6 August 2024
XP
Power Limited
2024
Interim Results
Robust
management action taken to address impact of market
slowdown
Full
year outlook unchanged and well-positioned for
recovery
XP Power
Limited (“XP Power” or “the Group”), one of the world's leading
developers and manufacturers of critical power control solutions
for the Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment, Healthcare and
Industrial Technology sectors, today announces its interim results
for the six months ended 30 June 2024
(“H1 2024” or “the period”).
Six
months ended 30 June
(£m
unless otherwise stated)
|
2024
|
2023
|
%
change
|
At actual
exchange rate
|
In
constant currency
|
|
|
|
|
|
Order
intake
|
87.9
|
115.6
|
(24)%
|
(22)%
|
Revenue
|
127.1
|
160.2
|
(21)%
|
(18)%
|
Book-to-bill
|
0.69x
|
0.72x
|
(0.03)x
|
|
Order
book
|
149.5
|
250.0
|
|
|
Adjusted
results1:
|
|
|
|
|
Operating
profit
|
13.5
|
21.8
|
(38)%
|
(36)%
|
Profit
before tax
|
7.6
|
15.8
|
(52)%
|
(50)%
|
Diluted
earnings per share (pence)
|
24.4p
|
59.1p
|
(59)%
|
|
Operating
cash flow
|
34.9
|
30.0
|
16%
|
|
Statutory
results:
|
|
|
|
|
Gross
margin
|
40.6%
|
41.8%
|
(120)bps
|
(120)bps
|
Operating
profit
|
9.1
|
17.3
|
(47)%
|
|
Profit
before tax
|
3.2
|
10.9
|
(71)%
|
|
Diluted
earnings per share (pence)
|
8.8p
|
38.7p
|
(77)%
|
|
Net
Debt1
|
104.2
|
148.4
|
(30)%
|
|
Net Debt :
Adjusted LTM EBITDA1
|
2.2x
|
2.3x
|
|
|
1 Details
of the adjustments made and reconciliations to the reported results
can be found in note 5 to the condensed consolidated financial
statements.
Financial Highlights
-
Order
intake of £87.9m:
-
Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment orders higher than the market trough in H1
2023, but awaiting a sustained recovery
-
Channel
destocking progressing but taking longer than expected,
particularly within the Industrial Technology sector
-
Revenue of
£127.1m:
-
First half
revenue in line with the Board’s expectations
-
Year-on-year
reduction reflects channel destocking and a market-wide downcycle
impacting demand for Semiconductor Manufacturing
Equipment
-
Monthly
revenue steady throughout the period
-
Adjusted
Operating Profit of £13.5m:
-
Ahead of
the Board’s expectations set in March due to the proactive actions
taken to manage costs
-
Adjusted
Operating Expenses 16% lower than the comparative period, with
sources of long-term competitive advantage preserved
-
Gross
Margin of 40.6% similar to the second half of 2023
(41.2%)
-
Adjusted
Operating Cash Flow of £34.9m:
-
Actions to
improve balance sheet resilience are delivering ahead of
expectations
-
Record
operating cash conversion of 259% (H1 2023: 138%) from working
capital reduction
-
Net Debt
reduced by £8.5m in the period to £104.2m, equal to 2.2x Adjusted
LTM EBITDA
-
Borrowing
facilities proactively extended to December
2026 and covenant headroom prudently increased to maximise
balance sheet resilience and accommodate any unexpected market
developments
Operational Highlights
-
Robust
management action taken to address impact of market
slowdown:
-
Cost base
rapidly right-sized to market conditions - with further action
taken in the period, building on initial measures commenced in late
2023
-
Long-term
competitiveness maintained
-
Inventory
management significantly improved, with inventory reduced by £9.9m
in the period
-
Group has
remained profitable and highly cash generative in challenging
“trough” conditions, highlighting underlying resilience and latent
margin potential when volumes recover
-
Provides a
solid base for future growth
-
Well-positioned
for recovery:
-
Confident
that end markets will resume trajectory of GDP++ long-term
growth
-
Established
customer relationships provide clear growth
opportunities
-
Healthy
pipeline of new business wins and new products
-
Well
invested infrastructure with scalable capacity
-
Strong
market position with clear differentiators
Outlook
-
Confident
that our financial performance will improve and reflect underlying
operational improvements once channel stock levels reach
equilibrium and as demand recovers within the Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment market
-
It remains
difficult to be precise about the timing of the recovery with
channel destocking now expected to continue until the end of the
third quarter, longer than previously expected. The profit impact
of this is offset by decisive cost actions already
taken
-
Adjusted
Operating Profit expectations for 2024 are unchanged, more evenly
weighted between each half and generally less sensitive to demand
conditions in the second half
Gavin Griggs, Chief Executive Officer,
commented:
“The
proactive actions we have taken to reduce cost and working capital
have created a solid platform from which to trade profitably and
cash generatively whilst we wait for market conditions to recover.
The relative consistency we have seen in trading month-to-month
during the first half suggests that market conditions are in the
process of stabilising, although it remains difficult to be precise
about the timing of the recovery and the duration of channel
destocking in particular.
Momentum
has continued into the start of the second half of the year and the
Board’s profit expectations for 2024 remain unchanged. Cost actions
have made our profit more evenly weighted between each half and
generally less sensitive to second half demand
conditions.
Whilst our
focus has been on closely managing short-term performance, we have
continued to execute our strategy and have used a period of slower
activity levels to make sure we have the foundations necessary to
maximise our long-term potential. The fundamentals underpinning
demand in our sectors remain firmly in place and we are
well-positioned to benefit as an independent business as our
markets return to structural long-term growth.”
Enquiries:
XP
Power
Gavin Griggs, Chief Executive Officer +44
(0)118 976 5155
Matt Webb, Chief Financial Officer +44
(0)118 976 5155
Citigate
Dewe Rogerson
Kevin Smith/ Lucy
Gibbs +44
(0)20 7638 9571
A
meeting for analysts will be held at 10:30am
BST today, 6 August 2024 at
the offices of Investec, 30 Gresham Street, London EC2V 7QN. To register to attend please
email
xppower@citigatedewerogerson.com.
A live audio stream of the meeting can be accessed
via
https://brrmedia.news/XPP_HY24.
XP
Power designs and manufactures power controllers, the essential
hardware component in every piece of electrical equipment that
converts power from the electricity grid into the right form for
equipment to function. Power controllers are critical for optimal
delivery in challenging environments but are a small part of the
overall customer product cost.
XP
Power typically designs power control solutions into the end
products of major blue-chip OEMs, with a focus on Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment (circa 36% of sales in H1 2024), Healthcare
(circa 24% sales in H1 2024) and Industrial Technology (circa 40%
of sales in H1 2024) sectors. Once designed into a programme, XP
Power has a revenue annuity over the life cycle of the customer’s
product which is typically five to seven years depending on the
industry sector. XP Power has invested in research and development
and its own manufacturing facilities in China, North
America, and Vietnam, to
develop a range of tailored products based on its own intellectual
property that provide its customers with significantly improved
functionality and efficiency.
Headquartered
in Singapore and listed on the
Main Market of the London Stock Exchange since 2000, XP Power is a
constituent of the FTSE All Share Index. XP Power serves a global
blue-chip customer base from over 30 locations in Europe, North
America, and Asia.
For
further information, please visit
www.xppowerplc.com
Forward-looking
statements
This
announcement contains forward-looking
statements that are subject to risk factors associated with, among
other things, the economic and business circumstances occurring
from time to time in the countries, sectors and markets in which
the Group operates. It is believed that the expectations reflected
in these statements are reasonable, but they may be affected by a
wide range of variables which could cause actual results to differ
materially from those currently anticipated. No assurances can be
given that the forward-looking
statements in this announcement will be realised.
The
forward-looking
statements reflect the knowledge and information available to
management at the date of preparation of this announcement. XP
Power and its Directors accept no responsibility to third parties
and undertake no obligation to update these
forward-looking
statements. Nothing in this announcement should be construed as a
profit forecast.
Chief
Executive Officer’s Review
H1
Overview
As
expected, the Group faced unusually challenging market conditions
in the first half of 2024 but responded to them
robustly.
One of the
Group’s main strengths is its attractive positions in three
distinct market sectors, namely Semiconductor Manufacturing
Equipment, Healthcare and Industrial Technology, which all have
clear, distinguishable long-term growth drivers. We have
long-standing customer relationships in these sectors and
participate in long-term projects with a high proportion of annuity
revenue. This makes the simultaneous slowdown in all three sectors
in 2024 very unusual. I am proud of the way in which we responded
to these developments by diligently executing a plan of action to
protect our performance whilst ensuring that we remain well
positioned to benefit as our markets return to growth.
Revenue
was £127.1m (H1 2023: £160.2m), 20.7% lower than a strong
comparative period that benefited from backlog clearance. Revenue
declined in all three market sectors. The slowdown within the
Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment sector was due to an
industry-wide downcycle. The slowdown in the Healthcare and
Industrial Technology sectors was driven by channel destocking,
with end market demand remaining more resilient. Monthly revenue
was stable throughout the period and in line with our expectations.
Recent ordering patterns suggest channel destocking will continue
until the end of Q3 2024, slightly longer than we had previously
expected.
Gross
Margin of 40.6% (H1 2023: 41.8%) was similar to our performance in
H2 2023. Lower manufacturing output inevitably brought less
efficient utilisation of factory overheads, but this was
successfully offset by input cost savings and better manufacturing
process efficiency, as we had planned.
In
response to the market downturn, the Group implemented a programme
of cost reduction measures. Adjusted Operating Expenses were
reduced by 16% to £38.1m (H1 2023: £45.2m) through various actions
taken in late 2023 and throughout the first half of 2024. Our
approach to cost reduction has been broad, disciplined and
continuous, whilst preserving key sources of long-term competitive
advantage.
Adjusted
Operating Profit of £13.5m (H1 2023: £21.8m) was £8.3m lower than a
buoyant H1 2023 and benefited significantly from cost reduction
initiatives, as a result of which first half profits were slightly
ahead of the Board’s expectation.
Self-help
actions also underpinned continued strong cash generation. We
delivered record Adjusted Operating Cash Conversion, primarily
through inventory reduction, which lowered our borrowings and
improved our balance sheet. Tight control of cost, working capital
and operational execution has allowed the business to generate
healthy profits and cash during an unprecedented demand trough. We
are confident that continued discipline in this area, combined with
ongoing balance sheet deleveraging, will ensure that we emerge from
this period with renewed resilience.
Revenue
by market
Revenue
declined by 20.7% to £127.1m (H1 2023: £160.2m), including a
constant currency decline of (18.3)% and an adverse currency
movement of 2.4%.
The
breakdown of the revenue movement by sector was as
follows:
|
% of
Group
revenue
|
Revenue
growth
/
(decline)
%
|
|
|
|
Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment
|
36%
|
(14)%
|
Industrial
Technology
|
40%
|
(23)%
|
Healthcare
|
24%
|
(16)%
|
Total – In
constant currency
|
100%
|
(18)%
|
|
|
|
Currency
movement
|
|
(3)%
|
Total
|
|
(21)%
|
Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment
Sales to
the Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment sector reduced by 14% in
constant currency, outperforming the wider Group due to strong
sales of high voltage, high power (“HVHP”) products, which have
proved more resilient and are used at key stages in the wafer
fabrication process. Investment in people and processes over recent
years allowed us to scale up manufacturing output of these products
to meet demand, reducing backlog and growing sales by more than 70%
year-on-year. We are targeting further growth by adding low-cost
HVHP manufacturing capacity to our existing facilities in
Asia to complement our existing
operations in the USA.
Order
intake of £36.1m (H1 2023: £28.1m) was 29% higher than the
comparative period and 17% higher sequentially, indicating that the
sector is likely past the market trough, albeit this has yet to
convert into a sustained recovery. The book-to-bill ratio was
0.79x.
Global
sales of semiconductor devices returned to growth in late 2023,
with double digit growth expected for 2024 as a whole. Wafer
fabrication capacity utilisation rates are increasing and we are
confident that this will lead to increased sales of Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment in due course.
The
prospects for this sector are very attractive and we continue to
expect long-term market growth averaging 10% per annum, underpinned
by the wafer fabrication capacity expansion planned in an
increasing number of countries to keep pace with future demand for
technologies such as AI, IoT and electrified transportation. Given
our customer exposure, we expect to grow ahead of the
market.
Industrial
Technology
Industrial
Technology is a large, diverse and growing market. Our business is
largely focused on meeting the power needs of customers in the
analytical instrumentation, test & measurement and process
control & automation sub-sectors. We also have opportunities to
increase our presence in attractive areas requiring high power
and/or high voltage solutions, such as mass spectrometry, scanning
electron microscopy, CT-based security scanners and renewable
electricity applications.
Sales to
the Industrial Technology sector declined by 23% in constant
currency, as expected, due to a combination of backlog clearance in
the comparative period and channel destocking in the current
period. With delivery lead times now largely normalised, customers
continue to wind down their buffer inventory before placing new
orders. This is particularly evident within the High Service Level
Distribution (“HSLD”) channel, consisting of specialist
distributors of electronic components, which account for
approximately one quarter of sector revenue. HSLD channel inventory
levels have reduced but remain elevated relative to network
revenue, meaning we expect destocking to continue until the end of
the third quarter.
Order
intake totalled £34.7m (H1 2023: £51.2m), representing a
book-to-bill ratio of 0.68x.
In 2023,
we entered into a sales agreement with a leading, pan-European
“design in” distributor to increase our sales reach in the Region.
The new sales approach is delivering as planned, with our new
distribution partner identifying a significant number of small to
medium-sized customer projects in the period, freeing-up our
in-house sales team to focus on larger accounts.
Healthcare
Long-term
growth in this sector is supported by an ageing population and the
incorporation of new technologies into medical devices to improve
treatment outcomes, drive efficiency or reduce procedural
invasiveness. As an illustration, we recently won a significant new
project to provide a power solution for an innovative device that
uses high voltage electrical fields to treat cardiac arrhythmia
without the need for major surgery.
Sales to
the Healthcare sector reduced by 16% in constant currency, as
expected. Healthcare was our fastest growing sector in 2023, in
part supported by backlog clearance leading to the restocking of
the sales channel. Restocking in 2023 has switched to destocking in
2024 as normalised global supply chain conditions post-pandemic
have allowed customers to lower their inventory cover. End market
demand has remained healthy throughout, with many of our major
customers reporting sales growth in 2024.
Order
intake was £17.1m and the book-to-bill was 0.56x. Monthly intake
was relatively stable throughout the period.
Regional
Performance
Sales to
North America reduced by 19% in
constant currency to £69.7m (H1 2023: £88.8m). Sales to
Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment customers declined by less
than the Regional average, aided by capacity expansion within the
HVHP category as referenced above. Order intake from these
customers improved sequentially and year-on-year. Sales to
customers in the Healthcare and Industrial Technology sectors
slowed by more than the Regional average due to
destocking.
Sales to
Europe totalled £43.3m (H1 2023:
£52.2m), down 15% in constant currency. The decline was driven by
customer destocking particularly within the HSLD channel which is
particularly significant to this Region. Regional performance
included further sales growth from FuG, a business acquired by the
Group in 2022. As highlighted at the time of acquisition, we are
supporting the future progress of this business by using our sales
team to increase its global reach.
Sales to
Asia totalled £14.1m (H1 2023:
£19.2m), down 25% in constant currency. Order intake from customers
in China reduced materially as the
domestic semiconductor industry adapted to new rules introduced by
both the US and Chinese governments controlling the export of wafer
fabrication equipment. Whilst most of our products are not directly
impacted by the new rules, their introduction is disrupting
purchasing patterns across the industry.
Robust
management action taken to address impact of market
slowdown
At the end
of 2023, it became clear that we would need to adapt to slower than
expected demand by lowering our costs and maximising our cash
generation in a targeted way. Our response since then has been
diligent, proportionate and proactive. Throughout the process, we
have been careful to strike the right balance between protecting
our short-term performance and preserving our long-term
potential.
The
initial round of cost reduction actions announced in October 2023, from which £8-10m of annualised benefit was expected, have been
delivered in full. A second round of headcount reduction actions
was taken toward the end of the first quarter, supplemented by
natural headcount attrition and continuous, tight control over
discretionary expenditure throughout the period. Further details
can be found in the Chief Financial Officer’s Review.
The
cumulative effect was a 16% year-on-year reduction in first half
overheads (Adjusted Operating Expenses), which we expect to be
repeated for the full year. We believe the current cost base is
appropriate for the demand we expect, but we remain vigilant. I
would like to thank the entire XP team for their diligence and
forbearance during this difficult period, from which I believe we
will emerge stronger.
We also
made good progress with working capital reduction, particularly
inventory, leading to record Adjusted Operating Cash Conversion of
259% (H1 2023: 138%). Capex (excluding product development) was
limited to maintenance levels save for residual amounts paid as
planned in respect of major projects in 2023.
Through
continuous and diligent action, we have supported our profits and
balance sheet position through an unprecedented trough in demand,
whilst creating a leaner and more efficient business that will
deliver an enduring benefit as our markets recover.
Well-positioned
for recovery
Whilst
managing the market slowdown has been a key priority, we have also
used this period of slower trading to ensure we are well positioned
as conditions improve. Our vision, culture and strategy are clear
and unchanged. We have improved our readiness by accelerating the
delivery of our strategy whilst we wait for market conditions to
turn.
Our vision
is to be the first-choice power solutions provider and deliver the
ultimate experience for our customers and our people. It is helpful
to put this vision into the context of the Group’s recent
history.
Our
business originated as a distributor of low voltage power supplies.
Over time, we developed strategically to become vertically
integrated, with in-house design and manufacturing capability. We
have invested proactively in the systems and production
capabilities necessary to operate a global, flexible, high quality,
low-cost supply chain.
Through
both organic product development and M&A, we have expanded into
more complex categories, adding HVHP and radio frequency (“RF”)
products to our portfolio. We are now one of only a few providers
who can offer a complete spectrum of power and voltage capabilities
and package several power converters into an overall solution
customised to the customer’s specific application. This makes us an
attractive partner to our key customers and is a key driver of our
market share gains.
Whilst our
origins are in powering our customers’ products, we are
increasingly involved in enabling our customers’ power-driven
processes. Examples include our high voltage devices that allow
semiconductor wafers to be clamped electrostatically during wafer
fabrication, or our RF products that precisely energise gas plasmas
used to etch chip architectures. Products that support power-driven
processes are often essential to the functionality of our
customers’ own equipment and as such are typically high margin and
defensible. Serving this market plays to our strengths of close
customer support, world class technical knowledge, rapid product
development, high quality standards and a closely integrated supply
chain.
Our
strategy is as follows:
·
Product
development: Continually develop our market leading range of
competitive products, both organically and through selective
acquisition;
·
Customer
development: Target customer accounts where we can add value and
increase our penetration of those target customers;
·
Supply
chain development: Continually improve our global, end-to-end,
supply chain, balancing high efficiency with market leading
customer responsiveness; and
·
Environmental
leadership: Lead our industry on environmental
responsibility
We have
continued to make progress with our strategic priorities during the
period, as summarised below.
Product
development
Our
product development activities divide into two broad
areas:
·
Traditional
development of base power supplies for general market launch,
and
·
Development
of customised solutions for specific customers that are often
derived from the base power supply (which we call Engineering
Services).
Our
traditional development activities this year are focused
on:
·
Rapid
enhancement of our low voltage range, with support of third-party
design and manufacturing partners, to infill gaps in the power
spectrum, reduce the product form factor and add
connectivity
·
Completing
the development of a new digitally configurable low voltage, high
power product family
·
Extending
our HVHP range to grow our share of ion implantation, mass
spectroscopy and scanning electron microscopy end
markets.
Collectively,
our pipeline of new product development activities is the strongest
it has been for several years.
We
continued to launch our pipeline of new Engineering Services
products. Our long-term ambitions for this part of our business
were underlined by the opening of our new Innovation Centre in San
Jose, USA which showcases our
product design, test, customisation and fulfilment capabilities in
the heart of Silicon Valley.
Customer
development
We work
with leading OEMs in each of the three market sectors we serve.
These relationships are deep and enduring and our customers
recognise us for our superior quality, reliability, responsiveness
and flexibility.
To
illustrate the progress we are making in this area, we grew the
value of new projects sampled and new projects won year-on-year
despite the slowdown in demand conditions. The size of our sales
funnel also grew, indicating that the value of new business won
exceeded the value of projects reaching the end of their life
cycle.
Both
outcomes support the conclusion that our competitive advantages
remain strong and we are well positioned to continue to outperform
the market long-term.
Supply
chain development
Normalised
global supply chain conditions have allowed us to continue to
improve our service levels. Average delivery lead times reduced and
continue to do so. Delivery of backlog allowed the order book to
reduce by £42m in the period to £150m.
Manufacturing
capacity was flexed appropriately to meet demand. Within HVHP,
capacity was added to our facility in the US to meet demand through
investment in both people and equipment to improve production
efficiency. In other product categories, manufacturing capacity was
scaled back proactively and efficiently in response to lower
demand. We have ample structural capacity within our existing
manufacturing sites in China and
Vietnam and have therefore
deferred the recommencement of construction of our new facility in
Malaysia until 2025. We have clear
plans in place to rapidly scale up manufacturing output as demand
improves.
Slower
demand conditions allowed us to take steps to improve the
efficiency and resilience of our supply chain arrangements. Input
costs are being progressively lowered through the negotiation of
better pricing and tighter sourcing processes. Resilience is being
enhanced through the negotiation of flexible purchasing
arrangements, the resetting of safety stock levels and via
improvements to our production planning systems.
Another
key area of focus has been on ensuring we leverage fully the cost
and capacity advantages of our Asian supply chain across our
product portfolio. These efforts have focused on HVHP and RF
products that are largely made in the US today. I am confident that
the efforts being put into this area in 2024 will have a material
beneficial impact on 2025 and beyond.
Sustainability
The Group
is committed to significant reductions in Greenhouse Gas emissions
by 2030 via the Science-Based Targets Initiative (“SBTi”). We
achieved reductions in Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions in 2023, greater
than the run rate required to achieve our SBTi goals and expect to
do so again in 2024.
We already
submit the Carbon Disclosure Project’s Climate Change questionnaire
annually, receiving an upgraded B rating in 2023, and plan to add
the Water Security questionnaire for the first time this
year.
Outlook
The
proactive actions we have taken to reduce cost and working capital
have created a solid platform from which to trade profitably and
cash generatively whilst we wait for market conditions to recover.
The relative consistency we have seen in trading month-to-month
during the first half suggests that market conditions are in the
process of stabilising, although it remains difficult to be precise
about the timing of the recovery and the duration of channel
destocking in particular.
Momentum
has continued into the start of the second half of the year and the
Board’s profit expectations for 2024 remain unchanged. Cost actions
have made our profit more evenly weighted between each half and
generally less sensitive to second half demand
conditions.
Whilst our
focus has been on closely managing short-term performance, we have
continued to execute our strategy and have used a period of slower
activity levels to make sure we have the foundations necessary to
maximise our long-term potential. The fundamentals underpinning
demand in our sectors remain firmly in place and we are
well-positioned to benefit as an independent business as our
markets return to structural long-term growth.
Gavin Griggs
Chief
Executive Officer
Chief
Financial Officer’s Review
Statutory
Results
The
statutory operating profit of £9.1m was £8.2m lower than the
comparative period due to the impact of lower revenue net of cost
reductions.
Net
finance expense was £5.9m (H1 2023: £6.4m), resulting in profit
before tax of £3.2m (H1 2023: £10.9m). The reduction in net finance
costs reflects lower average borrowing levels. The tax charge was
£1.0m (H1 2023: £3.1m). The basic earnings per share was 8.9p (H1
2023: 38.9p).
Adjusted
Results
As in
prior years, Adjusted and other alternative performance measures
are used in this announcement to describe the Group’s results.
These are not recognised under International Financial Reporting
Standards (IFRS) or other generally accepted accounting principles
(GAAP).
Adjustments
are items included within our statutory results that are deemed by
the Board to be unusual by virtue of their size or incidence. Our
Adjusted measures are calculated by removing such Adjustments from
our statutory results. The Board believes Adjusted measures help
the reader to understand XP Power’s underlying results and are used
by the Board and management team to interpret Group performance.
Note 5 to the condensed consolidated financial statements includes
reconciliations of statutory metrics to their Adjusted equivalent
and provides a breakdown of the Adjustments made.
Order
Intake
In the six
months to 30 June 2024, our order
intake of £87.9m was 24.0% lower than the same period in the
comparative period. The reduction in order intake reflects both a
natural slowdown after the particularly strong years of 2021 and
2022 and the current market dynamics. The Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment sector continues to be impacted by an
industry-wide downcycle, although it is performing better than the
trough experienced in the comparative period. The Healthcare and
Industrial Technology sectors also saw lower order intake,
primarily due to ongoing customer destocking. Additionally, shorter
delivery lead times have temporarily reduced order intake, as
customers have had the flexibility to place orders later than in
recent financial years.
Revenue
Revenue
for the period of £127.1m remained in line with expectations and
was relatively stable from month-to-month. However, revenue for the
period was 20.7% lower than the elevated comparative period, which
benefited from significant amounts of backlog clearance. At
constant currency the decrease was 18%, with a 2.4% impact from
currency movements.
The
Group’s revenue by region and by sector for the first half of 2024
is set out in the table below:
|
Six months
to 30 June 2024
£m
|
%
change in
constant
currency
|
|
|
|
North
America
|
|
|
Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment
|
37.4
|
(11.8%)
|
Industrial
Technology
|
16.1
|
(34.0%)
|
Healthcare
|
16.2
|
(16.5%)
|
Total
|
69.7
|
(19.2%)
|
|
|
|
Europe
|
|
|
Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment
|
1.9
|
(16.7%)
|
Industrial
Technology
|
29.6
|
(14.2%)
|
Healthcare
|
11.8
|
(14.9%)
|
Total
|
43.3
|
(14.5%)
|
|
|
|
Asia
|
|
|
Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment
|
6.4
|
(21.8%)
|
Industrial
Technology
|
5.2
|
(29.5%)
|
Healthcare
|
2.5
|
(22.5%)
|
Total
|
14.1
|
(25.0%)
|
Revenue
from Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment declined by 16%,
reflecting the ongoing downcycle. However, increased manufacturing
output has driven significant market share gain within our HVHP
business, resulting in a 71% increase in revenue for this product
line, compared to the comparative period. This aligns with our
long-term strategy of gaining share in categories that require
greater power delivery and technical complexity.
The
revenue generated from Industrial Technology experienced a 26%
decline, primarily driven by destocking activities, particularly by
our Distribution customers who account for a significant proportion
of this sector.
In
Healthcare, revenue decreased by 18% driven by continued channel
destocking. End market demand absent channel stock movements
remained stronger, with our major medical customers reporting
continued revenue growth. The year-on-year decline in Healthcare
and Industrial Technology sectors was generally impacted by
customers switching from restocking in the first half of 2023 to
destocking in the first half of 2024 as supply chains began to
normalise.
Turning to
regional revenue performance (in constant currency) North America saw a 19% decline, with the
impact of underlying market dynamics somewhat mitigated by strong
shipments of HVHP products. This was achieved against the backdrop
of a successful transition to our new facility in Silicon Valley.
In Europe, revenue declined by
15%, driven by destocking within the Industrial Technology and
Healthcare sectors, which represent the majority of our sales in
the region. However, we saw healthy growth from the FuG business
(HVHP products) acquired in 2022 and feel optimistic about the
significant opportunities for further cross-selling of FuG products
by our global sales teams. Our recent partnership with a major,
pan-European “design in” distributor will also enhance our market
reach moving forward. In Asia,
revenue decreased by 25%. Demand from Semiconductor Manufacturing
Equipment customers in China was
disrupted by the global market downcycle and market-wide disruption
from recent changes to export controls.
Order
Book
Our order
book reduced by c. £42m during the period, bringing it to £150m as
at 30 June 2024. As expected, the
backlog of overdue orders is now largely cleared. We anticipate
that delivery lead times will continue to shorten as we continue to
improve our fulfilment performance, which is likely to result in a
further natural reduction in the order book size in the second
half. Consequently, we expect the book-to-bill ratio to remain
below 1.0x until delivery lead times have reached optimised levels,
which is expected to occur in the second half of 2024.
Our order
book suggests revenue in Q3 2024 will be similar to Q2
2024.
Gross
Margin
Our gross
margin for the period was 40.6%, slightly lower than the
comparative period, but similar to that achieved in the second half
of 2023 (41.2%). We have seen a positive impact from our
cost-saving actions, benefited from input cost reductions and held
our selling prices at 2023 levels, all of which helped offset the
impact of lower factory utilisation due to the slower demand
conditions explained above.
Cost-saving
actions include a reduction in logistics costs from reduced use of
expensive air freight and contract negotiation. Events in the Red
Sea have not had a material impact on either logistics costs or
product availability.
Our
underlying manufacturing process efficiency also improved,
particularly in our two facilities on the US East Coast, which
produce HVHP and RF products. We have also rationalised our
production overhead across all manufacturing locations, whilst
still leaving the business well positioned to scale up as demand
recovers.
We expect
gross margins to benefit in the future from ongoing efforts to
transfer specific product lines from the US to Asia to take advantage of lower costs of
production. The transfer will also provide additional manufacturing
capacity needed to support future growth as our key sectors
recover.
Our
production facility in Malaysia
remains part of our long-term manufacturing plan, but slower demand
conditions have allowed us to defer its completion. We do not
expect to recommence construction during 2024.
Operating
Expenses
Statutory
operating expenses reduced by £7.2m to £42.5m.
Adjusted
Operating Expenses in the period are 16% lower than the comparative
period. This reduction reflects the impact of cost actions taken in
late 2023 and throughout the first half of 2024 in response to the
market slowdown preserving our profitability and protecting our
balance sheet position. The reduction achieved is net of additional
costs from relocating to improved facilities in Silicon
Valley.
Our focus
on managing costs has been broad, disciplined and continuous,
whilst being careful to preserve our sources of competitive
advantage. The actions set in the original funding plan disclosed
in our annual report for the year ended 31
December 2023 have all been delivered in full. In the first
half of 2024 we have removed a further 60 support and
administrative roles from the business, restricted annual salary
increases to lower paid workers only and have progressively reset
all discretionary spending to appropriate levels.
We believe
our cost base is now appropriate for expected activity levels. We
will retain the current rigour in cost control and therefore expect
to see strong operating leverage from growth as our markets
recover. For the full-year 2024 we expect to be able to report a
17% overhead reduction compared to 2023.
Operating
Profit
Statutory
operating profit of £9.1m was £8.2m lower than the comparative
period.
Our
Adjusted Operating Profit for the period of £13.5m was £8.3m lower
than the comparative period. This performance reflects our
extensive efforts to protect profitability through cost reduction
in softer demand conditions. Our proactive cost management allowed
us to enter the second half with first half profit slightly ahead
of the Board’s expectations.
Adjusted
Net Finance Expense
Adjusted
Net Finance Expense of £5.9m reflects a £1.2m increase in IFRS16
lease interest costs from our new Silicon Valley facility, offset
by an equivalent reduction in bank interest. The much-reduced
average level of borrowings has led to a lower bank interest charge
despite an increase in base rates.
Tax
and earnings per share
The
effective tax rate applicable to Adjusted Profit Before Tax was
22.4%.
Our
effective tax rate applicable to Adjusted Profit Before Tax for
2023 was elevated at 36.8% due to difficulties in obtaining full
benefit from available tax losses and credits in our US business.
These difficulties are gradually being overcome, as the lower tax
rate for H1 2024 reflects.
Adjusted
Basic and Adjusted Diluted Earnings Per Share decreased by 59% to
24.5 pence and 24.4 pence respectively.
Adjustments
The Group
incurred costs of £4.4m (H1 2023: costs of £4.9m) which we consider
to be Adjustments (as explained in Note 5 to the condensed
consolidated financial statements) and have therefore excluded them
when calculating Adjusted Profit Before Tax. These are summarised
below:
Income /
(cost) impact by
Income
Statement line
Six months
ended 30 June
£m
|
2024
|
2023
|
Operating
profit
|
Net
finance expense
|
Profit
before tax
|
Operating
profit
|
Net
finance expense
|
Profit
before tax
|
Restructuring
costs
|
(1.1)
|
-
|
(1.1)
|
(1.5)
|
-
|
(1.5)
|
Site
double running costs
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1.0)
|
(1.0)
|
Supply
chain transformation
|
(0.9)
|
-
|
(0.9)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Comet
legal case
|
(0.6)
|
-
|
(0.6)
|
(1.4)
|
-
|
(1.4)
|
Amortisation
of acquired intangibles
|
(1.6)
|
-
|
(1.6)
|
(1.6)
|
-
|
(1.6)
|
ERP
implementation
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
Bid
defence costs
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Other
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.2
|
0.6
|
0.8
|
Total
|
(4.4)
|
-
|
(4.4)
|
(4.5)
|
(0.4)
|
(4.9)
|
Severance
paid in respect of headcount reduction in the period resulted in
restructuring costs of £1.1m.
£0.2m was
spent on bid defence activities following a recent unsolicited and
unsuccessful takeover approach for the Group.
In respect
of the Comet legal case, we continue to await the original trial
judge’s ruling in respect of plaintiff’s claim for associated legal
fees and interest. Once this ruling is received, our Appeal will be
heard against the original damages award. We believe our Appeal is
well-founded.
Cash
Flow and Financial Position
During the
period the Group generated Adjusted Operating Cash Flow of £34.9m,
representing a record Adjusted Operating Cash Conversion of
259%.
This was
achieved through self-help actions to reduce inventory and tightly
control cash collection. We delivered an inventory reduction of
£9.9m despite relatively slow demand conditions, through proactive
management of forward purchasing and production output, and the
removal of surplus inventory buffer as supply chain conditions
normalised. A full review of safety stock was conducted during the
period to ensure the business is well positioned to respond as
demand improves.
Six months
ended 30 June
Adjusted
£m
|
2024
|
2023
|
Operating
profit
|
13.5
|
21.8
|
Depreciation
and amortisation
|
7.8
|
6.9
|
EBITDA
|
21.3
|
28.7
|
Change in
working capital
|
14.1
|
1.1
|
Other
items
|
(0.5)
|
0.2
|
Operating
cash flow
|
34.9
|
30.0
|
Net
capital expenditure – Product development costs
|
(5.5)
|
(4.6)
|
Net
capital expenditure – Other assets
|
(7.8)
|
(9.2)
|
Net
interest paid
|
(6.0)
|
(6.8)
|
Tax
paid
|
(3.1)
|
(1.3)
|
Other
items
|
(0.7)
|
(0.3)
|
Free
cash flow
|
11.8
|
7.8
|
Our
capital expenditure for the period was £13.3m, including £5.5m
invested in product development, £6.0m on major projects and £1.8m
on maintaining our existing assets. Major projects comprised the
relocation of our facilities on the US West Coast and construction
of the Malaysia facility, prior to
pausing this project whilst capacity remains ample. The facility
moves in the US went smoothly with no disruption, and our new
Silicon Valley facility is a world-class full-service site,
demonstrating the breadth of our offering in the heart of the US
semiconductor industry. The final payment of £3m for the
construction of this facility is due early in the second half of
2024.
We
successfully reduced our Net Debt by £8.5m to £104.2m, which has
resulted in a better-than-expected funding position. At
30 June 2024, leverage stood at 2.2x
Adjusted LTM EBITDA compared to a covenant limit of 3.5x and
Interest Cover at 4.2x compared to a covenant floor of 3.0x. We
expect Interest Cover to reduce modestly in H2 as our finance
expense reflects the full annualised cost of IFRS 16 lease interest
costs associated with the new Silicon Valley facility. We remain
confident in our previous guidance that Net Debt will be at or
below 2.5x Adjusted LTM EBITDA by the end of 2024 and that the
Group will remain in full compliance with all banking
covenants.
Dividends
continue to be an important part of the Group’s long-term capital
allocation strategy, but our focus must remain on debt reduction.
No dividends are declared in respect of the period (H1 2023:
18.0p).
Notwithstanding
our expectations of continued covenant compliance, the Directors
believe it is in the interests of shareholders that all available
proactive steps are taken to ensure the Group’s balance sheet is
fully resilient to all possible future market developments, whether
expected or not. In particular, the Directors have sought to ensure
the Group can comfortably accommodate an unexpectedly large amount
of channel destocking, recognising that customers’ stocking
decisions are beyond its control and could impact short-term
performance. It has therefore implemented the following package of
prudent changes to its funding arrangements at relatively modest
cost and with the full support of its lenders:
-
A
temporary reduction in the Interest Cover covenant for quarterly
tests until Q1 2026, as set out in note 2 to the Condensed
Consolidated Financial Statements. No changes have been made or are
deemed necessary to leverage covenant levels.
-
An
extension of the maturity of its main RCF facility to December 2026
As part of
these changes we have reduced the total borrowing facility size
from $255m to $210m. . Had this reduction been made at
30 June 2024, headroom in committed
banking facilities would have been $59m. This level of headroom is sufficient to
meet the Group’s future borrowing needs, is consistent with our aim
of reducing leverage to 0-1x Adjusted LTM EBITDA and allows the
Group to reduce the cost of unutilised borrowing
capacity.
The
Directors are confident that the Group will remain in full
compliance with its banking covenants for the foreseeable future,
in both its base case and severe but plausible downside case
scenarios, as required by mandatory going concern testing, with
clear covenant headroom.
Matt Webb
Chief
Financial Officer
6 August 2024
XP
Power Limited
Condensed
Consolidated Income Statement
For
the six months ended 30 June
2024
£m
|
Note
|
Adjusted
|
Adjustments
(see Note 5)
|
Six
months ended
30
June 2024
|
Adjusted
|
Adjustments
(see Note 5)
|
Six months
ended
30 June
2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
4
|
127.1
|
-
|
127.1
|
160.2
|
-
|
160.2
|
Cost of
sales
|
|
(75.5)
|
-
|
(75.5)
|
(93.2)
|
-
|
(93.2)
|
Gross
profit
|
|
51.6
|
-
|
51.6
|
67.0
|
-
|
67.0
|
Operating
Expenses
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Distribution
and marketing
|
|
(26.4)
|
(2.9)
|
(29.3)
|
(31.7)
|
(1.9)
|
(33.6)
|
Administrative
|
|
(2.1)
|
(1.5)
|
(3.6)
|
(2.1)
|
(2.6)
|
(4.7)
|
Research
and development
|
|
(9.6)
|
-
|
(9.6)
|
(11.4)
|
-
|
(11.4)
|
Operating
profit
|
|
13.5
|
(4.4)
|
9.1
|
21.8
|
(4.5)
|
17.3
|
Net
finance expense
|
|
(5.9)
|
-
|
(5.9)
|
(6.0)
|
(0.4)
|
(6.4)
|
Profit
before tax
|
|
7.6
|
(4.4)
|
3.2
|
15.8
|
(4.9)
|
10.9
|
Taxation
|
6
|
(1.7)
|
0.7
|
(1.0)
|
(4.0)
|
0.9
|
(3.1)
|
Profit
for the period
|
|
5.9
|
(3.7)
|
2.2
|
11.8
|
(4.0)
|
7.8
|
Attributable
to:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
shareholders
|
|
|
|
2.1
|
|
|
7.6
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
|
|
|
0.1
|
|
|
0.2
|
Profit
for the period
|
|
|
|
2.2
|
|
|
7.8
|
Earnings
per share (pence)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basic
|
8
|
24.5
|
(15.6)
|
8.9
|
59.3
|
(20.4)
|
38.9
|
Diluted
|
8
|
24.4
|
(15.6)
|
8.8
|
59.1
|
(20.4)
|
38.7
|
Condensed
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income
For
the six months ended 30 June
2024
£m
|
|
Six
months ended
30
June 2024
|
Six months
ended
30 June
2023
|
|
|
|
|
Profit
for the period
|
|
2.2
|
7.8
|
|
|
|
|
Items
that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or
loss:
|
|
|
|
Exchange
differences on translation of foreign operations
|
|
(1.0)
|
(3.8)
|
Items
that will not be reclassified subsequently to profit or
loss:
|
|
-
|
-
|
Other
comprehensive loss, net of tax
|
|
(1.0)
|
(3.8)
|
Total
comprehensive income for the period
|
|
1.2
|
4.0
|
Attributable
to:
|
|
|
|
Equity
shareholders
|
|
1.1
|
3.9
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
Total
comprehensive income for the period
|
|
1.2
|
4.0
|
|
|
|
|
The
above condensed consolidated income statement and statement of
comprehensive income should be read in conjunction with the
accompanying notes.
XP
Power Limited
Condensed
Consolidated Balance Sheet
As
at 30 June 2024
£m
|
Note
|
30
June
2024
|
31
December
2023
|
ASSETS
|
|
|
|
Current
assets
|
|
|
|
Cash and
bank balances
|
|
13.0
|
12.0
|
Inventories
|
|
81.7
|
91.6
|
Trade
receivables
|
|
34.9
|
43.1
|
Bond
receivables
|
|
37.6
|
36.7
|
Other
current assets
|
|
5.5
|
8.1
|
Current
income tax receivable
|
|
0.6
|
0.5
|
Total
current assets
|
|
173.3
|
192.0
|
Non-current
assets
|
|
|
|
Cash and
bank balances
|
|
1.4
|
1.4
|
Goodwill
|
|
75.2
|
75.6
|
Intangible
assets
|
9
|
63.8
|
63.1
|
Property,
plant and equipment
|
10
|
64.3
|
59.5
|
Right-of-use
assets
|
|
53.0
|
54.0
|
Deferred
income tax assets
|
|
1.0
|
0.7
|
Total
non-current assets
|
|
258.7
|
254.3
|
Total
assets
|
|
432.0
|
446.3
|
LIABILITIES
|
|
|
|
Current
liabilities
|
|
|
|
Current
income tax liabilities
|
|
2.9
|
5.0
|
Trade and
other payables
|
|
41.2
|
48.3
|
Lease
liabilities
|
|
1.5
|
1.4
|
Provisions
|
|
45.0
|
44.9
|
Borrowings
|
11
|
0.5
|
0.4
|
Accrued
consideration
|
|
1.8
|
-
|
Total
current liabilities
|
|
92.9
|
100.0
|
Non-current
liabilities
|
|
|
|
Accrued
consideration
|
|
-
|
1.7
|
Borrowings
|
11
|
118.1
|
125.7
|
Deferred
income tax liabilities
|
|
9.4
|
9.3
|
Provisions
|
|
1.2
|
1.0
|
Lease
liabilities
|
|
53.2
|
53.3
|
Total
non-current liabilities
|
|
181.9
|
191.0
|
Total
liabilities
|
|
274.8
|
291.0
|
NET
ASSETS
|
|
157.2
|
155.3
|
EQUITY
|
|
|
|
Equity
attributable to equity holders of the Company
|
|
|
|
Share
capital
|
|
71.2
|
71.2
|
Share-based
payment reserve
|
|
2.2
|
2.1
|
Merger
reserve
|
|
0.2
|
0.2
|
Translation
reserve
|
|
(1.9)
|
(0.9)
|
Other
reserve
|
|
8.2
|
7.6
|
Retained
earnings
|
|
76.5
|
74.4
|
|
|
156.4
|
154.6
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
|
0.8
|
0.7
|
TOTAL
EQUITY
|
|
157.2
|
155.3
|
The
above condensed consolidated balance sheet should be read in
conjunction with the accompanying notes.
XP
Power Limited
Condensed
Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity
For
the six months ended 30 June
2024
£m
|
Attributable
to equity holders of the Company
|
|
|
|
Share
capital
|
Share-based
payment reserve
|
Merger
reserve
|
Translation
reserve
|
Other
reserve
|
Retained
earnings
|
Total
|
Non-controlling
interests
|
Total
Equity
|
Balance at
1 January 2023
|
27.2
|
2.5
|
0.2
|
4.2
|
6.1
|
98.4
|
138.6
|
0.9
|
139.5
|
Exercise of
share-based payment awards
|
-
|
(1.1)
|
-
|
-
|
1.1
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Employee
share-based payment expenses, net of tax
|
-
|
0.1
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.1
|
-
|
0.1
|
Dividends
paid (note 7)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(11.2)
|
(11.2)
|
(0.1)
|
(11.3)
|
Future
acquisitions of non-controlling interests
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
Exchange
difference arising from translation of financial statements of
foreign operations
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(3.6)
|
-
|
-
|
(3.7)
|
(0.1)
|
(3.8)
|
Profit for
the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
7.6
|
7.6
|
0.2
|
7.8
|
Total
comprehensive income for the period
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(3.6)
|
-
|
7.6
|
3.9
|
0.1
|
4.0
|
Balance
at 30 June 2023
|
27.2
|
1.4
|
0.2
|
0.6
|
7.1
|
94.8
|
131.3
|
0.9
|
132.2
|
Balance at
1 January 2024
|
71.2
|
2.1
|
0.2
|
(0.9)
|
7.6
|
74.4
|
154.6
|
0.7
|
155.3
|
Exercise of
share-based payment awards
|
-
|
(0.7)
|
-
|
-
|
0.7
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Employee
share-based payment expenses, net of tax
|
-
|
0.8
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.8
|
-
|
0.8
|
Future
acquisition of non-controlling interest
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
Exchange
difference arising from translation of financial statements of
foreign operations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1.0)
|
-
|
-
|
(1.0)
|
-
|
(1.0)
|
Profit for
the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2.1
|
2.1
|
0.1
|
2.2
|
Total
comprehensive income for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1.0)
|
-
|
2.1
|
1.1
|
0.1
|
1.2
|
Balance
at 30 June 2024
|
71.2
|
2.2
|
0.2
|
(1.9)
|
8.2
|
76.5
|
156.4
|
0.8
|
157.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
above condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity should
be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes.
XP
Power Limited
Condensed
Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows
For
the six months ended 30 June
2024
£m
|
|
Six
months ended
30
June 2024
|
Six months
ended
30 June
2023
|
Cash
flows from operating activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit
after income tax
|
|
2.2
|
7.8
|
Adjustments
for:
|
|
|
|
-
Taxation
|
|
1.0
|
3.1
|
-
Amortisation
and depreciation
|
|
9.3
|
9.2
|
-
Net
finance expense
|
|
5.9
|
6.4
|
-
Share-based
payment expenses
|
|
0.6
|
0.2
|
-
Fair value
gain on derivative financial instruments
|
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
-
Impairment
loss on intangible assets
|
|
-
|
0.1
|
-
Unrealised
currency translation (gain)/loss
|
|
(0.4)
|
1.0
|
-
Provision
for doubtful debt
|
|
0.1
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
Change in
the working capital:
|
|
-
Inventories
|
|
10.3
|
2.5
|
-
Trade and
other receivables
|
|
11.1
|
(2.9)
|
-
Trade and
other payables
|
|
(7.1)
|
1.4
|
-
Provision
for liabilities and other charges
|
|
(0.2)
|
0.2
|
Cash
generated from operations
|
|
32.8
|
28.8
|
Income tax
paid, net of refund
|
|
(3.1)
|
(1.3)
|
Net
cash provided by operating activities
|
|
29.7
|
27.5
|
|
|
|
|
Cash
flows from investing activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Purchases
and construction of property, plant and equipment
|
|
(7.7)
|
(8.8)
|
Additions
of product development costs
|
|
(5.5)
|
(4.6)
|
Additions
of software and software under development
|
|
(0.1)
|
(0.3)
|
Proceeds
from disposal of property, plant and equipment
|
|
0.2
|
-
|
Interest
received
|
|
-
|
0.8
|
Net
cash used in investing activities
|
|
(13.1)
|
(12.9)
|
|
|
|
|
Cash
flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Proceeds
from borrowings
|
|
-
|
9.7
|
Repayment
of borrowings
|
|
(8.9)
|
-
|
Principal
payment of lease liabilities
|
|
(0.8)
|
(0.6)
|
Interest
paid
|
|
(6.0)
|
(7.6)
|
Dividends
paid to equity holders of the Company
|
|
-
|
(11.2)
|
Dividends
paid to non-controlling interests
|
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
Bank
deposits pledged
|
|
-
|
(0.4)
|
Net
cash used in financing activities
|
|
(15.7)
|
(10.2)
|
|
|
|
|
Net
increase in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
0.9
|
4.4
|
Cash and
cash equivalents at beginning of financial period
|
|
12.0
|
22.1
|
Effects of
currency translation on cash and cash equivalents
|
|
0.1
|
(1.0)
|
Cash
and cash equivalents at end of financial period
|
|
13.0
|
25.5
|
The
above condensed consolidated statement of cash flows should be read
in conjunction with the accompanying notes.
XP
Power Limited
Notes
to the condensed consolidated financial
statements
-
Basis of
preparation
The
condensed consolidated financial statements for the period ended
30 June 2024 have been prepared in
accordance with the Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the United
Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority and with International
Accounting Standards (‘IAS’) 34 Interim
Financial Reporting as issued
by the International Accounting Standards Board.
The
condensed consolidated financial statements should be read in
conjunction with the annual financial statements for the year ended
31 December 2023 which have been
prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting
Standards (‘IFRSs’) as issued by the International Accounting
Standards Board (IFRS as issued by the IASB) and Singapore
Financial Reporting Standards (International)
(SFRS(I)s’).
The
condensed consolidated interim financial statements have not been
audited.
-
Going
concern
The Group
has available to it a US $ denominated Revolving Credit Facility
(RCF) of $210m (£165m). The facility
matures in December 2026 and
therefore is committed throughout the minimum period for which
going concern is assessed, which is 12 months from the date of
signing these condensed consolidated financial
statements.
At
30 June 2024, the Group had drawn
down $151m (£119m) against this,
leaving undrawn facility headroom of more than £50
million.
Given that
the Group's borrowings are US $ denominated, net debt and therefore
the leverage ratio can be impacted by future movements in the US $
exchange rate. In both Cases, the US $ exchange rate is assumed to
$1.269.
As part of
its going concern review, the Group has developed both Base Case
and Downside Case financial forecasts, with the latter representing
a severe but plausible downside scenario, assessing forecast
liquidity and covenant compliance in each case.
Two
financial covenants apply to the Group’s Revolving Credit
Facility:
-
Leverage
(as defined in Note 5) of not more 3.5x for each calendar quarter
until 31 December 2024 and not more
than 3.0x thereafter.
-
Interest
Cover (as defined in Note 5) as follows, following a recent
amendment to specifically accommodate going concern testing
requirements:
Interest
Cover
|
Not less
than
|
|
|
Q3
2024
|
3.00
|
Q4
2024
|
2.75
|
Q1
2025
|
2.75
|
Q2
2025
|
2.50
|
Q3
2025
|
2.75
|
Q4
2025
|
3.25
|
Q1
2026
|
3.50
|
Q2 2026
and onwards
|
4.00
|
The Group
is currently experiencing an unusual slowdown in demand across all
three of its market sectors. Monthly revenue and order intake have
been relatively stable during the first half of 2024, suggesting
market conditions are in the process of stabilising. The key
assumption in any forecast scenario is therefore the monthly
revenue level at which market conditions stabilise and for how long
these conditions persist before markets recover. Specifically, this
requires assumptions to be made regarding the timing and impact of
the expected recovery in demand for Semiconductor Manufacturing
Equipment, which has been in an industry-wide downcycle since the
end of 2022, as well as the extent and duration of channel
destocking within the Healthcare and Industrial Technology sectors.
We are confident that the Group’s revenue will grow long-term due
to the nature of the markets we operate in and our attractive
positions within them but it is difficult to be precise about the
timing of the return to growth. The Base Case and Downside Case
make differing assumptions in this regard.
Base Case
The
Group’s Base Case scenario is that channel destocking within the
Healthcare and Industrial Technology sectors, which has reduced
Group revenue throughout H1 2024, continues until the end of Q3
2024. This leads to an improvement in quarterly revenue between Q3
and Q4 2024. The Base Case also assumes that demand for
Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment improves from the start of H1
2025 onwards. These assumptions result in a c.4% improvement in
revenue from H1 to H2 2024 and 8% improvement from 2024 to
2025.
The Base
Case assumes our interest cost in H2 2024 will be slightly higher
than H1 2024 due to increased borrowing margin. Total 2024 interest
cost is projected to be higher than 2023 as the benefit to interest
costs from lower borrowings is offset by an increase in lease
interest costs from our new facility in Silicon Valley.
The Base
Case assumes that the Secured Overnight Financing Rate ("SOFR")
remains at current level for the remainder of 2024 and 2025. The
Group has capped the interest rate applicable to the majority of
its borrowings at a rate slightly above the current SOFR. In the
Base Case, the Group remains in full compliance with its financial
covenants and with ample liquidity throughout the going concern
assessment period.
The lowest
point of headroom in the Leverage Ratio covenant is at 30 September 2024. EBITDA would need to fall
c.29% short of expectations in the period 1
October 2023 to 30 September
2024 for a breach to occur.
The lowest
point of headroom in the Interest Cover covenant is at 31 December 2024. EBITDA would need to fall c.24%
short of expectations in the period 1 January to 31 December 2024 for a breach to
occur.
Downside Case
In the
Downside Case, channel destocking in the Healthcare and Industrial
Technology sectors continues until the end of H1 2025, 9 months
longer than the Base Case. It assumes demand from Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment improves from the start of H2 2025, 6
months longer than the Base Case.
This
results in a 5% decline in revenue between H1 and H2 2024 and total
2024 revenue 4% lower than the Base Case. The delay of the recovery
until 2025 across all sectors means that the 2025 revenue is also
4% lower than in the Base Case.
The
Downside Case assumes interest costs to be similar with the Base
Case.
The
interest rate assumption is the same as the Base Case.
In the
Downside Case, the Group remains in compliance with its financial
covenants with ample liquidity throughout the going concern
assessment period.
The lowest
point of headroom in the Leverage Ratio covenant is at 30 June 2025. EBITDA would need to fall c.10%
short of expectations in the period 1 July
2024 to 30 June 2025 for a
breach to occur.
The lowest
point of headroom in the Interest Cover covenant is at 31 March 2025. EBITDA would need to fall c.6%
short of expectations in the period 1 April
2024 to 31 March 2025 for a
breach to occur.
The
Directors are confident that the Base Case and Downside Case
provide an appropriate basis for the going concern assumption to be
applied in preparing the financial statements. Therefore, the
Directors have a reasonable expectation that the Group has adequate
resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable
future. The Group, therefore, continues to adopt the going concern
basis in preparing its condensed consolidated financial
statements.
-
Accounting
policies
The
condensed consolidated interim financial statements have been
prepared under the historical cost convention except as disclosed
in the accounting policies within the Group financial statements
for the year ended 31 December
2023.
The same
accounting policies, presentation and methods of computation are
followed in these condensed consolidated interim financial
statements as were applied in the presentation of the Group’s
financial statements for the year ended 31
December 2023.
A number
of new or amended standards became applicable for the current
reporting period. The adoption of these new or amended standards
did not result in substantial changes to the Group’s accounting
policies and had no material effect on the amounts reported for the
current or prior financial years.
XP
Power Limited
Notes
to the condensed consolidated financial
statements
-
Segmented
and revenue information
The Board
of Directors monitors the business based on the three primary
geographical areas: North America,
Europe and Asia. All geographic locations market the same
classes of products to their respective customer base.
Revenue
The Group
derives revenue from the transfer of goods at a point in time in
the following major business lines and geographical
regions.
Analysis
by class of customer
The
revenue by class of customer is as follows:
Six
months ended 30 June 2024
|
|
|
|
|
£m
|
|
|
|
|
|
Europe
|
North
America
|
Asia
|
Total
|
Primary
geographical markets
|
|
|
|
|
Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment
|
1.9
|
37.4
|
6.4
|
45.7
|
Industrial
Technology
|
29.6
|
16.1
|
5.2
|
50.9
|
Healthcare
|
11.8
|
16.2
|
2.5
|
30.5
|
|
43.3
|
69.7
|
14.1
|
127.1
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Six
months ended 30 June 2023
|
|
|
|
|
£m
|
|
|
|
|
|
Europe
|
North
America
|
Asia
|
Total
|
Primary
geographical markets
|
|
|
|
|
Semiconductor
Manufacturing Equipment
|
2.5
|
43.7
|
8.2
|
54.4
|
Industrial
Technology
|
35.4
|
25.5
|
7.8
|
68.7
|
Healthcare
|
14.3
|
19.6
|
3.2
|
37.1
|
|
52.2
|
88.8
|
19.2
|
160.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
XP
Power Limited
Notes
to the condensed consolidated financial
statements
-
Segmented
and revenue information (continued)
Reconciliation
of segment results to profit for the period:
£m
|
Six
months ended
30
June 2024
|
Six months
ended
30 June
2023
|
Europe
|
11.6
|
12.3
|
North
America
|
19.1
|
28.4
|
Asia
|
5.5
|
6.8
|
Segment
results
|
36.2
|
47.5
|
Research
and development
|
(7.9)
|
(11.0)
|
Manufacturing
|
(5.1)
|
(5.3)
|
Corporate
costs
|
(9.7)
|
(9.4)
|
Adjusted
operating profit
|
13.5
|
21.8
|
Net
finance expenses
|
(5.9)
|
(6.4)
|
Adjustments
|
(4.4)
|
(4.5)
|
Profit
before tax
|
3.2
|
10.9
|
Taxation
|
(1.0)
|
(3.1)
|
Profit
for the period
|
2.2
|
7.8
|
£m
|
At
30 June
2024
|
At 31
December
2023
|
Total
assets
|
|
|
Europe
|
77.6
|
79.2
|
North
America
|
233.8
|
245.9
|
Asia
|
119.0
|
120.0
|
Segment
assets
|
430.4
|
445.1
|
Unallocated
deferred and current income tax
|
1.6
|
1.2
|
Total
assets
|
432.0
|
446.3
|
-
Reconciliation
of non-statutory measures
The Group
presents Adjusted Operating Profit and Adjusted Profit Before Tax
by adjusting for costs and profits which management believes to be
significant by virtue of their size, nature or incidence or which
have a distortive effect on current year earnings (Adjustments).
Such items may include, but are not limited to, costs associated
with business combinations, amortisation of intangible assets
arising from business combinations and restructuring
costs.
In
addition, the Group presents an Adjusted Profit For The Period
measure by adjusting for certain tax charges and credits which
management believe to be significant by virtue of their size,
nature, or incidence or which have a distortive effect.
The Group
uses these and other adjusted measures to evaluate performance and
as a method to provide shareholders with clear and consistent
reporting.
XP
Power Limited
Notes
to the condensed consolidated financial
statements
-
Reconciliation
of non-statutory measures (continued)
(i)
Adjusted
Operating Profit, Net Finance Expense, Profit Before Tax, Tax and
Profit For The Period
|
Six
months ended 30 June 2024
|
£m
|
Operating
profit
|
Net
finance expense
|
Profit
before tax
|
Taxation
|
Profit
for the period
|
Statutory
result
|
9.1
|
(5.9)
|
3.2
|
(1.0)
|
2.2
|
Adjusted
for:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Restructuring
costs
|
1.1
|
-
|
1.1
|
-
|
1.1
|
Costs
relating to legal dispute
|
0.6
|
-
|
0.6
|
-
|
0.6
|
Amortisation
of intangible assets acquired from business combinations
|
1.6
|
-
|
1.6
|
-
|
1.6
|
Global
supply chain transformation
|
0.9
|
-
|
0.9
|
-
|
0.9
|
Bid
defence costs
|
0.2
|
-
|
0.2
|
-
|
0.2
|
Non-recurring
tax benefits
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.7)
|
(0.7)
|
Adjusted
result
|
13.5
|
(5.9)
|
7.6
|
(1.7)
|
5.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Six
months ended 30 June 2023
|
£m
|
Operating
profit
|
Net
finance expense
|
Profit
before tax
|
Taxation
|
Profit
for the period
|
Statutory
result
|
17.3
|
(6.4)
|
10.9
|
(3.1)
|
7.8
|
Adjusted
for:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Restructuring
costs
|
1.5
|
1.0
|
2.5
|
-
|
2.5
|
Costs
relating to legal dispute
|
1.4
|
-
|
1.4
|
-
|
1.4
|
Amortisation
of intangible assets acquired from business combinations
|
1.6
|
-
|
1.6
|
-
|
1.6
|
Costs
related to Enterprise Resource Planning system
implementation
|
0.2
|
-
|
0.2
|
-
|
0.2
|
Fair value
gain on derivative financial instruments
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
Gain on
modifications of revolving credit facility
|
-
|
(0.6)
|
(0.6)
|
-
|
(0.6)
|
Non-recurring
tax benefits
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.9)
|
(0.9)
|
Adjusted
result
|
21.8
|
(6.0)
|
15.8
|
(4.0)
|
11.8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(ii)
Adjusted
Operating Cash Flow and Conversion %
£m
|
Six
months ended 30 June 2024
|
Six
months
ended 30
June
2023
|
Cash
generated from operations
|
32.8
|
28.8
|
Adjusted
for cash flows in respect of:
|
|
|
Costs
relating to legal dispute
|
1.0
|
1.2
|
Restructuring
costs
|
0.7
|
-
|
Global
supply chain transformation
|
0.4
|
-
|
Adjusted
Operating Cash Flow
|
34.9
|
30.0
|
|
|
|
Adjusted
Operating Profit
|
13.5
|
21.8
|
|
|
|
Adjust
Operating Cash Conversion
|
259%
|
138%
|
XP
Power Limited
Notes
to the condensed consolidated financial
statements
-
Reconciliation
of non-statutory measures (continued)
(iii)
Adjusted
LTM EBITDA
£m
|
Twelve
months ended 30 June
2024
|
Twelve
months
ended 30
June
2023
|
Profit
before tax
|
3.5
|
28.1
|
Adjusted
for:
|
|
|
Net
finance expense
|
12.8
|
10.3
|
Depreciation
|
9.0
|
10.0
|
Amortisation
|
11.2
|
9.1
|
LTM
EBITDA
|
36.5
|
57.5
|
Adjusted
for:
|
|
|
Restructuring
costs
|
4.0
|
0.8
|
Costs
relating to legal dispute
|
1.3
|
5.8
|
Global
supply chain transformation
|
3.6
|
-
|
Impairment
loss on intangible assets
|
2.0
|
0.3
|
Costs
related to Enterprise Resource Planning system
implementation
|
0.1
|
0.4
|
Acquisition
costs
|
0.1
|
1.5
|
Foreign
exchange gain on Euro-denominated loan drawn down to finance
acquisition
|
-
|
(0.8)
|
Revolving
credit facility fees
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
Fair value
loss/(gain) on derivative financial instrument
|
0.1
|
(0.6)
|
Bid
defence costs
|
0.2
|
-
|
Adjusted
LTM EBITDA
|
47.9
|
64.7
|
XP
Power Limited
Notes
to the condensed consolidated financial
statements
-
Reconciliation
of non-statutory measures (continued)
(iv)
Net
Debt
£m
|
At
30 June 2024
|
At 30
June
2023
|
Borrowings
|
|
|
Current
|
0.5
|
0.7
|
Non-current
|
118.1
|
174.6
|
Total
borrowings
|
118.6
|
175.3
|
Cash and
bank balances
|
|
|
Cash at
bank and on hand
|
14.3
|
26.8
|
Short-term
bank deposits
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
Total
cash and bank balances
|
14.4
|
26.9
|
|
|
|
Net
Debt
|
104.2
|
148.4
|
|
|
|
(v)
Leverage
(Net Debt: Adjusted LTM EBITDA)
£m
|
At
30 June 2024
|
At 30
June
2023
|
Net Debt
(Note 5(iv))
|
104.2
|
148.4
|
Adjusted
LTM EBITDA (Note 5(iii))
|
47.9
|
64.7
|
Leverage
(Net Debt: Adjusted LTM EBITDA)
|
2.2x
|
2.3x
|
(vi)
Interest
Cover (Adjusted LTM EBITDA : Adjusted LTM Net Finance
Expense)
£m
|
Twelve
months ended 30 June 2024
|
Twelve
months
ended 30
June
2023
|
Adjusted
LTM EBITDA (Note 5(iii))
|
47.9
|
64.7
|
|
|
|
Net
finance expense
|
12.8
|
10.3
|
Adjusted
for:
|
|
|
Restructuring
costs1
|
(1.4)
|
(1.1)
|
Gain on
modification of revolving credit facility
|
-
|
0.6
|
Adjusted
LTM Net Finance Expense
|
11.4
|
9.8
|
Interest
Cover
(Adjusted
LTM EBITDA : Adjusted LTM Net Finance Expense)
|
4.2x
|
6.6x
|
1 Restructuring
cost consist only of interest on lease liabilities related to lease
for office spaces in the United States of
America.
XP
Power Limited
Notes
to the condensed consolidated financial
statements
-
Taxation
The
average effective tax rate applied to Adjusted Profit Before Tax
for the period is 22% (2023: 25%). This is based on an estimate of
the full year effective tax rate by jurisdiction.
-
Dividends
Amounts
recognised as distributions to equity holders of the Company in the
period:
|
Six
months ended
30
June 2024
|
Six months
ended
30 June
2023
|
|
Pence
per share
|
£
Millions
|
Pence per
share
|
£
Millions
|
|
|
|
|
|
Prior year
third quarter dividend paid
|
-
|
-
|
21.0
|
4.1
|
Prior year
final dividend paid
|
-
|
-
|
36.0
|
7.1
|
Total
|
-
|
-
|
57.0
|
11.2
|
-
Earnings
per share
Earnings
per share attributable to equity holders of the company arise from
continuing operations as follows:
£m
|
Six
months
ended
30 June 2024
|
Six
months
ended 30
June 2023
|
Earnings
|
|
|
Earnings
for the purposes of basic and diluted earnings per share (profit
for the period attributable to equity holders of the
company)
|
2.1
|
7.6
|
Restructuring
costs
|
1.1
|
2.5
|
Costs
relating to legal dispute
|
0.6
|
1.4
|
Amortisation
of intangibles acquired from business combinations
|
1.6
|
1.6
|
Global
supply chain transformation
|
0.9
|
-
|
Costs
related to Enterprise Resource Planning system
implementation
|
-
|
0.2
|
Fair value
gain on derivative financial instruments
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
Gain on
modifications of revolving credit facility
|
-
|
(0.6)
|
Bid
defence costs
|
0.2
|
-
|
Non-recurring
tax benefits
|
(0.7)
|
(0.9)
|
Earnings
for Adjusted Earnings Per Share
|
5.8
|
11.6
|
Number
of shares
|
|
|
Weighted
average number of shares for the purposes of basic earnings per
share (thousands)
|
23,700
|
19,555
|
|
|
|
Effect of
potentially dilutive share options (thousands)
|
39
|
58
|
|
|
|
Weighted
average number of shares for the purposes of dilutive earnings per
share (thousands)
|
23,739
|
19,613
|
|
|
|
Earnings
per share from operations:
|
|
|
Basic
|
8.9p
|
38.9p
|
Adjusted
Basic
|
24.5p
|
59.3p
|
Diluted
|
8.8p
|
38.7p
|
Adjusted
Diluted
|
24.4p
|
59.1p
|
XP
Power Limited
Notes
to the condensed consolidated financial
statements
-
Intangible
assets
|
Product
Development costs
|
Brand
|
Trademarks
|
Technology
|
Customer
relationships
|
Customer
contracts
|
Software
|
Assets
under development
|
Total
|
£
Millions
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 31
December 2023
|
51.0
|
1.8
|
1.1
|
7.9
|
24.8
|
2.6
|
24.2
|
25.6
|
139.0
|
Additions
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.1
|
5.5
|
5.6
|
Disposal
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
Transfer
|
0.2
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.2)
|
-
|
Reclassification
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.9)
|
(0.9)
|
Foreign
currency translation
|
0.2
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
0.2
|
0.2
|
0.4
|
At
30 June 2024
|
51.4
|
1.7
|
1.1
|
7.9
|
24.7
|
2.6
|
24.4
|
30.2
|
144.0
|
Accumulated
amortisation and impairment losses
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 31
December 2023
|
35.9
|
0.8
|
1.0
|
4.4
|
13.6
|
1.9
|
8.3
|
10.0
|
75.9
|
Amortisation
charge for the year
|
2.1
|
0.1
|
-
|
0.4
|
0.8
|
0.3
|
1.1
|
-
|
4.8
|
Disposal
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
-
|
(0.1)
|
Reclassification
|
(0.9)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(0.9)
|
Foreign
currency translation
|
0.2
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.1
|
-
|
0.1
|
0.1
|
0.5
|
At
30 June 2024
|
37.3
|
0.9
|
1.0
|
4.8
|
14.5
|
2.2
|
9.4
|
10.1
|
80.2
|
Carrying
amount
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At
30 June 2024
|
14.1
|
0.8
|
0.1
|
3.1
|
10.2
|
0.4
|
15.0
|
20.1
|
63.8
|
At 31
December 2023
|
15.1
|
1.0
|
0.1
|
3.5
|
11.2
|
0.7
|
15.9
|
15.6
|
63.1
|
The
amortisation period for development costs incurred on the Group’s
products varies between five and seven years according to the
expected useful life of the products being developed.
Amortisation
commences when the product is ready and available for
use.
The
remaining amortisation period for customer relationships ranges
from four to nine years.
-
Property,
plant and equipment
|
£
Millions |
Freehold
land |
Buildings |
Plant and
equipment |
Motor
vehicles |
Building
improvements |
Assets under
construction |
Total |
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 31
December 2023
|
1.5
|
18.2
|
38.1
|
0.2
|
26.9
|
7.6
|
92.5
|
|
Additions
|
-
|
0.3
|
1.0
|
-
|
-
|
6.4
|
7.7
|
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
(0.5)
|
(0.1)
|
(1.8)
|
-
|
(2.4)
|
|
Transfers
|
-
|
-
|
1.7
|
-
|
0.9
|
(2.6)
|
-
|
|
Foreign
currency translation
|
-
|
0.1
|
-
|
-
|
0.2
|
(0.2)
|
0.1
|
At
30 June 2024
|
1.5
|
18.6
|
40.3
|
0.1
|
26.2
|
11.2
|
97.9
|
|
Accumulated
depreciation
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 31
December 2023
|
-
|
5.3
|
22.9
|
0.2
|
4.6
|
-
|
33.0
|
|
Depreciation
charge
|
-
|
0.3
|
2.0
|
-
|
0.5
|
-
|
2.8
|
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
(0.3)
|
(0.1)
|
(1.8)
|
-
|
(2.2)
|
|
At
30 June 2024
|
-
|
5.6
|
24.6
|
0.1
|
3.3
|
-
|
33.6
|
|
Carrying
amount
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At
30 June 2024
|
1.5
|
13.0
|
15.7
|
-
|
22.9
|
11.2
|
64.3
|
|
At 31
December 2023
|
1.5
|
12.9
|
15.2
|
-
|
22.3
|
7.6
|
59.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Assets
under construction pertains to cost incurred for the building of
Malaysia factory of £7.6 million
and renovation of the office space in North America which is due for completion in
2024 of £3.6 million.
XP
Power Limited
Notes
to the condensed consolidated financial
statements
-
Borrowings
As at
30 June 2024 the Group’s borrowings
had been drawn down from a US$255m
Revolving Credit Facility (“RCF”) (subsequently reduced to
$210m concurrent with the
renegotiation of covenants referred to below). The RCF was
committed until June 2026 and had no
fixed repayment terms until maturity. The finance costs on the RCF
are priced based on the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR)
administered by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York plus a margin. The margin applicable
to drawn amounts range from 1.5-3.25%, depending on the Net Debt :
Adjusted LTM EBITDA ratio for the previous quarter. The
non-utilisation fee payable for the undrawn element of the facility
is priced at 40% of the margin applicable to drawn
amounts.
The
covenants attaching to the RCF were renegotiated in July 2024. The interest cover (Adjusted LTM
EBITDA: Adjusted LTM Net Finance Expense) covenant has been reduced
to a range between 2.50x to 3.50x until maturity of the facility.
Subsequent to the balance sheet date, the maturity date of the RCF
has also been extended to December
2026 and therefore repayment will be due in the third year
after the date of these accounts.
As at
30 June 2024, the borrowings were
repayable as follows:
£m
|
At
30 June
2024
|
At 31
December 2023
|
On demand
or within one year
|
0.5
|
0.4
|
In the
second year
|
118.1
|
-
|
In the
third year
|
-
|
125.7
|
Total
|
118.6
|
126.1
|
The timing
of repayment is subject to the compliance of loan covenants and any
non-compliance can result in earlier repayment. All loan covenants
have been complied with as at 30 June
2024 (refer to Note 2 Going Concern for further
information).
-
Foreign
exchange rates
Exchange
rates applied in these condensed consolidated financial statements
are the average for the six month period for Income Statement items
(including £1/USD1.2636, £1/€1.1679,
£1/SGD1.7007) and are the closing
rate for Balance Sheet items (including £1/USD1.2640, £1/€1.1802, £1/SGD1.7135 at 30 June
2024).
-
Principal
risks
The Group
has well-established risk management processes to identify and
assess risks. The Group’s principal risks are regularly reviewed by
the Board and mapped onto a risk universe, where risk mitigation or
reduction can be tracked and managed. This facilitates further
discussion regarding risk appetite and identifies the risks that
require greater attention. Details of our risk management framework
are set out in the Group’s Annual Report & Accounts for the
year ended 31 December 2023 on pages
52 to 59.
The Board
has reviewed the principal risks as of 30
June 2024 against the context of the environment in which
the Group operates and the operational developments during the
first six months of the financial year and the outlook for the
remainder of the financial year. There is no change in principal
risks as disclosed in the Group’s Annual Report &
Accounts:
-
Disruption
to manufacturing
-
Supply
chain risks
-
Market/customer
related risks
-
Product-related
risks
-
IT/data
-
Funding/treasury
-
Legal
& regulatory
-
M&A
-
People-related
-
Climate-related
XP
Power Limited
Directors’
responsibility statement
The
Directors confirm to the best of their knowledge
that:
-
the
unaudited interim results have been prepared in accordance with IAS
34 Interim Financial Reporting issued by the International
Accounting Standards Board; and
-
the
interim results include a fair view of the information required by
DTR 4.2.7 (indication of important events during the first six
months and description of principal risks and uncertainties for the
remaining six months of the year) and DTR 4.2.8 (disclosure of
related party transactions and changes therein).
The
Directors of XP Power Limited are as follows:
Jamie
Pike
|
Non-Executive
Chair
|
Gavin
Griggs
|
Chief
Executive Officer
|
Matt
Webb
|
Chief
Financial Officer
|
Andy
Sng
|
Executive
Vice President, Asia
|
Polly
Williams
|
Senior
Independent Director
|
Pauline
Lafferty
|
Non-Executive
Director
|
Sandra
Breene
|
Non-Executive
Director
|
Amina
Hamidi
|
Non-Executive
Director
|
By order
of the Board:
Gavin Griggs Matt
Webb
Chief
Executive Officer Chief
Financial Officer
6 August 2024
Independent
review report to XP Power Limited
Report
on review of interim financial information
We have
reviewed the accompanying condensed consolidated financial
information of XP Power Limited (“the Company”) and its
subsidiaries (“the Group”) set out on pages 13 to 26, which
comprise the condensed consolidated balance sheet of the Group as
at 30 June 2024, the condensed
consolidated income statement, statement of comprehensive income ,
changes in equity and cash flows for the 6-month period then ended
and the other explanatory notes. Management is responsible for the
preparation and presentation of this condensed consolidated interim
financial information in accordance with International Accounting
Standard 34 Interim Financial Reporting as issued by the
International Standards Board. Our responsibility is to express a
conclusion on this condensed consolidated interim financial
information based on our review.
Scope
of Review
We
conducted our review in accordance with International Standard on
Review Engagements 2410 Review of Interim Financial Information
Performed by the Independent Auditor of the Entity. A review of
interim financial information consists of making inquiries,
primarily of persons responsible for financial and accounting
matters, and applying analytical and other review
procedures.
A review
is substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in
accordance with International Standards on Auditing and
consequently does not enable us to obtain assurance that we would
become aware of all significant matters that might be identified in
an audit. Accordingly, we do not express an audit
opinion.
We have
read the other information contained in the interim report for the
6-month period ended 30 June 2024,
which comprise the “Interim Results” set out on pages 1 to 3,
“Chief Executive Officer’s Review” set out on pages 4 to 8 and
“Chief Financial Officer’s Review” set out on pages 9 to 12 and
considered whether it contains any apparent misstatements or
material inconsistencies with the information in the condensed
consolidated interim financial information.
Conclusion
Based on
our review, nothing has come to our attention that causes us to
believe that the accompanying condensed consolidated interim
financial information is not prepared, in all material respects, in
accordance with International Accounting Standard 34 Interim
Financial Reporting as issued by the International Accounting
Standards Board.
Restriction
on Distribution and Use
This
report has been prepared solely for the Company in accordance with
the letter of engagement between us and the Company. We do not
accept or assume liability or responsibility to anyone other than
the Company for our work or this report.
PricewaterhouseCoopers
LLP
Public
Accountants and Chartered Accountants
Singapore,
6 August 2024