11 June 2024
Idox plc
Half Year results for the six months ended 30
April 2024
Strong first half performance
with over 20% growth in revenue
Idox plc (AIM: IDOX, 'Idox', 'the
Company' or 'the Group'), a leading supplier of specialist
information management software and geospatial data solutions to
the public and asset-intensive sectors, is pleased to announce its
unaudited half year results for the six months ended 30 April 2024
('H1 FY24').
Financial highlights - in line with
expectations
Revenue
·
Revenue increased by 21% to £43.1m (H1 FY23:
£35.8m), with a full six-month contribution from
Emapsite.
·
Recurring revenues1 increased by 29% to
£27.4m (H1 FY23: £21.2m), accounting for 63% of the Group's total
revenue (H1 FY23: 59%).
Profit
·
Adjusted2 EBITDA increased by 8% to
£13.1m (H1 FY23: £12.1m).
·
Adjusted2 EBITDA margin of 30% (H1
FY23: 34%), in line with expectations following the Emapsite
acquisition.
·
Statutory operating profit increased by 15% to
£5.7m (H1 FY23: £4.9m).
·
Statutory operating profit margin stable at 13%
(H1 FY23: 14%).
·
Statutory profit before tax increased 12% to £4.6m
(H1 FY23: £4.1m).
·
Adjusted3 diluted EPS of 1.26p (H1
FY23: 1.33p), reflecting an increased effective tax rate and higher
borrowing costs.
·
Statutory diluted EPS of 0.71p (H1 FY23:
0.73p).
Cash
·
Free cashflow5 generation stable at
£13.0m (H1 FY23: £12.9m).
·
Net debt4 at the end of the period
reduced to £6.6m (31 October 2023: £14.7m; 30 April 2023: net cash
£1.1m).
·
Cash generated from operating activities before
taxation as a percentage of Adjusted EBITDA for total operations
was 149% (H1 FY23: 148%).
·
Significant resources in place to fund accretive
M&A, including £75m revolving credit facility and £45m
accordion.
Operational highlights - a strong
performance
·
Order intake of £54.1m, up 4% from H1 FY23,
providing increasing levels of recurring revenue visibility for the
remainder of FY24 and into FY25.
·
Integration of Emapsite, acquired in August 2023
has progressed well, with performance in line with
expectations.
·
Good progress on developing the Group's geospatial
capabilities.
·
Healthy M&A pipeline with good leads on a
number of strategic targets.
Current trading and outlook - good
visibility for the remainder of the year
·
Combination of growth in recurring revenue and
pipeline, provides good revenue visibility for the remainder of
FY24 and into FY25.
·
The business continues to perform well and in line
with the Board's expectations.
·
Intention to pay a final dividend in line with the
Group's stated dividend policy.
David Meaden, Chief Executive Officer of Idox
said:
"The Group has delivered a strong
financial performance in the first half of 2024 in line with the
Board's expectations, with increased total revenue, recurring
revenue, profitability and cash generation.
A clear focus on, and a deep
understanding of the markets we serve, continues to provide us with
excellent opportunities to support new and existing customers. The
breadth and depth of our services delivered via our outstanding
people offers further opportunities for organic growth.
We have a proven track record of
identifying, acquiring and integrating strategic assets into Idox
as with our most recent acquisition of Emapsite in 2023. Our
M&A pipeline is very healthy, and we remain confident that we
can continue to make use of our significant financial resources to
deliver profitable organic and inorganic growth in order to
maximise shareholder value.
We are pleased with the progress the
Group has made and are on track to deliver on our plans for the
remainder of 2024 in line with the Board's
expectations."
There will be a webcast at
11.45am UK time today for analysts and investors. To register for
the webcast please contact MHP at idox@mhpgroup.com
For
further information please contact:
Idox plc
|
+44 (0) 870 333
7101
|
Chris Stone, Non-Executive
Chair
|
investorrelations@idoxgroup.com
|
David Meaden, Chief Executive
Officer
|
|
Anoop Kang, Chief Financial
Officer
|
|
|
|
Peel Hunt LLP (NOMAD and
Broker)
|
+44 (0) 20 7418
8900
|
Paul Gillam
|
|
Kate Bannatyne
|
|
Adam Telling
|
|
|
|
MHP
|
+ 44 (0) 7827 662
831
|
Reg Hoare
|
idox@mhpgroup.com
|
Ollie Hoare
|
|
Matthew Taylor
|
|
About Idox plc
For more information
see www.idoxgroup.com
@Idoxgroup
Alternative Performance Measures (APMs)
The Group uses these APMs, which are
not defined or specified under International Financial Reporting
Standards, as this is in line with the management information
requested and presented to the decision makers in our business; and
is consistent with how the business is assessed by our debt and
equity providers.
1 Recurring revenue is defined as revenues associated with
access to a specific ongoing service, with invoicing that typically
recurs on an annual basis and underpinned by either a multi-year,
rolling contract and highly repeatable services. These services
include Support & Maintenance, SaaS fees, Hosting services, and
some Managed service arrangements which involve a fixed fee
irrespective of consumption.
2 Adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation
and amortisation) is defined as earnings before amortisation,
depreciation, restructuring, acquisition costs, impairment,
financing costs and share option costs. Share option costs are
excluded from Adjusted EBITDA as this is a commonly used measure in
the industry and how management and our shareholders track
performance (see note 10 for reconciliation).
3 Adjusted EPS excludes amortisation on acquired intangibles,
restructuring, financing, impairment, share option and acquisition
costs (see note 10 for reconciliation).
4 Net debt / cash is
defined as the aggregation of cash, bank borrowings and the
long-term bond (see note 10 for reconciliation). This differs from
a similar measure under IFRS, which would also include lease
liabilities as debt. The definition used is consistent with that
used within the Group's banking arrangements.
5 Free cash flow is
defined as net cash flow from operating activities after taxation
less capital expenditure and lease payments (see note 10 for
reconciliation).
Chair's
statement
Introduction
I am pleased to introduce a strong
set of results from Idox for the first half of the financial year.
This has been a period of continuous progress and strong
operational execution. During the period, revenues grew by 21% and
Adjusted EBITDA by 8%. Cash generated from operating activities,
before taxation, was £19.5m, a conversion rate of 149% against an
Adjusted EBITDA for the period of £13.1m. The period ended with the
business in a net debt position of £6.6m.
The Group continues to be well placed
to execute on our growth strategy. There is positive momentum
across the business, supported by an increase of 4% on last year's
order intake and a strong pipeline of opportunities which underpins
our confidence in the medium term. We continue to see strong demand
for our products and services from existing clients as they use
software and new technologies to help them manage increasing demand
with limited resources, and whilst this is an election year, these
pressures will remain for the incoming government.
It is important that we manage the
business to take advantage of new opportunities, build scale in our
operations and continue to expand into near market adjacencies to
capitalise on our core competencies.
We have continued to see
opportunities that extend our product and service footprint with
our clients, and we have supported the business with investment in
new product areas which we believe will deliver value to clients
and shareholders over the medium term. We have been pleased with
the acquisition of Emapsite in which we have invested further to
enable the business to grow its product and services
portfolio.
The divisional structure we
implemented last year has been successful and it has been pleasing
to see the business continue to grow its recurring revenue, up 29%
in the period. We continue to see strong demand for our cloud-based
solutions, particularly in our LPPP business where we saw recurring
revenue in Idox Cloud up over 20% on the prior year period, with
order intake up 48% on the same period last year.
We continue to look for accretive,
synergistic acquisition opportunities that support our long-term
focus on software and complement the existing portfolio. We are
confident that there are a range of opportunities that fit the key
criteria we have defined, and whilst it is incumbent on the Board
to exercise the necessary patience to ensure that we are delivering
in the best long-term interests of shareholders, we look forward to
adding further assets in due course. In support of our growth
strategy, the continued focus on cash generation and paying down
existing debt has put the business in a strong position.
During the reporting period, we have
undertaken work to report our progress in matters relating to ESG
and enhanced our reporting on matters relating to diversity,
equality, and inclusivity (DEI). We have continued to explore how
our teams engage with the business and their thoughts on matters
that affect them through the 'Dare to Be Different' survey and this
continues to shape our approach to DEI. We are committed to
ensuring that all stakeholders, foremost amongst these our
employees, can be proud of the Company's work in this area. The
Chief Executive's statement includes further information on our ESG
related activities.
We are grateful to our clients for
continuing to have confidence in Idox as a partner and to our
colleagues for their hard work and dedication in making Idox the
business it is today.
Dividend
As previously announced, the Group
paid a dividend of 0.6p per share in April 2024 in respect of the
year ending 31 October 2023. Our current policy is to only declare
a final dividend and therefore, no interim dividend is proposed in
respect of H1 FY24 (H1 FY23: £Nil). We will keep the level of
future dividends under review in consideration of our financial
position and our confidence in the future.
Summary
The Group has made good progress in
the period. The integration of Emapsite into the Group structure
has been well executed and the ongoing focus on growing recurring
revenue and cash continues to produce results. We remain committed
to our buy and build strategy and continue to carefully evaluate
M&A opportunities that we believe will deliver long term
benefits for clients and shareholders whilst creating strong
opportunities for our teams and their future development. The
business continues to perform well and in line with the Board's
expectations.
Chris
Stone
Chair of the
Board
Chief Executive's
statement
It is very pleasing to be able to
report on another strong performance for the first half of this
year, as we continue to deliver great value to our customers
through our software solutions. Across the industries and markets
that we serve, our solutions enable our customers to manage highly
complex operational, legislative, and regulatory processes, through
reliable and effective solutions.
Our 'Four Pillars' underpin our
strategic thinking and operational decision making for the business
as we continue to grow, adapt, and evolve; these are Revenue
expansion, Margin enhancement, Simplification and
Communication.
Integration of the recently acquired
Emapsite business into the organisational structure has gone well
and we are seeing great collaboration with other areas of
geospatial capability within the Group to form new and exciting
solutions and data services, driving future revenues.
Our financial position remains strong
and our committed banking facilities provide significant firepower
to continue to compliment the organic growth of the business with
acquisitions where we see that we can add scale and capability,
alongside internal investment. We focus on opportunities that can
drive growth, improve recurring revenue, broaden our offering to
existing clients, and extend Idox's position in our chosen
markets.
Strong
progress
During this reporting period we have
seen growth in Group revenues of 21%, generating revenues of
£43.1m, an Adjusted EBITDA improvement of 8% from £12.1m to £13.1m
and a statutory operating profit improvement of 15% to £5.7m. The
Group continued to generate strong cash flow during the period,
resulting in a net debt position at 30 April 2024 of £6.6m compared
to £14.7m at the end of the last financial year.
Our strong operational cadence and
financial position makes Idox well placed for continued growth in
our software operations and provides a secure foundation to which
we can add compatible acquisitions to our portfolio of
offerings.
The
'Four Pillars' programme
Revenue expansion
Our core business areas performed
very well in the period, and we continue to demonstrate good levels
of resilience in our sales performance.
Our strong market positions and
continued investment in our solutions has supported an improved
sales performance, increasing sales to existing clients, in
addition to welcoming new client customers across all Divisions.
Improvements in execution and further expansion of our sales
stratification approach has delivered an enhanced performance and
better customer engagement.
For the six months ended 30 April
2024, order intake across the Group continued to grow, creating a
strong orderbook for the remainder of the financial year and
recurring revenue into future financial years. Order intake for the
period was £54.1m up 4% on the prior year.
Reviewing the performance of our
Divisions:
Land, Property & Public Protection
Sales order intake in Local
Government continued to perform well with high retention rates in
the period and a good mix of new services and contract extensions
supporting continued revenue growth. We have a strategic focus on
establishing longer term agreements with customers, securing future
long-term relationships; these included significant contracts with
North Northampton Council, Stroud District Council and City of York
Council all of which extended their agreements over five-years.
Scottish Borders Council joined a growing customer base choosing
the Idox provisioned hosting service for their existing software
platforms.
Recurring revenue in Idox Cloud was
up in H1 FY24 over 20% on the prior period, with order intake
continuing to improve - up 48% to £5.2m on the same period last
year. We welcomed new customers to our solution, including Waverley
Borough Council and the London Borough of Merton, as well as
customer migrations including Adur & Worthing Council and
Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council.
Revenues in Exegesis were down
slightly on prior year due to some one-off large-scale projects
delivered in the prior year. Extensions from large international
customers Natuurmomumenten & Staatsbosbeheer utilising our CMSi
solutions to manage large national parks and new projects with
Cornwall Council and the Bat Conservation Trust helped maintain a
heathy orderbook.
Address Management Solutions revenues
were up 7% supported by continued recurring revenue growth in the
period which was up 9%. Our strategy of expanding into new adjacent
markets showed good progress in the first half of the year with
significant new business wins with Gloucestershire Constabulary and
West Midlands Fire Service.
The formation of Idox Geospatial,
following the acquisition of Emapsite in 2023, has created an
opportunity to create and explore new data services and solutions.
Emapsite has built on its previous performance prior to the
acquisition, with revenue growth of 13% on the same period last
year. It has also been a very strong revenue period for thinkWhere
with large projects with NCAP and Eurogeographics being delivered
during the period.
Communities
Recurring revenue in Lilie, our
sexual health solution, was up 12% on prior year, as we continued
our strong relationship with market providers Virgin Care Services
and Solutions4Health.
With no major elections events across
the UK or Malta in the first half of FY24, Elections revenues were
down slightly on prior year, although order intake was up
significantly in the period as customers gear up for the impending
UK General Election.
In the Database subscription
businesses GrantFinder and ResearchConnect, recurring revenue was
up over 10% on the same period last year. GrantFinder order
intake showed a strong performance despite the pressure we have
seen on discretionary spend, particularly in the Public Sector. We
are excited and look forward to a positive second half following
the introduction of AI to this content area.
Through our "My Funding Central"
solution, and as part of our ongoing commitment to charities
working across the UK, we provide organisations with incomes of
less than £30,000 free access to grants and funding
information. Subscribers to these services continue to grow
with over 800 new users registering to use the service in the
period.
Social Care revenues were 2% lower
than in 2023, however, recurring revenue has continued to increase
(up 5%) as new customers including Derbyshire County Council and St
Helens Council joined our social care userbase.
Assets
EIM revenues
were 3% lower compared to 2023. However, the second quarter saw a
much better order intake performance carrying a stronger orderbook
into the second half of the year. New FusionLive sales included
seven new names in the period, and we saw two significant £1m+
contract extensions with clients in North America.
iFit (our asset tracking solution)
revenues were up over 9% with recurring revenues accounting for
most of the improvement in performance, growing 12% half-on-half.
There are a number of exciting opportunities for the iFit solution
across the NHS and into other markets that we continue to
target.
The latest release of CAFM
(facilities management solution) has been positively received by
the market and we are beginning to see more opportunities for the
solution in new business. Revenues were 12% down in the first half
of the year, but with new business wins in the UK including
Cheltenham College and overseas with Abdullah Rasheed Al Rushaid
Real Estate Investment Company, opportunities for an improvement in
the second half of the year are good.
Margin enhancement
We continue to target margin
improvements across the business, and this has helped deliver
results in the first half of the year. Leveraging the matrix
structure to build on our scale across our Engineering and IT
departments has helped create efficiencies and better use of
resources.
Formation of the Customer Success
horizontal team and combining the leadership and management of
onboarding, professional services and customer support is helping
improve efficiency and delivery of better and more consistent
services to customers. This approach has created opportunities for
pooled resources providing additional support and scale across the
Group as well as shared learning and improvement of technical
capabilities.
We have continued to increase our
operational teams in India over the first half of the year and see
this as an important focus area over the next few years as we
target increasing our teams in India to represent over 30% of our
colleagues in the future.
Across Engineering we have developed
a strategy to delivering Micro-Services across all platforms,
simplifying our approach to complex and repeatable software
requirements to ensure we engineer solutions once and apply them
across all of our platforms.
Simplification
Across the Group we have implemented
technologies and processes to streamline and improve consistency
and colleague experience, this has helped bring better controls and
improved visibility, facilitating better management control and
information.
Expansion of the sales desk and
revenue assurance teams across the entire Group has improved the
overall customer experience and simplifying the order process and
refining the order to cash workflow. This approach has created
organisational efficiencies, significantly simplified the
operations and created a more consistent approach.
We continue to review, refine and
invest in processes and technology across the organisation to
streamline and improve both the colleague and customer
experience.
Communication
Given the nature of our operations,
we have embraced, where appropriate, the world of hybrid working.
However, we continue to work hard to provide an open and engaging
environment where colleagues can collaborate effectively. We have
encouraged and facilitated regular face-to-face activities and
contact as we believe that in the creative areas of work,
especially in development and product management, this is of
particular importance.
We have opened a new office in
Belfast where we encourage many of our graduates to work alongside
our more experienced engineering teams and we are moving to a new
office in India to support our growth and continued collaborative
working environment.
As part of our communication
strategy, we engage and encourage regular and open dialogue with
colleagues across the business, targeted through areas of special
interest and focus groups, delivered through a variety of media and
channels, and leveraging the very latest collaboration
tools.
Regular CEO broadcasts continue to
underpin our communication strategy, these include regular
interactive sessions with various colleagues from across the
business contributing to ensure that a broad range of insights,
opinions, and inputs are presented. This forum provides
opportunities for colleagues to ask open questions of the panel
with high levels of participation from across the Group.
Participating personally and directly
with the selection and onboarding of new team members provides me
with a platform from which to outline our culture and what our
expectation levels are for each other at Idox. I believe that
this approach helps to maintain our Idox culture and authenticity
from the outset.
Responsible
We believe that our solutions and
services create long term value for the customers and communities
we serve, and whilst we recognise our need to create shareholder
value, the Board also recognises the importance of our societal and
environmental responsibilities and the need to conduct our business
in a responsible and sustainable way.
Our commitment to this is focussed in
four areas; our People; our Communities, our Environment and
Organisational Responsibilities.
Our ESG steering committee is now in
its fourth year of driving our strategy and agenda, built on
understanding and monitoring our business practices to ensure they
are sustainable in both environmental and social terms as well as
ensuring that Idox is well governed and authentic.
We have sponsored initiatives
throughout the first half of FY24, maintaining our focus on DEI -
and this is approached through smaller cross business virtual team
meetings to discuss lived experiences and effective ways to make
improvements across the business.
Our second "Dare to be Different"
engagement survey was undertaken in this half the year and
participation was again very high. We use the results and feedback
to help form our future strategies and policies.
We have also supported employee led
initiatives throughout the first half of the year to raise funds in
support of various charities and we encourage and promote the use
our community days scheme to support good causes in our local
communities. Initiatives like the payroll giving scheme are well
used and help maximise the impact of employee's contributions. We
also operate regular workplace wellbeing sessions, which are very
well attended and appreciated by members of the Idox
Team.
Through our work in the Local
Government community, we continue to enter into social value
partnerships with clients allied to the delivery of our products
and services. These arrangements enable Idox to make a very real
and direct contribution in the clients' local community. In
addition, as mentioned previously, we have continued to give free
access to our My Funding Central services for eligible
charities.
Idox remains committed to our
environmental protection initiatives and operating the business in
a responsible manner. Our Environmental Management System is
accredited to BS EN ISO 14001:2015, and we participate in the
Energy Saving Opportunities Scheme ('ESOS'), meeting the
requirements of the Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting
('SECR') regulations.
The ESG steering committee also
monitors our ongoing carbon reduction initiatives to ensure we are
meeting our targets, including maintaining disciplines on avoiding
unnecessary travel, travelling green wherever possible and by
continuing to take advantage of virtual meetings and the delivery
of many of our customer services online. Following its introduction
last year, we have maintained our options to incentivise and
encourage employees to obtain an electric vehicle through our
salary sacrifice scheme.
Outlook
The Group has delivered a strong
financial performance in the first half of 2024 in line with the
Board's expectations, with increased total revenue, recurring
revenue, profitability and cash generation.
A clear focus on, and a deep
understanding of the markets we serve, continues to provide us with
excellent opportunities to support new and existing customers. The
breadth and depth of our services delivered via our outstanding
people offers further opportunities for organic growth.
We have a proven track record of
identifying, acquiring and integrating strategic assets into Idox
as with our most recent acquisition of Emapsite in 2023. Our
M&A pipeline is very healthy, and we remain confident that we
can continue to make use of our significant financial resources to
deliver profitable organic and inorganic growth in order to
maximise shareholder value.
We are pleased with the progress the
Group has made and are on track to deliver on our plans for the
remainder of 2024 in line with the Board's
expectations.
David Meaden
Chief Executive
Officer
Chief Financial Officer's review
The Group delivered a strong
performance in the first half of 2024 across revenue, Adjusted
EBITDA and net debt. Revenue increased 21% in the period to £43.1m
(H1 FY23: £35.8m). Excluding the impact of Emapsite, the Group
delivered a 2% increase in revenue to £36.5m (H1 FY23: £35.8m).
Adjusted EBITDA increased by 8% to £13.1m (H1 FY23: £12.1m). Net
debt since 31 October 2023 decreased by over 50% to £6.6m at 30
April 2024.
The following table sets out the
Revenue and Adjusted EBITDA for each of the Group's
segments.
|
|
H1 FY24
|
H1 FY23
|
Variance
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
%
|
Revenue
|
|
|
|
|
|
LPPP
|
|
28,950
|
21,458
|
7,492
|
35%
|
Assets
|
|
7,081
|
7,177
|
(96)
|
(1%)
|
Communities
|
|
7,118
|
7,146
|
(28)
|
(-%)
|
Total
|
|
43,149
|
35,781
|
7,368
|
21%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue Split
|
|
|
|
|
|
LPPP
|
|
67%
|
60%
|
|
|
Assets
|
|
16%
|
20%
|
|
|
Communities
|
|
17%
|
20%
|
|
|
Total
|
|
100%
|
100%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA1
|
|
|
|
|
|
LPPP
|
|
9,197
|
7,735
|
1,462
|
19%
|
Assets
|
|
1,580
|
1,811
|
(231)
|
(13%)
|
Communities
|
|
2,282
|
2,557
|
(275)
|
(11%)
|
Total
|
|
13,059
|
12,103
|
956
|
8%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA Margin
|
|
|
|
|
|
LPPP
|
|
32%
|
36%
|
|
|
Assets
|
|
22%
|
25%
|
|
|
Communities
|
|
32%
|
36%
|
|
|
- Total
|
|
30%
|
34%
|
|
|
1 Adjusted EBITDA is defined as earnings before amortisation,
depreciation, restructuring, acquisition costs, impairment,
financing costs and share option costs. See note 10 for
reconciliations of the alternative performance measures.
Total revenue for the period
increased by 21% to £43.1m (H1 FY23: £35.8m). LPPP increased 35% in
the period to £29.0m (H1 FY23: £21.5m). Both Assets and Communities
revenues remained broadly flat at £7.1m.
Adjusted EBITDA increased by 8% for
the period to £13.1m (H1 FY23: £12.1m). In line with the revenue
performance, the growth in Adjusted EBITDA was driven by LPPP which
was up 19% in the period being partially offset by reduced
profitably in Assets and Communities. This resulted in an
anticipated overall Adjusted EBITDA margin of 30% (H1 FY23: 34%).
The LPPP Adjusted EBITDA margin of 32% was in line with the full
year 2023 result and includes expected lower margins on Emapsite
and further investment into developing our geospatial capabilities.
The Adjusted EBITDA margin reduction in Assets to 22% was driven
primarily by our CAFM facilities management solution. In
Communities the Adjusted EBITDA margin of 32% returned to a more
normalised level following the benefit of higher margin
non-recurring revenue in 2023.
Revenues
|
|
H1 FY24
|
H1 FY23
|
Variance
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
%
|
Revenues
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Recurring (LPPP)
|
|
17,621
|
11,689
|
5,932
|
51%
|
- Recurring (Assets)
|
|
4,727
|
4,788
|
(61)
|
(1%)
|
- Recurring (Communities)
|
|
5,018
|
4,674
|
344
|
7%
|
|
|
27,366
|
21,151
|
6,215
|
29%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Non-Recurring (LPPP)
|
|
11,329
|
9,769
|
1,560
|
16%
|
- Non-Recurring (Assets)
|
|
2,354
|
2,389
|
(35)
|
(1%)
|
- Non-Recurring
(Communities)
|
|
2,100
|
2,472
|
(372)
|
(15%)
|
|
|
15,783
|
14,630
|
1,153
|
8%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
43,149
|
35,781
|
7,368
|
21%
|
- Recurring1
|
|
63%
|
59%
|
|
|
-
Non-Recurring2
|
|
37%
|
41%
|
|
|
1 Recurring revenue is defined as revenues associated with
access to a specific ongoing service, with invoicing that typically
recurs on an annual basis and underpinned by either a multi-year,
rolling contract and highly repeatable services. These services
include Support & Maintenance, SaaS fees, Hosting services, and
some Managed service arrangements which involve a fixed fee
irrespective of consumption.
2 Non-recurring revenue is defined as revenues without any
formal commitment from the customer to recur on an annual
basis.
Total recurring revenue increased by
29% in the period to £27.4m and increased to 63% of the Group's
total revenue (H1 FY23: 59%). Excluding the impact of Emapsite,
recurring revenue increased by 7% in the period. LPPP has seen an
increase of 51% in recurring revenues to £17.6m driven by growth in
our core Local Authority and Cloud solutions as well as the
contribution from Emapsite. Excluding the impact of Emapsite
recurring revenue in LPPP increased 11% in the period. Recurring
revenue within the Assets division has remained stable at £4.7m
with growth in our asset tracking solution (iFit) offset by
reductions in the CAFM facilities management solution. EIM
recurring revenues remained stable in the period. Communities
recurring revenue increased by 7% driven by growth in health,
social care and databases solutions.
Non-recurring revenues have improved
by 8% to £15.8m for the period and account for 37% of the Group's
revenue. LPPP non-recurring revenue was up 16% to £11.3m (H1 FY23:
£9.8m) and benefitted from the contribution from Emapsite and
growth in ThinkWhere being partially offset by anticipated
reductions in Local Authority. Non-recurring revenue within Assets
remained stable at £2.4m (H1 FY23: £2.4m) with a good performance
in iFit. Communities delivered £2.1m (H1 FY23: £2.5m) of
non-recurring revenue with slightly lower volumes in our health and
social care solutions. Elections was flat in the period but is
expected to increase in the second half of the year as the Group
delivers the UK and Maltese general elections, as
anticipated.
The Group's order intake for the
period was up 4% on last year to £54.1m which provides good levels
of revenue visibility for the remainder of the year and into
FY25.
Profit before taxation
The statutory profit before taxation
for the period was up 12% at £4.6m (H1 FY23: £4.1m). The following
table provides a reconciliation between Adjusted EBITDA and
statutory profit before taxation.
|
|
H1 FY24
|
H1 FY23
|
Variance
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
|
13,059
|
12,103
|
956
|
8%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation &
Amortisation
|
|
(6,100)
|
(5,288)
|
(812)
|
15%
|
Restructuring costs
|
|
(26)
|
(329)
|
303
|
(92%)
|
Acquisition costs
|
|
(12)
|
(340)
|
328
|
(96%)
|
Financing costs
|
|
(23)
|
(28)
|
5
|
(18%)
|
Share option costs
|
|
(1,225)
|
(1,200)
|
25
|
2%
|
Net finance costs
|
|
(1,116)
|
(840)
|
(276)
|
33%
|
Profit before taxation
|
|
4,557
|
4,078
|
479
|
12%
|
The Group incurred combined
restructuring, acquisition and financing costs of less than £0.1m,
significantly less than in 2023, when the Group incurred
restructuring costs in connection with corporate simplification and
office rationalisation initiatives and finalisation of previous
acquisition costs.
Share option costs of £1.2m (H1 FY23:
£1.2m) relate to the accounting charge for awards made under the
Group's Long-term Incentive Plan, in accordance with IFRS 2 -
Share-based Payments.
Net finance costs are higher than the
prior year at £1.1m (H1 FY23: £0.8m) as a result of increased
borrowing costs on the new loan facility.
The Group continues to invest in
developing innovative technology solutions across the portfolio and
has capitalised £3.7m of development costs during the period (H1
FY23: £3.4m). The increase in the period is primarily due to the
impact of the Emapsite acquisition (£0.1m), with the remaining
£0.2m being driven by an increase in development work across the
portfolio.
Taxation
The effective tax rate (ETR) on a
statutory basis for the period was 28% (H1 FY23: 18%).
The main driver for the increased tax
rate is the full impact of the change in the UK corporation tax
rate from 19% to 25%. The ETR of 28% in the period was higher than
the UK corporation tax rate of 25% as a result of overseas losses
and expenses not deductible for tax purposes. In 2023 the ETR of
18% was lower than the UK corporation tax rate of 19% mainly due to
tax relief on share options. As a result, the ETR on an adjusted
basis moved from 22% to 26.5%.
Earnings per share and
dividends
The adjusted basic earnings per share
for the period was down 6% at 1.28p (H1 FY23: 1.36p) and the
adjusted diluted earnings per share decreased by 5% to 1.26p (H1
FY23: 1.33p). Whilst the Group reported an 8% increase in Adjusted
EBITDA of £13.1m, higher net finance costs and taxation resulted in
a lower adjusted profit after taxation of £5.8m (H1 FY23:
£6.1m).
Basic earnings per share reduced by
3% to 0.72p (H1 FY23: 0.75p). Diluted earnings per share decreased
by 3% to 0.71p (H1 FY23: 0.73p). This was driven by the statutory
profit after tax for the period being 3% lower than the prior
year.
In line with H1 FY23, the Board does
not propose an interim dividend in respect of the six months ended
30 April 2024. It will keep the level of
future dividends under review in consideration of the Group's
performance, financial position and overall confidence in the
future, and expects to pay a final dividend.
Balance sheet and
cashflow
The Group's net assets have
increased to £74.9m compared to £73.3m at 31 October 2023. The
constituent movements are detailed in the Group's consolidated
Statement of Changes in Equity, which are summarised as
follows:
|
6 months to
30 April
2024
£000
|
|
|
Total Equity as per FY23 Financial
Report
|
73,277
|
Share option movements
|
1,135
|
Equity dividends paid
|
(2,756)
|
Profit for the period
|
3,253
|
Exchange losses on translation of foreign
operations
|
(42)
|
Total Equity as per H1 FY24 Financial
Report
|
74,867
|
The Group continued to have good
cash generation in the period. Cash generated from operating
activities before taxation was £19.5m, and as a percentage of
Adjusted EBITDA was 149% (H1 FY23: 148%). The Group typically
operates on a negative working capital cycle. A significant part of
the Group's contracts renew and re-sign during the first half of
the year. As a result, billings and cash collections typically tend
to be annually in advance in the first half of the year.
|
|
H1 FY24
|
H1 FY23
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
|
|
|
|
Net cashflow from operating
activities after taxation
|
|
17,666
|
17,136
|
Capex
|
|
(4,292)
|
(3,785)
|
Lease payments
|
|
(400)
|
(423)
|
Free cashflow1
|
|
12,974
|
12,928
|
1 Free cash flow is
defined as net cash flow from operating activities after taxation
less capital expenditure and lease payments (see note 10 for
reconciliation).
Given the strong cash collection
during the first half of the year, the Group ended the period with
net debt of £6.6m compared to £14.7m at 31 October 2023. Net debt
comprised cash of £18.2m less bank borrowings of £13.8m and the
Maltese listed bond of £11.0m, which is due for repayment in July
2025. We ended the period with a leverage ratio of 0.3 times (FY23:
0.6 times) with significant headroom against the Group's financial
covenants.
The Group retains excellent
liquidity with cash and available committed bank facilities and has
strong headroom against financial covenants. The Group's total
available facilities at 30 April 2024 consisted of a revolving
credit facility of £75m and £45m accordion which continue to 1
October 2026, providing significant scope for further
M&A.
Anoop Kang
Chief Financial Officer
Consolidated interim statement of comprehensive
income
|
Note
|
6 months to 30 April
2024
(unaudited)
|
6 months to
30 April
2023
(unaudited)
|
12 months
to
31 October
2023
(audited)
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
3
|
43,149
|
35,781
|
73,277
|
Cost of
sales
|
|
(10,811)
|
(7,717)
|
(16,036)
|
Gross
profit
|
|
32,338
|
28,064
|
57,241
|
Administrative expenses
|
|
(26,665)
|
(23,146)
|
(47,897)
|
Operating
profit
|
|
5,673
|
4,918
|
9,344
|
|
|
|
|
|
Analysed
as:
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted
EBITDA
|
10
|
13,059
|
12,103
|
24,450
|
Depreciation & Amortisation
|
|
(6,100)
|
(5,288)
|
(10,955)
|
Restructuring costs
|
|
(26)
|
(329)
|
(378)
|
Acquisition
costs
|
|
(12)
|
(340)
|
(746)
|
Financing
costs
|
|
(23)
|
(28)
|
(396)
|
Share
option costs
|
|
(1,225)
|
(1,200)
|
(2,631)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Finance
income
|
|
186
|
61
|
219
|
Finance
costs
|
|
(1,302)
|
(901)
|
(1,743)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit before
taxation
|
|
4,557
|
4,078
|
7,820
|
|
|
|
|
|
Income tax
charge
|
5
|
(1,304)
|
(740)
|
(2,238)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit for the period
attributable to the owners of the parent
|
|
3,253
|
3,338
|
5,582
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other comprehensive loss for
the period
Items that will be reclassified
subsequently to profit or loss:
Exchange
movement on translation of foreign operations net of tax
|
|
(42)
|
(162)
|
(45)
|
Other comprehensive loss for
the period, net of tax
|
|
(42)
|
(162)
|
(45)
|
Total comprehensive income
for the period attributable to owners of the
parent
|
|
3,211
|
3,176
|
5,537
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings per share
attributable to owners of the parent
|
|
|
|
|
Basic
|
6
|
0.72p
|
0.75p
|
1.24p
|
Diluted
|
6
|
0.71p
|
0.73p
|
1.23p
|
|
|
|
|
|
The accompanying notes form an
integral part of these financial statements.
Consolidated interim balance sheet
|
Note
|
|
At 30 April
2024
(unaudited)
|
|
At 30 April 2023
(unaudited)
|
|
At 31 October
2023
(audited)
|
|
|
|
£000
|
|
£000
|
|
£000
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current
assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Property,
plant and equipment
|
|
|
1,358
|
|
1,275
|
|
1,339
|
Intangible
assets
|
7
|
|
107,520
|
|
91,368
|
|
108,785
|
Right-of-use-assets
|
|
|
1,398
|
|
1,628
|
|
1,333
|
Deferred
tax assets
|
|
|
2,130
|
|
2,804
|
|
2,541
|
Other
receivables
|
|
|
1,185
|
|
-
|
|
1,201
|
Total non-current
assets
|
|
|
113,591
|
|
97,075
|
|
115,199
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current
assets
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and
other receivables
|
|
|
24,026
|
|
23,734
|
|
21,451
|
Cash and
cash equivalents
|
|
|
18,217
|
|
23,722
|
|
14,824
|
Total current
assets
|
|
|
42,243
|
|
47,456
|
|
36,275
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total
assets
|
|
|
155,834
|
|
144,531
|
|
151,474
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current
liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade and
other payables
|
|
|
11,044
|
|
8,070
|
|
8,058
|
Deferred
consideration
|
|
|
869
|
|
420
|
|
869
|
Current tax
payable
|
|
|
922
|
|
365
|
|
1,422
|
Other
liabilities
|
|
|
32,062
|
|
34,691
|
|
26,828
|
Provisions
|
|
|
714
|
|
555
|
|
589
|
Lease
liabilities
|
|
|
522
|
|
473
|
|
220
|
Total current
liabilities
|
|
|
46,133
|
|
44,574
|
|
37,986
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Non-current
liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deferred
tax liabilities
|
|
|
7,052
|
|
5,673
|
|
7,519
|
Lease
liabilities
|
|
|
910
|
|
1,145
|
|
958
|
Other
liabilities
|
|
|
2,063
|
|
1,035
|
|
2,236
|
Bonds in
issue
|
|
|
11,049
|
|
11,362
|
|
11,207
|
Borrowings
|
|
|
13,760
|
|
11,245
|
|
18,291
|
Total non-current
liabilities
|
|
|
34,834
|
|
30,460
|
|
40,211
|
Total
liabilities
|
|
|
80,967
|
|
75,034
|
|
78,197
|
Net assets
|
|
|
74,867
|
|
69,497
|
|
73,277
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Called up
share capital
|
|
|
4,594
|
|
4,535
|
|
4,562
|
Capital
redemption reserve
|
|
|
1,112
|
|
1,112
|
|
1,112
|
Share
premium account
|
|
|
41,581
|
|
41,558
|
|
41,558
|
Share
option reserve
|
|
|
5,775
|
|
5,469
|
|
5,841
|
Other
reserves
|
|
|
9,165
|
|
9,165
|
|
9,165
|
ESOP
trust
|
|
|
(548)
|
|
(505)
|
|
(526)
|
Foreign
currency translation reserve
|
|
|
152
|
|
77
|
|
194
|
Retained
earnings
|
|
|
13,036
|
|
8,086
|
|
11,371
|
Equity attributable to the
owners of the parent
|
|
74,867
|
|
69,497
|
|
73,277
|
The accompanying notes form an
integral part of these financial statements.
Consolidated interim
statement of changes in equity
|
Called up share
capital
£000
|
Capital
redemption
reserve
£000
|
Share
premium
account
£000
|
Treasury
reserve
£000
|
Share
options
reserve
£000
|
Other
reserves
£000
|
ESOP
trust
£000
|
Foreign currency translation
reserve
£000
|
Retained
earnings
£000
|
Total
£000
|
Balance at 1 November 2022
(audited)
|
4,525
|
1,112
|
41,556
|
(594)
|
4,816
|
8,745
|
(466)
|
239
|
7,483
|
67,416
|
Issue of
share capital
|
10
|
-
|
2
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
12
|
Share
option costs
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,198
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,198
|
Exercise /
lapses of share options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
594
|
(545)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(47)
|
2
|
ESOP
trust
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(39)
|
-
|
-
|
(39)
|
Reallocation of deferred consideration share exercise
costs
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
420
|
-
|
-
|
(420)
|
-
|
Equity
dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2,268)
|
(2,268)
|
Transactions with
owners
|
10
|
-
|
2
|
594
|
653
|
420
|
(39)
|
-
|
(2,735)
|
(1,095)
|
Profit for
the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,338
|
3,338
|
Other comprehensive
loss
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exchange
movement on translation of foreign operations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(162)
|
-
|
(162)
|
Total comprehensive (loss) /
income for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(162)
|
3,338
|
3,176
|
At 30 April 2023
(unaudited)
|
4,535
|
1,112
|
41,558
|
-
|
5,469
|
9,165
|
(505)
|
77
|
8,086
|
69,497
|
Issue of
share capital
|
27
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
27
|
Share
options costs
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,413
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,413
|
Exercise /
lapses of share options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,041)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,041
|
-
|
ESOP
trust
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(21)
|
-
|
-
|
(21)
|
Transactions with
owners
|
27
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
372
|
-
|
(21)
|
-
|
1,041
|
1,419
|
Profit for
the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
2,244
|
2,244
|
Other comprehensive
income
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exchange
movement on translation of foreign operations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
117
|
-
|
117
|
Total comprehensive income
for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
117
|
2,244
|
2,361
|
Balance at 31 October 2023
(audited)
|
4,562
|
1,112
|
41,558
|
-
|
5,841
|
9,165
|
(526)
|
194
|
11,371
|
73,277
|
Issue of
share capital
|
32
|
-
|
23
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
55
|
Share
option costs
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,102
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,102
|
Exercise /
lapses of share options
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,168)
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1,168
|
-
|
ESOP
trust
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(22)
|
-
|
-
|
(22)
|
Equity
dividends paid
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2,756)
|
(2,756)
|
Transactions with
owners
|
32
|
-
|
23
|
-
|
(66)
|
-
|
(22)
|
-
|
(1,588)
|
(1,621)
|
Profit for
the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
3,253
|
3,253
|
Other comprehensive
loss
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exchange
movement on translation of foreign operations
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(42)
|
-
|
(42)
|
Total comprehensive (loss) /
income for the period
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(42)
|
3,253
|
3,211
|
At 30 April 2024
(unaudited)
|
4,594
|
1,112
|
41,581
|
-
|
5,775
|
9,165
|
(548)
|
152
|
13,036
|
74,867
|
The accompanying notes form an integral part of
these financial statements.
Consolidated interim cash flow statement
|
Note
|
|
6 months to
30 April
2024
(unaudited)
|
6 months to
30 April 2023
(unaudited)
|
12 months
to
31 October 2023
(audited)
|
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
Cash flows from operating
activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit for
the period before taxation
|
|
|
4,557
|
4,078
|
7,820
|
Adjustments
for:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Depreciation of property, plant and equipment
|
|
|
515
|
480
|
957
|
Depreciation of right-of-use assets
|
|
|
572
|
346
|
679
|
Amortisation of intangible assets
|
7
|
|
5,013
|
4,462
|
9,319
|
Acquisition
/ disposal finalisation costs
|
|
|
-
|
299
|
379
|
Finance
income
|
|
|
(186)
|
(8)
|
(216)
|
Finance
costs
|
|
|
1,227
|
840
|
1,532
|
Debt issue
costs amortisation
|
|
|
75
|
60
|
(238)
|
Research
and development tax credit
|
|
|
(275)
|
(258)
|
(522)
|
Share
option costs
|
8
|
|
1,225
|
1,200
|
2,631
|
Increase in
receivables
|
|
|
(2,559)
|
(5,821)
|
(3,325)
|
Increase in
payables
|
|
|
9,332
|
12,285
|
1,048
|
Cash generated by
operations
|
|
|
19,496
|
17,963
|
20,064
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tax
paid
|
|
|
(1,830)
|
(827)
|
(1,465)
|
Net cash from operating
activities
|
|
|
17,666
|
17,136
|
18,599
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from investing activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
Acquisition
of subsidiaries net of cash acquired
|
|
|
(1,393)
|
(2,184)
|
(14,105)
|
Purchase of
property, plant and equipment
|
|
|
(544)
|
(387)
|
(895)
|
Purchase /
capitalisation of intangible assets
|
7
|
|
(3,748)
|
(3,398)
|
(7,627)
|
Finance
income
|
|
|
34
|
36
|
80
|
Net cash used in investing
activities
|
|
|
(5,651)
|
(5,933)
|
(22,547)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from financing
activities
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest
paid
|
|
|
(694)
|
(325)
|
(1,439)
|
Loan
drawdowns
|
|
|
-
|
5,000
|
39,706
|
Loan
related costs
|
|
|
(174)
|
(77)
|
(169)
|
Loan
repayments
|
|
|
(4,706)
|
(3,000)
|
(30,000)
|
Principal
lease payments
|
|
|
(400)
|
(423)
|
(936)
|
Equity
dividends paid
|
4
|
|
(2,756)
|
(2,268)
|
(2,268)
|
Issue of
own shares
|
|
|
(60)
|
(106)
|
(185)
|
Net cash (outflows) / inflows
from financing activities
|
|
|
(8,790)
|
(1,199)
|
4,709
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net movement in cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
|
3,225
|
10,004
|
761
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents at
the beginning of the period
|
|
|
14,824
|
13,864
|
13,864
|
Exchange
gains / (losses) on cash and cash equivalents
|
|
168
|
(146)
|
199
|
Cash and cash equivalents at
the end of the period
|
|
18,217
|
23,722
|
14,824
|
The accompanying accounting policies
and notes form an integral part of these financial
statements.
Notes to the interim accounts
1 General information
Idox plc is a leading supplier of
software and services for the management of Local Government and
other organisations. The Company is a public limited company,
limited by shares, which is listed on the AIM Market of the London
Stock Exchange and is incorporated and domiciled in the UK. The
address of its registered office is Unit 5, Woking 8, Forsyth Road,
Woking, Surrey, GU21 5SB. The registered number of the Company is
03984070. There is no ultimate controlling party.
The interim financial statements are
prepared in pounds sterling.
2
Basis of preparation
The financial information for the
period ended 30 April 2024 set out in this interim report does not
constitute statutory accounts as defined in Section 434 of the
Companies Act 2006. The Group's statutory financial statements for
the year ended 31 October 2023 have been filed with the Registrar
of Companies. The auditor's report on those financial statements
was unqualified.
This interim report has been
prepared solely to provide additional information to shareholders
to assess the Group's strategies and the potential for those
strategies to succeed. The report should not be relied on by any
other party or for any other purpose.
The report contains certain
forward-looking statements. These statements are made by the
Directors in good faith based on the information available to them
up to the time of their approval of this report, but such
statements should be treated with caution due to the inherent
uncertainties, including both economic and business risk factors,
underlying any such forward-looking information.
The interim financial information
has been prepared using the same accounting policies and estimation
techniques as will be adopted in the Group financial statements for
the year ending 31 October 2024. The Group financial statements for
the year ended 31 October 2023 were prepared in accordance with
International Accounting Standards in conformity with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006 and International Financial
Reporting Standards as issued by the IASB. The Group has not
applied IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting', which is not
mandatory for AIM companies, in the preparation of these interim
financial statements.
Going concern
The Directors, having made suitable
enquiries and analysis of the accounts, consider that the Group has
adequate resources to continue in business for the foreseeable
future, taken to be a period of at least 12 months from the
approval of these interim financial statements. In making this
assessment, the Directors have considered the Group's budget, cash
flow forecasts, available banking facility with appropriate
headroom in facilities and financial covenants, and levels of
recurring revenue.
In October 2023 the Group refinanced
with the National Westminster Bank plc, HSBC Innovation Bank
Limited and Santander UK plc. The facilities comprise a revolving
credit facility of £75m and a £45m accordion and are committed
until October 2026. The Group retains significant liquidity with
cash and available committed bank facilities and has strong
headroom against financial covenants.
As part of the preparation of our
FY23 results, the Group performed detailed financial forecasting,
as well as severe stress-testing in our financial modelling, but
did not identify any credible scenarios that would cast doubt on
our ability to continue as a going concern. The financial
forecasting and stress testing assumptions remain valid at 30 April
2024.
On the basis of the above
considerations, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that
the Group will have adequate resources to continue in business for
the foreseeable future and therefore continue to adopt the going
concern basis in preparing the interim financial
statements.
3
Segmental analysis
During the period ended 30 April
2024, the Group was organised into three operating segments which
are detailed below.
IFRS 8 Operating Segments requires
the disclosure of reported segments in accordance with internal
reports provided to the Group's chief operating decision maker. The
Group considers its Board of Directors to be the chief operating
decision maker and therefore, has aligned the segmental disclosures
with the monthly reports provided to the Board of
Directors.
· Land
Property & Public Protection (LPPP) - delivering specialist
information management solutions and services to the public and
private sectors.
· Assets
- delivering engineering document management and control solutions
to asset intensive industry sectors.
· Communities (COMM) - delivering software solutions to clients
with social value running through their core.
Segment revenue comprises sales to
external customers and excludes gains arising on the disposal of
assets and finance income. Segment profit reported to the Board
represents the profit earned by each segment before the allocation
of taxation, Group interest payments and Group acquisition costs.
The assets and liabilities of the Group are not reviewed by the
chief operating decision maker on a segment basis. The Group does
not place reliance on any specific customer and has no individual
customer that generates 10% or more of its total Group
revenue.
The segment results for the six
months to 30 April 2024 were:
|
LPPP
£000
|
Assets
£000
|
COMM £000
|
Total
£000
|
Revenue
|
28,950
|
7,081
|
7,118
|
43,149
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted
EBITDA (note 10)
|
9,197
|
1,580
|
2,282
|
13,059
|
Depreciation & Amortisation
|
(3,945)
|
(1,147)
|
(1,008)
|
(6,100)
|
Restructuring costs
|
(16)
|
(5)
|
(5)
|
(26)
|
Acquisition
costs
|
(12)
|
-
|
-
|
(12)
|
Share
option costs
|
(770)
|
(204)
|
(251)
|
(1,225)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Segment
operating profit
|
4,454
|
224
|
1,018
|
5,696
|
Financing
costs
|
|
|
|
(23)
|
Operating
profit
|
|
|
|
5,673
|
Finance
income
|
|
|
|
186
|
Finance
costs
|
|
|
|
(1,302)
|
Profit
before tax
|
|
|
|
4,557
|
The corporate recharge to the
business unit is allocated on a head count basis.
The segmental information for the
six months to 30 April 2023 were:
|
LPPP
£000
|
Assets
£000
|
COMM £000
|
Total
£000
|
Revenue
|
21,458
|
7,177
|
7,146
|
35,781
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted
EBITDA (note 10)
|
7,735
|
1,811
|
2,557
|
12,103
|
Depreciation & Amortisation
|
(3,032)
|
(1,010)
|
(1,246)
|
(5,288)
|
Restructuring costs
|
(121)
|
(166)
|
(42)
|
(329)
|
Acquisition
costs
|
(340)
|
-
|
-
|
(340)
|
Share
option costs
|
(741)
|
(210)
|
(249)
|
(1,200)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Segment
operating profit
|
3,501
|
425
|
1,020
|
4,946
|
Financing
costs
|
|
|
|
(28)
|
Operating
profit
|
|
|
|
4,918
|
Finance
income
|
|
|
|
61
|
Finance
costs
|
|
|
|
(901)
|
Profit
before tax
|
|
|
|
4,078
|
The segment revenues by geographic
location were as follows:
|
|
H1 FY24
|
H1 FY23
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
Revenues from external
customers:
|
|
|
|
United
Kingdom
|
|
38,757
|
31,727
|
North
America
|
|
2,495
|
2,421
|
Europe
|
|
1,296
|
1,123
|
Rest of
World
|
|
601
|
510
|
|
|
43,149
|
35,781
|
4
Dividends
During the period a dividend was
paid in respect of the year ended 31 October 2023 final dividend of
0.6p per ordinary share at a total cost of £2,756,000 (H1 FY23:
0.5p per ordinary share at a total cost of
£2,268,000).
The directors do not propose a
dividend in respect of the interim period ended 30 April 2024 (H1
FY23: £Nil).
5
Tax on profit on ordinary activities
The tax
charge is made up as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
6 months to
30 April 2024
(unaudited)
|
6 months to
30 April 2023
(unaudited)
|
12 months
to
31 October
2023
(audited)
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
Current tax
|
|
|
|
UK
corporation tax on profit for the year
|
1,361
|
1,308
|
2,846
|
(Over) /
under provision in respect of prior periods
|
-
|
(20)
|
(90)
|
Total
current tax
|
1,361
|
1,288
|
2,756
|
|
|
|
|
Deferred
tax
|
|
|
|
Origination
and reversal of timing differences
|
(57)
|
(525)
|
(726)
|
Adjustment
for rate change
|
-
|
(31)
|
7
|
Adjustments
in respect of prior periods
|
-
|
8
|
201
|
Total
deferred tax
|
(57)
|
(548)
|
(518)
|
|
|
|
|
Total tax
charge
|
1,304
|
740
|
2,238
|
The UK trading losses remaining
unrecognised at the end of the period relate to brought-forward
losses in respect of loss-making trades. Unrelieved trading losses
of £493,674 (H1 FY23: £749,890) remain available to offset against
future taxable trading profits (excluding unrecognised losses of
£44,267 (H1 FY23: £58,806) in the UK and £15,736,014 (H1 FY23:
£14,433,730) overseas). The decision was made to maintain
derecognition of these assets on the basis these losses will not be
utilised over the next three to five years. Across the period the
total deferred tax asset in respect of unrelieved trading losses
reduced from £281,000 to £127,208. There are no expiry dates for
any of the unrelieved trading losses carried forward.
6
Earnings per share
The earnings per share is calculated
by reference to the earnings attributable to ordinary shareholders
divided by the weighted average number of shares in issue during
each period, as follows:
|
6 months to
30 April
2024
(unaudited)
|
6 months to
30 April
2023
(unaudited)
|
12 months
to
31 October
2023
(audited)
|
|
|
|
|
Profit for
the period (£000)
|
3,253
|
3,338
|
5,582
|
|
|
|
|
Basic earnings per
share
|
|
|
|
Weighted
average number of shares in issue
|
452,460,466
|
447,942,345
|
449,016,841
|
|
|
|
|
Basic
earnings per share
|
0.72p
|
0.75p
|
1.24p
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted
average number of shares in issue
|
452,460,466
|
447,942,345
|
449,016,841
|
Add
back:
|
|
|
|
Dilutive
share options
|
4,920,946
|
7,150,750
|
6,563,834
|
Weighted
average allotted, called up and fully paid share capital
|
457,381,412
|
455,093,095
|
455,580,675
|
|
|
|
|
Diluted earnings per
share
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Diluted
earnings per share
|
0.71p
|
0.73p
|
1.23p
|
Adjusted earnings per share
|
6 months to
30 April
2024
(unaudited)
|
6 months to
30 April
2023
(unaudited)
|
12 months
to
31 October
2023
(audited)
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted
profit for the period (£000) (see note 10)
|
5,781
|
6,075
|
11,917
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted
average number of shares in issue - basic
|
452,460,466
|
447,942,345
|
449,016,841
|
Weighted
average number of shares in issue - diluted
|
457,381,412
|
455,093,095
|
455,580,675
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted
basic earnings per share
|
1.28p
|
1.36p
|
2.65p
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted
diluted earnings per share
|
1.26p
|
1.33p
|
2.62p
|
7
Intangibles
|
Goodwill
|
Customer
relationships
|
Trade names
|
Software
|
Development
costs
|
Total
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 31
October 2023
|
61,555
|
19,692
|
1,840
|
9,601
|
16,097
|
108,785
|
Additions
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
3,747
|
3,748
|
Amortisation
|
-
|
(1,075)
|
(175)
|
(808)
|
(2,955)
|
(5,013)
|
At 30 April
2024
|
61,555
|
18,617
|
1,665
|
8,794
|
16,889
|
107,520
|
No impairment charge was incurred
during H1 FY24 (H1 FY23: £Nil).
8
Long-term incentive plan (LTIP)
During the period, 5,231,494 were
granted under the LTIP.
The Group recognised a total charge
of £1,225,000 (H1 FY23: £1,200,000) for equity-settled share-based
payment transactions related to the LTIP during the period. The
total cost was in relation to outstanding share options and share
options granted in the year.
The number
of options in the LTIP scheme is as follows:
|
30 April
2024
|
30 April
2023
|
31 October
2023
|
|
No.
|
No.
|
No.
|
|
|
|
|
Outstanding
at the beginning of the period
|
19,164,949
|
16,978,852
|
16,978,852
|
Granted
|
5,231,494
|
-
|
6,869,836
|
Forfeited
|
(422,448)
|
-
|
(1,234,756)
|
Exercised
|
(3,132,658)
|
(1,626,974)
|
(3,448,983)
|
Outstanding
at the end of the period
|
20,841,337
|
15,351,878
|
19,164,949
|
Exercisable
at the end of the period
|
785,530
|
3,473,759
|
2,628,342
|
9
Post balance sheet events
During the period Idox plc commenced
a capital reduction process in order to cancel £41,558,000 from the
share premium account and £1,112,000 from the capital redemption
reserve which is subsequently transferred to retained earnings. The
copy of the order confirming the cancellation of the share premium
account and capital redemption reserve was approved by the High
Court and registered by the Registrar of Companies for England and
Wales on 9th May 2024.
11
Alternative Performance Measures
Following the issuance of the
Guidelines on Alternative Performance Measures (APMs) by the
European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) in June 2015, the
Group has included this section in its Interim Report with the aim
of providing transparency and clarity on the measures adopted
internally to assess performance. Throughout this report, the Group
has presented financial performance measures which are considered
most relevant to Idox and are used to manage the Group's
performance. These financial performance measures are chosen to
provide a balanced view of the Group's operations and are
considered useful to investors as these measures provide relevant
information on the Group's past or future performance, position, or
cash flows. The APMs, which are not defined or specified under
International Financial Reporting Standards, adopted by the Group
are also commonly used in the sectors it operates in and therefore
serve as a useful aid for investors to compare Idox's performance
to its peers. The Board believes that disclosing these performance
measures enhances investors' ability to evaluate and assess the
underlying financial performance of the Group's operations and the
related key business drivers. These financial performance measures
are also aligned to measures used internally to assess business
performance in the Group's budgeting process and when determining
compensation. They are also consistent with
how the business is assessed by our debt and equity
providers.
We believe that these measures
provide a user of the Interim Report with important additional
information. The following table reconciles these APMs to statutory
equivalents:
|
6 months to 30 April 2024
(unaudited)
|
6 months to 30 April 2023
(unaudited)
|
12 months to 31 October
2023
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted
EBITDA:
|
|
|
|
Profit before taxation
|
4,557
|
4,078
|
7,820
|
Depreciation &
Amortisation
|
6,100
|
5,288
|
10,955
|
Restructuring costs
|
26
|
329
|
378
|
Acquisition
costs
|
12
|
340
|
746
|
Financing
costs
|
23
|
28
|
396
|
Share
option costs
|
1,225
|
1,200
|
2,631
|
Net finance
costs
|
1,116
|
840
|
1,524
|
Adjusted
EBITDA
|
13,059
|
12,103
|
24,450
|
|
|
|
|
Free
cashflow:
|
|
|
|
Net
cashflow from operating activities after taxation
|
17,666
|
17,136
|
18,599
|
Capex
|
(4,292)
|
(3,785)
|
(8,522)
|
Lease
payments
|
(400)
|
(423)
|
(936)
|
Free
cashflow
|
12,974
|
12,928
|
9,141
|
|
|
|
|
Net debt /
(cash):
|
|
|
|
Cash
|
(18,217)
|
(23,722)
|
(14,824)
|
Bank
borrowings
|
13,760
|
11,245
|
18,291
|
Bonds
in issue
|
11,049
|
11,362
|
11,207
|
Net
debt / (cash)
|
6,592
|
(1,115)
|
14,674
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted profit for the
period and adjusted earnings per share:
|
|
|
|
Profit for
the period
|
3,253
|
3,338
|
5,582
|
Add
back:
|
|
|
|
Amortisation from acquired intangibles
|
2,026
|
1,769
|
3,622
|
Impairment
|
-
|
-
|
168
|
Restructuring costs
|
26
|
329
|
746
|
Acquisition costs
|
12
|
340
|
378
|
Financing costs
|
23
|
28
|
396
|
Share
option costs
|
1,225
|
1,200
|
2,631
|
Tax
effect
|
(784)
|
(929)
|
(1,606)
|
Adjusted profit for the period
|
5,781
|
6,075
|
11,917
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted average number of shares in issue -
basic
|
452,460,466
|
447,942,345
|
449,016,841
|
Weighted average number of shares in issue -
diluted
|
457,381,412
|
455,093,095
|
455,580,675
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted basic earnings per share
|
1.28p
|
1.36p
|
2.65p
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted diluted earnings per share
|
1.26p
|
1.33p
|
2.62p
|
The Group adjusts for certain
non-underlying items which the Board believes assists in
understanding the performance achieved by the Group. These are
non-underlying items as they do not relate to the underlying
performance of the Group. Profit before taxation is adjusted for
depreciation, amortisation, restructuring costs, acquisition costs,
financing costs, share option costs and net finance costs to
calculate a figure for EBITDA which is commonly quoted by our peer
group and allows users to compare our performance with those of our
peers. This also provides the users of the accounts with a view of
the underlying performance of the Group which is comparable year on
year.
Depreciation and amortisation are
omitted as they relate to assets acquired by the Group which may be
subject to differing treatment within the peer group and so this
allows meaningful comparisons to be made.
Amortisation on acquired intangibles
omitted in order to improve the comparability between acquired and
organic operations as the latter does not recognise internally
generated intangible assets. Adjusting for amortisation provides a
more consistent basis for comparison between the two.
Restructuring costs, acquisition
costs, financing costs and net finance costs are omitted as they
are considered to be one off in nature or do not represent the
underlying trade of the Group. The items within these categories
are assessed on a regular basis to ensure that they do not contain
items which would be deemed to represent the underlying trade of
the business.
Share option costs are excluded as
they do not represent the underlying trade of the business and
fluctuate subject to external market conditions and number of
shares. This would distort year-on-year comparison of the
figures.
Profit after taxation is adjusted for
amortisation from acquired intangibles, restructuring costs,
acquisition costs, financing costs and share option costs, as well
as considering the tax impact of these items. To exclude the items
without excluding the tax impact would not give the complete
picture. This enables the user of the accounts to compare the core
operational performance of the Group. Adjusted earnings per share
takes into account all of the factors above and provides users of
the Interim Report information on the performance of the business
that management is more directly able to influence and on a
comparable basis for year to year. Readers of the Interim Report
are encouraged to review this report in its entirety.