborough@instinctif.com
or telephone on 07917
178920).
Notes to Editors
· Safestore is
the UK's largest self-storage group with 192 stores on 30
April 2024, comprising 135 wholly owned stores in
the UK (including 74 in London and the South
East with the remainder in key metropolitan areas such as
Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Liverpool, Sheffield,
Leeds, Newcastle, and Bristol), 29 wholly owned stores in the Paris
region, 11 stores in Spain, 11 stores in the Netherlands and 6
stores in Belgium.
· Safestore
operates more self-storage sites inside the M25 and in
central Paris than any competitor providing more
proximity to customers in the wealthiest and more densely
populated UK and French markets.
· Safestore was
founded in the UK in 1998. It acquired the French
business "Une Pièce en Plus" ("UPP") in 2004 which was founded in
1998 by the current Safestore Group CEO Frederic
Vecchioli.
· Safestore has
been listed on the London Stock Exchange since 2007. It entered the
FTSE 250 index in October 2015.
· The Group
provides storage to over 90,000 personal and business
customers.
· As at 30 April
2024, Safestore had a maximum lettable area ("MLA") of 8.230
million sq ft (excluding the expansion pipeline stores) of which
6.129 million sq ft was occupied.
· Safestore
employs around 750 people in
the UK, Paris, Spain, the Netherlands and
Belgium.
Our Strategy
The Group intends to continue to
deliver on its proven strategy of leveraging its well-located asset
base, management expertise, infrastructure, scale and balance sheet
strength and further increase its Earnings per Share by:
· Optimising the
trading performance of the existing portfolio;
· Maintaining a
strong and flexible capital structure; and
· Taking advantage
of selective portfolio management and expansion opportunities in
our existing markets and, if appropriate, in attractive new
geographies either through a joint venture or in our own
right.
In addition, the Group's strategy
is pursued whilst maintaining a strong focus on Environmental,
Social and Governance ("ESG") matters and a summary of our ESG
strategy is provided further on.
Optimisation of Portfolio
With the opening of 35 new stores
since August 2016 including post period openings, in addition to
the acquisitions of 47 existing trading stores, we have established
and strengthened our market-leading portfolio in the UK and Paris
and have entered the Spanish, Netherlands and Belgium markets. We
have a high quality, fully invested estate in all geographies and,
of our 192 stores as at 30 April 2024, 103 are in London and the
South East of England or in Paris, with 61 in the other major UK
cities and 28 in Spain and the Benelux region. In the UK, we now
operate 51 stores within the M25, which represents a higher number
of stores than any other competitor.
Our MLA has increased to 8.2m sq
ft at 30 April 2024 (FY 2023: 8.1m sq ft). At the current occupancy
level of 76.9% on a like-for-like basis, we have 2.1m sq ft of
fully invested unoccupied space (3.8m sq ft including the
development pipeline and post-period end openings), of which 1.5m
sq ft is in our UK stores, 0.3m sq ft is in Paris and 0.3m sq ft is
in Spain and Benelux. In total, unlet space at our existing stores
is the equivalent of c. 53 empty stores located across the estate
and provides the Group with significant opportunity to grow
further. We have a proven track record of filling our vacant space
at efficiently managed rates, so we view this availability of space
with considerable optimism. We will also benefit from the
operational leverage from the fact that this available space is
fully invested, and the related operating costs are essentially
fixed and already included in the Group cost base. Our continued
focus will be on ensuring that we drive occupancy to utilise this
capacity at carefully managed rates. From full year 2013 to half
year 2024, occupancy of the stores in the portfolio in 2013 that
remain in the Group today has increased from 63.1% to 77.8%, i.e.
an average of 1.3ppts per year and equivalent to a total of c. 1.0m
sq ft.
There are three elements that are
critical to the optimisation of our existing portfolio:
· Enquiry
generation through an efficient marketing operation;
· Strong
conversion of enquiries into new lets; and
· Disciplined
central revenue management and cost control.
Digital Marketing Expertise
Awareness of self-storage remains
relatively low with half of the UK population either knowing very
little or nothing about self-storage (source: SSA Annual Report
2024). In the UK, many of our new customers are using self-storage
for the first time and it is largely a brand-blind purchase.
Typically, customers requiring storage start their journey by
conducting online research using generic keywords in their locality
(e.g. "storage in Borehamwood", "self-storage near me") which means
that geographic coverage and search engine prominence remain key
competitive advantages.
We believe there is a clear
benefit of scale in the generation of customer enquiries. The Group
has continued to invest in technology and in-house expertise which
has resulted in the development of a leading digital marketing
platform that has generated 39% enquiry growth for the Group over
the last five years, an annual growth of 7%. Our in-house expertise
and significant annual budget have enabled us to deliver strong
results.
The Group's online strength came
to the fore during the various Covid-19 lockdowns and has since
continued to be the predominant channel for customer acquisition.
Online enquiries in the first half of this year made up 89% of all
our enquiries in the UK (H1 2023: 89%), with 85% in France (H1
2023: 84%). The majority of our online enquiries now originate
from a mobile device (69% share in UK for H1 2024, H1 2023: 65%),
highlighting the need for continual investment in our responsive
web platform for a "mobile-first" world. We continue to invest in
activities that promote a strong search engine presence to grow
enquiry volume whilst managing efficiency in terms of overall cost
per enquiry and cost per new let. Group marketing costs for the
half year as a percentage of revenue were in line with the previous
year at 4.0% (H1 2023: 3.6%).
During the period and post-period
end, the Group demonstrated its ability to integrate newly
developed and acquired stores into its marketing platform with
successful new openings at Eastleigh, South Madrid, Almere,
Aalsmeer, and Rotterdam in the Netherlands; and the satellite store
at London Paddington Park West Place. We have clearly demonstrated
that our marketing platform is transferrable into multiple overseas
geographies.
Motivated and effective store teams benefiting from
investment in training and development
Training, People and Performance Management
In what is still a relatively
immature and poorly understood market, customer service and selling
skills at the point of sale remain essential in earning the trust
of the customer and in driving the appropriate balance of volumes
and unit price in order to optimise revenue growth in each
store.
Our enthusiastic, well-trained,
and customer-centric sales team remains a key differentiator and a
strength of our business. Understanding the needs of our customers
and using this knowledge to develop trusted in-store advisors is a
fundamental part of driving revenue growth and market
share.
Safestore has been an Investors in
People ("IIP") accredited organisation since 2003 and we
passionately believe that our continued success is dependent on our
highly motivated and well-trained colleagues. Following the award
of a Bronze accreditation in 2015, a Gold accreditation in 2018,
and a Platinum accreditation in 2021, we were delighted to be
awarded the "we invest in people" Platinum accreditation again in
March 2024. Platinum is the highest accolade in the Investors
in People scale and achieving Platinum twice is a fantastic
achievement placing us as an employer of choice.
IIP is the international standard
for people management, defining what it takes to lead, support, and
engage people effectively to achieve sustainable results.
Underpinning the standard is the Investors in People framework,
reflecting the latest workplace trends, essential skills and
effective structures required to outperform in any industry.
Investors in People enables organisations to benchmark against the
best in the business on an international scale. We are proud to
have our colleagues recognised to such a high standard.
We are committed to growing and
rewarding our people and we tailor our development, reward and
recognition programmes to reflect this. Our IIP recognised coaching
programme, launched in 2018 and upgraded every year since,
continues to be a driving force behind the continuous performance
improvement demonstrated by our store colleagues.
Our online learning portal,
combined with the energy and flexibility of our store colleagues,
allows us to deliver our award-winning development
programmes.
All new recruits to the business
benefit from enhanced induction and training tools that have been
developed in-house and enable us to quickly identify high-potential
individuals and increase their speed to competency. They receive
individual performance targets within four weeks of joining the
business and are placed on the "pay-for-skills" programme that
allows accelerated basic pay increases dependent on success in
demonstrating specific and defined skills. The key target of our
programme remains that we grow our talent through our internal
Store Manager Development ("SMD") programme, and we are pleased
with our progress to date.
Our SMD programme has been in
place since 2016 and is a key part of succession planning for
future Store Managers. All eleven participants of our 2023 SMD
programme successfully completed their Level 3 Management and
Leadership apprenticeship, and we're delighted that ten of those
participants were awarded distinctions.
In January 2024, we commenced our
seventh SMD programme. Funded by the Apprenticeship Levy this
programme provides the opportunity to complete a Level 3 Management
and Leadership apprenticeship, with the additional opportunity to
complete an Institute of Leadership and Management ("ILM")
qualification.
Our Senior Leadership Development
programme ("LEAD") focuses on developing our high performing Store
Managers, aimed at preparing them for more senior roles within the
business. We are proud that all nine participants of our Senior
Leadership Development programme (LEAD Academy) successfully
completed their Level 5 Management and Leadership apprenticeship;
six of those participants were awarded Distinctions.
Our performance dashboard allows
our store and field teams to focus on the key operating metrics of
the business providing an appropriate level of management
information to enable swift decision making. Reporting performance
down to individual colleague level enhances our competitive
approach to team and individual performance. We continue to reward
our store colleagues for their performance with bonuses of up to
50% of basic salary based on their achievements against individual
targets for new lets, occupancy, and ancillary sales. In addition,
our Values and Behaviours framework is overlaid on individuals'
performance in order to assess performance and development needs on
a quarterly basis.
Our "Make the Difference" people
forum, launched in 2018, enables frequent opportunities for us to
hear and respond to our colleagues. Our network of 15 "People
Champions" collects questions and feedback from their peers across
the business and put them to members of the Executive Committee. We
drive change and continuous improvement in responding to the
feedback we receive for "Our Business, Our Customers and Our
Colleagues".
People Champions:
· Consult and collect the views and suggestions of all
colleagues that they represent;
· Engage in the bi-annual "Make the Difference" people forum,
raising and representing the views of their colleagues;
and
· Consult with and discuss feedback with management and the
leadership team at Safestore.
Our values are authentic, having
been created by our people. They are core to the employment life
cycle and bring consistency to our culture. Our leaders have high
values alignment enabling us to make the right decisions for our
colleagues and our customers.
Our customers continue to be at
the heart of everything we do, whether it be in store, online or in
their communities. Our commitment to our customers mirrors that of
our commitment to our colleagues.
Technological Developments
After delivering the appropriate
technology the Group recently opened a further two fully automated,
unmanned, satellite self-storage centre in Eastleigh and London
Paddington Park West having opened its first in Christchurch in FY
2023. Utilising industry leading automated technology, along with
in-house created communication and control technologies, customers
can securely enter the building and their storage unit from a
simple app on their mobile phone. Several additional unmanned
satellite stores are currently under various stages of development
in the UK.
Our customers also have the option
to complete a booking and contract for a self-storage unit online
for any UK store location. The Group's belief is that its
multi-channel sales strategy utilising, full automation, colleague
interaction through our store sales teams or our specialist call
centre and National Accounts team provide each type of customer
with the most tailored and easy way to buy self-storage at
Safestore.
Customer Satisfaction
In February 2024, Safestore UK won
the Feefo Platinum Trusted Service award for the fifth time. The
award is given to businesses which have achieved Gold standard for
three consecutive years. It is an independent mark of excellence
that recognises businesses for delivering exceptional experiences,
as rated by real customers. In addition to using Feefo, Safestore
invites customers to leave a review on a number of review
platforms, including Google and Trustpilot. Our ratings for each of
these three providers in the UK are between 4.7 and 4.9 out of 5.
In France, Une Pièce en Plus uses Google and Trustpilot to obtain
independent customer reviews and In H1 2024, achieved a 4.7 out of
5 and a "TrustScore" of 4.6 out of 5 respectively. In Spain, OMB
collects customer feedback via Google reviews and has attained a
score of 4.9 out of 5.
Central Revenue Management and Cost Control
We continue to pursue a balanced
approach to revenue management. We aim to optimise revenue per
available space ("REVPAF") by improving the utilisation of the
available space in our portfolio at carefully managed rates. Our
central pricing team is responsible for the management of our
dynamic pricing policy, which is set weekly at the granular level
of store / unit size, together with the implementation of
promotional offers and the identification of additional ancillary
revenue opportunities. Whilst prices are managed centrally, where
it is appropriate the store sales teams have the ability to offer
discretionary discounts or a Lowest Price Guarantee in the event
that a local competitor is offering a lower price in order to
optimise REVPAF.
Average rates are predominantly
influenced by:
· The store
location and catchment area;
· The volume of
enquiries generated online and available space;
· The store team
skills at converting these enquiries into new lets at the expected
price; and
· The very
granular pricing policy and the confidence provided by analytical
capabilities and systems that smaller players might
lack.
We believe that Safestore has a
very strong proposition in each of these areas.
Costs are managed centrally with a
lean structure maintained at Head Office. Enhancements to cost
control are continually considered and, particularly in the context
of the current inflationary environment, the cost base is
challenged on an ongoing basis.
Strong and Flexible Capital Structure
We believe that our capital
structure is appropriate for our business, with a strong position
which provides us with the flexibility to take advantage of
carefully evaluated development and acquisition
opportunities.
The Group finances its operations
through a combination of equity and debt. As at 30 April 2024, the
Loan to Value ("LTV") ratio for the Group was 25.7% (H1 2023:
25.3%) which is well below the 40% maximum policy rate which the
Board considers appropriate.
Both this LTV and the interest
cover ratio of 5.0x for the twelve-month period ended 30 April 2024
provides us with significant headroom compared to our banking
covenants (LTV of 60% and ICR of 2.4:1).
At 30 April 2024, the Group's
weighted average cost of debt was 3.77% (3.35% after capitalised
interest) and 68% of our drawn debt was incurred a fixed rate of
interest (FY 2023: 2.97% and 73% respectively). The weighted
average maturity of the Group's drawn debt was 4.5 years (FY 2023:
4.1 years) with this increasing to 4.7 years following the
repayment of the 2024 USPP in May 2024.
We have ample liquidity with
£245.4 million of undrawn bank facilities at 30 April 2024
following the exercise of an additional £100 million accordion
option on our revolving credit facility which takes total funds
available under our committed RCF to £500m. In addition, the
Group's operations are strongly cash generative and produce
sufficient free cash flow to fund our progressive dividend policy
together with the development of three to four new stores per annum
depending on location and cost of land.
The ongoing market for
self-storage is supporting investor demand which has led to
increased valuations. In the period ending 30 April 2024,
valuations on a constant currency basis of the standing store
portfolio (excluding additions and reclassifications) grew £130.2m
to £2,811.3m (FY 2023: £2,681.1m) demonstrating the underlying
strength of the balance sheet.
Recent refinancing
On 30 April 2024, the Group
exercised the RCF's accordion option to increase the committed
facility by £100m to £500m. The facility currently has a term to
November 2027 with an option for us to extend by a further
year.
The Group pays interest on the RCF
at a margin of 125bps plus SONIA or Euribor depending on both
Sterling and Euro drawn amounts. The margin on the facility is also
linked to ESG targets, enabling a reduction in the margin of up to
5bps to 120bps when certain targets are met.
The 2024 tranche of US Private
Placement notes matured at the end of May 2024 and were repaid
utilising existing facilities. The Euro denominated borrowings
provide a natural hedge against the Group's investment in the
Paris, Spain and Benelux businesses.
The main covenants under all of
the Group's borrowings are a Group Loan-to-value ("LTV") covenant
of 60% and an Interest Cover Ratio covenant of 2.4x. At 30 April
2024, all covenants have been comfortably met.
ESG
Strategy
ESG: Sustainable Self-Storage
Our purpose - to add stakeholder value by developing
profitable and sustainable spaces that allow individuals,
businesses and local communities to thrive - is supported by
the "pillars" of our sustainability strategy: our people, our
customers, our community and our environment. In addition, the
Group and its stakeholders recognise that its efforts are part of a
broader movement and we have, therefore, aligned our objectives
with the UN Sustainable Development Goals ("SDGs"). We reviewed the
significance of each goal to our business, their importance to our
stakeholders and assessed our ability to contribute to each of
them. Following this materiality exercise, we have chosen to focus
our efforts in the areas where we can have a meaningful impact.
These are "Decent work and economic growth" (goal 8), "Sustainable
cities and communities" (goal 11), "Responsible consumption and
production" (goal 12) and "Climate action" (goal 13).
Sustainability is embedded into
day-to-day responsibilities at Safestore and, accordingly, we have
opted for a governance structure which reflects this. Two members
of the Executive Management team co-chair a cross-functional
sustainability group consisting of the functional leads responsible
for each area of the business.
In 2018, the Group established
medium-term targets in each of the "pillars" towards which the
Group continued to progress in H1 2024.
Our people: Safestore was
awarded the prestigious Investors in People ("IIP") Platinum
accreditation in both 2021 and 2024. Platinum is the highest level of accreditation possible to
achieve on our We invest in people accreditation.
It means policies and practices
around supporting people are embedded in every corner of
Safestore. And in
a platinum company, everyone knows they have a part to play in the
company doing well and are always looking for ways to
improve.
Our customers: the Group's
brands continue to deliver a high-quality experience, from online
enquiry to move-in. This is reflected in customer satisfaction
scores on independent review platforms (Trustpilot, Feefo, Google)
of over 90% in each market. The introduction of digital contracts
during the pandemic offers both customer convenience and a
reduction in printing, saving an estimated 44,000 pieces of paper
each month.
Our community: we remain
committed to being a responsible business by making a positive
contribution within the local communities wherever our stores are
based. We continue to do this by developing brownfield sites and
actively engaging with local communities when we establish a new
store, identifying and implementing greener approaches in the way
we build and operate our stores, helping charities and communities
to make better use of limited space, and creating and sustaining
local employment opportunities directly and indirectly through the
many small and medium-sized enterprises which use our space. During
FY 2023, the space occupied by local charities in 184 units across
104 stores was 20,941 sq ft and worth £0.9 million.
Our environment: we are
committed to ensuring our buildings are constructed responsibly and
their ongoing operation has a minimal impact on local communities
and the environment. It should be noted that the self-storage
sector is not a significant consumer of energy when compared with
other real estate subsectors. As a result, operational emissions
intensity tends to be far lower. According to a 2023 report by KPMG
and EPRA, self-storage generates the lowest greenhouse gas
emissions intensity (4 kg/m2 for scope 1 and 2) of all
European real estate sub-sectors. Reflecting the considerable
progress made on energy mix, efficiency measures and waste
reduction to date, our emissions intensity is considerably than the
self-storage subsector average.
In H1 2024, the Group continued
progress towards achieving operational carbon neutrality (target
2035) by implementing key elements of the transition plan,
specifically removal of gas-burning appliances from a further six
stores in the UK estate and ensuring all new openings meet or
exceed minimum energy performance standard of a 'B' rating
and include energy solar PV installations where
viable.
In addition to the IIP award and
the customer satisfaction ratings, the Group has received
recognition for its sustainability progress and disclosures in the
last twelve months. Safestore has been given a Silver rating in the
2023 EPRA Sustainability BPR awards. The Global ESG Benchmark for
Real Assets ("GRESB") has once again awarded Safestore an "A"
rating in its 2023 Public Disclosures assessment. MSCI has also
awarded Safestore its second-highest rating of "AA" for ESG. The
Group has also been awarded the highest rating of five stars by
Support the Goals.
Portfolio Management
Our approach to store development
and acquisitions in the UK, Paris, Spain, the Netherlands, Belgium
and, through our joint venture with Carlyle, in Germany, continues
to be pragmatic, flexible and focused on the return on
capital.
Our experienced and skilled
property teams in all geographies continue to seek investment
opportunities in new sites to add to the store pipeline. However,
investments will only be made if they comply with our disciplined
and strict investment criteria. Our preference is to acquire sites
that are capable of being fully operational within 18-24 months
from completion.
Since 2016, the Group has opened
35 new stores in the UK (17), Paris (5), Spain (8) and the
Netherlands (5) adding 1,677,000 sq ft of MLA.
In addition, the Group has
acquired 47 existing stores through the acquisitions of Space
Maker, Alligator, Fort Box, Salus and Your Room in the UK, OhMyBox!
in Barcelona, the Lokabox and M3 group from our Benelux JV
acquisition, and Apeldoorn in the Netherlands. These acquisitions
added a further 1,890,000 sq ft of MLA and revenue performance has
been enhanced in all cases under the Group's ownership.
In the same period, we have also
completed the revenue enhancing extensions and refurbishments of
eleven stores adding a net 141,000 sq ft of fully invested space to
the estate. All of these stores are performing in line with or
ahead of their business plans.
The Group's current pipeline of
new developments and store extensions (see below) has grown
significantly over the last year and now constitutes c. 1,486,000
sq ft of future MLA. The pipeline is equivalent to c. 18% of the
existing portfolio. The outstanding capital expenditure of £170
million is expected to be funded from the Group's existing
resources.
Property Pipeline
Openings of New Stores and Extensions
Opened YTD 2024
|
FH/LH
|
MLA
|
Development Type
|
New
Developments
|
Eastleigh
|
LH
|
14.0
|
Conversion, Satellite
|
London- Paddington Park
West
|
FH
|
13.0
|
Conversion, Satellite
|
Madrid- South 2
|
FH
|
68.8
|
Conversion
|
Randstad- Aalsmeer
|
FH
|
48.4
|
New build
|
Randstad- Almere
|
FH
|
44.5
|
Conversion
|
Randstad- Rotterdam
|
FH
|
71.0
|
New build
|
Total New Developments Opened H1 2024 and post-period
end
|
259.7
|
|
In the period we opened two stores
in the UK with a further four in Spain (1) and the Netherlands (3)
opened early in H2 2024, adding in total 259,700 sq ft of MLA to
our portfolio contributing significantly to our operational scale
in our growing EU markets. The new stores include two new satellite
stores, adding capacity in high-demand locations whilst leveraging
the existing cost base and customer relationships.
Development Sites
Opening H2 2024
|
FH/LH
|
Status*
|
MLA
|
Development Type
|
|
Redevelopments and Extensions
|
|
London- Holloway
|
FH
|
C, UC
|
9.5
|
Extension
|
|
Paris- Poissy
|
FH
|
C, UC
|
25.0
|
Extension
|
|
Paris- Pyrenees
|
LH
|
C, UC
|
15.4
|
Extension
|
|
Total Redevelopments and Extensions H2 2024
|
49.9
|
|
New Developments
|
|
London- Lea Bridge
|
FH
|
C, UC
|
80.9
|
New build
|
|
St Albans
|
FH
|
C, UC
|
56.0
|
Conversion
|
|
Paris- South Paris
|
FH
|
C, UC
|
55.0
|
New build
|
|
Total New Developments H2 2024
|
191.9
|
|
Total Opening H2 2024
|
241.8
|
|
Opening 2025
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Developments
|
|
London- Walton
|
FH
|
C, PG
|
20.7
|
Conversion
|
|
London- Wembley
|
FH
|
C, PG
|
55.0
|
New build
|
|
London- Watford
|
FH
|
CE, PG
|
57.5
|
New build
|
|
London- Woodford
|
FH
|
C, PG
|
68.7
|
New build
|
|
Paris- La Défense
|
FH
|
C, UC
|
44.0
|
Mixed use facility
|
|
Paris- West 3
|
FH
|
C, UC
|
58.0
|
New build
|
|
Paris- East 1
|
FH
|
C, PG
|
60.0
|
Conversion
|
|
Paris- North West 1
|
FH
|
C, PG
|
54.0
|
Conversion
|
|
Paris- West 1
|
FH
|
C, PG
|
56.0
|
New build
|
|
Paris- West 4
|
FH
|
CE, PG
|
53.0
|
New Build
|
|
Barcelona- Central 2
|
LH
|
C, UC
|
20.4
|
Conversion
|
|
Madrid- North East
|
FH
|
C, UC
|
57.0
|
Conversion
|
|
Madrid- South West
|
FH
|
C, UC
|
45.4
|
Conversion
|
|
Pamplona
|
FH
|
C, PG
|
60.7
|
Conversion
|
|
Randstad- Amsterdam
|
FH
|
C, PG
|
65.4
|
New build
|
|
Randstad- Utrecht
|
FH
|
C, PG
|
50.0
|
Conversion
|
|
Brussels- Zaventem
|
FH
|
C, PG
|
47.4
|
New build
|
|
Total New Developments 2025
|
873.2
|
|
Opening Beyond 2025
|
|
|
|
|
|
New Developments
|
|
London- Bermondsey
|
FH
|
C, STP
|
50.0
|
New build
|
|
London- Old Kent Road
|
FH
|
C, STP
|
75.6
|
New build
|
|
London- Romford
|
FH
|
C, STP
|
41.0
|
New build
|
|
Shoreham
|
FH
|
CE, PG
|
47.0
|
New build
|
|
Hemel Hempstead
|
FH
|
CE, STP
|
51.3
|
New build
|
|
London- Kingston
|
FH
|
CE, STP
|
55.0
|
New build
|
|
Welwyn Garden City
|
FH
|
CE, STP
|
51.0
|
New build
|
|
Total New Developments Beyond 2025
|
370.9
|
|
Total Pipeline
|
1,485.9
|
|
|
|
*C = completed, CE = contracts exchanged, STP = subject to
planning, PG = planning granted, UC = under
construction
|
|
We have three redevelopments and
extensions and a further three new stores under construction with
expected completion dates in H2 2024. These will add 241,800 sq ft
of new space and are all located in London and its surroundings and
in Paris.
Our pipeline of new store
developments continues with 30 projects identified which will
deliver an additional 1,486,000 sq ft of new space. The
developments are located in all of our markets and are focused in
the key cities London (11 stores, 565,000 sq ft), Paris (9 stores,
420,000 sq ft), Barcelona and Madrid (3 stores, 123,000 sq ft), the
Randstad in the Netherlands (2 stores, 115,000 sq ft), Brussels (1
store, 47,000 sq ft) and other regional cities (4 stores, 216,000
sq ft).
The pipeline is expected to
deliver 873,200 sq ft of new space opening in FY 2025 and 370,850
in later years. All property projects require planning permission
and of the projects 75% are projects with planning granted and 25%
of projects are still subject to planning. Typically, we aim to
structure our development opportunities to minimise planning risk
and working capital by making completion on contracts for
opportunities to also be subject to planning.
Of the development projects two
(7%) are leasehold sites where the city-centre locations have
limited freehold development opportunities but are where we believe
there is strong customer demand.
Portfolio Summary
The self-storage market has been
growing consistently for over 20 years across many European
countries, but few regions offer the unique characteristics of
London and Paris, both of which consist of large, wealthy and
densely populated markets. In the London region, the population is
13 million inhabitants with a density of 5,200 inhabitants per
square mile in the region, 11,000 per square mile in central London
and up to 32,000 per square mile in the densest
boroughs.
The population of the Paris urban
area is 10.7 million inhabitants with a density of 9,300
inhabitants per square mile in the urban area but 54,000 per square
mile in the City of Paris and first belt, where 69% of our French
stores are located and which has one of the highest population
densities in the western world. 85% of the Paris region population
live in central parts of the city versus the rest of the urban
area, which compares with 60% in the London region. There are
currently c. 250 storage centres within the M25 as compared to only
c. 125 in the Paris urban area.
The density of self-storage supply is estimated to be 0.89 sq ft
per inhabitants in the UK and 0.40 sq ft in Paris.
In addition, barriers to entry in
these two important city markets are high, due to land values and
limited availability of sites as well as planning regulation. This
is the case for Paris and its first belt in particular, which
inhibits new development possibilities.
Over the last four years the Group
has expanded into further attractive, under-penetrated markets in
Spain, the Netherlands and Belgium with a focus on the conurbations
of Barcelona, Madrid, the Randstad area and Brussels. All these new
markets, particularly Madrid and Barcelona, are wealthy
high-density conurbations with very high barriers to entry. The
density of self-storage supply is estimated at 0.50 sq ft per
inhabitants in the Netherlands, 0.20 sq ft in Belgium, 0.54 sq ft
in Madrid and 0.65 sq ft in Barcelona.
Store Portfolio by Region
|
London
&
|
Rest of
|
UK
|
Paris
|
Spain
|
Benelux
|
Group
|
|
South East
|
UK
|
Total
|
|
|
|
Total
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of Stores
|
74
|
61
|
135
|
29
|
11
|
17
|
192
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Let Square Feet (m sq ft)
|
2.252
|
2.064
|
4.316
|
1.104
|
0.179
|
0.530
|
6.129
|
Maximum Lettable Area (m sq
ft)
|
3.000
|
2.820
|
5.820
|
1.360
|
0.340
|
0.710
|
8.230
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Average Let Square Feet per store (k
sq ft)
|
30
|
34
|
32
|
38
|
16
|
31
|
32
|
Average Store Capacity (k sq
ft)
|
41
|
46
|
43
|
47
|
31
|
42
|
43
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Closing Occupancy %
|
75.3%
|
73.2%
|
74.3%
|
81.1%
|
52.1%
|
73.9%
|
74.4%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Average Rate (£ per sq
ft)
|
36.85
|
23.30
|
30.34
|
35.91
|
25.60
|
18.39
|
30.16
|
Revenue (£'m)
|
50.2
|
29.5
|
79.7
|
21.6
|
2.40
|
5.50
|
109.2
|
Average Revenue per Store
(£'m)
|
0.68
|
0.48
|
0.59
|
0.74
|
0.22
|
0.32
|
0.57
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The reported totals have not been
adjusted for the impact of rounding
|
We have a strong position in both
the UK and Paris markets operating 135 stores in the UK, 74 of
which are in London and the South East, and 29 stores in
Paris.
In the UK, 63% of our revenue is
generated by our stores in London and the South East. On average,
our stores in London and the South East are smaller than in the
rest of the UK but the rental rates achieved are materially higher,
enabling these stores to typically achieve similar or better
margins than the larger stores. In London we operate 51 stores
within the M25, more than any other competitor.
In France, we have a leading
position in the heart of the affluent City of Paris market with
nine stores branded as Une Pièce en Plus ("UPP") ("A spare room").
Over 60% of the UPP stores are located in a cluster within a
five-mile radius of the city centre, which facilitates strong
operational and marketing synergies as well as options to
differentiate and channel customers to the right store subject to
their preference for convenience or price affordability. The
Parisian market has attractive socio-demographic characteristics
for self-storage and we believe that UPP enjoys unique strategic
strength in such an attractive market.
In Spain, including post-period
end openings, the Group has twelve stores open in Barcelona and
Madrid with a further three stores in the pipeline in these two
cities and one in Pamplona in the Basque Country/ Navarra region
which has clusters of population benefitting from an above average
dynamic and healthy economy
In the Benelux Region, including
post-period end openings, the Group has fourteen stores open in the
Netherlands and six in Belgium. The pipeline contains a further two
stores in the Netherlands and two in Belgium.
In addition, we have the benefit
of a leading national presence in the UK outside of London where
the stores are predominantly located in the centre of key
metropolitan areas such as Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool,
Bristol, Newcastle, Glasgow and Edinburgh.
Market
The self-storage market in the UK,
France, Spain, the Netherlands and Belgium remains relatively
immature compared to geographies such as the USA and Australia. The
SSA Annual Survey (May 2024) confirmed that self-storage capacity
stands at 0.89 sq ft per head of population in the UK. The most
recent report relating to Europe (FEDESSA's 2023 report) showed
that capacity in France is 0.35 sq ft per capita. Whilst the Paris
market density is greater than France, we estimate it to be
significantly lower than the UK at around 0.4 sq ft per inhabitant.
This compares with closer to 7 sq ft per inhabitant in the USA and
2 sq ft in Australia. In the UK, in order to reach the US density
of supply, it would require the addition of around another 17,000
stores as compared to c. 1,500 currently. In the Paris region, it
would require around 2,400 new facilities versus c. 122 currently
opened.
In Spain, the Netherlands and
Belgium, penetration is similarly low. In Spain capacity is around
0.32 sq ft per head of population and the consumer is serviced by
just 585 stores. In the Netherlands penetration is 0.50 sq ft per
head of population (320 stores) and in Belgium 0.20 sq ft per head
of population (96 stores).
The Group has a JV with Carlyle in
Germany. The German market is one of Europe's more under-penetrated
markets with just 0.21 sq ft of storage space per capita and,
according to the 2023 FEDESSA report, there are just 530 facilities
in the country and 17.4 million sq ft of lettable space.
Our interpretation of the most
recent 2024 SSA report is that operators remain optimistic about
their trading and the future growth of the industry. The level of
development estimated for the next three years is similar to that
witnessed in recent years and we do not consider this level of new
supply growth to be of concern, especially as we believe new supply
helps to create increased awareness of what is a relatively
immature product on Europe. We estimate new supply to represent
around 2% to 3% of the traditional self-storage industry in the UK.
These figures represent gross openings and do not consider storage
facilities closing or being converted for alternative uses. We
estimate that a small proportion of these sites compete with
existing Safestore stores.
New supply in London and Paris is
likely to continue to be limited in the short and medium term as a
result of planning restrictions, competition from a variety of
other uses and the availability of suitable land.
The supply in the UK market,
according to the SSA Survey, remains relatively fragmented despite
a number of acquisitions in the sector in recent years. The SSA's
estimates of the scale of the UK industry are finessed each year
and changes from one year to the next represent improved data in
addition to new supply. In the 2024 report the SSA estimates that
2,706 self-storage facilities exist in the UK market including
around 1,694 container-based operations. At the point in time that
the 2024 survey was written, Safestore was the industry leader by
number of stores with 133 wholly owned sites followed by Big Yellow
with 109 stores (including Armadillo), Access with 60 stores,
Shurgard with 43 stores, Lok'n Store with 43 stores, Storage King
with 42 stores and Ready Steady Store with 27 stores. In aggregate,
the top seven leading operators account for around 20% of the UK
store portfolio. The remaining c. 2,182 self-storage outlets
(including container-based operations) are independently owned in
small chains or single units. Based on the 2023 SSA reports there
were 1,086 storage brands operating in the UK.
Our French business, UPP, is
mainly present in the core wealthier and more densely populated
inner Paris and first belt areas, whereas our two main competitors,
Shurgard and Homebox, have a greater presence in the outskirts and
second belt of Paris.
Our Spanish business currently
operates in Barcelona and Madrid. The metropolitan areas of
Barcelona and Madrid have combined growing high-density populations
of twelve million inhabitants and significant barriers to
entry.
Our focus in the Netherlands
market is on the densely populated Amsterdam and Randstad
conurbations. The Netherlands is the second most developed
self-storage market in Europe (after the UK) but still remains
under-penetrated with approximately 320 stores and 0.50 sq ft per
capita of storage space.
Belgium is one of the more
under-penetrated markets in Europe with just 96 stores and 0.20 sq
ft per capita of self-storage space. In Belgium our presence is
focused on Brussels and the significant urban conurbations of
Liege, Charleroi and Nivelles.
Consumer awareness of self-storage
appears to be increasing but at a relatively slow rate, providing
an opportunity for future industry growth. The SSA survey indicates
that approximately half of consumers have low awareness about the
service offered by self-storage operators or had not heard of
self-storage at all. Since 2014, this statistic has only fallen
9ppts from 61%. Therefore, the opportunity to grow awareness,
combined with limited new industry supply, makes for an attractive
industry backdrop.
Self-storage is a brand-blind
product. 52% of respondents in the 2024 SSA Survey were unable to
name a self-storage business in their local area. The lack of
relevance of brand in the process of purchasing a self-storage
product emphasises the need for operators to have a strong online
presence. This requirement for a strong online presence was also
reiterated by the SSA Survey where 76% of those surveyed (76% in
2023) confirmed that an internet search would be their chosen means
of finding a self-storage unit to contact, whilst knowledge of a
physical location of a store as reason for enquiry was only c. 30%
of respondents (c. 30% in 2023).
There are numerous drivers of
self-storage growth. Most private and business customers need
storage either temporarily or permanently for different reasons at
any point in the economic cycle, resulting in a market depth that
is, in our view, the reason for its exceptional resilience. The
growth of the market is driven both by the fluctuation of economic
conditions, which has an impact on the mix of demand, and by
growing awareness of the product.
Our domestic customers' need for
storage is often driven by life events such as births, marriages,
bereavements, divorces or by the housing market including house
moves and developments and moves between rental properties. We have
estimated that UK owner-occupied housing transactions drive around
8-13% of the Group's new lets.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Business and Personal Customers
|
UK
|
Paris
|
Spain
|
|
|
Benelux
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Personal Customers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Numbers (% of total)
|
|
77%
|
81%
|
91%
|
|
|
84%
|
|
|
|
|
Square feet occupied (% of
total)
|
|
59%
|
63%
|
84%
|
|
|
76%
|
|
|
|
|
Average Length of Stay
(months)
|
17.2
|
28.3
|
21.5
|
|
|
29.1
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Business Customers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Numbers (% of total)
|
|
23%
|
19%
|
9%
|
|
|
16%
|
|
|
|
|
Square feet occupied (% of
total)
|
|
41%
|
37%
|
16%
|
|
|
24%
|
|
|
|
|
Average Length of Stay
(months)
|
26.3
|
26.7
|
24.0
|
|
|
32.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Our customer base is resilient and
diverse and consists of around 90,000 domestic, business and
National Accounts customers across London, Paris, Spain, the UK
regions, the Netherlands and Belgium.
Business Model
The Group operates in a market
with relatively low consumer awareness. It is anticipated that this
will increase over time as the industry matures. To date, despite
the financial crisis in 2007/08, the implementation of VAT in the
UK on self-storage in 2012, Brexit and the Covid-19 pandemic, the
industry has been exceptionally resilient. In the context of
uncertain economic conditions, driven by inflation and the war in
Ukraine, the industry remains well positioned with limited new
supply coming into the self-storage market.
With more stores inside London's
M25 than any other operator and a strong position in central Paris,
we have leading positions in the two most important and
demographically favourable markets in Europe. In addition, our
regional presence in the UK is unsurpassed and contributes to the
success of our industry-leading National Accounts business. In the
UK, Safestore is the leading operator by number of wholly owned
stores. With 53% of customers travelling for less than 15 minutes
to their storage facility (2024 SSA Survey). Our national store
footprint represents a competitive advantage. Based on the revenue
reported by Cushman and Wakefield in the various SSA reports, our
market share in the UK based on revenue is 21%.
The Group's capital-efficient
portfolio of 192 stores in the UK, Paris, Spain, the Netherlands
and Belgium consists of a mix of freehold and leasehold stores. In
order to grow the business and secure the best locations for our
facilities we have maintained a flexible approach to leasehold and
freehold developments as well as being comfortable with a range of
building types, from new builds to conversions of warehouses and
underground car parks.
Currently, around a quarter of our
stores in the UK are leaseholds with an average remaining lease
length at 30 April 2024 of 13.6 years (FY 2023: 12.4 years).
Although our property valuation for leaseholds is based on future
cash flows until the next contractual lease renewal date, Safestore
has a demonstrable track record of successfully re-gearing leases
several years before renewal whilst at the same time achieving
concessions from landlords.
In England, we benefit from the
Landlord and Tenant Act that protects our rights for renewal except
in case of redevelopment. The vast majority of our leasehold stores
have building characteristics or locations in retail parks that
make current usage either the optimal and best use of the property
or the only one authorised by planning. We observe that our
landlords, who are property investors, value the quality of
Safestore as a tenant and typically prefer to extend the length of
the leases that they have in their portfolio, enabling Safestore to
maintain favourable terms.
In Paris, where 40% of stores are
leaseholds, our leases typically benefit from the well-enshrined
Commercial Lease statute that provides that tenants own the
commercial property of the premises and that they are entitled to
renew their lease at a rent that is indexed to the Indice des
Loyers Commerciaux (Commercial Rental Index) published by the
state. Taking into account this context, the valuer values the
French leaseholds based on an indefinite property tenure, similar
to freeholds but at a significantly higher exit cap
rate.
The Group believes there is an
opportunity to leverage its highly scalable marketing and
operational expertise in geographies outside the UK and
Paris.
During 2019, a Joint Venture was
established with Carlyle. There were six stores acquired in the
Netherlands (M3 Self Storage business) and then a further two added
to the portfolio and six stores acquired in Belgium (Lokabox) After
three years of learning about and understanding these markets, the
Group acquired the remaining 80% of equity in the Joint Venture
owned by Carlyle in March 2022 and subsequently added a further six
stores.
In 2019, the Group entered the
Spanish market with the acquisition of Oh My Box!. Our Spanish
portfolio currently consists of eight stores in Barcelona, and four
Madrid stores including post-period end openings. We have a further
four stores in our development pipeline situated in Madrid,
Barcelona and Pamplona. We consider these cities to have attractive
characteristics in relation to self-storage and intend to continue
to seek further expansion opportunities.
In late 2022, Safestore entered
the German self-storage market via a joint venture with Carlyle,
which has acquired the myStorage business. myStorage has seven
medium to long-term leasehold stores and 326,000 sq ft of MLA in
Berlin, Heidelburg, Mannheim, Fürth, Nuremburg, Neu-Ulm and
Reutlingen.
Our experience is that being
flexible in its approach has enabled us to operate from properties
and in markets that would have been otherwise unavailable and to
generate strong cash-on-cash returns.
We excel in the generation of
customer enquiries which are received through a variety of channels
including the internet, telephone and "walk-ins". In the early days
of the industry, local directories and store visibility were key
drivers of enquiries. However, the internet is now by far the
dominant channel, accounting for 89% (H1 2023: 89%) of our
enquiries in the UK and 85% (H1 2023: 84%) in France. This
dynamic is a clear benefit to the leading national operators that
possess the budget and the management skills necessary to generate
a commanding presence in the major search engines. We have
developed and continue to invest in a leading digital marketing
platform that has generated 39% enquiry growth over the last five
years.
Although mostly generated online,
our enquiries are predominantly handled directly by the stores and,
in the UK, we have a Customer Support Centre ("CSC") which handles
customer service issues in addition to enquiries, in particular
when the store colleagues are busy handling calls or outside of
normal store opening hours.
Our pricing platform provides the
store and CSC colleagues with system-generated real-time prices
managed by our centrally based yield-management team. Local
colleagues have certain levels of discretion to flex the
system-generated prices, but this is continually
monitored.
Customer service standards are
high and customer satisfaction feedback is consistently very
positive. We invite customers to leave a review on a number of
review platforms, including Google and Trustpilot. Our ratings for
each of these three providers in the UK are between 4.7 and 4.9 out
of 5. In France, Une Pièce en Plus uses Google and Trustpilot to
obtain independent customer reviews and In H1 2024, achieved a 4.7
out of 5 and a "TrustScore" of 4.6 out of 5 respectively. In
Spain, OMB collects customer feedback via Google reviews and has
attained a score of 4.9 out of 5.. The key drivers of sales success
are the capacity to generate enquiries in a digital world, the
capacity to provide storage locations that are conveniently located
close to the customers' requirements and the ability to maintain a
consistently high quality, motivated retail team that is able to
secure customer sales at an appropriate storage rate, all of which
can be better provided by larger, more efficient
organisations.
We remain focused on business as
well as domestic customers. Our national network means that we are
uniquely placed to further grow the business customer market and in
particular National Accounts. Business customers in the UK
constitute 41% of our total space let and have an average length of
stay of 26 months. Within our business customer category, our
National Accounts business represents around 493,000 sq ft of
occupied space (around 11% of the UK's occupancy). Approximately
71% of the space occupied by National Accounts customers is outside
London, demonstrating the importance and quality of our well
invested national estate.
The business now has in excess of
90,000 business and domestic customers with an average length of
stay of 27 months and 21 months respectively.
The cost base of the business is
relatively fixed. Each store typically employs three staff. Our
Group Head Office comprises business support functions such as
Yield Management, Property, Marketing, HR, IT and
Finance.
In April 2024, the Group exercised
the RCF's accordion option to increase the committed facility by
£100m to £500m. We have secure financing, a strong balance sheet
and significant covenant headroom. This provides the Group with
financial flexibility and the ability to grow organically and via
carefully selected new development or acquisition
opportunities.
At 30 April 2024 the Group had
1.5m sq ft of unoccupied space in the UK, 0.2m sq ft in France and
0.2m sq ft in Spain and 0.2m sq in Benelux, equivalent to c. 47
full new stores. Our main focus is on filling the spare capacity in
our stores at optimally yield-managed rates. The operational
leverage of our business model will ensure that the bulk of the
incremental revenue converts to profit given the relatively fixed
nature of our cost base.
Trading performance
Trading Data - Total
Key
Measures - Total
|
H1
2024
|
H1
2023
|
Change
|
Group
|
|
|
|
Revenue (£'m)
|
109.2
|
110.1
|
(0.8%)
|
Closing Occupancy (million sq
ft)
|
6.129
|
6.124
|
0.1%
|
Closing Occupancy (% of
MLA)
|
74.4%
|
76.7%
|
(2.3%)
|
Maximum Lettable Area
|
8.23
|
7.99
|
3.0%
|
Average Storage Rate (£ per sq
ft)
|
30.16
|
30.58
|
(1.4%)
|
REVPAF (£ per sq ft)
|
26.74
|
28.28
|
(5.4%)
|
Revenue (millions)
|
|
|
|
UK (£)
|
79.7
|
81.7
|
(2.4%)
|
Paris (€)
|
25.1
|
24.8
|
1.4%
|
Spain (€)
|
2.8
|
1.9
|
45.5%
|
Netherlands (€)
|
4.0
|
3.5
|
16.2%
|
Belgium (€)
|
2.3
|
2.0
|
14.0%
|
Average Rate (per sq ft)
|
|
|
|
UK (£)
|
30.34
|
30.50
|
(0.5%)
|
Paris (€)
|
41.78
|
42.02
|
(0.6%)
|
Spain (€)
|
29.78
|
35.44
|
(16.0%)
|
Netherlands (€)
|
19.73
|
18.95
|
4.1%
|
Belgium (€)
|
23.60
|
20.80
|
13.5%
|
REVPAF (per sq ft)
|
|
|
|
UK (£)
|
27.68
|
29.19
|
(5.2%)
|
Paris (€)
|
37.13
|
36.73
|
1.1%
|
Spain (€)
|
16.66
|
19.81
|
(15.9%)
|
Netherlands (€)
|
16.40
|
16.79
|
(2.3%)
|
Belgium (€)
|
20.72
|
18.22
|
13.7%
|
Closing Occupancy (million sq ft)
|
|
|
|
UK
|
4.316
|
4.410
|
(2.1%)
|
Paris
|
1.104
|
1.091
|
1.2%
|
Spain
|
0.179
|
0.105
|
70.5%
|
Netherlands
|
0.354
|
0.350
|
1.1%
|
Belgium
|
0.176
|
0.168
|
4.8%
|
Closing Occupancy (% of MLA)
|
|
|
|
UK
|
74.3%
|
77.1%
|
(2.8ppt)
|
Paris
|
81.1%
|
80.1%
|
1.0ppt
|
Spain
|
52.1%
|
42.4%
|
9.7ppt
|
Netherlands
|
71.5%
|
80.3%
|
(8.8ppt)
|
Belgium
|
79.3%
|
75.9%
|
3.4ppt
|
Maximum Lettable Area (million sq ft)
|
|
|
|
UK
|
5.820
|
5.720
|
1.7%
|
Paris
|
1.360
|
1.360
|
-
|
Spain
|
0.340
|
0.250
|
36.0%
|
Netherlands
|
0.490
|
0.440
|
11.4%
|
Belgium
|
0.220
|
0.220
|
-
|
Trading Data - Like-For-Like
Key
Measures - Like-For-Like
|
H1
2024
|
H1
2023
|
Change
|
Group
|
|
|
|
Revenue (£'m)
|
107.0
|
107.9
|
(0.8%)
|
Closing Occupancy (million sq
ft)
|
5.949
|
6.049
|
(1.7%)
|
Closing Occupancy (% of
MLA)
|
76.9%
|
78.5%
|
(1.6%)
|
Average Occupancy (million sq
ft)
|
5.960
|
6.055
|
(1.6ppt)
|
Maximum Lettable Area (million sq
ft)
|
7.730
|
7.710
|
0.3%
|
Average Storage Rate (£ per sq
ft)
|
30.55
|
30.70
|
(0.5%)
|
REVPAF (£ per sq ft)
|
27.86
|
28.24
|
(1.3%)
|
Revenue (millions)
|
|
|
|
UK (£)
|
78.6
|
79.8
|
(1.5%)
|
Paris (€)
|
25.1
|
24.8
|
1.4%
|
Spain (€)
|
2.0
|
1.9
|
2.4%
|
Netherlands (€)
|
3.7
|
3.3
|
13.2%
|
Belgium (€)
|
2.3
|
2.0
|
14.0%
|
Average Rate (per sq ft)
|
|
|
|
UK (£)
|
30.45
|
30.51
|
(0.2%)
|
Paris (€)
|
41.78
|
42.02
|
(0.6%)
|
Spain (€)
|
36.71
|
37.00
|
(0.8%)
|
Netherlands (€)
|
21.14
|
19.76
|
7.0%
|
Belgium (€)
|
23.60
|
20.80
|
13.5%
|
REVPAF (per sq ft)
|
|
|
|
UK (£)
|
28.00
|
28.62
|
(2.2%)
|
Paris (€)
|
37.13
|
36.73
|
1.1%
|
Spain (€)
|
32.09
|
31.43
|
2.1%
|
Netherlands (€)
|
19.95
|
17.67
|
12.9%
|
Belgium (€)
|
20.72
|
18.22
|
13.7%
|
Closing Occupancy (million sq ft)
|
|
|
|
UK
|
4.270
|
4.402
|
(3.0%)
|
Paris
|
1.104
|
1.091
|
1.2%
|
Spain
|
0.094
|
0.089
|
5.6%
|
Netherlands
|
0.305
|
0.299
|
2.0%
|
Belgium
|
0.176
|
0.168
|
4.8%
|
Closing Occupancy (% of MLA)
|
|
|
|
UK
|
75.6%
|
78.2%
|
(2.6ppt)
|
Paris
|
81.1%
|
80.1%
|
1.0ppt
|
Spain
|
77.7%
|
74.1%
|
3.6ppt
|
Netherlands
|
80.6%
|
79.0%
|
1.6ppt
|
Belgium
|
79.3%
|
75.9%
|
3.4ppt
|
Maximum Lettable Area (million sq ft)
|
|
|
|
UK
|
5.650
|
5.630
|
0.4%
|
Paris
|
1.360
|
1.360
|
-
|
Spain
|
0.120
|
0.120
|
-
|
Netherlands
|
0.380
|
0.380
|
-
|
Belgium
|
0.220
|
0.220
|
-
|
Average Occupancy (million sq ft)
|
|
|
|
UK
|
4.281
|
4.399
|
(2.7%)
|
Paris
|
1.107
|
1.095
|
1.1%
|
Spain
|
0.092
|
0.091
|
1.1%
|
Netherlands
|
0.310
|
0.299
|
3.7%
|
Belgium
|
0.170
|
0.171
|
(0.6%)
|
UK
Our operational performance across
the UK has been robust in the current economic environment
with UK revenue was down 2.4% for the
period and 1.5% on a like-for-like basis.
This resulted from a broadly
stable like-for-like average rental rate of £30.34 (0.5% down on H1
2023 at £30.50) together with a like-for-like average occupancy
decrease of 2.7% to 4.281 million sq ft (H1 2023: 4.399 million sq
ft).
Overall revenue in the UK was
impacted by £1.0m due to the changes to customer goods protection
with cover in FY 2024 no longer attracting insurance premium tax.
This difference is offset in cost of goods sold with lower costs of
goods in FY 2024. In addition, new stores and developments
contributed an additional £1.1m in the period.
The total cost base in the UK was
flat year on year reflecting a £1.0m reduction in costs of sales
due to changes in customer goods protection offset by increases in
leasehold rent payments and administrative costs.
As a result, underlying EBITDA after
leasehold costs for the UK business was £45.8m (H1 2023: £47.8m), a
decrease of £2.0m or 4.2%.
Operating profit for the UK
business was £120.4m (H1 2023: £74.5m), an increase of £45.9m or
62%, driven by the increase in the gain of investment properties of
£47.8m to £72.3m (H1 2023: £24.5m).
Paris
In Paris, all stores are
like-for-like in the period and delivered strong trading
performance, growing revenue by €0.3m or 1.4%.
Average occupancy for the period
has increased by 1.1% to 1.107 million sq ft with closing occupancy
at 30 April 2024 increasing by 1.2% compared to 30 April 2023 to
1.104 million sq ft. This was offset by a slight reduction in the
average rental rate in Paris to €41.78 for the period, a decrease
of 0.6% on H1 2023 (€42.02).
REVPAF, which we believe is
materially ahead of the local competition, grew by a further 1.1%
for the period.
Like-for-like EBITDA was down by
7.6% against H1 2023 with cost of sales and administrative costs
increasing by €1.6m.
Spain
Since acquiring our Spanish
business in 2019 we have opened a further eight stores. We now have
twelve open stores, including post-period end openings, and a
pipeline of a further two stores in Madrid one in Barcelona and one
in Pamplona.
The Spanish business contributed
€2.0m of like-for-like revenue, up 2.4% compared to the prior year.
This was driven by like-for-like average occupancy growth of 1.1%
compared to the prior period, offset by a reduction in the average
like-for-like storage rate of 0.8% to €36.71 (H1 2023: €37.00).
Ancillary revenues, an area of particular focus, drove further
increases in LFL revenue.
Like-for-like occupancy in
Barcelona has initially been diluted by the new Central Barcelona 2
store having opened in close proximity and within the same
catchment area as an existing store. In addition, the imminent
opening of Central Barcelona 3 also within short distance may
initially further dilute the like-for-like occupancy, but
management believes that, given the limited supply in central
Barcelona, once the absorption phase has been passed, the business
will generate higher revenue and profits.
New stores contributed €0.8m of
revenue growth in the period.
Underlying EBITDA increased by
€0.6m to €1.1m as the increase in revenue was partially offset by
an increase in the underlying cost of sales and administrative
expenses of €0.4m, resulting from additional costs to support the
new stores as well as their dilutive impact whilst they achieve
stabilisation.
Netherlands
Our Netherlands business, acquired
in March 2022 and is now included within the like-for-like metrics
for H1 2024. Total revenue delivered was €4.0m for the period, an
increase of €0.5m over prior period. On a like-for-like basis,
revenue increased 13.2% driven by strong increases in both average
occupancy of 3.7% and average rate of 7.0%.
During the period, we opened three
new stores in Almere, Aalsmeer and Rotterdam. New stores
contributed €0.3m of revenue in the period, an increase of €0.1m
over H1 2023.
Belgium
Our Belgium business, was also
acquired in March 2022 and is now included within the like-for-like
metrics for 2024. Total revenue delivered was €2.3m for the period,
an increase of €0.3m over prior period. On a like-for-like basis,
revenue increased 14.0% driven by strong increases in average rate
of 13.5% with broadly stable average occupancy down
0.6%.
Frederic Vecchioli
11 June 2024
Financial Review
Underlying Income Statement
The table below sets out the
Group's underlying results of operations for the six months ended
30 April 2024 and the six months ended 30 April
2023.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
Mvmt
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
109.2
|
110.1
|
(0.8%)
|
|
|
Underlying costs
|
|
|
|
(42.1)
|
(40.4)
|
4.2%
|
|
|
Underlying EBITDA
|
|
|
|
67.1
|
69.7
|
(3.7%)
|
|
|
Leasehold rent
|
|
|
|
(7.7)
|
(7.2)
|
6.9%
|
|
|
Underlying EBITDA after leasehold rent
|
|
59.4
|
62.5
|
(5.0%)
|
|
|
Depreciation
|
|
|
|
(0.7)
|
(0.6)
|
16.7%
|
|
|
Net underlying finance
charges
|
|
|
|
(9.7)
|
(7.5)
|
29.3%
|
|
|
Underlying profit before tax
|
|
|
49.0
|
54.4
|
(9.9%)
|
|
|
Current tax
|
|
|
|
|
(2.6)
|
(2.6)
|
0.0%
|
|
|
Adjusted EPRA earnings
|
|
|
46.4
|
51.8
|
(10.4%)
|
|
|
Share-based payments
charge
|
|
|
(1.4)
|
(1.3)
|
7.7%
|
|
|
EPRA basic earnings
|
|
|
|
45.0
|
50.5
|
(10.9%)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Average shares in issue
(m)
|
|
|
218.3
|
216.5
|
|
|
|
Diluted shares (for ADE EPS)
(m)
|
|
|
219.3
|
219.0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted diluted EPRA EPS (p)
|
|
21.2
|
23.7
|
(10.5%)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes:
1. Adjusted Diluted EPRA EPS is
defined in note 2 to the financial statements.
2. Adjusted EPRA earnings excludes
share-based payment charges and, accordingly, the underlying
EBITDA, underlying EBITDA after leasehold costs and underlying
profit before tax measures have been restated to exclude
share-based payment charges for consistency.
3. Store Protect has replaced our
customer goods insurance programme from 1 November 2023, attracting
VAT rather than Insurance Premium Tax (IPT). When comparing the
2024 half year, the 2023 comparative included revenue of £1.0m
representing 12% IPT on insurance sales. Excluding this, revenue
grew by 0.2% and underlying costs of sales increased by 6.9% on the
prior year.
The table below reconciles
statutory profit before tax in the income statement to underlying
profit before tax in the table above.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
Statutory profit before
tax
|
173.7
|
103.4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted for
|
|
|
|
|
|
- gain on investment
properties and investment properties under construction
|
(126.1)
|
(51.7)
|
|
|
|
- change in fair value of
derivatives
|
-
|
1.4
|
|
|
|
- share-based
payments
|
1.4
|
1.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying profit before
tax
|
49.0
|
54.4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Management considers the above
presentation of earnings to be representative of the underlying
performance of the business.
Underlying EBITDA decreased by
3.7% to £67.1m (H1 2023: £69.7m) reflecting a 0.8% decrease in
revenue and a 4.2% increase in underlying costs (see
below).
Finance charges increased from
£7.5m in H1 2023 to £9.7m in H1 2024. This principally reflects the
increased borrowing associated with developments and higher
interest rates.
As a result, underlying profit
before tax decreased 9.9% to £49.0m (H1 2023: £54.4m). The increase
in statutory profit before tax of £70.3m to £173.7m (H1 2023:
£103.4) results from the increased gain on investment properties of
£74.4m to £126.1m (H1 2023: £51.7m) This increase reflects the
increased value of the Group's store portfolio primarily as a
result of an improvement in cap rates, reflecting recent market
transactions in the self-storage market.
Given the Group's REIT status in
the UK, tax is not normally payable on rental income in the UK. The
current tax charge for the period was consistent at £2.6m (H1 2023:
£2.6m).
As explained in note 2 to the
financial statements, management considers that the most
representative earnings per share ("EPS") measure is Adjusted
Diluted EPRA EPS which has decreased by 2.5p or 10.5% to
21.2 pence (H1 2023: 23.7 pence).
Reconciliation of Underlying EBITDA
The table below reconciles the
operating profit included in the consolidated income statement to
underlying EBITDA.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Statutory operating
profit
|
186.3
|
114.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted for
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- gain on investment
properties
|
(121.7)
|
(47.3)
|
|
|
|
- depreciation
|
|
|
|
0.7
|
0.6
|
|
|
|
- variable lease
payments
|
0.4
|
0.2
|
|
|
|
- share-based
payments
|
|
|
1.4
|
1.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying EBITDA
|
|
|
|
|
67.1
|
69.7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The main reconciling items between
statutory operating profit and underlying EBITDA are the gain on
investment properties of £121.7m in H1 2024 (H1 2023: £47.3m),
represented by a gain on investment properties and investment
properties under construction of £126.1m less fair value
re-measurement of lease liabilities (£4.4m).
Underlying Profit by geographical region
The Group is organised and managed
in five operating segments based on geographical region, with
Benelux representing our Netherlands and Belgium operations. The
table below details the underlying profitability of each
region.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
|
Paris
|
Spain
|
Benelux
|
Total
(CER)
|
|
UK
|
Paris
|
Spain
|
Benelux
|
Total
(CER)
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
€'m
|
€'m
|
€'m
|
£'m
|
|
£'m
|
€'m
|
€'m
|
€'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
|
79.7
|
25.1
|
2.8
|
6.3
|
109.8
|
|
81.7
|
24.8
|
1.8
|
5.5
|
110.1
|
|
|
Underlying cost of sales
|
|
(24.4)
|
(7.6)
|
(1.3)
|
(2.9)
|
(34.9)
|
|
(25.2)
|
(6.4)
|
(0.8)
|
(2.3)
|
(33.7)
|
|
|
Store EBITDA
|
|
55.3
|
17.5
|
1.5
|
3.4
|
74.9
|
|
56.5
|
18.4
|
1.0
|
3.2
|
76.4
|
|
|
Store EBITDA margin
|
|
69.4%
|
69.7%
|
53.6%
|
54.0%
|
68.2%
|
|
69.2%
|
74.2%
|
55.6%
|
58.2%
|
69.4%
|
|
|
LFL store EBITDA margin
|
|
69.8%
|
69.7%
|
75.0%
|
56.7%
|
69.1%
|
|
69.8%
|
73.8%
|
78.9%
|
58.5%
|
70.1%
|
|
|
Underlying administrative
expenses
|
|
(5.0)
|
(1.8)
|
(0.4)
|
(0.7)
|
(7.5)
|
|
(4.6)
|
(1.5)
|
(0.5)
|
(0.4)
|
(6.7)
|
|
|
Underlying EBITDA
|
|
50.3
|
15.7
|
1.1
|
2.7
|
67.4
|
|
51.9
|
16.9
|
0.5
|
2.8
|
69.7
|
|
|
Underlying EBITDA margin
|
|
63.1%
|
62.5%
|
39.3%
|
42.9%
|
61.4%
|
|
63.5%
|
68.1%
|
27.8%
|
50.9%
|
63.3%
|
|
|
LFL EBITDA margin
|
|
63.7%
|
62.5%
|
52.6%
|
45.0%
|
62.4%
|
|
64.2%
|
68.5%
|
52.6%
|
45.3%
|
64.0%
|
|
|
Leasehold rent
|
|
(4.5)
|
(3.3)
|
(0.3)
|
(0.2)
|
(7.7)
|
|
(4.1)
|
(3.2)
|
(0.2)
|
(0.2)
|
(7.2)
|
|
|
Underlying EBITDA after leasehold rent
|
|
45.8
|
12.4
|
0.8
|
2.5
|
59.7
|
|
47.8
|
13.7
|
0.3
|
2.6
|
62.5
|
|
|
EBITDA after leasehold rent margin
|
|
57.5%
|
49.4%
|
28.6%
|
39.7%
|
54.4%
|
|
58.5%
|
55.2%
|
16.7%
|
47.3%
|
56.8%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Impact of Currency exchange
rates
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying EBITDA
after leasehold rent (CER)
|
45.8
|
11.0
|
0.8
|
2.1
|
59.7
|
|
47.8
|
12.1
|
0.4
|
2.2
|
62.5
|
|
|
Adjustment to actual exchange
rate
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(0.3)
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
Underlying EBITDA after leasehold
rent
|
45.8
|
10.8
|
0.7
|
2.1
|
59.4
|
|
47.8
|
12.1
|
0.4
|
2.2
|
62.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Note: CER is Constant Exchange
Rates (Euro denominated results for the current period have been
retranslated at the exchange rate effective for the comparative
period in order to present the reported results on a more
comparable basis).
Underlying EBITDA in the UK
decreased by £1.6m, or 3.1%, to £50.3m (H1 2023: £51.9m),
reflecting a 2.4% reduction in revenue together with a decrease in
underlying cost of sales and administrative expenses of £0.4m. The
Underlying EBITDA margin slightly reduced to 63.1% compared to H1
2023 at 63.5% with the like-for-like ("LFL") EBITDA margin also
seeing a slight reduction to 63.7% from 64.3% in H1
2023.
In Paris, underlying EBITDA
decreased by €1.2m, reflecting a €0.3m increase in revenue less an
increase in cost of sales and administrative expenses of €1.5m. As
a result, Underlying EBITDA decreased from 68.1% in H1 2023 to
62.5% in H1 2024.
In Spain, revenue increased by
€1.0m or 55.6%, to €2.8m (H1 2023: €1.8m), arising from a 2.4%
increase in LFL revenue together with an additional €0.8m from new
stores and developments. Underlying EBITDA increased by €0.6m to
€1.1m as the increase in revenue was partially offset by an
increase in the underlying cost of sales and administrative
expenses of €0.4m, resulting from additional costs to support the
new stores as well as their dilutive impact whilst they achieve
stabilisation.
In Belgium and Netherlands
(together "Benelux"), revenue increased by €0.8m or 15.4% to €6.3m
(H1 2023 €5.5m). This arises from an increase from LFL stores of
13.5% together with an additional €0.1m of growth from new stores
and developments. Underlying EBITDA decreased by €0.1m as
underlying costs of sales and administrative costs increased by
€0.9m to €3.6m in the period as a result of new store
openings.
The combined performance of the
UK, Paris, Spain, Netherlands and Belgium resulted in a 4.5%
decrease in underlying EBITDA after leasehold rent at constant
exchange rates. Adjusting for an unfavourable exchange rate
movement of 2.1% resulting in an impact of £0.3m in the current
year, Group reported underlying EBITDA after leasehold rent
decreased by 5.0% or £3.1m to £59.4m (H1 2023: £62.5m).
Revenue
Revenue for the Group is primarily
derived from the rental of self-storage space and the sale of
ancillary products such as customer goods protection and
merchandise (e.g. packing materials and padlocks).
The split of the Group's revenues
by geographical segment is set out below for H1 2023 and H1
2024.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
% of total
|
H1 2023
|
% of total
|
|
% change
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
|
|
£'m
|
79.7
|
73%
|
81.7
|
73%
|
|
(2.4%)
|
|
|
Paris
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Local currency
|
|
€'m
|
25.1
|
|
24.8
|
|
|
|
|
|
Paris in Sterling
|
|
£'m
|
21.6
|
20%
|
21.8
|
20%
|
|
(0.9%)
|
|
|
Spain
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Local currency
|
|
€'m
|
2.8
|
|
1.8
|
|
|
|
|
|
Spain in Sterling
|
|
£'m
|
2.4
|
2%
|
1.7
|
2%
|
|
41.2%
|
|
|
Benelux
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Local currency
|
|
€'m
|
6.3
|
|
5.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
Benelux in Sterling
|
|
£'m
|
5.5
|
5%
|
4.9
|
5%
|
|
12.2%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Average exchange rate
|
|
€:£
|
1.163
|
|
1.139
|
|
|
(2.1%)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total revenue
|
|
|
109.2
|
100%
|
110.1
|
100%
|
|
(0.8%)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Group's reported revenue
decreased by 0.8% or £0.9m during the period. This was driven by
broadly stable LFL revenue at CER (down 0.3%), the impact of
adverse currency exchange rate (0.6%), increases in revenue from
new stores and developments (1.0%) less the impact of changes in
customer goods protection and insurance in the UK (1.0%
impact).
Average rental rates for the Group
on a LFL CER basis increased by 0.1% to £30.74 (H1 2023 £30.70)
coupled with a decrease in average occupancy of 1.4ppts to 77.2%
(H1 2023: 78.6%).
In the UK, on a LFL basis which
excludes the impact of new stores and changes to customer goods
protection, Revenue decreased by £1.2m or 1.5%. This was driven by
a 2.7% decrease in the average occupancy together with a broadly
stable average store rate of (a decline of 0.2%).
Overall revenue in the UK was
impacted by £1.0m due the changes to customer goods protection with
cover in FY 2024 no longer attracting insurance premium tax. This
difference is offset in cost of goods sold with lower costs of
goods in FY 2024. In addition, new stores and developments
contributed an additional £0.2m in the period.
In Paris, revenue increased by
€0.3m or 1.4%. Average occupancy for the period has increased by
1.1% compared to 30 April 2023 to 1.11 million sq ft. This was
offset by a slight reduction in the average rental rate in Paris to
€41.78 for the period, a decrease of 0.6% on H1 2023,
€42.02.
For Spain, revenue was €2.8m in
the period (H1 2023: €1.8m). New stores contributed €0.8m of
revenue growth in the period. On a LFL basis revenue was €2.0m, a
2.4% increase from prior period. Average LFL occupancy increased
1.3% to 0.092 million sq ft (H1 2023: 0.091 million sq ft). The
like-for-like average rental rate in Spain was €36.71 for the
period, a decrease of 0.8% on H1 2023 at €37.00.
The Benelux business delivered
€6.3m of revenue for the period (H1 2023: €5.5m). New stores
contributed €0.1m of revenue growth in the period. On a LFL basis
revenue was €6.0m. For the Netherlands, average LFL occupancy was
82.0% (H1 2023: 79.0%) with an average LFL rental rate of €21.14
(H1 2023: €19.76), and for Belgium, average LFL occupancy was 76.8%
(H1 2023: 77.3%) with an average LFL rental rate of €23.60 (H1
2023: €20.80).
Analysis of Cost Base
On a like-for-like basis,
adjusting for new stores, total costs increased by 4.1% from £38.9m
in H1 2023 to £40.5m in H1 2024. The below tables detail the key
movements in cost of sales and administration expenses between H1
2023 and H1 2024.
Cost of
sales
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Volume related including bad
debt
|
|
(2.7)
|
(2.4)
|
|
|
Store employee and
related
|
|
|
(11.4)
|
(11.0)
|
|
|
Marketing
|
|
|
(4.2)
|
(3.9)
|
|
|
Business rates
|
|
|
(7.3)
|
(7.0)
|
|
|
Facilities and premises
insurance
|
|
|
(7.6)
|
(8.0)
|
|
|
Underlying cost of sales (Like-for-like;
CER)
|
|
|
(33.2)
|
(32.3)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
New stores and
developments
|
|
|
|
(1.7)
|
(0.4)
|
|
|
Store Protect replacement
IPT
|
|
|
|
-
|
(1.0)
|
|
|
Foreign exchange
|
|
|
|
0.3
|
-
|
|
|
Underlying costs of sales
|
|
|
|
(34.6)
|
(33.7)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation
|
|
|
|
(0.7)
|
(0.6)
|
|
|
Variable lease payments
|
|
|
|
(0.4)
|
(0.2)
|
|
|
Total costs of sales
|
|
|
|
(35.7)
|
(34.5)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
In order to arrive at underlying
cost of sales, adjustments are made to remove the impact of
depreciation and variable lease payments.
Adjusting for the impact of new
stores, underlying cost of sales at CER on a like-for-like basis
increased by 2.8% or £0.9m, to £33.2m (H1 2023: £32.3m),
principally due to increased employee remuneration and volume
related costs.
The cost of sales attributable to
the 2024 openings at Eastleigh, South Madrid 2, Almere, Aalsmeer,
and Rotterdam and the 2023 openings of Wigan, London-Morden,
Ellesmere Port, North Barcelona, Central Barcelona 3, South Madrid,
North Madrid, East Madrid and Amersfoort is £1.7m in H1
2024.
Administrative
Expenses
The table below reconciles
reported administrative expenses to underlying administrative
expenses and details the key movements in underlying administrative
expenses between H1 2023 and H1 2024.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying administrative expenses (Like-for-like;
CER)
|
(7.3)
|
(6.6)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
New stores and
developments
|
|
|
|
(0.2)
|
(0.1)
|
|
|
Underlying administrative expenses
|
|
|
(7.5)
|
(6.7)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Share based payments
|
|
|
|
(1.4)
|
(1.3)
|
|
|
Total administrative expenses
|
|
|
|
(8.9)
|
(8.0)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
In order to arrive at underlying
administrative expenses, adjustments are made to remove the impact
of exceptional items, share-based payments and corporate
transaction costs.
Underlying administrative expenses
increased by 11.9% or £0.8m to £7.5m (H1 2023: £6.7m). The increase
arose from a rise in employee and related costs of
£0.7m.
Gain on revaluation of Investment
Properties
A full, independent external
valuation of the store portfolio is undertaken by the Group on an
annual basis for year-end reporting. A sample of the Group's
largest properties, representing approximately 30% of the value of
the Group's investment property portfolio, has been valued by the
Group's external valuers, Cushman & Wakefield LLP ("C&W")
as at 30 April 2024. In addition, at the same date, the Directors
have prepared estimates of fair values for the remaining
approximately 70% of the Group's investment property portfolio by
updating 31 October 2023 valuations to incorporate latest
assumptions reflecting market conditions and trading
performance.
As a result of this exercise, the
net gain on investment properties during the period was as
follows.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gain on revaluation of investment
properties
|
|
129.5
|
52.3
|
|
|
Loss on revaluation of investment
properties under construction
|
(3.4)
|
(0.6)
|
|
|
Fair value re-measurement of lease
liabilities add back
|
|
(4.4)
|
(4.4)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gain on revaluation of investment
properties
|
|
|
121.7
|
47.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The movement on investment
properties reflects the increased value of the Group's store
portfolio primarily as a result of an improvement in cap rates,
reflecting recent market transactions in self-storage, as well as
the trading performance. The UK business contributed £74.3m of the
£126.1m net revaluation gain, with a £36.6m revaluation gain
arising in Paris, a £10.5m revaluation gain arising in Spain and a
£4.7m revaluation gain arising in Benelux.
The value of investment properties
under construction increased by £5.3m in the period due to
significant capital additions required to enable the store to be
operational which is not reflected in the valuation. The
re-measurement of lease liabilities of £4.4m represents the
adjustment of amortisation on the lease liabilities which is added
back to net valuation of the investment property.
Operating profit
Reported operating profit
increased by £71.4m from £114.9m in H1 2023 to £186.3m in H1 2024,
primarily reflecting a £74.4m increase in the investment property
gain offset by a £2.6m reduction in underlying EBITDA.
Net
finance costs
Net finance costs include interest
payable, interest on obligations under lease labilities, fair value
movements on derivatives, exchange gains or losses, unwinding of
discounts and exceptional finance income. Net finance costs
increased by £1.1m to £12.6m in H1 2024 (H1 2023: £11.5m). The main
driver of the increase was net bank interest payable reflecting the
Group's additional borrowings to fund the Group's acquisition and
development activity, higher interest rates on floating-rate
borrowings and prior period fair value movements on
derivatives.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other interest received
|
|
|
|
0.1
|
0.5
|
|
|
Interest from loan to
associates
|
|
|
|
0.2
|
-
|
|
|
Total finance income
|
|
|
|
0.3
|
0.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net bank interest payable
|
|
|
|
(9.4)
|
(7.3)
|
|
|
Amortisation of debt issuance costs
on bank loans
|
|
(0.6)
|
(0.7)
|
|
|
Underlying finance costs
|
|
|
(10.0)
|
(8.0)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest on lease
liabilities
|
|
|
(2.9)
|
(2.6)
|
|
|
Fair value movement on
derivatives
|
|
|
-
|
(1.4)
|
|
|
Total finance costs
|
|
|
|
|
(12.9)
|
(12.0)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
finance costs
|
|
|
|
|
(12.6)
|
(11.5)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The movement in underlying finance
costs can be summarised as follows:
Underlying finance
charge
The underlying finance costs
represent the finance expense before interest on obligations under
lease liabilities, changes in fair value of derivatives and
exceptional items and is disclosed because management reviews and
monitors performance of the business on this basis.
The underlying finance costs
(reflecting revolving credit facility ("RCF") and US Private
Placement ("USPP") interest costs and the amortisation of
capitalised debt issuance costs) increased by £2.0m to £10.0m (H1
2023: £8.0m), principally reflecting the Group's additional
borrowings in the year drawn to fund the Group's acquisition and
development activity and higher interest rates on RCF
borrowings.
Including the benefit of interest
received, net underlying finance charges were £9.7m in the period
(H1 2023: £7.5m).
Based on the drawn debt position
as at 30 April 2024, the effective interest rate is analysed as
follows:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Facility
|
Fixed-rate
borrowings
|
Floating-rate
borrowings
|
Total rate
|
|
|
|
£/€'m
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
RCF - GBP drawn
|
£500.0
|
|
£211.0
|
6.39%
|
|
|
RCF - EUR drawn
|
|
|
£43.6
|
5.05%
|
|
|
RCF - non-utilisation
|
|
£245.4
|
|
0.42%
|
|
|
USPP2024
|
€50.9
|
£43.5
|
|
1.59%
|
|
|
USPP2026
|
€70.0
|
£59.7
|
|
1.26%
|
|
|
USPP2026
|
£35.0
|
£35.0
|
|
2.59%
|
|
|
USPP2027
|
€74.1
|
£63.2
|
|
2.00%
|
|
|
USPP2028
|
£20.0
|
£20.0
|
|
1.96%
|
|
|
USPP2028
|
€29.0
|
£24.7
|
|
0.93%
|
|
|
USPP2029
|
£50.5
|
£50.5
|
|
2.92%
|
|
|
USPP2029
|
£30.0
|
£30.0
|
|
2.69%
|
|
|
USPP2029
|
€105.0
|
£89.7
|
|
2.45%
|
|
|
USPP2031
|
£80.0
|
£80.0
|
|
2.39%
|
|
|
USPP2033
|
€29.0
|
£24.8
|
|
1.42%
|
|
|
Unamortised finance costs
|
-
|
(£4.5)
|
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
|
£1,021.1
|
£762.0
|
£254.6
|
3.77%
|
|
|
Capitalised interest
costs
|
|
|
|
(£3.3m)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Effective Interest Rate after
capitalised interest costs
|
|
|
|
3.35%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The debt repayment profile can be
summarised as follows:
On 30 April 2024, the Group
exercised the RCF's accordion option to increase the committed
facility by £100m to £500m. The facility was originally for a
four-year term with two one-year extension options exercisable
after the first and second years of the agreement. The first of
these extensions was granted in October 2023, taking the term to
five years, to November 2027.
The Group pays interest on the RCF
at a margin of 125bps plus SONIA or Euribor depending on whether
the borrowings are drawn in Sterling or Euros. This margin is now
linked to ESG targets, which have been met, enabling a reduction in
the margin of up to 5bps to 120bps.
As at 30 April 2024, £254.6m of
the £500.0m UK revolver was drawn, split £211.0m and €51.0m
(£43.6m). The Group pays a non-utilisation fee of 0.42% on the
undrawn balance of £245.4m.
The 2024, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029
and 2033 USPP Notes are denominated in Euros and attract fixed
interest rates of 1.59% (on €50.9m), 1.26% (on €70.0m), 2.00% (on
€74.1m), 0.93% (on €29.0m), 2.45% (on €105.0m) and 1.42% (on
€29.0m) respectively. The 2024 tranche of US Private Placement
notes matured at the end of May 2024 and was repaid utilising
existing facilities. The Euro denominated borrowings provide a
natural hedge against the Group's investment in the Paris, Spain,
and Benelux businesses.
The 2026 (£35.0 million), 2028
(£20.0 million), 2029 (£50.5 million), 2029 (£30.0 million) and
2031 (£80.0 million) US Private Placement Notes are denominated in
Sterling and attract a fixed interest rate of 2.59%, 1.96%, 2.92%,
2.69% and 2.39% respectively.
As at 30 April 2024, 68% of the
Group's drawn debt is at fixed rates of interest. Overall, the
Group has an effective interest rate on its borrowings of 3.77% as
at 30 April 2024, compared with 3.58% at the previous year end.
After adjusting for capitalised interest costs the Group has an
effective interest rate on its borrowings of 3.35%, compared with
2.97% at the previous year end.
Non-underlying finance
charge
Interest on finance leases was
£2.9m (H1 2023: £2.6m) and reflects part of the leasehold rental
payment. The balance of the leasehold payment is charged through
the gain or loss on investment properties line and variable lease
payments in the income statement. Overall, the leasehold rent
charge increased by £0.5m to £7.7m in H1 2024 (H1 2023: £7.2m). In
the prior year, a net loss of £1.4m was recognised on fair
valuation of derivatives when they matured.
The Group undertakes net
investment hedge accounting for its Euro denominated loan
notes.
Tax
The tax charge for the period is
analysed below:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tax
charge
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying current tax
|
|
|
|
|
2.6
|
2.6
|
|
|
Current tax charge
|
|
|
|
|
2.6
|
2.6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tax on investment properties
movement
|
|
|
13.8
|
8.0
|
|
|
Adjustment in respect of prior
years
|
|
|
(0.4)
|
-
|
|
|
Losses in respect of current
year
|
|
|
|
0.9
|
-
|
|
|
Deferred tax charge
|
|
|
|
14.3
|
8.0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net tax charge
|
|
|
|
|
16.9
|
10.6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Income tax in the period was a net
charge of £16.9m (H1 2023: £10.6m).
In the UK, the Group is a REIT, so
the current tax charge relates to the Paris and Spain businesses.
The underlying current tax charge for the period amounted to £2.6m
(H1 2023: £2.6m).
Profit after tax
The profit after tax for the
period was £156.8m, compared with £92.8m in H1 2023, an increase of
£64.0m which arose principally due to the increased gain on
investment properties, which is explained above.
Basic EPS was 71.8 pence (H1 2023:
42.9 pence) and diluted EPS was 71.5 pence (H1 2023: 42.7 pence).
As explained in note 2 to the financial statements, management
considers adjusted diluted EPRA EPS to be more representative of
the underlying EPS performance of the business.
Investment Properties
As discussed above, a sample of
the Group's largest properties, representing approximately 30% of
the value of the Group's investment property, has been valued by
the Group's external valuers and the Directors have prepared
estimates of fair values for the remaining 70% of the Group's
investment property portfolio.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UK
|
Paris
|
Spain
|
Benelux
|
Total
|
Paris
|
Spain
|
Benelux
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
€'m
|
€'m
|
€'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total Investment Properties Including IPuC
Value as at 1 November
2023
|
1,934.0
|
590.3
|
83.5
|
181.9
|
2,789.7
|
676.7
|
95.7
|
208.7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Currency translation
movement
|
-
|
(12.8)
|
(2.0)
|
(3.9)
|
(18.7)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Additions incl
Acquisitions
|
|
27.9
|
7.7
|
5.5
|
14.5
|
55.6
|
8.9
|
6.3
|
16.9
|
|
|
Revaluation
|
|
74.3
|
36.6
|
10.5
|
4.7
|
126.1
|
42.6
|
12.2
|
5.4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Value at 30 April 2024
|
|
2,036.2
|
621.8
|
97.5
|
197.2
|
2,952.7
|
728.2
|
114.2
|
231.0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The above tables summarise the
movement in the valuations of the Group's investment property
portfolio including investment properties under
construction.
The Group's property portfolio
valuation, including investment properties under construction,
increased by £163.0m from the valuation of £2,789.7m at 31 October
2023. This includes the gain on valuation of £126.1m, and £55.6m
relating to additions and store refurbishments, including
acquisitions.
The exchange rate at 30 April 2024
was €1.171:£1 compared to €1.146:£1 at 31 October 2023. This
movement in the foreign exchange rate has resulted in a £18.7m
unfavourable currency translation movement in the
period.
The EPRA basic NTA per share, as
reconciled to IFRS net assets per share in financial statements,
was 1,003 pence at 30 April 2024, up 5.4% since 31 October 2023
(952 pence), and the IFRS reported diluted NAV per share was 930
pence (FY 2023: 884 pence), reflecting a £106.3m increase in
reported net assets since 31 October 2023.
Gearing, and Capital Structure and Going
Concern
As at 30 April 2024, the Group's
borrowings comprised bank borrowing facilities, made up of the RCF
together with USPPs.
Net debt (including finance leases
and cash) stood at £862.7m at 30 April 2024, an increase of £52.4m
during the period, principally due to increased funding required
for store acquisitions and developments. Total capital (net debt
plus equity) increased from £2,745.4m at 31 October 2023 to
£2,904.1m at 30 April 2024. The net impact is that the gearing
ratio has increased to 29.7% at 30 April 2024 from 29.5% at 31
October 2023.
Management also measures gearing
with reference to its loan to value ("LTV") ratio defined as net
debt (excluding lease liabilities) as a proportion of the valuation
of investment properties (excluding finance leases), including
investment properties under construction. As at 30 April 2024, the
Group LTV ratio was 25.7% compared with 25.4% at 31 October 2023.
The Board considers the current level of gearing is appropriate for
the business to enable the Group to increase returns on equity,
maintain financial flexibility and to achieve our medium-term
strategic objectives.
As at 30 April 2024, £254.6m of
the £500.0m UK revolver was drawn. Including the USPP debt of
€358.0m (£305.9m) and £215.5m, the Group's borrowings totalled
£775.7m (before adjustment for unamortised finance costs). As at 30
April 2024, the weighted average remaining term for the Group's
committed borrowing facilities is 4.5 years.
Following the repayment of the
2024 USPP, the Group has no other maturities until 2026 and has a
weighted average term to maturity of 4.7 years.
Borrowings under the existing loan
facilities are subject to certain financial covenants. The RCF and
the USPPs share interest cover and LTV covenants. The interest
cover requirement of a minimum of EBITDA:interest of 2.4:1.
Interest cover for the twelve-month period to 30 April 2024 was
5.0x (FY 2023: 6.7x), calculated on the basis required under our
financial covenants.
The LTV covenant is 60% for the
Group. As at 30 April 2024, there is significant headroom in the
Group LTV covenant calculations. The Group is in compliance with
its covenants at 30 April 2024 and, based on forecast projections
(which considered a number of factors, including the current
balance sheet position, the principal and emerging risks which
could impact the performance of the Group, and the Group's
strategic and financial plan), is expected to be in compliance for
a period in excess of twelve months from the date of this report
and accordingly, this interim statement is prepared on the basis of
going concern.
Cash flow
The table below sets out the cash
flow of the business in H1 2024 and H1 2023.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Underlying EBITDA
|
|
|
|
|
67.1
|
69.7
|
|
|
Working capital/ exceptionals/
other
|
|
|
|
(6.3)
|
(19.8)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted operating cash inflow
|
|
|
|
60.8
|
49.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest payments
|
|
|
|
|
(9.0)
|
(7.1)
|
|
|
Leasehold payments
|
|
|
|
(7.7)
|
(7.2)
|
|
|
Tax payments
|
|
|
|
|
(3.1)
|
(3.7)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Free cash flow (before investing and financing
activities)
|
41.0
|
31.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Investment in associates
|
|
|
-
|
(1.5)
|
|
|
Capital expenditure - investment
properties
|
|
|
(56.7)
|
(62.2)
|
|
|
Capital expenditure - property,
plant and equipment
|
|
(1.2)
|
(0.5)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted net cash flow after investing
activities
|
|
|
(16.9)
|
(32.3)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issues of share capital
|
|
|
|
0.7
|
0.3
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
|
|
|
|
(38.9)
|
(37.7)
|
|
|
Net drawdown of
borrowings
|
|
|
|
52.4
|
71.1
|
|
|
Swap termination income
|
-
|
0.4
|
|
|
Debt issuance costs
|
-
|
(4.3)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
(decrease) in cash
|
|
|
|
(2.7)
|
(2.5)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note: Free cash flow is a non-GAAP
measure, defined as cash flow before investing and financing
activities but after leasehold rent payments.
Adjusted operating cash flow
increased by £10.9m in the period. In the prior period, the
movement in working capital was primarily associated with
settlement of employment-related taxes connected with the maturity
of the five and three-year share based payment schemes at the end
of 2022 and early 2023 respectively.
Interest payments increased
compared to the prior half year as a result of the increased
interest charge associated with the additional borrowings to fund
the capital expenditure on new stores and development of the
existing portfolio.
Investing activities generated a
net outflow of £57.9m (H1 2023: net outflow of £64.2m) from capital
expenditure on new stores and development of the existing
portfolio. Of the £56.7m cash outflow on investment properties,
£51.3m (H1 2023: £59.4m) was spent on new stores and development of
the existing portfolio, with the balance principally spent on
capital maintenance.
Dividends paid to shareholders
increased from £37.7m in H1 2023 to £38.9m in H1 2024, and the
Group drew a net £52.4m of borrowings, primarily to finance capital
expenditure.
The first table below reconciles
free cash flow (before investing and financing activities) in the
table above to net cash inflow from operating activities in the
consolidated cash flow statement. The second table below reconciles
adjusted net cash flow after investing activities in the table
above to the consolidated cash flow statement.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Free cash flow (before investing and
financing activities)
|
|
41.0
|
31.9
|
|
|
Addback: Finance lease principal
payments
|
4.4
|
4.4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
cash inflow from operating activities
|
45.4
|
36.3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
H1 2024
|
H1 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'m
|
£'m
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
From table above:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted net cash flow after
investing activities
|
|
(16.9)
|
(32.3)
|
|
|
Addback: Finance lease principal
payments
|
|
4.4
|
4.4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
cash outflow after investing activities
|
|
(12.5)
|
(27.9)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
From consolidated cash flow:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net cash inflow from operating
activities
|
|
|
|
45.4
|
36.3
|
|
|
Net cash outflow from investing
activities
|
|
|
(57.9)
|
(64.2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
cash outflow after investing activities
|
(12.5)
|
(27.9)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends
The Board has announced an interim
dividend of 10.0 pence per share, an
increase of 1% on the prior period. This will amount to a dividend
payment of £21.8m (H1 2023: £21.6m). The dividend will be paid on 8
August 2024 to shareholders who are on the Company's register on 5
July 2024. The ex-dividend date will be 4 July 2024. 25% (H1 2023:
25%) of the dividend will be paid as a REIT Property Income
Distribution ("PID").
Consolidated income statement
for the six months ended 30 April 2024
|
|
Six months
ended
30 April
2024
|
Six
months
ended
30 April
2023
|
Year
ended
31 October
2023
|
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
Note
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Revenue
|
4,5
|
109.2
|
110.1
|
224.2
|
Cost of sales
|
|
(35.7)
|
(34.5)
|
(69.9)
|
Gross profit
|
|
73.5
|
75.6
|
154.3
|
Administrative expenses
|
|
(8.9)
|
(8.0)
|
(17.7)
|
Underlying EBITDA
|
5
|
67.1
|
69.7
|
142.2
|
Share-based payments
|
|
(1.4)
|
(1.3)
|
(3.5)
|
Depreciation and variable lease
payments
|
|
(1.1)
|
(0.8)
|
(2.1)
|
Operating profit before gain on investment properties and
other exceptional gains
|
|
64.6
|
67.6
|
136.6
|
Gain on revaluation of investment
properties
|
12
|
121.7
|
47.3
|
93.8
|
Operating profit
|
|
186.3
|
114.9
|
230.4
|
Finance income
|
6
|
0.3
|
0.5
|
0.8
|
Finance expense
|
6
|
(12.9)
|
(12.0)
|
(23.4)
|
Profit before income tax
|
5
|
173.7
|
103.4
|
207.8
|
Tax charge
|
7
|
(16.9)
|
(10.6)
|
(7.6)
|
Profit for the period
|
|
156.8
|
92.8
|
200.2
|
Earnings per share for profit attributable to the equity
holders
|
|
|
|
|
- basic (pence)
|
10
|
71.8
|
42.9
|
92.2
|
- diluted (pence)
|
10
|
71.5
|
42.7
|
91.8
|
All items in the income statement
relate to continuing operations. Underlying EBITDA is an
Alternative Performance Measure and is defined as operating profit
before exceptional items, share-based payments, corporate
transaction costs, gain/loss on investment properties, depreciation
and variable lease payments and the share of associate's
depreciation, interest and tax.
An interim dividend of 10.0 pence
per ordinary share has been declared for the period ended 30 April
2024 (30 April 2023: 9.9 pence).
Consolidated statement of comprehensive
income
for
the six months ended 30 April 2024
|
Six months
ended
30 April
2024
|
Six
months
ended
30 April
2023
|
Year
ended
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Profit for the period
|
156.8
|
92.8
|
200.2
|
Other comprehensive income:
|
|
|
|
Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit and
loss:
|
|
|
|
Currency translation
differences
|
(11.4)
|
9.2
|
7.1
|
Net investment hedge
|
3.0
|
(3.8)
|
(2.9)
|
Total other comprehensive (expense)/income net of
tax
|
(8.4)
|
5.4
|
4.2
|
Total comprehensive income for the period
|
148.4
|
98.2
|
204.4
|
Consolidated balance sheet
as at 30 April 2024
|
|
30 April
2024
|
30
April
2023
|
31
October
2023
|
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
Note
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Investment in
associates
|
11
|
4.1
|
3.3
|
4.1
|
Fair value of investment
properties, net of lease
liabilities
|
|
2,838.8
|
2,586.6
|
2,681.1
|
Add-back of lease
liabilities
|
|
105.2
|
97.3
|
101.2
|
Investment properties under
construction
|
|
113.9
|
93.7
|
108.6
|
Total investment
properties
|
12
|
3,057.9
|
2,777.6
|
2,890.9
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
|
6.0
|
3.2
|
5.2
|
Deferred tax assets
|
8
|
6.1
|
0.8
|
6.6
|
|
|
3,074.1
|
2,784.9
|
2,906.8
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
|
Inventories
|
|
0.4
|
0.4
|
0.4
|
Derivative financial
instruments
|
|
-
|
0.3
|
-
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
30.0
|
36.0
|
32.7
|
Current tax assets
|
|
0.3
|
0.2
|
-
|
Amounts due from
associates
|
|
0.2
|
-
|
0.1
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
13.8
|
18.1
|
16.9
|
|
|
44.7
|
55.0
|
50.1
|
Total assets
|
|
3,118.8
|
2,839.9
|
2,956.9
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Borrowings
|
15
|
(43.5)
|
-
|
(44.5)
|
Trade and other
payables
|
|
(48.2)
|
(54.9)
|
(52.4)
|
Current tax liabilities
|
|
-
|
-
|
(0.4)
|
Obligations under lease
liabilities
|
|
(14.4)
|
(13.1)
|
(13.1)
|
|
|
(106.1)
|
(68.0)
|
(110.4)
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Borrowings
|
15
|
(727.7)
|
(697.2)
|
(681.3)
|
Deferred tax
liabilities
|
8
|
(150.1)
|
(139.4)
|
(139.2)
|
Obligations under lease
liabilities
|
|
(90.9)
|
(84.4)
|
(88.3)
|
Provisions
|
19
|
(2.6)
|
(2.6)
|
(2.6)
|
|
|
(971.3)
|
(923.6)
|
(911.4)
|
Total liabilities
|
|
(1,077.4)
|
(991.6)
|
(1,021.8)
|
Net assets
|
14
|
2,041.4
|
1,848.3
|
1,935.1
|
Shareholders' equity
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary shares
|
16
|
2.2
|
2.2
|
2.2
|
Share premium
|
|
62.7
|
62.0
|
62.0
|
Translation reserve
|
|
4.3
|
13.9
|
12.7
|
Retained earnings
|
|
1,972.2
|
1,770.2
|
1,858.2
|
Total equity
|
|
2,041.4
|
1,843.3
|
1,935.1
|
The notes set out below form an
integral part of this condensed consolidated interim financial
information.
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in
equity
for the six months ended 30 April 2024
|
Share
capital
|
Share
Premium
|
Translation
reserve
|
Retained
earnings
|
Total
equity
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Balance at 1 November
2023
|
2.2
|
62.0
|
12.7
|
1,858.2
|
1,935.1
|
Profit for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
156.8
|
156.8
|
Other comprehensive income for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
(8.4)
|
-
|
(8.4)
|
Total comprehensive income for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
(8.4)
|
156.8
|
148.4
|
Transactions with owners in their capacity as
owner:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends (note 9)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(44.1)
|
(44.1)
|
Increase in share
capital
|
-
|
0.7
|
-
|
-
|
0.7
|
Employee share options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1.3
|
1.3
|
Balance at 30 April 2024
|
2.2
|
62.7
|
4.3
|
1,972.2
|
2,041.4
|
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in
equity
for
the six months ended 30 April 2023
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
|
Translation
reserve
|
Retained
earnings
|
Total
Equity
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Balance at 1 November
2022
|
2.1
|
61.8
|
8.5
|
1,721.0
|
1,793.4
|
Profit for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
92.8
|
92.8
|
Other comprehensive income for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
5.4
|
-
|
5.4
|
Total comprehensive income for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
5.4
|
92.8
|
98.2
|
Transactions with owners in their capacity as
owner:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends (note 9)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(44.5)
|
(44.5)
|
Increase in share
capital
|
0.1
|
0.2
|
-
|
-
|
0.3
|
Employee share options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.9
|
0.9
|
Balance at 30 April 2023
|
2.2
|
62.0
|
13.9
|
1,770.2
|
1,848.3
|
Condensed consolidated statement of changes in
equity
for the year ended 31 October 2023
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
|
Translation
reserve
|
Retained
earnings
|
Total
Equity
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Balance at 1 November
2022
|
2.1
|
61.8
|
8.5
|
1,721.0
|
1,793.4
|
Profit for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
200.2
|
200.2
|
Other comprehensive
income
|
-
|
-
|
4.2
|
-
|
4.2
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
4.2
|
200.2
|
204.4
|
Transactions with owners in their capacity as
owner:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends (note 9)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(65.9)
|
(65.9)
|
Increase in share
capital
|
0.1
|
0.2
|
-
|
-
|
0.3
|
Employee share options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2.9
|
2.9
|
Balance at 31 October 2023
|
2.2
|
62.0
|
12.7
|
1,858.2
|
1,935.1
|
Consolidated cash flow statement
for the six months ended 30 April 2024
|
Six months
ended
30 April
2024
|
Six
months
ended
30 April
2023
|
Year
ended
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Profit before income
tax
|
173.7
|
103.4
|
207.8
|
Gain on the revaluation of
investment properties
|
(121.7)
|
(47.3)
|
(93.8)
|
Depreciation
|
0.7
|
0.6
|
1.3
|
Net finance expense
|
12.6
|
11.5
|
22.6
|
Employee share options
|
1.3
|
1.0
|
2.9
|
(Increase)/decrease in
inventories
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(Increase)/decrease in trade and
other receivables
|
2.6
|
(4.2)
|
(1.4)
|
(Decrease) in trade and other
payables
|
(8.8)
|
(15.4)
|
(11.2)
|
Increase in provision
|
-
|
0.2
|
0.2
|
Cash flows from operating activities
|
60.4
|
49.7
|
128.4
|
Interest received
|
0.3
|
-
|
-
|
Interest paid
|
(12.2)
|
(9.7)
|
(24.9)
|
Tax paid
|
(3.1)
|
(3.7)
|
(5.5)
|
Net cash inflow from operating activities
|
45.4
|
36.3
|
98.0
|
Cash flows from investing activities
|
|
|
|
Investment in
associates
|
-
|
(1.5)
|
(2.3)
|
Expenditure on investment and
development properties
|
(56.7)
|
(62.2)
|
(119.0)
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
(1.2)
|
(0.5)
|
(2.9)
|
Net cash (outflow) from investing
activities
|
(57.9)
|
(64.2)
|
(124.2)
|
Cash flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
Issue of share capital
|
0.7
|
0.3
|
0.2
|
Equity dividends paid
|
(38.9)
|
(37.7)
|
(65.9)
|
Proceeds from
borrowings
|
52.4
|
176.2
|
108.4
|
Repayment of borrowings
|
-
|
(105.1)
|
(7.1)
|
Debt issuance costs
|
-
|
(4.4)
|
(4.9)
|
Financial instruments
income
|
-
|
0.4
|
0.4
|
Principal payment of lease
liabilities
|
(4.4)
|
(4.3)
|
(8.8)
|
Net cash inflow from financing activities
|
9.8
|
25.4
|
22.3
|
Net (decrease) / increase in cash and cash
equivalents
|
(2.7)
|
(2.5)
|
(3.9)
|
Exchange loss on cash and cash
equivalents
|
(0.4)
|
(0.3)
|
(0.1)
|
Opening cash and cash
equivalents
|
16.9
|
20.9
|
20.9
|
Closing cash and cash equivalents
|
13.8
|
18.1
|
16.9
|
Reconciliation of net cash flow to movement in net
debt
for
the six months ended 30 April 2024
|
Six months
ended
30 April
2024
|
Six
months
ended
30 April
2023
|
Year
ended
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Net (decrease) in cash and cash
equivalents (after exchange adjustments)
|
(3.1)
|
(2.8)
|
(4.0)
|
Increase in debt
financing
|
(49.3)
|
(75.5)
|
(108.0)
|
(Increase) in net debt
|
(52.4)
|
(78.3)
|
(112.0)
|
Net debt at start of
period
|
(810.3)
|
(698.3)
|
(698.3)
|
Net debt at end of period
|
(862.7)
|
(776.6)
|
(810.3)
|
Notes to the interim report for the six months ended 30 April
2024
1 General information
The Company is a public limited
company incorporated and domiciled in the UK. The address of its
registered office is Brittanic House, Stirling Way, Borehamwood,
Hertfordshire WD6 2BT.
The Company is listed on the
London Stock Exchange.
This interim report was approved
for issue on 11 June 2024.
This condensed consolidated
interim financial information does not comprise statutory accounts
within the meaning of section 434 of the Companies Act 2006. The
full accounts of Safestore Holdings plc for the year ended 31
October 2023, which received an unqualified report from the
auditor, and did not contain a statement under S.498(2) or (3) of
the Companies Act 2006, were filed with the Registrar of Companies
on 26 March 2024.
This condensed consolidated
interim financial information for 30 April 2024 and 30 April 2023
is unaudited. The interim financial information for 30 April 2024
has been reviewed by the auditor and their Independent Review
report is included within this financial information.
2 Basis of preparation
The condensed consolidated interim
financial information for the six months ended 30 April 2024
has been prepared in accordance with the
Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial
Conduct Authority and with United Kingdom adopted International
Accounting Standard 34 'Interim Financial Reporting' (IAS
34).
The Directors are satisfied that
the Group has sufficient resources to continue in operation for the
foreseeable future, a period of not less than twelve months from
the date of this report. Accordingly, they continue to adopt the
going concern basis in preparing this condensed consolidated
interim financial information.
In assessing the Group's going
concern position as at 30 April 2024, the Directors have considered
a number of factors, including the net current liability balance
sheet position of £61.4m, which is mainly the current USPP tranche
which was settled at the end of May 2024, the principal and
emerging risks which could impact the performance of the Group and
the Group's strategic and financial plan. Consideration has been
given to compliance with borrowing covenants along with the
uncertainty inherent in future financial forecasts. The Directors
considered the most recent three-year outlook approved by the
Board. More recently, the Board have reviewed and approved the
budget and recent forecast for the current and next financial year.
This forecast includes a projected cashflow position which
highlights that Group has sufficient available cash to support the
business strategy for the next twelve months. Should situations
arise where the Group's demand and enquiry levels, average rate
growth and the level of cost savings be impacted, clear mitigating
actions are available to ensure that the Group remains liquid and
able to meet its liabilities as they fall due. The financial
position of the Group, including details of its financing and
capital structure, is set out in the financial review section of
this announcement.
On 30 April 2024, the Group
completed the financing of its RCF's accordion option for £100m.
This increased the facility to £500m. The facility was originally
for a four-year term with two one-year extension options
exercisable after the first and second years of the agreement. The
first extension was granted in October 2023, taking the term to
five years, maturing November 2027. One tranche of Private
Placement notes matured at the end of May 2024 and was repaid
utilising existing debt facilities.
Further details of the Group's
viability statement is included in page 42 of the Annual Report and
Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2023.
The assessment concluded that, for
the foreseeable future, the Group has sufficient capital to support
its operations; has a funding and liquidity base which is strong,
robust and well managed with substantial future capacity and has
expectations that performance will continue to improve as the
Group's strategy is executed.
The condensed consolidated interim
financial information should be read in conjunction with the annual
financial statements for the year ended 31 October 2023, which have
been prepared in accordance with the International Financial
Reporting Standards ("IFRS").
Non-GAAP financial information
The Directors have identified
certain measures that they believe will assist the understanding of
the performance of the business. The measures are not defined under
IFRS and they may not be directly comparable with other companies'
adjusted measures. The non-GAAP measures are not intended to be a
substitute for, or superior to, any IFRS measures of performance
but they have been included as the Directors consider them to be
important comparable and key measures used within the business for
assessing performance. The following are the key non-GAAP measures
identified by the Group:
· The Group
defines exceptional items to be those that warrant, by virtue of
their nature, size or frequency, separate disclosure on the face of
the income statement where, in the opinion of the Directors, this
enhances the understanding of the Group's financial
performance.
· Underlying
EBITDA is an Alternative Performance Measure and is defined as
operating profit before exceptional items, share-based payments,
corporate transaction costs, gain/loss on investment properties,
depreciation and variable lease payments and the share of
associate's depreciation, interest and tax. Management considers
this presentation to be representative of the underlying
performance of the business, as it removes the income statement
impact of items not fully controllable by management, such as the
revaluation of derivatives and investment properties, and the
impact of exceptional credits, costs and finance charges. A
reconciliation of statutory operating profit to Underlying EBITDA
can be found in the financial review section of this
announcement.
· Adjusted Diluted
EPRA EPS is based on the European Public Real Estate Association's
("EPRA") definition of EPRA earnings and is defined as profit or
loss for the period after tax but excluding corporate transaction
costs, change in fair value of derivatives, fair value gain/loss on
investment properties and the associated tax impacts. The Company
then makes further company-specific adjustments for the impact of
exceptional items, net exchange gains/losses recognised in net
finance costs, exceptional tax items, and deferred and current tax
in respect of these adjustments. The Company also adjusts for IFRS
2 share-based payment charges. This adjusted earnings is divided by
the diluted number of shares. The IFRS 2 cost is excluded as it is
written back to distributable reserves and is a non-cash item (with
the exception of the associated National Insurance element).
Therefore, neither the Company's ability to distribute nor pay
dividends are impacted (with the exception of the associated
National Insurance element). The financial statements disclose
earnings on a statutory, EPRA and Adjusted Diluted EPRA basis and
will provide a full reconciliation of the differences in the
financial year in which any LTIP awards may vest. A reconciliation
of statutory basic earnings per share to Adjusted Diluted EPRA EPS
can be found in note 10.
· EPRA's Best
Practices Recommendations guidelines for Net Asset Value ("NAV")
metrics are EPRA Net Tangible Assets ("NTA"), EPRA Net
Reinstatement Value ("NRV") and EPRA Net Disposal Value ("NDV").
EPRA NTA is considered to be the most relevant measure for the
Group's business which provides sustainable long term progressive
returns and is now the primary measure of net assets. The basis
of calculation, including a reconciliation to reported net
assets, is set out in note 14.
· Like-for-like
figures are presented to aid in the comparability of the underlying
business as they exclude the impact on results of purchased, sold,
opened or closed stores.
· Constant
exchange rate (CER) figures are provided in order to present
results on a more comparable basis, removing foreign exchange
movements.
3 Accounting policies
The condensed consolidated interim
financial information has been prepared on the basis of the
accounting policies expected to apply for the financial year to 31
October 2024 and the same as applied for the Group's Financial
Statements for the Full Year October 2023 applicable to companies
under IFRS.
The preparation of financial
statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles requires the use of certain critical accounting
estimates. It also requires management to exercise judgement in the
process of applying the Company's accounting policies. The areas
involving a higher degree of judgement or complexity, or areas
where assumptions and estimates are significant to the condensed
consolidated interim financial statements are disclosed within the
Group's accounting policies as disclosed in the IFRS financial
statements for the year ended 31 October 2023. There have been no
other significant changes in accounting estimates in the
period.
The same accounting policies,
presentation and methods of computation are followed in the
condensed set of financial statements as applied in the Group's
latest financial statements. The nature of the Critical Accounting
Judgements and Key Sources of Estimation Uncertainty applied in the
condensed financial statements have remained consistent with those
applied in the Group's latest annual audited financial
statements.
4 Revenue
|
Six months
ended
30 April
2024
|
Six
months
ended
30 April
2023
|
Year
ended
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Self-storage income
|
91.6
|
92.4
|
187.2
|
Customer goods
protection
|
12.0
|
12.1
|
25.5
|
Other non-storage
income
|
5.6
|
5.6
|
11.5
|
Total revenue
|
109.2
|
110.1
|
224.2
|
5 Segmental information
The segmental information for the
six months ended 30 April 2024 is as follows:
|
United
Kingdom
|
Paris
|
Spain
|
Benelux
|
Total
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
79.7
|
21.6
|
2.4
|
5.5
|
109.2
|
Underlying EBITDA
|
50.3
|
13.6
|
0.9
|
2.3
|
67.1
|
Share-based payments
|
(1.2)
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
-
|
(1.4)
|
Depreciation and variable lease
payments
|
(1.0)
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
-
|
(1.1)
|
Operating profit before gain on investment properties and
other exceptional gains
|
48.1
|
13.3
|
0.9
|
2.3
|
64.6
|
Gain on revaluation investment
properties
|
72.3
|
34.5
|
10.3
|
4.6
|
121.7
|
Operating profit
|
120.4
|
47.8
|
11.2
|
6.9
|
186.3
|
Net finance expense
|
(8.9)
|
(1.1)
|
(1.6)
|
(1.0)
|
(12.6)
|
Profit before income tax
|
111.5
|
46.7
|
9.6
|
5.9
|
173.7
|
Total assets
|
2,326.2
|
638.0
|
73.6
|
81.0
|
3,118.8
|
The segmental information for the
six months ended 30 April 2023 is as follows:
|
United
Kingdom
|
Paris
|
Spain
|
Benelux
|
Total
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Continuing operations
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
81.7
|
21.8
|
1.7
|
4.9
|
110.1
|
Underlying EBITDA
|
51.9
|
14.9
|
0.6
|
2.3
|
69.7
|
Share-based payments
|
(1.2)
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
-
|
(1.3)
|
Depreciation and variable lease
payments
|
(0.7)
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
-
|
(0.8)
|
Operating profit before gain on investment properties and
other exceptional gains
|
50.0
|
14.7
|
0.6
|
2.3
|
67.6
|
Gain on revaluation of investment
properties
|
24.5
|
14.4
|
2.1
|
6.3
|
47.3
|
Operating profit
|
74.5
|
29.1
|
2.7
|
8.6
|
114.9
|
Net finance expense
|
(10.8)
|
(0.6)
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(11.5)
|
Profit before income tax
|
63.7
|
28.5
|
2.6
|
8.6
|
103.4
|
Total assets
|
2,143.9
|
586.2
|
30.7
|
79.1
|
2,839.9
|
Underlying EBITDA is defined as
operating profit before exceptional items, share-based payments,
corporate transaction costs, gain/loss on investment properties,
depreciation and variable lease payments and the share of
associate's depreciation, interest and tax.
6 Finance income and
costs
|
Six months
ended
30 April
2024
|
Six
months
ended
30 April
2023
|
Year
ended
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Finance income
|
|
|
|
Interest receivable from loan to
associates
|
0.2
|
-
|
-
|
Other interest received
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
Financial instruments
income
|
-
|
0.4
|
0.4
|
Underlying finance
income
|
0.3
|
0.5
|
0.5
|
Net exchange gains
|
-
|
-
|
0.3
|
Total finance income
|
0.3
|
0.5
|
0.8
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
|
Interest payable on bank loans and
overdrafts
|
(9.4)
|
(7.3)
|
(15.1)
|
Amortisation of debt issuance
costs on bank loans
|
(0.6)
|
(0.7)
|
(1.3)
|
Underlying finance
charges
|
(10.0)
|
(8.0)
|
(16.4)
|
Interest on obligations under
lease liabilities
|
(2.9)
|
(2.6)
|
(5.3)
|
Fair value movement on
derivatives
|
-
|
(1.4)
|
(1.7)
|
Total finance costs
|
(12.9)
|
(12.0)
|
(23.4)
|
Net finance costs
|
(12.6)
|
(11.5)
|
(22.6)
|
7 Taxation
|
Six months
ended
30 April
2024
|
|
Six
months
ended
30 April
2023
|
Year
ended
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
Current tax - current
year
|
2.6
|
|
2.6
|
5.1
|
Current tax - prior
year
|
-
|
|
-
|
|
Deferred tax - current
year
|
14.7
|
|
8.0
|
5.3
|
Deferred tax - prior
year
|
(0.4)
|
|
-
|
(2.8)
|
|
16.9
|
|
10.6
|
7.6
|
Income tax is recognised based on
management's best estimate of the weighted average annual income
tax rate expected for the full financial year.
In the UK, the Group is a Real
Estate Investment Trust ("REIT"). As a result, the Group is exempt
from UK corporation tax on the profits and gains arising from its
qualifying property rental business in the UK provided that it
meets certain conditions. Non-qualifying profits and gains of the
Group remain subject to corporation tax as normal. The Group
monitors its compliance with the REIT conditions. There have been
no breaches of the conditions to date.
The main rate of corporation tax
in the UK is 25%. Accordingly, the Group's results for this
accounting period are taxed at an effective rate of 25% (30 April
2023: 18%). Following Finance Act 2021, the main rate of
corporation increased from 19% to 25% from 1 April 2023. There is
no deferred taxation impact in respect of this change in taxation
rate.
Taxation for other jurisdictions
is calculated at the rates prevailing in the respective
jurisdictions.
8 Deferred tax
|
As at
30 April
2024
|
As
at
30 April
2023
|
As
at
31 October 2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
The amounts provided in the
accounts are:
|
|
|
|
Revaluation of investment
properties and tax depreciation
|
150.1
|
139.4
|
139.2
|
Deferred tax
liabilities
|
150.1
|
139.4
|
139.2
|
Other timing
differences
|
6.1
|
0.8
|
6.6
|
Deferred tax assets
|
6.1
|
0.8
|
6.6
|
Net deferred tax liability
|
144.0
|
138.6
|
132.6
|
As at 30 April 2024, the Group had
income losses of £32.7m (30 April 2023: £41.0m) and capital losses
of £36.4m (30 April 2023: £36.4m) in respect of its UK operations.
All losses can be carried forward indefinitely. A deferred tax
asset has been recognised on £21.0m of income tax
losses.
9 Dividends
|
Six months
ended
30 April
2024
|
Six
months
ended
30 April
2023
|
Year
ended
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
For the year ended 31 October
2022:
|
|
|
|
Final dividend - paid 7 April 2023
(20.40p per share)
|
|
44.3
|
44.3
|
For the year ended 31 October
2023
|
|
|
|
Interim dividend - paid 10 August
2023 (9.90p per share)
|
|
-
|
21.6
|
Final dividend - paid 9 April 2024
(20.20p per share)
|
44.1
|
-
|
|
Dividends in the statement of changes in
equity
|
44.1
|
44.3
|
65.9
|
Timing difference on payment of
withholding tax
|
(5.2)
|
(6.6)
|
-
|
Dividends in the cash flow statement
|
(38.9)
|
37.7
|
65.9
|
An interim dividend of 10.0 pence
per ordinary share (April 2023: 9.9 pence) has been declared. The
ex-dividend date will be 4 July 2024 and the record date 5 July
2024, with an intended payment date of 8 August
2024.
It is intended that 25% (April
2023: 25%) of the interim dividend of 10.0 pence per ordinary share
(April 2023: 9.9 pence) will be paid as a REIT Property Income
Distribution ("PID") net of withholding tax where
appropriate.
The interim dividend, amounting to
£21.8m (April 2023: £21.6m), has not been included as a liability
at 30 April 2024. It will be recognised in shareholders' equity in
the year to 31 October 2024.
10 Earnings per ordinary share
Basic earnings per share has been
calculated by dividing the profit attributable to equity holders of
the Company by the weighted average number of ordinary shares in
issue during the period/year excluding ordinary shares held by the
Safestore Employee Benefit Trust. Diluted earnings per share are
calculated by adjusting the weighted average numbers of ordinary
shares to assume conversion of all dilutive potential shares. The
Company has one category of dilutive potential ordinary shares:
share options. For the share options, a calculation is done to
determine the number of shares that could have been acquired at
fair value (determined as the average annual market price of the
Company's shares) based on the monetary value of the subscription
rights attached to the outstanding share options. The number of
shares calculated as above is compared with the number of shares
that would have been issued assuming the exercise of the share
options.
|
Six months ended
30 April 2024
|
Six
months ended
30 April 2023
|
Year
ended
31 October 2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
Earnings
£m
|
Shares
million
|
Pence
per share
|
Earnings
£m
|
Shares
million
|
Pence
per share
|
Earnings
£m
|
Shares
million
|
Pence
per share
|
Basic
|
156.8
|
218.3
|
71.8
|
92.8
|
216.5
|
42.9
|
200.2
|
217.2
|
92.2
|
Dilutive share options
|
-
|
1.0
|
(0.3)
|
-
|
0.8
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
0.9
|
(0.4)
|
Diluted
|
156.8
|
219.3
|
71.5
|
92.8
|
217.3
|
42.7
|
200.2
|
218.1
|
91.8
|
Adjusted earnings per
share
Adjusted earnings per share
represents profit after tax adjusted for the valuation movement on
investment properties, exceptional items, change in fair value of
derivatives and the associated tax thereon. As an industry standard
measure, European Public Real Estate Association ("EPRA") earnings
are presented below. Adjusted diluted earnings are also presented
by adding back the share-based payment charge to the EPRA earnings.
The Directors consider that these alternative measures provide
useful information on the performance of the Group.
|
Six months ended
30 April 2024
|
Six
months ended
30 April 2023
|
Year
ended
31 October 2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
Earnings/(loss)
£m
|
Shares
million
|
Pence
per share
|
Earnings/
(loss)
£m
|
Shares
million
|
Pence
per share
|
Earnings/
(loss)
£m
|
Shares
million
|
Pence
per share
|
Basic
|
156.8
|
218.3
|
71.8
|
92.8
|
216.5
|
42.9
|
200.2
|
217.2
|
92.2
|
Adjustments:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gain on investment
properties
|
(121.7)
|
-
|
(55.7)
|
(47.3)
|
-
|
(21.9)
|
(93.8)
|
-
|
(43.2)
|
Net exchange loss
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.3)
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
Gain in fair value of
derivatives
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1.4
|
-
|
0.6
|
1.7
|
-
|
0.8
|
Tax on adjustments and exceptional
tax
|
13.7
|
-
|
6.3
|
7.4
|
-
|
3.4
|
1.4
|
-
|
0.6
|
Adjusted
|
48.8
|
218.3
|
22.4
|
54.3
|
216.5
|
25.0
|
109.2
|
217.2
|
50.3
|
EPRA adjusted:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fair value re-measurement of lease
liabilities add-back
|
(4.4)
|
-
|
(2.0)
|
(4.4)
|
-
|
(2.0)
|
(8.8)
|
-
|
(4.1)
|
Tax on lease liabilities add-back
adjustment
|
0.6
|
-
|
0.3
|
0.6
|
-
|
0.3
|
1.1
|
-
|
0.5
|
Adjusted EPRA basic EPS
|
45.0
|
218.3
|
20.7
|
50.5
|
216.5
|
23.3
|
101.5
|
217.2
|
46.7
|
Share-based payment
charge
|
1.4
|
-
|
0.6
|
1.3
|
-
|
0.6
|
3.5
|
-
|
1.6
|
Dilutive shares
|
-
|
1.0
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
2.5
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
1.9
|
(0.4)
|
Adjusted Diluted EPRA EPS
|
46.4
|
219.3
|
21.2
|
51.8
|
219.0
|
23.7
|
105.0
|
219.1
|
47.9
|
The definition of Adjusted Diluted
EPRA EPS can be found in note 2 to the financial statements,
being based on the EPRA definition of
earnings with company adjustments for specific items such as tor
the impact of exceptional items, IFRS 2 share-based payment
charges, and deferred tax charges.
Gain on investment properties
includes the fair value re-measurement of lease liabilities
add-back of £4.4m (30 April 2023: £4.4m) and the related tax
thereon of £0.6m (30 April 2023: £0.6m). As an industry standard
measure, EPRA earnings is presented. EPRA earnings of £45.0m (30
April 2023: £50.5m) and EPRA earnings per share of 20.7 pence (30
April 2023: 23.3 pence) are calculated after further adjusting for
these items.
11 Investment in associates
|
As at
30 April
2024
|
As
at
30 April
2023
|
As
at
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Investment in
associates
|
4.1
|
3.3
|
4.1
|
PBC Les Groues
SAS
The Group has a 24.9% interest in
PBC Les Groues SAS ("PBC"), a company registered and operating in
France. PBC is accounted for using the equity method of accounting.
PBC is the parent company of Nanterre FOCD 92, a company also
registered and operating in France, which is developing a new store
as part of a wider development programme located in Paris. The
development project is managed by its joint venture partners,
therefore the Group will have no operational liability during this
phase. During the current period there has been no further
investment in the company. The investment is considered immaterial
relative to the Group's underlying operations.
The aggregate carrying value of
the Group's interest in PBC was £1.8m (30 April 2023: £1.8m), made
up of an investment of £1.8m (30 April 2023: £1.8m). The Group's
share of profits from continuing operations for the period was £nil
(30 April 2023: £nil). The Group's share of total comprehensive
income of associates for the period was £nil (30 April 2023:
£nil).
Cerf II German Storage Topco S.a.r.l.
On 1 December 2022 the Group
acquired a 10.0% interest in CERF II German Storage Topco S.a.r.l.
(CERF II), a company registered in Luxembourg for which the Group
has board representation. The reporting date of the financial
statements for the company is 31 December. Cerf II is accounted for
using the equity method of accounting. Safestore entered the German
Self Storage market via a new investment with Carlyle which
acquired the myStorage business.
The aggregate carrying value of
the Group's interest in CERFII was £2.3m (30 April 2023: £1.5m),
made up of an investment of £2.3m (30 April 2023: £1.5m). The
Group's share of profits from continuing operations for the period
was £nil (30 April 2023: £nil). The Group's share of total
comprehensive income of associates for the period was £nil (30
April 2023: £nil).
12 Investment properties
|
Investment properties, net
of lease liabilities
|
Add-back
of
lease
liabilities
|
Investment
properties under construction
|
Total
investment
properties
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Balance at 1 November
2023
|
2,681.1
|
101.2
|
108.6
|
2,890.9
|
Additions
|
18.8
|
9.1
|
36.8
|
64.7
|
Reclassification
|
27.2
|
-
|
(27.2)
|
-
|
Revaluation movement
|
129.5
|
-
|
(3.4)
|
126.1
|
Fair value re-measurement of lease
liabilities
|
-
|
(4.4)
|
-
|
(4.4)
|
Exchange movements
|
(17.8)
|
(0.7)
|
(0.9)
|
(19.4)
|
Balance at 30 April 2024
|
2,838.8
|
105.2
|
113.9
|
3,057.9
|
|
Fair value of investment
properties, net of lease liabilities
|
Add-back
of
lease
liabilities
|
Investment
properties under construction
|
Total
investment
properties
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Balance at 1 November
2022
|
2,457.8
|
95.1
|
94.5
|
2,647.4
|
Additions
|
33.2
|
9.0
|
29.0
|
71.2
|
Disposal of
subsidiaries
|
-
|
(3.1)
|
-
|
(3.1)
|
|
Reclassification
|
29.9
|
|
(29.9)
|
-
|
Revaluation movement
|
52.3
|
-
|
(0.6)
|
51.7
|
Fair value re-measurement of lease
liabilities
|
-
|
(4.4)
|
-
|
(4.4)
|
Exchange movements
|
13.4
|
0.7
|
0.7
|
14.8
|
Balance at 30 April 2023
|
2,586.6
|
97.3
|
93.7
|
2,777.6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
The gain on investment properties
of £121.7m (30 April 2023: £47.3m) as disclosed in the consolidated
income statement comprises a £126.1m (30 April 2023: £51.7m)
revaluation gain on investment properties, net of lease liabilities
and investment properties under construction less the fair value
re-measurement of lease liabilities add-back of £4.4m (30 April
2023: £4.4m).
The Group has classified
investment property and investment property under construction,
held at fair value, within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.
There were no transfers to or from Level 3 during the period. The
fair valuation exercise undertaken at 30 April 2024 is explained in
note 13.
The fair value of investment
property held by the Group classified as the add-back of lease
liabilities of £105.2m (30 April 2023: £97.3m) reflects expected
cash flows (including rent reviews settled that are expected
to become payable). Accordingly, if a valuation obtained for a
property is net of all payments expected to be made, it will
be necessary to add-back any recognised lease liability, to
arrive at the carrying amount of the investment property using the
fair value model under IAS 40. The lease liability of £105.3m (30
April 2023: £97.5m) differs by £0.1m (30 April 2023: £0.2m) which
relates to the right-of-use asset classified as part of property,
plant and equipment.
13 Valuations
External
valuation
A sample of the Group's largest
properties, representing 30% of the value of the Group's investment
property portfolio at 31 October 2023, has been valued by the
Group's external valuers, C&W, as at 30 April 2024. The
valuation has been carried out in accordance with the requirements
of the RICS Valuation - Global Standards which incorporate the
International Valuation Standards ("IVS") and the RICS Valuation UK
National Supplement (the "RICS Red Book") edition current at 30
April 2024. The valuation of each of the investment properties has
been prepared on the basis of fair value as a fully equipped
operational entity, having regard to trading potential. The
valuation has been provided for accounts purposes and, as such, is
a Regulated Purpose Valuation as defined in the Red Book. In
compliance with the disclosure requirements of the Red Book,
C&W has confirmed that:
· the
member of the RICS who has been the signatory to the valuations
provided to the Group for the same purposes as previous valuations,
has done so since April 2020;
· C&W has been carrying out regular valuations for the same
purpose as this valuation on behalf of the Group since October
2006;
· C&W does not provide other significant professional or
agency services to the Group;
· The
proportion of fees payable by the Group to C&W to the total fee
income of C&W's last financial year to 31 December 2023, was
less than 5%. We anticipate that the proportion of fees for the
financial year to 31 December 2024 will remain at less than 5%;
and
· the
fee payable to C&W is a fixed amount per property and is not
contingent on the appraised value.
Further details of the valuation
carried out by C&W as at 31 October 2023, including the
valuation method and assumptions, are set out in note 13 to the
Group's annual report and financial statements for the year ended
31 October 2023. This note should be read in conjunction with note
13 of the Group's annual report.
Directors'
valuation
In addition, at the same date, the
Directors have prepared estimates of fair values for the remaining
70% of the Group's investment property portfolio, incorporating
assumptions for estimated absorption, revenue growth and
capitalisation rates to reflect current market conditions and
trading.
Assumptions
The key assumptions incorporated
into both the external valuation and the Directors' valuation,
calculated on a weighted average basis across the entire portfolio,
are:
· Net
operating income is based on projected revenue received less
projected operating costs together with a central administration
charge of 6% of the estimated annual revenue subject to a cap and
collar. The initial net operating income is calculated by
estimating the net operating income in the first twelve months
following the valuation date.
· The
net operating income in future years is calculated assuming either
straight line absorption from day one actual occupancy or variable
absorption over years one to four of the cash flow period, to an
estimated stabilised/mature occupancy level. In the valuations the
assumed stabilised occupancy level for the trading stores (both
freeholds and all leaseholds) open at 30 April 2024 averages 89.35%
(31 October 2023: 89.33%). The projected revenues and costs have
been adjusted for estimated cost inflation and revenue growth. The
average time assumed for stores to trade at their maturity levels
is 12.35 months (31 October 2023: 13.44 months).
· The
capitalisation rates applied to existing and future net cash flows
have been estimated by reference to underlying yields for
industrial and retail warehouse property, yields for other trading
property types such as student housing and hotels, bank base rates,
ten year money rates, inflation and the available evidence of
transactions in the sector. The valuations included in the accounts
assume rental growth in future periods. If an assumption of no
rental growth is applied to the valuations, the net initial yield
pre-administration expenses for the mature stores (i.e., excluding
those stores categorised as "developing") is
5.11% (31 October
2023: 5.92%), rising to stabilised net yield pre-administration
expenses of 6.71% (31 October 2023: 6.71%).
· The
weighted average freehold exit yield on UK freeholds is 5.51%
(31 October 2023: 5.75%), on Paris freeholds is 5.33% (31
October 2023: 5.61%), on Spain freeholds is
5.36% (31 October 2023:
5.50%), on the Netherlands freeholds is
4.89% (31 October 2023: 5.15%) and on Belgium freeholds is 4.77%
(31 October 2023: 5.00%). The weighted average freehold exit yield
for all freeholds adopted 5.42% (31 October
2023: 5.72%).
· The
future net cash flow projections (including revenue growth and cost
inflation) have been discounted at a rate that reflects the risk
associated with each asset. The weighted average annual discount
rate adopted (for both freeholds and leaseholds) in the UK
portfolio is 8.20% (31 October 2023:
8.59%) in the France portfolio is 8.17%
(31 October 2023: 8.38%), in the
Spain portfolio is 8.18% (31 October 2023:
8.39%), in the Netherlands portfolio is
7.59% (31 October 2023: 7.74%) and in the Belgium portfolio is
7.57% (31 October 2023: 7.99%). The weighted average annual
discount rate adopted (for both freeholds and all leaseholds) is
8.26% (31 October 2023:
8.54%).
· Purchaser's costs in the range of approximately 3.3% to 6.8%
for the UK, 7.5% for Paris and 2.5% for Spain have been assumed
initially, reflecting the progressive SDLT rates brought into force
in March 2016 in the UK, and sales plus purchaser's costs totalling
approximately 5.3% to 8.8% (UK), 9.5% (Paris) and 4.5% (Spain) are
assumed on the notional sales in the tenth year in relation to
freehold and long leasehold stores.
All other factors being equal,
higher net operating income would lead to an increase in the
valuation of a store and an increase in the capitalisation rate or
discount rate would result in a lower valuation, and vice versa.
Higher assumptions for stabilised occupancy, absorption rate,
rental rate and other revenue, and a lower assumption for operating
costs, would result in an increase in projected net operating
income, and thus an increase in valuation.
As a result of these exercises, as
at 30 April 2024, the Group's investment property portfolio has
been valued at £2,838.8m (30 April 2023: £2,586.6m), and a
revaluation gain of £121.7m (30 April 2023: £47.3m) has been
recognised in the income statement for the period.
A full external valuation of the
Group's investment property portfolio will be performed at 31
October 2024.
14 Net assets per share
|
As at
30 April
2024
|
As
at
30 April
2023
|
As
at
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
Analysis of net asset value
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Balance sheet net
assets
|
2,041.4
|
1,848.3
|
1,935.1
|
Adjustments to exclude:
|
|
|
|
Fair value of derivative financial
instruments (net of deferred tax)
|
-
|
(0.3)
|
-
|
Deferred tax liabilities on the
revaluation of investment properties
|
150.1
|
139.4
|
139.2
|
EPRA NTA
|
2,191.5
|
1,987.4
|
2,074.3
|
|
|
|
|
Basic net assets per share
(pence)
|
935
|
848
|
888
|
EPRA basic NTA per share
(pence)
|
1003
|
912
|
952
|
Diluted net assets per share
(pence)
|
930
|
845
|
884
|
EPRA diluted NTA per share
(pence)
|
999
|
909
|
948
|
|
Number
|
Number
|
Number
|
Shares in issue
|
218,487,150
|
218,006,528
|
218,039,419
|
Basic net assets per share is
shareholders' funds divided by the number of shares at the period
end. The number of shares in issue at the period end excludes
75,814 shares (30 April 2023: 145,493 shares) held by the Safestore
Employee Benefit Trust. Diluted net assets per share is
shareholders' funds divided by the number of shares at the period
end, adjusted for dilutive share options of 1,023,639 shares (30
April 2023: 821,170 shares).
15 Borrowings
The tables below set out the
Group's borrowings position as at 30 April 2024:
|
As at
30 April
2024
|
As
at
30 April
2023
|
As
at
31 October 2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
Non-current
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Borrowings:
|
|
|
|
Unsecured - revolving credit
facility
|
254.6
|
172.9
|
203.0
|
Unsecured - US Private placement
notes
|
477.6
|
529.2
|
483.3
|
Debt issue costs
|
(4.5)
|
(4.9)
|
(5.0)
|
|
727.7
|
697.2
|
681.3
|
Current
Borrowings:
|
|
|
|
Unsecured - US Private placement
notes
|
43.5
|
-
|
44.5
|
|
43.5
|
-
|
44.5
|
On 30 April 2024, the Group
completed the financing of its RCF's accordion option for £100m.
This increased the facility to £500m. The facility was originally
for a four-year term with two one-year extension options
exercisable after the first and second years of the agreement. The
first extension was granted in October 2023, taking the term to
five years.
One tranche of Private Placement
notes matured at the end of May 2024 and was repaid following the
balance sheet date utilising existing debt facilities.
The remaining US Private
Placement Notes of €307.1 have maturities extending to 2026, 2027,
2028, 2029 and 2033 and £215.5m which have maturities extending to
2026, 2028, 2029 and 2031.
Borrowings are stated before
unamortised issue costs of £4.5m (30 April 2023: £4.9m). The bank
loans and private placement notes were repayable as
follows:
|
As at
30 April
2024
|
As
at
30 April
2023
|
As
at
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Within one year
|
43.5
|
-
|
44.5
|
Between one and two
years
|
-
|
44.6
|
-
|
Between two and five
years
|
457.3
|
334.2
|
409.0
|
After more than five
years
|
274.9
|
323.3
|
277.3
|
Borrowings
|
775.7
|
702.1
|
730.8
|
Unamortised issue costs
|
(4.5)
|
(4.9)
|
(5.0)
|
|
771.2
|
697.2
|
725.8
|
The effective interest rates at
the balance sheet date were as follows:
|
As at
30 April
2024
|
As
at
30 April
2023
|
As
at
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
RCF (£)
|
Monthly,
quarterly or six monthly SONIA plus 1.25%
|
Monthly,
quarterly or six monthly SONIA plus 1.25%
|
Monthly,
quarterly or six monthly SONIA plus 1.25%
|
RCF (€)
|
Monthly,
quarterly or six monthly EURIBOR plus 1.25%
|
Monthly,
quarterly or six monthly EURIBOR plus 1.25%
|
Monthly,
quarterly or six monthly EURIBOR plus 1.25%
|
Private placement notes
(€)
|
Weighted
average rate of 1.80%
|
Weighted
average rate of 1.80%
|
Weighted
average rate of 1.80%
|
Private placement notes
(£)
|
Weighted
average rate of 2.55%
|
Weighted
average rate of 2.55%
|
Weighted
average rate of 2.55%
|
In addition to the margin of
1.25%, the RCF also has ESG targets enabling a reduction in the
margin of up to 5bps to 1.20%. In the period these targets were all
met.
Borrowing
facilities
The Group has the following
undrawn committed borrowing facilities available at the period end
in respect of which all conditions precedent had been met at that
date:
|
Floating rate
|
|
As at
30 April
2024
|
As
at
30 April
2023
|
As
at
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
Expiring within one
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Expiring beyond one
year
|
245.4
|
227.1
|
297.0
|
16 Share capital
|
As at
30 April
2024
|
As
at
30 April
2023
|
As
at
31 October
2023
|
|
(unaudited)
|
(unaudited)
|
(audited)
|
Called up, issued and fully paid
|
£m
|
£m
|
£m
|
218,487,150 (30 April 2023:
218,006,528) ordinary shares of 1p each
|
2.2
|
2.2
|
2.2
|
17 Capital commitments
The Group had capital commitments
of £170.0m as at 30 April 2024 (31 October 2023: £128.0m; 30 April
2023: £134.0m).
18 Related party transactions
The Group's shares are widely held.
Transactions between the Company and its subsidiaries, which are
related parties, have been eliminated on consolidation and are not
disclosed in this note.
Transactions with PBC Les
Groues SAS
As described in note 11, the Group
has a 24.9% interest in PBC Les Groues SAS ("PBC"). During the
period, the Group is due to receive interest of £0.2m which is
included within amounts due from associates (30 April 2023: £nil).
The total amount invested is included as part of its non-current
investments in associates.
Transactions with CERF II
German Storage Topco S a r l (CERF II)
As described in note 11, the Group
has a 10.0% interest in CERF II German Storage Topco S a r l (CERF
II). During the period, the Group recharged £0.2m (30 April 2023:
£Nil).
19 Provisions
In France, the basis on which
property taxes have been assessed has been challenged by the tax
authority for financial years 2011 onwards. In November 2022 the
French Supreme Court delivered a final judgement in respect of
litigation for years 2011 to 2013, which resulted in a partial
success for the Group. The Group is separately pursuing litigation
in respect of years since 2013 and has lodged an appeal with the
French administrative tribunal against the issues included in
assessments for 2013 onwards on which it was ultimately
unsuccessful in the French Supreme Court for the earlier years. A
provision is included in the consolidated financial accounts of
£2.6m at 30 April 2024 (31 October 2023: £2.6m), to reflect the
increased uncertainty surrounding the likelihood of a successful
outcome.
It is possible that the French tax
authority may appeal the decisions of the French Court of Appeal on
which the Group was successful to the French Supreme Court. The
maximum potential exposure in relation to these issues at 30 April
2024 is £3.0m (31 October 2023: £3.0m). No provision for any
further potential exposure has been recorded in the consolidated
financial statements since the Group believes it is more likely
than not that a successful outcome will be achieved, resulting in
no additional liabilities.
20 Contingent liabilities
The Group has a contingent
liability in respect of property taxation in the French subsidiary
as disclosed in note 19.
21 Post Balance Sheet Events
One tranche of Private Placement
notes matured for €50.9m (£43.5m) at the end of May 2024 and was
repaid utilising existing debt facilities.
The delivery of our strategic
objectives is dependent on effective risk management. There are a
number of potential risks and uncertainties which could have a
material impact on the Group's performance and could cause actual
results to differ materially from expected and historical results.
Details of the principal risks facing the Group were included on
pages 35 to 40 of the Annual Report and Financial Statements for
the year ended 31 October 2023, a copy of which is available
at www.safestore.com,
and include:
· Strategic risks
· Finance risk
· Treasury risk
· Property investment and development risk
· Valuation risk
· Occupancy risk
· Real
estate investment trust ("REIT") risk
· Catastrophic event risk
· Regulatory compliance risk
· Marketing risk
· IT
security/GDPR
· Brand and Reputational risk
· Geographical expansion
· Human resource risk
· Climate change related risk
The Company regularly assesses
these risks together with the associated mitigating factors listed
in the 2023 Annual Report. The levels of activity in the Group's
markets and the level of financial liquidity and flexibility
continue to be the areas designated as appropriate for added
management focus.
We continue to believe that our
market leading position in the UK and Paris, our strong brand and
depth of management, as well as our retail expertise and
infrastructure, help mitigate the effects of fluctuations in the
economy or the housing market. Furthermore, the UK self-storage
market remains immature with little risk of supply outstripping
demand in the medium term.
Our prudent approach on new stores
reduces our dependence on the number of non-trading investment
properties in relation to the established and mature stores that
provide relatively stable and growing cash flow. The Board
regularly reviews the cash requirements of the business, including
the covenant position although given the nature of the product,
customer base and lack of working capital requirements, liquidity
is not considered to be a significant risk.
The Outlook section of this half
yearly report provides a commentary concerning the remainder of the
financial year.
Forward-looking statements
Certain statements in this interim
results announcement are forward-looking statements. By their
nature, forward-looking statements involve a number of risks,
uncertainties or assumptions that could cause actual results or
events to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the
forward-looking statements. These risks, uncertainties or
assumptions could adversely affect the outcome and financial
effects of the plans and events described herein. Forward-looking
statements contained in this interim results announcement regarding
past trends or activities should not be taken as a representation
that such trends or activities will continue in the future. You
should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements,
which speak only as of the date of this interim results
announcement. Except as required by law, the Company is under no
obligation to update or keep current the forward-looking statements
contained in this interim results announcement or to correct any
inaccuracies which may become apparent in such forward-looking
statements.
Statement of Directors' responsibilities for the six months
ended 30 April 2024
The Directors confirm that, to the
best of their knowledge, this condensed consolidated interim
financial information has been prepared in accordance with IAS 34
as contained in the United Kingdom adopted IFRS and that the
interim management report includes a fair review of the information
required by DTR 4.2.4R, DTR 4.2.7R and DTR 4.2.8R,
namely:
· the
condensed set of financial statements gives a true and fair view of
the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit or loss of
Safestore Holdings plc, or the undertakings included in the
consolidation;
· an
indication of important events that have occurred during the first
six months of the financial year and their impact on the condensed
set of financial statements, and a description of the principal
risks and uncertainties for the remaining six months of the
financial year; and
· material related-party transactions in the first six months
and any material changes in the related-party transactions
described in the last annual report.
A list of current Directors is
maintained on the Safestore Holdings plc website,
www.safestore.com.
The Directors are responsible for
the maintenance and integrity of the Company's website. Legislation
in the United Kingdom governing the preparation and dissemination
of financial statements may differ from legislation in other
jurisdictions.
By order of the Board
Frederic Vecchioli
|
Simon Clinton
|
11 June 2024
|
11 June 2024
|
Chief Executive Officer
|
Chief Financial Officer
|
INDEPENDENT REVIEW REPORT TO SAFESTORE HOLDINGS
PLC
Conclusion
We have been engaged by the
company to review the condensed set of financial statements in the
half-yearly financial report for the six months ended 30 April 2024
which comprises the consolidated income statement, the consolidated
balance sheet, the consolidated statement of changes in equity, the
consolidated cash flow statement, and related notes 1 to
21.
Based on our review, nothing has
come to our attention that causes us to believe that the condensed
set of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report for
the six months ended 30 April 2024 is not prepared, in all material
respects, in accordance with the accounting policies the group
intends to use in preparing its next annual financial statements
and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the United
Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.
Basis for Conclusion
We conducted our review in
accordance with International Standard on Review Engagements (UK)
2410 "Review of Interim Financial Information Performed by the
Independent Auditor of the Entity" issued by the Financial
Reporting Council for use in the United Kingdom (ISRE (UK) 2410). A
review of interim financial information consists of making
inquiries, primarily of persons responsible for financial and
accounting matters, and applying analytical and other review
procedures. A review is substantially less in scope than an audit
conducted in accordance with International Standards on Auditing
(UK) and consequently does not enable us to obtain assurance that
we would become aware of all significant matters that might be
identified in an audit. Accordingly, we do not express an audit
opinion.
As disclosed in note 2, the annual
financial statements of the group are prepared in accordance with
United Kingdom adopted international accounting standards. The
condensed set of financial statements included in this half-yearly
financial report has been prepared in accordance with United
Kingdom adopted International Accounting Standard 34, "Interim
Financial Reporting".
Conclusion Relating to Going Concern
Based on our review procedures,
which are less extensive than those performed in an audit as
described in the Basis for Conclusion section of this report,
nothing has come to our attention to suggest that the directors
have inappropriately adopted the going concern basis of accounting
or that the directors have identified material uncertainties
relating to going concern that are not appropriately
disclosed.
This Conclusion is based on the
review procedures performed in accordance with ISRE (UK) 2410;
however future events or conditions may cause the entity to cease
to continue as a going concern.
Responsibilities of the directors
The directors are responsible for
preparing the half-yearly financial report in accordance with the
Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's
Financial Conduct Authority.
In preparing the half-yearly
financial report, the directors are responsible for assessing the
group's ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing as
applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going
concern basis of accounting unless the directors either intend to
liquidate the company or to cease operations, or have no realistic
alternative but to do so.
Auditor's Responsibilities for the review of the financial
information
In reviewing the half-yearly
financial report, we are responsible for expressing to the company
a conclusion on the condensed set of financial statements in the
half-yearly financial report. Our Conclusion, including our
Conclusion Relating to Going Concern, are based on procedures that
are less extensive than audit procedures, as described in the Basis
for Conclusion paragraph of this report.
Use of our report
This report is made solely to the
company in accordance with ISRE (UK) 2410. Our work has been
undertaken so that we might state to the company those matters we
are required to state to it in an independent review report and for
no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not
accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the company,
for our review work, for this report, or for the conclusions we
have formed.
Deloitte LLP
Statutory Auditor
London, United Kingdom
11 June 2024