DWF Group PLC
("DWF" or "the company" or "Group)
The information contained within this announcement is deemed to constitute inside information as stipulated under the Market Abuse Regulations (EU) No. 596/2014. Upon publication of this announcement, this inside information is now considered to be in the public domain.
25 August 2023
Full year results for the year ended 30 April 2023
DWF, the global provider of integrated legal and business services, today announces its full-year results for the year ended 30 April 2023. The Board is pleased with the Group's performance considering the challenging backdrop for the broader economy and the legal sector.
GROUP FINANCIAL SUMMARY
£m (unless otherwise stated) |
FY2022/23 |
FY2021/22 |
Change |
Revenue |
451.6 |
416.1 |
8.6 % |
Net revenue1 |
380.1 |
350.2 |
8.5 % |
Gross profit |
191.7 |
180.9 |
6.0 % |
Gross profit margin2 |
50.4% |
51.7% |
(1.3) ppts |
Cost to income ratio1 |
37.2% |
38.4% |
(1.2) ppts |
Adjusted EBITDA1 |
69.6 |
66.7 |
4.3 % |
Operating profit |
24.2 |
27.7 |
(12.4)% |
Adjusted profit before tax ('Adjusted PBT') 1 |
43.3 |
41.4 |
4.7 % |
Profit before tax ('PBT') |
17.2 |
22.3 |
(23.1)% |
Adjusted diluted EPS (pence) 1 |
10.2 |
10.7 |
(4.7)% |
Diluted EPS (pence) |
3.8 |
6.5 |
(41.5)% |
Gross lock-up days1 |
196 days |
179 days |
17 days |
Free cash flow1 |
12.9 |
12.9 |
(0.5) % |
Net debt1 |
101.7 |
71.8 |
29.9 |
Leverage1 |
1.46x |
1.08x |
0.38x |
FY2022/23 HIGHLIGHTS
· Group net revenue growth of 8.5% (5% like-for-like3) to
· Gross profit margin reduced by 1.3ppts to 50.4% (FY22 51.7%) reflecting direct cost pressure from salary increases.
· Cost to income ratio improved by 1.2ppts versus FY22 to 37.2%, helping to offset margin pressures.
· Adjusted PBT up 4.7% to
· Adjusted PBT margin4 of 11.4%, a reduction of 0.4 percentage points on FY22 reflecting cost pressures.
· Reported PBT of
· Adjusted diluted EPS of 10.2p (FY22 10.7p) a 4.7% decrease on prior year due to the non-recurring tax benefit in the prior year which related to deductions for historical restructuring costs.
· Lock-up days of 196 versus prior year of 179, representing a 17 day stretch (14 excluding acquisitions) due to sector wide trend towards extended billing and payment terms
·
· Net debt of
· Leverage has increased to 1.46x EBITDA (FY22 1.08x).
STRATEGIC HIGHLIGHTS
· Two strategic acquisitions made in the year with Acumension and Whitelaw Twining.
· Cost efficiency programme has continued with target savings of
· New divisional structure from 1st May 2023 further integrates the delivery of client service by combining legal and business services which are aligned with the needs of the Group's clients, whilst maximising the opportunity for future profitable revenue growth.
· On 21 July 2023, we were pleased to announce the Board's unanimous recommendation of an all cash offer for DWF Group plc from Aquila Bidco Limited, a newly incorporated wholly-owned subsidiary of funds advised by Inflexion ("Offer").
OUTLOOK AND CURRENT TRADING
· The first three months of trading for FY24 have been in line with management expectations from a revenue and income perspective, however lock-up stretch has had a balance sheet and cash impact.
· Management are considering the achievability of the lock-up target of 170 days given economic headwinds which are driving longer billing and payment cycles.
· With the current trends not expected to abate, the Board is not expecting to undertake any material M&A in the short term on a stand-alone basis as it seeks to address the ongoing challenges presented by lock-up stretch, increasing interest costs and the balance sheet leverage.
ACQUISITION BY INFLEXION
· The acquisition by Inflexion is expected to complete during the final quarter of this calendar year.
· As part of the Offer from Inflexion, shareholders will be entitled to receive a special dividend of
· With respect to the recommended cash acquisition of DWF Group plc by Inflexion Private Equity Partners LLP the shareholder Court Meetings and a General Meeting are to be held on 12th September 2023 to consider the scheme of arrangement.
· The DWF Directors recommend unanimously that DWF Shareholders vote in favour (or procure votes in favour) of the Scheme at the applicable Court Meetings and vote in favour (or procure votes in favour) of the Resolution at the General Meeting as the DWF Directors who hold DWF Shares as at the date of the Scheme Document have irrevocably undertaken to do (or procure to be done) in respect of their own beneficial holdings, amounting to 9,655,772 DWF Shares in aggregate, representing approximately 2.8 per cent. of the ordinary share capital of DWF as at 11 August 2023.
· Bidco has also received irrevocable undertakings to vote (or, where applicable, procure voting) in favour of the Court Meetings and the General Meeting from 107 DWF Partners and Senior Employees who hold DWF Shares totalling 132,370,677 DWF Shares representing approximately 38.7 per cent. of the existing issued ordinary share capital of DWF as at 11 August 2023.
Sir Nigel Knowles, Chief Executive Officer, commented:
"We have once again grown the business profitably in what continues to be a very challenging economic environment. Like other legal businesses, we have seen salary and inflationary pressures, the impact of interest rate increases and variable demand particularly in transactional areas. Despite these challenges, we have seen our organic growth strategy and integrated propositions continue to resonate with clients, and have also added quality businesses to the Group via our acquisitions of Acumension and Whitelaw Twining"
Paul Rimmer, CEO of Commercial Services, commented:
"The Senior Partners and leaders and I wanted to take this opportunity, on behalf of ourselves and the broader DWF partners and employees, to say thank you to our institutional shareholders for their support since DWF's IPO. The business has made substantial progress over the last 4.5 years in an evolving market and we are now excited about delivering the next stage of our strategy under private ownership. The quantum of irrevocable undertakings obtained from the senior partners and leaders demonstrates our collective strong belief in the rationale for the proposed acquisition, especially access to additional capital, more flexibility on investment spend and the ability to maintain additional leverage capacity in the business as we invest to counter macro headwinds. This is an essential opportunity to ensure DWF has a firm footing for growth over the medium term and we all look forward to supporting our clients under Inflexion's ownership."
The person responsible for making this announcement on behalf of the Company is Chris Stefani, Group Chief Financial Officer.
For further information:
H/Advisors Maitland (public relations advisers to DWF)
Sam Turvey or Sam Cartwright
+44(0)20 7379 5151
DWF Group plc
James Igoe
+44(0)7971 783533
Head of Communications & IR
About DWF Group
DWF is a global provider of integrated legal and business services. It has approximately 4,000 people and with offices and associations located across the globe. For more information visit: dwfgroup.com
Forward looking statements
This announcement contains certain forward‐looking statements with respect to the Company's current targets, expectations and projections about future performance, anticipated events or trends and other matters that are not historical facts. These forward‐looking statements, which sometimes use words such as "aim", "anticipate", "believe", "intend", "plan" "estimate", "expect" and words of similar meaning, include all matters that are not historical facts and reflect the directors' beliefs and expectations and involve a number of risks, uncertainties and assumptions that could cause actual results and performance to differ materially from any expected future results or performance expressed or implied by the forward‐looking statement.
LEI: 213800O9QREOHTOGQ266
1 Described in the glossary to the financial statements
2 Gross profit margin is defined as gross profit divided by net revenue
3 Like-for-like ('L4L') net revenue growth removes the impact of acquisitions
4 Adjusted PBT margin is defined as Adjusted PBT divided by net revenue
Chair's Statement
Dear Shareholder,
I am delighted to introduce our Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 30 April 2023. The past year has been marked by continued macroeconomic volatility with considerable inflationary pressures across food, energy and other essential consumer categories. These pressures have led, in many countries, to a cost of living crisis and rising interest rates, which in turn, has fuelled further uncertainty about economic growth rates.
Despite these challenging conditions, our differentiated integrated legal and business services offering and our focus on delivering positive outcomes has enabled us to continue to perform well relative to some challenging sentiments in the legal sector.
I would like to offer my thanks, and the thanks of the whole Board, to all of our colleagues across the Group for their continued commitment, dedication and high-quality delivery throughout the year.
Group performance
We are focused on driving shareholder value through the delivery of sustainable attractive growth. That is what we have achieved again this year.
The Board is pleased with the Group's performance on revenue growth, profitability and cost control. Net revenue is up by more than 8% to
Adjusted profit before tax increased by 4.7% to
This performance reflects the impact of the Group's Integrated Legal Management strategy and ongoing key client focus, delivering integrated solutions to more Group clients.
Culture
We are a people business where developing a positive and inclusive culture, underpinned by our values and behaviours, is critical to our success.
Over the past year, I have enjoyed spending more time in our offices meeting with partners and colleagues, hearing first-hand about their experiences of working for DWF and perspectives on the culture within our organisation.
We have been able to organise more colleague engagement activities in-person and in different locations. This allowed the Board to hold informal meetings with a cross-section of DWF colleagues, at every career level and from all parts of the business. We have all found these very valuable.
I would like to express my thanks to all attendees at these meetings in providing their thoughts and opinions in an open and constructive manner.
The feedback received at these meetings is echoed through our well established engagement survey, where our engagement score has remained stable at 76. In the context of macroeconomic volatility, we are pleased with this strong performance in this key indicator.
Our role in society
ESG is core to our business model and long-term strategy and it remains a priority focus area for the Board. FY22/23 marked the first full year since publication of our ESG Strategy and I am pleased to report that we have made meaningful progress in a number of areas.
This includes reductions of our Scope 1 and Scope 2 CO2 emissions of 20% and 41% respectively, compared with FY21/22. We have continued to enhance our office space, with
On our diversity & inclusion agenda, we increased overall ethnic minority representation to 14%, against a target of 13% by 2025 and we invested in a range of new and improved family friendly policies, significantly enhancing our maternity, paternity and adoption leave schemes.
We are also proud that in the last financial year the DWF Foundation, an independent charity established by DWF in 2015, exceeded the
I talk more about our purpose, values and culture in the Governance introduction. You can read more detail on our priorities and actions in the ESG section of our Annual Report and Accounts.
Annual General Meeting 2023
The Annual General Meeting will be held on 20 October 2023.
Looking ahead
On 21 July 2023, we were pleased to announce the Board's unanimous recommendation of an all cash offer for DWF Group plc from Aquila Bidco Limited, a newly incorporated wholly-owned subsidiary of funds advised by Inflexion. This transaction is highly attractive not only for our internal and external shareholders, but also for our clients, employees and other stakeholders. The DWF board of directors recognises the opportunities that could be delivered under private ownership with Inflexion, which includes access to significant capital to invest in people and technology, accelerated lateral hiring and transformative acquisitions across jurisdictions. Inflexion has a clear ambition to support the management team to execute its strategy to create a global professional services business emanating from the legal sector and this will enhance the already exceptional and differentiated services that we deliver for our clients.
Shareholders will already have received a copy of the Scheme Document which was published on 15 August 2023. The shareholder Court Meetings and a General Meeting to approve the scheme of arrangement have been scheduled for 12 September 2023.
Subject to shareholder approval and the satisfaction (or, where applicable, waiver) of the Conditions and further terms set out in Part 3 of the Scheme Document, the Acquisition is expected to become effective during Q2 FY2024.
I would like to thank all of our Board members for their time and focus throughout this year.
Jonathan Bloomer
Chair
24 August 2023
Chief Executive Officer's Review
How did the Group perform this year?
We have once again grown the business profitably in what has been a very challenging economic environment. Like other legal businesses, we have seen salary and inflationary pressures, the impact of interest rate increases and variable demand particularly in transactional areas. Despite these challenges, we have seen our organic growth strategy and integrated propositions continue to resonate with clients, and have also added quality businesses to the Group via our acquisitions of Acumension and Whitelaw Twining.
You have further extended your capabilities in
We were pleased to complete this transaction with Whitelaw Twining, one of
We have already expanded into the
This move marked the next step in DWF's North American strategy and has given us an integrated legal and business services offering in
In a highly-competitive talent market, what have you done this year to strengthen your colleague proposition?
Attracting and retaining the very best talent remains a top priority. That is why in the past year we have taken steps to continue strengthening our colleague proposition. I would highlight two areas where we have made particular progress, through significantly enhanced family friendly policies and improvements made to a number of our office locations through our future workplace strategy.
Our enhanced family friendly policies including aligning our maternity leave provision for all colleagues and partners to offer 26 weeks at full salary, with this same 26-week provision available to colleagues and partners taking adoption leave. We have doubled our paternity leave entitlement from two weeks to a four-week benefit and increased our Shared Parental Leave benefit from two weeks with full pay, to eight weeks. These investments carry a cost, but the improvements benefit our colleagues and support our drive to create an inclusive culture.
Our future workplace strategy includes a commitment to reducing the amount of overall office space and improving the quality, contributing to our ESG commitments through our use of materials and improving colleague wellbeing with smart and functional work areas. The actions taken this year include a relocation in
We have also delivered a refit of our
In March you announced changes to your global operating structure. What will these changes allow you to do differently and how do they support your integrated legal management approach?
The changes we announced in March were a natural evolution in our strategy as they allow us to go further in how we deliver our integrated offering to clients. It means our internal operations are better aligned with the services we provide and the clients and markets we serve. Many of our largest global clients are insurers and our integrated legal management approach is of particular relevance to them. By bringing legal and business services colleagues together into our two largest divisions, we are delivering a truly integrated offering to clients, driving greater internal collaboration and supporting profitable revenue growth.
What is the outlook for the year ahead?
We continue to be in turbulent times economically, and indeed the legal sector has seen pressures from both rising costs and volatility in demand particularly for transactional work. We have always viewed ourselves as having a defensive model but are not immune to the environment in which we operate. The margin dilution from salary and interest rate increases, which brought us in at the bottom end of Adjusted PBT expectations, will continue to need mitigating actions on price, productivity and cost control. We believe we have put the right initiatives in place to protect our P&L, but are also having to work hard to ensure lock-up stays within a sensible range as clients are inevitably holding on to cash for longer. This has implications for our leverage and our ability to execute our strategy. We remain confident in our prospects, but cannot be complacent about the headwinds affecting all businesses. Indeed, absent the Offer from Inflexion, the Board would need to consider the appropriate level of dividend, if any, for the period ending Apr-23 and DWF's medium term capital management framework.
Sir Nigel Knowles
Group Chief Executive Officer
24 August 2023
Financial Review
A Challenging Environment
The Group has delivered profitable growth in a particularly difficult environment for the sector. The results include reported revenue growth of 8.6% to
In addition to top-line growth rates, the Group is gradually seeing the stabilisation and reversal of gross margin dilution from salary inflation over the last 18 months. The gross margin gap to prior year at FY23 has reduced compared to HY23, reflecting some improvements in pricing combined with the cost programme announced in December 2022. Overheads and the cost-to-income ratio are trending favourably with
Working capital performance continues to be an area of challenge in an environment where clients are generally looking to manage their own working capital cycle by often seeking longer billing or payment cycles. The Group reported lock-up days of 190 at HY23 which reflected an 11 day increase on FY22. As expected, this position stabilised in H2 with the like-for-like lock-up day performance for the full year at 193 days (like-for-like excludes M&A). Net debt performance follows lock-up days with FY23 net debt of
Revenue
Revenue for the year is
Net revenue for the Group is
Divisional performance
Highlights of the performance by division are set out below:
Legal Advisory (83% of Group Net Revenue/85% of Group Gross Profit)
£m |
FY2022/23 |
FY2021/22 |
Change %/ppts |
Revenue |
385.3 |
355.1 |
+8.5 % |
Net revenue |
316.6 |
292.0 |
+8.4 % |
Direct costs |
(154.0) |
(138.7) |
+11.0 % |
Gross profit |
162.6 |
153.2 |
+6.1 % |
Gross margin %/ppts |
51.4% |
52.5% |
-(1.1)ppts |
Legal Advisory delivered net revenue growth of 8% (LFL growth of 5%) despite facing a number of challenges throughout FY23, including the impact of the
Given these various top line headwinds, fee earner, team and location performance levels have been closely monitored to identify potential strategic cost savings and protect margins. Along with tight controls over recruitment, these activities helped mitigate the impact of cost pressures that intensified from the FY23 sector 'war on talent' and market demands including cost of living pay increases for non-qualified grades upwards. Such actions needed to be balanced sensibly with the longer-term needs of the division.
Recruitment has been enhanced where the future pipeline warrants investment, for example in insurance and our new sustainable business offering and global arbitration teams. There has been a drive to build presence in
Consequently direct costs have increased ahead of net revenue growth, resulting in a degree of gross margin degradation. There has also been an impact from lengthening matter lifecycles which have led to slower payments from clients, placing pressure on working capital and increasing lock-up days. This is consistent with trends reported across the sector and a broad range of measures have been introduced to mitigate risks in this regard. This working capital stretch is considered to be a timing issue which will ultimately unwind.
The end of the year saw the launch of a number of initiatives, such as the planned introduction of pricing technology solutions to help counteract ongoing inflationary cost pressures.
In addition, expansion into new locations (including
Connected Services (11% of Group Net Revenue/9% of Group Gross Profit)
£m |
FY2022/23 |
FY2021/22 |
Change %/ppts |
Revenue |
41.5 |
34.2 |
+21.5 % |
Net revenue |
40.7 |
33.9 |
+20.1 % |
Direct costs |
(22.7) |
(18.8) |
+20.8 % |
Gross profit |
17.9 |
15.0 |
+19.1 % |
Gross margin %/ppts |
44.0% |
44.4% |
-(0.4)ppts |
Connected Services delivered net revenue growth of 20% compared to FY22 (LFL growth of 14%). This growth was supported by the acquisition of Acumension in September, a team of 47 legal costs management specialists in the
Whilst net revenue has grown by
The Claims Management and Adjusting business has grown by 12%. This was driven by both the US and Canadian geographies where the strength of the North American insurance market led to new client wins, teams in
The Regulatory business, which largely aligns to the new Commercial Services Division, has grown by 23% and saw an improving gross margin. With the exception of Audit, which underwent a restructure during the year, all businesses showed double-digit net revenue growth, reflecting a strong pipeline of work due to our clients increasing demand for regulatory advice.
The wider Group restructure produces synergies with what was the Legal Advisory division and presents the opportunity to reduce cost within the division. The full impact of the cost efficiency programme began to show through in the final quarter and, with the majority of the identified savings being support roles, should have limited impact on revenue.
Mindcrest (6% of Group Net Revenue/6% of Group Gross Profit)
£m |
FY2022/23 |
FY2021/22 |
Change %/ppts |
Revenue |
24.8 |
26.8 |
-(7.4)% |
Net revenue |
22.9 |
24.4 |
-(6.3)% |
Direct costs |
(11.7) |
(11.8) |
-(0.7)% |
Gross profit |
11.2 |
12.7 |
-(11.4)% |
Gross margin %/ppts |
49.0% |
51.8% |
-(2.8)ppts |
Mindcrest had a transitionary year as structural changes were implemented, including a change in leadership and the recruitment of new sales resource. The focus for H2 has been on building pipeline and embedding the new dual go-to-market strategy, focussing both on sales to the top 450 Group clients as well as internal work transfer to secure Group margin benefit. As with other divisions, the cost efficiency programme has driven some cost removal but has also facilitated investment into sales resource in the US (the largest alternative legal services provider market globally).
Divisional net revenue contracted by 6% in the year, owing to the conclusion of one of the division's flagship engagements which began winding down in H2 of FY22. Despite net revenue having contracted year-on-year, H2 of FY23 saw top line growth of 9% as compared to H2 of FY22 as the division starts to generate momentum. Certain services within the division have enjoyed particular success, reflecting improved demand from financial services clients. This includes eDiscovery services, which grew revenue by 15%, and lender/recovery services, which grew by 10%.
In addition to the restructuring and refocussing activities, the division saw similar inflationary cost of living pressure across all geographies (more so in
Direct costs
Direct costs, which reflect the salary costs of fee-earning partners and staff, have increased by
Gross profit
Gross profit of
Administrative expenses
Administrative expenses (including impairment) have increased to
The restriction of underlying overhead growth to 5% has delivered a cost-to-income ratio of 37.2% (FY2021/22 38.4%).
During the year, the Group announced a cost efficiency programme with the aim of reducing both direct and indirect costs to help offset other inflationary pressures. The outturn on administrative expenses and the resulting reduction in cost-to-income ratio is partly attributable to the savings delivered by this cost programme, which began to reflect in the numbers in the final quarter of the year. In May, the Group announced an increase in the cost savings target from
Adjusting items (the difference between reported and underlying administrative expenses) were
£m |
FY2022/23 |
FY2021/22 |
Office closures and scale-backs |
10.0 |
(0.2) |
Acquisition related expenses |
6.5 |
9.6 |
Gain on bargain purchase |
(4.5) |
- |
Other share based payments |
10.8 |
9.6 |
Restructuring costs |
3.3 |
- |
Refinancing costs |
- |
0.1 |
Total adjusting items |
26.2 |
19.1 |
Adjusting items in FY2022/23 can be summarised as:
1. Historical office closures, impairments and scalebacks where some final costs were charged to the income statement in the year in relation to
2. Acquisition related expenses principally relating to amortisation and impairment of intangibles recognised on acquisition, acquisition related remuneration for Acumension and Whitelaw Twining and acquisition related advisory fees;
3. Share based payment expenses reflecting grants from the Employee Benefit Trust which is a pre-funded trust established on IPO; and,
4. Non-recurring costs relating to the execution of the cost reduction programme
Net finance expense and interest payable on leases
Net finance expenses relating to bank charges and borrowings were
Interest payable on leases of
Profit before tax
The Group reported a profit before tax of
Adjusted PBT is
Tax
The reported tax charge for the year, excluding prior year adjustments, is
The Group also booked prior year adjustments of a net credit of
This gives a net tax charge of
There are no open tax audits or investigations across the Group. In line with Group tax strategy, it is not considered that any aggressive or materially uncertain tax positions have been adopted by any of the Group entities. As such, the level of tax risk faced by the Group is considered to be low.
EPS
Diluted EPS has decreased to 3.8p in FY2022/23 compared to 6.5p in FY2021/22. The reduction is due to three factors: an increase in one-off (adjusting items) compared to the prior year, reducing the reported profit; an increase in tax charge compared to prior year, which benefitted from deductions from historical closures and scalebacks; and an increase in the share count from the acquisition of Whitelaw Twining during the second half of the year.
Adjusted diluted EPS has decreased to 10.2p (FY2021/22 10.7p), a reduction of 0.5p or 5%. This reduction is due to the aforementioned one-off benefit in the prior year tax charge which enhanced the prior year EPS by an estimated 0.9p.
Dividend
The Group's capital allocation policy is to prioritise having sufficient capital to fund ongoing operating requirements and strategic investment in the Group's long term growth. Under normal circumstances, the Board targets a pay-out ratio of up to 70% of adjusted profit after tax. For FY2022/23, however, no final dividend has yet been declared given the proposed acquisition of DWF Group by Inflexion (which will include a special dividend payment of
Working capital, cash flow and net debt
The Group measures working capital efficiency using "lock-up days". Lock-up days are comprised of two elements: Work-in-progress ("WIP days"), representing the amount of time between performing work and invoicing clients; and Debtor days, representing the length of time between invoicing and cash collection.
During the year, the Group saw a stretch in lock-up days to 190 days at the half year, after achieving consistent reductions over the previous four reporting periods. This lock-up increase was in line with reported lock-up stretch in the legal sector as client demands have driven either extended billing cycles or longer payment terms. Whilst the lock-up increase for the Group, at 5% at half year, outperformed the sector-wide increase of 10% it nevertheless has driven a higher overall lock-up balance and resultant net debt outcome. The stated intention at the half-year was to stabilise the position and this was broadly achieved with year-end lock-up of 196 days (193 on a like-for-like basis excluding Whitelaw Twining acquisition). In an inflationary environment with rising interest rates the upward pressure on billing and collection terms is potentially an ongoing risk. Whilst the Group will continue to mitigate this by improving the efficiency of internal influencing factors, the external environment is not expected to enable significant near-term reductions in lock-up.
The Group expects to continue to operate well within its available facilities and for all covenants to be compliant for the remaining tenure of the RCF.
Capital expenditure
The main capital expenditure requirements of the Group are for IT infrastructure, replenishment and project work and office refurbishments. Overall capex (excluding right-of-use asset additions under IFRS 16, and intangible assets recognised from acquisitions) in FY2022/23 was
Current trading and future outlook
The performance in FY2022/23 reflects another year of profitable growth, albeit delivering an Adjusted PBT figure at the lower end of expectations. Whilst profits increased year-on-year, gross and net margins were diluted primarily as a result of direct cost pressures from increased salaries demanded across the sector. The Group has taken actions to mitigate these cost challenges via the cost programme which has made good progress and is expected to help to mitigate the ongoing upward cost pressures.
The balance sheet, specifically lock-up, has proved to be a continuing challenge with the lock-up stretch seen in H1 sustaining through H2 and into the new year. This increase in lock-up days has led to increases in net debt and leverage and reflects sector-wide pressures on billing frequencies and payment terms. Working capital efficiency remains a key focus of the Group in order to maximise cash generation to manage borrowing costs. Inevitably, there are conflicting pressures between lock-up management, borrowing costs, leverage, investments in M&A and dividend requirements which are being carefully managed and considered by management and the Board.
The Group continues to see growth and profit opportunities but the various performance levers will require cautious management in what continues to be a challenging environment.
Chris Stefani
Group Chief Financial Officer
24 August 2023
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Consolidated income statement
Year ended 30 April 2023
|
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
Notes |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Revenue |
3 |
451,641 |
416,052 |
Recoverable expenses |
3 |
(71,505) |
(65,810) |
Net revenue |
3 |
380,136 |
350,242 |
Direct costs |
3 |
(188,395) |
(169,332) |
Gross profit |
3 |
191,741 |
180,910 |
Administrative expenses |
|
(162,220) |
(146,691) |
Gain on bargain purchase |
9 |
4,459 |
- |
Trade receivables impairment |
13 |
(1,454) |
(2,973) |
Accelerated depreciation/amortisation |
4 |
(6,452) |
- |
Other impairment |
4 |
(1,856) |
(3,593) |
Operating profit |
4 |
24,218 |
27,653 |
Net finance expense |
5 |
(5,310) |
(3,664) |
Net interest expense on leases |
5 |
(1,739) |
(1,673) |
Profit before tax |
|
17,169 |
22,316 |
|
|
|
|
Total of adjusting items as defined under the Group's alternative performance measures |
2 |
(26,158) |
(19,081) |
Adjusted profit before tax |
2 |
43,327 |
41,397 |
|
|
|
|
Taxation |
6 |
(4,722) |
(2,029) |
Profit for the year |
|
12,447 |
20,287 |
|
|
|
|
Earnings per share attributable to the owners of the parent: |
|
|
|
Basic (p) |
8 |
4.0 |
6.8 |
Diluted (p) |
8 |
3.8 |
6.5 |
The results are from continuing operations.
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
Year ended 30 April 2023
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Profit for the year |
12,447 |
20,287 |
|
|
|
Items that are or may be subsequently reclassified to the income statement: |
|
|
Foreign currency translation differences - foreign operations |
(1,388) |
83 |
Total other comprehensive (expense)/income for the year |
(1,388) |
83 |
Total comprehensive income for the year |
11,059 |
20,370 |
There is no taxation on items within other comprehensive income.
Consolidated statement of financial position
As at 30 April 2023
|
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
Notes |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Non-current assets |
|
|
|
Intangible assets |
10 |
49,890 |
45,604 |
Property, plant and equipment |
11 |
9,300 |
11,239 |
Right-of-use assets |
12 |
57,223 |
65,234 |
Trade and other receivables |
13 |
412 |
1,464 |
Deferred tax assets |
20 |
4,320 |
3,938 |
Total non-current assets |
|
121,145 |
127,479 |
Current assets |
|
|
|
Trade and other receivables |
13 |
243,339 |
190,174 |
Cash and cash equivalents (excluding bank overdrafts) |
14 |
36,404 |
28,310 |
Total current assets |
|
279,743 |
218,484 |
Total assets |
|
400,888 |
345,963 |
Current liabilities |
|
|
|
Trade and other payables |
15 |
59,855 |
63,325 |
Corporation tax liabilities |
|
9,366 |
6,190 |
Deferred consideration |
|
583 |
890 |
Lease liabilities |
16 |
13,712 |
14,576 |
Interest-bearing loans and borrowings |
17 |
23,512 |
9,786 |
Provisions |
18 |
6,898 |
6,315 |
Amounts due to members of partnerships in the Group |
27 |
30,700 |
28,243 |
Total current liabilities |
|
144,626 |
129,325 |
Non-current liabilities |
|
|
|
Deferred tax liabilities |
20 |
7,501 |
5,869 |
Lease liabilities |
16 |
58,298 |
63,163 |
Interest-bearing loans and borrowings |
17 |
114,640 |
90,344 |
Provisions |
18 |
3,772 |
4,147 |
Total non-current liabilities |
|
184,211 |
163,523 |
Total liabilities |
|
328,837 |
292,848 |
Net assets |
|
72,051 |
53,115 |
Equity |
|
|
|
Share capital |
21 |
3,420 |
3,254 |
Share premium |
21 |
91,940 |
89,365 |
Treasury shares |
21 |
(129) |
(129) |
Other reserves |
22 |
17,021 |
4,929 |
Accumulated losses |
22 |
(40,201) |
(44,304) |
Total equity |
|
72,051 |
53,115 |
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
Year ended 30 April 2023
|
|
|
|
Other reserves |
|
|
|
||
|
Share capital |
Share premium |
Treasury shares |
Merger reserve |
Share-based payments reserve |
Translation reserve |
Accumulated losses |
Total equity |
|
|
(note 21) |
(note 21) |
(note 21) |
(note 22) |
(note 22) |
(note 22) |
(note 22) |
|
|
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
|
At 1 May 2022 |
3,254 |
89,365 |
(129) |
(2,385) |
11,512 |
(4,198) |
(44,304) |
53,115 |
|
Profit for the year |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
12,447 |
12,447 |
|
Other comprehensive income |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(1,388) |
- |
(1,388) |
|
Total comprehensive income |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(1,388) |
12,447 |
11,059 |
|
Shares issued |
166 |
2,575 |
|
- |
|
- |
- |
2,741 |
|
Dividends paid |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(15,113) |
(15,113) |
|
Share-based payments (note 23) |
- |
- |
- |
- |
20,774 |
- |
- |
20,774 |
|
Recycling of share-based payments (note 23) |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(7,294) |
- |
7,294 |
- |
|
Tax on share-based payments |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(525) |
(525) |
|
At 30 April 2023 |
3,420 |
91,940 |
(129) |
(2,385) |
24,992 |
(5,586) |
(40,201) |
72,051 |
Year ended 30 April 2022
|
|
|
|
Other reserves |
|
|
|
||||
|
Share capital |
Share premium |
Treasury shares |
Merger reserve |
Share-based payments reserve |
Translation reserve |
Accumulated losses |
Total equity |
|||
|
(note 21) |
(note 21) |
(note 21) |
(note 22) |
(note 22) |
(note 22) |
(note 22) |
|
|||
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
|||
At 1 May 2021 |
3,246 |
88,610 |
(129) |
(2,385) |
12,885 |
(4,281) |
(60,566) |
37,380 |
|||
Profit for the year |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
20,287 |
20,287 |
|||
Other comprehensive income |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
83 |
- |
83 |
|||
Total comprehensive income |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
83 |
20,287 |
20,370 |
|||
Shares issued |
8 |
755 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
763 |
|||
Dividends paid |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(13,537) |
(13,537) |
|||
Share-based payments (note 23) |
- |
- |
- |
- |
7,701 |
- |
- |
7,701 |
|||
Recycling of share-based payments (note 23) |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(9,074) |
- |
9,074 |
- |
|||
Tax on share-based payments |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
438 |
438 |
|||
At 30 April 2022 |
3,254 |
89,365 |
(129) |
(2,385) |
11,512 |
(4,198) |
(44,304) |
53,115 |
|||
Consolidated statement of cash flows
Year ended 30 April 2023
|
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
Note |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Cash flows from operating activities |
|
|
|
Cash generated from operations before adjusting items |
26 |
42,929 |
41,623 |
Cash used to settle non-underlying items |
|
(6,756) |
(8,464) |
Cash generated from operations |
|
36,173 |
33,159 |
Interest paid |
|
(5,979) |
(4,596) |
Interest received |
|
468 |
- |
Tax paid |
|
(3,713) |
(2,854) |
Net cash generated from operating activities |
|
26,949 |
25,709 |
Cash flows from investing activities |
|
|
|
Proceeds from sale of investment |
|
- |
227 |
Acquisition of subsidiary, net of cash acquired |
9 |
(16,807) |
(3,540) |
Purchase of property, plant and equipment |
|
(2,874) |
(3,581) |
Purchase of other intangible assets |
|
(3,452) |
(4,300) |
Net cash flows used in investing activities |
|
(23,133) |
(11,194) |
Cash flows from financing activities |
|
|
|
Dividends paid |
7 |
(15,113) |
(13,537) |
Loan arrangement fee |
|
(163) |
(626) |
Proceeds from borrowings |
|
37,089 |
109,727 |
Repayment of borrowings |
|
(10,908) |
(104,861) |
Repayment of principal of lease liabilities |
16 |
(14,447) |
(13,396) |
Interest received |
|
- |
101 |
Capital contributions by members |
27 |
7,237 |
2,132 |
Repayments to former members |
27 |
(4,807) |
(1,072) |
Net cash flows used in financing activities |
|
(1,112) |
(21,532) |
|
|
|
|
Net increase/(decrease) in cash and cash equivalents |
|
2,704 |
(7,017) |
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of year |
|
27,704 |
34,580 |
Effects of foreign exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents |
|
188 |
141 |
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of year |
14 |
30,596 |
27,704 |
Consolidated notes to the financial statements
Year ended 30 April 2023
1 Accounting policies
1.1 Nature of these financial statements
The following financial information does not amount to full financial statements within the meaning of Section 434 of Companies Act 2006. The financial information has been extracted from the Group's Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 April 2023 on which an unqualified report has been made by the Company's auditors. The 2023 statutory accounts will be delivered to Companies House in due course.
Copies of the Annual Report and Financial Statements will be posted to shareholders shortly and will be available from the Company's registered office at 20 Fenchurch Street,
1.2 Statement of accounting policies
The preliminary announcement for the year ended 30 April 2023 has been produced based on the Group's annual financial statements which are prepared in accordance with
1.3 Going concern
The Directors have assessed the going concern basis adopted by the Group in the preparation of the consolidated financial statements, taking into account the current financial position including its available financing facilities, the business model and future outlook, as well as the principal risks as listed in the Strategic Report. The Directors conclude that the Group has adequate resources to continue as a going concern across the period of assessment.
Assessment of going concern
The going concern assessment has been considered for the period to 31 October 2024 and is carried out as follows:
· The Group's Board-approved budget base case is used to calculate the net debt position, liquidity, covenant compliance and available headroom over the going concern period.
· The going concern assessment has been carried out on two different base cases, the first of which assumes the recommendation of an all cash offer for DWF Group plc from Aquila Bidco Limited is accepted, and the second of which assumes that the business continues as a Plc.
· The assessment of going concern is carried out with reference to available financing facilities under both scenarios, the ability to pay debts as they fall due and the covenants associated with the financing facilities.
· Plausible downside scenarios are modelled to quantify the impact of a variety of risks materialising over the going concern period.
· Mitigating actions which could be taken are identified, quantified and included in the assessment.
· The reasonable worst case scenario, along with mitigating actions, is then used to test that the Group would continue to have headroom in its available financing facilities, settle liabilities as they fall due and comply with the associated financial covenants over the going concern period.
Financing facilities
The Group closed the year with committed banking facilities of
Covenant |
Oct-23 |
Jan-24 |
Apr-24 |
Jul-24 |
Oct-24 |
Net Asset Value to Consolidated Net Borrowings |
1.60x |
1.60x |
1.60x |
1.60x |
1.60x |
Interest Cover |
4.00x |
4.00x |
4.00x |
4.00x |
4.00x |
Leverage |
1.75x |
1.75x |
1.75x |
1.75x |
1.75x |
Each of the covenants noted above is measured on a pre-IFRS 16 basis in accordance with the banking facility agreement. Interest cover is defined as the ratio of EBITDA to interest expense, and leverage is defined as the ratio of net debt to EBITDA.
If the recommendation of an all cash offer for DWF Group plc from Aquila Bidco Limited is approved, the current facilities will be fully repaid on completion, and new committed banking facilities of
Covenant |
Oct-23 |
Jan-24 |
Apr-24 |
Jul-24 |
Oct-24 |
Leverage |
- |
- |
- |
4.50x |
4.50x |
Future outlook, risks and uncertainties
The going concern and viability assessments are closely linked and therefore the conclusions of the going concern assessment are directly relevant to and should be read in conjunction with the viability statement. The Board-approved base case combined with the annual three-year plan, adjusted to include Whitelaw Twining, has been used to measure the going concern and future viability of the Group. This assessment has been performed on the same two bases as going concern. This includes monitoring net debt positions and cash management activities of the Group and their effect on covenant testing. The going concern and viability of the Group have been assessed taking into account the potential impact of certain downside scenarios arising from the principal risks and uncertainties.
In particular, the Board has considered the impact of both a de-listing and business-as-usual scenario, including impacts on cash flows and covenants. In addition the assessment considers the potential reduction in demand caused by either macro environmental factors, commercial pipeline, our ability to retain or attract the correct level of talent as well as inflationary pressures over and above each base case.
Mitigating actions
If faced with the reasonable worst-case scenario, the Board also considers possible mitigating actions available to the Group to maintain liquidity and covenant compliance. These can be swiftly implemented should the worst-case scenario arise and include (but are not limited to):
· freezing recruitment and a slowdown in investment in recruitment and reward;
· reducing discretionary operating spend such as marketing and travel;
· reducing non-committed capital expenditure;
· revision of the existing dividend policy; and
· cost cutting measures in non-fee earning areas including an acceleration of the execution of the Group's real estate reduction strategy
Reverse stress test
In addition to the modelling of the above scenarios, a reverse stress test was conducted by the Group to assess the quantum of increased inflationary pressures and a stretch in working capital that would materially impact our ability to comply with financial covenants. Such a material impact is not considered a reasonable scenario to adversely impact the going concern assessment, under either scenario.
Conclusion
Based on this assessment, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the Group and Company has sufficient resources to continue its operations for the period of assessment. In particular the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the Group and Company will operate under its existing financing facilities, will comply with all covenants with adequate headroom and settle all other liabilities as they fall due. The Directors therefore consider it appropriate for the Group and Company to adopt the going concern basis in preparing these financial statements.
The directors are satisfied that under the no deal basis there is sufficient support and knowledge of the cash flows and operations of the business to adopt a going concern basis for the Group and Company. The all cash offer for DWF Group plc from Aquila Bidco Limited outlined above remains subject to shareholder approval. Assuming such approval is received, the transaction is expected to complete within 12 months of these Financial Statements. Aquila Bidco Limited have stated their intentions surrounding the Group's future outlook and funding plans and these align to the Group's current business plan and strategy. However, as the decisions around future strategy and intentions will no longer be in the exclusive control of the DWF Group PLC Directors, this creates a material uncertainty that may cast significant doubt on the Group and Company's ability to continue as a going concern as at 24th August 2023. The financial statements do not include the adjustments that would result if the Group or Company were unable to continue as a going concern.
2 Alternative performance measures
APM's are not intended to supplant IFRS measures but are included in response to investor feedback or to provide readers of the financial statements with additional understanding of the underlying trading performance of the Group.
APMs are fully defined and information as to why they are useful is provided in the glossary. Adjusted profit before tax reconciles to profit before tax as follows:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Profit before tax |
17,169 |
22,316 |
Adjusting items: |
|
|
Amortisation of intangible assets - acquired |
3,929 |
4,655 |
Impairment of intangible assets |
1,494 |
2,966 |
Impairment of tangible and right of use assets |
362 |
627 |
Accelerated depreciation/amortisation |
6,452 |
- |
Non-underlying items |
6,248 |
1,224 |
Gain on bargain purchase |
(4,459) |
- |
Share-based payments expense |
12,132 |
9,609 |
Total of adjusting items |
26,158 |
19,081 |
Adjusted PBT |
43,327 |
41,397 |
In FY23, an accelerated depreciation charge of £6.5m (FY22: £nil) was recognised in relation to the right of use, and other fixed assets located within a vacant floor in the
Adjusted profit before tax reconciles to profit before tax with reconciling items by nature as follows:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Profit before tax |
17,169 |
22,316 |
Office closures and scale-backs |
9,972 |
(238) |
Acquisition-related expenses |
6,493 |
9,564 |
Gain on bargain purchase |
(4,459) |
- |
Share-based payment expense |
10,822 |
9,609 |
Restructuring costs |
3,330 |
- |
Refinancing costs |
- |
146 |
Adjusted PBT |
43,327 |
41,397 |
Cash used to settle non-underlying items includes £5.4m (FY22: £3.8m) relating to closures and other restructure costs and £1.4m (FY22: £4.6m) relating to acquisition-related advisory fees.
Non-underlying items are set out in the table below:
|
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Acquisition-related advisory fees |
a |
1,254 |
336 |
Acquisition-related expenses |
b |
- |
1,104 |
Closure and scale-back of operations |
c |
1,664 |
(362) |
Restructuring costs |
d |
3,330 |
- |
Non-underlying items within operating profit |
|
6,248 |
1,078 |
Non-underlying finance expense |
e |
- |
146 |
Total non-underlying items |
|
6,248 |
1,224 |
a. The Group periodically considers and analyses potential acquisition targets and recognises there is inherent complexity and risk associated with acquisitions. The Group manages this by employing external professional advisors to perform legal, financial, commercial and tax due diligence on targets. These costs relate to opportunities the Group identifies and pursues, of which a portion result in successful acquisitions. Acquisition fees in the current period relate to the acquisitions of Acumension and Whitelaw Twining as well as fees for aborted acquisitions.
b. Acquisition-related expense relates to the remuneration expense from the acquisition of Mindcrest in FY20. Payments to the sellers of Mindcrest were deemed to be remuneration (and not consideration) under IFRS 3, and therefore expensed over the deemed service period rather than included in goodwill. As these costs are not considered recurring and ceased in February 2022, they have been included within adjusting items in order to give greater clarity of underlying trading performance.
c. Closure and scale-back of operations in the current year relate to ongoing costs relating to the scale-back of operations in
d. During the year, the Group commenced an efficiency programme with the aim of removing cost from the business. Costs of executing the restructuring are considered non-recurring as a restructuring of this size is one-off and as a result is reported as a non-underlying item to provide clarity of underlying trading performance.
e. These costs are associated with the FY22 re-financing and include professional fees incurred that are significant in value and by their nature are not recurring annually.
The cost to income ratio is used to assess the levels of operational gearing in the Group. The cost to income ratio is defined as administrative expenses less adjusting items and divided by net revenue and is calculated as follows:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Net revenue |
380,136 |
350,242 |
Administrative expenses, gain on bargain purchase, accelerated depreciation and impairment |
167,523 |
153,257 |
Total of adjusting items |
(26,158) |
(19,081) |
Less: re-financing costs included in adjusting items |
- |
146 |
Adjusted administrative expenses |
141,365 |
134,322 |
Cost to income ratio |
37.2% |
38.4% |
3 Operating segments
Reporting segments
In accordance with IFRS 8: Operating Segments ('IFRS 8'), the Group's operating segments are based on the operating results reviewed by the Board, who represent the chief operating decision maker ('CODM'). The Group has the following three strategic divisions, which are its reportable segments. These divisions offer different services and are reported separately because of different specialisms within teams in the business group.
The following summary describes the operations of each reportable segment:
Reportable segment |
Operations |
|
|
Legal Advisory |
Premium legal advice, commercial intelligence and relevant industry experience.
|
Connected Services |
Collection of products and business services that enhance and complement our legal offerings.
|
Mindcrest* |
Outsourced and process-led legal services, designed to standardise, systemise, scale and optimise legal workflows. |
The revenue, net revenue and gross profit are attributable to the principal activities of the Group.
Effective from 1 May 2023, the Group changed from the above strategic divisions to:
Reportable segment |
Operations |
|
|
Commercial Services |
Combining our commercial Legal Advisory teams with business services including Global Entity Management, Forensic Accountants, ESG Consulting and Regulatory Consulting.
|
Insurance Services |
Combining our insurance-focused legal and business services expertise under a single leadership team.
|
Legal Operations |
Our alternative legal services provider, delivering services including eDiscovery, contract management, compliance, legal technology, consulting and operations, and knowledge management. |
These changes to the Group's internal structure are a natural evolution to those made at the start of FY22, and will allow DWF to go further in how it delivers its integrated offering to clients.
For year ended 30 April 2023
|
Legal Advisory |
Connected Services |
Mindcrest |
Total |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Revenue |
385,263 |
41,547 |
24,831 |
451,641 |
Recoverable expenses |
(68,685) |
(894) |
(1,926) |
(71,505) |
Net revenue |
316,578 |
40,653 |
22,905 |
380,136 |
Direct costs |
(153,959) |
(22,749) |
(11,687) |
(188,395) |
Gross profit |
162,619 |
17,904 |
11,218 |
191,741 |
Gross margin % |
51.4% |
44.0% |
49.0% |
50.4% |
Administrative expenses |
(162,220) |
|||
Gain on bargain purchase |
4,459 |
|||
Trade receivables impairment |
(1,454) |
|||
Other impairment |
(1,856) |
|||
Accelerated depreciation/amortisation |
(6,452) |
|||
Operating profit |
24,218 |
|||
Net finance expense |
(5,310) |
|||
Net interest expense on leases |
(1,739) |
|||
Profit before tax |
17,169 |
|||
Taxation |
(4,722) |
|||
Profit for the year |
12,447 |
In FY23, an accelerated depreciation charge of £6.5m (FY22: £nil) was recognised in relation to the right of use, and other fixed assets located within a vacant floor in the
Within administrative expenses, there is an impairment loss of £1.5m recognised relating to the Zing CGU. This is attributable to the Connected Services segment.
For year ended 30 April 2022
|
Legal Advisory |
Connected Services |
Mindcrest |
Total |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Revenue |
355,063 |
34,181 |
26,808 |
416,052 |
Recoverable expenses |
(63,110) |
(324) |
(2,376) |
(65,810) |
Net revenue |
291,953 |
33,857 |
24,432 |
350,242 |
Direct costs |
(138,729) |
(18,828) |
(11,775) |
(169,332) |
Gross profit |
153,224 |
15,029 |
12,657 |
180,910 |
Gross margin % |
52.5% |
44.4% |
51.8% |
51.7% |
Administrative expenses |
(146,691) |
|||
Trade receivables impairment |
(2,973) |
|||
Other impairment |
(3,593) |
|||
Operating profit |
27,653 |
|||
Net finance expense |
(3,664) |
|||
Net interest expense on leases |
(1,673) |
|||
Profit before tax |
22,316 |
|||
Taxation |
(2,029) |
|||
Profit for the year |
20,287 |
There are no inter-segmental revenues which are material for disclosure. Administrative expenses represent indirect costs that are not specifically allocated to segments.
Non-current assets, revenue and net revenue by region
The
The Group's non-current assets, net revenue and revenue by geographical region are as follows:
|
Non-current assets |
Revenue |
Net revenue |
|||
|
2023 |
2022 |
2023 |
2022 |
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
|
75,702 |
57,141 |
333,442 |
310,381 |
268,284 |
250,584 |
|
23,419 |
23,935 |
40,241 |
36,515 |
40,241 |
36,515 |
|
14,331 |
12,100 |
23,833 |
7,717 |
23,828 |
7,702 |
|
1,464 |
14,063 |
11,654 |
11,107 |
10,312 |
8,838 |
Rest of World |
1,497 |
14,838 |
42,471 |
50,332 |
37,471 |
46,603 |
Total allocated to geographical regions |
116,413 |
122,077 |
451,641 |
416,052 |
380,136 |
350,242 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deferred tax assets |
4,320 |
3,938 |
|
|
|
|
Non-current other trade receivables |
412 |
1,464 |
|
|
|
|
Total |
121,145 |
127,479 |
|
|
|
|
Total assets and liabilities for each reportable segment are not provided to the CODM and therefore not presented.
4 Operating profit and auditor's remuneration
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Recognised in the income statement |
|
|
Impairment of intangible assets |
1,494 |
2,966 |
Amortisation of intangible assets - acquired |
3,929 |
4,655 |
Impairment of property, plant and equipment and right-of-use assets |
362 |
627 |
Accelerated depreciation/amortisation |
6,452 |
- |
Gain on bargain purchase |
(4,459) |
- |
Non-underlying items (less: non-underlying finance expense) |
6,248 |
1,078 |
Share-based payments expense (note 23) |
12,132 |
9,609 |
Total of adjusting items within operating profit |
26,158 |
18,935 |
Members' remuneration charged as an expense |
44,829 |
43,670 |
Net foreign exchange gain |
(1,431) |
(1,856) |
Amortisation of intangible assets - software and capitalised development costs |
3,268 |
4,251 |
Depreciation of tangible assets |
3,562 |
2,960 |
Depreciation of right-of-use assets |
12,365 |
12,737 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Auditor's remuneration |
|
|
Audit of the Group financial statements |
535 |
510 |
Total audit fees |
535 |
510 |
Amounts payable to the Company's auditor and its associates in respect of: |
|
|
Audit of financial information of subsidiaries, subsidiary undertakings and partnerships of the DWF Group plc |
150 |
125 |
Other services pursuant to legislation or regulation |
429 |
105 |
Total fees |
1,114 |
740 |
5 Net finance expense and net interest expense on leases
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Finance income |
|
|
Interest receivable |
861 |
101 |
|
861 |
101 |
Finance expense |
|
|
Interest payable on bank borrowings |
4,969 |
2,300 |
Other interest payable |
112 |
54 |
Bank and other charges |
1,090 |
1,265 |
Non-underlying finance expense |
- |
146 |
|
6,171 |
3,765 |
Net finance expense |
5,310 |
3,664 |
Net interest expense on leases |
|
|
Interest expense on lease liabilities |
1,739 |
1,673 |
|
1,739 |
1,673 |
6 Taxation
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
|
4,858 |
5,639 |
Foreign tax on profit |
2,188 |
2,822 |
Adjustments in respect of prior periods |
(445) |
(5,443) |
Current tax expense |
6,601 |
3,018 |
Deferred tax credit |
(1,341) |
(2,354) |
Adjustments in respect of prior periods |
(538) |
1,365 |
Total deferred tax credit |
(1,879) |
(989) |
Total tax charge for the year |
4,722 |
2,029 |
The effective tax rate is higher (2022: lower) than the average rate of corporate tax in the
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
|
Profit before taxation |
17,169 |
22,316 |
|
Tax on Group profit at standard |
3,348 |
4,240 |
|
Foreign tax rate differences |
498 |
(4) |
|
Non-deductible expenses |
1,656 |
706 |
|
Adjustments in respect of prior periods |
(983) |
(4,079) |
|
Brought forward tax losses utilised |
(2,115) |
(263) |
|
Tax losses in year not recognised as assets |
2,478 |
2,060 |
|
Impact of share price on expected tax deduction |
- |
203 |
|
Effect on deferred tax of change in corporation tax rate |
(160) |
(834) |
|
Group total tax charge for the year |
4,722 |
2,029 |
In the Spring Budget 2021, the Government announced that from 1 April 2023 the corporation tax rate would increase to 25%. The impact of the change in tax rate has been recognised in tax expense in the income statement, except to the extent that it relates to items previously recognised outside the income statement.
The reported tax charge for the year, excluding prior year adjustments, is £5.7m on a profit before tax of £17.2m, representing an effective rate of tax of 33%. The effective tax rate was higher than the
7 Dividends
Distributions to owners of the parent in the year:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
pence per share |
pence per share |
Final dividend recognised as distributions in the year |
3.25 |
3.00 |
Interim dividend recognised as distributions in the year |
1.60 |
1.50 |
Total dividend paid in the year |
4.85 |
4.50 |
Final dividend proposed |
- |
3.25 |
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Final dividend recognised as distributions in the year |
9,821 |
9,008 |
Interim dividend recognised as distributions in the year |
5,292 |
4,529 |
Total dividend paid in the year |
15,113 |
13,537 |
Final dividend proposed |
- |
10,574 |
The Directors are not proposing a final dividend for the financial year ended 30 April 2023. A special dividend, which is conditional upon the scheme of arrangement becoming effective, is proposed as described in the scheme document published by the Company on 15 August 2023.
8 Earnings per share
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Profit for the year for the purpose of basic earnings per share |
12,447 |
20,287 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number |
Number |
Weighted average number of ordinary shares for the purposes of basic earnings per share |
311,419,070 |
298,898,991 |
Effect of dilutive potential ordinary shares: |
|
|
Future exercise of share awards and options |
12,001,403 |
13,639,188 |
Weighted average number of ordinary shares for the purposes of diluted earnings per share |
323,420,473 |
312,538,179 |
Earnings per share attributable to the owners of the parent: |
|
|
Basic earnings per share (p) |
4.0 |
6.8 |
Diluted earnings per share (p) |
3.8 |
6.5 |
Adjusted basic and adjusted diluted earnings per share are APMs (as defined in the glossary) and have been calculated using profit for the purpose of basic earnings per share adjusted for total adjusting items and the tax effect of those items.
Adjusted basic and adjusted diluted earnings per share may be reconciled to basic earnings per share as follows:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Profit for the year |
12,447 |
20,287 |
Add / (remove): |
|
|
Total of adjusting items (note 2) |
26,158 |
19,081 |
Tax effect of adjustments above |
(3,763) |
(4,651) |
Adjusted profit for the purpose of adjusted earnings per share |
34,842 |
34,717 |
|
|
|
|
Number |
Number |
Weighted average number of ordinary shares for the purposes of adjusted basic earnings per share |
311,419,070 |
298,898,991 |
|
|
|
Ordinary shares for the purposes of adjusted diluted earnings per share |
341,979,578 |
325,352,865 |
Adjusted basic earnings per share (p) |
11.2 |
11.6 |
Adjusted diluted earnings per share (p) |
10.2 |
10.7 |
Shares held in trust are issued shares that are owned by the Group's employee benefit trusts for future issue to employees as part of share incentive schemes. These are recognised on consolidation as treasury shares. The future exercise of share awards and options is the dilutive effect of share awards granted to employees that have not yet vested.
Shares held in trust are deducted from the weighted average number of ordinary shares for basic earnings per share and adjusted basic earnings per share.
The definitions of adjusted basic earnings per share and adjusted diluted earnings per share can be found in the glossary to these financial statements.
9 Acquisitions of subsidiaries and transactions related to previous acquisitions
Acquisitions in the year to 30 April 2023
Business combinations are accounted for using the acquisition accounting method as at the acquisition date, which is the date at which control is transferred to the Group.
Two acquisitions were made in the year; Acuhold Limited ('Acumension') and Whitelaw Twining Law Corporation ('Whitelaw Twining'). Details of the acquisitions are as follows:
|
Country of incorporation |
Nature of activity |
Date of acquisition |
Consideration £'000 |
Percentage ownership |
Acumension |
|
Costs management |
2 September 2022 |
5,530 |
100% |
Whitelaw Twining |
|
Insurance |
5 December 2022 |
5,260 |
100% |
Acumension is a leading specialist in legal costs management headquartered in
Whitelaw Twining, is a leading Canadian law firm headquartered in
The fair values of the assets and liabilities and the associated goodwill arising from the acquisitions are as follows:
|
Acumension £'000 |
Whitelaw Twining £'000 |
Intangible assets |
223 |
8,453 |
Property, plant and equipment |
89 |
- |
Right-of-use asset |
- |
4,835 |
Trade and other receivables |
2,854 |
15,204 |
Cash and cash equivalents |
1,690 |
91 |
Trade and other payables |
(352) |
(4,466) |
Lease liabilities |
- |
(4,835) |
Provisions |
- |
(342) |
Amounts due to members |
- |
(3,361) |
Loans and borrowings |
- |
(3,614) |
Deferred tax liability |
(81) |
(2,246) |
Net assets acquired |
4,423 |
9,719 |
Purchase consideration |
5,530 |
5,260 |
Purchase consideration satisfied by: |
|
|
Initial cash consideration |
4,368 |
304 |
Deferred cash consideration |
1,086 |
2,347 |
Assets transferred as consideration |
76 |
- |
Contingent consideration |
- |
15 |
Shares issued to shareholders |
- |
2,594 |
Provisional goodwill / (gain on bargain purchase) |
1,107 |
(4,459) |
Within the £5,530,000 consideration for Acumension, £1,086,000 is deferred and payable over one year post-acquisition and is not contingent on future performance targets. Of this deferred consideration, £760,000 has been paid in the period. Contingent consideration of £1,250,000 was payable based on certain KPIs being met in the first year post-acquisition. These targets were deemed to be unlikely to be met as at the acquisition date and therefore not included within the fair value assessment of consideration. The provisional fair values in relation to Acumension as disclosed in the FY23 interim accounts have been updated resulting in an increase to goodwill of £452,000 and a decrease in acquired net assets of £1,761,000.
Of the £5,260,000 consideration for Whitelaw Twining, £2,347,000 was deferred and payable in February 2023. This was not contingent on future performance targets. During the period, all deferred consideration was paid. An additional consideration of £15,000 was contingent on future performance targets in FY23. These were achieved, and the contingent consideration paid in March 2023.
In addition to the consideration paid for Whitelaw Twining, 13,143,000 of shares were issued that vest over a period of between one and five years to July 2027. These shares are contingent on continuing service of the sellers. This is accounted for as remuneration and within the scope of IFRS 2 Share-Based Payments. An IFRS 2 charge of £1,293,000 has been recognised in the income statement for FY23, and a balance of £9,234,000 included within prepayments.
The goodwill for Acumension is attributable to the benefits of operating an already well-established business in the relevant sector and the synergies that are expected to be achieved from incorporating the business into the Group's operations. The goodwill will be allocated to the Costs CGU. As the purchase was not made with any qualifying intellectual property, all goodwill acquired is non-tax deductible.
Goodwill is measured at the acquisition date as the fair value of consideration transferred, plus non-controlling interests and the fair value of any previously held equity interests less the net recognised amount (which is generally fair value) of the identifiable assets and liabilities assumed. Goodwill is subject to an annual review for impairment (or more frequently if necessary) in accordance with our accounting policies. Any impairment is charged to the income statement as it arises.
The following intangible assets were recognised at acquisition. These have been measured at their fair value through the multi-period excess earnings method (customer relationships) and royalty relief method (brand).
|
Acumension £'000 |
Whitelaw Twining £'000 |
Intangible assets - brands |
- |
2,086 |
Intangible assets - customer relationships |
223 |
6,235 |
Total fair value of intangibles on acquisition |
223 |
8,321 |
Deferred tax recognised as a result of the intangibles |
(57) |
(2,246) |
Total fair value on acquisition |
166 |
6,075 |
Cash flows arising from the acquisition were as follows:
|
Acumension £'000 |
Whitelaw Twining £'000 |
Initial purchase consideration |
(4,368) |
(304) |
Cash and cash equivalents acquired |
1,690 |
(3,523) |
Total fair value on acquisition |
(2,678) |
(3,827) |
Deferred consideration paid in the year |
(760) |
(2,347) |
Net cash outflow in the year |
(3,438) |
(6,174) |
The table below outlines the revenue and PBT of the acquirees since the acquisition date, which is included in the consolidated statement of comprehensive income for the year, and the annualised revenue and PBT of the acquirees had the acquisition dates for the business combinations been at the beginning of the year:
|
Revenue contributed post-acquisition |
PBT contributed post-acquisition |
Revenue in year of acquisition |
PBT in year of acquisition |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Acumension |
2,233 |
427 |
3,137 |
126 |
Whitelaw Twining |
10,025 |
877 |
23,676 |
997 |
Transaction costs comprised mainly advisor fees, including financial, tax and legal due diligence. These are all included within administrative expenses (non-underlying items) within note 2.
During FY23, the Group has concluded on the fair value of the net assets in respect of acquisitions completed, resulting in an increase of of £3.9m in net assets and a corresponding decrease in goodwill.
Acquisitions in the year to 30 April 2022
Two acquisitions were made in the year; Zing 365 Holdings Limited ('Zing') and BCA Claims and Consulting Limited ('BCA').
Full details of the acquisitions can be found in the Annual Report and Accounts 2022 at www.dwfgroup.com.
10 Intangible assets
|
|
Acquired |
|
|
|
|
|
|||
|
Goodwill |
Customer relationships |
Brand |
External software costs |
Capitalised development costs |
Total |
||||
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
||||
Cost |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||
At 1 May 2022 |
14,034 |
36,812 |
1,933 |
6,762 |
14,165 |
73,706 |
||||
Additions - internally developed |
- |
- |
- |
- |
2,726 |
2,726 |
||||
Additions - externally purchased |
- |
- |
- |
731 |
- |
731 |
||||
Additions through acquisitions |
1,107 |
6,458 |
2,086 |
132 |
- |
9,783 |
||||
Effect of movements in foreign exchange |
(38) |
(110) |
263 |
(58) |
- |
57 |
||||
At 30 April 2023 |
15,103 |
43,160 |
4,282 |
7,567 |
16,891 |
87,003 |
||||
Amortisation and impairment |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||
At 1 May 2022 |
1,357 |
13,132 |
1,782 |
4,444 |
7,387 |
28,102 |
||||
Amortisation for the year |
- |
3,743 |
186 |
987 |
2,281 |
7,197 |
||||
Accelerated Amortisation |
- |
- |
- |
133 |
- |
133 |
||||
Impairment |
1,403 |
91 |
- |
- |
- |
1,494 |
||||
Effect of movements in foreign exchange |
- |
172 |
36 |
(21) |
- |
187 |
||||
At 30 April 2023 |
2,760 |
17,138 |
2,004 |
5,543 |
9,668 |
37,113 |
||||
Net book value |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||
At 30 April 2023 |
12,343 |
26,022 |
2,278 |
2,024 |
7,223 |
49,890 |
||||
At 1 May 2022 |
12,677 |
23,680 |
151 |
2,318 |
6,778 |
45,604 |
||||
|
|
Acquired |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||
|
Goodwill |
Customer relationships |
Brand |
External software costs |
Capitalised development costs |
Total |
|||||
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
|||||
Cost |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
At 1 May 2021 |
11,141 |
35,608 |
1,633 |
4,322 |
11,311 |
64,015 |
|||||
Additions - internally developed |
- |
- |
- |
- |
2,854 |
2,854 |
|||||
Additions - externally purchased |
2,403 |
1,475 |
248 |
1,446 |
- |
5,572 |
|||||
Disposals |
- |
- |
- |
(354) |
- |
(354) |
|||||
Asset transfers |
- |
- |
- |
1,347 |
- |
1,347 |
|||||
Effect of movements in foreign exchange |
490 |
(271) |
52 |
1 |
- |
272 |
|||||
At 30 April 2022 |
14,034 |
36,812 |
1,933 |
6,762 |
14,165 |
73,706 |
|||||
Amortisation and impairment |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
At 1 May 2021 |
1,357 |
6,128 |
1,041 |
1,587 |
4,729 |
14,842 |
|||||
Amortisation for the year |
- |
3,945 |
711 |
1,593 |
2,658 |
8,907 |
|||||
Disposals |
- |
- |
- |
(94) |
- |
(94) |
|||||
Impairment |
- |
2,955 |
- |
11 |
- |
2,966 |
|||||
Asset transfers |
- |
- |
- |
1,347 |
- |
1,347 |
|||||
Effect of movements in foreign exchange |
- |
104 |
30 |
- |
- |
134 |
|||||
At 30 April 2022 |
1,357 |
13,132 |
1,782 |
4,444 |
7,387 |
28,102 |
|||||
Net book value |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
At 30 April 2022 |
12,677 |
23,680 |
151 |
2,318 |
6,778 |
45,604 |
|||||
At 1 May 2021 |
9,784 |
29,480 |
592 |
2,735 |
6,582 |
49,173 |
|||||
Individual intangible assets that are material to the financial statements are set out below:
· Customer relationships - Whitelaw Twining: Net book value at 30 April 2023 £6.0m (2022: £nil) - remaining amortisation period is 13.5 years
· Customer relationships -
Goodwill
Goodwill considered significant in comparison to the Group's total carrying amount of such assets has been allocated to CGU's or groups of CGU's as follows:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Insurance |
3,921 |
3,921 |
Claims Management and Adjusting |
2,150 |
2,150 |
Costs |
1,398 |
1,398 |
Other individually immaterial CGUs |
4,874 |
5,208 |
|
12,343 |
12,677 |
The recoverable amounts of the CGUs are determined from value in use calculations. The calculations have been based on a discounted cash flow model covering a period of five years using forecast revenues and costs, extended to perpetuity. The inputs into the model appropriately consider the relevant market maturity and local factors. The first year of the forecast is established from the budget for FY24 which is underpinned by the business plan that has been signed off by the Board. Cash flows for FY24 through to FY27 have been included on a consistent basis with the Board approved strategy. In each case, the calculations use a long term growth rate of 2% (2022: 2%) consistent with the sector average and a pre-tax discount rate of 12-13% (2022: 10-12%). These pre-tax discount rates reflect current market assessments for the time value of money and the specific risks associated with each CGU. The long-term growth rates used are based on management's expectations of future changes in the markets for each CGU.
The review for the Zing 365 CGU indicated that the recoverable amount was lower than the carrying value by £1.5m. The carrying value of the CGU has therefore been reduced to its recoverable amount, resulting in a Goodwill impairment charge of £1.4m, with the remaining £0.1m impairment allocated against the Customer Relationships intangible. This charge is recognised within administrative expenses in the Group income statement, and is attributable to the Connected Services segment.
Goodwill that has been allocated to other individually immaterial CGUs in the table above is monitored at a lower level than operating segment. Significant headroom exists for each CGU, with the exception of the Zing 365 CGU. No other reasonable worst-case scenario gives rise to a material impairment risk.
11 Property, plant and equipment
|
Leasehold improvements |
Office equipment and fixtures and fittings |
Computer equipment |
Total |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Cost |
|
|
|
|
At 1 May 2022 |
18,170 |
13,938 |
37,491 |
69,599 |
Additions |
855 |
1,160 |
871 |
2,886 |
Acquired through business combinations |
- |
89 |
- |
89 |
Disposals |
(68) |
(322) |
(151) |
(541) |
Effect of movements in foreign exchange |
(209) |
(29) |
(20) |
(258) |
At 30 April 2023 |
18,748 |
14,836 |
38,191 |
71,775 |
Accumulated depreciation |
|
|
|
|
At 1 May 2022 |
14,066 |
9,163 |
35,131 |
58,360 |
Charge for the year |
789 |
1,367 |
1,406 |
3,562 |
Accelerated depreciation |
985 |
190 |
- |
1,175 |
Disposals |
- |
(319) |
(57) |
(376) |
Effect of movements in foreign exchange |
(32) |
(181) |
(33) |
(246) |
At 30 April 2023 |
15,808 |
10,220 |
36,447 |
62,475 |
Net book value |
|
|
|
|
At 30 April 2023 |
2,940 |
4,616 |
1,744 |
9,300 |
At 1 May 2022 |
4,104 |
4,775 |
2,360 |
11,239 |
In FY23, an accelerated depreciation charge of £1.2m (FY22: £nil) was recognised in relation to leasehold improvements and office equipment located within a vacant floor in the
|
Leasehold improvements |
Office equipment and fixtures and fittings |
Computer equipment |
Total |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Cost |
|
|
|
|
At 1 May 2021 |
16,179 |
15,366 |
38,499 |
70,044 |
Additions |
508 |
1,169 |
1,903 |
3,580 |
Disposals |
(669) |
(448) |
(1,584) |
(2,701) |
Asset transfers |
2,130 |
(2,130) |
(1,347) |
(1,347) |
Effect of movements in foreign exchange |
22 |
(19) |
20 |
23 |
At 30 April 2022 |
18,170 |
13,938 |
37,491 |
69,599 |
Accumulated depreciation |
|
|
|
|
At 1 May 2021 |
13,287 |
8,235 |
35,907 |
57,429 |
Charge for the year |
778 |
1,029 |
1,153 |
2,960 |
Disposals |
(463) |
(129) |
(608) |
(1,200) |
Impairment |
402 |
84 |
17 |
503 |
Asset transfers |
46 |
(46) |
(1,347) |
(1,347) |
Effect of movements in foreign exchange |
16 |
(10) |
9 |
15 |
At 30 April 2022 |
14,066 |
9,163 |
35,131 |
58,360 |
Net book value |
|
|
|
|
At 30 April 2022 |
4,104 |
4,775 |
2,360 |
11,239 |
At 1 May 2021 |
2,892 |
7,131 |
2,592 |
12,615 |
12 Right-of-use assets
Leases as a lessee
|
Property |
Equipment |
Total |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Right-of-use assets |
|
|
|
At 1 May 2021 |
67,073 |
2,093 |
69,166 |
Additions |
10,467 |
- |
10,467 |
Acquisitions |
- |
- |
- |
Depreciation |
(12,264) |
(473) |
(12,737) |
Impairment |
(124) |
- |
(124) |
Disposals |
(1,110) |
- |
(1,110) |
Remeasurement adjustment |
(1,156) |
- |
(1,156) |
Effect of movements in foreign exchange |
729 |
(1) |
728 |
At 30 April 2022 |
63,615 |
1,619 |
65,234 |
Additions |
3,487 |
- |
3,487 |
Acquisitions |
4,835 |
- |
4,835 |
Depreciation |
(11,907) |
(458) |
(12,365) |
Accelerated depreciation |
(5,144) |
- |
(5,144) |
Impairment |
(362) |
- |
(362) |
Remeasurement adjustment |
1,559 |
(23) |
1,536 |
Effect of movements in foreign exchange |
2 |
- |
2 |
At 30 April 2023 |
56,085 |
1,138 |
57,223 |
In FY23, an accelerated depreciation charge of £5.1m (FY22: £nil) was recognised in relation to the right of use asset for a vacant floor in the
Leases as a lessor
During FY22, the Group has sub-leased property in
13 Trade and other receivables
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Current |
|
|
Trade receivables |
104,593 |
88,949 |
|
|
|
Amounts recoverable from clients in respect of unbilled revenue |
92,890 |
71,958 |
Unbilled disbursements |
11,232 |
7,982 |
Contract assets |
104,122 |
79,940 |
|
|
|
Trade receivables and contract assets |
208,715 |
168,889 |
|
|
|
Other receivables |
4,143 |
2,216 |
Amounts due from Members of partnerships |
2,441 |
2,238 |
Lease receivables |
310 |
432 |
Reimbursement asset |
4,962 |
4,040 |
Prepayments |
22,768 |
12,359 |
|
243,339 |
190,174 |
Non-current |
|
|
Other receivables |
225 |
938 |
Lease receivables |
187 |
526 |
|
412 |
1,464 |
The reimbursement asset is principally attributable to the professional indemnity provision (see note 18). Prepayments include £9.2m (2022: £nil) relating to acquisition-related remuneration expense (see note 9).
Ageing of trade receivables, amounts recoverable from clients in respect of unbilled revenue and unbilled disbursements
|
|
|
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Trade receivables not past due |
18,286 |
14,794 |
Trade receivables past due |
|
|
0 - 90 days |
68,522 |
59,876 |
91 - 180 days |
11,432 |
8,846 |
181 - 270 days |
4,538 |
3,337 |
271 - 365 days |
2,746 |
2,366 |
More than 365 days |
10,615 |
11,459 |
Gross trade receivables |
116,139 |
100,678 |
Amounts recoverable from clients in respect of unbilled revenue |
92,890 |
71,958 |
Unbilled disbursements |
11,232 |
7,982 |
|
|
|
Expected credit losses |
(8,438) |
(8,588) |
Other impairment provisions |
(3,108) |
(3,141) |
|
|
|
Total trade receivables and contract assets |
208,715 |
168,889 |
Lifetime expected credit losses are used to measure the loss allowance. These balances are held against trade receivables, amounts recoverable from clients in respect of unbilled revenue and unbilled disbursements. Other impairment provisions are applied against the trade receivables which are not based on the average expected credit loss rates presented below. The other categories of trade and other receivables do not contain impaired assets.
Expected credit loss rates
To measure the expected credit losses, trade receivables and contract assets have been grouped based on shared credit risk characteristics and the days past due. The contract assets relate to unbilled revenue and have substantially the same risk characteristics as the trade receivables for the same types of contracts.
The average expected credit loss rates for trade receivables and contract assets are presented below.
|
Group rates |
|
||
|
2023 |
2022 |
2023 |
2022 |
0 - 90 days |
0.9% |
0.5% |
2.7% |
0.9% |
91 - 180 days |
3.5% |
3.4% |
8.7% |
4.2% |
181 - 270 days |
7.6% |
10.5% |
19.8% |
13.1% |
271 - 365 days |
12.5% |
19.9% |
25.8% |
20.7% |
More than 365 days |
63.4% |
50.6% |
49.1% |
45.0% |
Movement in provision for impairment
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
At 1 May 2022 |
11,729 |
13,031 |
Provision utilised and other movements |
(1,637) |
(4,275) |
Charges to income statement |
1,454 |
2,973 |
At 30 April 2023 |
11,546 |
11,729 |
Other movements include expected credit loss provisions acquired from business combinations in the year of £421,000 (2022: £61,500).
Trade receivables, unbilled disbursements and contracts assets are written off where there is no reasonable expectation of recovery. For trade receivables and unbilled disbursements, impairment losses are presented as net impairment losses within operating profit whereas contract asset impairment losses are presented as a reduction in revenue. Subsequent recoveries of amounts previously written off are credited against the same line item.
14 Cash and cash equivalents
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Cash at bank and in hand |
36,404 |
28,310 |
Bank overdrafts |
(5,808) |
(606) |
Cash and cash equivalents |
30,596 |
27,704 |
15 Trade and other payables
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Trade payables |
28,716 |
27,896 |
Other payables |
3,101 |
3,748 |
Other taxation and social security |
14,164 |
15,284 |
Deferred income |
1,795 |
2,014 |
Accruals |
12,079 |
14,383 |
Trade and other payables |
59,855 |
63,325 |
Other payables relates principally to payroll-related creditors.
16 Lease liabilities
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
At 1 May 2022 |
77,739 |
84,002 |
Additions |
3,387 |
7,683 |
Acquisitions |
4,835 |
- |
Interest expense related to lease liabilities |
1,738 |
1,673 |
Net foreign currency translation (gain)/loss |
(379) |
763 |
Remeasurement adjustment |
875 |
(1,313) |
Repayment of lease liabilities (including interest) |
(16,185) |
(15,069) |
At 30 April 2023 |
72,010 |
77,739 |
Current lease liabilities |
13,712 |
14,576 |
Non-current lease liabilities |
58,298 |
63,163 |
|
72,010 |
77,739 |
The maturity of lease liabilities can be found in note 19. The undiscounted contractual cash flows relating to lease liabilities accounted for in accordance with IFRS 16 is £78.1m (2022: £82.9m). Operating costs, included within administrative expenses, relating to short-term and low value leases during the year were £2.2m (2022: £1.6m).
17 Interest-bearing loans and borrowings
This note provides information about the Group's interest-bearing loans and borrowings, which are measured at amortised cost. For more information about the contractual terms and the Group's exposure to interest rate and foreign currency risk, refer to note 19.
Obligations under interest-bearing loans and borrowings
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Current liabilities |
|
|
Bank loans |
11,425 |
9,093 |
Supplier payment facility |
6,279 |
87 |
Bank overdrafts |
5,808 |
606 |
|
23,512 |
9,786 |
Non-current liabilities |
|
|
Bank loans |
115,069 |
90,907 |
Unamortised finance costs |
(429) |
(563) |
|
114,640 |
90,344 |
|
138,152 |
100,130 |
On 22 December 2021, the Group completed a refinancing of its principal rolling credit facility ('RCF'). The new facility was increased to £120m in February 2023 and matures in December 2025 with one additional 12-month extension option.
The Group operates a supplier payment facility with HSBC, which has a limit of £11m. This facility is utilised in paying certain suppliers from time to time and repaid in the short-term.
Analysis of cash and cash equivalents and other interest-bearing loans and borrowings:
|
1 May 2022 |
Cash flow |
Exchange movement |
Non-cash movement |
30 April 2023 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Cash and cash equivalents |
27,704 |
2,705 |
187 |
- |
30,596 |
Bank loans |
(99,437) |
(26,017) |
(313) |
(297) |
(126,064) |
Supplier payments facility |
(87) |
34,831 |
- |
(41,023) |
(6,279) |
Total net debt (excluding IFRS 16) |
(71,820) |
11,519 |
(126) |
(41,320) |
(101,747) |
|
1 May 2021 |
Cash flow |
Exchange movement |
Non-cash movement |
30 April 2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Cash and cash equivalents |
34,580 |
(7,017) |
141 |
- |
27,704 |
Bank loans |
(94,544) |
(4,240) |
227 |
(880) |
(99,437) |
Supplier payments facility |
(204) |
15,683 |
- |
(15,566) |
(87) |
Total net debt (excluding IFRS 16) |
(60,168) |
4,426 |
368 |
(16,446) |
(71,820) |
Non-cash movements within bank loans relate to the amortisation of fees incurred on arrangement of the facility, over the expected life of the facility. Non-cash movements within the supplier payments facility relate to the utilisation of the facility to settle liabilities with suppliers, with the supplier payments facility being settled with cash when the liability becomes due.
Net debt including lease liabilities in scope of IFRS 16 is £173.8m (2022: £149.6m).
Net debt is an APM and is defined in the glossary.
18 Provisions
|
Dilapidation provision |
Professional indemnity provision |
Total |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
At 1 May 2022 |
4,462 |
6,000 |
10,462 |
Utilised in the year |
(213) |
(2,428) |
(2,641) |
Released in the year |
(68) |
(414) |
(482) |
Provisions made in the year |
107 |
4,014 |
4,121 |
Acquired through business combinations |
342 |
- |
342 |
Reclassified to other payables |
- |
(1,132) |
(1,132) |
At 30 April 2023 |
4,630 |
6,040 |
10,670 |
Current |
858 |
6,040 |
6,898 |
Non-current |
3,772 |
- |
3,772 |
Professional indemnity provision
The provision for professional indemnity reflects the Group's expected outflow for legal claims brought against the Group relating to historic professional services rendered. A provision is only recognised where an outflow is probable. The probability is established by reference to whether a claim is more likely than not to be successful. A professional indemnity liability for a claim that is agreed (i.e. the timing and amount of payments are well understood) is recognised in accruals (see note 15). Claims are assessed as being settled in full within the next five years.
Separately, the Group recognises expected reimbursements from professional indemnity insurance when it is virtually certain that the reimbursement will be received (note 13). No separate disclosure is made of the detail of such claims or proceedings, or the costs recovered by insurance, as such detail would be seriously prejudicial to the position of the Group.
There are circumstances of which the Group is aware but there is insufficient information available to either estimate whether a claim will develop or, where a claim appears possible, make an assessment of the outflow. Such circumstances are contingent liabilities of the Group.
Dilapidation provision
Dilapidation provisions are established for restoration and reinstatement costs for property leases, held at the date of the statement of financial position. Such provisions are estimated at the start of the lease and updated annually. The Group's current lease portfolio terminates over the course of the next eleven years.
19 Financial instruments
The Directors have overall responsibility for the oversight of the Group's risk management framework. Further explanation on management of risk factors is provided in the risk section of the Strategic report.
The Group's trading and financing activities expose it to various financial risks that if left unmanaged could adversely impact on current or future earnings. These risks can be categorised as credit risk, liquidity risk, market risk (interest rate risk and foreign currency risk) and capital risk.
Credit risk
Credit risk is the risk of financial loss to the Group if a client or counterparty to a financial instrument fails to meet its contractual obligations, and arises principally from the Group's trade receivables. Credit checks are performed for new clients and ongoing monitoring takes place for existing clients. A provision is carried for expected credit losses, see note 13.
In connection with the Group's financial instruments there is not believed to be a material concentration risk based on the nature of the instruments.
Liquidity risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group will not be able to meet its financial obligations as they fall due. The Group maintains sufficient cash or working capital facilities to meet the cash requirements of the Group in order to mitigate this risk.
The Group is financed through a combination of members' capital (repayable on retirement of the member), undistributed profits, cash and bank borrowing facilities.
The Group's principal facility is a £120m (2022: £100m) RCF. Details of amounts drawn can be found in note 17. Management maintain a rolling 12-month cash flow and covenant forecasts to ensure visibility of short-term liquidity and manage facility usage, in addition to annual budgets and longer-term planning. The RCF matures in 2025, with one 12-month extension option and there are no contracted repayments until that date. The Group anticipates continued utilisation of the facility to fund working capital.
Note 1.3 sets out the financial covenants attached to the RCF held with the Group's banking syndicate, and more information on how the Group manages liquidity risk.
The Group has bank guarantees of £0.7m denominated in euros (2022: £0.7m). The Group has issued rental guarantees of £2.1m denominated in Euros and Australian dollars (2022: £2.1m).
Maturity analysis
The table below presents the outstanding contractual maturity profile by fiscal year for the Group's interest-bearing loans and borrowings and lease liabilities. Trade and other payables are excluded from this profile as they fall due within a year.
The majority of the Group's borrowings comprise the drawn-down balance on the RCF, as discussed above. The payments shown below reflect the contractual repayments upon expiry of the facility, excluding the extension options, so if the facility is extended these repayments will be deferred.
|
Borrowings |
Lease liabilities |
||
|
2023 |
2022 |
2023 |
2022 |
Payments |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Year to 2023 |
- |
9,180 |
- |
16,030 |
Year to 2024 |
11,451 |
- |
15,364 |
14,639 |
Year to 2025 |
- |
90,907 |
14,212 |
13,056 |
Year to 2026 |
115,042 |
- |
13,102 |
11,850 |
Year to 2027 |
- |
- |
11,867 |
- |
Later years |
- |
- |
23,553 |
27,326 |
|
126,493 |
100,087 |
78,098 |
82,901 |
Effect of discounting cash flows |
- |
- |
(6,088) |
(5,162) |
Carrying value |
126,493 |
100,087 |
72,010 |
77,739 |
Market risk
Market risk is the risk that changes in market prices, such as foreign exchange rates and interest rates, will affect the Group's income. The Group's exposure to market risk predominantly relates to interest and currency risk.
Interest rate risk
The Group's bank borrowings incur both fixed and variable interest charges. The variable rates on its principal borrowing facilities are linked to SONIA or EURIBOR plus a margin.
The Group's principal facility exposure to variable interest rates poses a risk in both the cash flows and the impact on the income statement with potential interest increases expected in FY24.
Foreign currency risk
The Group has overseas operations in
Capital risk
The capital structure of the Group consists of net debt, as disclosed in note 17, and equity. The Group's objectives when managing capital are to safeguard the Group's ability to continue as a going concern and to provide optimal returns for shareholders. The Group manages its capital structure and makes adjustments to it, in light of changes to economic conditions and the strategic objectives of the Group.
Fair value measurement
Financial assets and liabilities are measured in accordance with the fair value hierarchy and assessed as Level 1, 2 or 3 based on the following criteria:
· Level 1: fair value measurement based on quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or liabilities;
· Level 2: fair value measurements derived from inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly (i.e. as prices) or indirectly (i.e. derived from prices);
· Level 3: fair value measurements derived from valuation techniques that include inputs for the asset or liability that are not based on observable market data.
Investments, held at fair value through profit or loss, are a Level 3 financial asset. The remaining financial instruments are measured at amortised cost. The carrying values of the Group's financial assets and liabilities approximate their fair values.
The table below sets out the Group's accounting classification of each category of financial assets and liabilities and their carrying values at the end of the financial year.
|
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
Notes |
£'000 |
£'000 |
|
|
|
|
Measured at amortised cost: |
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents |
14 |
30,596 |
27,704 |
Trade and other receivables |
13 |
220,983 |
179,279 |
Total financial assets |
|
251,579 |
206,983 |
|
|
|
|
Measured at amortised cost: |
|
|
|
Trade and other payables |
15 |
58,360 |
61,311 |
Lease liabilities |
16 |
72,010 |
77,739 |
Borrowings |
17 |
132,773 |
100,087 |
Amounts due to members of partnerships in the Group |
27 |
30,700 |
28,243 |
Total financial liabilities |
|
293,843 |
267,380 |
Financial instruments sensitivity analysis
The Group has exposure to interest rate and foreign exchange rate movements given the nature of its borrowings and operations. At the end of the year, the effect of hypothetical changes in interest and currency rates are as follows.
Interest rate sensitivity
At 30 April 2023, based upon the amount of variable rate debt outstanding, the Group's pre-tax profits would change by approximately £1.1m for each one percentage point change in interest rates applicable to the variable rate debt and, after tax effect, equity would change by approximately £0.9m.
Foreign exchange rate sensitivity
The Group transacts in a range of currencies, but is primarily exposed to changes in the Euro and US Dollar exchange rates.
A 20% (FY22: 20%) strengthening and weakening of the above currencies against Pound Sterling would have the following impacts on net assets and profit shown below.
This calculation assumes that the change occurred at the statement of financial position date and had been applied to risk exposures existing at that date. This analysis assumes that all other variables, in particular interest rates, remain constant. The analysis is performed on the same basis for comparative periods.
|
|
Effect of change in |
Effect of change in |
Strengthening |
Year |
EUR rate |
USD rate |
Impact on equity |
FY23 |
2,041 |
194 |
Impact on equity |
FY22 |
1,796 |
203 |
Impact on profit or loss |
FY23 |
(1,541) |
(31) |
Impact on profit or loss |
FY22 |
(647) |
(207) |
|
|
Effect of change in |
Effect of change in |
Weakening |
Year |
EUR rate |
USD rate |
Impact on equity |
FY23 |
(1,361) |
(129) |
Impact on equity |
FY22 |
(1,198) |
(135) |
Impact on profit or loss |
FY23 |
1,027 |
1 |
Impact on profit or loss |
FY22 |
431 |
138 |
20 Deferred taxation
The deferred tax asset is as follows:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Assets |
|
|
At 1 May 2022 |
3,938 |
4,649 |
Deferred tax (credit)/debit recognised directly in equity |
(525) |
438 |
Deferred tax credit/(charge) in the income statement for the year |
894 |
(1,173) |
Exchange rate translation |
13 |
24 |
At 30 April 2023 |
4,320 |
3,938 |
Deferred tax assets of £4.3m have been recognised in respect of tax depreciation timing differences (£1.6m), expected tax deductions for share-based payments (£2.5m) and other temporary differences (£0.2m). It is anticipated that the Group and certain related subsidiary undertakings will make sufficient taxable profit to allow the benefit of the deferred tax asset to be utilised. A potential deferred tax asset of £14.2m (2022: £11.7m) has not been recognised relating to tax losses in subsidiary undertakings that are not anticipated to make sufficient taxable profit to allow the benefit of the deferred tax asset to be utilised.
The deferred tax liability as at 30 April 2023 is as follows:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Non-current liabilities |
|
|
At 1 May 2022 |
5,869 |
7,584 |
Arising on acquisition of intangibles |
2,303 |
503 |
Deferred tax credit in the income statement for the year |
(985) |
(2,163) |
Exchange rate translation |
314 |
(55) |
At 30 April 2023 |
7,501 |
5,869 |
The deferred tax liability principally relates to the recognition of acquired intangible assets arising on consolidation.
21 Share capital
|
Number |
Share capital |
Share premium |
Treasury shares |
Total |
|
of 1p each |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
At 1 May 2021 |
324,554,653 |
3,246 |
88,610 |
(129) |
91,727 |
Shares issued on acquisition of Zing 365 Holdings Ltd |
798,212 |
8 |
755 |
- |
763 |
At 30 April 2022 |
325,352,865 |
3,254 |
89,365 |
(129) |
92,490 |
Shares issued on transaction with Whitelaw Twining |
16,626,713 |
166 |
2,575 |
- |
2,741 |
At 30 April 2023 |
341,979,578 |
3,420 |
91,940 |
(129) |
95,231 |
On 6 December 2022, 16,504,757 ordinary shares were issued as a result of the transaction with Whitelaw Twining Law Corporation. A further 121,956 ordinary shares were issued on 31 March 2023 in relation to the same transaction.
The Group has 11,309,876 (2022: 24,322,488) shares held in treasury.
22 Reserves
The following describes the nature and purpose of each reserve within equity:
Share premium |
The amount subscribed for share capital in excess of the nominal value. |
Treasury shares |
The treasury shares reserve represents shares in DWF Group plc held by the Group's share trusts. The trusts are consolidated in the Group's financial statements. |
Merger reserve |
The difference between the nominal value of shares acquired by the Company in the share-for-share exchange with the former DWF LLP members and the nominal value of shares issued to acquire them. |
Share-based payments reserve |
The cumulative share-based payment expense net of release of amounts in respect of option exercised. |
Translation reserve |
Gains / losses in translating the net assets of overseas operations into GBP. |
Accumulated losses |
All other net gains and losses and transactions with owners not recognised elsewhere. |
23 Share-based payments
Share-based payment arrangements
The Group operates three share-based payment plans (2022: three plans), all of which are equity settled and consist only of share awards.
· The equity incentive plan ('EIP'): This is used to incentivise and reward performance from primarily Directors, upper-level management and members. Within the EIP are the following schemes: The EIP-IPO award, the career level 1-3 award, the long-term incentive plan ('LTIP') and the promotion award.
· The buy-as-you-earn ('BAYE') plan: All employees, excluding members, are eligible for the BAYE plan which is used to incentivise retention and reward contribution. Within the BAYE are the following schemes: The BAYE-IPO award, the free-share award and, the share incentive plan matching award ('SIP matching award').
· The deferred bonus plan: This comprises the deferred bonus award scheme. This plan is used as an alternative to cash bonuses for eligible employees and awards may be made following year-end results announcements.
The social security expenses in relation to share-based payment arrangements are based on the rates and treatment prevailing in each jurisdiction. This is accounted for as a cash-settled award.
Charge to the income statement
The charge to the income statement is set out below:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Share plans: |
|
|
Equity incentive plan |
11,229 |
6,721 |
Buy-as-you-earn plan |
174 |
871 |
Deferred bonus plan |
236 |
109 |
|
11,639 |
7,701 |
Social security expenses |
493 |
1,908 |
Total expense |
12,132 |
9,609 |
Impact of share-based payments ('SBP') movement in 2023:
|
SBP expense £'000 |
SBP reserve £'000 |
Accumulated losses £'000 |
Prepayments £'000 |
Other taxation and social security £'000 |
Acquisition of Whitelaw Twining |
1,310 |
(10,445) |
- |
(9,234) |
- |
Share-based payment schemes |
10,329 |
(10,329) |
- |
- |
- |
Recycling of vested shares |
- |
7,294 |
(7,294) |
- |
- |
Social security expenses |
493 |
- |
- |
- |
(493) |
Total movement |
12,132 |
(13,480) |
(7,294) |
(9,234) |
(493) |
Prepaid share-based payments charge in the year relates to shares issued as part of the Whitelaw Twining acquisition that is treated as remuneration rather than consideration. Refer to Note 9 for further detail.
Impact of share-based payments ('SBP') movement in 2022:
|
SBP expense £'000 |
SBP reserve £'000 |
Accumulated losses £'000 |
Prepayments £'000 |
Other taxation and social security £'000 |
Share-based payment schemes |
7,701 |
(7,701) |
- |
- |
- |
Recycling of vested shares |
- |
9,074 |
(9,074) |
- |
- |
Social security expenses |
1,908 |
- |
- |
- |
(1,908) |
Total movement |
9,609 |
1,373 |
(9,074) |
- |
(1,908) |
Summary of share awards
The following table shows the movements in share awards across all plans for the year:
|
2023 Number of shares '000 |
2022 Number of shares '000 |
Number of shares awards outstanding 1 May |
34,073 |
33,046 |
Awards granted during the year |
26,849 |
12,331 |
Awards vested during the year |
(7,805) |
(8,598) |
Awards lapsed during the year |
(6,026) |
(2,706) |
Number of shares awards outstanding 30 April |
47,091 |
34,073 |
The weighted average remaining contractual life at the end of the period is 1.3 years (2022: 1.8 years).
The exercise price of all share awards is nil. The weighted average share price at the vesting date for all awards vested during the year was £0.86 (2022: £1.07).
Details of the Group's share awards are as follows:
Share awards under the DWF Group plc 2019 EIP - IPO award
At IPO, conditional and restricted share awards were granted to a limited number of the senior management team.
The awards are subject to a service condition and have an entitlement to receive dividend equivalents. A portion of the awards were previously subject to performance targets, but these have subsequently been removed.
Share awards under the DWF Group PLC EIP - Career level 1-3 award
This scheme is to incentivise senior employees for performance and exceptional contributions to the Group, on promotion or as a lateral or senior hire to the Group. Additionally, as part of the RCD acquisition, shares are ring-fenced for future grant to employees of the acquired business which fall under this award.
All of the awards under this scheme are subject to service conditions and a portion of the awards are also subject to performance targets. There is an entitlement to receive dividend equivalents on the awards.
Share awards under the DWF Group PLC EIP - Long-Term Incentive Plan
The Group incentivises its Executive Board with long-term rewards based on challenging performance targets.
The awards under this scheme are also subject to service conditions. There is no dividend or dividend equivalent entitlement until such time as they vest and after a holding period.
Share awards under the DWF Group PLC EIP - Promotion award
The Group may incentivise its employees on promotion with a share award from this scheme.
All of the awards under this scheme are subject to service conditions. A portion of the awards were previously subject to performance targets, but these have subsequently been removed. There is an entitlement to receive dividend equivalents on the awards.
Share awards under the DWF Group plc BAYE - IPO award
At IPO, awards were granted to eligible employees.
The awards under this scheme were subject to service conditions. There was no entitlement to receive dividends or dividend equivalents on the awards until such time as they vested.
Share awards under the DWF Group plc BAYE - Free-share award
The Group incentivises its employees for exceptional contributions from this scheme.
The awards under this scheme are subject to service conditions. There is no entitlement to receive dividends or dividend equivalents until such time as they vest.
Share awards under the DWF Group plc BAYE - Plan matching award ('BAYE matching shares award')
The Group offers its employees in the
There is no entitlement to receive dividends or dividend equivalents until such time as they vest.
Share awards under the DWF Group plc - Deferred bonus plan
The Group may make awards under this scheme to eligible employees as part of the bonus plan.
The awards under this scheme are subject to service conditions. There is no entitlement to receive dividends or dividend equivalents until such time as they vest.
Share awards granted
The Black Scholes method was used to value all share awards granted during the year. The following table outlines the inputs and assumptions used:
|
2023 |
|
2022 |
|
|||||
|
EIP |
BAYE |
Deferred bonus |
|
EIP |
BAYE |
Deferred bonus |
||
Weighted average fair value at measurement date |
0.75 |
0.65 |
0.78 |
|
1.14 |
1.10 |
0.95 |
||
Weighted average share price at grant date |
0.84 |
0.65 |
0.93 |
|
1.19 |
1.20 |
1.17 |
||
Expected volatility |
38.55% |
35.14% |
43.21% |
|
42.96% |
43.46% |
43.52% |
||
Expected life (years) |
1.71 |
1.96 |
2.92 |
|
2.87 |
1.37 |
2.87 |
||
Expected dividend yield |
6.85% |
7.60% |
7.67% |
|
1.33% |
5.72% |
6.57% |
||
Risk free interest rate |
2.99% |
4.00% |
2.03% |
|
0.50% |
0.51% |
0.18% |
||
Estimate of attrition |
16.98% |
25.18% |
27.94% |
|
21.60% |
9.42% |
20.46% |
||
Estimate of performance conditions being met |
88.47% |
N/A |
N/A |
|
85.70% |
N/A |
N/A |
||
The expectations and estimates used represent the average across the tranches granted. Expected volatility was determined by reference to the period for which the share price history is available. The expected life used is the vested date of the award.
24 Key management personnel
Compensation paid to key management personnel
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Remuneration of the PLC Board |
|
|
Short-term employee benefits |
1,899 |
2,717 |
Post-employment benefits |
101 |
92 |
Share-based payments |
555 |
640 |
|
2,555 |
3,449 |
Key management personnel comprise the PLC Board of Directors. The amount paid to the highest paid member of key management was £0.8m (2022: £0.8m).
Related parties
Zeus Capital Limited was a related party of the Group by virtue of Sir Nigel Knowles being Chairman of Zeus Capital Limited. Total sales by the Group to Zeus Capital in the period were £5,000 (PY: £255,000) relating to the provision of legal services. Zeus Capital Limited also act as broker to the Group, and fees payable to Zeus Capital Limited in the period was £50,000 (PY: £43,750). No amounts were payable or outstanding at the year end or at the prior year end.
Onedome Limited is also a related party of the Group by virtue of Sir Nigel Knowles being a director of the company. Total sales to Onedome Limited in the period were £78,000 (PY: £nil) relating to the provision of legal services. An amount of £94,000 was outstanding from Onedome Limited as at the year end (PY: £nil).
Cannaray Limited is a related party of the Group by virtue of Sir Nigel Knowles being a director of the company. Total sales by the Group to Cannaray Limited in the period were £11,000 (PY: £30,000) relating to the provision of legal services. An amount of £13,000 was outstanding from Cannaray Limited as at the year end (PY: £nil).
25 Employee information and their pay and benefits
The average number of persons employed by the Group (including Executive Directors) during the year, analysed by category, and the aggregate payroll costs of these persons were as follows:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
No. |
No. |
Legal advisors |
2,542 |
2,426 |
Support staff |
1,296 |
1,222 |
|
3,838 |
3,648 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Wages and salaries |
217,504 |
199,828 |
Social security costs |
13,390 |
11,694 |
Contributions to defined contribution plans |
7,843 |
6,698 |
|
238,737 |
218,220 |
The Group operates defined contribution pension plans. The total annual pension cost for the defined contribution plan was £7.8m (2022: £6.7m) and the outstanding balance at 30 April 2023 was £1.3m (30 April 2022: £0.9m).
26 Cash generated from operations
a) Cash generated from operations before adjusting items
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Cash flows from operating activities |
|
|
Profit before tax |
17,169 |
22,316 |
Adjustments for: |
|
|
Amortisation of acquired intangible assets |
3,929 |
4,655 |
Impairment of intangible assets |
1,494 |
- |
Impairment of tangible and right of use assets |
362 |
- |
Accelerated depreciation/amortisation |
6,452 |
3,593 |
Depreciation of right-of-use asset |
12,365 |
12,737 |
Other depreciation and amortisation |
6,830 |
7,211 |
Non-underlying items |
6,248 |
1,224 |
Gain on bargain purchase |
(4,459) |
- |
Share-based payments expense |
12,132 |
9,609 |
Interest expense on lease liabilities |
1,739 |
1,673 |
Net finance expense |
5,310 |
3,518 |
Operating cash flows before movements in working capital |
69,571 |
66,536 |
Increase in trade and other receivables |
(24,775) |
(8,031) |
(Decrease) in trade and other payables |
(79) |
(17,641) |
(Decrease)/increase in provisions |
(1,309) |
4,798 |
Decrease in amounts due to members of partnerships in the Group |
(479) |
(4,039) |
Cash generated in operations before adjusting items |
42,929 |
41,623 |
b) Free cash flows
Free cash flow is an APM and is defined in the glossary.
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Free cash flows |
|
|
Operating cash flows before movements in working capital |
69,571 |
66,536 |
Net working capital movement |
(26,163) |
(20,874) |
Amounts due to members of partnerships in the Group |
(479) |
(4,039) |
Cash generated from operations before adjusting items |
42,929 |
41,623 |
Net interest paid |
(5,511) |
(4,596) |
Tax paid |
(3,713) |
(2,854) |
Repayment of lease liabilities |
(14,447) |
(13,396) |
Purchase of property, plant and equipment |
(2,874) |
(3,581) |
Purchase of other intangible assets |
(3,452) |
(4,300) |
Free cash flows |
12,932 |
12,896 |
c) Working capital measures
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
WIP days |
|
|
Amounts recoverable from clients in respect of unbilled revenue |
92,890 |
71,958 |
Unbilled disbursements |
11,232 |
7,982 |
Total WIP |
104,122 |
79,940 |
Annualised net revenue |
396,757 |
350,490 |
WIP days |
96 |
83 |
|
|
|
Debtor days |
|
|
Trade receivables (net of allowance for doubtful receivables) |
104,593 |
88,949 |
Other receivables |
4,368 |
3,154 |
Total debtors |
108,961 |
92,103 |
Annualised net revenue |
396,757 |
350,490 |
Debtor days |
100 |
96 |
|
|
|
Total lock-up days |
|
|
Total WIP |
104,122 |
79,940 |
Total debtors |
108,961 |
92,103 |
Total lock-up |
213,083 |
172,043 |
Annualised net revenue |
396,757 |
350,490 |
Total lock-up days |
196 |
179 |
Annualised net revenue, an APM as defined in the glossary, reflects the total net revenue for the previous 12-month period inclusive of pro-forma adjustments for acquisitions.
Lock-up days is an APM and is defined in the glossary.
The Group also measures lock-up as above but excluding other receivables as this more closely aligns with lock-up measurement of other businesses in the legal sector and also as other receivables do not represent sales outstanding. Excluding other receivables, lockup days are 192 days (2022: 176 days).
27 Amounts due to members of partnerships in the Group
Amounts due to members of partnerships in the Group comprise members' capital and other amounts due to members classified as liabilities as follows:
|
Members' capital |
Other amounts due to members |
Total amounts due to members of partnerships in the Group |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
At 1 May 2022 |
14,370 |
13,873 |
28,243 |
Members' remuneration charged as an expense |
- |
44,829 |
44,829 |
Unrealised foreign exchange translation differences |
54 |
452 |
506 |
Capital introduced by members |
7,237 |
- |
7,237 |
Repayments of capital |
(4,807) |
- |
(4,807) |
Drawings |
- |
(45,308) |
(45,308) |
At 30 April 2023 |
16,854 |
13,846 |
30,700 |
|
Members' capital |
Other amounts due to members |
Total amounts due to members of partnerships in the Group |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
At 1 May 2021 |
13,348 |
18,144 |
31,492 |
Members' remuneration charged as an expense |
- |
43,670 |
43,670 |
Unrealised foreign exchange translation differences |
(38) |
(80) |
(118) |
Capital introduced by members |
2,132 |
- |
2,132 |
Repayments of capital |
(1,072) |
- |
(1,072) |
Drawings |
- |
(47,861) |
(47,861) |
At 30 April 2022 |
14,370 |
13,873 |
28,243 |
The average number of members during the year was as follows:
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
|
|
Average number of members of partnerships held by the Group during the year |
385 |
366 |
|
|
|
28 Events after the reporting date
On 21 July 2023, the Board unanimously announced the recommendation of an all cash offer for DWF Group Plc from Aquila Bidco Limited, a newly incorporated wholly-owned subsidiary of funds advised by Inflexion. It is not possible to estimate the financial effect on the Company as a result of this change in ultimate parent ownership.
UNAUDITED INFORMATION
Appendix
Reconciliation to new global operating structure - year ended 30 April 2023
The following reconciliation shows how the current year's revenue, net revenue and gross profit would be presented under the new operating structure:
|
As reported for the year ended 30 April 2023 |
Impact of restructure |
Under new global operating structure effective 1 May 2023 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
£'000 |
Net revenue |
|
|
|
Legal Advisory |
316,577 |
(316,577) |
- |
Connected Services |
40,653 |
(40,653) |
- |
Commercial Services |
- |
203,118 |
203,118 |
Insurance Services |
- |
162,930 |
162,930 |
Mindcrest |
22,906 |
(22,906) |
- |
Legal Operations |
- |
14,088 |
14,088 |
Net revenue |
380,136 |
- |
380,136 |
Direct cost |
|
|
|
Legal Advisory |
(153,959) |
153,959 |
- |
Connected Services |
(22,749) |
22,749 |
- |
Commercial Services |
- |
(98,343) |
(98,343) |
Insurance Services |
- |
(83,842) |
(83,842) |
Mindcrest |
(11,687) |
11,687 |
- |
Legal Operations |
- |
(6,210) |
(6,210) |
Direct cost |
(188,395) |
- |
(188,395) |
Gross profit |
|
|
|
Legal Advisory |
162,618 |
(162,618) |
- |
Connected Services |
17,904 |
(17,904) |
- |
Commercial Services |
- |
104,775 |
104,775 |
Insurance Services |
- |
79,088 |
79,088 |
Mindcrest |
11,219 |
(11,219) |
- |
Legal Operations |
- |
7,878 |
7,878 |
Gross profit |
191,741 |
- |
191,741 |
UNAUDITED INFORMATION
Glossary
Alternative Performance Measures ('APMs')
In accordance with the Guidelines on APMs issued by the European Securities and Markets Authority ('ESMA'), additional information is provided on the APMs used by the Group below. In the reporting of financial information, the Group uses certain measures that are not required under IFRS.
These additional measures (commonly referred to as APMs) provide the Group's stakeholders with additional information on the performance of the business. These measures are consistent with those used internally, and are considered insightful to understanding the financial performance of the Group. The Group's APMs provide an important measure of how the Group is performing by providing a meaningful comparison of how the business is managed and measured on a day-to-day basis and achieves consistency and comparability between reporting periods.
These APMs may not be directly comparable with similar measures reported by other companies and they are not intended to be a substitute for, or superior to, IFRS measures. All Income Statement measures are provided for continuing operations unless otherwise stated.
APM Net revenue |
||
Closest equivalent statutory measure Revenue |
||
Definition and purpose Revenue less recoverable expenses
Recoverable expenses do not attract a profit margin and can vary significantly month-to-month such that they may distort the link between revenue and the performance of the Group. Net revenue is widely reported in the legal sector as the key measure reflecting underlying trading, and allows greater comparability with other legal businesses. |
||
Reconciliation
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Revenue |
451,641 |
416,052 |
Recoverable expenses |
(71,505) |
(65,810) |
Net revenue |
380,136 |
350,242 |
APM Adjusting items |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Closest equivalent statutory measure None |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Definition and purpose Those items which the Group excludes from its statutory metrics to arrive at adjusted profit or cash flow metrics in order to present further measures of the Group's performance.
These include items which are significant in size or by nature are non-trading or non-recurring. This provides a comparison of how the business is managed and measured on a day-to-day basis and provides consistency and comparability between reporting periods, as well as allows our results to be compared more fairly with other similar businesses.
Share-based payment charges within adjusting items relate to shares allocated from the pre-funded employee benefit trust, which are not dilutive to shareholders. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Reconciliation See note 2
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
APM Adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation ('adjusted EBITDA') |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Closest equivalent statutory measure Operating profit |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Definition and purpose Operating profit adjusted for adjusting items, as detailed in note 2, and adding back depreciation and amortisation.
Adjusted EBITDA is useful as a measure of comparative operating performance between both previous periods, and other companies as it is reflective of adjustments for adjusting items and other factors that affect operating performance. Adjusted EBITDA removes the affect of depreciation and amortisation, and adjusting items as described above, as well as items relating to capital structure (finance costs and income) and items outside the control of management. |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
APM Adjusted profit before tax ('adjusted PBT') |
||
Closest equivalent statutory measure Profit before tax |
||
Definition and purpose Profit before tax and after reflecting the impact of adjusting items.
Adjusted PBT is useful as a measure of comparative operating performance between both previous periods, and other companies as it is reflective of adjustments for non-underlying items, amortisation of acquired intangibles, share based payments expense, impairment/impairment reversal and other factors that affect operating performance. Adjusted PBT is used to provide a useful and consistent measure of the ongoing performance of the Group. Adjusted measures are reconciled to statutory measures in note 2. |
||
Reconciliation
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Profit before tax |
17,169 |
22,316 |
Total of adjusting items (note 2) |
26,158 |
19,081 |
Adjusted profit before tax |
43,327 |
41,397 |
APM Cost to income ratio |
||
Closest equivalent statutory measure Not applicable |
||
Definition and purpose Adjusted administrative expenses and impairment as detailed in note 2, divided by net revenue as defined above.
After adjusting for significant items that are one-off in nature, the cost to income ratio is an essential metric in assessing the levels of underlying operational gearing in the Group. The Group uses the cost to income ratio to measure the efficiency of its activities. A decrease in cost to income ratio indicates an improvement to efficiency, and likewise an increase indicates a decline. Management note that the usefulness of the cost to income ratio is inherently limited by the fact that it is a ratio and thus does not provide information on the absolute amount of operating revenue and expenses. |
||
Reconciliation
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
Net revenue |
380,136 |
350,242 |
Adjusted administrative expenses and impairment (note 2) |
141,365 |
134,322 |
Cost to income ratio |
37.2% |
38.4% |
APM Adjusted administrative expenses |
Closest equivalent statutory measure Administrative expenses and impairment |
Definition and purpose Adjusted administrative expenses are defined as administrative expenses plus impairment less adjusting items (as defined above).
Adjusted administrative expenses provide a useful and consistent measure of the ongoing administrative expenses of the Group. In particular, the adjusted administrative expenses are utilised within the Group's definition of 'Cost to income ratio' which is also defined above. |
Reconciliation See note 2 |
APM Net debt (excluding IFRS 16) |
Closest equivalent statutory measure Cash and cash equivalents less borrowings |
Definition and purpose Net debt comprises cash and cash equivalents less interest-bearing loans and borrowings (including the supplier payments facility).
Net debt is one measure that can be used to indicate the strength of the Group's statement of financial position and can be a useful measure of the indebtedness of the Group. This metric excludes the Group's lease liabilities under IFRS 16 in order to provide consistency with how the Group manages and reports its indebtedness and also providing consistency with the definition of Net debt under the Group's principal banking agreement. |
Reconciliation See note 17 |
APM Lock-up days |
Closest equivalent statutory measure Not applicable |
Definition and purpose Lock-up days comprise work-in-progress ('WIP') days, representing the amount of time between performing work and invoicing clients; and debtor days, representing the length of time between invoicing and cash collection. WIP days are calculated as unbilled revenue divided by annualised net revenue multiplied by 365 days. Debtor days are calculated as trade and other receivables, excluding amounts due from members of partnerships, divided by annualised net revenue multiplied by 365 days. Annualised net revenue is the total net revenue for the previous 12 month period with adjustments for acquisitions and discontinuations. |
Reconciliation See note 26
|
APM Adjusted diluted earnings per share ('adjusted DEPS') |
Closest equivalent statutory measure Diluted earnings per share ('DEPS') |
Definition and purpose Adjusted earnings divided by the total number of ordinary shares in issue. Adjusted earnings is defined as earnings from continuing operations adjusted for: - non-underlying items; - share-based payments expense; - gain on investment; - amortisation of acquired intangible assets; - impairment; and - the tax effect of the above items; Whilst this metric is not prepared in accordance with IAS 33 'Earnings per Share', it is an important APM to provide the Group's stakeholders with a fully diluted EPS metric using the Group's adjusted earnings for the period that is consistent year on year. |
Reconciliation See note 8 |
APM Adjusted earnings per share ('adjusted EPS') |
Closest equivalent statutory measure Basic EPS |
Definition and purpose Adjusted earnings divided by weighted average number of ordinary shares for the purposes of the basic earnings per share calculation. See adjusted diluted EPS definition and purpose above for details of adjusting measures.
This metric provides the Group's stakeholders with an EPS metric using the Group's adjusted profitability but with a denominator consistent with the statutory basic EPS measure. |
Reconciliation See note 8 |
APM Like for like ('L4L') |
||
Closest equivalent statutory measure N/A |
||
Definition and purpose Like for like metrics, are applied to net revenue, direct costs, gross profit and gross margin to exclude the acquisitions of Acumension and Whitelaw Twining.
This metric allows the Group's stakeholders to compare the performance of the business on a consistent basis with the prior period, given that the acquisitions of Acumension and Whitelaw Twining were a significant change to the Group. |
||
Reconciliation |
|
|
Not applicable |
APM Revenue per partner |
|||
Closest equivalent statutory measure Revenue |
|||
Definition and purpose Revenue per partner is defined as net revenue divided by average number of partners (on a full time equivalent basis) for the period.
This metric allows the Group's stakeholders to view the performance of the business based on average revenue per partner, split by division (this includes both member and employee partners). |
|||
Reconciliation
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
|
Legal Advisory |
937 |
896 |
|
Connected Services |
1,457 |
1,382 |
|
Mindcrest |
8,589 |
12,216 |
|
Group |
1,001 |
975 |
|
APM Annualised net revenue |
||
Closest equivalent statutory measure Revenue |
||
Definition and purpose Annualised net revenue reflects the total net revenue for the previous 12-month period inclusive of pro-forma adjustments for acquisitions and discontinuations/closures/scale-backs.
This metric is utilised as a denominator for lock up, WIP and debtor day calculations which allow greater comparability within the legal sector consistent with prior and full year metrics. |
||
Reconciliation |
|
|
Not applicable |
APM Free cash flow |
||
Closest equivalent statutory measure Not applicable |
||
Definition and purpose Free cash flow is the amount by which the operating cash flow exceeds working capital, amounts payable to members, tax, interest and capital expenditure.
This metric provides the Group's stakeholders detail around the efficiency of cash generation and utilisation. |
||
Reconciliation |
|
|
See note 26 |
APM Leverage |
|||
Closest equivalent statutory measure Not applicable |
|||
Definition and purpose Leverage is calculated as net debt, divided by the last 12 months adjusted EBITDA (both defined above).
This metric provides the Group's stakeholders detail around the Group's ability to repay debt and meet payment obligations. Leverage should be compared with a benchmark, or industry average and is widely used by analysts and credit rating agencies. |
|||
Reconciliation
|
2023 |
2022 |
|
|
£'000 |
£'000 |
|
Adjusted EBITDA (last 12 months) |
69,571 |
66,682 |
|
Net debt |
101,747 |
71,820 |
|
Leverage |
1.46 |
1.08 |
|
RNS may use your IP address to confirm compliance with the terms and conditions, to analyse how you engage with the information contained in this communication, and to share such analysis on an anonymised basis with others as part of our commercial services. For further information about how RNS and the London Stock Exchange use the personal data you provide us, please see our Privacy Policy.