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Target Healthcare REIT PLC
14 March 2025
 

14 March 2025

Target Healthcare REIT plc

 

HALF-YEAR RESULTS FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2024

 

Influential sectoral tailwinds and a business model focussed on high quality, purpose-built real estate combine to deliver further earnings and NTA growth

 

Target Healthcare REIT plc (the "Company" or the "Group"), the UK listed specialist investor in modern, purpose-built care homes, announces its results for the six months ended 31 December 2024.

 

NTA growth and strong total return performance; robust balance sheet supported by long-term fixed rate debt; fully covered and growing dividend

·      EPRA NTA per share increased 1.8% to 112.7 pence (June 2024: 110.7 pence)

·      Total Accounting Return(1) of +4.5% (2023: +4.9%)

·      Adjusted EPRA Earnings per share(2) increased 2.6% to 3.13 pence (2023: 3.05 pence)

·     Dividend per share in respect of the period of 2.942 pence, 107% covered on adjusted EPRA earnings(3), with quarterly rate increased by 3%

·    Net loan-to-value ("LTV") of 22.7% (June 2024: 22.5%), with a weighted average cost of drawn debt at 3.95% (June 2024: 3.91%), an average term to maturity of 4.7 years (June 2024: 5.2 years) and interest rate hedged on 93% of drawn debt until expiry

·     EPRA Cost Ratio of 16.1% (2023: 16.0%)

 

Growing rent roll and stable valuations. Modern, purpose-built portfolio providing a strong platform for robust underlying trading performance with sustainable rent covers backed by operators weighted towards private fee payers.

·     Portfolio market valuation increased by 1.8% to £924.7 million (June 2024: £908.5 million), primarily driven by:

a 1.1% like-for-like valuation increase, comprising +1.3% from inflation-linked rental uplifts and the unwind of rent-free periods offset by -0.2% due to outward yield movements and other asset management activities; and

increase of 0.7% due to capital expenditure.

·     Contractual rent increased by 3.0% to £60.6 million (June 2024: £58.8 million), including like‑for-like rental growth of 1.3%

·   Strong performance across all key metrics of underlying trading performance at the homes with rent collection of 98% and mature home rent cover of 1.9 times (June 2024: 1.9 times)

·     Mature home resident spot occupancy at the period end of 86%

·     Diversified portfolio and tenant base, with 34 tenants across 94 properties (June 2024: 34 tenants and 94 properties)

·     Weighted average unexpired lease term of 26.1 years (June 2024: 26.4 years) remains one of the longest in the sector

 

Delivering sector-leading real estate metrics - significant differentiation in real estate quality metrics, providing benefits from the dual tailwinds of an ageing demographic and clear trend to quality:

·      100% properties A or B EPC ratings (+30ppts relative to listed peer average)

·      99% of rooms fully en suite wet-rooms (+63 ppts relative to listed peer average)

·      Generous 48m2 of average space per resident (+19% relative to listed peer average)

·      84% of properties younger than 2010 build date (+67ppts relative to listed peer average)

 

Unless otherwise stated in the above, references to 2023 mean the comparative six month period to 31 December 2023 and references to 2024 mean 30 June 2024, being the start of the period under review.

 

(1) Based on EPRA NTA movement and dividends paid, see alternative performance measures below.

(2) For the details of EPRA earnings and adjusted EPRA earnings refer to note 6 to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.

(3) See alternative performance measures below.

 

 

Alison Fyfe, Chair of the Company, said:

"Target Healthcare REIT plc has continued to deliver both consistent property and financial performance, which is a testament to the quality of our business model, portfolio, and management team. We have a secure, long-duration income stream which provides compounding growth annually, which is underpinned by a portfolio containing some of the highest quality real estate in the care home sector. The modernity of the portfolio is evidenced by having one of the strongest EPC ratings of any UK listed real estate company."

 

 

A live webcast presentation for analysts will be held at 9.00 a.m. GMT this morning and can be accessed via the following link:

https://brrmedia.news/THRL_INT_2025

 

LEI: 213800RXPY9WULUSBC04

 

Enquiries:

 

Kenneth MacKenzie; Gordon Bland

Target Fund Managers Limited

01786 845 912

 

Mark Young; Rajpal Padam

Stifel Nicolaus Europe Limited

020 7710 7600

 

Dido Laurimore; Richard Gotla

FTI Consulting

020 3727 1000

TargetHealthcare@fticonsulting.com 

 

Notes to editors:

UK listed Target Healthcare REIT plc (THRL) is an externally managed Real Estate Investment Trust which provides shareholders with an attractive level of income, together with the potential for capital and income growth, from investing in a diversified portfolio of modern, purpose-built care homes.

The Group's portfolio at 31 December 2024 comprised 94 assets let to 34 tenants with a total value of £924.7 million.

The Group invests in modern, purpose-built care homes that are let to high quality tenants who demonstrate strong operational capabilities and a strong care ethos. The Group builds collaborative, supportive relationships with each of its tenants as it believes working in this way helps raise standards of care and helps its tenants build sustainable businesses. In turn, that helps the Group deliver stable returns to its investors.



Chair's Statement

 

Target Healthcare REIT plc has continued to deliver both consistent property and financial performance, which is a testament to the quality of our business model, portfolio, and management team. We have a secure, long-duration income stream which provides compounding growth annually, which is underpinned by a portfolio containing some of the highest quality real estate in the care home sector. The modernity of the portfolio is evidenced by having one of the strongest EPC ratings1 of any UK listed real estate company.

 

More widely, the share prices of other real estate companies outside the care home sector remained anchored by the interest rate environment and economic uncertainty, with the read-across from each of these being poorer occupier trading and resulting concerns on rental and valuation growth. There are, of course, real macro factors driving this, however more positive "micro" factors affecting UK care homes are proving to be influential and leave our portfolio well positioned. The dual tailwinds of growing, needs-based demand from an ageing population, and the clear trend to quality in care home real estate2, are specific to our sector and support our portfolio. Our tenants continue to report healthy demand for care home places with the quality of the underlying real estate supporting resident fee levels that allow our tenants to manage their inflationary cost pressures.

 

1.   Results summary

The portfolio has once again outperformed the MSCI UK Annual Healthcare Property Index, with calendar year total return at the property level of 10.8% relative to the index's 5.4%, ranking the portfolio in the top quartile and maintaining its record of outperforming the Index in every year since our IPO. The portfolio return, when combined with the Group's efficient property management model and stable valuations, translates to a Total Accounting Return for the six months to 31 December 2024 of +4.5%. Adjusted EPRA Earnings per share has increased by 2.6% to 3.13 pence per share and EPRA NTA increased by 1.8% to 112.7 pence per share. We have increased the dividend by 3.0% to an annualised 5.884 pence per share. This is comfortably covered by earnings for the period at 107% based on adjusted EPRA earnings, which is similar to a cash basis, and 134% when applying the more-widely used EPRA earnings metric.

 

2.   Reflections

We, of course, acknowledge that our share price drives the day-to-day returns to our shareholders. Along with income-producing real estate companies more generally, our share price has been closely correlated with movements in interest rates and our discount to NTA therefore remains persistent as interest rates remain elevated. The sentiment towards real estate generally remains bearish given the economic outlook, though with positive sectoral demographics, consistently strong property performance and RPI-linked contractual rental growth, we remain well positioned for the future.

 

In our annual report of September 2024, I provided our response to a number of questions which were being posed to those running listed property companies. It feels appropriate to revisit how we are addressing these.

 

How we deliver earnings growth

Our model provides guaranteed rental growth and an efficient property model with respect to operating costs. We have embedded rental uplifts linked to inflation and achieved like-for-like rental growth of 1.3% in the period, with our key cost ratios demonstrating operational efficiency - our long-term Ongoing Charges Ratio has remained consistent since launch at c.1.5% and our current EPRA Cost Ratio (based on rental income) is 16.1%. The powerful compounding effect of guaranteed rental growth combined with an efficient cost structure is a key component of our long-term business model.

 

 

Stability of valuations

There remains a fundamental depth of demand for modern, purpose-built, high quality UK care homes. Valuations have remained stable despite the risk-free rate changing and this is backed up by transactional evidence including our own disposals towards the end of the prior year of assets at the lower end of our portfolio's quality spectrum. The demand for our assets and their robust and growing rental streams is likely to mitigate the potential for some outwards yield shift should the risk-free rate remain elevated, providing further valuation stability.

 

Enviable debt position

At 22.7% net LTV, our debt remains one of the lowest amongst our peers. Our net debt to EBITDA ratio of 4.6 times is a notable indicator of our ability to not only service our debt but also to reduce debt from recurring cashflows should it be required. Headroom levels on covenant compliance remain comfortable.

 

Minimising the impact on returns of higher interest rate environment

The majority of the Group's drawn debt is long-term and fixed at low rates, with £150 million due to expire between 2032 and 2037. In relation to the Group's remaining debt facilities, which expire in November 2025, indicative refinance terms have been obtained from a number of parties, including each of the incumbent lenders, for a range of facility types and durations. Based on refinancing terms and current market hedging prices, replacing these existing facilities and hedging on a like-for-like five-year basis would provide a weighted average cost on drawn debt of c.4.4%, compared to the current 4.0%, leaving the dividend fully covered. Such discussions are well advanced and we have absolute confidence in the Group's ability to appropriately refinance the expiring loans.

 

We have been positioning the Group's capital structure and dividend policy since the interest rate environment changed during 2022, and continuing with a prudent approach to gearing would provide helpful flexibility with regard to capital allocation.

 

Recent focus

The quality of our best-in-class real estate portfolio clearly differentiates us from our listed peers. These quality metrics, our diversified tenant base and underlying private fee bias provide a strong platform for sustainable long-term returns. With growth capital having been constrained recently, our focus has been on improving our portfolio's quality even further. Our disposals programme has targeted the older and less spacious homes enabling the recycling of capital into new build homes and we have continued to enhance those few remaining "stragglers" without 100% en suite wet-rooms. We improved our EPC ratings to 100% A or B, invested in environmental efficiencies such as PV panels and thermal insulation and improved our GRESB score to 71, placing the Group second in its peer group. The Investment Manager has also remained active throughout the period through continual monitoring of the operational and financial performance of our tenants in order to maintain and enhance the quality of our rental income stream, resulting in the completion of one property re‑tenanting and the progression of others. More details on our portfolio enhancements and asset management initiatives are provided within the Manager's report below.

 

3.   Looking ahead

Our business model provides growing, secure rental income and valuation stability from real estate which is in high demand. We have a 100% occupied, modern real estate portfolio with leading environmental credentials, and inflation-linked annual rental growth. Strong underlying trading at the care home level supports the longevity and consistency of returns, evidenced by our consistent top quartile performance in the MSCI UK Annual Healthcare Property Index and consistent portfolio and total accounting returns.

 

The modernity of our portfolio, and its strong environmental credentials, will also minimise the future need for returns-depleting remedial capital expenditure.

 

The six-monthly Total Accounting Return for this reporting period is 4.5%, following the 11.8% for the year to 30 June 2024. We note recently published analyst research3 concluding that share price total returns correlate with total accounting returns over the longer term and would find it logical that a best-in-class portfolio with strong fundamentals such as ours will provide further evidence to support this correlation over time.

 

Whilst we remain cognisant of the discount and the heightened level of corporate activity in the market and shareholder activism, we believe that the Group's prospects remain positive. Our current dividend yield of 6.4% and historical earnings yield for the period of 7.5% provide an attractive premium to the risk-free rate. Almost 12 years of track record, inclusive of a global pandemic, associated period of high inflation, and now an extended period towards a normalisation of the cost of capital, provides compelling evidence of our robust rental stream which appears to be very much "investment-grade" in its volatility characteristics.

 

We know, however, that we need to remain on the front foot. We will continue to consider disposals which will provide capital for us to allocate intelligently to the investment pipeline and other opportunities, carefully balancing the desire to enhance both shareholder returns and the quality of the real estate portfolio to ensure it remains future-proof and significantly differentiated from the sector average and our listed peers.

 

We continue to believe that our model (REIT, listed, closed-ended, and served by a specialist manager) is an attractive way for investors to place capital in a disciplined and well-founded investment in UK care home real estate.

 

Alison Fyfe

13 March 2025

 

 

1 100% A & B rated (Scottish homes assessed at England & Wales equivalent).

2 The percentage of UK care home beds with en suite wet-rooms is now 34%, increasing from 14% in 2014 (Carterwood).

3 Source - Panmure Liberum Real Estate - New Themes for a New World, November 2024.

 



Investment Manager's Report

 

Portfolio performance

The portfolio once again demonstrated its ability to provide attractive returns from assets which are proving their long-term investment grade characteristics. On the income side, for the six months under review, rental collection has remained robust at 98% (2023: 99%), rental growth was 1.3% on a like-for-like basis (2023: 1.9%) and contractual rent has increased by 3.0% to £61 million, with 39 rent reviews completed at an average increase of 3.0%. Investment demand in an active market supports valuations, with the like-for-like valuation growth for the period of 1.1% (2023: 1.4%) largely driven by the growth in rents as valuation yield volatility remains low for prime care homes. The EPRA topped-up NIY is stable at 6.20%.

 

The portfolio has continued to outperform the MSCI UK Annual Healthcare Property Index, with a standing assets total return of 10.8% for the 2024 calendar year compared to the index of 5.4%.

 

We are deeply proud to remain a top performer in the MSCI UK Annual Healthcare Property Index for the calendar year 2024, coming fourth of 37 contributors on an all-assets basis. More importantly, this is sustained performance as we rank second over 10 years.

 

 

Pence per share

EPRA NTA per share as at 30 June 2024

110.7

 

 

Property revaluations - rent review

2.1

Property revaluations - yield shift and asset management

(0.3)

Adjusted EPRA earnings

3.1

Dividends paid

(2.9)

 

 

EPRA NTA per share as at 31 December 2024

112.7

 

Underlying trading

Our growing rental stream is supported by underlying trading in a sector with significant tailwinds and structural support. Our portfolio of 34 tenants continues to generate sustainable earnings with an average rent cover of 1.9x (2023: 1.9x). Underlying demand for places in our homes remains high at 86% mature occupancy (2023: 86%) with scope for further profitability growth as occupancy trends further towards the 90% long-term average. Our tenants' commercial propositions are largely geared towards privately-funded residents, with fee levels therefore able to be more easily varied in response to inflationary cost increases. The current period, of course, sees National Insurance and National Living Wage increases. This increases tenants' cost bases by a typical 6% - 7% given staffing is the most significant cost for a care home. In response, we are seeing fee increases across the portfolio for private residents of c.8% - 10%, maintaining operating margins and supporting the long-term stability of these care providers.

 

Real estate quality

We continue to manage the portfolio to ensure it is comfortably best-in-class in listed care home real estate. Disposals of bottom quartile assets and investment in developments has been a part of this, as well as capital expenditure where required, usually as envisaged in the initial investment underwrite.

·      100% EPCs A-B (+30 ppts from listed peer average)

·      99% en suite wet-rooms (+63 ppts from listed peer average)

·      Spacious 48 m2 per resident on average (+19% from listed peer average)

·      84% of homes younger than 2010 build date (+67 ppts from listed peer average)

·      All let on long leases (WAULT 26.1 years) with upwards-only rent reviews.

Based on these important metrics, the portfolio is significantly differentiated from those of its listed peers, therefore benefitting from the sector's trend towards quality, and compares well to wider commercial real estate with respect to returns and longevity.

 

Asset management

Portfolio and investment capital expenditure, including developments, ESG-improvements such as the installation of en suite wet-rooms and PV panels and re-tenanting initiatives, has increased contractual rent by £1.0 million, and we will continue to consider all opportunities as and when they arise.

 

Notable initiatives and challenges in the period include:

·    One of the Group's two development sites reached practical completion and was leased on pre-agreed terms to an existing tenant of the Group adding £0.9 million to the Group's contractual rent;

·     A home was re-tenanted resulting in a tenant who had taken the strategic decision to exit the elderly care sector being replaced by a new tenant to the Group with an experienced management team. The contracted rent from the property remained unchanged, with the rent free period granted to the incoming tenant being partially funded by the outgoing tenant, an increase in the minimum annual rental uplift and an improvement in the property's valuation yield;

·      Action was taken in relation to a non-paying tenant of a single home in the South West amounting to 1.5% of rent roll. Having already commenced discussions with strong alternative tenants, and with others having noted interest subsequently, we remain confident in the prospects for the home, and anticipate a satisfactory resolution of the situation with minimal impact on returns; and

·    The following initiatives were completed with capital expenditure rentalised at yields ahead of the portfolio topped-up EPRA NIY:

Facilitated the installation of PV panels at five homes;

Refurbished one of the Group's homes in the North West;

Converted the final four rooms to provide full en suite wet-room facilities at one of the Group's homes in North Yorkshire as part of ongoing asset enhancements; and

Paid a performance payment of £1.0 million to a tenant where contracted performance conditions set at the time of entering into the initial lease had been met.

 

Investment market

The UK care home investment market saw record activity in Q4 2024 with transaction volumes of c.£1.3 billion (Source: Cushman & Wakefield). Whilst US REITs dominated transactions, there were a broad range of market participants. These volume levels provide ample evidence to support property valuations.

 

Health and social care update

Social care reform

After initial speculation of a Royal Commission on Social Care last year the Government subsequently announced that Baroness Louise Casey would chair an independent commission which would identify the key issues facing the sector and recommend changes. However, some voices in the sector expressed concern that a final report would not be expected until 2028. The sector continues to see itself as part of the answer to reduce delayed discharge and avoid unnecessary hospital admissions, but sector commentators note the lack of wider Government policy to work with operators, who have also experienced some (unwarranted in their view) criticism of being uncooperative.

 

 

 

Budget

In tandem with other sectors, social care leaders were caught off guard with the announcement of the changes to employers' national insurance contributions in the autumn Budget, with many organisations, including the not-for-profit sector, expressing disappointment at the extra costs, coupled with the rising minimum wage, with no parallel announcement on support for the sector. These rises are particularly significant for those who operate primarily on public funding. It may be less so for those who have a higher proportion of private fee payers. The sector expects an average fee increase of 8%+ to be required to cover costs.

 

Funding

The Government subsequently announced a generally welcomed local government finance settlement for 2025/26, making available up to £3.7 billion in "additional funding" for adult social care, although sector commentators argue the allocations only show an increase of £880 million compared to the current year. Further detail is awaited, and, of course, the sector highlights the difficulty in ring fencing those funds.

 

Council tax rises specifically with adult social care costs in mind have been a feature of the past few years and 2025/26 is likely to be no exception, with many councils opting to take the 2% social care precept allowance bringing their requests to the maximum 4.99% limit. Six English councils have been given specific permission to approach double digit rises, and around thirty have been thrown a lifeline to borrow from a £1.5 billion pot to avoid bankruptcy. Much of this financial stress is linked to the soaring demand for social care.

 

Care Regulator (CQC in England)

The CQC remained in the headlines over the autumn and winter after a turbulent period during which Dr Penny Dash concluded her review into the Regulatory body and issued a report, noting that the organisation had ''lost its credibility''. After a period under interim oversight, Sir Julian Hartley took over as CEO, Sir Mike Richards has been named as the Government's preferred candidate for Chair and Professor Adrian Fowler has been appointed Interim Chief Inspector. Sir Julian has added his observation that the organisation had "lost its way", not least with its IT system being ''not fit for purpose''. An alliance within the sector has offered their own suggestions for detailed change.

 

Staffing

Staffing is perhaps less of a concern than in recent years, with many of the Group's tenants reporting stable team numbers. The wider sector is less optimistic, with concerns regarding the reissue of overseas licenses once current visas have run their course. Reapplications will, of course, exclude the previously allowed dependants' ability to accompany the worker, and reapplications taking place have seen a significant downturn in number, with some believing the dependant issue may be at least part of that equation.

 

 

Target Fund Managers Limited

13 March 2025

 

 

 



Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income

For the six months ended 31 December 2024                                                                          

 


 

Six months ended

31 December 2024

(unaudited)

Six months ended

31 December 2023

(unaudited)


 

Revenue

Capital

Total

Revenue

Capital

Total


Notes

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

Revenue








Rental income


29,770

5,487

35,257

28,588

5,463

34,051

Other income


7

-

7

5

-

5

Total revenue


29,777

5,487

35,264

28,593

5,463

34,056

 

Gain on investment properties

8

 

-

 

5,908

 

5,908

 

-

 

7,745

 

7,745

Total income


29,777

11,395

41,172

28,593

13,208

41,801

Expenditure


 

 

 




Investment management fee

2

(3,909)

-

(3,909)

(3,679)

-

(3,679)

Credit loss allowance and bad debts

3

(180)

-

(180)

(306)

-

(306)

Other expenses

3

(1,581)

-

(1,581)

(1,474)

-

(1,474)

Total expenditure


(5,670)

-

(5,670)

(5,459)

-

(5,459)

Profit before finance costs and taxation


 

24,107

 

11,395

 

35,502

 

23,134

 

13,208

 

36,342

Net finance costs


 

 

 




Interest income


225

-

225

33

-

33

Finance costs

4

(5,362)

(403)

(5,765)

(5,212)

(402)

(5,614)

Net finance costs


(5,137)

(403)

(5,540)

(5,179)

(402)

(5,581)

 

Profit before taxation


 

18,970

 

10,992

 

29,962

 

17,955

 

12,806

 

30,761

Taxation

5

-

-

-

-

-

-

Profit for the period


18,970

10,992

29,962

17,955

12,806

30,761

Other comprehensive income:


 

 

 




Items that are or may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss


 

 

 




Movement in fair value of interest rate derivatives designated as cash flow hedges


 

 

-

 

 

(796)

 

 

(796)

 

 

-

 

 

(2,975)

 

 

(2,975)

Total comprehensive income for the period


 

18,970

 

10,196

 

29,166

 

17,955

 

9,831

 

27,786

 

Earnings per share (pence)

 

6

 

3.06

 

1.77

 

4.83

 

2.90

 

2.06

 

4.96

 

The total column of this statement represents the Group's Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income, prepared in accordance with UK adopted IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting'. The supplementary revenue return and capital return columns are both prepared under guidance published by the Association of Investment Companies.

 

All revenue and capital items in the above statement are derived from continuing operations.

 

No operations were discontinued in the period.

 

 

           

 



Condensed Consolidated Statement of Financial Position

As at 31 December 2024


 

As at

31 December

2024

(unaudited)

As at

30 June

2024

(audited)


Notes

£'000

£'000

Non-current assets




Investment properties

8

841,325

831,573

Trade and other receivables

9

96,019

88,426

Interest rate derivatives

12

-

2,820



937,344

922,819

Current assets

 

 


Trade and other receivables

9

3,439

5,667

Interest rate derivatives

12

1,621

-

Cash and cash equivalents

11

37,918

38,884

 

 

42,978

44,551

Total assets

 

980,322

967,370

Non-current liabilities

 

 


Loans

12

(148,341)

(240,672)

Trade and other payables

13

(12,126)

(9,893)



(160,467)

(250,565)

Current liabilities

 

 


Loans

12

(97,643)

-

Trade and other payables

13

(21,734)

(27,512)



(119,377)

(27,512)

Total liabilities

 

(279,844)

(278,077)

Net assets

 

700,478

689,293



 


Share capital and reserves

 

 


Share capital

14

6,202

6,202

Share premium


256,633

256,633

Merger reserve


47,751

47,751

Distributable reserve


170,347

170,347

Hedging reserve


945

1,741

Capital reserve


88,660

77,668

Revenue reserve


129,940

128,951

Equity shareholders' funds

 

700,478

689,293



 


Net asset value per ordinary share (pence)

6

112.9

111.1

 



Condensed Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity

 

For the six months ended 31 December 2024   (unaudited)                              

                                                           

 

 

 

 

Notes

 

Share capital

 

Share premium

 

Merger reserve

Distrib-utable

reserve

 

Hedging

reserve

 

Capital reserve

 

Revenue reserve

 

 

Total


 

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

As at 30 June 2024

 

6,202

256,633

47,751

170,347

1,741

77,668

128,951

689,293

 

Profit for the period

 

 

-

 

-

 

-

 

-

 

-

 

10,992

 

18,970

 

29,962

Other comprehensive income

 

-

-

-

-

(796)

-

-

(796)

Total comprehensive income


 

-

 

-

 

-

 

-

 

(796)

 

10,992

 

18,970

 

29,166

Transactions with owners recognised in equity:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends paid

7

-

-

-

-

-

-

(17,981)

(17,981)

 

As at 31 December 2024

 

 

6,202

 

256,633

 

47,751

 

170,347

 

945

 

88,660

 

129,940

 

700,478

 

 

For the six months ended 31 December 2023   (unaudited)      

 

 

 

 

 

Notes

 

Share capital

 

Share premium

 

Merger reserve

Distrib-utable

reserve

 

Hedging

reserve

 

Capital reserve

 

Revenue reserve

 

 

Total


 

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

As at 30 June 2023


6,202

256,633

47,751

187,887

5,026

40,914

110,395

654,808

 

Profit for the period


 

-

 

-

 

-

 

-

 

-

 

12,806

 

17,955

 

30,761

Other comprehensive income


-

-

-

-

(2,975)

-

-

(2,975)

Total comprehensive income


 

-

 

-

 

-

 

-

 

(2,975)

 

12,806

 

17,955

 

27,786

Transactions with owners recognised in equity:


 

 








Dividends paid

7

-

-

-

(17,540)

-

-

-

(17,540)

 

As at 31 December 2023


 

6,202

 

256,633

 

47,751

 

170,347

 

2,051

 

53,720

 

128,350

 

665,054

                       

 




Condensed Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows

For the six months ended 31 December 2024                          

 


 

Six months ended

31 December

2024

(unaudited)

Six months ended

31 December

2023

(unaudited)


Notes

£'000

£'000

Cash flows from operating activities

 

 

 

Profit before tax


29,962

30,761

Adjustments for:


 


Interest income


(225)

(33)

Finance costs


5,765

5,614

Revaluation gains on investment properties and movements in lease incentives, net of acquisition costs written off

 

 

 

(11,395)

 

(13,208)

Decrease in trade and other receivables


1,832

3,697

Increase in trade and other payables


676

506



26,615

27,337

Interest paid


(5,049)

(4,598)

Interest received


225

33

 

 

(4,824)

(4,565)

Net cash inflow from operating activities

 

21,791

22,772

 

Cash flows from investing activities

 

 


Purchase of investment properties, including acquisition costs

 

 

 

(9,805)

 

(25,477)

Net cash outflow from investing activities

 

(9,805)

(25,477)

 

Cash flows from financing activities

 

 


Drawdown of bank loan facilities

12

10,000

22,500

Repayment of bank loan facilities

12

(5,000)

-

Dividends paid


(17,952)

(17,530)

Net cash (outflow)/inflow from financing activities

 

(12,952)

4,970

 

Net (decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents

 

 

(966)

 

2,265

Opening cash and cash equivalents


38,884

15,366

Closing cash and cash equivalents

11

37,918

17,631










Transactions which do not require the use of cash

 

 

Movement in fixed or guaranteed rent reviews and lease incentives

5,368

6,012

                       



Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements

 

1.   Basis of Preparation

The condensed consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with UK-adopted IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting' and the accounting policies set out in the statutory financial statements of the Group for the year ended 30 June 2024.

 

The condensed consolidated financial statements do not include all of the information required for a complete set of IFRS financial statements and should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements of the Group for the year ended 30 June 2024, which were prepared under full UK-adopted IFRS requirements.

 

Going concern

The condensed consolidated financial statements have been prepared on the going concern basis. In assessing the going concern basis of accounting the Directors have had regard to the guidance issued by the Financial Reporting Council. The Directors have continued to place a particular focus on the appropriateness of adopting the going concern basis in preparing the financial statements for the period ended 31 December 2024.

 

The Group's going concern assessment particularly considered that:

·      The value of the Group's portfolio of assets significantly exceeds the value of its liabilities;

·      The Group is contractually entitled to receive rental income which significantly exceeds its forecast expenses and loan interest; and

·      The Group remains within its loan covenants, with a weighted average term to maturity of 4.7 years at 31 December 2024 and an earliest repayment date of November 2025. Discussions with existing and potential lenders do not raise any concerns over the Group's ability to re-finance the proportion of its debt facilities due to expire in November 2025 on appropriate terms in due course.

 

The Group has a significant balance of cash and undrawn debt available and the Group's current policy is to prudently retain a proportion of this to ensure it can continue to pay the Group's expenses and loan interest in the unlikely scenario that the level of rental income received deteriorates significantly. The proportion retained will be kept under review dependent on portfolio performance and market conditions.

 

Based on these considerations, the Directors consider that the Group has adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future and at least the next twelve months from the date of issuance of this report. For this reason, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the financial statements.

 

2.   Investment Management Fee


For the six month

period ended

31 December 2024

For the six month

period ended

31 December 2023


£'000

£'000

Investment management fee

3,909

3,679

 

The Group's Investment Manager and Alternative Investment Fund Manager ('AIFM') is Target Fund Managers Limited. The Investment Manager is entitled to an annual management fee on a tiered basis based on the net assets of the Group as set out below. Where applicable, VAT is payable in addition.

 

Net assets of the Group

 

Management fee percentage

Up to and including £500 million

 

1.05

Above £500 million and up to and including £750 million

 

0.95

Above £750 million and up to and including £1 billion

 

0.85

Above £1 billion and up to and including £1.5 billion

 

0.75

Above £1.5 billion

 

0.65

 

 

2.   Investment Management Fee (continued)

 

The Investment Management Agreement can be terminated by either party on 24 months' written notice. Should the Company terminate the Investment Management Agreement earlier then compensation in lieu of notice will be payable to the Investment Manager. The Investment Management Agreement may be terminated immediately without compensation if: the Investment Manager is in material breach of the agreement; guilty of negligence, wilful default or fraud; is the subject of insolvency proceedings; or there occurs a change of Key Managers to which the Board has not given its prior consent.

 

3.   Other expenses

 


For the six month period ended

31 December 2024

For the six month period ended

31 December 2023


£'000

£'000

Total movement in credit loss allowance

180

306

Credit loss allowance charge

180

306


 


 


Valuation and other professional fees

969

835

Secretarial and administration fees

109

116

Directors' fees

114

114

Other

389

409

Total other expenses

1,581

1,474

 

4.   Finance costs

 


For the six month period ended

31 December 2024

For the six month period ended

31 December 2023


£'000

£'000

Interest paid on loans

5,050

4,900

Amortisation of loan costs

312

312

Finance and transaction costs relating to the interest rate cap

 

403

 

402

Total

5,765

5,614

 

5.   Taxation

 

The Directors intend to conduct the Group's affairs such that management and control is exercised in the United Kingdom and so that the Group carries on any trade in the United Kingdom.

 

The Group has entered the REIT regime for the purposes of UK taxation. Subject to continuing relevant UK-REIT criteria being met, the profits from the Group's property rental business, arising from both income and capital gains, are exempt from corporation tax.

 



 

6.   Earnings per share and Net Asset Value per share

 

Earnings per share


For the six month

period ended

31 December 2024

For the six month

period ended

31 December 2023


 

£'000

Pence per share

 

£'000

Pence per share

Revenue earnings

18,970

3.06

17,955

2.90

Capital earnings

10,992

1.77

12,806

2.06

Total earnings

29,962

4.83

30,761

4.96


 

 



Average number of shares in issue

 

620,237,346


620,237,346

 

The European Public Real Estate Association ('EPRA') is an industry body which issues best practice reporting guidelines for property companies and the Group reports an EPRA NAV quarterly. EPRA has issued best practice recommendations for the calculation of certain figures which are included below.

 

The EPRA earnings are calculated by making prescribed adjustments specifically defined by EPRA, being an adjustment for the revaluation movements on investment properties and other items of a capital nature. EPRA considers this to be a measure of operational performance and representative of the net income generated from the Group's operational activities.

 

The Group's specific adjusted EPRA earnings also includes any additional adjustments considered by an individual company to be required to arrive at an underlying performance measure appropriate for their specific business model. In the case of the Group, this adjusts the EPRA earnings downwards for rental income arising from recognising guaranteed rental review uplifts and upwards for development interest received from developers in relation to monies advanced under forward fund agreements which, in the Group's IFRS financial statements, is required to be offset against the book cost of the property under development. The Board believes that that Group's specific adjusted EPRA earnings represents the underlying performance measure appropriate for the Group's business model as it illustrates the underlying revenue stream and costs generated by the Group's property portfolio. The reconciliations are provided in the table below:

 


For the six month period ended

31 December 2024

For the six month period ended

31 December 2023


£'000

£'000

Earnings per IFRS Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income

 

29,962

 

30,761

Adjusted for gain on investment properties

(5,908)

(7,745)

Adjusted for finance and transaction costs on the interest rate cap and other capital items

 

403

 

402

EPRA earnings

24,457

23,418

Adjusted for rental income arising from recognising guaranteed rent review uplifts

 

(5,487)

 

(5,463)

Adjusted for development interest under forward fund agreements

 

469

 

964

Group specific adjusted EPRA earnings

19,439

18,919


 


Earnings per share ('EPS') (pence per share)

 


EPS per IFRS Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income

 

4.83

 

4.96

EPRA EPS

3.94

3.78

Group specific adjusted EPRA EPS

3.13

3.05

 

Earnings for the period ended 31 December 2024 should not be taken as a guide to the results for the year to 30 June 2025.



 

6.   Earnings per share and Net Asset Value per share (continued)

 

Net Asset Value per share

 

The Group's net asset value per ordinary share of 112.9 pence (30 June 2024: 111.1 pence) is based on equity shareholders' funds of £700,478,000 (30 June 2024: £689,293,000) and on 620,237,346 (30 June 2024: 620,237,346) ordinary shares, being the number of shares in issue at the period end.

 

The three EPRA NAV metrics are shown below. Further details are included in the glossary.

 


31 December 2024

30 June 2024


EPRA NRV

£'000

EPRA NTA

£'000

EPRA NDV

£'000

EPRA NRV

£'000

EPRA NTA

£'000

EPRA NDV

£'000

IFRS NAV per financial statements

700,478

700,478

700,478

689,293

689,293

689,293

Fair value of interest rate derivatives

(1,621)

(1,621)

-

(2,820)

(2,820)

-

Fair value of loans

-

-

31,661

-

-

29,780

Estimated purchasers' costs

61,844

-

-

60,026

-

-

EPRA net assets

760,701

698,857

732,139

746,499

686,473

719,073

EPRA net assets (pence per share)

122.6

112.7

118.0

120.4

110.7

115.9

 

7.   Dividends

 

Dividends paid as distributions to equity shareholders during the period.

 


For the six month period ended

31 December 2024

For the six month period ended

31 December 2023


Pence

£'000

Pence

£'000

Fourth interim dividend for prior year

1.428

8,857

1.400

8,683

First interim dividend

1.471

9,124

1.428

8,857

Total

2.899

17,981

2.828

17,540

 

A second interim dividend for the year to 30 June 2025, of 1.471 pence per share, was paid on 28 February 2025 to shareholders on the register on 14 February 2025.

 



 

8.   Investment properties

 

 

The investment properties can be analysed as follows:

 

 

 



 

8.   Investment properties (continued)

 

At 31 December 2024, the investment properties were valued at £924,650,000 (30 June 2024: £908,530,000) by CBRE Limited ('CBRE'), in their capacity as external valuers. The valuation was undertaken in accordance with the latest version of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors ('RICS') Valuation - Global Standards, incorporating the International Valuation Standards, and the UK national supplement ('the Red Book'). The valuation was prepared on the basis of Fair Value as defined in IFRS13 which is effectively the same as Market Value. Market Value represents the estimated amount for which a property should exchange on the valuation date between a willing buyer and a willing seller in an arm's length transaction, after proper marketing and where the parties had each acted knowledgeably, prudently and without compulsion.

 

The fair value of the properties after adjusting for the movement in the fixed or guaranteed rent reviews, lease incentives and performance payments was £841,325,000 (30 June 2024: £831,573,000). The adjustment consisted of £74,343,000 (30 June 2024: £68,856,000) relating to fixed or guaranteed rent reviews and £9,892,000 (30 June 2024: £10,011,000) of accrued income relating to the recognition of rental income over rent free periods subsequently amortised over the life of the lease, which are both separately recorded in the financial statements as non-current and current assets within 'trade and other receivables' (see note 9). An adjustment is also made to reflect the amount by which the portfolio value is expected to increase if the performance payments recognised in 'trade and other payables' of £910,000 (30 June 2024: £1,910,000) are paid and the passing rent at the relevant property increased accordingly (see notes 13 and 16).

 

The Group is required to classify fair value measurements of its investment properties using a fair value hierarchy, in accordance with IFRS 13 'Fair Value Measurement'. This hierarchy reflects the subjectivity of the inputs used, and has the following levels:

-- Level 1: unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities that the entity can access at the measurement date;

-- Level 2: observable inputs other than quoted prices included within level 1;

-- Level 3: use of inputs that are not based on observable market data.

 

The Group's investment properties are valued by CBRE on a quarterly basis. The valuation methodology used is the yield model, which is a consistent basis for the valuation of investment properties within the healthcare industry. This model has regard to the current investment market and evidence of investor interest in properties with income streams secured on healthcare businesses. On an asset-specific basis, the valuer makes an assessment of: the quality of the asset; recent and current performance of the asset; and the financial position and performance of the tenant operator. This asset specific information is used alongside a review of comparable transactions in the market and an investment yield is applied to the asset which, along with the contracted rental level, is used to derive a market value.

 

In determining what level of the fair value hierarchy to classify the Group's investments within, the Directors have considered the content and conclusion of the position paper on IFRS 13 prepared by the European Public Real Estate Association ('EPRA'), the representative body of the publicly listed real estate industry in Europe. This paper concludes that, even in the most transparent and liquid markets, it is likely that valuers of investment property will use one or more significant unobservable inputs or make at least one significant adjustment to an observable input, resulting in the vast majority of investment properties being classified as level 3.

 

Observable market data is considered to be that which is readily available, regularly distributed or updated, reliable and verifiable, not proprietary, and provided by independent sources that are actively involved in the relevant market. In arriving at the valuation the external valuers make adjustments to observable data of similar properties and transactions to determine the fair value of a property and this involves the use of judgement. Considering the Group's specific valuation process, industry guidance, and the level of judgement required in the valuation process, the Directors believe it appropriate to classify the Group's investment properties within level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.

 



 

8.   Investment properties (continued)

 

The key unobservable inputs made in determining the fair values are:

·      Contracted rental level: the rent payable under the lease agreement at the date of valuation or, where applicable, on expiry of the rent free period; and

·      Yield: the yield is defined as the initial net income from a property at the date of valuation, expressed as a percentage of the gross purchase price including the costs of purchase.

 

The contracted rental level and yield are not directly correlated although they may be influenced by similar factors. Rent is set at a long-term, supportable level and is likely to be influenced by property-specific matters. The yield also reflects market sentiment and the strength of the covenant provided by the tenant, with a stronger covenant attracting a lower yield.

 

The Group's investment properties, which are all care homes, are considered to be a single class of assets. The weighted average net initial yield ('NIY') on these assets, as measured by the EPRA topped-up net initial yield, is 6.2 per cent. The yield on the majority of the individual assets ranges from 5.5 per cent to 9.8 per cent (30 June 2024: 5.5 per cent to 8.9 per cent). The average annual contracted rent per bed is £9,474 (30 June 2024: £9,292) with the annual contracted rent per bed on individual assets ranging between £5,093 and £21,033 (30 June 2024: between £4,919 and £20,481). There have been no changes to the valuation technique used through the period, nor have there been any transfers between levels.

 

The lease agreements on the properties held within the Group's property portfolio generally allow for annual increases in the contracted rental level in line with inflation, within a cap and a collar. An increase of 1.0 per cent in the contracted rental level will increase the fair value of the portfolio, and consequently the Group's reported income from unrealised gains on investments, by £9,247,000 (30 June 2024: £9,085,000); an equal and opposite movement would have decreased net assets and decreased the Group's income by the same amount.

 

A decrease of 0.25 per cent in the net initial yield applied to the property portfolio will increase the fair value of the portfolio by £38,630,000 (30 June 2024: £37,901,000), and consequently increase the Group's reported income from unrealised gains on investments. An increase of 0.25 per cent in the net initial yield will decrease the fair value of the portfolio by £35,651,000 (30 June 2024: £34,982,000) and reduce the Group's income.

 

9.   Trade and other receivables

 

 



 

10.  Investment in subsidiary undertakings

 

The Group included 49 subsidiary companies as at 31 December 2024. All subsidiary companies were wholly owned, either directly or indirectly, by the Company and, from the date of acquisition onwards, the principal activity of each company within the Group was to act as an investment and property company. Other than one subsidiary which is incorporated in Jersey, two subsidiaries which are incorporated in Gibraltar and two subsidiaries which are incorporated in Luxembourg, all subsidiaries are incorporated within the United Kingdom.

 

11.  Cash and cash equivalents

 

All cash balances at the period-end were held in cash, current accounts or deposit accounts.

 


As at

31 December

2024

As at

30 June

 2024


£'000

£'000

Cash at bank and in hand

13,151

15,813

Short-term deposits

24,767

23,071

Total

37,918

38,884

 

The cash on deposit at 31 December 2024 included £23,208,000 (30 June 2024: £22,989,000) held in a secured account in relation to the loan from Phoenix Group following disposals made by the Group. The use of this cash is restricted until the Group either partially repays the loan or pledges replacement assets as security. As at each of 30 June 2024 and 31 December 2024, the Group had sufficient unencumbered assets which could be pledged as additional security in order to release these funds.

 

12.  Loans


As at

31 December

2024

As at

30 June

 2024

Non-current loans

£'000

£'000

Principal amounts outstanding

150,000

243,000

Set-up costs

(2,413)

(4,520)

Amortisation of set-up costs

754

2,192

Total

148,341

240,672

 


As at

31 December

2024

As at

30 June

 2024

Current loans

£'000

£'000

Principal amounts outstanding

98,000

-

Set-up costs

(2,107)

-

Amortisation of set-up costs

1,750

-

Total

97,643

-

 

In November 2020, the Group entered into a £70,000,000 committed term loan and revolving credit facility with the Royal Bank of Scotland plc ('RBS') which is repayable in November 2025. Interest accrues on the bank loan at a variable rate, based on SONIA plus margin and mandatory lending costs, and is payable quarterly. The margin is 2.18 per cent per annum on £50,000,000 of the facility and 2.33 per cent per annum on the remaining £20,000,000 revolving credit facility, both for the duration of the loan. A non-utilisation fee of 1.13 per cent per annum is payable on the first £20,000,000 of any undrawn element of the facility, reducing to 1.05 per cent per annum thereafter. As at 31 December 2024, the Group had drawn £48,000,000 under this facility (30 June 2024: £43,000,000).

 



 

12.  Loans (continued)

 

In November 2020, the Group entered into a £100,000,000 revolving credit facility with HSBC Bank plc ('HSBC') which is repayable in November 2025. Interest accrues on the bank loan at a variable rate, based on SONIA plus margin and mandatory lending costs, and is payable quarterly. The margin is 2.17 per cent per annum for the duration of the loan and a non-utilisation fee of 0.92 per cent per annum is payable on any undrawn element of the facility. As at 31 December 2024, the Group had drawn £50,000,000 under this facility (30 June 2024: £50,000,000).

 

In January 2020 and November 2021, the Group entered into committed term loan facilities with Phoenix Group of £50,000,000 and £37,250,000, respectively. Both these facilities are repayable on 12 January 2032. The Group has a further committed term loan facility with Phoenix Group of £62,750,000 which is repayable on 12 January 2037. Interest accrues on these three loans at aggregate annual fixed rates of interest of 3.28 per cent, 3.13 per cent and 3.14 per cent, respectively and is payable quarterly. As at 31 December 2024, the Group had drawn £150,000,000 under these facilities (30 June 2024: £150,000,000).

 

The following interest rate derivatives were in place during the period ended 31 December 2024:

 

Notional Value

Starting Date

Ending Date

Interest paid

Interest received

Counterparty

30,000,000

5 November 2020

5 November 2025

0.30%

Daily compounded SONIA (floor at -0.08%)

RBS

50,000,000

1 November 2022

5 November 2025

nil

Daily compounded SONIA above 3.0% cap

HSBC

 

The Group paid a premium of £2,577,000, inclusive of transaction costs of £169,000, on entry into the £50,000,000 interest rate cap in November 2022.

 

At 31 December 2024, inclusive of the interest rate derivatives, the interest rate on £230,000,000 of the Group's borrowings had been capped, including the amortisation of loan arrangement costs, at an all-in rate of 3.70 per cent per annum until at least November 2025. The remaining £90,000,000 of debt, of which £18,000,000 was drawn at 31 December 2024, would, if fully drawn, carry interest at a variable rate equal to daily compounded SONIA plus a weighted average lending margin, inclusive of the amortisation of arrangement costs, of 2.46 per cent per annum.

 

The aggregate fair value of the interest rate derivatives at 31 December 2024 was an asset of £1,621,000 (30 June 2024: asset of £2,820,000). The Group categorises all interest rate derivatives as level 2 in the fair value hierarchy (see note 8).

 

At 31 December 2024, the nominal value of the Group's loans equated to £248,000,000 (30 June 2024: £243,000,000). Excluding the interest rate derivatives referred to above, the fair value of these loans, based on a discounted cashflow using the market rate on the relevant treasuries plus an estimated margin based on market conditions at 31 December 2024, totalled, in aggregate, £216,339,000 (30 June 2024: £213,220,000). The payment required to redeem the loans in full, incorporating the terms of the Spens clause in relation to the Phoenix Group facilities, would have been £228,889,000 (30 June 2024: £226,721,000). The loans are categorised as level 3 in the fair value hierarchy given the estimated margin is not observable market data.

 

The RBS loan is secured by way of a fixed and floating charge over the majority of the assets of the THR Number One plc Group ('THR1 Group') which consists of THR1 and its five subsidiaries. The Phoenix Group loans of £50,000,000 and £37,250,000 are secured by way of a fixed and floating charge over the majority of the assets of the THR Number 12 plc Group ('THR12 Group') which consists of THR12 and its eight subsidiaries. The Phoenix Group loan of £62,750,000 is secured by way of a fixed and floating charge over the majority of the assets of THR Number 43 plc ('THR43'). The HSBC loan is secured by way of a fixed and floating charge over the majority of the assets of the THR Number 15 plc Group ('THR15 Group') which consists of THR15 and its 18 subsidiaries. In aggregate, the Group has granted a fixed charge over properties with a market value of £752,515,000 as at 31 December 2024 (30 June 2024: £743,265,000).



 

12.  Loans (continued)

 

Under the financial covenants related to the loans, the Group is to ensure that:

-  the loan to value percentage for THR1 Group and THR15 Group does not exceed 50 per cent;

-  the loan to value percentage for THR12 Group and THR43 does not exceed 60 per cent;

-  the interest cover for THR1 Group is greater than 225 per cent on any calculation date;

-  the interest cover for THR15 Group is greater than 200 per cent on any calculation date; and

-  the debt yield for each of THR12 Group and THR43 is greater than 10 per cent on any calculation date.

 

All loan covenants have been complied with during the period.

 

13.  Trade and other payables

 

 

The Group's payment policy is to ensure settlement of supplier invoices in accordance with stated terms.

 

14.  Share capital

 

Allotted, called-up and fully paid ordinary shares of £0.01 each

Number of shares

£'000

Balance as at 30 June 2024 and 31 December 2024

620,237,346

6,202

 

During the period to 31 December 2024, the Company did not issue any ordinary shares of £0.01 each (period to 31 December 2023: nil). The Company did not buyback or resell any ordinary shares (period to 31 December 2023: nil).

 

At 31 December 2024, the Company did not hold any shares in treasury (30 June 2024: nil).

 

15.  Commitments

 

The Group had capital commitments as follows:


As at

31 December

2024

As at

30 June

 2024


£'000

£'000

Amounts due to complete forward fund developments

1,112

4,723

Other capital expenditure commitments

938

394

Total

2,050

5,117

 



 

16.  Contingent assets and liabilities

 

As at 31 December 2024, two (30 June 2024: three) properties within the Group's investment property portfolio contained performance payment clauses meaning that, subject to contracted performance conditions being met, further capital payments totalling £2,695,000 (30 June 2024: £3,695,000) may be payable by the Group to the vendors/tenants of these properties. The potential timings of these payments are also conditional on the date(s) at which the contracted performance conditions are met and are therefore uncertain.

 

It is highlighted that any performance payments subsequently paid will result in an increase in the rental income due from the tenant of the relevant property. As the net initial yield used to calculate the additional rental which would be payable is not significantly different from the investment yield used to arrive at the valuation of the properties, any performance payments paid would be expected to result in a commensurate increase in the value of the Group's investment property portfolio.

 

Having assessed each clause on an individual basis, the Group has determined that the contracted performance conditions were highly likely to have been met in relation to one (30 June 2024: two) of these properties and therefore at 31 December 2024 an amount of £910,000 (30 June 2024: £1,910,000) has been recognised as a liability (see note 13). An equal but opposite amount has been recognised as an asset in 'investment properties' in note 8 to reflect the increase in the investment property value that would be expected to arise from the payment of the performance payment(s) and the resulting increase in the contracted rental income. A performance payment of £1,000,000 was paid and rentalised during the six months ended 31 December 2024.

 

17.  Related party transactions

 

The Directors are considered to be related parties to the Company. No Director has an interest in any transactions which are, or were, unusual in their nature or significant to the nature of the Company.

 

The Directors of the Company received fees for their services. Total fees for the period were £114,000 (period ended 31 December 2023: £114,000) of which £nil (31 December 2023: £nil) remained payable at the period end.

 

The Investment Manager received £3,909,000 (inclusive of estimated irrecoverable VAT) in management fees in relation to the period ended 31 December 2024 (period ended 31 December 2023: £3,679,000). Of this amount £1,957,000 remained payable at the period end (31 December 2023: £1,841,000). The Investment Manager received a further £96,000 (inclusive of irrecoverable VAT) during the period ended 31 December 2024 (period ended 31 December 2023: £94,000) in relation to its appointment as Company Secretary and Administrator, of which £48,000 (31 December 2023: £47,000) remained payable at the period end. Certain employees of the Investment Manager are directors of some of the Group's subsidiaries. Neither they nor the Investment Manager receive any additional remuneration in relation to fulfilling this role.

 

18.  Operating segments

 

The Board has considered the requirements of IFRS 8 'Operating Segments'. The Board is of the view that the Group is engaged in a single segment of business, being property investment, and in one geographical area, the United Kingdom, and that therefore the Group has only a single operating segment. The Board of Directors, as a whole, has been identified as constituting the chief operating decision maker of the Group. The key measure of performance used by the Board is the EPRA NTA. The reconciliation between the NAV, as calculated under IFRS, and the EPRA NTA is detailed in note 6.

 

The view that the Group is engaged in a single segment of business is based on the following considerations:

·      One of the key financial indicators received and reviewed by the Board is the total return from the property portfolio taken as a whole;

·      There is no active allocation of resources to particular types or groups of properties in order to try to match the asset allocation of the benchmark; and

·      The management of the portfolio is ultimately delegated to a single property manager, Target.

19.  Interim Report Statement

 

These are not full statutory accounts in terms of Section 434 of the Companies Act 2006 and are unaudited. Statutory accounts for the Company for the year ended 30 June 2024, which received an unqualified audit report and which did not contain a statement under Section 498 of the Companies Act 2006, have been lodged with the Registrar of Companies. No full statutory accounts, for either the Company or Group, in respect of any period after 30 June 2024 have been reported on by the Company's auditor or delivered to the Registrar of Companies.

 

The Interim Report and Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements for the six months ended 31 December 2024 will be posted to shareholders and made available on the website: www.targethealthcarereit.co.uk. Copies may also be obtained from the Company Secretary, Target Fund Managers Limited, 1st Floor, Glendevon House, Castle Business Park, Stirling FK9 4TZ.

 



Directors' Statement of Principal Risks and Uncertainties

 

The risks, and the way in which they are managed, are described in more detail in the Strategic Report within the Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year to 30 June 2024. Other than as disclosed in the Chair's Statement and Investment Manager's Report, the Group's principal risks and uncertainties have not changed materially since the date of the report and are not expected to change materially for the remainder of the Group's financial year.

 

 

Statement of Directors' Responsibilities in Respect of the Interim Report

 

We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:

 

• the condensed set of financial statements has been prepared in accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting' and gives a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit of the Group;

 

• the Chair's Statement and Investment Manager's Report (together constituting the Interim Management Report) include a fair review of the information required by the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules ('DTR') 4.2.7R, being an indication of important events that have occurred during the period and their impact on the financial statements;

 

• the Statement of Principal Risks and Uncertainties referred to above is a fair review of the information required by DTR 4.2.7R; and

 

• the condensed set of financial statements includes a fair review of the information required by DTR 4.2.8R, being related party transactions that have taken place in the period and that have materially affected the financial position or performance of the Group during the period.

 

 

On behalf of the Board

 

 

 

Alison Fyfe

Chair

13 March 2025

 



Independent Review Report to Target Healthcare REIT plc

Conclusion

We have been engaged by Target Healthcare REIT plc ("the Company") to review the consolidated set of financial statements in the Interim Report and Financial Statements for the six months ended 31 December 2024 which comprises the Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income, Condensed Consolidated Statement of Financial Position, Condensed Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity, Condensed Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows and the related notes 1 to 19 to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements. We have read the other information contained in the Interim Report and Financial Statements and considered whether it contains any apparent misstatements or material inconsistencies with the information in the consolidated set of financial statements.

Based on our review, nothing has come to our attention that causes us to believe that the consolidated set of financial statements in the Interim Report and Financial Statements for the six months ended 31 December 2024 are not prepared, in all material respects, in accordance with UK adopted International Accounting Standard 34 and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority

Basis for Conclusion

We conducted our review in accordance with International Standard on Review Engagements 2410 (UK) 'Review of Interim Financial Information Performed by the Independent Auditor of the Entity' (ISRE) issued by the Financial Reporting Council. A review of interim financial information consists of making enquiries, primarily of persons responsible for financial and accounting matters, and applying analytical and other review procedures. A review is substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) and consequently does not enable us to obtain assurance that we would become aware of all significant matters that might be identified in an audit. Accordingly, we do not express an audit opinion.

As disclosed in note 1, the annual financial statements of the Group are prepared in accordance with UK adopted international accounting standards. The consolidated set of financial statements included in this Interim Report and Financial Statements has been prepared in accordance with UK adopted International Accounting Standard 34, 'Interim Financial Reporting'.

Conclusions Relating to Going Concern

Based on our review procedures, which are less extensive than those performed in an audit as described in the Basis for Conclusion section of this report, nothing has come to our attention to suggest that management have inappropriately adopted the going concern basis of accounting or that management have identified material uncertainties relating to going concern that are not appropriately disclosed.

This conclusion is based on the review procedures performed in accordance with this ISRE, however future events or conditions may cause the entity to cease to continue as a going concern.

Responsibilities of the Directors

The Directors are responsible for preparing the Interim Report and Financial Statements in accordance with the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.

In preparing the Interim Report and Financial Statements, the Directors are responsible for assessing the 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 Company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

Auditor's Responsibilities for the Review of the Financial Information

In reviewing the Interim Report and Financial Statements, we are responsible for expressing to the Company a conclusion on the consolidated set of financial statements in the Interim Report and Financial Statements. Our conclusion, including our Conclusions Relating to Going Concern, are based on procedures that are less extensive than audit procedures, as described in the Basis for Conclusion paragraph of this report.

 

Use of our Report

This report is made solely to the Company in accordance with guidance contained in International Standard on Review Engagements 2410 (UK) 'Review of Interim Financial Information Performed by the Independent Auditor of the Entity' issued by the Financial Reporting Council. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the Company, for our work, for this report, or for the conclusions we have formed.

 

Ernst & Young LLP

London

13 March 2025



Glossary of Terms and Definitions

Contractual Rent

The annual rental income receivable on a property as at the balance sheet date, adjusted for the inclusion of rent currently subject to a rent free period.

 

Discount/

Premium*

The amount by which the market price per share of a Closed-end Investment Company is lower or higher than the net asset value per share. The discount or premium is expressed as a percentage of the net asset value per share.

 

Dividend Cover*

The absolute value of Group specific adjusted EPRA Earnings, or EPRA earnings, divided by the absolute value of dividends relating to the period of calculation.

 

Dividend Yield*

The annual Dividend expressed as a percentage of the share price at the date of calculation.

 

Earnings Yield*

The annualised Group specific adjusted EPRA Earnings per Share for the period expressed as a percentage of the share price at the end of the relevant period.

 

Energy Performance Certificate ('EPC')

An Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) rates how energy efficient a building is using grades from A to G (with 'A' the most efficient grade). All commercial properties leased to a tenant must have an EPC. All EPCs are valid for 10 years.

 

EPRA Cost Ratio*

Reflects the relevant overhead and operating costs of the business. It is calculated by expressing the sum of property expenses (net of service charge recoveries and third-party asset management fees) and administration expenses (excluding exceptional items) as a percentage of gross rental income.

 

EPRA Group specific adjusted Cost Ratio*

The EPRA Cost Ratio adjusted for items thought appropriate for the Group's specific business model. The adjustments made are consistent with those made to the Group specific adjusted EPRA earnings as detailed in note 6.

 

EPRA Earnings

per Share*

Recurring earnings from core operational activities. A key measure of a company's underlying operating results from its property rental business and an indication of the extent to which current dividend payments are supported by earnings. A reconciliation of the earnings per IFRS and the EPRA earnings, including any items specific to the Group, is contained in note 6.

 

EPRA Net Disposal Value ('NDV')*

A measure of Net Asset Value which represents the shareholders' value under a disposal scenario, where deferred tax, financial instruments and certain other adjustments are calculated to the full extent of their liability, net of any resulting tax.

 

EPRA Net Reinstatement Value ('NRV')*

A measure of Net Asset Value which assumes that entities never sell assets and aims to represent the value required to rebuild the entity. The objective is to highlight the value of net assets on a long-term basis. Assets and liabilities that are not expected to crystallise in normal circumstances, such as the fair value movements on financial derivatives, are excluded and the costs of recreating the Group through investment markets, such as property acquisition costs and taxes, are included.

 

EPRA Net Tangible Assets ('NTA')*

A measure of Net Asset Value which assumes that entities buy and sell assets, thereby crystallising certain levels of unavoidable deferred tax.

 

EPRA Net Initial

Yield*

Annualised rental income based on the cash rents passing at the balance sheet date, less non-recoverable property operating expenses, divided by the market value of the property, increased with (estimated) purchasers' costs. EPRA's purpose is to provide a comparable measure around Europe for portfolio valuations.

 

EPRA Topped-up

Net Initial Yield*

Incorporates an adjustment to the EPRA Net Initial Yield in respect of the expiration of rent-free periods (or other unexpired lease incentives).

 

Loan-to-Value

('LTV')*

A measure of the Group's Gearing level. Gross LTV is calculated as total gross debt as a proportion of gross property value. Net LTV is calculated as total gross debt less cash (including any cash held as security in relation to the debt facilities) as a proportion of gross property value.

 

Mature Homes

Care homes which have been in operation for more than three years. Homes which do not meet this definition are referred to as 'immature'.

 

Portfolio or Passing Rent*

The annual rental income currently receivable on a property as at the balance sheet date, excluding rental income where a rent free period is in operation. The gross rent payable by a tenant at a point in time.

 

Rent Cover*

A measure of a tenant's ability to meet its rental liability from the profit generated by their underlying operations. Generally calculated as the tenant's EBITDARM (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortisation, rent and management fees) divided by the contracted rent.

 

Total Return*

The return to shareholders calculated on a per share basis by adding dividends paid in the period to the increase or decrease in the Share Price or NAV. The dividends are assumed to have been reinvested in the form of Ordinary Shares or Net Assets.

 

Total Accounting Return*

The return to shareholders calculated on a per share basis by adding dividends paid in the period to the increase or decrease in the EPRA NTA. The dividends are assumed to have been reinvested at the prevailing net asset value per share at the date of the dividend payment.

 

WAULT*

Weighted average unexpired lease term. The average lease term remaining to expiry across the portfolio weighted by contracted rental income.

 

* Alternative Performance Measure



Alternative Performance Measures

The Company uses Alternative Performance Measures ('APMs'). APMs do not have a standard meaning prescribed by GAAP and therefore may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other entities. The definitions of all APMs used by the Company are highlighted in the glossary above, with detailed calculations, including reconciliation to the IFRS figures where appropriate, being set out below.

Discount or Premium - the share price of an Investment Company is derived from buyers and sellers trading their shares on the stock market. This price is not identical to the NAV. If the share price is lower than the NAV per share, the shares are trading at a discount and, if the share price is higher than the NAV per share, are said to be at a premium. The figure is calculated at a point in time and, unless stated otherwise, the Company measures its discount or premium relative to the EPRA NTA per share.



31 December

2024

pence

30 June

2024

pence

EPRA Net Tangible Assets per share (see note 6)

(a)

112.7

110.7

Share price

(b)

84.0

78.5

Discount

= (b-a)/a

(25.5)%

(29.1)%

 

Dividend Cover - the percentage by which earnings for the period cover the dividend paid.



Period ended

31 December

2024

£'000

Period ended

31 December

2023

£'000

EPRA earnings for the period (see note 6)

(a)

24,457

23,418

Group-specific EPRA earnings for the period (see note 6)

(b)

19,439

18,919

First interim dividend


9,124

8,857

Second interim dividend


9,124

8,857

Dividends paid in relation to the period

(c)

18,248

17,714

Dividend cover based on EPRA earnings

= (a/c)

134%

132%

Dividend cover based on Group-specific EPRA earnings

= (b/c)

107%

107%

 

EPRA Cost Ratio - the EPRA cost ratios are produced using EPRA methodology, which aims to provide a consistent base-line from which companies can provide additional information, and include all property expenses and management fees. The Group did not have any vacant properties during the periods and therefore separate measures excluding direct vacancy costs are not presented. Consistent with the Group specific adjusted EPRA earnings detailed in note 6 to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements, similar adjustments have been made to also present the adjusted Cost Ratio which is thought more appropriate for the Group's business model.

 



Period ended

31 December 2024

£'000

Period ended

31 December

2023

£'000

Investment management fee


3,909

3,679

Credit loss allowance and bad debts written off


180

306

Other expenses


1,581

1,474

EPRA costs (including direct vacancy costs)

(a)

5,670

5,459

Specific cost adjustments, if applicable


-

-

Group specific adjusted EPRA costs (including direct vacancy costs)

 

(b)

 

5,670

 

5,459

Gross rental income per IFRS

(c)

35,264

34,056

Adjusted for rental income arising from recognising guaranteed rent review uplifts

 

 

(5,487)

 

(5,463)

Adjusted for development interest under forward fund arrangements

 

 

469

 

964

Group specific adjusted gross rental income

(d)

30,246

29,557

EPRA Cost Ratio (including direct vacancy costs)

= (a/c)

16.1%

16.0%

EPRA Group specific adjusted Cost Ratio (including direct vacancy costs)

 

= (b/d)

 

18.7%

 

18.5%



Net Debt to EBITDA ratio - a leverage ratio that measures the net earnings available to address debt obligations.

 



Period ended

31 December 2024

£'000

Period ended

31 December

2023

£'000

Net debt (see below)

(a)

227,809

252,231

Group-specific adjusted EPRA earnings

 

19,439

18,919

Net finance costs

 

5,137

5,179

EBITDA

(b)

24,576

24,098

Net debt to EBITDA ratio

= a/(b*2)

4.6 times

5.2 times

 

EPRA Loan-to-Value ('LTV') - A shareholder-gearing measure to determine the percentage of debt comparing to the appraised value of the properties. EPRA LTV is calculated as total gross debt (adding net trade payables and less cash) as a proportion of gross property value.

 



31 December 2024

£'000

30 June

2024

£'000

Borrowings


248,000

243,000

Net payables


17,727

20,269

Cash and cash equivalent


(37,918)

(38,884)

Net debt

(a)

227,809

224,385



 


Investment properties at market value


924,650

908,530

Total property value

(b)

924,650

908,530

EPRA Loan-to-Value

= (a/b)

24.6%

24.7%

 

EPRA Net Initial Yield and EPRA Topped-up Net Initial Yield - EPRA Net Initial Yield is calculated as annualised rental income based on the cash rents passing at the balance sheet date, less non-recoverable property operating expenses, divided by the market value of the property, increased with (estimated) purchasers' costs. The EPRA Topped-up Net Initial Yield incorporates an adjustment in respect of the expiration of rent-free periods (or other unexpired lease incentives).



31 December

2024

£'000

30 June

2024

£'000

Annualised passing rental income based on cash rents

(a)

59,340

57,462

Notional rent expiration of rent-free periods or other lease incentives


 

1,262

 

1,363

Topped-up net annualised rent

(b)

60,602

58,825

Standing assets (see note 8)


916,020

889,255

Allowance for estimated purchasers' costs


61,844

60,026

Grossed-up completed property portfolio valuation

(c)

977,864

949,281

EPRA Net Initial Yield

= (a/c)

6.07%

6.05%

EPRA Topped-up Net Initial Yield

= (b/c)

6.20%

6.20%

 



Total Return - the return to shareholders calculated on a per share basis by adding dividends paid in the period to the increase or decrease in the Share Price or NAV. The dividends are assumed to have been reinvested in the form of Ordinary Shares or Net Assets.

 



Period ended

31 December 2024

Period ended

31 December 2023



EPRA NTA

(pence)

IFRS NAV

(pence)

Share price

(pence)

EPRA NTA

(pence)

IFRS NAV

(pence)

Share price

(pence)

Value at start of period

(a)

110.7

111.1

78.5

104.5

105.6

71.8

Value at end of period

(b)

112.7

112.9

84.0

106.7

107.2

86.3

Change in value during the period (b-a)

 

(c)

 

2.0

 

1.8

 

5.5

 

2.2

 

1.6

 

14.5

Dividends paid

(d)

2.9

2.9

2.9

2.8

2.8

2.8

Additional impact of dividend reinvestment

 

(e)

 

0.1

 

0.1

 

(0.1)

 

0.1

 

0.1

 

0.2

Total gain in period (c+d+e)

 

(f)

 

5.0

 

4.8

 

8.3

 

5.1

 

4.5

 

17.5

Total return for the period

= (f/a)

4.5%

4.3%

10.6%

4.9%

4.3%

24.4%

 

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