ILIKA plc
("Ilika", the "Company", or
the "Group")
Full Year
Results
Ilika (AIM: IKA), an independent global expert solid-state
battery technology, announces its results for the year ended
30 April 2024 (the "Period").
During the Period,
Ilika continued to develop and commercialise its
thin-film Stereax® miniature solid state batteries ("SSBs") for
powering implantable medical devices and industrial wireless
sensors in specialist environments, and significantly progressed
the transfer of manufacturing to US-headquartered Cirtec Medical LLC ("Cirtec"). During
the financial year, Ilika also achieved
significant milestones in the development roadmap of its
large-format Goliath cells for electric vehicles ("EV") and
cordless appliances.
Operational highlights:
Stereax
· First customer
shipments of M300 batteries from UK pilot manufacturing
facility.
· Entered ten-year
licensing agreement and technology transfer with Cirtec.
· Despatched
key equipment and substantially completed
installation in the Cirtec facility to enable manufacture of the
Stereax cells.
· Continued
collaboration with Cirtec to support the development plans and
launch schedules of 21 Stereax customers.
Goliath
· Reached
significant development milestones
o Achieved D4 design freeze and
Li-ion energy density parity, making strong progress on the
technology roadmap and meeting development milestones on
time.
· Strong scale-up
progress
o Faraday Battery Challenge:
24-month, £8.2m grant-funded HISTORY project, with input from BMW
and Fortescue WAE.
o Automotive Transformation Fund
16-month, £2.7m grant-supported SiSTEM project, collaborating with
Mpac plc and UK Battery Industrialisation Centre
("UKBIC").
o Welcomed Agratas (Tata Group's
global battery business) as a full partner to the SiSTEM
project.
· Production-intent
equipment trialled at vendor sites and installed at pilot facility
to provide larger volumes of evaluation cells to
customers.
· Bi-lateral
12-month technology collaboration agreement with Agratas, and
agreement outlining potential longer-term collaboration through to
gigafactory implementation.
· Continued
interaction with automotive and consumer OEMs globally - pipeline
of evaluation agreements with 17 companies
· Portfolio of 62
granted patents, with 10 new grants in the reporting period; four
additional international filings submitted.
Financial highlights:
·
Turnover £2.1m (2023: £0.7m) with other income of
£0.5m (2023: £0.1m) giving a Total Income of £2.6m (2023:
£0.8m)
·
EBITDA Loss adjusted for share-based payments for
the year £4.1m (2023: £7m)
·
Loss per share 3.03p (2023: 4.61p)
·
Cash, cash equivalents and longer term bank
deposits of £11.9m (2023: £15.9m)
Post-period end highlights:
· Commenced testing
of initial batch of P1 Goliath prototype batteries in a
customer-sponsored programme following the successful completion of
production and in-house testing.
· Successful £2.3
million (gross) fundraising to support the Goliath roadmap and
Stereax commercialisation.
· Completed the
delivery of its first batch of P1 Goliath batteries for customer
testing by a tier 1 automotive company.
Outlook:
· Cirtec contract
represents most immediate commercialisation opportunity, allowing
fulfilment of order book and creation of further commercial
opportunities.
· Stereax to focus,
post US installation, on commissioning activities and engineering
lots to fully qualify the process in readiness for production of
commercial samples, expected in late CY2024.
· Plans to increase
commercial collaboration alongside Cirtec in the year
ahead.
· Clear Goliath
roadmap: aim to reach the D8 development milestone by the end of
the HISTORY programme grant in Q1 2025, underpinning licencing
opportunities.
· Pre-pilot
production facility targets capacity increase to 1.5
MWh/a.
· Commercial
interest and government grant support expected to intensify as the
Goliath product continues to mature.
Commenting on the results Ilika's Chief Executive Officer,
Graeme Purdy, said, "We are proud of
the further success we have made whilst developing our solid state
battery technology. Both of our product lines, Stereax and Goliath,
have seen significant operational progress as we continue to work
towards commercialisation.
"Our contract with Cirtec is an enormous achievement and
represents a significant opportunity to scale Stereax at pace
through a partner that boasts a strong track record in the
commercialisation of miniature medical devices. We are confident
that the partnership positions Ilika well to deliver high quality,
reliable and scalable supplies of Stereax batteries to our
customers.
"Meanwhile, the global prospects for EVs, and Goliath, remain
promising. Following the team's achievements we expect to be in the
position to manufacture and deliver
fully characterised P1 test pouch cells to customers in H2 2024.
Based on our D4 design freeze, these cells have the potential to
offer significant benefits not attainable with current EV battery
technology. The Board expects both
commercial interest and government grant support to intensify as
the Goliath product continues to mature. Discussions with
commercial and grant partners are in progress and the development
programmes are being aligned to the timelines planned for market
roll-out by the OEMs involved. Current estimates are that the UK EV
battery market will be worth ca. £9bn by 2030 and Ilika is
positioning its technology to be ready for that
opportunity."
Analyst Briefing
The management team will be hosting a
hybrid analyst briefing today at 9.30am. Analysts who wish to
attend should contact Nick Rome at Walbrook PR on +44(0)20 7933
8780 or email ilika@walbrookpr.com to
register.
Investor Presentation
An investor presentation will be held
this afternoon at 4.30pm and will be hosted through the digital
platform, Investor Meet Company. Investors can sign up to Investor Meet Company for free and
add to meet Ilika plc via the following link: https://www.investormeetcompany.com/ilika-plc/register-investor
or for more information please contact Walbrook PR
at ilika@walbrookpr.com.
For
more information contact:
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Ilika plc
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www.ilika.com
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Graeme Purdy, Chief
Executive
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Via
Walbrook PR
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Jason Stewart, Chief Financial
Officer
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Panmure Liberum Limited (Nomad and Joint
Broker)
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Tel: 020
3100 2000
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Andrew Godber, John More,
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Nikhil Varghese, Josh
Borlant
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Joh.
Berenberg, Gossler & Co. KG (Joint Broker)
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Tel: 020
3207 8700
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Mark Whitmore, Detlir
Elezi,
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Natasha Ninkov
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Walbrook PR Ltd
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Tel: 020
7933 8780 / Ilika@walbrookpr.com
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Nick Rome, Charlotte Edgar, Joe Walker
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About Ilika plc - https://www.ilika.com.
Ilika specialises in the developing
and commercialisation of solid state batteries. The Company's
mission is to rapidly develop leading-edge IP, manufacture and
license solid state batteries for markets that cannot be addressed
with conventional batteries due to their safety, charge rates,
energy density and life limits. The Company achieves this by
using ceramic-based lithium-ion technology that is inherently safe
in manufacture and usage, higher thermal tolerance and easier to
recycle which differentiates our products from existing
batteries.
The Company has two product lines.
Its Stereax batteries which are designed for powering miniature
medical implants, industrial wireless sensors and specialist
internet of Things (IoT) applications and the Goliath large format
batteries designed for EV cars and cordless appliances.
ILIKA plc
STRATEGIC
REPORT
Chairman, Prof. Keith
Jackson's statement
This financial year was one of
significant operational progress for Ilika as it continues to
develop its solid state battery technology. The Board remains
excited by the opportunity ahead and is confident in the Company's
commercialisation strategy and future potential.
Goliath batteries meeting the Li-ion
energy density cannot be understated. Firstly, the achievement
opens the expectation of batteries which can be developed to
outperform conventional batteries for energy density, with the
inherent additional benefits of a wider range of operating
temperatures and a stable chemistry allowing simplification of
battery packages. For customers this creates opportunities for
smaller, lighter and higher performance solutions for vehicle and
device applications. Secondly, the intricacies of solid state
battery should not be underestimated. This allows us to build a
wide portfolio of intellectual property including patents, trade
secrets and know how, which protects our business and our
investors' commitments. Those same intricacies make the development
and timing of the technology complex. The team is constantly
working on not just its technical understanding but also on the
most effective development and planning processes to deliver
technical advances.
The D4 batteries arrived and met
expectations in a timely manner. Our team's ability and commitment,
and their effort and success in creating improved development
processes and controls continue to be excellent. Development
of these batteries is also very much a wider aligned effort and the
importance and value of grant funding from the Faraday Battery
Challenge and the Automotive Transformation Fund is clear. The
contribution from our suppliers and collaboration partners like
MPAC and UK BIC and project steering from BMW, Fortescue WAE and
Agratas joining as partner on SiSTEM and the potential
collaboration on a gigafactory ensure our efforts are well aligned
with market requirements.
Regarding Stereax, the Cirtec license
agreement shortens and clarifies the route to market for medical
devices. Device companies want a platform with an integrated
battery and Cirtec can do this using our batteries, providing
platforms to end users. These integrated platforms allow for an
optimised and physically minimised solution, essential for medical
applications, and fully exploiting our USPs. While the technology
transfer of our equipment to Cirtec (excluding cathode production)
is time consuming and complex given we have developed so much
know-how and IP around the equipment and process, we remain
confident this approach will create the best product opportunities
and license returns for the Company and our shareholders. As
always, and as I have come to expect, the Ilika team has worked
tirelessly on the technology and subsequent equipment transfer, and
to train the relevant personnel at Cirtec. The focus is now on
completion of the transfer, producing the platforms and validating
the customer expectations.
Outlook
Ilika's signed contract with Cirtec
represents the most immediate commercialisation opportunity, which
will enable fulfilment of the order book and create further
opportunities for commercial engagement. The installation of
Ilika's Stereax manufacturing equipment in Cirtec's US facility is
nearing completion, at which point the focus will shift to the
finalisation of commissioning activities and running engineering
lots to fully qualify the Stereax manufacturing process in
readiness for commencement of commercial sample production for its
customers, which is estimated to begin towards the end of
CY2024.
The Company has demonstrated strong
progress as a result of its strategy and has a clear development
roadmap for its Goliath cells. MVP aims to reach the D8 development
milestone by the end of the HISTORY programme grant in Q1 CY2025,
which will underpin future licencing opportunities.
The Board expects both commercial
interest and government grant support to intensify as the Goliath
product continues to mature.
In parallel, Ilika plans to increase
the capacity of the Company's existing pre-pilot production
facility using automation and larger scale items of equipment. It
is anticipated that it will reach an installed capacity of 1.5
MWh/a, which will allow Ilika to scale production volumes and
mature its technology to the level required to respond to
automotive requests for quotation ("RFQs") by the end of calendar
year 2025.
Jeremy Millard
Director
Principal Activities
Ilika has continued to develop and
commercialise its cutting-edge solid state batteries. The
Company's mission is to rapidly develop leading-edge IP, and
manufacture and license solid state batteries for markets that
cannot be addressed with conventional batteries due to their
safety, charge rates, energy density and life limits. It will
achieve this using ceramic-based lithium-ion technology that is
inherently safe in manufacture and usage, has higher thermal
tolerance and is easier to recycle, which differentiates
Ilika's products from existing batteries.
Business Strategy
The Group's revenue model involves
three phases:
a) Commercially funded and
grant-funded development of small quantities of batteries for
customer evaluation on Company-operated pilot lines;
b) Scale-up to mid-scale
manufacturing facilities to demonstrate product and process
robustness, while also supporting initial commercialisation;
and
c) Commercial collaborations,
including licensing the technology, for large volume
production.
Ilika has scaled-up its Stereax
technology to a mid-scale manufacturing facility and initial
deliveries of batteries were made in H1 CY 2023.
Ilika has entered into a 10-year
agreement for Cirtec Medical LLC to manufacture Stereax under
license. Ilika's Goliath programme is currently in the first
commercial phase, where product development is being supported by
grant-funded programmes and commercial collaborations.
To support Ilika's commitment to
ESG, it maintains an ESG Committee with Board-level leadership.
Taking a risk-managed approach, all aspects of the business
incorporate environmental sustainability, social responsibility and
appropriate corporate governance. ESG performance is reported at
all levels within the organisation and monitored at Board
level.
Introduction to Solid state
Batteries
Ilika has been working with solid
state battery technology since 2008 and has developed a type of
lithium-ion battery, which, instead of using liquid or polymer
electrolyte, uses a ceramic ion conductor. Ilika's solid state
batteries have a number of benefits over traditional lithium-ion
batteries, including the following:
· Non-flammable,
which eliminates the need for containment packaging;
· Faster
charging;
· Increased energy
density, reducing their size to up to half the volume and weight
for a given electrical charge;
· Longer storage
without loss of charge.
Ilika has developed two product
lines:
1) Miniature solid state devices designed
for powering wireless sensor applications (Industrial IOT) and
medical devices (Stereax);
2) Large format cells for consumer
appliances and automotive power (Goliath).
Miniature Stereax
batteries
Ilika's miniature Stereax cells are
differentiated from other solid state technology through their
selection of materials and an efficient, low temperature
evaporation process that is capable of higher manufacturing rates
than other existing solid state routes. This results in the
following benefits relative to previous solid state battery
designs:
· Lower cost of
manufacture by avoiding use of expensive sputtering
targets;
· Long cycle life
through use of a silicon anode;
· Less encapsulation
required;
· High temperature
resilience.
The unique benefits of Stereax
batteries have been optimised for medical implants and industrial
applications. Miniature Stereax batteries can enable medical
devices in a way that is currently not possible with conventional
lithium-ion batteries. Their compact, high-energy density and
high-power characteristics make them useful for a range of medical
implant applications covering blood pressure monitoring to
neuro-stimulation.
Stereax Manufacturing
Scale-up and Commercialisation
Following substantial completion of
Stereax process qualification in CY2022, Ilika demonstrated it was
able to run the complete manufacturing process from beginning to
end and an understanding was gained of process stability and
reproducibility. Product qualification was initiated, and initial
samples were issued to customers.
In August 2023, Ilika announced a
10-year agreement with Cirtec, an industry-leading strategic
outsourcing partner of complex medical devices including minimally
invasive and active implantable devices, to transfer, under
license, Stereax mm-scale battery manufacturing to Cirtec's
facility in Lowell, Massachusetts, US.
Contract headlines
include:
· Exclusivity for
Cirtec in the field of medical devices designed to drive full
utilisation of Cirtec's installed capacity.
· Profit sharing
during the initial period followed by royalty-bearing manufacturing
aligned with industry norms, calculated on individual battery
volumes.
· Retention of the
cathode deposition process and back-end battery formation at
Ilika's UK pilot facility as a sub-contract service to
Cirtec.
· Transfer of
machine sets to the US for Cirtec to operate on loan, to enable a
quicker technology transfer and qualification process.
Ilika is focusing on advanced
technology development and IP licensing to support Cirtec's
manufacturing and commercialisation activities. This partnership
will reinforce Cirtec's ongoing activities in system level
miniaturisation for the medical device industry.
Benefits of this partnership to Ilika include:
· Further validation
of Stereax's capabilities
· Manufacturing
partnership delivering economy of scale and ability to rapidly ramp
production.
· Expanded business
development team bringing additional commercial
momentum.
Once the agreement was signed, Ilika
shipped its Stereax manufacturing equipment to Cirtec to enable
rapid commencement of operations. The equipment has now been safely
received by Cirtec and installation is substantially complete.
Cirtec is now finalising commissioning of the equipment and shortly
intends to start production of engineering lots. Once the process
is established at the Cirtec facility, batches of products will be
produced for highly accelerated life testing ("HALT") and
reliability testing. HALT is designed to understand the failure
modes of the product in case opportunities can be identified to
increase product robustness. Reliability testing involves creating
statistically relevant data sets to underpin the product
specification sheets. Production of costumer samples is expected to
commence by the end of CY2024.
Ilika continues to work with Cirtec
to support a portfolio of 21 current Stereax customers. Demand from
applications such as smart orthopedics, orthodontics,
neurostimulation and smart contact lenses has created opportunities
in the medical device sector, which is the sector generating the
strongest demand and accordingly the Company is increasing its
commercial collaboration alongside Cirtec in the year ahead.
Commercial ramp up in this space usually takes three to five years,
depending on the regulatory classification of the device.
As demand for Stereax increases over the coming
years, Cirtec intends to expand Stereax production
capacity.
Large Format Goliath
Batteries
Ilika's Goliath batteries are
differentiated from other solid state prototype cells through the
Company's choice of materials, cell architecture and manufacturing
process. The key materials choices to be made by SSB developers
relate to the selection of cathode, electrolyte and anodes.
Different developers have selected distinct combinations of these
materials to achieve an outcome suitable for their target markets.
Ilika has chosen materials that have the potential to enable longer
range vehicles with battery packs that last longer and can be
recycled more easily.
Ilika's initial target market for
Goliath in automotive is the luxury performance market, which is
less cost-sensitive than higher volume segments and is willing to
pay a premium for the enhanced vehicle range. To address this
market, Ilika is driving forward its Goliath development programme.
In November 2023, Ilika reached a point of maturity it refers to as
its D4 development point, which is a design-freeze milestone in the
Goliath roadmap upon which Ilika's first prototype for customer
release, P1, is based. The P1 prototype is an intermediate
milestone on Ilika's roadmap to its minimum viable product ("MVP")
in 2025. The P1 Goliath prototype is a solid state pouch cell made
from readily available materials including a
lithium-nickel-manganese-cobalt oxide ("NMC") cathode and a silicon
anode.
Reaching the D4 development point is
an important milestone for the Company, effectively marking the
start of Goliath's productisation journey; it means that a number
of key data sets, including energy density and power density, have
been met while showing that the Company is on track to achieve
further improvements. Given the data sets that are now achievable,
the Company is able to create P1 samples, which comprise multilayer
stacks, for sale to OEMs for testing.
Over the first six months of CY
2024, Ilika has manufactured and tested batches of pouch cells
based on the D4 development point prior to delivering fully
characterised P1 cells to customers in H2 2024.
In parallel, Ilika has continued to
progress its roadmap, and in December 2023 it was able to announce
it had reached its 2023 stated intermediate technology development
target of parity with lithium-ion energy density.
Ilika is currently in discussions
with its customer base for Goliath batteries, which is primarily
automotive OEMs, but also includes Tier 1 automotive suppliers and
consumer appliance companies.
Work is continuing on Ilika's
roadmap through to MVP, for which the corresponding D8 development
point will be achieved by the end of the HISTORY project in Q1
2025. The MVP, or P2 prototypes, will be cells meeting
customer-agreed specifications for EVs, underpinning licensing
opportunities.
Ilika is currently implementing a
plan to increase the capacity of its existing pre-pilot production
facility using automation and larger scale items of equipment, such
as a roll-to-roll coater, to provide larger volumes of evaluation
cells to customers. Ilika is targeting an installed capacity of 1.5
MWh/a to allow it to scale production volumes and mature its
technology to the level required to respond to automotive requests
for quotation (RFQ) by the end of 2025. Ilika's experience working
with automotive partners has shown that the industry expects
suppliers to have reached what it defines as A-Sample readiness to
respond to RFQs. Beyond 1.5 MWh/a, at B- and C-Sample readiness and
volumes, Ilika intends to work with manufacturing partners such as
UKBIC to scale to higher levels of production capacity on
production-intent equipment i.e., equipment that could be used for
mass production.
Goliath
Funding
Ilika has financed its Goliath
technology development programme with equity funding supplemented
by grant funding from the Faraday Battery Challenge ("FBC") and the
Advanced Propulsion Centre ("APC"). In the first half of the
current financial year, Ilika's development efforts have been
supported specifically by the continuation of the FBC 24-month,
£8.2m grant-funded HISTORY project, steered with input from BMW and
Fortescue WAE, to integrate high silicon content electrodes into
Goliath. In parallel, Ilika has been trialing production-intent
equipment at vendor sites and its pilot facility in the UK. Since
October 2023, this scale-up work has been supported by the
Automotive Transformation Fund 16-month, £2.7m grant-supported
SiSTEM project, in which Ilika is collaborating with Mpac plc and
UKBIC. Tata Sons subsidiary Agratas joined the SiSTEM project in
April 2024. Ilika and Agratas also announced that they had entered
into a bi-lateral technology collaboration agreement and a Heads of
Terms covering a potential longer-term collaboration through to
gigafactory implementation.
Furthermore, Ilika continues to
interact with a portfolio of 17 automotive and consumer appliance
OEMs globally, with a view to intensifying interactions through
both grant-supported and commercially funded collaborations as the
Goliath technology matures.
Geo-political Tensions and Conflicts
Conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle
East have created inflationary pressures across the supply chain,
but there is no specific consumable or product from conflict
regions upon which Ilika is particularly reliant. The impact on
global energy pricing and specifically the UK energy market did
have the potential to impact the Stereax pilot facility, which the
Board mitigated through early interaction with Cirtec and the
outsourcing activity.
Patent Position
Building Ilika's intellectual
property portfolio in solid state batteries has continued to be a
focus this year. Ilika believes its patents ring-fence and protect
critical IP to avoid competitors working around a single patent.
Ilika now maintains a portfolio of 62 granted patents, and holds
trade secrets in solid state batteries.
Quality Management System
Ilika has maintained its
certification for ISO 9001:2015, which is the
world's most widely recognized QMS and helps organisations to meet
the expectations and needs of their customers. The certification
promotes the development of continual improvement, customer
satisfaction, traceability and international best
practices.
Environmental Management System
The Company has also maintained its
ISO 14001:2015 certification, which is part of a family of
standards developed by the International Organisation for
Standardisation. It specifies the requirements for an environmental
management system that an organisation can use to enhance its
environmental performance. The certification confirms that
environmental impact is being continuously monitored and
improved.
Environmental, Social & Governance
("ESG")
The Board takes a proactive approach
to ESG matters looking to adopt the best practice and
recommendations from the Quoted Companies Alliance ("QCA")
Corporate Governance Code. The Group is committed to achieving a
real and sustainable positive impact on the broader community by
adopting environmentally responsible policies so it can demonstrate
a responsible and balanced approach to corporate
governance.
Key
performance indicators ("KPIs")
The Board monitors the Group's
progress against a set of KPIs. Technical KPIs benchmark battery
development milestones and patent applications. Commercial KPIs
link the technical development programmes to the sales pipeline and
engagement of commercialisation partners. Operational KPIs ensure
that overheads and cash resources are tightly
controlled.
The most important financial KPIs are
the cash position, turnover and profitability of the Group, which
remain under constant focus and are considered in the financial
review.
Section 172 Statement
Section 172 of the Companies Act 2006
requires Directors to take into consideration the interests of
stakeholders and other matters in their decision making. The
Directors continue to have regard to the interests of the Group's
employees and other stakeholders, the impact of its activities on
the community, the environment and the Group's reputation for good
business conduct, when making decisions. In this context, acting in
good faith and fairly, the Directors consider what is most likely
to promote the success of the Group for its members in the long
term. The Board regularly reviews the Group's principal
stakeholders and how it engages with them. This is achieved through
information provided by management and also by direct engagement
with stakeholders themselves.
Why
engagement is important
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Engagement process
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Strategic decisions in the year
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Investors
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To
communicate and secure support for our long-term strategic
objectives effectively and to promote long-term
holdings.
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AGM,
analyst presentations, institutional investor presentations. Use of
Investor Meet Company and Directors' Talk platforms to extend reach
to retail investors.
Trading on
OTCQX best market to extend coverage to US retail
investors.
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Decision to
hold a Capital Markets Day for investors, prospects and
analysts.
Successful
equity placing to support continued collaboration with Cirtec and
to support the grant-assisted development of Goliath through to
partner commercial prototypes (A-Samples).
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Employees
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To deliver
our long-term strategic objectives. To promote our culture, purpose
and values and support their well-being whilst maintaining low
turnover and high productivity rates
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Transparent
cascading Key Performance Indicators that link directly to the
company objectives.
Twice
yearly performance evaluations with objective setting and
reviews.
Formal
policies and procedures.
Quarterly,
all-company, update meetings.
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Issue of
EMI stock options.
Performance
related pay review.
Implementation of private medical insurance.
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Community and environment
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To ensure activities are socially and
environmentally responsible and meet the highest
standards.
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Promotion
of the employee-led "Green Champions", a cross-company working
group to ensure green initiatives are raised and followed
through.
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Maintained
ISO accreditations (9001 and 14001). Continued use of electricity
solely from renewable sources.
Maintained
an electric vehicle salary sacrifice scheme.
Undertook
carbon offset program to minimise carbon footprint.
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Business relationships
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Engagement
process
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Strategic decisions in the
year
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To enable balanced decisions which
incorporate viewpoints of customers, suppliers and regulators and
ensure Company's integrity, brand and reputation are
upheld.
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Attendance
at conferences and customer and supplier meetings.
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10-year
agreement with Cirtec Medical for Stereax manufacturing.
Grant-supported SiSTEM collaboration with Mpac, UKBIC and
Agratas.
Bi-lateral
12-month technology collaboration agreement with Agratas and Heads
of Terms for potential longer-term collaboration through to
gigafactory implementation.
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FINANCIAL REVIEW
The Financial Review should be read
in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements of the
Company and Ilika Technologies Limited (together the 'Group') and
the notes thereto on pages 38 to 60. The consolidated financial
statements are presented under international accounting standards
in conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006. The
financial statements of the Company continue to be prepared in
accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards in
conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006 and are
set out on pages 61 to 65.
Statement of Comprehensive Income
Turnover
Turnover, all from continuing
activities, for the year ended 30th April 2024 was £2.1m
(2023: £0.7m). This includes £2.1m of grant income recognised from
two projects that the company has in progress with Innovate UK
(2023: £0.7m from four programmes). Non-grant turnover in the year
was £0.0m (2023: £0.0m).
Other Operating
Income
The Company
has benefitted from Research & Development Expenditure Credit
(RDEC) of £0.5m (2023: £0.1m).
Administrative expenses and losses for the
period
Administrative costs for the year
reduced from £8.9m in 2023 to £7.4m in 2024. While direct R&D
expenditure has reduced to £3.5m (2023: £4.1m). The implementation
of the Stereax Licencing agreement and the reduction in costs
associated with enacting the technology transfer elements of the
contract have enabled a reduction in the operational costs of the
Stereax activity contributing to the reduction in overall
expenditure. Staff costs reduced from £5.2m in 2023 to £4.8m in
2024 reflecting the Stereax licencing and associated adjustment in
staffing levels to support the ongoing needs of both Stereax and
Goliath R&D activities.
Average staff numbers during the year
reduced from 72 to 68 which reflects a reduction in the staff
required to support ongoing R&D activities for Stereax
following the Cirtec licencing agreement offset by growth in the
Goliath team as we scale this product line towards
commercialisation.
Development costs £0.8m of were
capitalised in the year compared to £1m in 2023.The share-based
payment charge reduced from £442k in 2023 to £383k in 2024,
reflecting the timing of options being issued and the departure of
a number of long standing employees.
The underlying level of loss that is
measured by Earnings Before Interest, Tax, Depreciation and
Amortisation and Share-based payments (adjusted EBITDA) shows a
reduction in loss from £7m in 2023 to a loss of £4.1m in
2024.
Statement of financial position and cash
flows
At 30th April 2024,
current assets amounted to £14.8m (2023: £19.1m), including cash,
cash equivalents and bank deposits of £11.9m (2023:
£15.9m).
The
principal elements of the £4.4m decrease in net assets
were:
· Operating cash
outflow of £4.1m (2023: £7m);
· Capital
expenditure on intangible development costs, plant, property and
equipment of £1.7m (2023: £1.4m) which mostly relates to the
capitalisation of Stereax R&D expenditure;
· Increased recovery
of R&D tax claims of £1.7m (2023: £1.4m);
PRINCIPAL RISKS AND
UNCERTAINTIES
Commercial
risk
The Group is subject to competition
from competitors who may develop more advanced and less expensive
alternative technology platforms, both for existing products and
for those products currently under development.
The Group seeks to reduce this risk
by continually assessing competitive technologies and competitors.
The Group seeks to commercialise its batteries through multiple
channels to reduce overreliance on individual partners and, in
agreements with partners, it ensures that there are
commercialisation milestones which must be met for the partner to
retain the rights to commercialise the intellectual
property.
Financial
risk
The Group is reliant on a small
number of significant customers, partners and grant funding bodies.
Termination of these agreements or grant polices could have a
material adverse effect on the Group's results or operations or
financial condition. The Group expects to incur further operating
losses as progress on development programmes continue.
The Group seeks to reduce this risk
by broadening the number of customers and partners and thereby
reduce reliance on individual significant companies and by
leveraging its IP and resources over multiple projects. The Group
applies for Research and Development tax credits to help mitigate
its investment in these activities.
Intellectual property
risk
The Group faces the risk that
intellectual property rights necessary to exploit research and
development efforts may not be adequately secured or defended. The
Group's intellectual property may also become obsolete before the
products and services can be fully commercialised.
The Group reduces this risk by
contracting specialist patent agents and attorneys with extensive
global experience of patenting and licensing.
Dependence on senior
management and key staff
Certain members of staff are
considered vital to the successful development of the business.
Failure to continue to attract and retain such highly skilled
individuals could adversely affect operational results.
The Group seeks to reduce this risk
by offering appropriate incentives to staff through competitive
salary packages and participation in long-term share option schemes
and a good working environment.
Conflict risk
The ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and
the Middle East have created inflationary pressures across the
supply chain, but there is no specific consumable or product from
the regions upon which Ilika is particularly reliant. Current
inflation forecasts have been factored into the forward-looking
financial forecasts.
Environmental, Social and Governance Risks
The Group has developed products
which rely on materials and supply chains which may be impacted by
changes in environmental social and governance factors. Changing
regulatory requirements may bring additional cost to the
development and implementation of our products.
The Group seeks to minimise risks by
following a proactive approach to all ESG items, ensuring that we
source from appropriate supply chain partners who match our own
ethos and values. The Group engages industry experts to advise and
support our ongoing development and to remain informed on all
current and potential future legislation and governance matters in
this sector which may affect the Group. The global drive for
decarbonization and environmentally supportive technologies may
impact the legislative and governance of the Group however it also
represents an opportunity in the legislative driven change and
adoption of EV's providing a growing market for our Goliath
product.
By order of the Board
Jeremy Millard
|
Graeme Purdy
|
Director
|
CEO
|
10th July 2024
|
|
ILIKA plc
DIRECTORS'
REPORT
Directors
The Directors who served on the
board of Ilika during the year and to the date of this report were
as follows:
Executive
Mr G Purdy (CEO)
Mr J Stewart (CFO)
Non-Executive
Prof. K
Jackson (Chairman)
Mr. J
Millard (Senior Independent Director)
Dr. M.
Biddulph
Mrs M
Petitt is current Company Secretary.
Research and development costs
In accordance with the policy
outlined in note 1, the Group incurred research and development
expenditure of £3,506,193 in the year (2023: £4,131,407). In
addition, amounts totalling £819,254 (2023:
£1,027,512) were capitalised in the year. Commentary on the major
activities is given in the Strategic Report.
Financial instruments
The use of financial instruments and
financial risk management policies is covered in the Strategic
Report and also in note 15 of the financial statements.
Future developments
Information on the future
developments of the business are included in the Strategic Report
on page 4.
Directors indemnities
The Company has made no qualifying
third part indemnity provisions during the year and no further
provisions have been made at the date of this report.
Political Donations
The Company has made no political
donations during the period.
Dividends
The Directors do not recommend the
payment of a dividend.
Directors' interests in ordinary shares
The directors, who held office at
30th April 2024, had the following interests in the
ordinary shares of the Company:
|
Number of
shares
|
|
30th April
2023
|
30th April
2024
|
|
|
|
G
Purdy
|
782,927
|
782,927
|
K
Jackson
|
102,142
|
102,142
|
M
Biddulph
|
16,071
|
16,071
|
J
Millard
|
-
|
-
|
J
Stewart
|
-
|
-
|
During the year, no Directors
exercised options nor sold shares.
Substantial shareholdings
On 20 June 2024 the Company had been
notified of the following holdings of 3% or more of the
issued share capital of the Company.
Shareholder
|
No. of ordinary
shares
|
%
shareholding
|
GPIM
|
20,440,658
|
12.22
|
Charles Schwab, New York
(ND)
|
14,647,156
|
8.75
|
Schroder Investment
Management
|
10,281,680
|
6.15
|
Janus Henderson Investors
|
9,917,148
|
5.93
|
Hargreaves Lansdown, stockbrokers
(EO)
|
9,910,881
|
5.92
|
Baillie Gifford
|
9,142,197
|
5.46
|
Interactive Investor (EO)
|
8,714,193
|
5.21
|
Herald Investment
Management
|
8,578,752
|
5.13
|
National Financial Services
(EO)
|
6,505,167
|
3.89
|
Post balance sheet events
Following
the end of the financial period on 30 April 2024 the Group
completed a fund raise comprised of an institutional placing and
open offer resulting in £2.1m of additional funds net of costs.
This transaction was completed on 31 May 2024 with the funds
remitted to the Group and the new shares admitted to trading on the
AIM market.
Auditors
All the current directors have taken
all the steps that they ought to have taken to make themselves
aware of any information needed by the Company's Auditors for the
purposes of their audit and to establish that the Auditors are
aware of that information. The Directors are not aware of any
relevant audit information of which the Auditors are
unaware.
A resolution to re-appoint BDO LLP
will be proposed at the next Annual General Meeting.
By order of the board
Mandy Petitt
Company Secretary
ILIKA plc
DIRECTORS' REMUNERATION
REPORT
Remuneration Committee
The Group's remuneration policy is
the responsibility of the Remuneration Committee (the 'Committee').
The terms of reference of the Committee are outlined in the
Corporate Governance Statement on page 20. The Committee members
are Keith Jackson (Chairman), Jeremy Millard and Monika Biddulph,
all of whom are independent non-executive directors. The Chief
Executive Officer and certain executives may be invited to attend
Committee meetings to assist with its deliberations, but no
executive is present when their own remuneration is being
discussed.
Remuneration policy
(i) Executive remuneration
The Committee has established a
remuneration policy which will enable it to attract and retain
individuals of the highest calibre to run the Group. The
Committee is committed to ensuring that the Group
reward framework continues to align Executive performance with
shareholder expectations, as well as with the customer experience,
while ensuring that pay remains competitive to retain the right
talent and aligned to the strategy of the Group over the short and
long term.
The Committee seeks independent
validation and recommendations on the remuneration policy and
levels by way of a bi-annual benchmarking exercise taking into
account factors including but not limited to: individual performance, the individual's experience,
regulatory developments and/or any significant changes in an
individual's role and responsibilities.
Components of remuneration Policy
Base
Salary
|
Purpose and link to strategy
|
Operation
|
Maximum Opportunity
|
Performance metrics
|
Externally
competitive base pay allows us to attract and retain high-calibre
Executives with the skill to develop, lead and deliver the business
strategy.
|
Reflects
the role of the individual within the Company, taking account of
responsibilities and experience. Base pay may be reviewed from time
to time, but at no greater frequency than once annually. Any
increase to base pay is subject to approval by the Remuneration
Committee and would normally be applicable from 1
January.
|
Base pay is not capped. Increases
to base pay for Directors may be
considered
taking into account practice for employees generally across the
Company, regulatory requirements, consultation feedback and any
relevant market information.
|
Take into
account Group and individual performance, external benchmark
information and internal relativities.
|
Pension
|
The pension
provides an important and competitive benefit within the overall
remuneration package for Executive Directors.
|
Executive
Directors are eligible to participate in the group pension scheme .
They can make voluntary additional contributions via a salary
sacrifice arrangement
|
The maximum
pension contribution is 10% of base salary. The Company will
contribute the ERNI benefit from the salary sacrifice
arrangement.
|
n/a
|
Annual Incentive Plan (AIP)
and Deferred Bonus Plan (DBP)
|
To motivate
Executive Directors to achieve and exceed the business plan,
rewarding annual financial and strategic targets and adherence to
Company Values, within the Company's risk appetite.
|
Annual
bonus awards are discretionary and are determined by reference to
the Company's performance against a scorecard of financial and
strategic goals. Awards may be made in cash and shares/share-like
instruments. 50% of the Award will be made in shares/share-like
instruments. Deferral of part of the annual bonus is applied in
accordance with the requirements of the Remuneration Committee .
The level of deferral for the Executive Directors is as per the
Remuneration Committee. Malus and clawback provisions apply to
share/share-like instrument awards, including the deferred
elements.
|
The maximum
award opportunity under the AIP will normally be no more than 100%
of salary in respect of any financial year, including any deferred
element. Annual bonus awards can be made up to 100% of total fixed
remuneration in respect of any financial year, less any other
variable remuneration awarded in respect of that financial
year.
|
An annual
corporate scorecard based on targets for financial and strategic
measures is developed for review and agreement at the start of each
year by the Remuneration Committee. This forms the basis of the
bonus pool. These measures include a combination of financial,
technical and strategic goals aligned to the Company's strategic
plan. Financial measures may include, but are not restricted to,
such measures as underlying income, operating expenses, capital
expenditure and cash management. Technical measures may include
development milestones for each of the Stereax and Goliath product
lines. Strategic goals may include commercial engagement, ESG
compliance among other metrics.
|
Long‑Term Incentive Plan - restricted share unit
awards
|
To
incentivise senior management to deliver a sustainable Company, by
providing over the longer term value to shareholders, regulatory
stability and, for customers, employees and other stakeholders,
promoting the principles enshrined in the Company's
Values.
|
The
Committee will determine the award levels to be granted in respect
of any financial year, in compliance with regulatory requirements
and the Ilika plc Long Term Incentive Plan 2018 (the "LTIP"), which
was adopted by shareholders at the 2018 AGM. Awards will be made in
the form of share/share-like instruments. Following grant, the award is subject to a three year vesting
period throughout which the overall value will fluctuate dependent
on performance conditions and/or the value of the Company share
price. Malus and clawback provisions apply to awards in full and
are explained in more detail in the notes to the policy
below.
|
The
maximum award opportunity under the LTIP will normally be 100% of
base salary in respect of any financial year.
|
Performance
measures for the LTIP are based on development of long term
shareholder value through share price growth as agreed by the
Committee in line with the Company's long term priority of
delivering sustainable returns to shareholders. Before any part of
any LTIP award may vest, the Committee must be satisfied that the
Company's underlying financial performance justifies such vesting.
This will be assessed by the Remuneration Committee. Performance
measures for LTIP awards may be subject to change to ensure
continued alignment with the business strategy and any future
regulatory review or requirements.
|
Benefits
|
Benefits
are provided to attract and retain executives with the appropriate
skills to drive the business and to ensure that the overall package
is competitive in the market.
|
Executive
Directors receive a benefits package generally set by reference to
market practice in companies of a similar size and complexity
and/or business scope. Benefits provided
include, private medical insurance, life insurance, and income
protection. Relocation support may be provided if required upon the
appointment of a new Executive Director. The Committee may periodically amend the benefits available to
all employees. The Executive Directors are eligible to receive such
benefits on similar terms to other Senior Executives.
|
Benefits
are set taking into account affordability and market practice for
comparable roles. Costs may vary by provider from year to year. The
Committee keeps the benefits and levels under review. It may remove
benefits that Executive Directors receive or introduce other
benefits if it considers it is appropriate to do so.
|
n/a
|
(ii) Chairman and non-executive
Director remuneration
The Chairman, Keith Jackson receives
a fixed fee of £71,341 per annum. Jeremy Millard and Monika
Biddulph receive a fixed fee of £35,938 per annum. The fixed fee
covers preparation for and attendance at meetings of the full Board
and committees thereof. The Chairman and the executive directors
are responsible for setting the level of non-executive
remuneration. The non-executive directors are also reimbursed for
all reasonable expenses incurred in attending meetings. Non
Executive contracts will continue until terminated by either
party.
All remuneration policies will be
reviewed regularly using independent remuneration consultants to
maintain adherence with best market practice as
appropriate.
Directors' remuneration
The aggregate remuneration received
by directors who served during the year ended 30th April
2024 and 30th April 2023 was as follows:
|
Basic
salary
|
Benefits in kind
|
Bonus
|
Total
Short term benefits
|
Pension
|
Total
|
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
£
|
Year to 30th April 2024
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
G Purdy
|
214,537
|
2,504
|
47,947
|
264,988
|
69,549
|
334,537
|
J Stewart
|
135,173
|
941
|
5,783
|
141,897
|
45,208
|
187,105
|
K Jackson
|
71,341
|
-
|
-
|
71,341
|
-
|
71,341
|
J Millard
|
35,938
|
-
|
-
|
35,938
|
-
|
35,938
|
M Biddulph
|
35,938
|
-
|
-
|
35,938
|
-
|
35,938
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
|
492,927
|
3,445
|
53,730
|
550,102
|
114,757
|
664,859
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
Year to 30th April 2023
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
G Purdy
|
211,238
|
1,497
|
106,549
|
319,284
|
22,056
|
341,340
|
S Boydell* (to July 22)
|
33,576
|
204
|
-
|
33,780
|
2,686
|
36,466
|
J Stewart (from Jan 23)
|
51,600
|
7
|
13,773
|
65,380
|
2,146
|
67,526
|
K Jackson
|
69,424
|
-
|
-
|
69,424
|
-
|
69,424
|
J Millard
|
35,233
|
-
|
-
|
35,233
|
-
|
35,233
|
M Biddulph
|
35,233
|
-
|
-
|
35,233
|
-
|
35,233
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
|
436,304
|
1,708
|
120,322
|
558,334
|
26,888
|
585,222
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
*S Boydell resigned as Finance
Director and Company Secretary leaving the company in 15 July
2022.
Benefits in kind include critical
illness cover and Private medical.
Share
options
The share options of the directors
are set out below:
Unapproved
|
Type
|
2023
Number
|
2024
Number
|
Exercise Price
(p)
|
Min
Vesting Price
(a)
|
Full
Vesting Price
(b)
|
Expiry date
|
G
Purdy
|
Bonus
|
75,810
|
75,810
|
1
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Aug-27
|
G
Purdy
|
LTIP
|
1,127,777
|
1,127,777
|
1
|
27
|
54
|
Jan-29
|
G
Purdy
|
Bonus
|
207,229
|
207,229
|
1
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Aug-29
|
G
Purdy
|
LTIP
|
606,014
|
-
|
1
|
51
|
102
|
Mar-30
|
G
Purdy
|
Bonus
|
65,812
|
65,812
|
1
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Sep-30
|
G
Purdy
|
LTIP
|
92,536
|
-
|
1
|
336
|
672
|
Feb-31
|
G
Purdy
|
Bonus
|
33,394
|
33,394
|
1
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Sep-31
|
G
Purdy
|
LTIP
|
153,541
|
153,541
|
1
|
202.5
|
405
|
Feb-32
|
G
Purdy
|
LTIP
|
-
|
416,954
|
1
|
78
|
156
|
Jan-33
|
G
Purdy
|
Bonus
|
-
|
131,005
|
1
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Sep-33
|
G
Purdy
|
LTIP
|
-
|
492,764
|
1
|
66
|
132
|
Dec-33
|
J
Stewart
|
Bonus
|
-
|
15,799
|
1
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Sep-33
|
J
Stewart
|
LTIP
|
-
|
140,909
|
1
|
66
|
132
|
Dec-33
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Approved
|
Type
|
2023
Number
|
2024
Number
|
Exercise
Price
|
Vesting Price
(a)
|
Full Vesting Price
(b)
|
Expiry date
|
J
Stewart
|
EMI
|
300,000
|
300,000
|
52
|
52
|
69.2
|
Jan-33
|
J
Stewart
|
EMI
|
-
|
213,636
|
44
|
44
|
58.6
|
Dec-33
|
Unapproved Executive Bonus options
are granted as specified in the Directors remuneration policy shown
on page 14 to 15 of this report. Bonus options are awarded in lieu
of cash payment and are subject to a one-year vesting period.
Executive bonus options are awarded in relation to the achievement
of company KPI target's in respect of financial performance,
technical development for both Stereax and Goliath products, the
creation of new Patents and other company KPI's. These KPI targets
are set by the Board annually.
Unapproved Executive LTIP options are
granted as specified in the Directors remuneration policy shown on
page 15 of this report. Options are awarded with a three year
vesting period and the vesting price has been set to support
long-term shareholder returns through the delivery of strategic
milestones. Option awards vest on a straight-line basis between the
minimum vesting price (a) and full vesting price (b).
Approved EMI shares are offered in
lieu of LTIP options where the individual has not fully utilised
the approved allowance under the HMRC EMI scheme rules. EMI shares
have a three year vesting period and the vesting price has been set
to support long-term shareholder returns through the delivery of
strategic milestones. Option awards vest on a straight-line basis
between the minimum vesting price (a) and full vesting price
(b).
A total of 698,550 options lapsed
during the year
Share based payment charge
attributable to directors in the year was £281,766 (2023:
£256,036).
Keith Jackson
Chairman of the Remuneration Committee
Statement of Directors' responsibilities in respect of the
Annual Report and the Financial Statements
The Directors are responsible for
preparing the annual report and the financial statements in
accordance with applicable law and regulations.
Company law requires the directors
to prepare financial statements for each financial year.
Under that law the directors are required to prepare the group and
company financial statements in accordance with UK adopted
international accounting standards. Under company law the
directors must not approve the financial statements unless they are
satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of
affairs of the group and company and of the profit or loss of the
group and company for that period.
In preparing these financial
statements, the directors are required to:
·
select suitable accounting policies and then apply
them consistently;
·
make judgements and accounting estimates that are
reasonable and prudent;
·
state whether they have been prepared in
accordance with UK adopted international accounting standards
subject to any material departures disclosed and explained in the
financial statements;
·
prepare the financial statements on the going
concern basis unless it is inappropriate to presume that the group
and the company will continue in business.
The directors are responsible for
keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and
explain the company's transactions and disclose with reasonable
accuracy at any time the financial position of the company and
enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006. They are also
responsible for safeguarding the assets of the company and hence
for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of
fraud and other irregularities.
Website publication
The
directors are responsible for ensuring the annual report and the
financial statements are made available on a website.
Financial statements are published on the company's website in
accordance with legislation in the United Kingdom governing the
preparation and dissemination of financial statements, which may
vary from legislation in other jurisdictions. The maintenance
and integrity of the company's website is the responsibility of the
directors. The directors' responsibility also extends to the
ongoing integrity of the financial statements contained
therein
Going concern
The directors have prepared and
reviewed financial forecasts. After due consideration of these
forecasts, current cash resources, and the recently completed
fund raise of £2.1m net of fees, the directors consider that the
Company and the Group have adequate financial resources to continue
in operational existence for the foreseeable future (being a period
of at least twelve months from the date of this report), and for
this reason the financial statements have been prepared on a going
concern basis.
By order
of the Board
Graeme Purdy
Chief Executive
10th July
2024
ILIKA plc
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE STATEMENT
We confirm that our governance
structures and practices are in agreement with the provisions of
the Quoted Companies Alliance (QCA) Corporate Governance Code
(2018) for small and mid-size quoted companies. Our statement of
compliance with the 10 principles of the QCA Corporate Governance
Code is set out below and on our website:
https://www.ilika.com/investors/corporate-governance.
Principle
|
Disclosure
|
Establish a strategy and business
model which promotes long-term value for shareholders.
|
Business
strategy outlined on page 4.
|
Promote a corporate culture that is
based on sound ethical values and behaviours.
|
See the "Promoting ethical values and
behaviours" section in Corporate Governance Statement.
|
Seek to understand and meet
shareholder needs and expectations.
|
See the "Shareholder engagement"
section in Corporate Governance Statement.
|
Take into account wider stakeholder
and social responsibilities and their implications for long term
success.
|
See the
"Shareholder engagement" section in Corporate Governance Statement.
Further information can be found on the Ilika website.
|
Embed effective risk management,
considering both opportunities and threats, throughout the
organisation.
|
See risk management and internal
control section in Corporate Governance Statement.
|
Maintain the board as a
well-functioning, balanced team led by the chair.
|
See the "Board of directors" section
in Corporate Governance Statement, and further information in the
Nominations Committee report found on pages 25-27
|
Ensure that between them the
directors have the necessary up-to-date experience, skills and
capabilities.
|
See the "Board experience" section in
Corporate Governance Statement and further information in the
Nominations Committee report found on pages 25-27
|
Maintain governance structures and
processes that are fit for purpose and support good decision making
by the board.
|
See the "Board Committees" section in
Corporate Governance Statement.
|
Evaluate all elements of board
performance based on clear and relevant objectives, seeking
continuous improvement.
|
See the "Performance evaluation"
section below in Corporate Governance Statement and further
information in the Nominations Committee report found on pages
25-27
|
Establish a remuneration policy
which is supportive of long-term value creation and the company's
purpose, strategy and Culture
|
See Directors Remuneration report
including the Directors Remuneration policy found on pages 14 to
18
|
Communicate how the company is
governed by maintaining a dialogue with shareholders and other
relevant stakeholders.
|
See the "Shareholder engagement"
section in Corporate Governance Statement.
|
Shareholder engagement
The Board recognises the importance
of communicating with its shareholders and maintains dialogue with
institutional shareholders and analysts, presentations are made
when financial results are announced. The Group retains the
services of a professional financial public relations company, who
assist with ensuring the accurate and timely communication of
relevant corporate, financial and other regulatory news. The Annual
General Meeting is the principal forum for dialogue with private
shareholders who are given the opportunity to raise questions at
the meeting, and to meet directors and senior managers of the
business who make themselves available after each meeting.
The Company aims to send out the notice of the Annual General
meeting at least 21 working days before the meeting and publish the
results of resolutions (which are usually voted on by electronic
submission prior to the meeting or by show of hands) in a
Regulatory News Statement after the relevant meeting. Shareholders
also have access to the Company's website and interactive Investor
Meet Company web-based presentations.
Meeting the needs and objectives of
shareholders
The Board appreciates that the
diverse shareholder base of the Group may have differing objectives
for their investment in the business, and therefore the importance
of ensuring that non-executive directors ("NED") have an up to date
understanding of these perspectives is well recognised. Directors
will therefore routinely engage with both institutional and private
investors and will seek out opinions on unusual or potentially
controversial matters before adopting policy changes or tabling
shareholder resolutions. The Board will always review written
feedback reports from investors following financial results
"roadshows" and will always consider information received from
institutional voter advisory firms.
Promoting Ethical Values and
Behaviours
The Board has primary
responsibility for ensuring that the Group operates according to
the highest ethical standards. The Directors believe that the main
determinant of whether a business behaves ethically and with
integrity is the quality of its people. The Directors have
responsibility for ensuring that individuals employed by the Group
demonstrate the highest levels of integrity. In addition, the Group
has a formal Share Dealing Code.
Board of Directors
The Board of directors (the
'Board') consists of a Non-Executive Chairman, two Executive
Directors and two Non-Executive Directors.
The responsibilities of the
Non-Executive Chairman and the Chief Executive Officer are clearly
divided. The Chairman is responsible for overseeing the formulation
of the overall strategy of the company, the running of the board,
ensuring that no individual or group dominates the Board's decision
making and ensuring that the non-executive directors are properly
briefed on matters. Prior to each Board meeting, directors are sent
an agenda and Board papers for each agenda item to be discussed.
Additional information is provided when requested by the Board or
individual directors.
The Chief Executive Officer has
the responsibility for implementing the strategy of the Board and
managing the day to day business activities of the Group through
his chairmanship of the executive committee.
The Non-Executive Directors bring
relevant experience from different backgrounds and receive a fixed
fee for their services and reimbursement of reasonable expenses
incurred in attending meetings.
The Senior Non-Executive Director is
responsible for providing a sounding board to the Chair and to act
as an intermediary for other directors and stakeholders outside of
the normal channels of communication.
The Board retains full and
effective control of the Group. This includes responsibility for
determining the Group's strategy and for approving budgets and
business plans to fulfil this strategy. The full Board ordinarily
meets bi-monthly.
The Company Secretary is
responsible to the Board for ensuring that Board procedures are
followed and that the applicable rules and regulations are complied
with. All directors have access to the advice and services of the
Company Secretary, and independent professional advice, if
required, at the Company's expense.
Removal of the Company Secretary would be a matter for the
Board.
Performance evaluation
The Board has a process for
evaluation of its own performance, based on clear and relevant
objectives to ensure continuous improvement. All members of the
Board engaged freely and openly with the reviews and demonstrated
the expected level of commitment and held the appropriate level of
skills, experience and expertise to guide the business ad represent
all stakeholder interests. Further information on the Board
performance evaluation can be found in the Nominations Committee
report on pages 25-27.
Board experience
Keith Jackson - Non-Executive
Chairman
Keith has had a wide ranging and
successful career in companies varying from start-ups to
multinationals. He founded and grew an automotive control systems
company whose engine control systems are used on millions of
vehicles worldwide. Following the sale of the company to a major
OEM, he joined Rolls Royce Engines PLC where he worked as Chief
Technology Officer (CTO) in the electrical power and control
systems group and later became the CTO at Meggitt PLC.
Keith is now the Non-Executive
Chairman Libertine FPE and a Professor at Sheffield University's
Automated Control and Systems Engineering department. He also
advises a number of companies on their technologies and strategy.
Keith is a Fellow of the Society of Automotive Engineers, a
previous Rolls Royce Engineering Fellow and Royal Aeronautical
Society Fellow. He is a Computer Science graduate from University
College London.
Graeme Purdy - Chief
Executive Officer
Graeme was appointed to head up
Ilika in May 2004, just before completion of the company's seed
round of funding. He led the company through two successful rounds
of venture funding before floating the company on AIM in
2010.
Prior to joining Ilika, Graeme was
Chief Operating Officer of a high-technology company in the
Netherlands and before that worked internationally in a variety of
technical and commercial roles for Shell. Graeme holds a Master's
degree in Chemical Engineering from Cambridge and an MBA from
INSEAD business school in France. Graeme is a Chartered Engineer
and a Sainsbury Management Fellow.
Jason Stewart - Chief Financial
Officer
Jason is a CIMA qualified
accountant, senior Finance Director and Executive joining Ilika in
January 2023 bringing significant commercial experience in the
manufacturing sector. Most recently, Jason spent twelve years at
Sunseeker International in various senior roles including Interim
CFO where he successfully managed the company through the COVID-19
crisis, managing costs and re-establishing production subsequent to
the lockdown.
Prior to joining Sunseeker
International Jason undertook roles across the broad spectrum of
finance including B&Q Ltd and Kerry Foods Ltd where he
completed his professional training. He brings with him a wealth of
knowledge across financial functions, with particular expertise in
project appraisals, performance management and business
development.
Monika Biddulph - Non-Executive
Director
Monika has a wide range of experience in both the commercial
and technical aspects of an international technology business.
Until 2018, Monika was a member of the Senior Leadership Team IP
Product Groups at Arm Holdings plc, responsible for driving the
execution of the product roadmaps across all lines of business and
central engineering, and previously holding various General Manager
and licensing roles in the business. Currently Monika is also a
Non-Executive Director on the board of Celebrus Technologies Plc
AFC Energy Plc and Power Roll Limited. She was previously NED at
Linaro Limited, an open source software organisation. Monika holds
a PhD in Physics from the ETH Zurich.
Jeremy Millard - Senior
Non-Executive Director
After an early career in
engineering, Jeremy trained as a chartered accountant in the late
1990s. Jeremy has over 20 years' investment banking experience and
currently provides corporate finance advice to clients in the
science and deep technology sectors via Iridium Corporate Finance
Limited which he founded, prior to which he held senior roles in a
number of corporate finance houses including heading up the
technology practice at Rothschild in London. Jeremy is currently a
Non-Executive Director and Chairman of the audit committee of UK
listed Cambridge Nutritional Sciences plc (AIM: CNSL). Jeremy has
previously held NED roles with private companies Blackbullion Ltd
(EdTech) and CFPro Ltd (specialist accounting services).
Board Committees
As appropriate, the Board has
delegated certain responsibilities to Board Committees. These
committees are made up of Non Executive Directors to ensure that
they remain independent from the day to day operations of the
Company. The responsibilities of the individual committees are as
follows:
i)
Audit Committee
The Audit Committee currently
comprises Jeremy Millard (Chair), Professor Keith Jackson and Dr.
Monika Biddulph.
The Committee monitors the
integrity of the Group's financial statements and the effectiveness
of the audit process. The Committee reviews accounting policies and
material accounting judgements. The Committee also reviews, and
reports on, reports from the Group's auditors relating to the
Group's accounting controls. It makes recommendations to the Board
on the appointment of auditors and the audit fee. It has
unrestricted access to the Group's auditors. The Committee keeps
under review the nature and extent of non-audit services provided
by the external auditors in order to ensure that objectivity and
independence are maintained. For further information see the Audit
Committee report which can be found on page 28
ii)
Remuneration Committee
The Remuneration Committee
comprised Professor Keith Jackson (Chairman), Jeremy Millard and
Dr. Monika Biddulph.
The committee is responsible for
making recommendations to the Board on remuneration policy for
Executive Directors and the terms of their service contracts, with
the aim of ensuring that their remuneration, including any share
options and other awards, is based on their own performance and
that of the Group generally. For further information see the
Director remuneration report which can be found on pages
14-18
iii)
Nomination Committee
The
Nomination Committee comprised Professor Keith Jackson
(Chairman), Jeremy Millard and Dr. Monika
Biddulph.
It is responsible for providing a
formal, rigorous and transparent procedure for the appointment of
new directors to the board and reviewing the performance of the
board each year. For further information
see the Nominations Committee report which can be found on pages
25-27
Attendance at Board meetings and
committees
The Directors are expected to
attend all Board committees of which they are a member and NED's
are expected to dedicate a minimum of twelve days per annum to the
Company. During the year the Directors attended the following Board
and committees meetings during the year:
Attendance
|
Board
|
Audit
|
Nomination
|
Remuneration
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mr J Stewart
Mr G. Purdy
|
7/7
7/7
|
-
-
|
-
-
|
-
-
|
Prof K Jackson
|
7/7
|
2/2
|
1/1
|
3/3
|
Jeremy Millard
|
7/7
|
2/2
|
1/1
|
3/3
|
Dr. Monika Biddulph
|
7/7
|
2/2
|
1/1
|
3/3
|
Risk management and internal
control
The Board is responsible for the
systems of internal control and for reviewing their effectiveness.
The internal controls are designed to manage rather than eliminate
risk and provide reasonable but not absolute assurance against
material misstatement or loss. The Audit Committee reviews the
effectiveness of these systems primarily by discussion with the
external auditor and by considering the risks potentially affecting
the Group.
The Board continues to improve the
control of risk within the business through the appointment of
established experts who can bring relevant industry and subject
matter experience to develop better control environments. This has
been accomplished with the recruitment of a Sustainability, Quality
and Business Compliance Director, a Supply Chain Director with
multiple years of advanced and complex supply chains within the
automotive industry, a Financial Controller to provide additional
financial review and an Operations Director once again bringing a
lifetime of experience from the automotive area. These individuals
bring developed control and risk management skills to provide hands
on experience to developing the Company and as an additional route
for the NED members of the Board to seek independent verification
of the improvements being made.
The Group maintains both a
strategic and business risk register as dynamic documents and as a
route to track the developing risks to the Group. These risk
registers are used to manage and mitigate emerging and established
risks and escalate these to the appropriate level within the
business to support a timely response.
The Board has assessed the risk
management activity of the Board and Group to be appropriate for
the business during its current phase of R&D and scale up
development activity.
The Group does not consider it
necessary to have an internal audit function due to the small size
of the administration function. Instead there is a detailed
Director review and authorisation of transactions. The annual audit
by the Group auditor, which tests a sample of transactions, did not
highlight any significant system improvements in order to reduce
risk.
The Group maintains appropriate
insurance cover in respect of actions taken against the Executive
Directors because of their roles, as well as against material loss
or claims of the Group. The insured values and type of cover are
comprehensively reviewed on a periodic basis.
By order of the Board
Jeremy Millard
Director
10th July 2024
REPORT
OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
The Audit Committee has primary
responsibility for ensuring that the financial performance of the
Group is properly measured and reported on. It is responsible for
providing oversight of the Company's financial reporting process,
the audit process, the system of internal controls including
business continuity, information technology, the
identification and management of significant risks and the
Companies compliance with laws and regulations. Its terms of
reference and its current membership are outlined in the Corporate
Governance Statement on page 21.
The Committee is chaired by an
independent director with significant experience in finance and
financial markets. The experience and background of the individuals
who make up the Audit Committee is detailed in the summary of Board
experience on page 22.
The attendance of the individual
members of the Audit Committee is detailed in the summary of Board
attendance as detailed on page 23.
Committee independence
The Audit Committee maintains its
independence from the Group by being composed exclusively of Non
Executive Directors thus ensuring the Committee's ability to
effectively challenge the operations of the business. The Board is
satisfied that in doing so that the committee is in line with best
practice and that all members are independent.
Matters covered by the Committee
The Committee, which is required to
meet at least twice a year, met twice during the year ended 30
April 2024, with all members present. The Committee undertakes
review of the principal risk matters and is responsible for making
recommendations to the Board in relation to appropriate mitigations
and control measures. The Committee reviews the risk matrix and
verifies and challenges the processes for identifying new and
emerging risks and the appropriateness of the risk severity
rating.
The Committee considers the role of
the independent auditors, their tenure and their report in relation
to the Audit of Ilika Plc and Ilika Technologies Ltd.
·
The Committee reviews the performance of the
external auditor and considers their performance in relation to the
requirements of internal and external stakeholders.
·
It considers the appropriateness of the auditor in
respect of objectivity and independence
· The Committee
reviews the duration on the audit and time to
rotation of audit partner. BDO LLP were appointed as auditors of
Ilika Plc and its subsidiary companies in 2011 and the audit
partner is due for rotation in 2025.
·
The Committee gives appropriate consideration to
the reappointment of the external auditor or the needs to tender
audit services.
Matters covered during the year ended
30 April 2024:
·
July 2023: Audit completion meeting for the 2023
year-end audit,
o Review the financial forecast to support the Group's ability
to account on a going concern basis,
o Review of the auditor's report on the audit, including
materiality levels and any significant matters or specific
recommendations from the auditor.
o Review of the annual report and financial statements to ensure
they represents a fair and balance portrayal of the Group's
performance.
·
January 2024: Half year report completion meeting.
Approval of the release of the Half Year report.
Auditor independence
The auditors supply only audit and
assurance related services and do not provide and non-audit
consultation services. Any assurance services provided are provided
on an exceptional basis and reviewed by the Audit & Risk
Committee prior to engagement to ensure adherence to their
independence. This policy safeguards auditor objectivity and
independence.
The external auditor may not
undertake any work that may compromise its independence or is
otherwise prohibited by any law or regulation.
Payments made to the auditor are
detailed in Note 3 to the financial statements and can be found on
page 48.
Internal audit function
The Group does not have an internal
audit function, but the Committee considers that this is
appropriate, given the size and relative lack of complexity of the
Group. The Committee keeps this matter under review
annually.
Jeremy Millard
Chair of the Audit Committee
Independent auditor's report to the members of Ilika
Plc
Opinion on the financial statements
In our opinion:
• the
financial statements give a true and fair view of the state of the
Group's and of the Parent Company's affairs as at 30 April 2024 and
of the Group's loss for the year then ended;
• the Group
financial statements have been properly prepared in accordance with
UK adopted international accounting standards;
• the Parent
Company financial statements have been properly prepared in
accordance with UK adopted international accounting standards
and as applied in accordance with the provisions of the Companies
Act 2006; and
• the
financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the
requirements of the Companies Act 2006.
We have audited the financial
statements of Ilika plc (the 'Parent Company') and its subsidiaries
(the 'Group') for the year ended 30 April 2024 which comprise the
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income, the Consolidated
balance sheet, the Consolidated cash flow statement, the
Consolidated statement of changes in equity, the Company balance
sheet, the Company cash flow statement, the Company statement of
changes in equity and notes to the financial statements, including
a summary of significant accounting policies. The financial
reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is
applicable law and UK adopted international accounting standards
and, as regards the Parent Company financial statements, as applied
in accordance with the provisions of the Companies Act
2006.
Basis for opinion
We conducted our audit in accordance
with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs
(UK)) and applicable law. Our
responsibilities under those standards are further described in
the
Auditor's responsibilities for the
audit of the financial statements section of our report. We believe
that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and
appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.
Independence
We remain independent of the Group
and the Parent Company in accordance with the ethical requirements
that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the
UK, including the FRC's Ethical Standard as applied to listed
entities, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities
in accordance with these requirements.
Conclusions relating to going concern
In auditing the financial
statements, we have concluded that the Directors' use of the going
concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial
statements is appropriate. Our evaluation of the Directors'
assessment of the Group and the Parent Company's ability to
continue to adopt the going concern basis of accounting
included:
·
Reviewing Directors' assessment of going concern
through analysis of the Group's cash flow forecast through to July
2025 including assessing and challenging the assumptions underlying
the forecasts by reference to historic performance and our
knowledge of future developments.
·
Sensitising the forecasts further to ascertain the
levels of revenue decline and cost increase that would cause a cash
shortage at any point in Directors' post balance sheet assessment
period. We also compared the level of expenditure included in
the forecasts and compared this to previous periods.
Based on the work we have performed,
we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to
events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast
significant doubt on the Group and the Parent Company's ability to
continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months
from when the financial statements are authorised for
issue.
Our responsibilities and the
responsibilities of the Directors with respect to going concern are
described in the relevant sections of this report.
Overview
Coverage
|
100% (2023: 100%) of Group loss before tax
100% (2023: 100%) of Group revenue
100% (2023: 100%) of Group total assets
|
Key
audit matters
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
Capitalisation of development
expenditure
|
P
|
P
|
|
|
|
|
Materiality
|
Group financial statements as a whole
£410,000 (2023: £446,000) based on
2% of net assets (2023: 5% of loss before tax)
|
An
overview of the scope of our audit
Our Group audit was scoped by
obtaining an understanding of the Group and its environment,
including the Group's system of internal control, and assessing the
risks of material misstatement in the financial statements.
We also addressed the risk of management override of internal
controls, including assessing whether there was evidence of bias by
the Directors that may have represented a risk of material
misstatement.
At 30 April 2024 the group had two
components whose transactions and balances are included in the
consolidated accounting records. Both components, being Ilika plc
and its subsidiary Ilika Technologies Limited, were considered to
be significant components and were subject to a full scope
audit.
All work was carried out by the
group audit team.
Key audit matters
Key audit matters are those matters
that, in our professional judgement, were of most significance in
our audit of the financial statements of the current period and
include the most significant assessed risks of material
misstatement (whether or not due to fraud) that we identified,
including those which had the greatest effect on: the overall audit
strategy, the allocation of resources in the audit, and directing
the efforts of the engagement team. These matters were addressed in
the context of our audit of the financial statements as a whole,
and in forming our opinion thereon, and we do not provide a
separate opinion on these matters.
Key
audit matter
|
How
the scope of our audit addressed the key audit
matter
|
Capitalisation of development
expenditure
Please refer to note 7, and accounting policies and key
sources of estimation and uncertainty in note 1.
|
The group has capitalised development
expenditure in relation to their Stereax battery technology.
This is the third full period in which the associated expenditure
has been capitalised having been deemed to meet the criteria in the
accounting standards in the previous year.
There are a number of judgements
involved in accounting for development expenditure, including
whether the activities are appropriate for capitalisation in
accordance with the criteria of the applicable accounting standard,
the allocation of the relevant costs to the Stereax battery
project, and the recoverability of the asset generated.
Due to the level of judgement, there
was also considered to be an inherent risk of management bias
therefore this was considered to be an area of focus for our
audit.
|
We considered the conditions under
which development costs can be capitalised under the accounting
standards and checked that these conditions have been met in
respect of the Stereax battery technology.
We discussed with management the
Group's processes for identifying the relevant development
costs. We reviewed the nature of the costs capitalised to
check they were in line with our understanding of the work carried
out in the year.
We agreed a sample of capitalised
costs to underlying supporting documentation to confirm the
existence and accuracy of the costs. This included obtaining time
records to corroborate the allocation of employee time spent on the
Stereax battery technology and inspecting employee contracts to
check that their stated job roles support their involvement in
development activities. Employee costs were also agreed to
the underlying payroll records.
We assessed the ability of the asset
to generate future economic benefits for the business, which must
at least exceed the carrying value of the intangible asset.
We have corroborated management's assessment to external market
information and expectations.
Key
observations:
Based on the audit work performed we
consider that development costs have been capitalised appropriately
and in accordance with the Group's accounting policy
|
|
| |
Our
application of materiality
We apply the concept of materiality
both in planning and performing our audit, and in evaluating the
effect of misstatements. We consider materiality to be the
magnitude by which misstatements, including omissions, could
influence the economic decisions of reasonable users that are taken
on the basis of the financial statements.
In order to reduce to an
appropriately low level the probability that any misstatements
exceed materiality, we use a lower materiality level, performance
materiality, to determine the extent of testing needed.
Importantly, misstatements below these levels will not necessarily
be evaluated as immaterial as we also take account of the nature of
identified misstatements, and the particular circumstances of their
occurrence, when evaluating their effect on the financial
statements as a whole.
Based on our professional judgement,
we determined materiality for the financial statements as a whole
and performance materiality as follows:
|
Group financial
statements
|
Parent company financial
statements
|
|
2024
£
|
2023
£
|
2024
£
|
2023
£
|
Materiality
|
410k
|
446k
|
200k
|
223k
|
Basis for determining materiality
|
2% of net assets
|
5% of loss before tax
|
49% of Group materiality
|
50% of Group materiality
|
Rationale for the benchmark applied
|
We considered 2% of net assets to be
a key performance benchmark for the Group and the users of the
financial statements in assessing financial performance.
|
We considered 5% of loss before tax
to be a key performance benchmark for the Group and the users of
the financial statements in assessing financial
performance.
|
Calculated as a percentage of Group
materiality due to aggregated consideration of significant
component materiality levels.
|
Calculated as a percentage of Group
materiality due to aggregated consideration of significant
component materiality levels.
|
Performance materiality
|
308k
|
335k
|
150k
|
167k
|
Basis for determining performance
materiality
|
On the basis of our risk assessment,
together with our assessment of the Group's control environment,
previous low level of misstatements our judgement is that
performance materiality for the financial statements
|
On the basis of our risk assessment,
together with our assessment of the Group's control environment,
previous low level of misstatements our judgement is that
performance materiality for the financial
|
On the basis of our risk assessment,
together with our assessment of the Group's control environment,
previous low level of misstatements our judgement is that
performance materiality for the financial
|
On the basis of our risk assessment,
together with our assessment of the Group's control environment,
previous low level of misstatements our judgement is that
performance materiality for the financial statements
|
|
should be 75% of
materiality.
|
statements should be 75% of
materiality.
|
statements should be 75% of
materiality.
|
should be 75% of
materiality.
|
Rationale for the percentage applied for performance
materiality
|
See above
|
See above
|
See above
|
See above
|
Component materiality
For the purposes of our Group audit
opinion, we set materiality for each significant component of the
Group, [apart from the Parent Company whose materiality is set out
above], based on a percentage of 98% (2023: 92%) of Group
materiality dependent on the size and our assessment of the risk of
material misstatement of that component. Component
materiality in respect of Ilika Technologies Limited was £400k
(2023: £410k). We further applied performance materiality levels of
75% (2023: 75%) of the component materiality to our testing to
ensure that the risk of errors exceeding component materiality was
appropriately mitigated.
Reporting threshold
We agreed with the Audit Committee
that we would report to them all individual audit differences in
excess of £16k (2023: £13k). We also agreed to report
differences below this threshold that, in our view, warranted
reporting on qualitative grounds.
Other information
The directors are responsible for
the other information. The other information comprises the
information included in the financial statements other than the
financial statements and our auditor's report thereon. Our opinion
on the financial statements does not cover the other information
and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our
report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.
Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing
so, consider whether the other information is materially
inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge
obtained in the course of the audit, or otherwise appears to be
materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies
or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine
whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in the financial
statements themselves. If, based on the work we have performed, we
conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other
information, we are required to report that fact.
We have nothing to report in this
regard.
Other Companies Act 2006 reporting
Based on the responsibilities
described below and our work performed during the course of the
audit, we are required by the Companies Act 2006 and ISAs (UK) to
report on certain opinions and matters as described
below.
Strategic report and Directors' report
|
In our opinion, based on the work
undertaken in the course of the audit:
· the information
given in the Strategic report and the Directors' report for the
financial year for which the financial statements are prepared is
consistent with the financial statements; and
· the Strategic
report and the Directors' report have been prepared in accordance
with applicable legal requirements.
In the light of the knowledge and
understanding of the Group and Parent Company and its environment
obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified
material misstatements in the strategic report or the Directors'
report.
|
Matters on which we are required to report by
exception
|
We have nothing to report in respect
of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act
2006 requires us to report to you if, in
our opinion:
· adequate
accounting records have not been kept by the Parent Company, or
returns adequate for our audit have not been received from branches
not visited by us; or
· the Parent Company
financial statements are not in agreement with the accounting
records and returns; or
· certain
disclosures of Directors' remuneration specified by law are not
made; or
· we have not
received all the information and explanations we require for our
audit.
|
Responsibilities of Directors
As explained more fully in the
statement of Directors' responsibilities, the Directors are
responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for
being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such
internal control as the Directors determine is necessary to enable
the preparation of financial statements that are free from material
misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.
In preparing the financial
statements, the Directors are responsible for assessing the Group's
and the Parent Company's ability to continue as a going concern,
disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and
using the going concern basis of accounting unless the Directors
either intend to liquidate the Group or the Parent Company or to
cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do
so.
Auditor's responsibilities for the audit of the financial
statements
Our objectives are to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a
whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or
error, and to issue an auditor's report that includes our opinion.
Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a
guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will
always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements
can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if,
individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected
to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of
these financial statements.
Extent to which the audit was capable of detecting
irregularities, including fraud
Irregularities, including fraud, are
instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We design
procedures in line with our responsibilities, outlined above, to
detect material misstatements in respect of irregularities,
including fraud. The extent to which our procedures are capable of
detecting irregularities, including fraud is detailed
below:
Non-compliance with laws and regulations
Based on:
· Our understanding
of the Group and the industry in which it operates;
· Discussion with
management and those charged with governance and the Audit
Committee;
· Obtaining and
understanding of the Group's policies and procedures regarding
compliance with laws and regulations;
we considered the significant laws
and regulations to be the applicable accounting framework, UK tax
legislation and the AIM Listing Rules etc.
The Group is also subject to laws and
regulations where the consequence of non-compliance could have a
material effect on the amount or disclosures in the financial
statements, for example through the imposition of fines or
litigations. We identified such laws and regulations to be the
health and safety legislation.
Our procedures in respect of the
above included:
· Review of minutes
of meetings of those charged with governance for any instances of
non-compliance with laws and regulations;
· Review of
correspondence with regulatory and tax authorities for any
instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations;
· Review of
financial statement disclosures and agreeing to supporting
documentation;
· Involvement of tax
specialists in the audit;
· Review of legal
expenditure accounts to understand the nature of expenditure
incurred.
Fraud
We assessed the susceptibility of the
financial statements to material misstatement, including fraud. Our
risk assessment procedures included:
· Enquiry with
management and those charged with governance including the Audit
Committee regarding any known or suspected instances of
fraud;
· Obtaining an
understanding of the Group's policies and procedures relating
to:
o Detecting and responding to
the risks of fraud; and
o Internal controls established
to mitigate risks related to fraud.
· Review of minutes
of meetings of those charged with governance for any known or
suspected instances of fraud;
· Discussion amongst
the engagement team as to how and where fraud might occur in the
financial statements;
· Assessing journal
entries as part of our planned approach, with a particular focus on
journal entries to key financial areas such as intangible assets
and journals raised after the year end; and
· Considering
significant management judgements, particularly in relation to the
capitalisation of intangible assets.
Based on our risk assessment, we
considered the areas most susceptible to fraud to be capitalisation
of development costs and management override.
Our procedures in respect of the
above included:
· Testing of the
capitalisation of development costs (as detailed in the KAM
above);
· Testing of all
material journals raised post year by agreeing to supporting
documentation, and considering if they had any impact on the year
to April 2024;
· Assessing
significant estimates made by management for bias.
We also communicated relevant
identified laws and regulations and potential fraud risks to all
engagement team members who were all deemed to have appropriate
competence and capabilities and remained alert to any indications
of fraud or non-compliance with laws and regulations throughout the
audit.
Our audit procedures were designed
to respond to risks of material misstatement in the financial
statements, recognising that the risk of not detecting a material
misstatement due to fraud is higher than the risk of not detecting
one resulting from error, as fraud may involve deliberate
concealment by, for example, forgery, misrepresentations or through
collusion. There are inherent limitations in the audit procedures
performed and the further removed non-compliance with laws and
regulations is from the events and transactions reflected in the
financial statements, the less likely we are to become aware of
it.
A further description of our
responsibilities is available on the Financial Reporting Council's
website at:
www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities.
This description forms part of our auditor's report.
Use
of our report
This report is made solely to the
Parent Company's members, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3
of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been
undertaken so that we might state to the Parent Company's members
those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor's
report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent
permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to
anyone other than the Parent Company and the Parent Company's
members as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the
opinions we have formed.
Stephen Le Bas (Senior Statutory
Auditor)
For and on behalf of BDO LLP,
Statutory Auditor
Southampton, UK
BDO LLP is a limited liability
partnership registered in England and Wales (with registered number
OC305127).
Ilika plc
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
|
Notes
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
|
Turnover
|
2
|
2,090.6
|
702.0
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
|
20.1
|
33.8
|
UK grants
|
|
2,070.5
|
668.2
|
|
|
|
|
Cost of sales
|
|
(1,081.9)
|
(404.0)
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Gross profit
|
|
1,008.7
|
298.0
|
|
|
|
|
Other Operating income
|
2
|
532.4
|
79.0
|
|
|
|
|
Total Administrative
expenses
|
|
|
|
Administrative expenses
|
|
(7,397.8)
|
(8,932.7)
|
Share based payment
charge
|
|
(383.1)
|
(441.8)
|
|
|
(7,780.9)
|
(9,374.5)
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Operating loss
|
3
|
(6,239.8)
|
(8,997.5)
|
|
|
|
|
Income from short term
deposits
|
|
507.0
|
105.7
|
Interest payable
|
|
(33.0)
|
(36.6)
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Loss before tax
|
|
(5,765.8)
|
(8,928.4)
|
Taxation
|
5
|
952.4
|
1,632.6
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Loss for period / total comprehensive
expense
|
|
(4,813.4)
|
(7,296.0)
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Loss per share from continuing operations
|
6
|
|
|
Basic
|
|
(3.03)p
|
(4.61)p
|
Diluted
|
|
(3.03)p
|
(4.61)p
|
|
|
|
|
The notes below form part of these
financial statements.
Ilika plc
Consolidated balance sheet
|
As at 30th
April
|
|
Notes
|
2024
|
2023
|
ASSETS
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Intangible
assets
|
7
|
3,721.0
|
2,943.5
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
8
|
3,758.6
|
4,263.6
|
Right to use
assets
|
9
|
569.6
|
630.9
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Total non-current assets
|
|
8,049.2
|
7,838.0
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
10
|
2,304.2
|
1,938.5
|
Current tax
receivable
|
5
|
526.4
|
1,261.1
|
Other financial assets - bank
deposits
|
11
|
4,180.9
|
772.7
|
Cash and cash
equivalents
|
12
|
7,764.4
|
15,101.0
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Total current assets
|
|
14,775.9
|
19,073.3
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Total assets
|
|
22,825.1
|
26,911.3
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Issued capital and reserves attributable to owners of
parent
|
|
|
Issued share
capital
|
16
|
1,591.4
|
1,590.6
|
Share
premium
|
|
64,953.5
|
64,936.6
|
Capital restructuring
reserve
|
|
6,486.1
|
6,486.1
|
Accumulated losses
|
|
(52,671.4)
|
(48,241.1)
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Total equity
|
|
20,359.6
|
24,772.2
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
LIABILITIES
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other
payables
|
13
|
1,590.7
|
1,271.1
|
Lease liabilities
|
9
|
288.7
|
260.8
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Total current liabilities
|
|
1,879.4
|
1,531.9
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Non-current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Lease liabilities
|
9
|
336.6
|
357.7
|
Provisions
|
14
|
249.5
|
249.5
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Total non-current liabilities
|
|
586.1
|
607.2
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Total liabilities
|
|
2,465.5
|
2,139.1
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Total equity and liabilities
|
|
22,825.1
|
26,911.3
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
The notes below form part of these
financial statements.
These financial statements were
approved and authorised for issue by the Board of Directors on
10th July
2024.
Mr. J
Millard
Director
Ilika plc
Consolidated cash flow statement
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
Cash flows from operating activities
|
|
|
|
Loss before taxation
|
|
(5,765.8)
|
(8,928.4)
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
Amortisation
|
|
41.7
|
42.2
|
Depreciation
|
|
1,694.4
|
1,552.8
|
Equity settled share-based
payments
|
|
383.1
|
441.8
|
Loss / (profit) on disposal of plant
property and equipment
|
|
14.8
|
(0.8)
|
Net financial (income)
|
|
(474.0)
|
(69.1)
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Operating cash flow before changes in working capital,
interest and taxes
|
|
(4,105.8)
|
(6,961.5)
|
Increase in trade and other
receivables
|
(365.6)
|
(454.0)
|
Increase / (decrease) in trade and
other payables
|
319.6
|
(136.3)
|
Increase in provisions
|
-
|
9.2
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Cash utilised by operations
|
|
(4,151.8)
|
(7,542.6)
|
|
|
|
|
Tax received
|
|
1,687.1
|
1,388.1
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Net
cash flow used in operating activities
|
|
(2,464.7)
|
(6,154.5)
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from investing activities
|
|
|
|
Interest received
|
|
507.0
|
105.6
|
Purchase of intangible
assets
|
(819.3)
|
(1,027.5)
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
(842.5)
|
(374.0)
|
Sale of property, plant and
equipment
|
7.8
|
0.8
|
Increase in other financial assets -
Bank deposits
|
|
(3,408.2)
|
-
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Net
cash used in investing activities
|
|
(4,555.2)
|
(1,295.1)
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
Proceeds from issuance of ordinary
share capital
|
|
17.7
|
190.0
|
Cost of share issue
|
|
-
|
-
|
Lease payments - capital
|
|
(301.4)
|
(229.1)
|
Lease payments - interest
|
|
(33.0)
|
(36.6)
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Net
cash (used in) financing activities
|
|
(316.7)
|
(75.7)
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Net (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
(7,336.6)
|
(7,525.3)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the
start of the period
|
|
15,101.0
|
22,626.3
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end
of the period
|
|
7,764.4
|
15,101.0
|
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
|
|
|
| |
The notes below form part of these
financial statements.
Ilika plc
Consolidated statement of
changes in equity
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
account
|
Capital
restructuring reserve
|
Accumulated losses
|
Total
attributable to equity
holders of parent
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As at 30th April
2022
|
1,582.3
|
64,754.9
|
6,486.1
|
(41,386.9)
|
31,436.4
|
Share-based payment
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
441.8
|
441.8
|
Issue of
shares
|
8.3
|
181.7
|
-
|
-
|
190.0
|
Cost of
share issue
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Loss and
total comprehensive expense
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(7,296.0)
|
(7,296.0)
|
|
------
|
-------
|
--------
|
--------
|
--------
|
As at 30th April
2023
|
1,590.6
|
64,936.6
|
6,486.1
|
(48,241.1)
|
24,772.2
|
Share-based payment
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
383.1
|
383.1
|
Issue of
shares
|
0.8
|
16.9
|
-
|
-
|
17.7
|
Cost of
share issue
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Loss and
total comprehensive expense
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(4,813.4)
|
(4,813.4)
|
|
------
|
-------
|
--------
|
--------
|
--------
|
As at 30th April
2024
|
1,591.4
|
64,953.5
|
6,486.1
|
(52,671.4)
|
20,359.6
|
|
------
|
-------
|
--------
|
--------
|
--------
|
Share capital
The share capital represents the
nominal value of the equity shares in issue.
Share premium account
When shares are issued, any premium
paid above the nominal value is credited to the share premium
reserve.
Capital restructuring
reserve
The capital restructuring reserve
arises on the accounting for the share for share exchange. It
represents the difference between the value of the issued equity
instruments of Ilika Technologies Ltd immediately before the share
for share exchange and the equity instruments of Ilika plc along
with the shares issued to effect the share for share
exchange.
Accumulated losses
The accumulated losses reserve
records the accumulated profits and losses of the Group since
inception of the business.
The notes below form part of these
financial statements.
Ilika plc
Notes to the consolidated financial
statements
1 Accounting
policies
Basis of preparation
These financial statements have
been prepared in accordance with UK adopted international
accounting standards. The principal accounting policies adopted in
the preparation of the consolidated financial statements are set
out below. The policies have been consistently applied to all of
the years presented. The figures presented in the financial
statements are shown in thousands.
The individual financial statements
of Ilika plc are shown on page 61 to 65.
Basis of consolidation
The consolidated financial
statements incorporate the financial statements of the Company and
entities controlled by the Company made up to the reporting date.
The Company controls an investee if all three of the following
elements are present: power over the investee, exposure to variable
returns over the investee, and the ability of the investee to use
its power to affect the variable returns. Control is reassessed
whenever facts and circumstances indicate that there may be a
change in any of these elements of control. All intra-group
transactions, balances, income and expenses are eliminated on
consolidation.
Going concern
The financial statements have been
prepared on a going concern basis which assumes that the Company
will have sufficient funds available to enable it to continue to
trade for the foreseeable future. In making their assessment that
this assumption is correct the Directors have undertaken an
in-depth review of the business, its current prospects, and cash
resources as set out below.
The directors have prepared and
reviewed financial forecasts. The Group meets its day to day
working capital requirements through existing cash resources, short
and long term bank deposits, which, at 30th April 2024, amounted to
£11,945,282 (2023: £15,873,631). After due consideration of these
forecasts and current cash resources and bank deposits, the
directors consider that the Company and the Group have adequate
financial resources to continue in operational existence for the
foreseeable future (being a period of at least twelve months from
the date of this report), and for this reason the financial
statements have been prepared on a going concern basis.
Following the completion of the
2023_24 accounting period the Company successfully raised an
additional £2.3m gross, funds through an equity placing of ordinary
shares to institutional and retail shareholders. This additional
capital further strengthens the balance sheet and underpins the
ongoing support from shareholders.
After taking account of all the
above factors the Directors believe that as the market becomes more
aware of the Company's prospects and the scale of the opportunities
that the Company's technologies create the Company will continue to
be able to raise any funds required to enable it to continue to
trade and grow towards self-sufficiency.
Changes in
accounting policies
(a) New standards, amendments to
standards or interpretations
No new standards, interpretations
and amendments adopted in the year have had a material impact on
the Group.
(b) New standards, amendments
to standards or interpretations not yet applied
There are no new standards,
interpretations or amendments not yet applied which the directors
anticipate will have a material impact on the Group.
Turnover
Turnover comprises the amount of
consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled for the
sales of products or services, net of value added tax and is
recognised as follows:
Sales of
goods
Sales of Stereax batteries are
recognised upon despatch to the customer at which point they have
an obligation to pay in full and as such, control is considered to
transfer at that point. Invoices are raised at the point
purchase orders are made and subsequently upon delivery.
Government
grants
Grants that compensate the Group
for expenses incurred are recognised in the income statement on a
systematic basis in the same periods in which the expenses are
recognised. Submissions are made for pre-arranged time periods with
timing differences recognised within accrued or deferred
income.
Financial income
Income from short term deposits is
recognised in the income statement as it accrues, using the
effective interest method.
Pension and other post-retirement benefits
Payments to defined contribution
retirement benefit schemes are charged as an expense as they fall
due.
Share-based payment transactions
The Group issues equity-settled
share options to all employees. Equity-settled share options are
measured at fair value at the date of grant. The fair value
determined at the grant date of the equity-settled share options is
expensed on a straight-line basis over the vesting period. At each
period end, the directors re-assess the impact of non-market
conditions and adjust the estimated share-based payment
appropriately.
The fair value of options granted
by the Group is measured by use of the Black-Scholes pricing model
taking into account the following inputs: the exercise price of the
option; the life of the option; the market price on the date of
grant of the option; the expected volatility of the share price;
the dividends expected on the shares; and the risk free interest
rate for the life of the option. Where required market-based
vesting and other conditions are also considered in determining the
fair value of new options granted in the year. The expected life
used in the model has been adjusted, based on management's best
estimate, for the effects of non-transferability, exercise
restrictions, and behavioural considerations.
Foreign currency
Transactions in foreign currencies
are translated at the foreign exchange rate ruling at the date of
the transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in
foreign currencies at the balance sheet date are translated at the
foreign exchange rate ruling at that date. Foreign exchange
differences arising on translation are recognised in profit or
loss.
Research and development expenditure
Research expenditure is recognised
as an expense when it is incurred.
Development expenditure is
recognised as an expense except that costs incurred on development
projects are capitalised as intangible assets to the extent that
such expenditure is expected to generate future economic benefits.
Development expenditure is capitalised if, and only if, an entity
within the Group can demonstrate all of the following:
i. its ability to measure
reliably the expenditure attributable to the asset under
development;
ii. the product or process is
technically and commercially feasible;
iii. its future economic benefits are
probable;
iv. its ability to use or sell the developed
asset;
v. the availability of adequate
technical, financial and other resources to complete the asset
under development; and
vi. its intention is to use or sell the
developed asset.
During the year, £819,254 (2023:
£1,027,512) of development expenditure has been capitalised in line
with IAS 38 as a result of the conditions being met in respect of
the Stereax battery project and the sales made in the year.
This capitalisation had commenced in April 2020.
Taxation
Companies within the group may be
entitled to claim special tax allowances under the SME scheme in
relation to qualifying research and development expenditure (eg
R&D tax credits). The group accounts for such allowances as tax
credits, which means that they are recognised when it is probable
that the benefit will flow to the group and that benefit can be
reliably measured. R&D tax credits reduce current tax
expense and, to the extent the amounts due in respect of them are
not settled by the balance sheet date, reduce current tax payable.
Where companies are loss-making the company claims tax credits on
their surrenderable losses, with an appropriate receivable
recognised. A deferred tax asset is recognised for unclaimed
tax credits that are carried forward as deferred tax
assets.
Tax credits claimed under the RDEC
scheme are accounted for under IAS 20 as government grants in line
with the accounting policy noted above.
Deferred tax is provided on
temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and
liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amounts used
for taxation purposes. The amount of deferred tax provided is based
on the expected manner of realisation or settlement of the carrying
amount of assets and liabilities, using tax rates enacted or
substantively enacted at the reporting date.
A deferred tax asset is recognised
only to the extent that it is probable that future taxable profits
will be available against which the asset can be
utilised.
Property, plant and equipment
Property, plant and equipment are
stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment
losses.
Where parts of an item of property,
plant and equipment have different useful lives, they are accounted
for as separate items of property, plant and equipment.
Depreciation is charged to the
statement of comprehensive income on a straight-line basis over the
estimated useful lives of each part of an item of property, plant
and equipment less their estimated residual value. The estimated
useful lives are as follows:
Leasehold improvements
|
lease term
|
Plant, machinery and
equipment
|
2 - 5 years
|
Fixtures & fittings
|
3 - 5 years
|
Impairment
The carrying amounts of the Group's
assets are reviewed at each reporting date to determine whether
there is any indication of impairment. If any such indication
exists, the asset's recoverable amount is estimated at the present
value of the future expected cashflows associated with the impaired
asset.
An impairment loss is recognised
whenever the carrying amount of an asset exceeds its recoverable
amount.
Impairment losses are recognised in
profit or loss.
Leases
All leases are accounted for by
recognising a right-of-use asset and a lease liability except for
leases of low value assets and leases with a duration of twelve
months or less.
Lease liabilities are measured at
the present value of the contractual payments due to the lessor
over the lease term, with the discount rate determined by reference
to the rate inherent in the lease unless (as is typically the case)
this is not readily determinable, in which case the Group's
incremental borrowing rate on commencement of the lease is used.
Variable lease payments are only included in the measurement of the
lease liability if they depend on an index or rate. In such cases,
the initial measurement of the lease liability assumes the variable
element will remain unchanged throughout the lease term. Other
variable lease payments are expensed in the period to which they
relate.
On initial recognition, the
carrying value of the lease liability also includes: amounts
expected to be payable under any residual value guarantee; the
exercise price of any purchase option granted in favour of the
group if it is reasonably certain to exercise that option; and any
penalties payable for terminating the lease, if the term of the
lease has been estimated on the basis of termination option being
exercised.
Right-of-use assets are initially
measured at the amount of the lease liability, reduced for any
lease incentives received, and increased for: lease payments made
at or before commencement of the lease, initial direct costs
incurred, and the amount of any provision recognised where the
Group is contractually required to dismantle, remove or restore the
leased asset.
Subsequent to initial measurement,
lease liabilities increase as a result of interest charged at a
constant rate on the balance outstanding and are reduced for lease
payments made. Right-of-use assets are amortised on a straight-line
basis over the remaining term of the lease or over the remaining
economic life of the asset if, rarely, this is judged to be shorter
than the lease term.
Intangible assets
Computer software
Acquired computer software licenses
are capitalised on the basis of the costs incurred to acquire and
bring to use the specific software. These costs are amortised to
administrative expenses using the straight line method over their
estimated useful lives (1-5 years).
Intellectual
property
Acquired intellectual property is
included at cost and is amortised to administrative expenses on a
straight-line basis over its useful economic life of 15
years.
Development
expenditure
Development expenditure is
capitalised at cost and is amortised to administrative expenses on
a straight-line basis over its useful economic life of 10
years.
Financial
instruments
Financial assets and financial
liabilities are recognised on the Group's balance sheet when the
Group becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the
instrument. The Group's financial assets are all carried at
amortised cost. Impairment provisions for trade receivables are
recognised based on the simplified approach within IFRS 9 using a
provision matrix in the determination of the lifetime expected
credit losses. The Group's financial liabilities are all classified
as 'other' liabilities which are carried at amortised cost.
Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash balances
and call deposits. Deposits of over 3 months' maturity, judged at
inception, are classified as Other Financial Assets.
Cash comprises cash on hand and
demand deposits. Cash equivalents are short-term, highly liquid
investments that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash
and that are subject to an insignificant risk of changes in
value.
Financial liabilities and
equity
Classification as debt or equity
Debt and equity instruments are
classified as either financial liabilities or as equity in
accordance with the substance of the contractual arrangements and
the definitions of a financial liability and an equity
instrument.
Equity instruments
An equity instrument is any
contract that evidences a residual interest in the assets of an
entity after deducting all of its liabilities. Equity instruments
issued by the Group are recognised at the proceeds received, net of
direct issue costs.
Provisions
Provisions are made where an event
has taken place that gives the Group a legal or constructive
obligation that probably requires settlement by a transfer of
economic benefit, and a reliable estimate can be made of the amount
of the obligation.
Provisions are either charged as an
expense to income statement or capitalised within property, plant
and equipment in the year that the Group becomes aware of the
obligation, and are measured at the best estimate at the balance
sheet date of the expenditure required to settle the obligation,
taking into account relevant risks and uncertainties.
When payments are made, they are
charged to the provision carried in the balance sheet.
Key sources of estimation and
uncertainty
The preparation of the Group's
financial statements requires management to make estimates and
assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and
liabilities, revenues and expenses at the date of the Group's
financial statements. The Group's estimates and judgements are
continually evaluated and are based on historical experience and
other factors, including expectations of future events that are
believed to be reasonable under the circumstances.
The estimates and assumptions that
have a significant risk of causing a material adjustment to the
carrying amounts of assets and liabilities within the next
financial year are discussed below:
Capitalisation of development costs
During the year, costs have been
capitalised in respect of the Stereax battery technology. The
directors have determined that the conditions to capitalise this
associated expenditure have been met. Had these costs been
considered research rather than development expenditure then the
intangible assets would be £819,254 lower.
Recoverability of development costs
The directors have considered the
recoverability of the capitalised costs by reference to third party
market analysis and the signed contract with Cirtec and determined
that the amounts are recoverable.
2 Segment reporting
The Group operates in one area of
activity, namely the production, design and development of
solid-state batteries. For management purposes, the Group is
analysed by the geographical location of its customer base and
business development directors have been appointed to cover the
group's three territories of focus, Asia, North America and Europe
(with the UK further split out below).
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
Turnover
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
Analysis by geographical
market:
|
|
By
destination
|
|
|
Asia
|
5.3
|
20.4
|
Europe
|
-
|
-
|
North
America
|
2.1
|
0.6
|
UK
|
2,083.2
|
681.0
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
|
2,090.6
|
702.0
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
An analysis of turnover by type,
demonstrating the changing focus of management from sales of
services to sales of goods, is as follows:
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
Turnover
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
Goods and services
|
20.1
|
33.8
|
UK Grants
|
2,070.5
|
668.2
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
|
2,090.6
|
702.0
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Customers might individually
account for more than 10% of the total turnover of the Group. The
turnover from these companies are indicated below:
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
Turnover
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
UK Grants
|
2,070.5
|
668.2
|
Customers less than 10%
|
20.1
|
33.8
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
|
2,090.6
|
702.0
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
The Company benefitted from the UK
Government Research & Development Expenditure Credit (RDEC)
during the year:
|
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
Other Operating Income
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£
|
£
|
|
|
|
RDEC
|
532.4
|
79.0
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
|
532.4
|
79.0
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
3 Operating loss
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
This is arrived at after charging:
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
Research and development expenditure
in the year
|
3,506.2
|
4,131.4
|
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment
|
1,324.4
|
1,292.5
|
Depreciation of right-of-use
assets
|
369.5
|
260.3
|
Amortisation of intangible
assets
|
41.7
|
42.2
|
Auditors remuneration:
Fees payable to the Group's auditor
for the audit of the Group's
accounts
|
42.2
|
43.5
|
Fees payable to the Group's auditor
for other services:
- The Audit of
the Group's subsidiaries
|
9.5
|
9.8
|
- Audit
assurance services
|
-
|
4.0
|
Foreign exchange
differences
|
2.7
|
10.4
|
Share-based payment
|
383.1
|
441.8
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
4 Employees
The
average number of employees during the year, including executive
directors, was:
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
Number
|
Number
|
Administration
|
6
|
6
|
Materials synthesis
|
62
|
66
|
|
------
|
------
|
|
68
|
72
|
|
------
|
------
|
Staff costs for all employees,
including executive directors, consist of:
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
Wages and salaries
|
3,548.7
|
4,043.8
|
Social security costs
|
380.6
|
473.3
|
Share-based payment
expense
|
383.1
|
441.8
|
Pension costs
|
488.5
|
280.0
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
|
4,800.9
|
5,238.9
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
Included in the above are amounts
totaling £752,332 (2023: £935,669) which have been
capitalised.
The total remuneration of the
Directors of the Group was as follows:
|
|
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
Wages and salaries
|
550.1
|
558.3
|
Pension costs
|
114.8
|
26.9
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Directors' emoluments
|
664.9
|
585.2
|
|
|
|
Social security costs
|
71.8
|
72.7
|
Share-based payment
expense
|
281.8
|
256.0
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
Key management personnel
|
1,018.5
|
913.9
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
The Directors represent key
management personnel and further details, are given in the
Directors' Remuneration Report on page 14. The highest paid
director received remuneration of £334,537 (2023: £341,340)
including pension contributions of £69,549 (2023:
£22,056).
5 Taxation
(a) Tax on loss from
ordinary activities
There is no taxation charge due to
the losses incurred by the Group during the year. The taxation
credit represents R&D tax credit claims as follows:
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
R&D tax credits
|
526.4
|
1,261.1
|
Adjustments to prior
period
|
426.0
|
371.5
|
|
----
|
----
|
|
952.4
|
1,632.6
|
|
------
|
------
|
(b)
Factors affecting current tax credit
The tax assessed on the loss on
ordinary activities for the period is different to the standard
rate of corporation tax in the UK of 19% up to April 2024 and 19%
from April 2024 under the Small ring fenced profits rate (2023:
19%). The differences are reconciled below:
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
Loss on ordinary activities before
tax
|
(5,765.8)
|
(8,928.4)
|
|
------
|
------
|
Loss on ordinary activities before
tax multiplied by the standard rate of corporation tax in the UK of
19% (2023: 19%)
|
(1,095.5)
|
(1,696.4)
|
Effects of:
|
|
|
Expenses not deductible for
corporation tax
|
96.2
|
90.7
|
R&D relief
|
(135.8)
|
(468.0)
|
Origination of unrecognised tax
losses
|
608.7
|
812.6
|
Adjustments to prior
period
|
(426.0)
|
(371.5)
|
|
------
|
------
|
Total tax credit for the year
|
(952.4)
|
(1,632.6)
|
|
------
|
------
|
Unrecognised deferred taxation
There are tax losses available for
carry forward against future trading profits of approximately
£42.6m (2023: £40m). A deferred tax asset in respect of these
losses, net of fixed asset timing differences of approximately
£9.6m (2023: £9.1m) has not been recognised in the accounts, as the
full utilisation of these losses in the foreseeable future is
uncertain.
6 Losses per
share
Losses per ordinary share have been
calculated using the weighted average number of shares in issue
during the relevant financial periods. The weighted average number
of equity shares in issue and the losses, being loss after tax, are
as follows:
|
Year ended 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
No.
|
No.
|
|
|
|
Weighted average number of equity
shares
|
159,036,098
|
158,395,116
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
|
|
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
Losses after tax
|
(4,813.4)
|
(7,295.9)
|
|
-------
|
-------
|
|
|
|
|
Pence
|
Pence
|
Loss per share
|
(3.03)
|
(4.61)
|
|
------
|
------
|
The loss attributable to ordinary
shareholders and weighted average number of ordinary shares for the
purpose of calculating the diluted losses per ordinary share are
identical to those used for basic losses per share. This is because
the exercise of share options would have the effect of reducing the
loss per ordinary share and is therefore not dilutive. At
30th April 2024, there were 8,316,157 options outstanding
(2023: 6,978,331 ) as detailed in
notes 16 and 20.
7 Intangible
assets
|
Development
expenditure
|
Software
licences
|
Intellectual
property
|
Total
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
As
at 30th April 2022
|
1,793.0
|
269.9
|
75.0
|
2,137.9
|
Additions
|
1,027.5
|
-
|
-
|
1,027.5
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April 2023
|
2,820.5
|
269.9
|
75.0
|
3,165.4
|
Additions
|
819.2
|
-
|
-
|
819.2
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April 2024
|
3,639.7
|
269.9
|
75.0
|
3,984.6
|
|
|
|
|
|
Amortisation
|
|
|
|
|
As
at 30th April 2022
|
-
|
104.7
|
75.0
|
179.7
|
Provided for the year
|
-
|
42.2
|
-
|
42.2
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April 2023
|
-
|
146.9
|
75.0
|
221.9
|
Provided for the year
|
-
|
41.7
|
-
|
41.7
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April 2024
|
-
|
188.6
|
75.0
|
263.6
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
book value
|
|
|
|
|
As
at 30th April 2023
|
2,820.5
|
123.0
|
-
|
2,943.5
|
|
-------
|
------
|
-------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April 2024
|
3,639.7
|
81.3
|
-
|
3,721.0
|
|
-------
|
------
|
-------
|
------
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The amortisation charge of £41,668
(2023: £42,203) is included within administrative
expenses.
Development expenditure has not yet
been amortised awaiting full commercialisation and completion of
the technology transfer of the Stereax business to Cirtec under
licence.
8 Property, plant and
equipment
|
Leasehold
improvements
|
Plant,
machinery and
equipment
|
Fixtures and
fittings
|
Total
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
|
As
at 30th April 2022
|
392.4
|
8,538.1
|
103.0
|
9,033.5
|
Additions
|
1.4
|
478.5
|
3.9
|
483.8
|
Disposals
|
-
|
(119.7)
|
-
|
(119.7)
|
|
------
|
-------
|
------
|
-------
|
As
at 30th April 2023
|
393.8
|
8,896.9
|
106.9
|
9,397.6
|
Additions
|
38.9
|
802.6
|
1.0
|
842.5
|
Disposals
|
-
|
(153.6)
|
-
|
(153.6)
|
|
------
|
-------
|
------
|
-------
|
As
at 30th April 2024
|
432.7
|
9,545.9
|
107.9
|
10,086.5
|
|
------
|
-------
|
------
|
-------
|
Depreciation
|
|
|
|
|
As
at 30th April 2022
|
80.9
|
3,836.3
|
44.1
|
3,961.3
|
Provided for the year
|
78.7
|
1,190.9
|
22.8
|
1,292.4
|
Disposals
|
-
|
(119.7)
|
-
|
(119.7)
|
|
------
|
-------
|
------
|
-------
|
As
at 30th April 2023
|
159.6
|
4,907.5
|
66.9
|
5,134.0
|
Provided for the year
|
81.1
|
1,230.8
|
13.0
|
1,324.9
|
Disposals
|
-
|
(131.0)
|
-
|
(131.0)
|
|
------
|
-------
|
------
|
-------
|
As
at 30th April 2024
|
240.7
|
6,007.3
|
79.9
|
6,327.9
|
|
------
|
-------
|
------
|
-------
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net
book value
|
|
|
|
|
As
at 30th April 2023
|
234.2
|
3,989.4
|
40.0
|
4,263.6
|
|
------
|
-------
|
------
|
-------
|
As
at 30th April 2024
|
192.0
|
3,538.6
|
28.0
|
3,758.6
|
|
------
|
-------
|
------
|
-------
|
At the year end, deposits totaling
£414,183 (2023: £223,751) were paid in respect of property, plant
and equipment and are held in prepayments. These will be
transferred once the items have been received. Additionally, the
Group has capital commitments totaling £515,722 (2023: £314,531) as
disclosed in note 18.
9
Leases
The Group has leases for its
premises in Romsey and Chandler's Ford and for a company van. These
leases are accounted for by recognising a right-of-use asset and a
lease liability.
The lease liabilities have been
measured at the present value of the contractual payments due to
the lessor over the lease terms using an incremental borrowing rate
of between 4% - 7.5%, which is the group's estimate of the discount
rate applicable to a property and an equipment lease. The lease
terms have been determined to be between 3 and 5 years, as this is
the non-cancellable period before the Group has the option of a
break. There is no reasonable certainty that the leases will
continue beyond this point.
The right-of-use assets have been
initially measured at the amount of the lease liabilities.
Subsequent to initial measurement the lease liabilities increase as
a result of interest charged at a constant rate on the balance
outstanding and are reduced for any lease payments made.
Right-of-use assets are depreciated on a straight-line basis over
the remaining term of the lease.
Right-of-use assets
|
Land and
buildings
|
Plant and
equipment
|
Total
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
Cost
|
|
|
|
As
at 1st May 2022
|
1,046.5
|
229.2
|
1,275.7
|
Additions
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April 2023
|
1,046.5
|
229.2
|
1,275.7
|
Additions
|
298.0
|
10.2
|
308.2
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April 2024
|
1,344.5
|
239.4
|
1,583.9
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
Depreciation
|
|
|
|
As
at 1st May 2022
|
365.4
|
19.2
|
384.6
|
Provided for the year
|
209.3
|
50.9
|
260.2
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April 2023
|
574.7
|
70.1
|
644.8
|
Provided for the year
|
209.3
|
160.2
|
369.5
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April 2024
|
784.0
|
230.3
|
1,014.3
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
Net
book value
|
|
|
|
As
at 30th April 2023
|
471.8
|
159.1
|
630.9
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April 2024
|
560.5
|
9.1
|
569.6
|
|
------
|
------
|
------
|
|
|
|
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
|
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
As
at 1st May
|
|
618.5
|
847.6
|
Additions
|
|
308.2
|
-
|
Cashflows:
|
|
|
|
Lease payments
|
|
(334.4)
|
(265.7)
|
Interest expense
|
|
33.0
|
36.6
|
|
|
------
|
------
|
As
at 30th April
|
|
625.3
|
618.5
|
|
|
------
|
------
|
Maturity analysis of lease payments:
|
|
|
|
|
As at 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
0-3 months
|
58.2
|
57.8
|
3-12 months
|
230.5
|
203.0
|
|
------
|
------
|
Due in less than one year
|
288.7
|
260.8
|
1-2 years
|
194.1
|
207.7
|
2-5 years
|
142.5
|
150.0
|
|
------
|
------
|
Lease payments
|
625.3
|
618.5
|
|
------
|
------
|
10 Trade
and other receivables
|
As at 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
Trade receivables
|
2.1
|
19.3
|
Prepayments
|
1,144.0
|
970.1
|
Other receivables
|
432.3
|
481.6
|
Accrued income
|
725.8
|
467.5
|
|
------
|
------
|
|
2,304.2
|
1,938.5
|
|
------
|
------
|
The ageing of trade receivables is
as follows:
|
As at 30th
April
|
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
£
|
£
|
|
|
|
0-29 days
|
-
|
19.3
|
30+ days
|
2.1
|
-
|
|
------
|
------
|
The accrued income of £725,778
(2023: £467,495) relates to performance obligations satisfied but
not invoiced, all of which is due to be settled within the next
twelve months. The change in accrued income reflects the level of
grants underway at the current year end compared to the previous
year and the change to the R&D tax credit scheme with
additional recovery through the RDEC element for 23_24 financial
year.
11 Other
financial assets - bank deposits
|
As at 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
Short term deposits with more than
three months' maturity
|
4,180.9
|
772.7
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
12 Cash and
cash equivalents
|
As at 30th
April
|
|
2023
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
Current bank accounts
|
1,010.0
|
739.5
|
Short term deposits with less than
three months' maturity
|
6,754.4
|
14,361.5
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
|
7,764.4
|
15,101.0
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
13 Trade and other
payables
|
As at 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
Trade payables
|
286.9
|
294.1
|
Other payables
|
39.2
|
39.0
|
Other taxes and social security
costs
|
91.5
|
92.7
|
Accruals and deferred
income
|
1,173.1
|
845.3
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
|
1,590.7
|
1,271.1
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
The ageing of financial liabilities
is as follows:
|
As at 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
0-29 days
|
855.3
|
680.3
|
30-59 days
|
1.5
|
85.5
|
60-89 days
|
630.5
|
383.2
|
90+ days
|
11.9
|
29.4
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
|
1,499.2
|
1,178.4
|
|
--------
|
--------
|
Within Accruals and deferred income
is deferred income of £11,886 (2023: £10,000) that represents
unfulfilled performance obligations on grants and product sales to
be satisfied in the next twelve months.
14
Provisions
|
|
Leasehold
Dilapidations
|
|
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
As at 1st May
2023
|
|
249.5
|
Provided
|
|
-
|
|
|
------
|
As at 30th April
2024
|
|
249.5
|
|
|
--------
|
Leasehold dilapidations relate to
the estimated cost of returning two leasehold properties to their
original state at the end of the lease in accordance with the lease
terms.
15
Financial instruments
The risks
associated with financial instruments are set out below.
Foreign currency
risk
The Group buys goods and services
in currencies other than sterling. The Group's non sterling
liabilities and cash flows can be affected by movements in exchange
rates. Given the low value of non-sterling transactions the Group
considers there to be a low exposure to foreign currency risk. The
Group has denominated some of its sales transactions in
non-sterling currencies. The foreign exchange loss recognised in
the accounts in the year to 30th April 2024 was £2,661
(2023: £10,436).
Credit risk
The Group's credit risk is
attributable to its trade receivables and banking deposits. The
Group places its deposits with reputable financial institutions to
minimise credit risk. The maximum exposure to credit risk for each
period is the amount disclosed above as cash and cash equivalents,
banking deposits and receivables. For the periods above there were
no trade receivables which were past due or impaired. Risk is
further mitigated through the use of credit limits, but also
through the nature of the customers, who, for the most part, are
large multinationals.
Liquidity risk
The Group's policy is to maintain
adequate cash resources to meet liabilities as they fall due. All
Group payable balances fall due for payment within one year. Cash
balances are placed on deposit for varying periods with reputable
banking institutions to ensure there is limited risk of capital
loss. The Group does not maintain an overdraft facility.
Interest rate risk
The main risk arising from the
Group's financial instruments is interest rate risk. The Group
placed deposits surplus to short-term working capital requirements
with a variety of reputable UK-based banks. These balances are
placed at floating rates of interest and deposits have maturities
of one to twelve months. The Group's cash and short-term deposits
are set out in note 11 and 12. Floating-rate financial assets
comprise cash on deposit and cash at bank. Short-term deposits are
placed with banks and are categorised as floating-rate financial
assets. Contracts in place at 30th April 2024 had a
weighted average period to maturity of 45 days (2023: 7 days) and a
weighted average annualised rate of interest of 3.71%. (2023:
2.73%).
Interest rate risk sensitivity analysis
It is
estimated that a change in base rate to zero would have increased
the Group's loss before taxation for the year to 30th
April 2024 by approximately £507,038 (2023: £105,696).
It is
estimated that an increase in base rate by 1 percent would decrease
the Group's loss before taxation for the year to 30th
April 2024 by approximately £119,453 (2023: £158,699).
There is
no difference between the book and fair value of financial assets
and liabilities.
Capital management
The primary aim of the Group's
capital management is to safeguard the Group's ability to continue
as a going concern, to support its businesses and maximise
shareholder value. The Group monitors its capital structure and
makes adjustments as and when it is deemed necessary and
appropriate to do so using such methods as the issuing of new
shares. At present all funding is raised by equity.
16 Share
capital
|
As at 30th
April
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
Authorised
|
|
|
158,975,667 (2023: 158,474,367)
Ordinary Shares of £0.01 each
|
1,589.8
|
1,584.7
|
1,355,100 (2023: 1,781,400)
Convertible Preference Shares of £0.01 each
|
13.6
|
17.8
|
|
------
|
------
|
Allotted, called up and fully paid
|
|
|
158,975,667 (2023:158,474,367)
Ordinary Shares of £0.01 each
|
1,589.8
|
1,584.7
|
162,100 (2023: 588,400) Convertible
Preference Shares of £0.01 each
|
1.6
|
5.9
|
|
------
|
------
|
|
1,591.4
|
1,590.6
|
|
------
|
------
|
Share Rights
The ordinary share and preference
shares rank pari passu in all respects other than:
·
The losses which the Group may determine to
distribute in respect of any financial period shall be distributed
only among the holders of the Ordinary Shares. The Preference
Shares shall not entitle the holders of them to any share in such
distributions.
·
On a return of capital or assets on a liquidation,
reduction of capital or otherwise the surplus assets of the Group
remaining after payment of its obligations shall be
applied:
o
First, in paying to the holders of the Preference
Shares the amount paid thereon, being the amount equal to the par
value of the preference shares excluding any premium;
and
o
Secondly, the balance of such surplus assets shall
belong to and be distributed amongst the holders of the Ordinary
Shares.
The Preference Shareholders have
the right, at any time, to convert the preference shares held to
the same number of Ordinary Shares. There are no further redemption
rights.
During the year, a total of 75,000
options over Ordinary Shares of £0.01 each were exercised for a
total consideration of £19,125.
During the year, a total of 426,300
Preference Shares were converted to Ordinary Shares of £0.01
each.
Share options
Employee related share options are
disclosed in note 20.
17 Pensions
The Group operates a defined
contribution group personal pension scheme. The pension cost charge
for the period represents contributions payable by the Group to the
scheme and amounted to £495,220 (2023: £280,021). Included within
other creditors is £37,207 (2023: £37,429) relating to outstanding
pension contributions.
18 Capital
commitments
At
30th April, the group had capital commitments as
follows:
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
|
|
|
Contracted
for but not provided in these financial statements
|
515.7
|
314.5
|
|
------
|
------
|
19 Related party
transactions
The directors consider that no one
party controls the Group.
Details of key management personnel
and their compensation are given in note 4 and in the Directors'
Remuneration Report on pages 14 to 18.
Included within these statements,
as shown in note 10 and note 27, are amounts totalling £91,593
(2023: £127,403) relating to employee share option exercises which
were owed as at April 30 2024.
20 Share-based payments expense and
share options
Share-based payment
expense
The Group has incentivised and
motivated staff through the grant of share options under the
Enterprise Management Incentive (EMI) scheme and through unapproved
share options.
At 30th April 2024, the
following fully vested options, whose fair values have been fully
charged to the consolidated statement of total comprehensive
income, were outstanding:
Approved share options:
Date of grant
|
Number of shares
|
Period of
option
|
Vesting
date
|
Exercise
Price per
share
|
|
|
|
|
|
08/02/18
|
78,375
|
10 years
|
08/02/21
|
£0.21
|
24/01/19
|
390,500
|
10 years
|
18/01/22
|
£0.182
|
09/07/19
|
238,983
|
10 years
|
09/07/22
|
£0.295
|
19/03/20
|
677,000
|
10 years
|
19/03/23
|
£0.255
|
Unapproved share options:
Date of grant
|
Number of shares
|
Period of
option
|
Vesting
date
|
Exercise
Price per
share
|
15/08/2017
|
84,021
|
10 years
|
15/08/18
|
£0.01
|
24/01/2019
|
1,840,171
|
10 years
|
23/01/22
|
£0.01
|
29/08/2019
|
268,125
|
10 years
|
29/08/20
|
£0.01
|
26/03/2020
|
60,000
|
10 years
|
19/03/23
|
£0.01
|
22/09/2020
|
81,575
|
10 years
|
22/09/21
|
£0.01
|
|
|
|
|
|
Black Scholes valuation
|
Weighted Average Exercise
Price
|
Number
|
|
2024
|
2023
|
2024
|
2023
|
Outstanding:
|
£
|
£
|
|
|
At start of the period
|
0.2213
|
0.1840
|
6,978,331
|
6,673,840
|
Granted in the period
|
0.4377
|
0.3844
|
2,832,777
|
1,579,140
|
Exercised in the period
|
0.2550
|
0.2293
|
(75,000)
|
(828,500)
|
Lapsed in the period
|
0.4057
|
0.2270
|
(1,419,951)
|
(446,149)
|
|
-----
|
-----
|
--------
|
--------
|
At the end of the period
|
0.2632
|
0.2213
|
8,316,157
|
6,978,331
|
|
-----
|
-----
|
--------
|
--------
|
The exercise price of options
outstanding at the end of the period ranged between £0.01 and £0.52
and their weighted average contractual life was 7.3 years (2023:
7.1 years). These share options are exercisable and must be
exercised within 10 years from the date of grant.
Ilika plc Executive Share Option Scheme 2010
At 30th April 2024 the
following share options were outstanding in respect of the Ilika
plc Executive Share Option Scheme 2010:
Date
of grant
|
Number of
shares
|
Period of
option
|
Vesting
Date
|
Exercise
Price per
share
|
|
|
|
|
|
08/02/18
|
78,375
|
10
years
|
08/02/21
|
£0.21
|
24/01/19
|
390,500
|
10
years
|
18/01/22
|
£0.182
|
09/07/19
|
238,983
|
10
years
|
09/07/22
|
£0.295
|
19/03/20
|
677,000
|
10
years
|
19/03/23
|
£0.255
|
26/01/23
|
1,104,786
|
10
years
|
26/01/26
|
£0.52
|
14/12/23
|
2,032,300
|
10
years
|
14/12/26
|
£0.44
|
All of the options have been valued
using the Black-Scholes methodology, with an expected volatility
rate of between 37.7% and 100%, the interest rate being the bank of
interest base rate at the time of grant and an expected period to
maturity of 3 years.
Members of staff in the Group are
awarded options in respect of ordinary shares in Ilika plc, which
are conditional upon the achievement of a series of financial and
commercial milestones.
294,100 options lapsed in the year
and 75,000 options were exercised.
Ilika plc unapproved share options
At 30th April 2024 the
following share options were outstanding in respect of Ilika plc
unapproved share options:
Date
of grant
|
Number of shares
|
Period of option
|
Vesting
Date
|
Exercise
Price per
share
|
|
|
|
|
|
15/08/17
|
84,021
|
10 years
|
15/08/18
|
£0.01
|
24/01/19
|
1,840,171
|
10 years
|
23/01/22
|
£0.01
|
29/08/19
|
268,125
|
10 years
|
29/08/20
|
£0.01
|
26/03/20
|
60,000
|
10 years
|
19/03/23
|
£0.255
|
22/09/20
|
81,575
|
10 years
|
22/09/21
|
£0.01
|
22/09/21
|
42,105
|
10 years
|
22/09/22
|
£0.01
|
07/02/22
|
197,985
|
10 years
|
07/02/25
|
£0.01
|
26/01/23
|
419,754
|
10 years
|
26/01/26
|
£0.01
|
20/09/23
|
146,804
|
10 years
|
20/09/24
|
£0.01
|
14/12/23
|
653,673
|
10 years
|
14/12/26
|
£0.01
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
1,125,851 options lapsed in the
year and no options were exercised.
There are total of 3,760,855
options from both schemes which were capable of being exercised as
at 30th April 2024.
|
2024
|
2023
|
|
£000's
|
£000's
|
Share-based payment
expense
|
|
|
Black
Scholes calculation
|
383.1
|
441.8
|
|
------
|
------
|
21 Post Balance Sheet Events
Following
the end of the financial year on 30 April 2024 the Company
completed a fund raise by way of equity placing, open offer and
Director subscriptions of 8,327,424 new Ordinary shares at £0.28
per share resulting in gross proceeds of £2.3m
22 Company details
Ilika plc
is a public limited company registered in England and Wales with
company number 07187804 and whose registered office is Unit 10a,
The Quadrangle, Premier Way, Romsey, England, SO51 9DL.