31 July 2024
Walker Crips Group
plc
("Walker
Crips", the "Company" or the "Group")
Final results for the year
ended 31 March 2024
Walker Crips Group plc, the
investment management and wealth management services, pensions
administration and regulation technology Group, announces audited
results for the year ended 31 March 2024.
Financial highlights
●
Total revenues broadly flat at £31.57 million (2023: £31.61
million).
●
Operating profit declined by 89.9% to £63,000 (2023:
£625,000).
●
Profit before tax declined by 38.8% to £387,000 (2023:
£632,000).
●
Adjusting for exceptional items, the Group is reporting an
operating loss of £162,000 (2023: operating profit of £1,179,000)
and a profit before tax of £162,000 (2023: £1,186,000)*.
●
Adjusted EBITDA of £1.77 million (2023: £3.25 million), a
decline of 45.4%.**
●
Underlying cash generated in the year £2.30 million (2023:
£3.36 million), reducing by 31.6%.***
●
Cash and cash equivalents of £13.86 million (2023: £13.14
million).
●
Assets Under Management ("AUM") decreased by 13.5% to £2.7
billion (2023: £3.1 billion).
●
Proposed final dividend of 0.25 pence per share (2023: 0.25
pence per share), bringing the total dividends for the year to 0.50
pence per share (2023: 0.50 pence per share).
*
Exceptional items are disclosed in note 9 to the accounts and a
full reconciliation to IFRS results is presented in the Finance
Director's review.
** Adjusted
EBITDA represents earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation
and amortisation, and exceptional items. The Directors present this
result as it is a metric widely used by stakeholders when
considering an entity's financial performance. A full
reconciliation to IFRS results is provided in the Finance
Director's review.
*** Underlying cash generated
from operations represents the cash generated from operations
adjusted for lease liability payments under IFRS 16, non-cyclical
working capital movements and operational exceptional items. The
Directors consider that this metric helps readers understand the
cash generating performance of the Group. A full reconciliation to
the IFRS results is provided in the Finance Director's
review.
For
further information, please contact:
Walker Crips Group plc
Craig Harrison, Media
Relations
|
|
Tel: +44 (0)20 3100
8000
|
Four Agency
Jonathan Atkins
walkercrips@four.agency
Singer Capital Markets
Charles Leigh-Pemberton/Asha
Chotai
|
|
Tel: +44 (0)20 3920 0555
Tel: +44 (0)20 7496
3000
|
Further information on Walker Crips
Group is available on the Company's website:
www.walkercrips.co.uk
Chairman's statement
"Our year to 31 March 2024 has been a
difficult one. We had a significant year-on-year cost
increase, caused in part by high inflation, our compliance
transformation project and by recruiting, and maintaining in real
terms the salaries paid to staff within our organisation.
Staff are our key asset and so it is right we pay market rates to
ensure we retain top calibre employees. In our compliance
transformation programme, we have learned from past events and are
fully committed to ensuring our compliance and risk management
follows best practice. This comes with a cost, both in financial
terms and senior management time, but we remain committed to
ensuring our customers are fully protected and that we deliver good
outcomes for them. In addition, achieving best practice has
meant losing several investment managers and their related
clients. Although we have suffered financially, we believe
that this was the right outcome, aligning with the values we
uphold.
Looking forward, we are making
important investments for growth. We have recruited new
financial planners and have now met our targeted staffing
levels. We are committed to offering more choice for
clients and have hired new business development managers. We have
also launched a new structured deposit product.
We are developing a full strategic
integrated plan closely linked with our compliance transformation
project and we look forward to announcing details of this in the
coming months."
Chairman's
statement
Our financial year to 31 March 2024
has been a year of continuing challenges. A large part of the
year was overshadowed by global conflicts, political uncertainty,
high inflation and high interest rates. These external influences
coupled with the costs incurred to strengthen our compliance and
risk framework significantly affected our results.
Inevitably, inflation increased our cost base. In addition,
to bring our remuneration levels in line with the market and to
negate the impact of the cost-of-living crisis on our staff, we
approved what overall was a substantial increase in staff
remuneration. Further, rising interest rates impacted our
market driven fee and commission income, although this was offset
by retaining a share of interest income earned on our own reserves
and customer trading cash balances.
In terms of our results, the Group,
for the 12-month period to 31 March 2024, is reporting an operating
profit of £63,000 (2023: £625,000) and profit before tax of
£387,000 (2023: £632,000). Excluding exceptional items, the
Group is reporting an operating loss of £162,000 (2023: operating
profit of £1,179,000) and profit before tax of £162,000 (2023:
£1,186,000). A more detailed explanation of our results is set out
in the Finance Director's review.
I have already referenced our
compliance and risk framework. Since I took over as Chairman
of the Group, I have been making reference to investments that we
have been making in this respect, originally specifically on our
financial crime framework and, in my statement in our annual report
to March 2023 and our interim statement, I noted more generally our
strategic initiative to improve our regulatory and compliance
framework. This work is still continuing and still requiring
considerable investment. During the year, in addition to
implementation and embedding changes to reflect the Consumer Duty
regime, management has been working with external consultants on a
number of high priority projects extending from client assets
management specifically, to compliance and risk management
generally with the objective of ensuring that our operational and
regulatory control environment is fit for purpose and up to date
with market best practice.
Last year I noted that we needed to
strengthen our senior management team to address some
self-identified weaknesses. Previously, we had been minded to
recruit once the business was performing better. We have
concluded that this is a false economy, unreasonably stretching our
senior management and holding back the business. I am
therefore pleased to report that we have recently recruited a
senior Chief Risk and Compliance Officer, Christian Dougal, to work
alongside the CEO and CFO. We believe that his experience and
expertise, having worked for nearly thirty years in risk and
compliance, will enable the Group finally to move to a robust
comprehensive and integrated platform, and to reduce substantially
the reliance on external consultants.
Turning to the business operations,
the Board fully recognises that the Group must grow to return, at
the least, to an acceptable level of profitability.
Establishing a robust operational, compliance and risk framework
is, of course, an essential prerequisite. Equally we still
need to grow the senior executive team, and have further plans so
to do.
Our business development team has
been working hard in promoting our products and services to the IFA
community and new customer groups and we are expecting their good
work to translate to new customers and ultimately new revenues. The
Board is developing plans to generate new income by way of
broadening and improving our offering in a way that will enable us
to serve the requirements of existing clients better and more
comprehensively as well as attracting new customers and new assets
under management. This initiative will go beyond the
business-as-usual efforts of our investment managers and beyond the
significant gains from our business development initiative.
This is likely to involve much greater cooperation between
different divisions within the Group.
On a positive note, our York
Division, which has been on a recruitment drive, has now recruited
their target number of financial advisers. This plan
envisages that the anticipated new revenues should now be coming on
stream and the division is expected to move to profitability in the
coming year. This will pave the way for the division to
become self-sufficient at its current levels and to pay back the
investment made by the Group. I would like to thank the
management team of the York Division and wish them continued good
fortune in the coming months.
Our Structured Products division,
whilst it had a difficult year with the industry shifting towards
deposits, launched a new structured deposit initiative last year,
allowing us to expand to a new customer cohort. We are expecting
the team to generate new income from this initiative in the coming
year.
Finally, the underpayment of Stamp
Duty Reserve Tax that I referenced in my 2023 statement has been
resolved, following an extensive internal investigation and our tax
advisers are in communication with the HMRC to agree the final
settlement. The extent of underpayment was lower than we initially
estimated last year and the excess, net of professional fees, has
been written back to exceptional items in the current year. I
am pleased to report that an HMRC case officer has been appointed
and we hope to conclude this matter in the coming
months.
In addition to our regulatory
framework, the FCA's Consumer Duty regulations were high on the
list of priorities during the year. A detailed review of our
products and services and how they are matched to clients and their
needs was carried out during the year. Further details on how
we implemented the Duty are contained in the CEO's
statement.
Dividend
We aim to reward our shareholders
for their continued patience and support. Given the current
economic environment and reported results, the Board will recommend
for shareholders' approval at the forthcoming AGM a final dividend
of 0.25 pence per share (2023: 0.25 pence) payable on 4 October
2024 to those shareholders on the register at the close of business
on 20 September 2024, with an ex-dividend date of 19 September
2024.
Directors,
Account Executives and staff
I would like to thank my fellow
Directors, our investment managers and advisers and all members of
staff for their efforts, resilience and continued commitment to the
Group. We have had a difficult couple of years, with more work to
do this year, but the path to a more robust operating model and
business plan is now much clearer.
As announced, our Senior Independent
Director, Clive Bouch, resigned and relinquished his role on 27
June 2024. Clive and I had discussed his wish to step
down and we are grateful to him for deferring the step by several
months. On behalf of the Board, I wish to thank Clive for his
considerable contribution to the Group over the last seven years
and I wish him all the best with his future endeavours.
Clive's resignation leaves the
governance of the Group short of what is required by the UK
Corporate Governance Code. The Board is addressing this and,
as part of the plans to which I refer, we are in discussions to
appoint two new Independent Non-executive Directors. As soon
as we are able, we will provide further updates.
Outlook
As you are aware from my previous
communications, we have been working to improve our financial crime
framework and I am pleased to report that we have successfully
completed this work and changes are now embedded to our day-to-day
operations. In addition to this, overseen directly by me, with
support from independent external advisers and led now by our Chief
Risk and Compliance Officer, we are carrying out an extensive
review of other areas across our Compliance, Risk, Suitability,
Monitoring functions and adoption of Consumer Duty regulation to
establish a target future state for risk and compliance. This
will be linked to additional business planning and change
management resource we are currently putting in place that will
enable us to develop a comprehensive and integrated plan for the
entire Group. We expect to complete the majority of this work
in the financial year 2025.
I anticipate that this programme we
have set out to achieve, whilst wholly necessary, will require
considerable management time and resource in the coming
year.
There is little doubt that we have
short-term challenges we need to overcome, and we are committed to
this course. We will have another year of high costs and pressure
on management to deliver a fit for purpose operational and
regulatory framework. Despite these short-term challenges,
which I see as an investment, for the reasons described, I remain
optimistic about the longer-term future of our Group.
Martin Wright
Chairman
31 July 2024
CEO's statement
Innovating, Digitising and Focusing on Customer
Outcomes
This has been a mixed year for us.
We have put a great deal of effort into the rolling out of the
Consumer Duty (The Duty) regulations, in a manner that I consider
has been to the benefit of our customers and the organisation as a
whole. The market for our structured products diminished slightly
during this financial year, but the team was innovative and
launched an additional structured deposit model which is already
generating considerable interest. Our financial planning division
showed an increased loss, but this was a consequence of our
strategy to rebuild the team, and there tends to be a time lag
between recruitment and new revenue coming 'on stream'.
As mentioned in the Chairman's
Statement, we have struggled with bandwidth at the senior
management level. To address this, we have made a number of senior
hires, including a new Chief Risk and Compliance Officer. We will
continue to review our resource requirements and adjust
accordingly. We have also hired for the front office new business
development individuals, investment managers and financial planners
to service our existing customers, and to grow new revenues. We
also believe in the training of young people and our Graduate
Trainee and Internship programmes have enabled us to bring new
individuals into the industry who could well become the new leaders
of the firm in the future. More details on our regulated
subsidiaries are mentioned below.
Our Financial Highlights show that
our financial performance has not met our initial projections or
expectations. Operating profit declined by 89.9%
to £63,000 (2023: £625,000) and, adjusting for exceptional items,
we are reporting an operating loss of £162,000 (2023: operating
profit of £1,179,000). With the additional senior risk and
compliance hires and the new front office personnel, we believe
that we have in place a plan that will put the business on to a
better risk and compliance footing and on to a platform for
growth.
We continue to invest in greater
digitisation to improve customer facing services such as the
provision of better systems to our investment managers, associates,
financial planners and IFAs who work with the Group, updating our
Client Portal, substantially enhancing our mobile apps, improving
the documentation provided to customers, revised and standardised
our tariff of fees and commission and simplifying our supplementary
tariff.
Consumer Duty
Throughout the past year, we have
focused on the implementation of the Consumer Duty (The Duty)
regulations which serves to set higher and clearer standards of
consumer protection across financial services, and require firms to
put customers' needs first. The Duty effectively codifies our
fundamental principle of taking all
reasonable steps to avoid causing foreseeable harm to customers,
enabling them to pursue their financial objectives, and always act
in good faith towards them.
We have reviewed all the services
that we provide to our customers, clarified the target market of
our services, we benchmarked our services to our peers to ensure
that we are competitive, we clarified the benefits that our
customers are receiving from the services that we provide, we
reviewed the cost to the business in providing those services, we
also reviewed our fees and commissions and simplified our
supplementary tariff and we conducted a value assessment to ensure
our customers are receiving what they are paying for. We are
particularly mindful of those who may be vulnerable and take extra
care in supporting them and delivering the level of service and
outcomes that match their needs.
Our review has included the Group's
approach to the treatment of cash held by our own or external
custodians on customers' behalf, with the objective of ensuring
consistency and fairness in relation to the income derived and the
cost of managing and protecting customers' assets under our
control.
Our delivery strategy has been, for
a number of years, to "simplify and digitise", and The Duty has
helped push this development further and faster. This has included
the simplification of tariffs, the improvement of communication
with customers, moving from static customer feedback to regular and
continuous based on activity and there is even a smiley-face
quick-feedback feature, where appropriate. We have ensured that our
documents are clearly written and understood and that our website
is written in 'plain language', as was certified by the Plain
Language Commission. The Duty has caused a positive mindset change
within the Group and has permeated through the organisation, and it
is not just top down, but exhibited by all staff.
However, our approach in the
implementation of The Duty, the development of new and revised
policies and procedures, the streamlining of our tariff, the
further simplification of our business, was not wholly acceptable
by a number of our self-employed investment management associates
who decided to leave us. It is always disappointing to see
colleagues whom we've known for a long time leave the Group;
nevertheless, we do wish them well.
Divisional performance
Our regulated entities have only a
moderate amount of cross-over but over the coming year, the Group
executive and our divisional heads will be making greater efforts
to have individuals from across divisions collaborating in order to
increase the provision of a consolidated approach to engagement
with our customers, all the while ensuring that we are providing
good outcomes to them.
Our Investment Management division has
invested in the building blocks for growth. We have hired
specialist business development individuals with a clear mandate to
attract new investment portfolios into the business by
promoting our products and services to the IFA
community and new customer groups such as sportspersons and future
investors, through our #WalkerCripsInSports and
#WalkerCripsInSchools initiatives. Our team has
reviewed our product offering, removed complications, and
simplified/streamlined our model portfolio service. We have also
re-launched our AIM inheritance tax portfolio service and created a
new Gilt portfolio service.
Our Structured Investments division
launched a new structured deposit initiative which will allow us to
expand into a new group of customers and we have already seen
encouraging investment inflows.
Our Financial Planning division continues
to grow with highly experienced financial planners (FPs) joining
us. In 2021, we were left with two full-time FPs and we embarked on
a rebuilding programme and now, in 2024, we have 12 qualified FPs
serving our customers. Most of the customers of these new FPs
'followed' them and opened accounts with Walker Crips. Over that
period, our AUA within our Financial Planning division grew from
£141m to £415m (June 2024).
Barker Poland Asset Management (BPAM) continues to focus on financial planning and
discretionary investment management for UK based individuals,
providing advice on strategy, tax wrappers and associated tax,
retirement, cash flow management, insurance and estate planning. On
investments, BPAM runs a range of risk adjusted models containing
active and passive funds. It is aiming for a profit of circa £450k
from c.£2.4m turnover for the next financial year while keeping
focus on reducing costs of funds, and keeping its back office as
streamlined as possible. BPAM is also recruiting trainees/juniors
with the intention of developing them into advisers over time. It
has always placed great emphasis on personal contact, which is one
way it seeks to differentiate itself in a highly competitive market
space.
Ebor Trustees (Ebor) has been
driving to keep its pricing competitive and increasing the adoption
of digitised solutions. The division is also preparing its
marketing campaign which will take place between October and March
2025, and with a more targeted campaign for Accountants, promoting
the benefits of pension platforms and how they may fit into the
overall financial plan for customers.
For more information about the
financial performance of the Divisions, please refer to the Finance
Director's Review.
Corporate responsibility
I wish to reiterate my message from
the last few years, that we can all do our part in reducing our
carbon footprint:
REFUSE - Avoid buying harmful,
wasteful or non-recyclable products
REDUCE - Reduce the use of
harmful, wasteful, and non-recyclable products
REUSE - Get rid of the "buy and
throw-away" mindset, re-use what you have
REPAIR - Try to repair before
tossing them out
REPURPOSE - Upcycle, break down
and reconstitute as something else
ROT - Compost if you
can
RECYCLE - Make recycling your
last step, after going through all the R's above
We are committed to sustainability
and environmental responsibility because we recognise the urgent
need to address climate change and mitigate our environmental
impact. We also believe that our commitment to sustainable
practices will also present us with opportunities for innovation
and cost efficiencies.
Mental health charity
As a Group, we continue to support
twiningenterprise.org.uk, the mental health charity. In addition to
financial support, we also try to use our technology for good,
through technology philanthropy. If you wish to find out more, or
want to support Twining financially, please visit
walkercrips.co.uk/community.
Conclusion
I wish to echo our Chairman's thanks
to our Audit Committee Chairman and Director, Clive Bouch, who
stepped down on 27 June 2024. Clive's attention to detail and
thoroughness has been invaluable to the Group. We wish him
well.
We shall continue to make investment
rewarding for our customers, our shareholders and our staff, and to
give our customers a fair deal. We continue to support our
investment advisers and our staff by being a technology-driven
financial services company. We have had significant challenges, as
mentioned in the Chairman's Statement and above, but we are
optimistic about the future, with the right strategies, personnel,
and the right mindset to overcome the challenges and create
opportunities. We remain committed to delivering sustainable
growth, creating value for our stakeholders, and making a positive
impact on society.
Sean Lam
Chief Executive Officer
31 July 2024
Finance Director's review
The financial year to 31 March 2024
was one of dealing with difficult challenges. Our primary focus
during the year was the continuation of the initiatives to improve
our compliance and risk management framework including the initial
work relating to the financial crime control framework review and
remediation that we noted last year. It is a significant
undertaking, in terms of management time and the resource required.
As described in the Chairman's Statement, the work is ongoing and
it is a worthwhile and necessary investment to improve our control
environment, customer service and ultimately leading to improve
operating margins and profitability in the long run.
Financial performance
The Group's results were impacted by
external pressures and internal operational matters that saw
trading commissions and management fees impacted negatively, whilst
inflationary pressures, together with continued costs and
investment in strengthening our regulatory and compliance
functions, kept our cost base high. Our performance, as noted in my
report last year, was also impacted by five self-employed
investment managers and their client base leaving the group during
the year. We will see one more self-employed investment manager
depart early in the new financial year.
The negative impact of these were
somewhat mitigated by interest income from managing customer
deposits and the firm's own money, and an exceptional income
arising from a lower than expected liability in relation to the
previously reported Stamp Duty Reserve Tax (SDRT) underpayment and
related professional fees (see note 9).
We are reporting a Group profit
before tax of £387,000 (2023: £632,000), reflecting the outcome of
challenges noted by the Chairman. Adjusting for exceptional items,
there has been a marked decline in year-on-year pre-tax,
pre-exceptional profits of £162,000 (2023: £1,186,000). Further
explanation of these headline results is provided below.
Notwithstanding the headline
results, we did not lose focus on strategic measures to ensure that
the Group's underlying performance in the future is strengthened
with the hiring of business development managers with a clear
mandate to attract new customers and new assets under management.
They have had some success already and there is a considerable book
of prospects in the pipeline.
We also launched a new structured
deposit initiative to help us identify and open new doors for new
clients and revenues. During the financial year, we saw the first
shoots from this initiative with 152 new clients investing £5.2
million into our opening structured deposit.
We remain cautiously optimistic
about the future as we view much of the work in relation to
improvements to our compliance and risk management framework,
internal controls, financial crime prevention systems, client asset
management processes and Consumer Duty implementation as
investments which are necessary to protect client and Group assets
from which we can reap long-term benefits.
Total revenue
Total revenue, due to a number of
variables, decreased by 0.1% to £31.57 million (2023: £31.61
million). The decrease, as I referenced last year, was partly
driven by a number of self-employed investment managers exiting the
Group at the start of the year, and partly driven by difficult
market and uncertain economic pressures depressing trading
commissions and management fees, which were offset by higher
retention of interest earned on managing customer trading
balances.
Total commission income reduced by
17.9% to £4.9 million (2023: £6.0 million). The loss of a number of
self-employed investment managers and their clients, and the
revenue therein, and persisting market uncertainty were direct
causes of the reduction in commission. It is also important to
recognise that the Group has been slowly moving away from volume
based variable income to more stable fee income, and this is
expected to be more prominent next year with the recent tariff
alignment exercise conducted by the Investment Management division,
which will be in place for a full financial year.
Fee generating client assets fell by
13.5% to £2.7 billion (2023: £3.1 billion). The reduction in these
assets naturally resulted in our fee income reducing by 4.9% to
£16.9 million, down £0.8 million from last year (2023: £17.7
million). During the year, in conjunction with the Consumer Duty
implementation, the Investment Management division standardised its
fee tariffs across all its service range thereby removing
historical commercial arrangements agreed at customer level. As a
result, the division is expected to see its aggregate fee income
increasing in the next financial year. This will support our
commitment to reduce our reliance on retained interest
income.
Our Structured Investment division
ended the financial year reporting £3.0 million of gross income,
down £0.9 million from last year (2023: £3.9 million). The
reduction in reported income is largely down to the structured
products industry shifting from structured investments to
structured deposits. The team is currently involved in a project to
digitise its operations and the outcome of this is expected to
create capacity to increase customer engagement and revenue growth.
The team's recent product launch is one of their steps in their
journey to increase market share in the UK.
Arbitrage business reported a modest
increase in contribution to £152,000 for the year (2023:
£97,000).
Barker Poland Asset Management saw a
4.4% increase in revenue and reported £2.3 million of gross income
(2023: £2.2 million) compared to last year.
Our Financial Planning division,
following a successful recruitment drive, saw their income
increasing by 26.4% to £2.5 million (2023: £1.9 million), showing
great promise and giving optimism for the near future.
Interest income increased by 82.8%
to £5.8 million (2023: £3.2 million). This revenue stream does
provide the Group with a level of protection against adverse
fluctuations of income linked to high interest environments which
make asset prices and indices susceptible to stagnation or low
growth. The Group is committed to reducing this reliance and has
already taken steps towards achieving this objective. It should,
however, be noted that there are significant costs associated with
managing client assets and money and changes made to Group's
business model will take a period of time to be fully
effective.
Commissions and fees paid
The aforementioned departure of
certain self-employed investment managers also resulted in reducing
our income sharing. This saw a reduction of £1.5 million to £5.8
million (2023: £7.3 million), contributing to an increase in our
gross operating margin to 81.7% from 77.0% in 2023. At the same
time our operating margin reduced to 0.4% (2023: 2.6%), reflecting
our higher cost base this year.
Expenses
Administrative expenses, excluding
exceptional items, salaries and related staff costs, depreciation
and amortisation, increased by 7.9% in the year, with investments
made to strengthen our compliance and risk management framework
significantly increasing our cost base. This, along with general
inflationary increases in a number of areas, was offset by a
reduction in FCA fees and levies in the year. Salaries and
staff related costs saw a year-on-year increase of 16.8%, with
salaries increasing by 15.7% to £15.8 million in the year (2023:
£13.7 million), partly due to the current labour market demanding
higher pay packages to attract high calibre staff and partly as a
result of pay increases awarded to our existing staff to support
them through the inflation-driven cost-of-living pressures. The
Group, as part of its overall strategy, will continue to search and
onboard high-calibre staff to all parts of our business. These,
along with the costs of benefits offered to staff, contributed to
increasing our related staff costs in the year by 43.1% to £0.8
million (2023: £0.6 million).
I am pleased to report, with support
from our tax advisers, and following an extensive internal
investigation, we have now completed the issue in relation to the
underpayment of SDRT that I reported last year, and our tax
advisers are in communication with the HMRC to agree the final
settlement. As a result, the Group is reporting an
exceptional income totalling £225,000 (2023: exceptional cost of
£554,000), being the credit adjustment to reduce the final SDRT
liability and professional costs estimate to a more accurate figure
(see note 9).
UK inflation has come down from a
peak of 11.1% in October 2022, to 3.2% in March 2024 and down to
the government CPI target of 2% in May 2024. The 2% inflation
target, however, does not translate to a cost reduction, but merely
an indication that costs are not increasing from their all-time
higher base over a set period. This means that our high-cost base
will continue into the future, and as noted in the Chairman's
report, we are on a strategic initiative to improve our compliance
and risk management framework which will require considerable
investment over the next 12 months.
Cash
management
The Group remains cash generative
and recorded a cash inflow from operations of £0.97 million (2023:
£3.5 million), much lower than in the previous year, reflecting low
income generation in a period of rising costs, leading to much
lower operating profits.
The underlying cash generated from
operations, reflecting the impact of lease liability payments,
non-cyclical working capital movements and cash flows from
exceptional items (see adjacent reconciliation) showed a
performance of £2.3 million (2023: £3.4 million). The underlying
cash generation compared to last year was lower due to reasons
noted above, but it does demonstrate the cash generative nature of
the underlying business model.
After deducting cash deployed in
investing activities and dividends paid, cash and cash equivalents
increased to £13.9 million at year-end (2023: £13.1
million).
Looking forward to next year, we
have a number of key priorities with uplifting our compliance and
risk management framework and the investment required therein being
at the core. We will continue with initiatives to generate more
income, as mentioned above in relation to business development and
structured deposits. Changes already made to align our fee
structure and the output of these ongoing initiatives will place
the Group in a good standing to deliver on our commitment to reduce
our reliance on retained interest income, which will see some
pressure on cash generation, however, our going concern forecast
model indicates a modest year on year increase in cash and cash
equivalent next year.
Financial result and alternative performance
measures
The Group reported operating profit
and profit before tax for the year of £63,000 and £387,000,
respectively (2023: £625,000 and £632,000).
Adjusting for exceptional items (see
below reconciliations and further detail in note 9), the Group made
an operating loss of £162,000 for the year (2023: operating profit
1,179,000) and a profit before tax of £162,000 (2023: £1,186,000).
The Group's adjusted EBITDA (being EBITDA adjusted for exceptional
items - see adjacent reconciliation) is £1.8 million (2023: £3.3
million), not surprisingly a decrease of 45.4%.
Total Assets Under Management and
Administration ("AUMA") stood at £4.9 billion at the end the
financial year (2023: £5.0 billion). Discretionary and Advisory
Assets Under Management fell by 13.5% to £2.7 billion (2023: £3.1
billion). The decrease in AUMA values can be attributed
partly to a number of self-employed investment managers and their
client base departing the Group and partly to existing customers
deploying cash to alternative needs during a period of high
inflation and rising costs offset by onboarding new customers. In
addition to this and disappointingly, we have also lost a small
number of customers as a result of the tariff standardisation
exercise that resulted in the removal of historical fee and
commission arrangements.
Notwithstanding above and after the
completion of our initiative to improve our compliance and risk
management framework, with its high calibre staff base and improved
systems coupled with revenue generating initiatives in the
pipeline, the Group would be ideally placed to propel forward to a
profitable landscape.
Reconciliation of operating profit to operating (loss)/profit
before exceptional items
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Operating profit
|
63
|
625
|
Operating exceptional items (note
9)
|
(225)
|
554
|
Operating (loss)/profit before exceptional
items
|
(162)
|
1,179
|
Reconciliation of profit before tax to profit before tax and
exceptional items
|
2024
£'000
|
2024
£'000
|
Profit before tax
|
387
|
632
|
Total exceptional items (note
9)
|
(225)
|
554
|
Profit before tax and exceptional items
|
162
|
1,186
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Operating profit
|
63
|
625
|
Operating exceptional items (note
9)
|
(225)
|
554
|
Amortisation/depreciation (note
30)
|
1,299
|
1,301
|
Right-of-use assets depreciation
charge (note 30)
|
636
|
771
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
1,773
|
3,251
|
Underlying cash generated from operations
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Net cash inflow from
operations
|
970
|
3,539
|
Working capital (note 30)
|
1,124
|
156
|
Lease liability payments under IFRS
16 (note 30)
|
(722)
|
(332)
|
Cash outflow on operating exceptional
items
|
928
|
-
|
Underlying cash generated in the period
|
2,300
|
3,363
|
Divisional performance
The Investment Management division,
including exceptional costs, delivered an operating profit of £1.63
million for the year, compared to £1.55 million in the previous
year. Adjusting for exceptional items, the division reported an
operating profit of £1.41 million (2023: £2.11 million). The
division took the brunt of the aforementioned effects of fee and
commission revenues, cost of investment in improving our compliance
and risk management framework, and inflationary cost
pressures. On a positive note, the division has successfully
onboarded a new business development team, invested in a number of
new salaried investment managers and launched a new structured
deposit product, all of which are the necessary ingredients to move
the Group to a higher margin operating model.
The Financial Planning division has
now successfully completed its recruitment drive to increase its
advisor base with several key hires in the year. The division saw
its year-on-year income increase by 26.4% to £2.45 million (2023:
£1.94 million) however reported an increased loss of £0.63 million
(2023: £0.31 million). The advisers onboarded will take time to
bring their client base across and operate at full capacity and the
division is expected to return to profitability in the coming
year.
Our software as a service (SaaS)
division, represented by our subsidiary EnOC Technologies Limited
(EnOC), has returned an operating loss of £490,000 (2023: £128,000
loss) after removing intercompany revenues. However, standalone
performance, including revenue generated from providing its
services to Group entities, saw it generate operating profit of
£102,000 (see note 6). EnOC benefited from the transfer of
intellectual property from the Investment Management division on 1
April 2023, an action intended to allow EnOC the ownership and
control of the Group's internally generated intellectual property
and to allow it to maintain and develop it with its own staff and
dedicated resources, while leasing its services to sister
companies.
Capital resources, liquidity and regulatory
capital
The Group's capital structure,
consisting solely of equity capital, provides a stable platform to
support the Group's strategic plan and initiatives. At year end,
net assets are £21.3 million (2023: £21.2 million), reflecting a
net increase of £0.1 million (2023: £0.2 million net decrease),
from reported profit after tax, less dividends paid. Liquidity
remains strong with cash and cash equivalents increasing over the
year to £13.9 million (2023: £13.1 million). Regulatory capital at
year end, including audited reserves for the year, is £13.4 million
(2023: £12.4 million), comfortably in excess of the Group's Own
Funds (Capital) Threshold Requirement, as shown in the tables
below.
Regulatory own funds and own funds
requirements
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Own funds
|
|
|
Share capital
|
2,888
|
2,888
|
Share premium
|
3,763
|
3,763
|
Retained earnings
|
10,259
|
10,104
|
Other reserves
|
4,723
|
4,723
|
Less:
|
|
|
Own shares held
|
(312)
|
(312)
|
Regulatory adjustments
|
(7,880)
|
(8,800)
|
Total own funds
|
13,441
|
12,366
|
|
|
|
Own
funds requirement (OFR)
|
(5,075)
|
(4,854)
|
|
|
|
Regulatory capital surplus over OFR
|
8,366
|
7,512
|
Cover on own funds as a %
|
264.8%
|
254.8%
|
|
|
|
Own
Funds Threshold Requirement (OFTR)
|
(7,022)
|
(7,227)
|
Regulatory capital surplus over OFTR
|
6,419
|
5,139
|
Cover on own funds as a %
|
191.4%
|
171.1%
|
Dividends
In view of the Group's financial
performance, capital and liquidity position, the Board recommends a
final dividend of 0.25 pence per share to be paid on 4 October 2024
for those members on the shareholders' register on 20 September
2024, the ex-dividend date being 19 September 2024. Including the
interim dividend of 0.25 pence per share (2023: 0.25 pence per
share), the total dividend paid and proposed in respect of the year
is 0.50 pence per share (2023: 0.50 pence per share).
Sanath Dandeniya
Finance Director
31 July 2024
Consolidated
income statement
year ended 31
March 2024
|
Note
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Revenue
|
5
|
31,574
|
31,612
|
Commissions and fees paid
|
7
|
(5,769)
|
(7,264)
|
Gross profit
|
|
25,805
|
24,348
|
|
|
|
|
Administrative expenses
|
8
|
(25,967)
|
(23,169)
|
Exceptional items
|
9
|
225
|
(554)
|
Operating profit
|
|
63
|
625
|
|
|
|
|
Investment revenue
|
10
|
446
|
95
|
Finance costs
|
11
|
(122)
|
(88)
|
Profit before tax
|
|
387
|
632
|
Taxation
|
13
|
(19)
|
(214)
|
Profit for the year attributable to equity holders of the
Parent Company
|
|
368
|
418
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings per share
|
|
|
|
Basic and diluted
|
15
|
0.86p
|
0.98p
|
The following Accounting Policies
and Notes form part of these financial statements.
Consolidated
statement of comprehensive income
year ended 31
March 2024
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Profit for the year
|
368
|
418
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year attributable to equity holders of the Parent
Company
|
368
|
418
|
The following Accounting Policies
and Notes form part of these financial statements.
Consolidated
statement of financial position
as at 31 March
2024
|
Note
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Goodwill
|
16
|
4,388
|
4,388
|
Other intangible assets
|
17
|
3,741
|
4,648
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
18
|
815
|
989
|
Right-of-use asset
|
19
|
2,075
|
2,340
|
Total non-current assets
|
|
11,019
|
12,365
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
21
|
31,902
|
36,301
|
Investments - fair value through
profit or loss
|
20
|
538
|
1,276
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
22
|
13,863
|
13,138
|
Total current assets
|
|
46,303
|
50,715
|
Total assets
|
|
57,322
|
63,080
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
25
|
(31,961)
|
(36,849)
|
Current tax liabilities
|
|
(242)
|
(269)
|
Deferred tax liabilities
|
23
|
(260)
|
(371)
|
Provisions
|
26
|
(355)
|
(878)
|
Lease liabilities
|
27
|
(718)
|
(341)
|
Deferred cash
consideration
|
35
|
(25)
|
(94)
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
(33,561)
|
(38,802)
|
Net
current assets
|
|
12,742
|
11,913
|
|
|
|
|
Long-term liabilities
|
|
|
|
Deferred cash
consideration
|
35
|
(15)
|
(71)
|
Lease liabilities
|
27
|
(1,736)
|
(2,389)
|
Provision
|
26
|
(689)
|
(652)
|
Total non-current liabilities
|
|
(2,440)
|
(3,112)
|
Net
assets
|
|
21,321
|
21,166
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
28
|
2,888
|
2,888
|
Share premium account
|
28
|
3,763
|
3,763
|
Own shares
|
29
|
(312)
|
(312)
|
Retained earnings
|
29
|
10,259
|
10,104
|
Other reserves
|
29
|
4,723
|
4,723
|
Equity attributable to equity holders of the Parent
Company
|
|
21,321
|
21,166
|
The following Accounting Policies
and Notes form part of these financial statements.
The financial statements of Walker
Crips Group plc (Company registration no. 01432059) were approved
by the Board of Directors and authorised for issue on 31 July
2024.
Signed on behalf of the Board of
Directors
Sanath Dandeniya FCCA
Director
31 July 2024
Consolidated
statement of cash flows
year ended 31
March 2024
|
Note
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Operating activities
|
|
|
|
Cash generated from
operations
|
30
|
970
|
3,539
|
Tax paid
|
|
(157)
|
(120)
|
Net
cash generated from operating activities
|
|
813
|
3,419
|
Investing activities
|
|
|
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
(114)
|
(150)
|
Sale / (Purchase) of investments
held for trading
|
|
642
|
(205)
|
Consideration paid on acquisition of
intangible assets
|
|
(104)
|
(183)
|
Dividends received
|
10
|
19
|
47
|
Interest received
|
10
|
427
|
48
|
Net
cash generated from/(used in) investing
activities
|
|
870
|
(443)
|
Financing activities
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
14
|
(213)
|
(617)
|
Interest paid
|
11
|
(23)
|
(2)
|
Repayment of lease liabilities
**
|
|
(623)
|
(246)
|
Repayment of lease interest
**
|
|
(99)
|
(86)
|
Net
cash used in financing activities
|
|
(958)
|
(951)
|
Net
increase in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
725
|
2,025
|
Net
cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period
|
|
13,138
|
11,113
|
Net
cash and cash equivalents at end of period
|
|
13,863
|
13,138
|
** Total repayment of lease
liabilities under IFRS 16 in the period was £722,000 (2023:
£332,000)
The following Accounting Policies
and Notes form part of these financial statements.
Consolidated
statement of changes in equity
year ended 31
March 2024
|
Share
capital
£'000
|
Share
premium
account
£'000
|
Own
shares
held
£'000
|
Capital
redemption
£'000
|
Other
£'000
|
Retained
earnings
£'000
|
Total
equity
£'000
|
Equity as at 31 March 2022
|
2,888
|
3,763
|
(312)
|
111
|
4,612
|
10,303
|
21,365
|
Comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
418
|
418
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
418
|
418
|
Contributions by and distributions to owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(617)
|
(617)
|
Total contributions by and
distributions to owners
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(617)
|
(617)
|
Equity as at 31 March 2023
|
2,888
|
3,763
|
(312)
|
111
|
4,612
|
10,104
|
21,166
|
Comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
368
|
368
|
Total comprehensive income for the
year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
368
|
368
|
Contributions by and distributions to owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(213)
|
(213)
|
Total contributions by and
distributions to owners
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(213)
|
(213)
|
Equity as at 31 March 2024
|
2,888
|
3,763
|
(312)
|
111
|
4,612
|
10,259
|
21,321
|
The following Accounting Policies
and Notes form part of these financial statements.
Notes to the
accounts
year ended 31
March 2024
1. General information
Walker Crips Group plc ("the
Company") is the Parent Company of the Walker Crips group of
companies ("the Company"). The Company is a public limited company
incorporated in the United Kingdom under the Companies Act 2006 and
listed on the London Stock Exchange. The Group is registered in
England and Wales. The address of the registered office is Old
Change House, 128 Queen Victoria Street, London EC4V
4BJ.
The significant accounting policies
have been disclosed below. The accounting policies for the Group
and the Company are consistent unless otherwise stated.
2. Basis of preparation
The consolidated financial
statements have been prepared in accordance with UK-adopted
international accounting standards in conformity with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006.
The principal accounting policies
adopted in the preparation of the consolidated financial statements
are set out in note 3. The policies have been consistently applied
to all the years presented, unless otherwise stated.
The consolidated financial
statements are presented in GBP Sterling (£). Amounts shown are
rounded to the nearest thousand, unless stated
otherwise.
The consolidated financial
statements have been prepared on the historical cost basis, except
for certain financial instruments that are measured at fair value,
and are presented in Pounds Sterling, which is the currency of the
primary economic environment in which the Group operates. The
principal accounting policies adopted are set out below and have
been applied consistently to all periods presented in the
consolidated financial statements.
The preparation of financial
statements requires the use of certain critical accounting
estimates. It also requires management to exercise its judgement in
the process of applying the Group's accounting policies. The areas
involving a higher degree of judgement or complexity, or areas
where assumptions and estimates are significant to the consolidated
financial statements, are disclosed in note 4.
There are a number of standards,
amendments to standards, and interpretations which have been issued
by the IASB that are effective in future accounting periods that
the Group has decided not to adopt early.
The following amendments are
effective for the period beginning on or after 1 January
2024:
• IFRS 16 Leases (Amendment -
Liability in a Sale and Leaseback).
• IAS 1 Presentation of Financial
Statements (Amendment - Classification of Liabilities as Current or
Non-current).
• IAS 1 Presentation of Financial
Statements (Amendment - Non-current Liabilities with
Covenants).
The Group is currently assessing the
impact of these new accounting standards and amendments. The Group
does not believe that the amendments to IAS 1 will have a
significant impact on the classification of its liabilities, as it
does not have convertible debt instruments.
The Group does not expect any other
standards issued by the IASB, but not yet effective, to have a
material impact on the Group.
Going concern
The financial statements of the
Group have been prepared on a going concern basis. At 31 March
2024, the Group had net assets of £21.3 million (2023: £21.2
million), net current assets of £12.7 million (2023: £11.9 million)
and cash and cash equivalents of £13.9 million (2023: £13.1
million). The Group reported an operating profit of £63,000 for the
year ended 31 March 2024 (2023: £625,000), inclusive of operating
exceptional income of £225,000 (2023: operating exceptional expense
of £554,000), and net cash inflows from operating activities of
£0.9 million (2023: £3.5 million).
The Directors consider the going
concern basis to be appropriate following their assessment of the
Group's financial position and its ability to meet its obligations
as and when they fall due. In making the going concern assessment
the Directors have considered:
●
The Group's three-year base case projections based
on current strategy, trading performance, expected future
profitability, liquidity, capital solvency and dividend
policy.
●
The outcome of stress scenarios applied to the
Group's base case projections prior to deployment of management
actions.
●
The principal risks facing the Group and its
systems of risk management and internal control.
●
The Group's ability to generate positive operating
cash flow during the year to 31 March 2024 and projected future
cash flows.
Key assumptions that the Directors
have made in preparing the base case projections are:
●
Trading commission is expected to be flat for the
foreseeable future and management fee growth expectation of 2.5%
has been set, while also having adjusted for expected client
attrition in respect of the recent self-employed investment manager
departures (see Finance Director's review).
●
UK base rate to remain at 5.25% for a main part of
2024 and see a gradual reduction over the next 24 months to
4%.
●
Inflation to remain below 3% for the foreseeable
future.
Key stress scenarios that the
Directors have then considered include:
●
A "bear stress scenario": representing a 10%
reduction in management fees, trading commissions, and interest
income with the consequent reduction in revenue sharing based
costs, compared to the base case in the reporting periods ending 31
March 2025 and 31 March 2026.
●
A "severe stress scenario": representing a 20%
fall in management fees, trading commissions, and interest income
with the consequent reduction in revenue sharing based costs,
compared to the base case in the reporting periods ending 31 March
2025 and 31 March 2026.
Liquidity and regulatory capital
resource requirements exceed the minimum thresholds in both the
base case and bear scenarios. In the severe stress scenario,
although the Group has positive liquidity throughout the period,
the negative impact on our prudential capital ratio is such that it
is projected to fall below the regulatory requirement in February
2026. The Directors consider the severe stress scenario to be
remote in view of the prudence built into the base case projections
and that further mitigations available to the Directors are not
reflected therein. Such mitigating actions within Management's
control include reduction in proprietary risk positions, delayed
capital expenditure, further reductions in discretionary spend, not
paying planned dividends and reductions in employee headcount.
Other mitigating actions may include disposal of businesses,
stronger cost reductions and potential to seek shareholder
support.
Based on the assessment of the
Group's financial position and its ability to meet its obligations
as and when they fall due, the Directors do not consider there are
material uncertainties that cast significant doubt on the Group's
ability to continue as a going concern in the 12-month period from
the date of approval of the Annual Report and Accounts.
Standards and interpretations affecting the reported results
or the financial position
The accounting standards adopted are
consistent with those of the previous financial year. Amendments to
existing IFRS standards did not have a material impact on the
Group's Consolidated Income Statement or the Statement of Financial
Position.
The Group does not expect standards
yet to be adopted by the UK endorsement body ("UKEB") to have a
material impact in future years.
3. Significant accounting
policies
Basis of consolidation
The Group financial statements
consolidate the financial statements of the Group and companies
controlled by the Group (its subsidiaries) made up to 31 March each
year. The Group controls an entity when it is exposed to, or has
rights to, variable returns from its involvement with the entity
and has the ability to affect those returns through its powers to
direct relevant activities of the entity. Subsidiaries are fully
consolidated from the date on which control is obtained and no
longer consolidated from the date that control ceases; their
results are in the consolidated financial statements up to the date
that control ceases.
Entities where the interest is 49%
or less are assessed for potential treatment as a Group company
against the control tests outlined in IFRS 10, being power over the
investee, exposure or rights to variable returns and power over the
investee to affect the amount of investors' returns. At the
reporting date there were no entities where the Group had an
interest below 49%.
All intercompany balances, income
and expenses are eliminated on consolidation.
Business combinations
The acquisition of subsidiaries is
accounted for using the acquisition method. The cost of the
acquisition is measured at the aggregate of the fair values, at the
date of exchange, of assets given, liabilities incurred or assumed,
and equity instruments issued by the Group in exchange for control
of the acquiree. The acquiree's identifiable assets, liabilities
and contingent liabilities that meet the conditions for recognition
under IFRS 3 Business Combinations are recognised at their fair
value at the acquisition date.
Acquisition-related costs are
expensed as incurred.
If the business combination is
achieved in stages, the acquisition date carrying value of the
acquirer's previously held equity interest in the acquiree is
re-measured to fair value at the acquisition date; any gains or
losses arising from such remeasurement are recognised in profit or
loss.
Contingent consideration is
classified either as equity or as a financial liability. Amounts
classified as a financial liability are subsequently remeasured to
fair value, with changes in fair value recognised in profit or
loss.
Interests in associate
An associate is an entity in which
the Group has significant influence, but not control or joint
control. The Group uses the equity method of accounting by which
the equity investment is initially recorded at cost and
subsequently adjusted to reflect the investor's share of the net
assets of the associate.
Intangible assets
(a)
Goodwill
Goodwill arises on the acquisition
of subsidiaries and represents the excess of the consideration
transferred, the amount of any non-controlling interest in the
acquiree and the acquisition-date fair value of any previous equity
interest in the acquiree over the fair value of the identifiable
net assets acquired. If the total of consideration transferred,
non-controlling interest recognised and previously held interest
measured at fair value is less than the fair value of the net
assets of the subsidiary acquired, in the case of a bargain
purchase, the difference is recognised directly in the income
statement.
Goodwill is initially recognised as
an asset at cost and is subsequently measured at cost less any
accumulated impairment losses. Goodwill is not amortised but is
reviewed for impairment at least annually. Any impairment is
recognised immediately in profit or loss and is not subsequently
reversed in future periods.
For the purpose of impairment
testing, goodwill acquired in a business combination is allocated
to each of the cash generating units ("CGUs"), or groups of CGUs,
that is expected to benefit from the synergies of the combination.
Each unit or group of units to which the goodwill is allocated
represents the lowest level within the entity at which the goodwill
is monitored for internal management purposes. Goodwill is
monitored at the operating segment level.
Goodwill impairment reviews are
undertaken annually or more frequently if events or changes in
circumstances indicate a potential impairment. The carrying value
of the CGU containing the goodwill is compared to the recoverable
amount, which is the higher of value-in-use and the fair value less
costs of disposal. Any impairment is recognised immediately as an
expense and is not subsequently reversed.
(b)
Client lists
Client lists are recognised when it
is probable that future economic benefits will flow to the Group
and the cost of the asset can be measured reliably whilst the risk
and rewards have also transferred into the Group's
ownership.
Intangible assets classified as
client lists are recognised when acquired as part of a business
combination, when separate payments are made to acquire clients'
assets by adding teams of investment managers, or when acquiring
the ownership of client relationships from retiring in-house
self-employed investment managers.
Some client list acquisitions are
linked to business combination acquisitions such as those related
to the historical acquisition of Barker Poland Asset Management LLP
and others are related to the purchase of client lists related
to an individual
investment manager or investment management team
recruitment-related costs.
The cost of acquired client lists
and businesses generating revenue from clients and investment
managers are capitalised. These costs are amortised on a
straight-line basis over their expected useful lives of three to 20
years at inception. The amortisation period and amortisation method
for intangible assets are reviewed at least each financial year
end. All client list intangible assets have a finite useful life.
Client lists associated with self-employed investment managers were
revised in 2023 so that no client list was amortised for periods
longer than six years from 1 April 2022.
Amortisation of intangible fixed
assets is included within administrative expenses in the
consolidated income statement.
At each statement of financial
position date, the Group reviews the carrying amounts of its
intangible assets to determine whether there is any indication that
those assets have suffered an impairment loss. If any such
indication exists, the recoverable amount of the asset is estimated
in order to determine the extent of the impairment loss (if any).
Where the asset does not generate cash flows that are independent
from other assets, the Group estimates the recoverable amount of
the cash-generating unit to which the asset belongs.
(c)
Software licences
Computer software which is not an
integral part of the related hardware is recognised as an
intangible asset when the Group is expected to benefit from future
use of the software and the costs are reliably measured and
amortised using the straight-line method over a useful life of up
to five years.
Impairment of non-financial assets
Intangible assets that have an
indefinite useful life or intangible assets not ready to use are
not subject to amortisation and are tested annually for impairment.
Assets that are subject to amortisation are reviewed for impairment
whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the
carrying amount may not be recoverable. An impairment loss is
recognised for the amount by which the asset's carrying amount
exceeds its recoverable amount. The recoverable amount is the
higher of an asset's fair value less costs of disposal and
value-in-use. For the purposes of assessing impairment, assets are
grouped at the lowest levels for which there are largely
independent cash inflows (cash-generating units). Prior impairments
of non-financial assets (other than goodwill) are reviewed for
possible reversal at each reporting date.
Own
shares held
Own shares consist of treasury
shares which are recognised at cost as a deduction from equity
shareholders' funds. Subsequent consideration received for the sale
of treasury shares is also recognised in equity with any difference
being taken to retained earnings. No gain or loss is recognised on
sale of treasury shares.
Revenues recognised under IFRS 15
Revenue from contracts with
customers:
●
Gross commissions on stockbroking activities are
recognised on those transactions whose trade date falls within the
financial year, with the execution of the trade being the
performance obligation at that point in time.
●
Management fees earned from managing various types
of client portfolios are accrued daily over the period to which
they relate with the performance obligation fulfilled over the same
period.
●
Fees in respect of financial services activities
of Walker Crips Financial Planning are accrued evenly over the
period to which they relate with the performance obligation
fulfilled over the same period.
●
Fees earned from structured investments are
recognised on the date the underlying security of the structured
investment is traded and settled, with the execution of the trade
being the performance obligation at that point in time.
●
Fees earned from software offering, Software as a
Service ("SaaS"), are accrued evenly over the period to which they
relate with the performance obligation fulfilled over the same
period.
Other incomes:
●
Interest is recognised as it accrues in respect of
the financial year.
●
Dividend income is recognised when:
o The
Group's right to receive payment of dividends is
established;
o When
it is probable that economic benefits associated with the dividend
will flow to the Group;
o The
amount of the dividend can be reliably measured; and
●
Gains or losses arising on disposal of trading
book instruments and changes in fair value of securities held for
trading purposes are both recognised in profit and loss.
The Group does not have any
long-term contract assets in relation to customers of any fixed
and/or considerable lengths of time which require the recognition
of financing costs or incomes in relation to them.
Operating expenses
Operating expenses and other charges
are provided for in full up to the statement of financial position
date on an accruals basis.
Exceptional items
To assist in understanding its
underlying performance, the Group identifies certain items of
pre-tax income and expenditure and discloses them separately in the
Consolidated income statement.
Such items include:
1. profits or losses on
disposal or closure of businesses;
2. corporate transaction
and restructuring costs;
3. changes in the fair
value of contingent non-cash consideration; and
4. non-recurring items
considered individually for classification as exceptional by virtue
of their nature or size.
The separate disclosure of these
items allows a clearer understanding of the Group's trading
performance on a consistent and comparable basis, together with an
understanding of the effect of non-recurring or large individual
transactions upon the overall profitability of the Group. The
exceptional items arising in the current period are explained in
note 9.
Deferred income
Income received from clients in
respect of future periods to the transaction or reporting date are
classified as deferred income within creditors until such time as
value has been received by the client.
Foreign currencies
The individual financial statements
of each of the Group's companies are presented in Pounds Sterling,
which is the functional currency of the Group and the presentation
currency of the consolidated financial statements.
In preparing the financial
statements of the individual companies, transactions in currencies
other than the entity's functional currency (foreign currencies)
are recorded at the rates of exchange prevailing on the dates of
the transactions. At each statement of financial position date,
monetary assets and liabilities that are denominated in foreign
currencies are retranslated at the rates prevailing on the balance
sheet date. Exchange differences arising on the settlement of
monetary items, and on the retranslation of monetary items, are
included in the consolidated income statement for the
period.
Where consideration is received in
advance of revenue being recognised, the date of the transaction
reflects the date the consideration is received.
Property, plant and equipment
Fixtures and equipment are stated at
historical cost less accumulated depreciation and provision for any
impairment. Depreciation is charged so as to write-off the cost or
valuation of assets over their estimated useful lives using the
straight-line method on the following bases:
Computer hardware
33 1/3% per annum on cost
Computer software
between 20%
and 33 1/3% per annum on cost
Leasehold
improvements
over the term of the lease
Furniture and equipment
33 1/3% per annum
on cost
Right-of-use assets held under
contractual arrangements are depreciated over the lengths of their
respective contractual terms, as prescribed under IFRS
16.
The gain or loss on the disposal or
retirement of an asset is determined as the difference between the
sales proceeds and the carrying amount of the asset and is
recognised in income. The residual values and estimated useful life
of items within property, plant and equipment are reviewed at least
at each financial year end. Any shortfalls in carrying value are
impaired immediately through profit or loss.
Taxation
The tax expense for the period
comprises current and deferred tax.
Tax is recognised in the income
statement, except to the extent that it relates to items recognised
directly in equity. In this case the tax is also recognised
directly in other comprehensive income or directly in equity,
respectively.
The current income tax charge is
calculated on the basis of the tax laws enacted or substantively
enacted at the end of the reporting period in the countries where
the Company's subsidiaries and associates operate and generate
taxable income. Management periodically evaluates positions taken
in tax returns with respect to situations in which applicable tax
regulation is subject to interpretation. It establishes provisions
where appropriate on the basis of amounts expected to be paid to
the tax authorities.
Deferred income tax is recognised,
using the liability method, on temporary differences arising
between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and their carrying
amounts in the consolidated financial statements. However, the
deferred tax is not accounted for if it arises from initial
recognition of an asset or liability in a transaction other than a
business combination that, at the time of the transaction, affects
neither accounting nor taxable profit or loss. Deferred income tax
is determined using tax rates (and laws) that have been enacted, or
substantially enacted, by the end of the reporting period and are
expected to apply when the related deferred income tax asset is
realised, or the deferred income tax liability is
settled.
Deferred income tax assets are
recognised only to the extent that it is probable that future
taxable profit will be available against which the temporary
differences can be utilised.
Deferred income tax liabilities are
provided on taxable temporary differences arising from investments
in subsidiaries, associates and joint arrangements, except for
deferred income tax liability where the timing of the reversal of
the temporary difference is controlled by the Group and it is
probable that the temporary difference will not reverse in the
foreseeable future. Generally, the Group is unable to control the
reversal of the temporary difference for associates, unless there
is an agreement in place that gives the Group the ability to
control the reversal of the temporary difference not
recognised.
Deferred income tax assets are
recognised on deductible temporary differences arising from
investments in subsidiaries, associates and joint arrangements only
to the extent that it is probable the temporary difference will
reverse in the future and there is sufficient taxable profit
available against which the temporary difference can be
utilised.
Deferred income tax assets and
liabilities are offset when there is a legally enforceable right to
offset current tax assets against current tax liabilities, and when
the deferred income tax assets and liabilities relate to income
taxes levied by the same taxation authority on either the taxable
entity or different taxable entities where there is an intention to
settle the balances on a net basis.
Financial assets and liabilities
Financial assets and liabilities are
recognised in the Consolidated Statement of Financial Position when
the Group becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the
instrument.
At initial recognition, the Group
measures a financial asset or financial liability at its fair value
plus or minus transaction costs. Transaction costs of financial
assets and financial liabilities carried at fair value through
profit or loss ("FVTPL") are expensed in the income statement.
Immediately after initial recognition, an expected credit loss
allowance ("ECL") is recognised for financial assets measured at
amortised cost, which results in an accounting loss being
recognised in profit or loss when an asset is newly
originated.
The Group does not use hedge
accounting.
a) Financial assets
Classification and subsequent
measurement
The Group classifies its financial
assets in the following measurement categories:
●
Fair value through profit or loss
("FVTPL");
●
Fair value through other comprehensive income
("FVTOCI"); or
●
Amortised cost.
Financial assets are classified as
current or non-current depending on the contractual timing for
recovery of the asset. The classification depends on the purpose
for which the financial assets were acquired. Management determines
the classification of its financial assets at initial
recognition.
(i) Debt instruments
Classification and subsequent
measurement of debt instruments depend on:
●
the Group's business model for managing the asset;
and
●
the cash flow characteristics of the
asset.
Business model: The business
model reflects how the Group manages the assets in order to
generate cash flows. That is, whether the Group's objective is
solely to collect the contractual cash flows from the assets, to
collect both the contractual cash flows and cash flows arising from
the sale of assets, or solely or mainly to collect cash flows
arising from the sale of assets. Factors considered by the Group
include past experience on how the contractual cash flows for these
assets were collected, how the assets' performance is evaluated,
and how risks are assessed and managed.
Cash flow characteristics of the asset:
Where the business model is to hold assets to
collect contractual cash flows, the Group assesses whether the
financial instruments' contractual cash flows represent solely
payments of principal and interest ("the SPPI test"). In making
this assessment, the Group considers whether the contractual cash
flows are consistent with a basic lending instrument.
Based on these factors, the Group
classifies its debt instruments into one of two measurement
categories:
Amortised cost: Assets that are
held for collection of contractual cash flows where those cash
flows represent solely payments of principal and interest ("SPPI"),
and that are not designated at FVTPL, are measured at amortised
cost. Amortised cost is the amount at which the financial asset is
measured at initial recognition minus the principal repayments,
plus or minus the cumulative amortisation, using the effective
interest rate method, of any difference between that initial amount
and the maturity amount, adjusted by any ECL recognised. The
effective interest rate is the rate that discounts estimated future
cash payments or receipts through the expected life of the
financial asset to the gross carrying amount. Interest income from
these financial assets is included within investment revenues using
the effective interest rate method.
Fair value through profit or loss ("FVTPL"):
Assets that do not meet the criteria for amortised
cost or fair value through other comprehensive income ("FVTOCI")
are measured at fair value through profit or loss.
Reclassification
The Group reclassifies debt
instruments when and only when its business model for managing
those assets changes. The reclassification takes place from the
start of the first reporting period following the
change.
Impairment
The Group assesses on a
forward-looking basis the expected credit loss ("ECL") associated
with its debt instruments held at amortised cost. The Group
recognises a loss allowance for such losses at each reporting date.
On initial recognition, the Group recognises a 12-month ECL. At the
reporting date, if there has been a significant increase in credit
risk, the loss allowance is revised to the lifetime expected credit
loss.
The measurement of ECL
reflects:
●
an unbiased and probability weighted amount that
is determined by evaluating a range of possible
outcomes;
●
the time value of money; and
●
reasonable and supportable information that is
available without undue cost or effort at the reporting date about
past events, current conditions and forecasts of future economic
conditions.
The Group adopts the simplified
approach to trade receivables and contract assets, which allows
entities to recognise lifetime expected losses on all assets,
without the need to identify significant increases in credit risk
(i.e. no distinction is needed between 12-month and lifetime
expected credit losses).
(ii) Equity instruments
Investments are recognised and
derecognised on a trade date basis where a purchase or sale of an
investment is under a contract whose terms require delivery of the
instrument within the timeframe established by the market
concerned, and are initially measured at fair value.
The Group subsequently measures all
equity investments at fair value through profit and loss. Changes
in the fair value of financial assets at FVTPL are recognised in
revenue within the Consolidated Income Statement.
(iii) Cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents include
cash in hand, deposits held at call with financial institutions,
other short-term, highly liquid investments with original
maturities of three months or less that are readily convertible to
known amounts of cash and which are subject to an insignificant
risk of changes in value. Bank overdrafts are shown within current
liabilities in the statement of financial position.
Derecognition
Financial assets are derecognised
when the rights to receive cash flows from the financial assets
have expired or have been transferred and the Group has transferred
substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership.
b) Financial liabilities
Classification and subsequent
measurement
Financial liabilities are classified
and subsequently measured at amortised cost.
Financial liabilities are
derecognised when they are extinguished.
Financial liabilities and
equity
Financial liabilities and equity
instruments are classified according to the substance of the
contractual arrangements entered into. An equity instrument is any
contract that evidences a residual interest in the assets of the
Group after deducting all of its liabilities.
Trade
payables
Trade payables are classified at
amortised cost. Due to their short-term nature, their carrying
amount is considered to be the same as their fair value.
Bank
overdrafts
Interest-bearing bank overdrafts are
initially measured at fair value and shown within current
liabilities. Finance charges are accounted for on an accrual basis
in profit or loss using the effective interest rate method and are
added to the carrying amount of the instrument to the extent that
they are not settled in the period in which they arise.
Equity
instruments
Ordinary shares are classified as
equity.
Incremental costs directly
attributable to the issue of new shares or options are shown in
equity as a deduction, net of tax, from the proceeds.
Where any Group company purchases
the Company's equity share capital (treasury shares), the
consideration paid, including any directly attributable incremental
costs (net of income taxes) is deducted from equity attributable to
the Company's equity holders, until the shares are cancelled or
reissued. Where such shares are subsequently reissued, any
consideration received, net of any directly attributable
incremental transaction costs and the related income tax effects,
is included in equity attributable to the Company's equity
holders.
Share Incentive Plan
("SIP")
The Group has an incentive policy to
encourage all members of staff to participate in the ownership and
future prosperity of the Group. All employees can participate in
the SIP following three months of service. Employees may contribute
a maximum of 10% of their gross salary in regular monthly payments
(being not less than £10 and not greater than £150) to acquire
Ordinary Shares in the Parent Company (Partnership Shares).
Partnership Shares are acquired monthly.
The matching option was reinstated
to one-to-one from 1 April 2023 from the previous one-half for
every Partnership Share purchased. All shares awarded under this
scheme have been purchased in the market by the Trustees of the
SIP.
Provisions
Provisions are recognised when the
Group has a present obligation as a result of a past event, and it
is probable that the Group will be required to settle that
obligation. Provisions are measured at the Directors' best estimate
of the expenditure required to settle the obligation at the
statement of financial position date, and are discounted to present
value where the effect is material.
Long-term liabilities -
deferred cash and shares consideration
Amounts payable to personnel under
recruitment contracts in respect of the client relationships, which
transfer to the Group, are treated as long-term liabilities if the
due date for payment of cash consideration is beyond the period of
one year after the year-end date. The value of shares in all cases
is derived by a formula based on the value of client assets
received in conjunction with the prevailing share price at the date
of issue which in turn determines the number of shares
issuable.
Pension
costs
The Group contributes to defined
contribution personal pension schemes for selected employees. For
defined contribution schemes, the Group pays contributions to
publicly or privately administered pension insurance plans on a
mandatory, contractual or voluntary basis. The Group has no further
payment obligations once the contributions have been paid. The
contributions are recognised as employee benefit expenses when they
are due. Prepaid contributions are recognised as an asset to the
extent that a cash refund or a reduction in the future payments is
available. The contribution rate is based on annual salary and the
amount is charged to the income statement on an accrual
basis.
Dividends
paid
Equity dividends are recognised when
they become legally payable. Dividend distribution to the Company's
shareholders is recognised as a liability in the Group's financial
statements in the period in which the dividends are approved by the
Company's shareholders. There is no requirement to pay dividends
unless approved by the shareholders by way of written resolution
where there is sufficient cash to meet current liabilities, and
without detriment of any financial covenants, if
applicable.
Leases
The Group leases various offices,
software and equipment that are recognised under IFRS 16. The
Group's lease contracts are typically made for fixed periods of two
to 10 years and extension and termination options enabling maximise
operational flexibility are included in a number of property and
software leases across the Group.
All leases are accounted for by
recognising a right-of-use asset and a lease liability except
for:
●
Leases of low value assets; and
●
Leases with a duration of 12 months or
less.
Payments associated with short-term
leases and leases of low-value assets are recognised on a
straight-line basis as an expense in profit or loss. Short-term
leases are leases with a lease term of 12 months or less. Low-value
assets comprise IT equipment and small items of office
furniture.
Leases are recognised as a
right-of-use asset and a corresponding liability at the date at
which the leased asset is available for use by the Group. Each
lease payment is allocated between the liability and finance cost.
The finance cost is charged to profit or loss over the lease period
so as to produce a constant periodic rate of interest on the
remaining balance of the liability for each period. The
right-of-use assets are depreciated over the shorter of the asset's
useful life and the lease term on a straight-line basis.
Assets and liabilities arising from
a lease are initially measured on a present value basis. Lease
liabilities include the net present value of the following lease
payments:
●
fixed payments (including in-substance fixed
payments), less any lease incentives receivable;
●
variable lease payments that are based on an index
or a rate;
●
amounts expected to be payable by the lessee under
residual value guarantees;
●
the exercise price of a purchase option if the
lessee is reasonably certain to exercise that option;
and
●
payments of penalties for terminating the lease,
if the lease term reflects the lessee exercising that
option.
The lease payments are discounted
using the interest rate implicit in the lease. If that rate cannot
be readily determined, which is generally the case for leases held
by the Group, the lessee's incremental borrowing rate is
used.
To determine the incremental
borrowing rate, the Group:
●
where possible, uses recent third-party financing
received by the individual lessee as a starting point, adjust to
reflect changes in financing conditions since third-party financing
was received;
●
uses a build-up approach that starts with a
risk-free interest rate adjusted for credit risk for leases held by
the Group, which does not have recent third-party financing;
and
●
make adjustments specific to the lease, for
example term, country, currency and security.
Lease payments are allocated between
principal and finance cost. The finance cost is charged to profit
and loss over the lease period so as to produce a constant periodic
rate of interest on the remaining balance of the liability for each
period.
Right-of-use assets are measured at
cost comprising the following:
●
the amount of the initial measurement of lease
liability;
●
any lease payments made at or before the
commencement date less any lease incentives received;
●
any initial direct costs; and
●
restoration costs.
Right-of-use assets are depreciated
over the shorter of the lease term and the useful economic life of
the underlying asset on a straight-line basis.
The Group does not have any leasing
activities acting as a lessor.
Earnings per
share
Basic earnings per share is
calculated by dividing:
●
the profit attributable to owners of the Company,
excluding any costs of servicing equity other than ordinary
shares;
●
by the weighted average number of ordinary shares
outstanding during the financial year, adjusted for bonus elements
in ordinary shares issued during the year and excluding treasury
shares (note 15).
There are currently no obligations
present that could have a dilutive effect on ordinary
shares.
Share-based
payments
Share-based payments are
remuneration payments to selected employees that take the form of
an award of shares in Walker Crips Group plc. Employees are not
able to exercise such awards in full until a period of two to five
years, based on the terms of each individual award (the vesting
period).
Equity-settled share-based payments
to employees are measured at fair value of the equity instruments
at the date of grant. The fair value excludes the effect of
non-market-based vesting conditions. Details regarding the
determination of the fair value of equity-settled share-based
transactions are set out in note 36.
As the share-based payment awards
are for fully paid free shares, fair value is measured as the
market value of the shares at each grant date.
The fair value determined at the
grant date of the equity-settled share-based payments is expensed
on a straight-line basis over the vesting period, based on the
Group's estimate of the number of shares that will eventually vest.
At each reporting date, the Group revises its estimate of the
shares expected to vest as a result of the effect of non-market
based vesting conditions. The impact of the revision of the
original estimates, if any, is recognised in the Income Statement
such that the cumulative expense reflects the revised
estimate.
4. Key sources of estimation uncertainty and
judgements
The Group makes certain estimates
and assumptions regarding the future. Estimates and
judgements are continually evaluated based on historical experience
and other factors, including expectations of future events that are
believed to be reasonable under the circumstances. In the
future, actual experience may differ from these estimates and
assumptions. The estimates and assumptions that have a
significant risk of causing a material adjustment to the carrying
amounts of assets and liabilities within the next financial year
are discussed below.
Impairment of goodwill - estimation and
judgement
Determining whether goodwill is
impaired requires an estimation of the fair value less costs to
sell and the value-in-use of the cash-generating units to which
goodwill has been allocated. The fair value less costs to sell
involves estimation of values based on the application of earnings
multiples and comparison to similar transactions. The value-in-use
calculation requires the entity to estimate the future cash flows
expected to arise from the cash-generating unit and apply a
discount rate in order to calculate present value. The assumptions
used and inputs involve judgements and create estimation
uncertainty. These assumptions have been stress-tested as described
in note 16. The carrying amount of goodwill at the balance sheet
date was £4.4 million (2023: £4.4 million) as shown in note
16.
Other intangible assets - judgement
Acquired client lists are
capitalised based on current fair values. When the Group purchases
client relationships from other corporate entities, a judgement is
made as to whether the transaction should be accounted for as a
business combination, or a separate purchase of intangible assets.
In making this judgement, the Group assesses the acquiree against
the definition of a business combination in IFRS 3. The useful
lives are estimated by assessing the historic rates of client
retention, the ages and succession plans of the investment managers
who manage the clients and the contractual incentives of the
investment managers. There were no new purchases of client lists
during the year.
Key assumptions in this regard
consist of the following:
1. The continuing going concern of
the Company;
2. Life expectancy of clients based
on the Office for National Statistics;
3. Succession plans in place for
staff and investment managers;
4. Amounts of AUMA are consistent on
average;
5. A growth rate of client list AUMA
of a conservative 2%; and
6. A discount rate of
12%.
Provisions - estimation and judgement
Provisions are recognised when the
Group has a present obligation as a result of a past event, and it
is probable that the Group will be required to settle that
obligation. Provisions are measured at the Directors' best estimate
of the expenditure required to settle the obligation at the
statement of financial position date, and are discounted to present
value where the effect is material.
IFRS 16 "Leases" - estimation and judgement
IFRS 16 requires certain judgements
and estimates to be made and those significant judgements are
explained below.
The Group has opted to use single
discount rates for leases with reasonably similar characteristics.
The discount rates used have had an impact on the right-of-use
assets' values, lease liabilities on initial recognition and lease
finance costs included within the income statement.
Where a lease includes the option
for the Group to extend the lease term, the Group has exercised the
judgement, based on current information, that such leases will be
extended to the full length available, and this is included in the
calculation of the value of the right-of-use assets and lease
liabilities on initial recognition and valuation at the reporting
date.
Provision for dilapidations - estimation and
judgement
The Group has made provisions for
dilapidations under six leases for its offices. The Group entered
into one new property lease in the period, which was the renewal of
an existing lease that had ended in the period. The amounts of the
provisions are, where possible, estimated using quotes from
professional building contractors. The property, plant and
equipment elements of the dilapidations are depreciated over the
terms of their respective leases. The obligations in relation to
dilapidations are inflated using an estimated rate of inflation and
discounted using appropriate gilt rates to present value. The
change in liability attributable to inflation and discounting is
recognised in interest expense.
Provision for stamp duty liability - estimation and
judgement
The Group, in the previous year,
identified an obligation in respect of stamp duty reserve tax which
has arisen over a number of years. An initial provision of £878,000
was made in the previous year and subsequently upon management
investigation and external tax advice, the liability including
professional fees outstanding, is estimated to be £355,000 which is
fully provided in the financial statements (see note
26).
5. Revenue
An analysis of the Group's revenue
is as follows:
|
|
|
2024
|
|
|
2023
|
|
Broking
income
£'000
|
Non-
broking
income
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Broking
income
£'000
|
Non-
broking
income
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Stockbroking commission
|
4,934
|
-
|
4,934
|
6,008
|
-
|
6,008
|
Fees and other revenue *
|
-
|
24,189
|
24,189
|
-
|
23,665
|
23,665
|
Investment Management
|
4,934
|
24,189
|
29,123
|
6,008
|
23,665
|
29,673
|
Wealth Management,
Financial Planning &
Pensions
|
-
|
2,451
|
2,451
|
-
|
1,939
|
1,939
|
Revenue
|
4,934
|
26,640
|
31,574
|
6,008
|
25,604
|
31,612
|
Investment revenue (see note
10)
|
-
|
446
|
446
|
-
|
95
|
95
|
Total income
|
4,934
|
27,086
|
32,020
|
6,008
|
25,699
|
31,707
|
% of total income
|
15.4%
|
84.6%
|
100.0%
|
18.9%
|
81.1%
|
100.0%
|
* Includes £5.8 million (2023: £3.2
million) of interest income from managing client trading cash
funds.
Timing of revenue recognition
The following table presents
operating income analysed by the timing of revenue recognition of
the operating segment providing the service:
2024
|
Investment
Management
£'000
|
Financial Planning &
Wealth
Management
£'000
|
SaaS
£'000
|
Consolidated
year ended
31 March
2024
£'000
|
Revenue from contracts with customers
|
|
|
|
|
Products and services transferred at
a point in time
|
8,176
|
408
|
17
|
8,601
|
Products and services transferred
over time
|
14,959
|
2,043
|
-
|
17,002
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other revenue
|
|
|
|
|
Products and services transferred at
a point in time
|
153
|
-
|
-
|
153
|
Products and services transferred
over time
|
5,818
|
-
|
-
|
5,818
|
|
29,106
|
2,451
|
17
|
31,574
|
2023
|
Investment
Management
£'000
|
Financial
Planning & Wealth
Management
£'000
|
SaaS
£'000
|
Consolidated
year
ended
31
March
2023
£'000
|
Revenue from contracts with customers
|
|
|
|
|
Products and services transferred at
a point in time
|
10,104
|
272
|
16
|
10,392
|
Products and services transferred
over time
|
16,295
|
1,666
|
-
|
17,961
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other revenue
|
|
|
|
|
Products and services transferred at
a point in time
|
75
|
1
|
-
|
76
|
Products and services transferred
over time
|
3,183
|
-
|
-
|
3,183
|
|
29,657
|
1,939
|
16
|
31,612
|
6. Segmental analysis
For segmental reporting purposes,
the Group currently has three operating segments; Investment
Management, being portfolio-based transaction execution and
investment advice; Financial Planning, being financial planning,
wealth management and pensions administration; and Software as a
Service ("SaaS") comprising provision of regulatory and admin
software and bespoke cloud software to companies. Unallocated
corporate expenses, assets and liabilities are not considered to be
allocatable accurately, or fairly, under any known basis of
allocation and are therefore disclosed separately.
Walker Crips Investment Management's
activities focus predominantly on investment management of various
types of portfolios and asset classes.
Walker Crips Financial Planning
provides advisory and administrative services to clients in
relation to their wealth management, financial planning, life
insurance, inheritance tax and pension arrangements.
EnOC Technologies Limited ("EnOC")
provides regulatory and admin software to their business partners,
including all of the Group's regulated entities. Fees payable by
subsidiary companies to EnOC have been eliminated on consolidation
and are excluded from segmental analysis.
Revenues between Group entities, and
in turn reportable segments, are excluded from the segmental
analysis presented below.
The Group does not derive any
revenue from geographical regions outside of the United
Kingdom.
2024
|
Investment
Management
£'000
|
Financial Planning &
Wealth
Management
£'000
|
SaaS
£'000
|
Consolidated
year ended
31 March
2024
£'000
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue from contracts with
customers
|
23,135
|
2,451
|
17
|
25,603
|
Other revenue
|
5,971
|
-
|
-
|
5,971
|
Total revenue
|
29,106
|
2,451
|
17
|
31,574
|
|
|
|
|
|
Results
|
|
|
|
|
Segment result
|
1,632
|
(629)
|
(490)
|
513
|
Unallocated corporate
expenses
|
|
|
|
(450)
|
Operating profit
|
|
|
|
63
|
Investment revenue
|
|
|
|
446
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
|
(122)
|
Profit before tax
|
|
|
|
387
|
Tax
|
|
|
|
(19)
|
Profit after tax
|
|
|
|
368
|
2024
|
Investment
Management
£'000
|
Financial Planning &
Wealth
Management
£'000
|
SaaS
£'000
|
Consolidated
year ended
31 March
2024
£'000
|
Other information
|
|
|
|
|
Capital additions
|
463
|
24
|
-
|
487
|
Depreciation
|
261
|
27
|
-
|
288
|
|
|
|
|
|
Statement of financial positions
|
|
|
|
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
|
Segment assets
|
54,333
|
1,279
|
406
|
56,018
|
Unallocated corporate
assets
|
|
|
|
1,304
|
Consolidated total assets
|
|
|
|
57,322
|
|
|
|
|
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Segment liabilities
|
37,984
|
315
|
242
|
38,541
|
Unallocated corporate
liabilities
|
|
|
|
(2,540)
|
Consolidated total
liabilities
|
|
|
|
36,001
|
2023
|
Investment
Management
£'000
|
Financial
Planning & Wealth
Management
£'000
|
SaaS
£'000
|
Consolidated
year
ended
31
March
2023
£'000
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue from contracts with
customers
|
26,399
|
1,938
|
16
|
28,353
|
Other revenue
|
3,258
|
1
|
-
|
3,259
|
Total revenue
|
29,657
|
1,939
|
16
|
31,612
|
|
|
|
|
|
Results
|
|
|
|
|
Segment result
|
1,553
|
(310)
|
(128)
|
1,115
|
Unallocated corporate
expenses
|
|
|
|
(490)
|
|
|
|
|
625
|
Investment revenue
|
|
|
|
95
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
|
(88)
|
Profit before tax
|
|
|
|
632
|
Tax
|
|
|
|
(214)
|
Profit after tax
|
|
|
|
418
|
2023
|
Investment
Management
£'000
|
Financial
Planning & Wealth
Management
£'000
|
SaaS
£'000
|
Consolidated
year
ended
31
March
2023
£'000
|
Other information
|
|
|
|
|
Capital additions
|
368
|
10
|
-
|
378
|
Depreciation
|
273
|
58
|
-
|
331
|
|
|
|
|
|
Statement of financial positions
|
|
|
|
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
|
Segment assets
|
57,255
|
1,163
|
406
|
58,824
|
Unallocated corporate
assets
|
|
|
|
4,256
|
Consolidated total assets
|
|
|
|
63,080
|
|
|
|
|
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
Segment liabilities
|
39,546
|
247
|
329
|
40,122
|
Unallocated corporate
liabilities
|
|
|
|
1,792
|
Consolidated total
liabilities
|
|
|
|
41,914
|
The following table analyses the
above segmental breakdown without cancelling intercompany
transactions to show the value of each segment to the Group itself.
Since EnOC acquired the intellectual property of the Advance
Walkers Online platform on 1 April 2023, it has become a profitable
entity, reflecting its value to the Group.
2024
|
Investment
Management
£'000
|
Financial Planning &
Wealth
Management
£'000
|
SaaS
£'000
|
Consolidated
year ended
31 March
2024
£'000
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue from contracts with
customers
|
23,135
|
2,544
|
609
|
26,288
|
Other revenue
|
5,971
|
-
|
-
|
5,971
|
Total revenue
|
29,106
|
2,544
|
609
|
32,259
|
|
|
|
|
|
Results
|
|
|
|
|
Segment result
|
947
|
(536)
|
102
|
513
|
Unallocated corporate
expenses
|
|
|
|
(450)
|
|
|
|
|
63
|
Investment revenue
|
|
|
|
446
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
|
(122)
|
Profit before tax
|
|
|
|
387
|
Tax
|
|
|
|
(19)
|
Profit after tax
|
|
|
|
368
|
7. Commissions and fees
paid
Commissions and fees paid
comprises:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
To authorised external
agents
|
-
|
3
|
To self-employed certified
persons
|
5,769
|
7,261
|
|
5,769
|
7,264
|
8. Profit for the year
Profit for the year on continuing
operations has been arrived at after charging:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment (see note 18)
|
288
|
331
|
Depreciation of right-of-use assets
(see note 19)
|
636
|
771
|
Amortisation of intangibles (see
note 17)
|
1,011
|
970
|
Staff costs (see note 12)
|
16,898
|
14,475
|
Recharge of staff costs
|
(278)
|
(248)
|
Settlement costs
|
1,029
|
994
|
Communications
|
1,385
|
1,387
|
Computer expenses
|
1,000
|
831
|
Other expenses
|
3,736
|
3,442
|
Auditor's remuneration
|
262
|
216
|
|
25,967
|
23,169
|
A more detailed analysis of
auditor's remuneration is provided below:
|
2024
£'000
|
2024
%
|
2023
£'000
|
2023
%
|
Audit services
|
|
|
|
|
Fees payable to the Company's
auditor for the audit of its annual accounts
|
113
|
43
|
84
|
39
|
The audit of the Company's
subsidiaries pursuant to legislation - current year
|
119
|
45
|
119
|
55
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-audit services
|
|
|
|
|
FCA client assets
reporting
|
30
|
12
|
13
|
6
|
|
262
|
100
|
216
|
100
|
9. Exceptional items
Certain amounts are disclosed
separately in order to present results which are not distorted by
significant items of income and expenditure due to their nature and
materiality.
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Exceptional items included within operating
profit
|
|
|
SDRT liability to HMRC
|
(225)
|
131
|
Accelerated amortisation
|
-
|
423
|
Total exceptional items
|
(225)
|
554
|
In the current year, the final SDRT
liability to HMRC has been disclosed to HMRC, which HMRC is
examining. This adjustment reflects the restatement of the final
expected liability, net of actual and estimated professional
costs.
In the prior year, the following
items were classified as exceptional items due to their materiality
and non-recurring nature. These were:
a) SDRT liability
to HMRC resulting from a system monitoring error where stamp duty
was omitted from a small number of client
contracts.
b) Amortisation of
client list intangible assets of £423,000.
10. Investment revenue
Investment revenue
comprises:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Interest on bank deposits
|
427
|
48
|
Dividends from equity
investment
|
19
|
47
|
|
446
|
95
|
11. Finance costs
Finance costs comprises:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Interest on lease
liabilities
|
(99)
|
(86)
|
Interest on dilapidation
provisions
|
(2)
|
3
|
Interest on overdue
liabilities
|
(21)
|
(5)
|
|
(122)
|
(88)
|
12. Staff costs
Particulars of employee costs
(including Directors) are as shown
below:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Wages and salaries
|
13,891
|
11,943
|
Social security costs
|
1,328
|
1,262
|
Share incentive plan
|
43
|
60
|
Other employment costs
|
1,636
|
1,210
|
|
16,898
|
14,475
|
Staff costs do not include
commissions payable, as these costs are included in total
commissions payable to self-employed certified persons disclosed in
note 7. At the end of the year there were 26 certified
self-employed account executives (2023: 32).
The average number of staff employed
during the year was:
|
2024
Number
|
2023
Number
|
Executive Directors
|
2
|
2
|
Certification and approved
staff
|
60
|
49
|
Other staff
|
157
|
155
|
|
219
|
206
|
The table incorporates the staff
classification in accordance with the Senior Managers and
Certification Regime
("SM&CR").
13. Taxation
The tax charge is based on the
profit for the year of continuing operations and comprises:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
UK corporation tax at 25% (2023:
19%)
|
218
|
228
|
Prior year adjustments
|
(175)
|
(7)
|
Origination and reversal of timing
differences during the current period
|
(24)
|
(46)
|
|
19
|
175
|
Corporation tax is calculated at 25%
(2023: 19%) of the estimated assessable profit for the
year.
The charge for the year can be
reconciled to the profit per the income statement as
follows:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Profit before tax
|
387
|
632
|
Tax on profit on ordinary activities
at the standard rate UK corporation tax rate of 25% (2023:
19%)
|
97
|
120
|
|
|
|
Effects of:
|
|
|
Tax rate changes for deferred
tax
|
-
|
(8)
|
Expenses not deductible for tax
purposes
|
9
|
64
|
Prior year adjustment *
|
(175)
|
(14)
|
Fixed asset differences
|
168
|
65
|
Non-taxable income **
|
(93)
|
-
|
Other
|
13
|
(13)
|
|
19
|
214
|
* The prior year adjustment only
relates to tax disclosure where the Group received capital
allowances on capital expenditure that were previously not
available due to expenditure recorded in the loss-making parent
entity. Since the assets were transferred to a profit-making
subsidiary on 1 April 2022, capital allowances claimed with HMRC
and deductions received.
** This relates to the above matter
where a landlord contribution write-down was incorrectly taxed in
prior years, which was subsequently by our tax advisers and
reversed, with the credit recognised in the current
year.
Current tax has been provided at the
rate of 25%. Deferred tax has been provided at 25% (2023:
25%).
The exceptional credit of £225,000
(2023: the exceptional charge of £554,000), disclosed separately on
the consolidated income statement, is taxable to the value of
£56,250 (2023: tax deductible of £105,000) of corporation tax.
Classifying these credits/costs as exceptional has no effect on the
tax liability.
14. Dividends
When determining the level of
proposed dividend in any year a number of factors are taken into
account including levels of profitability, future cash commitments,
investment needs, shareholder expectations and prudent buffers for
maintaining an adequate regulatory capital surplus. Amounts
recognised as distributions to equity holders in the
period:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Final dividend for the year ended 31
March 2023 of 0.25p (2022: 1.20p) per share
|
107
|
511
|
Interim dividend for the year ended
31 March 2024 of 0.25p (2023: 0.25p) per share
|
106
|
106
|
|
213
|
617
|
Proposed final dividend for the year
ended 31 March 2024 of 0.25p (2023: 0.25p) per share
|
106
|
106
|
The proposed final dividends are
subject to approval by shareholders at the Annual General Meeting
and have not been included as liabilities in these financial
statements.
15. Earnings per share
The calculation of basic earnings
per share for continuing operations is based on the post-tax profit
for the financial year of £368,000 (2023: £418,000) and divided by
42,577,328 (2023: 42,577,328) Ordinary Shares of
62/3 pence, being the weighted average number
of Ordinary Shares in issue during the year.
No dilution to earnings per share in
the current year or in the prior year.
The calculation of the basic
earnings per share is based on the following data:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Earnings for the purpose of basic
earnings per share
|
|
|
being net profit attributable to
equity holders of the Parent Company
|
368
|
418
|
Number of shares
|
2024
Number
|
2023
Number
|
Weighted average number of Ordinary
Shares for the purposes of basic earnings per share
|
42,577,328
|
42,577,328
|
This produced basic earnings per
share of 0.86 pence (2023: 0.98 pence).
16. Goodwill
|
£'000
|
Cost
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
7,056
|
At 1 April 2023
|
7,056
|
At
31 March 2024
|
7,056
|
|
|
Accumulated impairment
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
2,668
|
At 1 April 2023
|
2,668
|
Impaired during the year
|
-
|
At
31 March 2024
|
2,668
|
|
|
Carrying amount
|
|
At
31 March 2024
|
4,388
|
At 31 March 2023
|
4,388
|
Goodwill acquired in a business
combination is allocated, at acquisition, to the cash-generating
units ("CGUs") that are expected to benefit from that business
combination or intangible asset. The carrying amount of goodwill
has been allocated as follows:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
London York Fund Managers Limited
CGU ("London York")
|
2,901
|
2,901
|
Barker Poland Asset Management LLP
CGU ("BPAM")
|
1,487
|
1,487
|
|
4,388
|
4,388
|
The recoverable amounts of the CGUs
have been determined based upon value-in-use calculations for the
London York CGU and fair value, less costs of disposal for the BPAM
CGU.
The London York computation was
based on discounted five-year cash flow projections and terminal
values. The key assumptions for these calculations are a pre-tax
discount rate of 12%, terminal growth rates of 2% and the expected
changes to revenues and costs during the five-year projection
period based on discussions with senior management, past
experience, future expectations in light of anticipated market and
economic conditions, comparisons with our peers and widely
available economic and market forecasts. The pre-tax discount rate
is determined by management based on current market assessments of
the time value of money and risks specific to the London York CGU.
The base value-in-use cash flows were stress tested for an increase
in discount rates to 16% and a 20% fall in net inflows resulting in
no impairment.
The discount rate would need to
increase above 28% for the London York CGU value-in-use to equal
the respective carrying values. Revenues would need to fall by
63.7% per annum in present value terms for the London York CGU
value-in-use to equal the respective carrying values.
The BPAM CGU recoverable amount was
assessed, in accordance with IAS 36, by adopting the higher method
of the fair value less cost of disposal to determine the
recoverable amount (as opposed to the lower value-in-use). The
recoverable amount at the year-end calculated for the BPAM CGU,
determined by the fair value less cost of disposal, exceeded that
produced by the value-in-use calculation. The fair value less cost
of disposal amounted to £13 million (2023: £10 million) with
headroom, after selling costs, of £9.8 million (2023: £6.7 million)
after applying price earnings multiples based on the average of the
Group's and its peers' published results. Accordingly, this
measurement is classified as fair value hierarchy Level 3 (Note 20)
having used valuation techniques not based on directly observable
market data. A 36% decrease in BPAM's profit after tax across five
years would result in reducing the headroom to a negligible
value.
17. Other intangible assets
|
Software
licences
£'000
|
Client
lists
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
2,899
|
10,697
|
13,596
|
Reclassification of assets relating
to IFRS 16
|
(22)
|
-
|
(22)
|
Additions in the year
|
45
|
266
|
311
|
At 1 April 2023
|
2,922
|
10,963
|
13,885
|
Additions in the year
|
104
|
-
|
104
|
At
31 March 2024
|
3,026
|
10,963
|
13,989
|
|
|
|
|
Amortisation
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
2,644
|
5,200
|
7,844
|
Charge for the year
|
137
|
833
|
970
|
Charge for the year - exceptional
cost (note 9)
|
-
|
423
|
423
|
At 1 April 2023
|
2,781
|
6,456
|
9,237
|
Charge for the year
|
100
|
911
|
1,011
|
At
31 March 2024
|
2,881
|
7,367
|
10,248
|
|
|
|
|
Carrying amount
|
|
|
|
At
31 March 2024
|
145
|
3,596
|
3,741
|
At 31 March 2023
|
141
|
4,507
|
4,648
|
The intangible assets are amortised
over their estimated useful lives in order to determine
amortisation rates. "Client lists" are assessed on an
asset-by-asset basis and are amortised over periods of three to 20
years and "Software licences" are amortised over five
years.
There are no indications that the
value attributable to client lists or software licences should be
further impaired.
18. Property, plant and equipment
Owned fixed assets
|
Leasehold
improvement,
furniture
and
equipment
£'000
|
Computer
hardware
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
At 1 April 2022
|
2,753
|
1,590
|
4,343
|
Additions in the year
|
99
|
52
|
151
|
At 1 April 2023
|
2,852
|
1,642
|
4,494
|
Additions in the year
|
59
|
55
|
114
|
At
31 March 2024
|
2,911
|
1,697
|
4,608
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
|
|
|
1 April 2022
|
1,633
|
1,541
|
3,174
|
Charge for the year
|
297
|
34
|
331
|
1 April 2023
|
1,930
|
1,575
|
3,505
|
Charge for the year
|
258
|
30
|
288
|
At
31 March 2024
|
2,188
|
1,605
|
3,793
|
|
|
|
|
Carrying amount
|
|
|
|
At
31 March 2024
|
723
|
92
|
815
|
At 31 March 2023
|
922
|
67
|
989
|
19. Right-of-use assets
|
|
Computer
|
Computer
|
|
|
Offices
|
software
|
hardware
|
Total
|
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
1 April 2023
|
4,650
|
1,067
|
95
|
5,812
|
Additions
|
100
|
271
|
-
|
371
|
At
31 March 2024
|
4,750
|
1,338
|
95
|
6,183
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accumulated depreciation
|
|
|
|
|
1 April 2023
|
2,486
|
906
|
80
|
3,472
|
Charge for the year
|
480
|
141
|
15
|
636
|
At
31 March 2024
|
2,966
|
1.047
|
95
|
4,108
|
|
|
|
|
|
Carrying amount
|
|
|
|
|
At
31 March 2024
|
1,784
|
291
|
-
|
2,075
|
At 31 March 2023
|
2,164
|
161
|
15
|
2,340
|
20. Investments - fair value through profit or
loss
Non-current asset investments
The Group did not hold any
non-current asset investments at the reporting date.
Current asset investments
|
As at
31 March
2024
£'000
|
As
at
31
March
2023
£'000
|
Trading investments
|
|
|
Investments - fair value through
profit or loss
|
538
|
1,276
|
Financial assets at fair value
through profit or loss represent investments in equity securities
and collectives that present the Group with opportunity for return
through dividend income, interest and trading gains. The fair
values of these securities are based on quoted market prices and
the Group is able to liquidate these assets at short
notice.
The following provides an analysis
of financial instruments that are measured after initial
recognition at fair value, grouped into Levels 1 to 3 based on the
degree to which the fair value is observable:
Level 1 fair value measurements are
those derived from quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for
identical assets or liabilities. The Group's financial assets held
at fair value through profit and loss under current assets fall
within this category;
Level 2 fair value measurements are
those derived from inputs other than quoted prices included within
Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either
directly (i.e. as prices) or indirectly (i.e. derived from prices).
The Group does not hold financial instruments in this category;
and
Level 3 fair value measurements are
those derived from valuation techniques that include inputs for the
asset or liability that are not based on observable market data
(unobservable inputs). The Group does not hold financial
instruments in this category.
|
Level 1
£'000
|
Level 2
£'000
|
Level 3
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
At
31 March 2024
|
|
|
|
|
Financial assets held at fair value through profit and
loss
|
538
|
-
|
-
|
538
|
At 31 March 2023
|
|
|
|
|
Financial assets held at fair value
through profit and loss
|
1,276
|
-
|
-
|
1,276
|
Further IFRS 13 disclosures have not
been presented here as the balance represents 0.939% (2023: 2.022%)
of total assets. There were no transfers of investments between any
of the levels of hierarchy during the year.
21. Trade and other receivables
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Amounts falling due within one
year:
|
|
|
Due from clients, brokers and
recognised stock exchanges at amortised cost
|
24,630
|
28,554
|
Other debtors at amortised
cost
|
1,191
|
2,148
|
Prepayments and accrued
income
|
6,081
|
5,599
|
|
31,902
|
36,301
|
The Group acts as an agent for
clients on the trading of their investments. As an agent, the Group
only recognises amounts due from or to clients, brokers and
recognised stock exchanges as trade receivables and trade payables
(see note 25) respectively. As a result, no underlying investments
are recognised on the Group's consolidated statement of financial
position.
22. Cash and cash equivalents
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Cash deposits held at bank,
repayable on demand without penalty
|
13,863
|
13,138
|
|
13,863
|
13,138
|
Cash and cash equivalents do not
include deposits of client monies placed by the Group with banks
and building societies in segregated client bank accounts (free
money and settlement accounts). All such deposits are designated by
the banks and building societies as clients' funds and are not
available to satisfy any liabilities of the Group.
The amount of such net deposits
which are not included in the consolidated statement of financial
position at 31 March 2024 was £213,695,000 (2023:
£267,258,000).
The credit quality of banks holding
the Group's cash at 31 March 2024 is analysed below with reference
to credit ratings awarded by Fitch.
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
A+
|
5,676
|
5,400
|
AA-
|
8,187
|
7,738
|
|
13,863
|
13,138
|
23. Deferred tax liability
|
Capital
allowances
£'000
|
Short-term
temporary
differences
and other
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
At 1 April 2022
|
(5)
|
(409)
|
(414)
|
Use of loss brought
forward
|
-
|
2
|
2
|
Debit to the income
statement
|
-
|
41
|
41
|
At 1 April 2023
|
(5)
|
(366)
|
(371)
|
Use of loss brought
forward
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Debit to the income
statement
|
(2)
|
113
|
111
|
At
31 March 2024
|
(7)
|
(253)
|
(260)
|
Deferred income tax assets are
recognised for tax loss carried forward to the extent that the
realisation of the related tax benefit through future taxable
profits is probable. The Group did not recognise deferred income
tax assets (2023: £12,362) in respect of losses amounting to £nil
(2023: £65,063) that can be carried forward against future taxable
income.
24. Financial instruments and risk
profile
Financial risk management
The Board has overall responsibility
for the determination of the Group's risk management objectives and
policies and, whilst retaining ultimate responsibility for them, it
has delegated the authority for designing and operating processes
that ensure the effective implementation of the objectives and
policies to the Group's Risk function. The Board receives
periodic reports from the Group Risk Team through which it reviews
the effectiveness of the processes put in place and the
appropriateness of the objectives and policies it sets.
Procedures and controls are in place
to identify, assess and ultimately control the financial risks
faced by the Group arising from its use of financial instruments.
Steps are taken to mitigate identified risks with established and
effective procedures and controls, operating systems, management
information and training of staff.
The Group's risk appetite, along
with the procedures and controls mentioned above, are laid out in
the Group's Internal capital adequacy and risk assessment
(ICARA).
The overall risk appetite for the
Group is considered by Management to be low, despite operating in a
marketplace where financial risk is inherent in investment
management and financial services.
The overall objective of the Board
is to set policies that seek to reduce risk as far as possible
without unduly affecting the Group's competitiveness and
flexibility. The Group considers its financial risks arising
from its use of financial instruments to fall into three main
categories:
(i) credit
risk;
(ii) liquidity risk;
and
(iii) market risk.
Financial risk management is a
central part of the Group's strategic management which recognises
that an effective risk management programme can increase a
business's chances of success and reduce the possibility of
failure. Continual assessment, monitoring and updating of
procedures and benchmarks are all essential parts of the Group's
risk management strategy.
(i)
Credit risk management practices
The Group's credit risk is the risk
of loss through default by a counterparty and, accordingly, the
Group's definition of default is primarily attributable to its
trade receivables or pledged collateral which is the risk that a
client, market counterparty or recognised stock exchange will be
unable to pay amounts to settle a trade in full when due. Other
credit risks, such as free delivery of securities or cash, are not
deemed to be significant. Significant changes in the economy or a
particular sector could result in losses that are different from
those that the Group has provided for at the year-end
date.
All financial assets at the year-end
were assessed for credit impairment and no material amounts have
arisen having evaluated the age of overdue debtors, the quality of
recourse to third parties and the availability of mitigation
through the disposal of liquid collateral in the form of marketable
securities. The Group's write-off policy is driven by the historic
dearth of instances where material irrecoverable losses have been
incurred. Where the avenues of recourse and mitigation outlined
above have not been successful, the outstanding balance, or
residual balance if sale proceeds do not fully cover an exposure,
will be written off.
The Board is responsible for
oversight of the Group's credit risk. The Group accepts a limited
exposure to credit risk but aims to mitigate and minimise the risk
through various methods. There is no material concentrated credit
risk as the exposures are spread across a substantial number of
clients and counterparties.
Trade receivables (includes
settlement balances)
Settlement risk arises in any
situation where a payment of cash or transfer of a security is made
in the expectation of a corresponding delivery of a security or
receipt of cash. Settlement balances arise with clients, market
counterparties and recognised stock exchanges.
In the vast majority of cases,
control of the stock purchased will remain with the Group until
client monetary balances are fully settled.
Where there is an absence of
securities collateral, clients are usually required to hold
sufficient funds in their managed deposit account prior to the
trade being conducted. Holding significant amounts of client money
helps the Group to manage credit risks arising with clients. Many
of our clients also hold significant amounts of stock and other
securities in our nominee subsidiary company, providing additional
security should a specific transaction fail to be settled and the
proceeds of such securities disposed of can be used to settle all
outstanding obligations.
In addition, the client side of
settlement balances are normally fully guaranteed by our
commission-sharing certified persons who conduct transactions and
manage the relationships with our mutual clients.
Exposures to market counterparties
also arise in the settlement of trades or when collateral is placed
with them to cover open trading positions. Market counterparties
are usually other FCA-regulated firms and are considered
creditworthy, some reliance being placed on the fact that other
regulated firms would be required to meet the stringent capital
adequacy requirements of the FCA.
Maximum exposure to credit
risk:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Cash
|
13,863
|
13,138
|
Trade receivables
|
24,630
|
28,554
|
Other debtors
|
1,191
|
2,148
|
Accrued interest income
|
767
|
591
|
|
40,451
|
44,431
|
An ageing analysis of the Group's
financial assets is presented in the following table:
At
31 March 2024
|
Current
£'000
|
0-1
month
£'000
|
2-3
months
£'000
|
Over 3
months
£'000
|
Carrying
value
£'000
|
Trade receivables
|
22,789
|
1,524
|
51
|
266
|
24,630
|
Cash and cash equivalent
|
13,863
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
13,863
|
Other debtors
|
1,188
|
3
|
-
|
-
|
1,191
|
Accrued interest income
|
767
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
767
|
|
38,607
|
1,527
|
51
|
266
|
40,451
|
Expected credit
loss
The Group applies the IFRS 9
simplified approach to measuring expected credit losses using a
lifetime expected credit loss provision for trade receivables and
contract assets. To measure expected credit losses on a collective
basis, trade receivables and contract assets are grouped based on
similar credit risk and ageing. The contract assets have similar
risk characteristics to the trade receivables for similar types of
contracts.
The Group undertakes a daily
assessment of credit risk which includes monitoring of client and
counterparty exposure and credit limits. New clients are
individually assessed for their creditworthiness using external
ratings where available and all institutional relationships are
monitored at regular intervals.
As at 31 March 2024, the Directors
of the Company reviewed and assessed the Group's existing assets
for impairment using the IFRS 9 simplified approach to measuring
expected credit losses using a lifetime expected credit loss
provision for trade receivables and contract assets and no
additional impairments have been recognised on application and no
material defaults are anticipated within the next 12
months.
Concentration of credit
risk
In addition, daily risk management
procedures to actively monitor disproportionately large trades by a
customer or market counterparty are in place. The financial
standing, pattern of trading, type and size of security or
instrument traded are amongst the factors taken into
consideration.
(ii) Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk arises from the
Group's management of working capital and the finance charges and
principal repayments on its debt instruments. It is the risk
that the Group will encounter difficulty in meeting its financial
obligations as they fall due. The Group's policy is to maintain
sufficient cash to allow it to meet its liabilities when they
become due.
Historically, sufficient underlying
cash has been prevalent in the business for many years as the Group
is normally cash generative. The risk of unexpected large cash
outflows could arise where significant amounts are being settled
daily of which only a fraction forms the commission earned by the
Group. This could be due to clients settling late or bad deliveries
to the market or CREST resulting in a payment delay from the market
side. The Group also commits in advance to product providers to
purchase future structured product issues at the future market
price. The Group then markets such products in advance of the
issue, which under normal business conditions means there is
limited liquidity and market risk at the time of product
launch.
The Group's policy with regard to
liquidity risk is to carefully monitor balance sheet structure and
borrowing limits, including:
●
monitoring of cash positions on a daily
basis;
●
exercising strict control over the timely
settlement of trade debtors; and
●
exercising strict control over the timely
settlement of market debtors and creditors.
The Group holds its cash and cash
equivalents spread across a number of highly rated financial
institutions. All cash and cash equivalents are short-term highly
liquid investments that are readily convertible to known amounts of
cash without penalty.
The Group and its subsidiaries
Walker Crips Investment Management Limited and Barker Poland Asset
Management LLP are in scope of the FCA's basic liquid assets
requirements and these are monitored by management on a daily
basis.
The table below analyses the Group's
cash outflow based on the remaining period to the contractual
maturity date.
2024
|
Less than
1 year
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Trade and other payables
|
31,961
|
31,961
|
|
31,961
|
31,961
|
|
|
|
2023
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
36,849
|
36,849
|
|
36,849
|
36,849
|
As at 31 March 2024 the Group had
commitments in respect of future structured product issues of £8.3
million (2023: 10.0 million)
(iii) Market risk
Market risk is the risk that changes
in market prices such as foreign exchange rates or equity prices,
on financial assets and liabilities will affect the Group's
results. They relate to price risk on fair value through profit or
loss trading investments and are subject to ongoing
monitoring.
Fair value of financial instruments
The fair values of the Group's
financial assets and liabilities are not materially different from
their carrying values as they are valued at their realisable
values. The Group's financial assets that are classed as current
asset and non-current asset investments (fair value through profit
or loss) have been revalued at 31 March 2024 using closing market
prices.
A 10% fall in the value of trading
financial instruments would, in isolation, result in a pre-tax
decrease to net assets of £53,800 (2023: £127,600). A 10% rise
would have an equal and opposite effect.
The impact of foreign exchange and
interest rate risk is not material and is therefore not
presented.
25. Trade and other payables
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Amounts owed to clients, brokers and
recognised stock exchanges
|
24,315
|
28,012
|
Other creditors
|
2,704
|
4,028
|
Contract liability
|
-
|
9
|
Accrued expenses
|
4,942
|
4,800
|
|
31,961
|
36,849
|
Trade creditors and accruals
comprise amounts outstanding for investment-related transactions,
to customers or counterparties, and ongoing costs. The average
credit period taken for purchases in relation to costs is 9 days
(2023: 11 days). The Directors consider that the carrying amount of
trade payables approximates to their fair value.
The Group acts as an agent for
clients on the trading of their investments. As an agent, the Group
only recognises amounts due from or to clients, brokers and
recognised stock exchanges as trade receivables and trade payables
respectively. As a result, no underlying investments are recognised
on the Group's consolidated statement of financial
position.
26. Provisions
Provisions included in other current
liabilities and long-term liabilities are made up as
follows:
|
Professional
fees
£'000
|
Client
payments
£'000
|
Dilapidations
£'000
|
Stamp Duty liability and
related costs
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Provisions falling due within one year
|
|
|
|
|
|
At
1 April 2022
|
455
|
650
|
32
|
747
|
1,884
|
Additions
|
-
|
96
|
-
|
131
|
227
|
Reclassification to trade and other
payables
|
(90)
|
(746)
|
-
|
-
|
(836)
|
Release of provisions
|
(20)
|
|
|
|
(20)
|
Utilisation of provisions
|
(345)
|
-
|
(32)
|
-
|
(377)
|
At
1 April 2023
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
878
|
878
|
Release of provisions
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(243)
|
(243)
|
Utilisation of provisions
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(280)
|
(280)
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
355
|
355
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Provisions falling due after one year
|
|
|
|
|
|
At
1 April 2022
|
-
|
-
|
586
|
-
|
586
|
Additions
|
-
|
-
|
61
|
-
|
61
|
Interest
|
-
|
-
|
5
|
-
|
5
|
At
1 April 2023
|
-
|
-
|
652
|
-
|
652
|
Additions
|
-
|
-
|
14
|
-
|
14
|
Interest
|
-
|
-
|
23
|
-
|
23
|
|
-
|
-
|
689
|
-
|
689
|
Total as at 31 March 2024
|
-
|
-
|
689
|
355
|
1,044
|
The Group, based on revised
estimates, made an additional provision of £37,000 (including
interest) for dilapidations in connection with acquired leasehold
premises (2023: total additional provision of £66,000). These costs
are expected to arise at the end of each respective
lease.
The Group had six leased properties,
all of which had contractual dilapidation requirements. The
dilapidation provisions in relation to these leases range from net
present values as at the year-end of £12,000 to £583,000 per
lease.
The Group, in the previous year,
identified an obligation in respect of stamp duty reserve tax which
arose over several years. An initial provision of £878,000 was made
in the prior year, and subsequently upon management investigation
and external tax advice, the liability including professional fees
currently outstanding, is estimated to be £355,000.
27. Lease liabilities
Lease liabilities
|
Offices
£'000
|
Computer
software
£'000
|
Computer
hardware
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
At 1 April 2023
|
2,562
|
148
|
20
|
2,730
|
Additions
|
100
|
271
|
-
|
371
|
Interest
|
87
|
12
|
-
|
99
|
Lease payments
|
(506)
|
(227)
|
(13)
|
(746)
|
At
31 March 2024
|
2,243
|
204
|
7
|
2,454
|
Lease liabilities profile (statement of financial
position)
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Amounts due within one
year
|
718
|
341
|
Amounts due after more than one
year
|
1,736
|
2,389
|
|
2,454
|
2,730
|
Undiscounted lease maturity analysis
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Within one year
|
865
|
426
|
Between one and two years
|
847
|
958
|
Between two and five
years
|
864
|
1,549
|
Total undiscounted lease
liabilities
|
2,576
|
2,933
|
28. Called-up share capital
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Called-up, allotted and fully
paid
|
|
|
43,327,328 (2023: 43,327,328)
Ordinary Shares of 62/3p each
|
2,888
|
2,888
|
There are no specific restrictions
on the size of a holding nor on the transfer of shares, which are
both governed by the general provisions of the Articles of
Association and prevailing legislation. The Directors are not aware
of any agreements between holders of the Group's shares that may
result in restrictions on the transfer of securities or on voting
rights.
The following movements in share
capital occurred during the year:
|
Number of
shares
|
Share
capital
£'000
|
Share
premium
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
At 1 April 2023
|
43,327,328
|
2,888
|
3,763
|
6,651
|
At
31 March 2024
|
43,327,328
|
2,888
|
3,763
|
6,651
|
The Group's capital is defined for
accounting purposes as total equity. As at 31 March 2024, this
totalled £21,321,000 (2023: £21,166,000).
The Group's objectives when managing
capital are to:
●
safeguard the Group's ability to continue as a
going concern so that it can continue to provide returns for
shareholders and benefits for other stakeholders;
●
maintain a strong capital base to support the
development of the business;
●
optimise the distribution of capital across the
Group's subsidiaries, reflecting the requirements of each
company;
●
strive to make capital freely transferable across
the Group where possible; and
●
comply with regulatory requirements at all
times.
The Group has been assessed as
constituting a MIFIDPRU Investment Firm group and has been
classified as a non-small non-interconnected (non-SNI) Investment
Firm group and performs an Internal Capital Adequacy and Risk
Assessment process (ICARA), which is presented to the FCA on
request.
The Group's capital, for accounting
purposes, is defined as the total of share capital, share premium,
retained earnings and other reserves. Total capital at 31 March
2024 was £21.3 million (2023: £21.2 million).
Regulatory capital is derived from
the Group's "ICARA", which is a requirement of the Investment Firm
Prudential Regime ('IFPR'). The ICARA draws on the Group's
risk management process that is embedded within all areas of the
Group. The Group's objectives when managing capital are to
comply with the capital requirements set by the Financial Conduct
Authority, to safeguard the Group's ability to continue as a going
concern.
Capital adequacy and the use of
regulatory capital are monitored daily by the Group's management.
In addition to a variety of stress tests performed as part of the
ICARA process, and daily reporting in respect of treasury activity,
capital levels are monitored and forecast to ensure that dividends
and investment requirements are managed and appropriate buffers are
held against potential adverse business conditions.
Regulatory capital
No breaches were reported to the FCA
during the financial years ended 31 March 2024 and 2023.
Treasury shares
The Group holds 750,000 of its own
shares, purchased for total cash consideration of £312,000. In line
with the principles of IAS 32 these treasury shares have been
deducted from equity (note 29). No gain or loss has been recognised
in the income statement in relation to these shares.
29. Reserves
Apart from share capital and share
premium, the Group holds reserves at 31 March 2024 under the
following categories:
Own
shares held
|
(£312,000) (2023:
(£312,000))
|
●
the negative balance of the Group's own shares,
which have been bought back and held in treasury.
|
Retained earnings
|
£10,259,000 (2023:
£10,104,000)
|
●
the net cumulative earnings of the Group, which
have not been
paid out as dividends, are retained to be reinvested in our core,
or developing, companies.
|
Other reserves
|
£4,723,000 (2023:
£4,723,000)
|
●
the cumulative premium on the issue of shares as
deferred consideration for corporate acquisitions £4,612,000 (2023:
£4,612,000) and non-distributable reserve into which amounts are
transferred following the redemption or purchase of the Group's own
shares.
|
30. Cash generated from operations
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Operating profit for the year
|
63
|
625
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
Amortisation of
intangibles
|
1,011
|
1,393
|
Net change in fair value of
financial instruments at fair value through profit or
loss***
|
96
|
575
|
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment
|
288
|
331
|
Depreciation of right-of-use
assets*
|
636
|
771
|
Decrease in debtors**
|
4,398
|
13,662
|
Decrease in creditors**
|
(5,522)
|
(13,818)
|
Net
cash inflow
|
970
|
3,539
|
*
Lease liability payments associated with RoU assets were 722,000
(2023: £332,000).
**
Cash outflow from working capital movement of £1,124,000 (2023:
£156,000)
*** Revaluation
profit on proprietary positions.
31. Financial commitments
Capital commitments
At the end of this year and the
previous year, there were no capital commitments contracted but not
provided for and no capital commitments authorised but not
contracted for.
32. Related parties
Directors and their close family
members have dealt on standard commercial terms with the Group. The
commission and fees earned by the Group included in revenue through
such dealings is as follows:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Commission and fees received from
Directors and their close family members
|
31
|
20
|
Other related parties include
Charles Russell Speechlys, of which Martin Wright, Chairman, was a
Partner and remains a consultant. Charles Russell Speechlys
provides certain legal services to the Group on normal commercial
terms and the amount paid and expensed during the year (including
the fees paid to the firm for Mr. Wright's services as Director)
was £208,000 (2023: £280,000).
Fees of £9,000 (2023: £9,000) are
receivable by EnOC Technologies Ltd from CyberQuote Pte Ltd (a
company, where Hua Min Lim is a shareholder) for the service
provided on normal commercial terms.
Commission of £19,714 (2023: £7,043)
was earned by the Group from Phillip Securities (HK) Limited (a
Phillip Brokerage Pte Limited company, where Hua Min Lim is a
shareholder) having dealt on standard commercial terms.
Additionally, some custody services are provided by Phillip
Securities Pte Ltd (in Singapore, where Hua Min Lim is a Director),
again all on standard commercial terms, both these items being
included in revenue. Transactions between the Group and its
subsidiaries, which are related parties, have been eliminated on
consolidation and are accordingly not disclosed. Remuneration of
the Directors who are the key Management personnel of the Group is
disclosed in the table below.
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Key management personnel
compensation
|
|
|
Short-term employee
benefits
|
519
|
459
|
Post-employment benefits
|
36
|
32
|
|
555
|
491
|
33. Contingent liabilities
In 2021 a former associate brought a
claim against Walker Crips Investment Management Limited in the
Employment Tribunal. A hearing of a preliminary issue took
place in 2022 and the Tribunal found in favour of the
company. The former associate appealed that decision and in
2023, whilst many of the appeal grounds were not upheld, certain
points were referred back to the Employment Tribunal to
reconsider. The Company does not consider that the claims are
justified and intends to continue to defend them
robustly.
From time to time, the Group
receives complaints or undertakes past business reviews, the
outcomes of which remain uncertain and/or cannot be reliably
quantified based upon information available and circumstances
falling outside the Group's control. Accordingly, contingent
liabilities arise, the ultimate impact of which may also depend
upon availability of recoveries under the Group's indemnity
insurance and other contractual arrangements. Other than any cases
where a financial obligation is deemed to be probable and thus
provision is made, the Directors presently consider a negative
outcome to be remote. As a result, no further disclosure has been
made in these financial statements. Provisions made remain subject
to estimation uncertainty, which may result in material variations
in such estimates as matters are finalised.
34. Subsequent events
There are no material events arising
after 31 March 2024, which have an impact on these financial
statements.
35. Deferred cash consideration
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Due
within one year
|
|
|
Amounts due to personnel under
recruitment contracts/acquisition agreements
|
25
|
94
|
|
|
|
Due
after one year
|
|
|
Amounts due to personnel under
recruitment contracts/acquisition agreements
|
15
|
71
|
These amounts are based on fixed
contractual terms and the fair value of the liability approximates
carrying value, due to the consistency of the prevailing market
rate of interest when compared to the inception of
liability.
36. Share-based payments
The Group recognised total expenses
in the year of £15,000 (2023: £nil) related to equity-settled
share-based payment transactions.
No award was made in the financial
year and prior year award was forfeited due to termination of
employment.
Share Incentive Plan ("SIP")
Employees who have been employed for
longer than three months and are subject to PAYE are invited to
join the SIP. Employees may use funds from their gross monthly
salary (being not less than £10 and not greater than £150) to
purchase ordinary shares in the Group ("Partnership Shares"). In
the current year, for every Partnership Share purchased, the
employee received matching shares at a rate of 100%. The matching
option will remain at this rate to 31 March 2025. Employees
are offered an annual opportunity to top up contributions to the
maximum annual limit of £1,800 (or 10% of salary, if lower). All
shares to date awarded under this scheme have been purchased in the
market at the prevailing share price on a monthly basis.
Company
balance sheet
as at 31 March
2024
|
Note
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Investments measured at cost less
impairment
|
40
|
22,105
|
21,907
|
|
|
22,105
|
21,907
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
41
|
803
|
801
|
Deferred tax asset
|
42
|
-
|
1
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
176
|
95
|
|
|
979
|
897
|
Total assets
|
|
23,084
|
22,804
|
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
43
|
(4,579)
|
(3,889)
|
|
|
(4,579)
|
(3,889)
|
Net
current assets/(liabilities)
|
|
(3,600)
|
(2,992)
|
|
|
|
|
Net
assets
|
|
18,505
|
18,915
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
45
|
2,888
|
2,888
|
Share premium account
|
45
|
3,763
|
3,763
|
Own shares
|
45
|
(312)
|
(312)
|
Retained earnings
|
45
|
7,443
|
7,853
|
Other reserves
|
45
|
4,723
|
4,723
|
Equity attributable to equity holders of the
Company
|
|
18,505
|
18,915
|
As permitted by section 408 of the
Companies Act 2006 the Parent Company has elected not to present
its own profit and loss account for the year. Walker Crips Group
plc reported an after-tax loss for the financial year of £197,000
(2023: after-tax profit of £89,000).
The financial statements of Walker
Crips Group plc (Company registration no. 01432059) were approved
by the Board of Directors and authorised for issue on 31 July
2024.
Signed on behalf of the Board of
Directors:
Sanath Dandeniya FCCA
Director
Company
statement of changes in equity
year ended 31
March 2024
|
Called up
share
capital
£'000
|
Share
premium
account
£'000
|
Own
shares
held
£'000
|
Other
£'000
|
Retained
earnings
£'000
|
Total
equity
£'000
|
Equity as at 31 March 2022
|
2,888
|
3,763
|
(312)
|
4,723
|
8,381
|
19,443
|
Total comprehensive income for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
89
|
89
|
Contributions by and distributions to owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(617)
|
(617)
|
Total contributions by and
distributions to owners
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(617)
|
(617)
|
Equity as at 31 March
2023
|
2,888
|
3,763
|
(312)
|
4,723
|
7,853
|
18,915
|
Total comprehensive loss for the
period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(197)
|
(197)
|
Contributions by and distributions to owners
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(213)
|
(213)
|
Total contributions by and
distributions to owners
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(213)
|
(213)
|
Equity as at 31 March 2024
|
2,888
|
3,763
|
(312)
|
4,723
|
7,443
|
18,505
|
The following Accounting Policies
and Notes form part of these financial statements.
Notes to the Company accounts
year ended 31 March 2024
37. Significant accounting policies
The separate financial statements of
Walker Crips Group plc, the Parent Company, are presented as
required by the Companies Act 2006.
The financial statements have been
prepared under the historical cost convention except for the
modification to a fair value basis for certain financial
instruments as specified in the accounting policies below, and in
accordance with Financial Reporting Standard (FRS 102), the
Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and the Republic
of Ireland, and the Companies Act 2006.
The preparation of financial
statements in compliance with FRS 102 requires the use of certain
critical accounting estimates. It also requires Management to
exercise judgement in applying the Parent Company's accounting
policies (see note 38).
The financial statements are
presented in the currency of the primary activities of the Parent
Company (its functional currency). For the purpose of the financial
statements, the results and financial position are presented in GBP
Sterling (£). The principal accounting policies have been
summarised below. They have all been applied consistently
throughout the year and the preceding year.
The Parent Company has chosen to
adopt the disclosure exemption in relation to the preparation of a
cash flow statement under FRS 102.
Going concern
After conducting enquiries, the
Directors believe that the Parent Company has adequate resources to
continue in existence for the foreseeable future. Accordingly, they
continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the
financial statements. The Parent Company's business activities,
together with the factors likely to affect its future development,
performance and position, have been assessed.
Property, plant and equipment
Fixtures and equipment are stated at
historical cost less accumulated depreciation and provision for any
impairment. Depreciation is charged so as to write-off the cost or
valuation of assets over their estimated useful lives using the
straight-line method on the following bases:
Computer hardware
331/3% per
annum on cost
Computer software
between 20% and
331/3% per annum on cost
Leasehold
improvements
over the term of the lease
Furniture and
equipment
331/3% per annum on cost
The gain or loss on the disposal or
retirement of an asset is determined as the difference between the
sales proceeds and the carrying amount of the asset and is
recognised in income. The residual values and estimated useful life
of items within property, plant and equipment are reviewed at least
at each financial year end. Any shortfalls in carrying value are
impaired immediately through profit or loss.
Impairment of non-financial assets
At each reporting date, the Parent
Company reviews the carrying amounts of its tangible and intangible
assets to determine whether there is any indication that those
assets have suffered an impairment loss. For the purposes of
assessing impairment, assets are grouped at the lowest levels for
which there are separately identifiable cash flows (cash-generating
units). If there is an indication of possible impairment, the
recoverable amount of any affected asset (or group of related
assets) is estimated and compared with its carrying amount. If the
estimated recoverable amount is lower, the carrying amount is
reduced to its estimated recoverable amount, and an impairment loss
is recognised immediately in profit or loss.
Taxation
The tax expense represents the sum
of the tax currently payable and any deferred tax.
Current tax, including UK
corporation tax and foreign tax, is provided at amounts expected to
be paid or recovered using the tax rates and laws that have been
enacted or substantively enacted by the balance sheet date. Current
tax charges arising on the realisation of revaluation gains
recognised in the statement of comprehensive income are also
recorded in this statement.
Deferred tax is recognised in
respect of all timing differences that have originated but not
reversed at the balance sheet date where transactions or events
that result in an obligation to pay more tax in the future or a
right to pay less tax in the future have occurred at the balance
sheet date.
A deferred tax asset is regarded as
recoverable and therefore recognised only when, on the basis of all
available evidence, it can be regarded as probable that there will
be suitable taxable profits from which the future reversal of the
underlying timing differences can be deducted. Deferred tax assets
and liabilities are not discounted.
Own
shares held
Own shares consist of treasury
shares which are recognised at cost as a deduction from equity
shareholders' funds. Subsequent consideration received for the sale
of treasury shares is also recognised in equity with any difference
being taken to retained earnings. No gain or loss is recognised on
sale of treasury shares.
Financial instruments
Financial assets and financial
liabilities are recognised in the balance sheet when the Parent
Company becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the
instrument. Section 11 of FRS 102 has been applied in classifying
financial instruments depending on the nature of the instrument
held.
Revenue
Income consists of profits
distribution from Barker Poland Asset Management LLP, interest
received or accrued over time and dividend income recorded when
received.
Investments in subsidiaries
Investments in subsidiaries are
stated at cost less, where appropriate, provisions for
impairment.
Debtors
Other debtors are classified as
basic financial instruments and measured at initial recognition at
transaction price. Debtors are subsequently measured at amortised
cost using the effective interest rate method. A provision is
established when there is objective evidence that the Group will
not be able to collect all amounts due.
Cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents comprise
cash in hand and demand deposits, together with other short-term
highly liquid investments, which are readily convertible to a known
amount of cash and are subject to an insignificant risk of changes
in value.
Financial liabilities and equity
Financial liabilities and equity
instruments are classified according to the substance of the
contractual arrangements entered into. An equity instrument is any
contract that evidences a residual interest in the assets of the
Parent Company after deducting all of its liabilities. Equity
instruments issued by the Parent Company are recorded at the
proceeds received, net of direct issue costs.
Leases
Rentals under operating leases are
charged on a straight-line basis over the lease term even if the
payments are not made on such a basis. Benefits received as an
incentive to enter into an operating lease are also spread on a
straight-line basis over the lease term.
38. Key sources of estimation uncertainty and
judgements
The preparation of financial
statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting
practice requires Management to make estimates and judgements that
affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities as well as
the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the balance
sheet date and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during
the reporting period.
39. Profit for the year
Loss for the financial year of
£197,000 (2023: profit of £89,000) is after an amount of £23,000
(2023: £23,000) related to the auditor's remuneration for audit
services to the Parent Company.
Particulars of employee costs
(including Directors) are as shown below. Employee costs during the
year amounted to:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Employee costs during the year
amounted to:
|
|
|
Wages and salaries
|
225
|
186
|
Social security costs
|
16
|
14
|
Other costs
|
4
|
3
|
|
245
|
203
|
In the current year, employee costs
include the costs of the Non-Executive Directors and a proportion
of Executive Directors. The remaining Executive Directors' employee
costs are borne by Walker Crips Investment Management
Limited.
The monthly average number of staff
employed during the year was:
|
2024
Number
|
2023
Number
|
Executive Directors
|
2
|
2
|
Non-Executive Directors
|
4
|
4
|
|
6
|
6
|
40. Investments measured at cost less
impairment
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Subsidiary undertakings
|
22,105
|
21,907
|
During the year, the Company made an
investment of £275,000 in Walker Crips Financial Planning Limited
and £200,000 into Ebor Trustees Limited, an indirect 100% owned
subsidiaries of the Group.
The decline in the net assets of
Walker Crips Financial Planning Limited resulted in Walker Crips
Group plc, the Company, taking an impairment charge in the current
year which is reversed on consolidation. The decline in net assets
of Walker Crips Financial Planning is due to the investment put in
place to increase its advisor base from two to 12 in a three-year
period. The subsidiary is expected to break into profitability in
the coming year.
A complete list of subsidiary
undertakings can be found in note 50.
41. Trade and other receivables
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Amounts owed by Group
undertakings
|
803
|
799
|
Taxation and social
security
|
-
|
2
|
|
803
|
801
|
A presentational change was made in
this note to exclude the deferred tax asset from this grouping and
to present it in its own line on the face of the statement of
financial position.
42. Deferred taxation
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
At 1 April
|
1
|
-
|
Use of Group Relief
|
(26)
|
(29)
|
Credit/(charge) to the income
statement
|
25
|
30
|
At 31 March
|
-
|
1
|
Deferred tax has been provided at
25% (2023: 25%).
43. Trade and other payables
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Accruals and deferred
income
|
53
|
99
|
Amounts due to subsidiary
undertakings
|
4,479
|
3,744
|
Other creditors
|
47
|
46
|
|
4,579
|
3,889
|
44. Risk management policies
Procedures and controls are in place
to identify, assess and ultimately control the financial risks
faced by the Parent Company arising from its use of financial
instruments. Steps are taken to mitigate identified risks with
established and effective procedures and controls, efficient
systems and the adequate training of staff.
The Parent Company's risk appetite,
along with the procedures and controls mentioned above, are laid
out in the Group's Internal capital adequacy and risk assessment
(ICARA).
The overall risk appetite for the
Parent Company and for the Group as a whole is considered by
Management to be low, despite operating in a marketplace where
financial risk is inherent in the core businesses of investment
management and financial services.
The Group considers its financial
risks arising from its use of financial instruments to fall into
three main categories:
(i) credit
risk;
(ii) liquidity risk;
and
(iii) market risk.
Further information on the
disclosures and policies carried out by the Parent Company and the
Group is given in note 24 of the consolidated financial
statements.
(i)
Credit risk
Maximum exposure to credit
risk:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Cash
|
176
|
95
|
Other debtors
|
803
|
799
|
As at 31 March
|
979
|
894
|
The credit quality of banks holding
the Company's cash at 31 March 2024 is analysed below with
reference to credit ratings awarded by Fitch.
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
A+
|
176
|
95
|
As
at 31 March
|
176
|
95
|
Analysis of other debtors due from
financial institutions:
|
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Neither past due, nor
impaired
|
|
803
|
799
|
None were past due.
(ii) Liquidity risk
The tables below analyse the Parent
Company's future undiscounted cash outflows based on the remaining
period to the contractual maturity date:
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Creditors due within one
year
|
4,579
|
3,889
|
Creditors due after more than one
year
|
-
|
-
|
As at 31 March
|
4,579
|
3,889
|
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Within one year
|
4,579
|
3,889
|
Within two to five years
|
-
|
-
|
After more than five
years
|
-
|
-
|
As at 31 March
|
4,579
|
3,889
|
The Company is in a net liability
position, but this is primarily driven by an intercompany creditor
balance with its subsidiary. This is deemed to not affect liquidity
as the subsidiary is 100% owned and controlled by the
Company.
(iii) Market risk
Market risk is the risk that changes
in market prices such as foreign exchange rates or equity prices
will affect the Group's income.
These relate to price risk breached
on available-for-sale and trading investments and closely monitored
using limits to prevent significant losses.
Fair value of financial instruments
No financial instruments at fair
value were held by the Parent Company in the current or prior
financial year.
45. Called-up share capital
|
2024
£'000
|
2023
£'000
|
Called-up, allotted and fully paid
|
|
|
43,327,328 (2023: 43,327,328)
Ordinary Shares of 62/3p each
|
2,888
|
2,888
|
No new shares were issued in the
year to 31 March 2024 or the prior year.
The Parent Company holds 750,000 of
its own shares, purchased for a total cash consideration of
£312,000. In line with the principles of FRS 102, section 11, these
treasury shares have been deducted from equity. No gain or loss has
been recognised in the profit and loss account in relation to these
shares.
The following movements in share
capital occurred during the year:
|
Number
of shares
|
Share
capital
£'000
|
Share
premium
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
At 1 April 2023
|
43,327,328
|
2,888
|
3,763
|
6,651
|
At 31 March 2024
|
43,327,328
|
2,888
|
3,763
|
6,651
|
Apart from share capital and share
premium, the Parent Company holds reserves at 31 March 2024 under
the following categories:
Own
shares held
|
(£312,000) (2023:
(£312,000))
|
●
the negative balance of the Parent Company's own
shares that have been bought back and held in treasury.
|
Retained earnings
|
£7,443,000 (2023:
£7,853,000)
|
●
the net cumulative earnings of the Parent Company,
which have not paid out as dividends, retained to be reinvested in
our core or new business.
|
Other reserves
|
£4,723,000 (2023:
£4,723,000)
|
●
the cumulative premium on the issue of shares as
deferred consideration for corporate acquisitions £4,612,000 (2023:
£4,612,000) and non-distributable reserve into which amounts are
transferred following the redemption or purchase of the Group's own
shares.
|
46. Financial commitments
Capital commitments
At the end of this year and the
previous year, there were no capital commitments contracted but not
provided for and no capital commitments authorised but not
contracted for.
47. Related party transactions
Key Management are those persons
having authority and responsibility for planning, controlling and
directing the activities of the Parent Company and Group. In the
opinion of the Board, the Parent Company and Group's key Management
are the Directors of Walker Crips Group plc.
Total compensation to key management
personnel is £555,000 (2023: £491,000).
48. Contingent liability
From time to time, the Company
receives complaints or undertakes past business reviews, the
outcomes of which remain uncertain and/or cannot be reliably
quantified based upon information available and circumstances
falling outside the Company's control. Accordingly contingent
liabilities arise, the ultimate impact of which may also depend
upon availability of recoveries under the Company's indemnity
insurance and other contractual arrangements. Other than the
complaints deemed to be probable, the Directors presently consider
a negative outcome to be remote or a reliable estimate of the
amount of a possible obligation cannot be made. As a result, no
disclosure has been made in these financial statements.
49. Subsequent events
There are no material events arising
after 31 March 2024, which have an impact on these financial
statements.
50. Subsidiaries and associates
|
Principal place of business
|
Principal activity
|
Class and percentage of shares held
|
Group
|
|
|
|
Trading subsidiaries
|
|
|
|
Walker Crips Investment Management
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Investment management
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
London York Fund Managers
Limited2
|
United Kingdom
|
Management services
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
Walker Crips Financial Planning
Limited2
|
United Kingdom
|
Financial services advice
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
Ebor Trustees
Limited2
|
United Kingdom
|
Pensions management
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
EnOC Technologies
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Financial regulation and other
software
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
Barker Poland Asset Management
LLP1
|
United Kingdom
|
Investment management
|
Membership 100%
|
|
|
|
|
Non-trading subsidiaries
|
|
|
|
Walker Crips Financial Services
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Financial services
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
G & E Investment Services
Limited2
|
United Kingdom
|
Holding company
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
Ebor Pensions Management
Limited2
|
United Kingdom
|
Dormant company
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
Investorlink
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Agency stockbroking
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
Walker Cambria
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Dormant company
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
Walker Crips Trustees
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Dormant company
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
W.B. Nominees
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Nominee company
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
WCWB (PEP) Nominees
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Nominee company
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
WCWB (ISA) Nominees
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Nominee company
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
WCWB Nominees
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Nominee company
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
Walker Crips Consultants
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Dormant company
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
Walker Crips Ventures
Limited1
|
United Kingdom
|
Financial services advice
|
Ordinary Shares 100%
|
The registered office for companies
and associated undertakings is:
1 Old Change House, 128
Queen Victoria Street, London, England, EC4V 4BJ.
2 Apollo House,
Eboracum Way, York, England, YO31 7RE.