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Name | Symbol | Market | Type |
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ProShares UltraPro Short 20 Year Treasury | AMEX:TTT | AMEX | Exchange Traded Fund |
Price Change | % Change | Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Traded | Last Trade | |
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-2.50 | -3.63% | 66.30 | 68.50 | 66.30 | 68.50 | 14,705 | 00:57:13 |
RNS Number:1247T 3i European Technology Trust PLC 11 December 2003 11 December 2003 3i European Technology Trust plc Interim results for the six months to 31 October 2003 Results overview The Board of 3i European Technology Trust plc ("the Trust") today announces the interim results for the six months to 31 October 2003, the key points of which are: * The Trust's Net Asset Value ("NAV") per share rose by 48.5% from 11.95p to 17.74p during the period. By way of comparison the Trust's benchmark index, the FTSE eTX Innovation index (sterling adjusted), rose by 51.4%. * During the new Fund Manager's first year, the portfolio outperformed the index over the twelve month period to 31 October 2003. * The underperformance over the interim period primarily reflects the outperformance by a few of the larger benchmark constituents in a sharp market rally at the end of the period. * The share price discount to NAV narrowed during the period from 19.0% to 14.0%, having varied between 25.2% and 9.0%. * The restructuring of the Trust has now been completed, with the remaining large company holdings and most of the underweight positions being sold, and holdings in small and micro-capitalisation companies increased. Investments were made in a number of new sectors, including healthcare and industrial processing technology. Commenting on the results, Patrick Gifford, Chairman of 3i European Technology Trust plc, said: 'It is encouraging that the Trust has performed well. We believe that the Trust's NAV performance was considerably better than most similar technology investment vehicles, and this gives us confidence in our investment processes. The business performance of the companies in our investment universe has strengthened considerably in 2003, and we believe that corporate earnings momentum will be maintained in 2004.' - ends - For further information, please contact: Pierre-Andre Boutin or William Davidson/Kirstie Hamilton Fund Manager Tulchan Communications 3i Asset Management (a division of 3i Investments plc, the Manager) Tel: 020 7928 3131 Tel: 020 7353 4200 Notes to editors The objective of 3i European Technology Trust plc is to achieve capital growth by investing in quoted companies, which have a significant focus on technology oriented activities, and which are principally based in Europe. The Trust does not invest in life science companies. 3i European Technology Trust plc is managed by the Asset Management division of 3i Investments plc which is an active fund manager seeking to achieve returns in excess of benchmark indices through the use of fundamental analysis. 3i Investments plc is regulated by the Financial Services Authority and is a wholly owned subsidiary of 3i Group plc ("3i"), Europe's leading venture capital company. The relationship with 3i brings several important benefits to 3i Investments plc and the funds that it manages, including access to 3i's international network, operating across 14 countries on three continents. This provides an important source of information on local companies. In addition to the management of 3i European Technology Trust plc, the Asset Management division of 3i Investments plc is involved in the management of the 3i Group's own portfolio of quoted investments and manages 3i Bioscience Investment Trust plc, 3i Smaller Quoted Companies Trust plc and the 3i Group Pension Plan. Chairman's statement Performance The Trust's NAV per share rose by 48.5% in the six months to 31 October 2003. This compares with a rise of 51.4% in our benchmark, the FTSE eTX Innovation index (sterling adjusted). The underperformance primarily reflects the outperformance by a few of the larger benchmark constituents in a sharp market rally at the end of the period. Our smaller company assets tend to lag moves of this kind but we believe they will outperform in the long run. Over the 12 month period to 31 October 2003, the portfolio outperformed the benchmark in a period characterised by a sharp market reversal. This gives us increasing confidence in our investment process. We believe that the Trust's NAV performance was markedly ahead of most similar technology funds. Economic background The six months to 31 October 2003 have seen a dawning realisation in stock markets that the fundamentals of the world economy have not dramatically changed, and that therefore the very substantial increase in world liquidity and the quasi-war approach to government finance of the US will have produced a marked improvement in economic activity. Within technology, this has been most striking in the hardware and components areas, particularly for new and fashionable consumer products, such as digital cameras, flat-screen TVs and broadband internet access. Corporate demand for technology products and services has improved, but more slowly. Stock markets were over pessimistic at the end of the last bear market, producing extreme cheapness in some technology stocks. This has been corrected and there has been a general rise in this high-beta area of the market. The improvement in corporate prospects, while very real, has taken place at varying rates, leading to anomalies and investment opportunities in the market. Share buybacks During the six months under review, the Trust bought back 15,050,000 shares or 4.12% of its outstanding equity at attractive discounts for the benefit of shareholders. Outlook The growth in liquidity that has fuelled the acceleration in economic growth has slowed recently. This is partly because real growth is absorbing liquidity and partly because the US Federal Reserve, in particular, has become more cautious. However, there is little doubt that 2004 will be a year of faster economic growth. After the sharp recession in technology spending since early 2000, we are confident that the business performance of companies in our universe will be strong. It is obviously difficult to forecast market movements. Although equities look somewhat overbought at the time of writing, we believe that earnings momentum should carry them upwards during 2004. Thereafter, markets may need renewed conviction about the duration of this period of growth. Patrick Gifford 10 December 2003 Investment Manager's review Background In the annual report we were cautiously positive on the market outlook for three main reasons: cost-cutting programmes were starting to bear fruit; balance sheets had been repaired; and take-over activity was highlighting the discrepancy between share prices and strategic value. An upward re-rating of technology stocks was anticipated and this occurred in the first half of the Trust's financial year. Portfolio activity The restructuring of the portfolio has now been completed. The remaining large company holdings have been sold; most underweight positions against the benchmark were sold, enhancing our "bottom-up" style of investing; holdings in small and micro-capitalisation companies were increased in number as well as average size; and the number of holdings accounting for less than 0.5% of the portfolio was cut to 7 from 17. Investments were made in a number of new sectors, including healthcare and industrial processing technology. Software The software sector saw a high level of merger and acquisition activity in the last six months. For instance, in the business intelligence market, Business Objects, Hyperion and Actuate bought Crystal Decision, Brio, and Nimble respectively. In the UK, iSoft* launched a bid for Torex, which is currently under review by the competition authorities. Enquiries from the corporate sector have picked up in the last six months, which is a strong indicator for new licences. Elsewhere, the Trust sold holdings in Misys and Dassault Systemes, and reinvested the proceeds in smaller vendors which offered better potential returns. The Trust bought shares in Merant, a provider of software development tools, which was trading at a near cash level and which we regard as a prime candidate for take-over. A position was also taken in Infovista, a telecom software vendor that traded close to cash and had sharply cut operating expenses. The Trust also bought Unit 4 Agresso, an ERP software vendor that trades at a large discount to its competitors, and Staffware, which produces workflow and business process management tools. A large position was taken in Netstore, a provider of on-line backup solutions based on Microsoft Exchange. Finally, the Trust bought Temenos, a provider of integrated financial software for the wholesale, retail and asset management industry. Semiconductors In line with our expectations, the post-SARS newsflow improved over the summer and autumn. Demand is stronger from consumers and from communication and, to a lesser extent, automotive and computer chip manufacturers. Global semiconductor fab (factory) utilisation is now above 90%. Taiwanese foundries, such as TSMC and UMC, have recently started to place larger orders with semiconductor capital equipment manufacturers. The Trust made an investment in Micronic Laser, a Swedish manufacturer of laser-based pattern generators for the semiconductor and computer flat-panel screen industry. After announcing contract wins, the Micronic Laser share price has more than tripled since the Trust first bought shares. A value-based holding was also made in ASM International. In the UK, the Trust bought holdings in Bede Electronic and Innovision Research and Transfer. The former is a manufacturer of infra-red based metrology instruments, the latter is a design house specialising in low-cost RFID (radio frequency identification tag) transmitters. We increased the Trust's exposure to IQE as we felt the stock price did not reflect medium-term prospects. Holdings in Elmos, Besi, Dialog Semiconductor and Suess Microtec were partially or fully realised after strong performance. Overall, the Trust has maintained its substantial exposure to semiconductor stocks over the period. Computer services We were surprised by the strong rally in the sector as trading news was generally poor across Europe and shorter-term prospects remain weak. Despite this, the sector performed well, partly on hopes of US bids. We continue to believe that the secular trend to offshore outsourcing will only accelerate, bringing widespread margin pressure. The Trust's activity was limited; the holding in Xansa was sold and an investment made in Teleca, a company which offers R&D services. Network equipment We are increasingly optimistic on the outlook for capital spending in the telecom and network equipment fields as initiatives on ADSL connectivity, WiFi connectivity, IP telephony and the deployment of 3G base stations gain momentum. For the first time in two years, forecasts for worldwide sales of handsets have been raised. The Trust bought shares in Filtronic, a manufacturer of power amplifiers for base-stations and increased its holding in TTP Communications. The Trust sold its holding in Wavecom as it became apparent that the company's business model was changing. The position in Tandberg asa was sold on valuation grounds after a strong performance. Tandberg Television, which makes digital broadcasting equipment, performed well as orders picked up. Hardware We could not find compelling, company specific reasons to continue holding the portfolio of European consumer orientated stocks and all the holdings, which included Philips, Thomson Multi-media, Logitech and Gericom, were sold. We commented on 3i-backed Kontron in the last report, and this provider of embedded software for automation and telecom sectors continued positively to surprise most investors over the period, and the shares performed well. Investments were made in Pursuit Dynamics, a small provider of processing equipment based on fluid physics which has no moving parts; and in Vianet, which provides telemetry applications for the vending machine industry. The Trust bought Carl Zeiss Meditec, a manufacturer of medical equipment used for the diagnosis of eye diseases, the first significant healthcare industry holding. Internet and e-commerce We commented in the last report on the rapid adoption of internet services across Europe. The sector has since enjoyed a very strong re-rating upwards. Some profits were taken in T-Online and an investment made in Freenet, a small German internet service provider. Corporate activity Corporate activity has been brisk over the period and, judging by the comments of US players, it may be expected to continue at a satisfactory level. Private placings are making a return. Initial public offerings have just started to re-appear on this side of the Atlantic, led by the massively over-subscribed offer for Wolfson Electronics. Outlook After a strong six months, markets will increasingly look for evidence of revenue expansion before rewarding technology stocks with another rally. We are confident this will be seen, and we are positive for 2004. Although cautiously optimistic in public, companies are more upbeat in private meetings for their medium-term prospects. Interest in software companies has increased over the last four months; semiconductor manufacturers are working at very high capacity levels; forecasts for global handset sales are being revised upwards; and telecom operators are spending again. We will continue to invest on a stock specific basis, underlying a bottom-up approach to technology markets. 3i Investments plc 10 December 2003 *Companies in bold text are or were portfolio companies during the period. Statement of total return for the six months ended 31 October 2003 (incorporating the revenue account) 6 months to 31 October 2003 6 months to 31 October 2002 12 months to 30 April 2003 (unaudited) (unaudited) (audited) Revenue Capital Total Revenue Capital Total Revenue Capital Total #'000 #'000 #'000 #'000 #'000 #'000 #'000 #'000 #'000 Gains/ (losses) on investments Net realised gains/(losses) over previous valuation 4,669 4,669 (6,638) (6,638) (21,922) (21,922) Net unrealised appreciation/ (depreciation) 15,921 15,921 (40,874) (40,874) (22,856) (22,856) Currency (losses)/gains (76) (76) 30 30 68 68 20,514 20,514 (47,482) (47,482) (44,710) (44,710) Income 328 328 592 592 830 830 Investment management fee (341) (341) (319) (319) (555) (555) Other expenses (142) (142) (187) (187) (360) (360) Net return before finance costs (155) 20,514 20,359 86 (47,482) (47,396) (85) (44,710) (44,795) Interest payable (1) (1) (124) (124) (147) (147) Return on ordinary activities before tax (156) 20,514 20,358 (38) (47,482) (47,520) (232) (44,710) (44,942) Tax on ordinary activities (33) (33) (31) (31) 18 18 Return on ordinary activities for the period (189) 20,514 20,325 (69) (47,482) (47,551) (214) (44,710) (44,924) Transfer to/(from) reserves (189) 20,514 20,325 (69) (47,482) (47,551) (214) (44,710) (44,924) Return per share (0.05)p 5.73p 5.68p (0.02)p (12.77)p (12.79)p (0.06)p (12.12)p (12.18)p All revenue and capital items in the above statement derive from continuing operations. No operations were acquired or discontinued during the period. Reconciliation of movements in shareholders' funds 6 months to 31 6 months to 31 12 months to October 2003 October 2002 30 April 2003 (unaudited) (unaudited) (audited) #'000 #'000 #'000 Return on ordinary activities for the period 20,325 (47,551) (44,924) Premium over nominal value on own shares purchased for cancellation (1,713) (1,358) (1,562) Nominal value of own shares purchased for cancellation (150) (102) (126) Movement 18,462 (49,011) (46,612) Opening total shareholders' funds 43,647 90,259 90,259 Closing total shareholders' funds 62,109 41,248 43,647 Balance sheet as at 31 October 2003 31 October 31 October 30 April 2003 2002 2003 (unaudited) (unaudited) (audited) #'000 #'000 #'000 Fixed assets Investments 60,484 42,495 42,143 Current assets Debtors 1,803 213 846 Cash and short term deposits 1,971 1,685 1,039 3,774 1,898 1,885 Creditors: amounts falling due within one year (2,149) (645) (381) Net current assets 1,625 1,253 1,504 Total assets less current liabilities 62,109 43,748 43,647 Creditors: amounts falling due after more than one year - (2,500) - Net assets 62,109 41,248 43,647 Capital and reserves Called-up share capital 3,502 3,676 3,652 Share premium 3,873 3,873 3,873 Capital redemption reserve 321 147 171 Capital reserve - realised (256,791) (185,724) (225,433) - unrealised (47,928) (142,281) (99,800) Special distributable reserve 361,037 363,128 362,900 Revenue reserve (1,905) (1,571) (1,716) Total equity shareholders' funds 62,109 41,248 43,647 Net asset value per share 17.74p 11.22p 11.95p Approved by the Board on 10 December 2003 Cash flow statement for the six months ended 31 October 2003 6 months to 6 months to 12 months to 31 October 31 October 30 April 2003 2002 2003 (unaudited) (unaudited) (audited) Notes #'000 #'000 #'000 Operating activities Investment income received 387 500 691 Income from money market funds 26 67 94 Deposit interest received 1 2 5 Investment management fees paid (286) (280) (699) Other cash payments (179) (226) (382) Net cash (outflow)/inflow from operating activities 1 (51) 63 (291) Taxation paid (28) (49) (55) Servicing of finance Interest paid (1) (247) (270) Net cash outflow from servicing of finance (1) (247) (270) Financial investment Purchase of investments (23,753) (11,130) (23,716) Sale of investments 26,704 14,433 29,446 Currency (losses)/gains (76) 30 68 Net cash inflow from financial investment 2,875 3,333 5,798 Net cash inflow before financing 2,795 3,100 5,182 Financing Purchase of ordinary shares for cancellation (1,863) (1,460) (1,688) Repayment of loan facility - (2,500) (5,000) Net cash outflow from financing (1,863) (3,960) (6,688) Increase/(decrease) in cash 2 932 (860) (1,506) Notes to the financial statements 1 Reconciliation of net revenue before finance costs to net cash (outflow)/ inflow from operating activities 6 months to 31 6 months to 31 12 months to October 2003 October 2002 30 April 2003 (unaudited) (unaudited) (audited) #'000 #'000 #'000 Net revenue before finance costs (155) 86 (85) Decrease/(increase) in accrued income 85 (23) (40) Increase/(decrease) in creditors 39 16 (166) Increase/(decrease) in debtors (20) (16) - Net cash (outflow)/inflow from operating activities (51) 63 (291) 2 Reconciliation of net cash flow to movement in net funds 6 months to 31 6 months to 31 12 months to October 2003 October 2002 30 April 2003 (unaudited) (unaudited) (audited) #'000 #'000 #'000 Increase/(decrease) in cash in the period 932 (860) (1,506) Cash outflow from change in debt - 2,500 5,000 Change in net funds resulting from cash flows 932 1,640 3,494 Opening net funds 1,039 (2,455) (2,455) Closing net funds 1,971 (815) 1,039 Independent review report of the auditors Independent review report to 3i European Technology Trust plc ("the Company") Introduction We have been instructed by the Company to review the financial information for the six months ended 31 October 2003 which comprises Statement of total return, Reconciliation of movements in total shareholders' funds, Balance sheet, Cash flow statement and the related notes 1 and 2 and the Basis of preparation. We have read the other information contained in the Interim report and considered whether it contains any apparent misstatements or material inconsistencies with the financial information. This report is made solely to the Company in accordance with guidance contained in Bulletin 1999/4 'Review of interim financial information' issued by the Auditing Practices Board. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the Company, for our work, for this report or for the conclusions we have formed. Directors' responsibilities The Interim report, including the financial information contained therein, is the responsibility of, and has been approved by, the Directors. The Directors are responsible for preparing the Interim report in accordance with the Listing Rules of the Financial Services Authority which require that the accounting policies and presentation applied to the interim figures should be consistent with those applied in preparing the preceding annual accounts except where any changes, and the reasons for them, are disclosed. Review work performed We conducted our review in accordance with guidance contained in Bulletin 1999/4 issued by the Auditing Practices Board for use in the United Kingdom. A review consists principally of making enquiries of management and applying analytical procedures to the financial information and underlying financial data and, based thereon, assessing whether the accounting policies and presentation have been consistently applied unless otherwise disclosed. A review excludes audit procedures such as tests of controls and verification of assets, liabilities and transactions. It is substantially less in scope than an audit performed in accordance with United Kingdom Auditing Standards and therefore provides a lower level of assurance than an audit. Accordingly, we do not express an audit opinion on the financial information. Review conclusion On the basis of our review, we are not aware of any material modifications that should be made to the financial information as presented for the six months ended 31 October 2003. Ernst & Young LLP London 10 December 2003 Notes to the announcement 1 The Interim report for the six months to 31 October 2003 will be posted to shareholders on 17 December 2003 and thereafter copies will be available from 3i Investments plc, 91 Waterloo Road, London, SE1 8XP. 2 The accounting policies used in the preparation of the Interim report are the same as those used in the statutory accounts for the year ended 30 April 2003 and those expected to be used for the year to 30 April 2004. The revised Statement of Recommended Practice: Financial Statement of Investment Trust Companies issued in January 2003 has been adopted for this Interim report; it's adoption had no effect on the results for the period. The six month period is treated as a discrete period except insofar as tax in the revenue account is charged on the basis of an estimated annual effective rate. The figures for the year to 30 April 2003 are extracted from the accounts filed with the Registrar of Companies on which the auditors issued an unqualified report. The Interim report and this announcement do not constitute statutory accounts. This information is provided by RNS The company news service from the London Stock Exchange END IR UROWRORRUAAA
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