RM plc: Preliminary Results for the year ended 30 November 2021
RM plc (RM.)
RM plc: Preliminary Results for the year ended 30 November 2021
15-Feb-2022 / 07:00 GMT/BST
Dissemination of a Regulatory Announcement that contains inside information according to REGULATION (EU) No 596/2014 (MAR), transmitted by EQS Group.
The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.
15 February 2022
RM plc
Preliminary Results for the year ended 30 November 2021
Improved 2021 performance despite continued COVID-19 disruption
RM plc ("RM"), a leading supplier of technology and resources to the education sector, reports its final results for the year ended 30 November 2021.
Highlights
Satisfactory results versus the prior year taking into account continued disruption to school attendance and examinations Revenue up 12% driven by strong trading in RM Resources enabling adjusted operating profit** improvement of 22% Balance sheet remains resilient with net debt** at £18.3m and movement of the pension position from a deficit to a surplus Statutory profit after tax down 45% with £8.3m (2020: £1.7m) of investment program costs expensed following a change in accounting treatment Paid and proposed final dividend of 4.7 pence per share (2020: 3.0p) Strategy reset established with plans to deliver sustainable growth Good early progress made
£M
2021
2020
Variance
Revenue
210.9
189.0
+12%
Adjusted* operating profit
18.5
15.1
+22%
Adjusted* operating profit margin
8.8%
8.0%
+0.8pp
Adjusted* profit before tax
17.1
14.0
+22%
Statutory profit after tax
4.2
7.6
-45%
Adjusted* diluted EPS
16.4p
13.6p
+21%
Diluted EPS
5.0p
9.1p
-45%
Proposed dividend per share
4.7p
3.0p
+1.7p
Net debt**
18.3
1.3
IAS 19 Pension surplus/(deficit)
30.4
(18.7)
* Throughout this statement, adjusted operating profit and EPS are stated after adjusting items (See Note 2) which are identified by virtue of their size, nature and/or incidence. The treatment of adjusted items is applied consistently period on period and is consistent with the way that underlying trading performance is measured by management.
** Alternative performance measure, see Note 2.
Commenting on the results, Neil Martin, Chief Executive of RM, said:
"RM delivered a satisfactory financial performance in another year impacted by COVID-19. While the current environment remains uncertain, market trends are developing positively for the longer-term outlook of RM.
This has been an important year strategically as we acknowledge a need to adapt if we are going to fully capitalise on the supportive structural opportunities and deliver sustainable growth. We refreshed our strategy to sharpen our focus and have made good early progress including a number of key leadership appointments across the Group. This is an exciting time to be involved in education and I continue to be impressed by the commitment and passion of our colleagues and their desire to improve educational outcomes for our customers".
Notes to Editors:
RM provides market-leading products and services to educational institutions, exam bodies and international governments which improve, simplify and support education and learning.
The education sector is transforming, and RM is well positioned to capitalise on this through its three divisions.
Following a review of strategy, the names of the Divisions have changed to align more closely to their customer proposition
RM Resources (remains the same) is the established provider of education resources for early years, primary schools and secondary schools across the UK and to 80 countries internationally.
RM Results becomes RM Assessment, acknowledging its broader product portfolio and the shift from a focus on digital marking only, to one engaged in digital solutions throughout the assessment lifecycle. RM Assessment is a leading provider of assessment software, supporting exam awarding bodies, universities and governments worldwide to digitise their assessment delivery
RM Education becomes RM Technology highlighting the Division's focus on improving the technology environment in schools and colleges to support learner outcomes. RM Technology is a market-leading supplier of ICT software, technology and services to UK schools and colleges
Ex-dividend date for 2021 final dividend
17th March 2022
Record date for 2021 final dividend
18th March 2022
AGM
7th April 2022
Payment of 2021 final dividend
29th April 2022
References to times are to Greenwich Mean Time. If any of the above times or dates should change, the revised times and/or dates will be notified to shareholders by an announcement on a Regulatory Information Service. Payment of the 2021 final dividend is subject to the approval by shareholders.
Presentation and live webcast details
A presentation for analysts and investors will be held today at 9.00am.
The audio and slide presentation will be webcast live and on demand at the following website:
https://www.investis-live.com/rmplc/61fab7b66c4c440c00000323/csaeg
The presentation will also be accessible via a live conference call:
Dial-in (UK): 0800 640 6441
Dial-in (Local): 020 3936 2999
Dial-in (all other locations): +44 20 3936 2999
Access code: 896032
For additional details and registration for the webcast, please contact Headland Consultancy on +44 203 805 4822 / rm@headlandconsultancy.com.
Contacts:
RM plc
Neil Martin, Chief Executive Officer
Mark Berry, Chief Financial Officer
Headland Consultancy (PR adviser to RM)
0203 805 4822
Stephen Malthouse (smalthouse@headlandconsultancy.com)
Chloe Francklin (cfrancklin@headlandconsultancy.com)
Jemma Savage (jsavage@headlandconsultancy.com)
CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT
Performance
Detailed assessment of the Group's 2021 performance is inevitably dominated by the pandemic. However, the results reflect the successful efforts of the Group to adapt to the resulting volatility of customer demand. The trading performance did not match pre-pandemic levels but was creditable in the light of the challenges presented, and addressed.
In parallel with accommodating these day-to-day fluctuations, good progress has been made on the warehouse consolidation project and the group-wide IT investment. The new RM Resources distribution facility is now complete, and the efficiency benefits will flow following systems integration and the transition of activities from existing sites. The IT project is in early testing and should also begin to deliver benefits in the current year and will be complete across all divisions by the end of 2022.
The Resources division, which provides teaching and learning products to support the school curriculum, saw early demand impacted by school closures in the first quarter but experienced a strong and pleasing recovery in its UK market following the return to face-to-face teaching. This produced a sales rate which exceeded pre-pandemic levels. It is uncertain how much of this volume was catch-up from earlier weakness, but it appears that the division has enjoyed a useful gain in UK market share. This increase coincided with the widely commented on supply chain constraints and the consequent necessity for price increases, all of which tested the organisation. Inevitably, operating costs increased as a result and margins suffered. The picture overseas was less buoyant as different regional effects of the pandemic made themselves felt. The outlook for RM Resources is positive, although unpredictable, given the short cycle nature of the business.
The Digital Assessment division was again constrained by the absence of formal school examinations in the UK and the difficulties in negotiating new contracts overseas consequent upon lack of an ability to engage directly with customers. The business delivered a respectable result in the circumstances. Although the business has good forward visibility from longer term contracts, performance in 2022 will be affected by a low level of new awards in 2021 and the extent to which UK school public examinations return to normal. In the longer term, the increasing attention being given to on-line examinations and assessment should support positive progress in this division.
The Technology division, providing managed IT services and software for schools had a steady, if unexciting, year as schools maintained their systems, irrespective of short-term attendance. The gradual trend to consolidation of schools into multi-academy trusts will subtly change the nature of the customer relationships and the company will need to offer a more sophisticated service package. The short-term performance will be relatively flat but it is noteworthy that the, historically beneficial, long-term Building Schools for the Future contracts no longer make a contribution.
The Board
Neil Martin was appointed CEO, having previously been CFO, in March 2021. Mark Berry was appointed CFO, after a period as interim, in September 2021. Further appointments at below-Board executive level have subsequently been made to strengthen the management team.
Corporate Governance procedures require that I stand down as Chairman by the ninth anniversary of my appointment, which occurs in May 2022. Accordingly, the Board has conducted a process to identify and appoint Helen Stevenson as my successor and she will assume the Chairmanship the day after the announcement of the preliminary results in February. I welcome her and the new executive team and wish them all, and the Company, well.
Dividend
In the light of the results and the Group's good cash performance, the Board considers it appropriate to recommend the payment of a final dividend of 3.0 p/share, which together with the interim dividend would amount to a total of 4.7 p/share.
Outlook
The short term remains subject to COVID-19 uncertainties, but the achievements of the Company in 2021 set a firm base from which to move forward, supported by the benefits of the current capital investments.
Chief Executive Officer's statement
RM delivered a resilient performance in 2021 in another year impacted by COVID-19 with school closures, travel restrictions and the cancellation of school exams in the UK and Ireland.
Our trading was satisfactory taking into account the market conditions and the performance highlighted some areas of our portfolio that were particularly encouraging, such as the UK market share gains in our Resources division alongside some areas which require more focused attention and a clearer direction such as in our Technology division.
Another year impacted by COVID-19
COVID-19 continued to impact the sector with UK schools closed for 8 weeks in the first quarter of 2021 and school exams cancelled for a second year. School attendance generally ran at a lower level due to isolation rules which deteriorated further in the fourth quarter as more children were forced to study from home. Disruption was not isolated to the UK and school closures were a common occurrence around the world, although we did see exams sat in the majority of geographies in which we operate.
The related restrictions continued to impact the way we operated with work-from-home guidance and travel restrictions influencing the way we deliver projects and progress sales pipelines. Although the organisation has adapted, the changes have come at a time of significant change in the sector and across our organisation with new leadership, organisational structures, and the delivery of a complex IT programme.
We also saw significant supply chain constraints build through the year which impacted pricing, margins, and customer engagement in some parts of the business. Our procurement teams were agile in establishing alternative supply channels to support the network and we did increase prices, but the overall impact was negative.
Given the challenges of the year and the change profile in our organisation I have been delighted by the response of our colleagues who, despite facing a number of challenges, continued to deliver for our customers and each other.
Whilst the current environment continues to remain uncertain as we enter 2022, with the added financial challenge of rising inflation impacting our costs and that of our customers, the pandemic has accelerated a number of important market trends that are positive to the longer-term outlook of RM.
MARKET TRENDS
The education marketplace is changing. Whilst in part, this is a direct response to COVID-19, much reflects a movement that has been evolving for some time. Looking beyond the disruption of the current pandemic, the longer-term market outlook should be positive for RM and our strategy has been refreshed to ensure it is aligned to capitalise on the benefit from these trends.
Use of technology in Education
Digital delivery of Assessment
Aggregated School Procurement
Accelerating as schools progress on long digital maturity journey
Growing engagement on digital solutions post COVID-19 disruption
Growth in larger school groups is key disrupter in buyer behaviour
Use of technology in Education
Education has traditionally lagged many sectors with respect to digital penetration, with currently only c. 4% of the $6.5tn global education and training market spend being digital.
In the UK, spend on education technology (defined as spend on technology and support services, admin software and digital content and learning) was estimated at c. £2bn in 2019. UK education budgets remain challenged, but despite this, it is anticipated that the proportion spent on technology will increase over the medium term, given the growing acceptance that technology can influence a reduction in teacher workload and an improvement in student attainment. That said, schools are at the start of a long digital maturity journey, beginning from different places and with different capabilities and resources.
Digital delivery of Assessment
COVID-19 has been accountable for a wide-ranging cancellation of global examinations across a range of education sectors. This has accelerated a review of the resilience of exam systems and subsequently the wider value of digital assessment in not only delivering flexibility and business continuity but also the value it can bring to user experience and data feedback into the learning process. Business models across education sectors from schools to higher education and professional qualifications are assessing the impact of learners studying remotely and consuming materials in different ways and therefore the opportunity for assessment to adapt accordingly.
Millions of exams are sat globally each year, and this continues to be predominantly on paper. Indicatively in 2019, 94% of the 38million UK examinations covering schools, professions, vocation, higher education, and national proficiency tests were done on paper rather than digitally. The UK is not a leader in digital assessment and RM works with several customers in different geographies who are further advanced in their digital engagement, but it does give an indication of the structural opportunity that exists globally for digital assessment solutions.
Consolidated Procurement across Schools
There has been a transition in recent years in England from schools being maintained and managed by local authorities, to schools becoming academies and receiving funding directly from government. Many then come together as a collection of schools in multi-academy trusts (MATs), the average size of which continues to grow. This transition remains a government policy focus and a trend that we predict will continue.
Larger MATS are more likely to centralise the procurement of some key services which leads to a demand for consistency across the school estate and a higher requirement for professionalism, partnering and demonstration of value delivery. Trends are also starting to demonstrate an increasing engagement with outsourced support in areas beyond teaching and learning. This is a positive dynamic for RM as a provider of services such as outsourced IT services with a national scale and reach that is more mature than many competitors.
Looking ahead
Following my appointment as Chief Executive in the second quarter of 2021, it was clear that the priority for RM moving forward should be to establish a clear path to long-term sustainable growth for the benefit of all stakeholders.
RM is a purpose-led organisation with a rich heritage in the education sector following almost 50 years of working exclusively with schools and education bodies globally. Our business has a unique breadth of knowledge and expertise, strong brands, market positions and industry renowned customers and partners. We combine this with a cash generative business model and a resilient balance sheet which provides a positive foundation on which to build.
However, RM has not consistently delivered sustainable growth and the company needs to adapt its go-to-market approach and customer propositions to the more competitive landscape and a market that is changing at an accelerating rate. Opportunities exist to improve operational and commercial execution, reduce complexity and establish clearer accountability.
To address this, we undertook a review of RM's strategy and business model in the second half of the year. This review has been positive in its output and plans are being progressed which will build on the strong business foundations and address the opportunities for improvement that I outlined above. We have made good early progress in changing the go-to-market divisional structure, maturing customer propositions and investing in leadership positions across the Group. Importantly in 2022, we move into the implementation phase of the programme to change our IT platform. The organisation is presently reliant on a legacy technology estate which results in a higher cost to serve than some competitors, a broader exposure to inflation and restricted digital and data capabilities. The transition to the new system, which should be complete by the end of 2022, will see us more than close the technology gap with our peers.
STRATEGY
At a Group level, we have established five simple overarching objectives which are critical to deliver our growth agenda:-
Why is it important
Where are we today
In progress
Reach more customers
Define target customers
Critical to optimize market share
RM Resources
RM Assessment
RM Technology
Green
Amber
Amber
Refreshed propositions
New technology platform
New structure & leadership
Improve share of customer spend
Optimize return on investment where cost to sell is high
RM Resources
RM Assessment
RM Technology
RM Group
Amber
Amber
Red
Red
Refreshed propositions
New technology platform
New structure and leadership
Operational excellence
Customer focus on trust
Tights budgets
High-touch requirements
Operational efficiency is behind some competitors
Amber
New technology platform
Single automated warehouse
Attract & retain talent
Talent has functional expertise
Sector knowledge
Customer empathy
Purpose led organisation but very challenging labour market
Amber
Employee engagement focus
New structure and leadership
New technology platform
Maintain strong financial discipline
Need to invest whilst balancing risk and stakeholder needs
Resilient balance sheet
Good cash generation
Prudent fiscal approach
Green
Large capital programmes conclude in 2022
Reach more customers
As an organisation focused on a single sector, customer market share is critical and provides broader commercial opportunities to a portfolio group. It also highlights the value in looking at adjacent markets in education where we are not currently focused but where the same customer need exists.
Example opportunity: whilst we are one of the leading brands in the sector, only 2% of UK schools have an RM Technology Managed Service in a market where this need is increasing.
Improve our share of customer spend
The cost to acquire new customers is relatively high and therefore it is critical that once a relationship is established, it is maintained, and the share of customer spend maximised.
Example opportunity: almost 90% of UK Primary Schools buy from the RM Resources brand, TTS. The opportunity exists to further leverage the trust in this brand through this channel. For example, only one third of TTS customers buy wider school supplies from their sister resources brand, Consortium.
Operational excellence
Good customer service and operational efficiency is essential to a sector that delivers a critical public service to its end customers.
Example opportunity: RM currently trades with a higher cost to serve than some of its competitors due to its legacy IT platform making it more people intensive to maintain the high customer service levels required by our customers. As outlined, this platform is being replaced in the year ahead which will more than close the technology gap on our peers.
Attract and retain talent
RM prides itself on a workforce that has functional expertise, deep sector knowledge and customer empathy. Acquiring, developing and retaining this talent and building a culture of positive employee engagement is a key success factor.
Example opportunity: In the year, we undertook a culture audit and are refreshing our employee engagement approach based on the feedback. We have also recently appointed a number of senior leaders from the education sector and specialisms in broader industry such as Cloud and Managed Services, to support the strategy execution and broader empowerment.
Maintain strong financial discipline
RM has a resilient balance sheet, a cash generative business model and a track record of prudent fiscal management. It is imperative that this is maintained and remains a focus on the path to more ambitious growth.
Example Opportunity: our large multi-year investment programmes will be completed in 2022 facilitating a reduction in investment spend and delivery of the financial benefits.
Against the backdrop of these Group-level objectives and coupled with an assessment of our current execution in light of the changes in our respective markets, the three divisions revisited their strategies to ensure that they were ambitious and aligned to the growth agenda. This exercise reconfirmed the need to continue to build on our unique breadth and depth of domain knowledge, brand strength and capabilities. It also highlighted the necessity to focus and be clear on the opportunities where we can grow at scale and sustainably differentiate in the market. This has crystalised a number of activities and exciting changes that are critical to our growth agenda centred around the clarity of the customer need in a post COVID environment and the impact of the market trends previously outlined.
Opportunities to unlock growth
Underpinning the 5 strategic objectives to unlock more ambitious growth are three key opportunities that we will progress and mature over the next 18 months.
Enablers to unlock growth
New digital and automated platforms
Portfolio & Operating model
Talent & culture
Integrated end to end platform and automated warehouse enable improved customer service and data insight
New divisional structure and operating model to ensuring the whole is greater than the sum of its parts
Building talent and inspiring leadership in a purpose led organisation
The new digital and automated platforms that will be implemented during 2022 constitute a significant transformation for the Group. Replacing eight core, but disparate, IT systems alongside consolidating five distribution centres into a single automated facility will deliver key benefits which include:
a secure technology and data estate through connected Group systems, a common financial system and a Microsoft cloud estate for resiliency; improved efficiency and customer experience through automated, integrated processes, self-serve capability, integrated service management platform and a modern website with improved user interface; improved revenue opportunities delivered through improved data insight from a single view of the customer and consolidated CRM, tailored and targeted market and improved digital channels capabilities; supply chain optimisation through improved warehouse efficiency and fulfilment performance and integration of demand with suppliers.
In parallel we have revisited our portfolio and operating model establishing a new divisional structure with three leadership teams aligned to the divisional model and market focus. This provides greater customer and domain focus and improved go-to-market execution. We are now developing the operating model to ensure that the value of RM Group is greater than the sum of its parts. This is being approached in two ways:
a focus on leveraging the relationships held in each division to bring broader value to our customers and a greater awareness of the unique breadth of our Group-wide knowledge and expertise we have in the sector; and revisiting the operating model to ensure that the organisation is delivering efficiently and effectively. This has identified centres of excellence that can deliver value across the whole Group rather than being separately delivered in each division. Initial changes have seen the creation of a single Bid Management function and Architecture and Digital product development centres.
Talent and culture should always be at the heart of a successful organisation, and this is particularly important to RM. We have a strong purpose-led culture and committed employees who care about education and learners, and we see exciting opportunities to continue to evolve and develop that culture. To support employee engagement, we have undertaken a culture audit, initiated several equality, diversity and inclusion initiatives and launched a new quarterly engagement survey which will provide valuable information to support our activities in this area. In addition, the establishment of the new leadership structure and the appointments made to key leadership positions in the organisation are designed to foster greater empowerment.
Outlook
The evolving market backdrop provides convincing reasons to believe that the sector is developing in a constructive and commercially positive way.
The actions taken in the last year and the plans we have in place to unlock growth will take time to mature and be fully embedded. With the new IT platform and automated warehouse expected to be fully operational by the end of 2022 and the changes we are making associated with the strategy refresh and new leadership structure, we are entering an 18 month period of transition. Following this, we will move into a phase whereby we are able to leverage the changes and investments made in the business alongside a greater customer and market focus. It is at this stage where we move beyond pre-COVID levels of financial and operational performance and will be able to more fully capitalise on the organisation's potential to deliver sustainable growth with greater agility to exploit customer and market opportunities as they arise in the future.
All of this represents material change for the organisation, which is essential to achieve its potential and deliver a sustainable pathway for growth and meet the changing needs of the education sector. It has been a challenging time to be involved in delivering and supporting education over the last two years, but this now feels like an exciting time for the sector and for RM. Our plans rely on dedicated and passionate people to be successful and I continue to be impressed by the commitment of our colleagues and their desire to not only develop and advance the organisation but importantly improve educational outcomes for our customers.
Neil Martin
Chief Executive
Chief Financial Officer's statement
Overview
RM's financial performance for the period was resilient despite being materially impacted by school closures, and the cancellation of all 2021 UK school exams.
Group revenue increased by 11.6% to £210.9m (2020: £189.0m) driven by strong trading in RM Resources which recovered quickly following the re-opening of UK schools in March 2021. Revenue growth was driven primarily by demand for UK curriculum resources as schools focused on curriculum spending to support outdoor teaching, physical education and pupil well-being, alongside managing COVID-19 transmission risks. Revenues in RM Assessment were broadly in line with prior year with the partial recovery of global exam activity being offset by a significant customer in-sourcing a contract in 2020. Hardware and connectivity sales in RM Technology improved reflecting the ongoing digitisation of school infrastructure.
Adjusted operating profit3 increased by 22.5% to £18.5m (2020: £15.1m) and was driven by revenue growth partially offset by increased operating costs. Statutory operating profit decreased by 33.9% to £7.0m (2020: £10.6m) primarily as a result of the accounting policy change described below.
The group continued to experience higher frictional costs in respect of freight and Brexit; increased costs associated with the resumption of key projects which were paused in 2020, and the non-repeat of prior year cost savings associated with our response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, the Group continued to face significant wage inflation pressure through the year, most significantly in India.
Net debt3 closed the year at £18.3m (2020: £1.3m). The £17.0m net cash outflow reflected good operating cash generation, offset by planned spending on two large capital programmes, Project Villa, which comprises the consolidation of five distribution centres into a single automated facility, and Project Evolution, which comprises the implementation of a new group-wide IT platform. The completion of both programmes was extended by six months to ensure their successful implementation. This was due to a need to de-risk the transition due to its inherent complexity and the impact of ongoing covid restrictions through the year. Both programmes are expected to complete in 2022 and the Group continues to utilise its £70m revolving credit facility to fund the investments in them.
Group Financial Performance
Income statement
£m
2021
20201
Adjusted3
Adjustment2
Statutory
Adjusted3
Adjustment2
Statutory
Revenue
210.9
-
210.9
189.0
-
189.0
Operating profit
18.5
(11.5)
7.0
15.1
(4.5)
10.6
Profit before tax
17.1
(11.5)
5.6
14.0
(4.5)
9.5
Tax
(3.3)
1.9
(1.4)
(2.7)
0.8
(1.9)
Profit after tax
13.8
(9.6)
4.2
11.4
(3.7)
7.6
Following the IFRS interpretations committee ("IFRIC") agenda decision, we have changed our accounting treatment and policy for IAS38 Intangible Assets accordingly. Prior year comparatives have been restated to derecognise previously capitalised SaaS related costs amounting to £1.7 million. See Note 14.
Adjustments reflect the amortisation of acquisition related intangible assets; major investment strategy costs including dual run costs, profits on sale of non-core assets, and other property related items. Further details can be found below and in Note 2.
Non-GAAP measures. See Note 2.
Group revenue increased by 11.6% to £210.9m (2020: £189.0m).
The pandemic continued to impact revenues in the UK and internationally. UK revenues increased by 9.8% with international revenues up 24.2%.
Adjusted operating profit margins3 improved to 8.8% (2020: 8.0%). Adjusted operating profit improved by 22.5% to £18.5m (2020: £15.1m). Statutory operating profit decreased by 33.9% to £7.0m (2020: £10.6m).
In order to provide an understanding of underlying business performance, certain costs are identified as 'adjustments' 2 to underlying business performance.
In 2021 Adjusted items comprised the following:
2021
2020
£m
£m
Amortisation charges associated with acquisition related intangible assets
2.0
2.0
Stock obsolescence associated with revised warehouse strategy4
-
0.4
Gain on sale of legacy property4
(1.4)
(0.7)
Dual running property & licence costs4
2.0
0.6
Gain on sale of legacy investment
-
(0.7)
Onerous lease commitments
0.5
-
Pension GMP
-
0.2
Restructuring costs
-
1.0
Net Adjustments before SaaS related expenses
3.1
2.8
IT platform costs incurred and expensed under new accounting guidance2
8.3
1.7
Total adjustments 2
11.5
4.5
The majority of adjusted items relate to planned spending on our two large capital programmes (4). These items have been disclosed as adjustments because they are material to the relevant segment.
£3.1m of net adjustments relate to amortisation of acquisition intangibles, dual running and one-off property costs in relation to the warehouse consolidation programme; and
Implementation of Software as a Service ("SaaS") accounting guidance
During the year the Group continued with its implementation of a new group-wide IT platform. Following the IFRS interpretations committee ("IFRIC") agenda decision, we have changed our accounting treatment and policy for IAS38 Intangible Assets accordingly. The directors determined that £8.3m of SaaS related costs incurred during FY21 no longer meet the criteria for recognition as an asset under IAS38. Accordingly, this amount has instead been expensed to the income statement. A total of £6.9 million SaaS related costs incurred in the year have been capitalised and recognised on the balance sheet as an intangible asset.
Prior year comparatives have been restated to derecognise previously capitalised SaaS related costs amounting to £1.7m.
Taking into consideration the adjustments of £11.5m (2020: £4.5m), statutory operating profit decreased to £7.0m (2020: £10.6m).
Statutory profit before tax fell to £5.6m (2020: £9.5m) after deducting net interest charges of £1.4m in relation to the Group's credit facility and finance costs related to the defined benefit pension schemes.
The total tax charge for the year was £1.4m (2020: £1.9m). The Group's tax charge measured as a percentage of profit before tax, was 25.3% (2020: 19.9%) driven mainly by an increase in deferred tax rate which was partially offset by the effect of indexation on the sale of property.
Statutory profit after tax decreased 45% to £4.2m (2020: £7.6m).
Adjusted diluted earnings per share3 increased to 16.4 pence (2020: 13.6 pence). Statutory basic earnings per share were 5.0 pence (2020: 9.2 pence) and statutory diluted earnings per share were 5.0 pence (2020: 9.1 pence).
Cash flow
RM generated cash from operations for the year of £8.4m (2020: £25.9m).
Cash from operations is after charging £6.5m of SaaS related costs incurred during FY21 which no longer meet the criteria for recognition as an asset under IAS38. Net working capital outflows for the year were £3.5m as the business returned to growth, and the settlement of £3.5m of VAT liabilities that were deferred from FY20 under the government's deferral scheme.
The use of cash generated comprised net capital expenditure of £11.8m (2020: £2.1m), contributions to the defined benefit pension schemes of £4.4m (2020: £4.1m), and tax payments of £0.1m (2020: £2.6m). Dividend payments were £3.9m having been reinstated following their suspension in 2020.
Divisional performance
RM Resources
RM Resources revenues increased by 24% to £114.4m (2020: £92.4m) driven by strong curriculum sales following the re-opening of schools in March. UK education revenue increased by 22% with international revenues up 39%.
Divisional operating profit increased to £10.1m (2020: £3.1m) and operating margins increased to 8.8% (2020: 3.3%). The increase was predominantly driven by higher revenues partially offset by higher product and freight costs associated with COVID-19 and Brexit, reduced COVID-19 cost saving benefits, and the resumption of the digital and automation projects which were paused in 2020. Uncertainty remains regarding the impact of the pandemic on supply chains in both the UK and International markets.
RM Resources continues to make good progress with its warehouse consolidation programme, with the fit out of the new warehouse and associated office space now complete. The automation and systems integration prior to the majority of inventory transfer is ongoing, and two of the five warehouses have now been exited with one exited in the period.
UK
Revenue in the UK increased by 22% to £98.4m (2020: £81.0m) despite schools closed to face to face teaching for a similar period in 2021 vs. 2020. Our TTS brand performed strongly, particularly in curriculum sales supporting outdoor teaching, physical education, pupil wellbeing and COVID-19 transmission management, benefitting from its differentiated position and innovative, own-developed product portfolio.
International
International sales comprise two key channels, international distributors, through which RM Resources sells own-developed products to over 80 countries, and international English curriculum schools to whom it sells a wider portfolio of education supplies. International revenues increased by 39% to £16.0m (2020: £11.5m) benefiting from reduced restrictions in a number of key territories vs. the prior year however volumes remain depressed vs. pre pandemic levels as COVID-19 continues to impact the international landscape with regard to pupil attendance.
RM Assessment
RM Assessment provides IT software and end-to-end digital assessment services to enable online exam marking, online testing and the management and analysis of educational data. Customers include government ministries, exam boards and professional awarding bodies in the UK and overseas.
Revenue increased by 1% on the prior year to £31.9m (2020: £31.6m) with the partial recovery of global examination activity in 2021 being offset by a significant customer in-sourcing a contract in 2020. Revenues remain heavily impacted by lower examination volumes with UK general exams cancelled and reduced international exam activity being offset by an increase in professional and language qualification activity.
2021
RM customers
Exam activity
vs. 2020
Exam activity
vs. 2019
UK School Exams
3
+10%
-95%
UK Other
6
+90%
+85%
International
9
+45%
-30%
Adjusted operating profit fell by 14% on the prior year to £5.7m (2020: £6.6m), with operating margins decreasing to 17.9% (2020: 20.9%).
COVID-19 disruption relating to ongoing international travel restrictions and global lockdown measures continues to adversely impact the sales pipeline development. Wage inflation pressure through the year increased delivery costs, driven in part by a shortage of in demand skilled developers in India.
RM Technology
Revenue decreased by 1% to £64.6m (2020: £65.0m) as the division showed its resilience to UK school closures as schools continued to require technology support with the challenge of progressing new opportunities.
Adjusted operating profit however decreased by 24% to £7.1m (2020: £9.3m), the key drivers being the combination of lower gross margins arising from a higher proportion of hardware sales, together with increased operating costs post lockdown, and the absence of prior-year, one-off benefits.
Services
The Services offering is primarily the provision of IT outsourcing and associated technology services (managed services) and managed broadband connectivity to UK schools and colleges. Total Services revenues declined by 1% to £53.6m (2020: £54.0m) with managed services revenues declining 4% to £40.5m (2020: £42.0m). This was driven primarily by a reduction in revenues from long term contracts and a slight reduction in site numbers through the year as converting the sales pipeline became challenging. Connectivity increased 9% to £13.1m (2020: £12.0m).
Digital Software Platforms
The Digital Software Platform offering covers a number of cloud-based products and services such as RM Integris (school management system), RM Unify (authentication and identity management system) and RM SafetyNet (internet filtering system) as well as other content, finance and network software offerings. Digital Platforms revenues increased marginally to £11.0m (2020: £10.9m).
Dividend
The Board took the decision not to pay a 2019 final dividend or a 2020 interim dividend as a result of the pandemic. However, whilst COVID-19 has continued to impact the business, the Board reinstated the 2020 final dividend and paid an interim dividend in the year of 1.7p (2020: nil).
In addition, the Board proposes a 2021 final dividend of 3.0 pence per share (2020: 3.0p) which is subject to shareholder approval. The estimated cost of the final dividend proposed is £2.5m.
The Board is committed to a long-term sustainable dividend policy and the Company has £35.8m of distributable reserves, as at 30 November 2021, available to support the dividend policy.
RM plc is a non-trading investment holding company and derives its profits from dividends paid by subsidiary companies. The Directors consider the Group's capital structure and dividend policy at least twice a year, ahead of announcing results and during the annual budgeting process, looking at longer-term sustainability. The Directors do so in the context of the Company's ability to execute the strategy and to invest in opportunities to grow the business and enhance shareholder value.
Defined Benefit Pension Schemes
The Company operates two defined benefit pension schemes ("RM Education Scheme" and "Care Scheme") and participates in a third, multi-employer, defined benefit pension scheme (the "Platinum Scheme"). Following the closure of one warehouse during the prior year (which impacted the Platinum Scheme), all schemes are now closed to future accrual of benefits.
The IAS19 net surplus (pre-tax) across the Group increased by £49.1m to £30.4m (2020: £18.7m deficit) with both the RM Education Scheme and the Platinum Scheme being in surplus. The improvement was driven primarily by better than expected returns on scheme assets, together with an increase in the discount rate, which is based on corporate bond yields, both of which were partially offset by an increase in inflation.
The Group deficit recovery plan payments across all schemes in 2021 were £4.4m (2020: £4.1m). The triennial valuation as at 31 May 2021 is nearing completion.
Treasury Management
The Company's financial position is supported by a committed revolving credit facility of £70million that is shared between two banks, HSBC and Barclays. It also has an additional uncommitted accordion arrangement for a further £30million, enabling the Group to extend the facility to £100m. The facility was extended during the year and is now committed to July 2023 and retains the option of a further 1-year extension. The associated financial covenants are based on the definition of finance leases prior to the implementation of the accounting standard, IFRS16. The Group is reliant on the facility in the short term to manage its net current liability position.
Treasury activities are managed centrally for the Group including banking relationships and foreign currency hedging. The Group has foreign currency denominated costs that outweigh foreign currency denominated revenues and therefore increased currency volatility creates an exposure. This is primarily attributed to US Dollar and Indian rupee exposure. This risk is managed through currency hedging against exchange rate movements, typically 9-12 months into the future. The Group is also working to rebalance its exposure by growing its foreign currency denominated sales ahead of its costs to reduce the currency imbalance and more naturally hedge this risk over time.
Going Concern
The financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis which the Directors consider to be appropriate for the following reasons.
The Directors have prepared cash flow forecasts for the period to the end of May 2023 which indicate that, taking into account reasonably plausible downsides as discussed below, the Company has sufficient funds to meet its liabilities as they fall due for at least 12 months from the date of this report.
In assessing the going concern position the Directors have considered the balance sheet position and the level of available finance not drawn down. The balance sheet shows net current liabilities of £1.0m. At 30 November 2021, the Group had net debt of £18.3m (November 2020: £1.3m) and drawn facilities of £20m (November 2020: £5m). RM Group has a £70m committed bank facility ("the facility") at the date of this report. Further details are set out in Note 10. Liquidity headroom at 30 November 2021 was £47.9m. Average net debt over the year to 30 November 2021 was £15.8m (2020: £16.3m) with a maximum borrowings position of £29.7m (2020: £29.6m). The debt facilities are subject to financial covenants of a maximum of 2.5 times Net Debt/EBITDA and at least 4 times interest cover/EBITDA. These covenants are tested in May and November. At 30 November 2021 the results of the covenant tests were 0.84 and 22.6 respectively.
The facility was extended by 1 year during 2021 and is committed until July 2023. During this extension process, the Board initiated conversations regarding a 3-year facility to replace the current facility when it expires and is confident in obtaining a new or renewed facility at an appropriate time.
The Chief Financial Officer's statement outlines the performance of the Group in the year to 30 November 2021 including the impact of COVID-19. In this period UK schools were closed for a number of weeks primarily during Q1, and UK and Irish school exams were cancelled by respective governments. Despite this backdrop, revenues increased by 12% compared to 2020 and adjusted profit before tax by 22%. RM Resources continued to provide products to its customers during school closures and has experienced strong curriculum sales in 2021. In RM Assessment, whilst the UK general exams saw a significant reduction compared to 2019, other UK assessment and international examination activity recovered partially. RM Technology continues to be resilient to UK school closures as it provides the technology support to UK schools and colleges that has allowed them to operate remotely. Performance by segment is set out in Note 2. Net cash inflow from operating activities was £3.8m.
For going concern purposes, the Group has assessed a base case scenario that assumes no significant downturn in UK or International markets occurs from that experienced in the year to 30 November 2021. The base case also incorporates a reduced level of investment expenditure in 2022 versus that incurred in 2021 relating to the anticipated completion of its two large capital programmes and assumes a return to shareholders through dividends. Under that base case RM continues to maintain significant headroom against the committed facility and are within the Group's covenants.
The Group has assessed a further severe downside scenario that adjusts the base assumptions to include:
Further school closures for March through to May 2022 at similar levels of trading experienced in 2021, comprising a c.30% reduction in divisional revenue in those months; Reduced International trading and exams, including an c.25% reduction in International general school exams against budget; Assumes the UK exams that have been cancelled in 2021 are also cancelled in 2022; Slower pipeline conversion, a c.50% of budgeted annuity contracts in RM Assessment and RM Technology being achieved; Benefits from our ERP programme are delayed by approximately 1 year Business disruption for 2 months in our RM Resources division when the warehouse automation goes live in 2022 reducing order intake by c.50% in those 2 months; Minimal cost mitigations and no significant cash flow deferrals.
The Directors do not believe that all these assumptions occurring together are plausible, but under these scenarios, in aggregate, the Company continues to have good headroom against the facility and complies with bank covenants until the facility concludes. Having considered the severity of this scenario, the Board considers this to be an appropriate worst case scenario.
The Board's assessment of the likelihood of a further downside scenario is remote, particularly with the continued vaccine booster/ roll out programmes and lifting of restrictions in key countries and the indications from most governments worldwide that they intend to lift remaining restrictions as soon as practicable.
Therefore, the Board has a reasonable expectation that the Group has adequate resources to continue in operational existence and meet its liabilities as they fall due for a period of not less than 12 months from the date of approval of these financial statements. For this reason, the Group continues to adopt the going concern basis of accounting in preparing the annual financial statements.
Mark Berry
Chief Financial Officer
14 February 2022
CONSOLIDATED INCOME STATEMENT
for the year ended 30 November 2021
Restated
Year ended 30 November 2021
Year ended 30 November 2020
Adjusted
Adjustments
Total
Adjusted
Adjustments
Total
Note
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
Revenue
2
210,853
-
210,853
188,999
-
188,999
Cost of sales
(140,220)
-
(140,220)
(121,551)
(365)
(121,916)
Gross profit
70,633
-
70,633
67,448
(365)
67,083
Operating expenses
(52,164)
(11,483)
(63,647)
(52,119)
(4,154)
(56,273)
Impairment losses
-
-
-
(248)
-
(248)
Profit from operations
18,469
(11,483)
6,986
15,081
(4,519)
10,562
Other income
3
28
-
28
21
-
21
Finance costs
4
(1,396)
-
(1,396)
(1,055)
-
(1,055)
Profit before tax
17,101
(11,483)
5,618
14,047
(4,519)
9,528
Tax
5
(3,282)
1,858
(1,424)
(2,668)
775
(1,893)
Profit for the year
13,819
(9,625)
4,194
11,379
(3,744)
7,635
Earnings per ordinary share
- basic
6
16.6p
5.0p
13.8p
9.2p
- diluted
6
16.4p
5.0p
13.6p
9.1p
Paid and proposed dividends per share
7
- interim
1.70p
-
- final
3.00p
3.00p
The previous year's results have been restated (see note 14). Throughout this statement, adjusted profit and EPS measures are stated after adjusting items which are identified by virtue of their size, nature and/or incidence. The treatment of adjusted items is applied consistently period on period and is consistent with the way that underlying trading performance is measured by management (see note 2).
All amounts were derived from continuing operations.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
for the year ended 30 November 2021
Restated
Year ended
30 November 2021
Year ended
30 November 2020
Note
£000
£000
Profit for the year
4,194
7,635
Items that will not be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss
Defined Benefit Pension Scheme remeasurements
13
44,860
(16,302)
Tax on items that will not be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss
5
(10,364)
2,854
Items that are or may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss
Fair value gain on hedged instruments
242
346
Tax on items that are or may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss
5
(45)
(3)
Exchange loss on translation of overseas operations
(180)
(205)
Other comprehensive income / (expense)
34,513
(13,310)
Total comprehensive income / (expense)
38,707
(5,675)
The previous year's results have been restated (see note 14).
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
Restated
At 30 November 2021
At 30 November 2020
Note
£000
£000
Non-current assets
Goodwill
49,202
49,322
Intangible assets
23,405
19,016
Property, plant and equipment
16,217
8,423
Right of Use asset
18,018
19,391
Defined Benefit Pension Scheme surplus
13
35,037
665
Other receivables
8
82
63
Contract fulfilment assets
4,169
3,420
Deferred tax assets
5
156
5,333
146,286
105,633
Current assets
Inventories
19,055
18,594
Trade and other receivables
8
33,865
31,475
Contract fulfilment assets
1,360
728
Held for sale asset
3,034
4,793
Tax assets
3,665
2,633
Cash at bank
3,560
5,941
64,539
64,164
Total assets
210,825
169,797
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables
9
(61,369)
(61,491)
Tax liabilities
-
(163)
Provisions
11
(2,066)
(435)
Overdraft
(2,082)
(2,480)
(65,517)
(64,569)
Net current (liabilities) /assets
(978)
(405)
Non-current liabilities
Other payables
9
(21,072)
(20,987)
Provisions
11
(1,475)
(3,998)
Deferred tax liability
(10,830)
(3,339)
Defined Benefit Pension Scheme obligation
13
(4,686)
(19,318)
Borrowings
10
(19,744)
(4,779)
(57,807)
(52,421)
Total liabilities
(123,324)
(116,990)
Net assets
87,501
52,807
Equity attributable to shareholders
Share capital
12
1,917
1,917
Share premium account
27,080
27,080
Own shares
(444)
(841)
Capital redemption reserve
94
94
Hedging reserve
177
(65)
Translation reserve
(882)
(702)
Retained earnings
59,559
25,324
Total equity
87,501
52,807
The previous year's results have been restated (see note 14).
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY
for the year ended 30 November 2021
Share capital
Share premium
Own shares
Capital redemption reserve
Hedging reserve
Translation reserve
Retained earnings
Total
Note
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
At 1 December 2019 - as reported
1,917
27,080
(1,007)
94
(411)
(497)
32,399
59,575
Configuration costs expensed
14
-
-
-
-
-
-
(1,798)
(1,798)
At 1 December 2019 - as restated
1,917
27,080
(1,007)
94
(411)
(497)
30,601
57,777
Profit for the year- restated
-
-
-
-
-
-
7,635
7,635
Other comprehensive income/(expense)
-
-
-
-
346
(205)
(13,451)
(13,310)
Total comprehensive income/(expense)
-
-
-
-
346
(205)
(5,816)
(5,675)
Transactions with owners of the Company:
Share-based payment awards exercised
-
-
166
-
-
-
(166)
-
Share-based payment fair value charges
-
-
-
-
-
-
705
705
At 1 December 2020 - as restated
1,917
27,080
(841)
94
(65)
(702)
25,324
52,807
Profit for the year
-
-
-
-
-
-
4,194
4,194
Other comprehensive income/(expense)
-
-
-
-
242
(180)
34,451
34,513
Total comprehensive income /(expense)
-
-
-
-
242
(180)
38,645
38,707
Transactions with owners of the Company:
Share-based payment awards exercised
-
-
397
-
-
-
(397)
-
Share-based payment fair value charges
-
-
-
-
-
-
(100)
(100)
Ordinary dividends paid
7
-
-
-
-
-
-
(3,913)
(3,913)
At 30 November 2021
1,917
27,080
(444)
94
177
(882)
59,559
87,501
CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOW STATEMENT
Restated
for the year ended 30 November 2021
Year ended
30 November 2021
Year ended
30 November 2020
Note
£000
£000
Profit before tax
5,618
9,528
Investment income
3
(28)
(21)
Finance costs
4
1,396
1,055
Profit from operations
6,986
10,562
Adjustments for:
Pension GMP
-
170
Amortisation and impairment of intangible assets
2,406
3,038
Depreciation and impairment of property, plant and equipment
4,281
3,718
(Gain) on disposal of other asset
-
(713)
(Gain)/ loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment
(1,449)
(949)
Loss/(gain) on foreign exchange derivatives
64
(625)
Share-based payment (credit)/ charge
(100)
705
(Decrease) / increase in provisions
(353)
1,443
Defined Benefit Pension Scheme administration cost
13
52
37
Operating cash flows before movements in working capital
11,887
17,386
(Increase) / decrease in inventories
(460)
3,557
(Increase) / decrease in receivables
(2,318)
2,362
(Increase) in contract fulfilment assets
(1,381)
(1,111)
Movement in payables
- increase in trade and other payables
1,177
6,012
- utilisation of provisions
11
(528)
(2,284)
Cash generated from operations
8,377
25,922
Defined benefit pension scheme cash contributions
13
(4,450)
(4,094)
Tax paid
(135)
(2,589)
Net cash inflow from operating activities
3,792
19,239
Investing activities
Interest received
28
21
Proceeds on disposal of investment asset
-
1,560
Proceeds on disposal of property, plant and equipment
3,214
2,900
Purchases of property, plant and equipment
(8,024)
(5,801)
Purchases of other intangible assets
(6,977)
(801)
Net cash used in investing activities
(11,759)
(2,121)
Financing activities
Dividends paid
7
(3,913)
-
Drawdown/ (repayment) of borrowings
10
15,000
(12,000)
Borrowing facilities arrangement and commitment fees
(497)
(226)
Interest paid
(675)
(501)
Payment of leasing liabilities
(3,889)
(2,523)
Net cash generated by/ (used in) financing activities
6,026
(15,250)
Net (decrease) /increase in cash and cash equivalents
(1,941)
1,868
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the year
3,461
1,528
Effect of foreign exchange rate changes
(42)
65
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year
1,478
3,461
Bank overdraft
(2,082)
(2,480)
Cash at bank
3,560
5,941
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year
1,478
3,461
The previous year's results have been restated (see note 14).
1. Preliminary announcement
The consolidated preliminary results are based on International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as adopted by the EU and were also in accordance with international financial reporting standards adopted pursuant to Regulation (EC) No 1606/2002 as it applies in the European Union.
The Group expects to publish a full Strategic Report, Directors' Report and financial statements which will be delivered before the Company's annual general meeting on 7 April 2022. The full Strategic Report and Directors' Report and financial statements will be published on the Group's website at www.rmplc.com.
The financial information set out in this preliminary announcement does not constitute the Group's statutory accounts for the year ended 30 November 2021. Statutory accounts for 2020 have been delivered to the Registrar of Companies and those for 2021 will be delivered following the Company's annual general meeting. The 2020 statutory accounts are amended for the restatement of configuration costs relating to a SaaS platform and are set out in Note 14. The auditor's reports on both the 2021 and 2020 accounts were unqualified, did not draw attention to any matters by way of emphasis without qualifying their report and did not contain statements under s498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006. This Preliminary announcement was approved by the Board of Directors on 14 February 2022.
Consolidated Income Statement presentation
The Directors assess the performance of the Group using an adjusted operating profit and profit before tax. The Board believes that presentation of the Group results in this way is relevant to an understanding of the Group's financial performance (and that of each segment). Underlying performance excludes adjusted items which are identified by virtue of their size, nature and/or incidence. The treatment of adjusted items is applied consistently period on period. This presentation is consistent with the way that financial performance is measured by management, reported to the Board, the basis of financial measures for senior management's compensation schemes and assists in providing supplementary information that assists the user to understand the underlying financial performance, position and trends of the Group. Further details are provided in Note 2.
Basis of preparation The financial statements have been prepared on the historical cost basis except for certain financial instruments, share-based payments and pension assets and liabilities which are measured at fair value. In addition, assets held for sale are stated at the lower of previous carrying amount and the fair value less costs to sell. The preparation of financial statements, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles, requires the use of estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Although these estimates are based on the Directors' best knowledge of current events and actions, actual results ultimately may differ from those estimates.
Going concern
The financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis which the Directors consider to be appropriate for the following reasons.
The Directors have prepared cash flow forecasts for the period to the end of May 2023 which indicate that, taking into account reasonably plausible downsides as discussed below, the company have sufficient funds to meet its liabilities as they fall due for at least 12 months from the date of this report.
In assessing the going concern position the Directors have considered the balance sheet position and the level of available finance not drawn down. The balance sheet shows net current liabilities of £1.0m. At 30 November 2021, the Group had net debt of £18.3m (November 2020: £1.3m) and drawn facilities of £20m (November 2020: £5m). RM Group has a £70m committed bank facility ("the facility") at the date of this report. Further details are set out in Note 10. Liquidity headroom at 30 November 2021 was £47.9m. Average net debt over the year to 30 November 2021 was £15.8m (2020: £16.3m) with a maximum borrowings position of £29.7m (2020: £29.6m). The debt facilities are subject to financial covenants of a maximum of 2.5 times Net Debt/EBITDA and at least 4 times interest cover/EBITDA. These covenants are tested in May and November. At 30 November 2021 the results of the covenant tests were 0.84 and 22.6 respectively.
The facility was extended by 1 year during 2021 and is committed until July 2023. During this extension process, the Board initiated conversations regarding 3 year facilities to replace the current facility when it expires and is confident in obtaining a new or renewed facility at an appropriate time. The Board is satisfied that there are several other financing options that could be put in place to maintain liquidity headroom and that there would be adequate time to complete negotiation of such arrangements.
The CFO report outlines the performance of the Group in the year to 30 November 2021 including the impact of COVID-19. In this period UK schools were closed for a number of weeks primarily during Q1, and many UK and Irish exams were cancelled by respective governments. Despite this backdrop, revenues increased by 12% compared to 2020 and adjusted profit before tax by 22%. In RM Resources we continued to provide products to our customers during school closures and have experienced strong curriculum sales in 2021. In RM Assessment (formerly RM Results), whilst the UK general exams saw a significant reduction compared to 2019, other UK assessment and international examination activity recovered partially. RM Technology (formerly RM Education) continues to be resilient to UK school closures as it provides the technology support to UK schools and colleges that has allowed them to operate remotely. Performance by segment is set out in Note 2. Net cash inflow from operating activities was £3.8m.
For going concern purposes the Group has assessed a base case scenario that assumes no further significant downturn in UK or International markets occurs than that experienced in the year to 30 November 2021. The base case also incorporates a reduced but still significant level of investment expenditure in 2022 as we have spent in 2021 relating to our major transformation projects and assumes a return to shareholders through dividends. Under that base case we continue to maintain significant headroom against our committed facility and are comfortably within our covenants.
The Group has assessed a further severe downside scenario that adjusts our base assumptions to include:
- Further school closures for March through to May 2022 at similar levels of trading experienced in 2021, comprising a c.30% reduction in divisional revenue in those months;
- Reduced International trading and exams, including an c.25% reduction in International general school exams against budget;
- Assumes the UK exams that have been cancelled in 2021 are also cancelled in 2022;
- Slower pipeline conversion, a c.50% of budgeted annuity contracts in RM Assessment and RM Technology being achieved;
- Benefits from our ERP programme are delayed by approximately 1 year
- Business disruption for 2 months in our RM Resources division when the warehouse automation goes live in 2022 reducing order intake by c.50% in those 2 months;
- Minimal cost mitigations and no significant cash flow deferrals.
The Directors do not believe that all these assumptions occurring together is plausible, but even considering all these scenarios in aggregate we continue to have good headroom against the facility and comply with bank covenants until the facility concludes. The Directors also believe there is reasonable expectation of entering into a new agreement on similar terms as the existing renewed facility. Having considered the severity of this scenario, the Board considers this to be an appropriate worst case scenario.
The Board's assessment of the likelihood of a further downside scenario is remote, particularly with the continued vaccine booster/ roll out programmes and lifting of restrictions in key countries and the indications from most governments worldwide that they intend to lift remaining restrictions as soon as practical.
Therefore, the Board has a reasonable expectation that the Group has adequate resources to continue in operational existence and meet their liabilities as they fall due for a period of not less than 12 months from the date of approval of these financial statements. For this reason, the Group continues to adopt the going concern basis of accounting in preparing the annual financial statements.
Significant accounting policies
The accounting policies used for the preparation of this announcement have been applied consistently, apart from the treatment of configuration costs relating to a SaaS platform (see Note 14).
Alternative Performance Measures (APMs)
In response to the Guidelines on APMs issued by the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) and the Financial Reporting Council (FRC), additional information on the APMs used by the Group is provided below.
The following APMs are used by the Group:
- Adjusted operating profit
- Adjusted operating margin
- Adjusted profit before tax
- Adjusted tax
- Adjusted profit after tax
- Adjusted earnings per share
- Adjusted cash conversion
- Net debt
Further explanation of what each APM comprises and reconciliations between Statutory reported measures and adjusted measures are shown in Note 2.
The Board believes that presentation of the Group results in this way is relevant to an understanding of the Group's financial performance (and that of each segment). Underlying performance excludes adjusted items which are identified by virtue of their size, nature and/or incidence. The treatment of adjusted items is applied consistently period on period. This presentation is consistent with the way that financial performance is measured by management, reported to the Board, the basis of financial measures for senior management's compensation schemes and assists in providing supplementary information that assists the user to understand the underlying financial performance, position and trends of the Group.
The APMs used by the Group are not defined terms under IFRS and may therefore not be comparable with similarly titled measures reported by other companies. They are not intended to be a substitute for, or superior to, GAAP measures. All APMs relate to the current year results and comparative periods where provided.
2. Operating Segments
The Group's business is supplying products, services and solutions to the UK and international education markets. Information reported to the Group's Chief Executive for the purposes of resource allocation and assessment of segmental performance is focused on the nature of each type of activity.
The Group is structured into three operating divisions: RM Resources, RM Assessment (formerly RM Results) and RM Technology (formerly RM Education). The Chief Operating Decision Maker review segments at an adjusted operating profit level and adjustments are not allocated to segments.
A full description of each revenue generating division, together with comments on its performance and outlook, is given in the Strategic Report. Corporate Services consists of central business costs associated with being a listed company and non-division specific pension costs.
This Segmental analysis shows the result and assets of these divisions. Revenue is that earned by the Group from third parties. Net financing costs and tax are not allocated to segments as the funding, cash and tax management of the Group are activities carried out by the central treasury and tax functions.
Segmental results
RM
RM
RM
Corporate
Total
Resources
Assessment
Technology
Services
Year ended 30 November 2021
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
Revenue
UK
98,448
18,846
64,265
-
181,559
Europe
8,849
6,104
91
-
15,044
North America
1,882
-
138
-
2,020
Asia
772
1,036
-
-
1,808
Middle East
2,004
159
-
-
2,163
Rest of the world
2,469
5,724
66
-
8,259
114,424
31,869
64,560
-
210,853
Adjusted profit/(loss)from operations
10,073
5,706
7,098
(4,408)
18,469
Investment income
28
Finance costs
(1,396)
Adjusted profit before tax
17,101
Adjustments (see below)
(11,483)
Profit before tax
5,618
RM
RM
RM
Corporate
Total
Resources
Assessment
Technology
Services
Year ended 30 November 2020
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
Revenue
UK
80,956
20,473
63,977
-
165,406
Europe
6,362
5,042
533
-
11,937
North America
777
-
412
-
1,189
Asia
848
1,250
-
-
2,098
Middle East
2,196
225
-
-
2,421
Rest of the world
1,303
4,589
56
-
5,948
92,442
31,579
64,978
-
188,999
Adjusted profit/(loss) from operations - restated
3,081
6,607
9,296
(3,903)
15,081
Investment income
21
Finance costs
(1,055)
Adjusted profit before tax - restated
14,047
Adjustments (see below) - restated
(4,519)
Profit before tax - restated
9,528
Adjustments to cost of sales and administrative expenses
Restated
Year ended
30 November 2021
Year ended
30 November 2020
£000
£000
Adjustments to cost of sales
Exceptional inventory adjustments
-
365
Adjustments to administrative expenses
Amortisation of acquisition related intangible assets
2,010
1,986
Dual running costs related to investment strategy
2,064
611
Sale of property
(1,399)
(670)
Configuration of SaaS licenses (ERP)
8,337
1,701
Onerous lease
471
-
Gain on sale of Essex LEP loan
-
(673)
Pension GMP
-
170
Restructuring costs
-
1,029
Total adjustments to administrative expenses
11,483
4,154
Total adjustments
11,483
4,519
Tax impact (Note 5)
(1,858)
(775)
Total adjustments after tax
9,625
3,744
The amortisation of acquisition related intangible assets is an annual recurring adjustment to profit that is a non-cash charge arising from investing activity. This adjustment is to clearly communicate with the investment analyst community in common with peer companies across the technology sector. The income generated from the use of these intangible assets is, however, included in the adjusted profit measures.
Other adjusted items:
These are items which are identified by virtue of either their size or their nature to be important to understanding the performance of the business including the comparability of the results year on year. These items can include, but are not restricted to, impairment; gain on held for sale assets and related transaction costs; changes in the provision for exceptional property costs; the gain/loss on sale of operations and restructuring and acquisition costs.
In 2018, following a large acquisition in the Resources division, the Group announced a new warehouse strategy which involved the disposal of 5 warehouses (including 3 warehouses from the newly acquired group of companies) into one new automated warehouse. Interlinked with the automation software is a requirement to change the ERP solution which is being rolled out across the whole Group. The Group believes that whilst this programme spans a number of years, it's size, complexity and number of unusual costs and income, impact the understanding of the trading performance of the business including the comparability of results year on year. As a result, all significant costs or income relating to this programme have been treated as an adjustment to profit, consistently period to period. This programme is expected to complete by the end of 2022. The cumulative net adjustments of these interlinked investment programmes has been £15.8m expense to 30 November 2021 of which £0.9m remains unpaid.
During the year this programme included the following costs and income:
Dual run related costs during the period (£1.0m), relate to costs associated with the new warehouse that is not yet fully operational but was acquired at the end of November 2020. These costs include items such as utilities, security and increased warehouse staff to test the new facility and to transfer inventory. Other dual run costs include IT costs (excluding configuration costs of SaaS licenses) being expensed that relate to running of IT systems not yet in use (£1.1m). During the period the Group disposed of one of the assets Held for Sale at 30 November 2020, which was a warehouse that will no longer be required following the estates strategy review. This warehouse sale generated proceeds of £3.2m and a profit after direct selling costs and costs of moving from the warehouse of £1.4m.
During the prior year this programme included the following costs and income:
The gain on sale of a held for sale asset, which was a warehouse that will no longer be required following the estates strategy review (£0.7m). An adjustment to restructuring costs that related to the warehouse disposal (£0.1m) that were originally provided in 2018 as an adjusting item. An inventory obsolescence charge for inventory that was not compliant with the new automated solution (£0.4m). Dual run IT costs (excluding configuration costs of SaaS licenses) being expensed that relate to running of IT systems not yet in use (£0.6m).
In addition to the warehouse programme, the Group believes the following items to be significantly large enough and unusual enough to impact the understanding of the performance of the group if not adjusted. In the year ended 30 November 2021, these items comprised:
The impairment of a right of use asset and onerous service charges relating to a leased office, which no longer meets our requirements following a change in working practises after the COVID-19 pandemic (£0.5m). The costs relating to the new replacement leased office that meets working practises requirements is included in the segmental results. The configuration and customisation costs relating to our ERP programme "Evolution", which represents a significant investment and would distort the understanding of the trading performance of the business including the comparability of results year on year if not adjusted. These costs total £8.3m.
During the year ended 30 November 2020 these items comprised:
The sale of our investment in Essex LEP (£0.7m). A material restructuring programme that spanned 3 months was announced and completed prior to the COVID-19 pandemic (£0.9m) relating to the RM Technology and RM Assessment businesses. An adjustment to the estimated liability of equalising our GMPs in our defined benefit schemes and was treated as an adjustment for consistency, period to period. This followed a Court ruling in 2020 relating to the valuation of transfer values (£0.2m). In 2018 a charge of £1.2m was treated as an adjusting item. Following the IFRIC interpretation in 2021 relating to the accounting treatment for configuration and customisation costs in a cloud computing arrangement the costs associated with our ERP programme have been restated (as set out in Note 14) and amount to £1.7m).
Net debt is the total of borrowings (£19.7m (2020: £4.8m)), cash at bank (£3.6m (2020: £5.9m)) and overdraft (£2.1m (2020: £2.5m)) which was £18.3m as at 30 November 2021 (2020: £1.3m). Lease liabilities of £20.9m (2020: £22.2m) are excluded from this measure as they are not included in the measurement of net debt for the purpose of covenant calculations.
Average net debt is calculated by taking the net debt on a daily basis and dividing by number of days.
The above adjustments that arise during the year have the following impact on the cash flow statement:
Year ended
30 November 2021
Year ended
30 November 2020
Restated
Restated
Restated
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
Statutory
Adjustments
Adjusted cash flows
Statutory
Adjustments
Adjusted cash flows
Profit before tax
5,618
11,483
17,101
9,528
4,519
14,047
Profit before operations
6,986
11,483
18,469
10,562
4,519
15,081
Net cash inflow from operating activities
3,792
8,917
12,709
19,397
3,511
22,908
Net cash used in investing activities
(11,759)
(3,214)
(14,973)
(2,279)
(4,460)
(6,739)
Net cash used in financing activities
6,026
-
6,026
(15,250)
-
(15,250)
Net increase in cash & cash equivalents
(1,941)
7,186
5,245
1,868
(949)
919
Adjusted cash conversion percentage is defined as adjusted cash inflow from operating activities as a percentage of adjusted profit before tax.
The adjustments have the following impact on key metrics:
Restated
Restated
Restated
2021
2021
2021
2020
2020
2020
Statutory measure
Adjustment
Adjusted measure
Statutory measure
Adjustment
Adjusted measure
Gross profit (£000)
70,633
-
70,633
73,965
365
74,330
Profit from operations (£000)
6,986
11,483
18,469
10,562
4,519
15,081
Operating margin (%)
3.0%
5.0%
9.0%
6.0%
2.0%
8.0%
Profit before tax (£000)
5,618
(11,483)
17,101
9,528
4,519
14,047
Tax (£000)
(1,424)
1,858
(3,282)
(1,893)
775
(2,668)
Profit after tax (£000)
4,194
9,625
13,819
7,635
(3,744)
11,379
Earnings per share (see Note 6)
Basic (Pence)
5.0
11.6
16.6
9.2
4.6
13.8
Diluted (Pence)
5.0
11.4
16.4
9.1
4.5
13.6
.
Adjusted operating profit is defined as the profit before operations excluding the adjustments referred to above. Operating margin is defined as the operating profit as a percentage of revenue.
3. Other income
Year ended
30 November 2021
Year ended
30 November 2020
£000
£000
Bank interest
24
21
Other finance income
4
-
28
21
4. Finance costs
Year ended
30 November 2021
Year ended
30 November 2020
Note
£000
£000
Borrowing facilities arrangement fees and commitment fees
462
469
Net finance costs on defined benefit pension scheme
13
254
83
Interest on lease of Right of Use assets
361
151
Interest on bank loans and overdrafts
319
352
1,396
1,055
5. Tax
a) Analysis of tax charge in the Consolidated Income Statement
Restated
Year ended
30 November 2021
Year ended
30 November 2020
£000
£000
Current taxation
UK corporation tax
442
1,450
Adjustment in respect of prior years
(58)
(305)
Overseas tax
(94)
391
Total current tax charge
290
1,536
Deferred taxation
Temporary differences
1,398
345
Adjustment in respect of prior years
(258)
21
Overseas tax
(6)
(9)
Total deferred charge
1,134
357
Total Consolidated Income Statement tax charge
1,424
1,893
b) Analysis of tax charge / (credit) in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income
Year ended
30 November 2021
Year ended
30 November 2020
£000
£000
UK corporation tax
Defined benefit pension scheme
(800)
(240)
Share based payments
(10)
(18)
Pension escrow account
(328)
(328)
Deferred tax
Defined benefit pension scheme movements
9,310
(2,408)
Defined benefit pension scheme escrow
328
297
Share based payments
42
66
Fair value movements of hedging instruments
45
3
Deferred tax relating to the change in rate
1,822
(223)
Total Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income tax charge /(credit)
10,409
(2,851)
c) Reconciliation of Consolidated Income Statement tax charge
The tax charge in the Consolidated Income Statement reconciles to the effective rate applied by the Group as follows:
Restated
Year ended 30 November 2021
Year ended 30 November 2020
Adjusted
Adjustments
Total
Adjusted
Adjustments
Total
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
Profit/(loss) on ordinary activities before tax
17,101
(11,483)
5,618
14,047
(4,519)
9,528
Tax at 19% (2020: 19%) thereon:
3,249
(2,182)
1,067
2,669
(859)
1,810
Effects of:
- change in tax rate on carried forward
deferred tax assets
(27)
788
761
(137)
391
254
- other expenses not deductible for tax purposes
(52)
-
(52)
187
(111)
76
- non-taxable gains
-
(266)
(266)
-
-
-
- other temporary timing differences
212
-
212
54
-
54
- effect of profits/losses in various overseas tax jurisdictions
18
-
18
53
-
53
- Prior period adjustments - UK
(60)
(198)
(258)
(158)
(196)
(354)
- Prior period adjustments - overseas
(58)
-
(58)
-
-
-
Tax charge/(credit) in the Consolidated Income Statement
3,282
(1,858)
1,424
2,668
(775)
1,893
d) Deferred tax
The Group has recognised deferred assets as these are anticipated to be recognised against future periods. The major deferred tax assets and liabilities recognised by the Group and the movements thereon are as follows:
Group
Accelerated tax depreciation
Defined
benefit pension scheme obligation
Share-based payments
Short-term timing differences
Acquisition related intangible assets
Total
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
At 1 December 2019
716
1,016
423
1,274
(3,328)
101
(Credit)/charge to income
(387)
-
162
(121)
(11)
(357)
(Charge)/ credit to other comprehensive income
-
2,527
(66)
(211)
-
2,250
At 30 November 2020
329
3,543
519
942
(3,339)
1,994
(Charge)/credit to income
(564)
-
(241)
77
(405)
(1,133)
(Charge)/ credit to other comprehensive income
-
(11,131)
(42)
(362)
-
(11,535)
At 30 November 2021
(235)
(7,588)
236
657
(3,744)
(10,674)
Certain deferred tax assets and liabilities have been offset above.
6. Earnings per share
Year ended 30 November 2021
Year ended 30 November 2020
Restated
Profit for
the year
Weighted average number of shares
Pence per share
Weighted average number of shares
Pence per share
£000
'000
£000
'000
Basic earnings per ordinary share
Basic earnings
4,194
83,150
5.0
7,635
82,576
9.2
Adjustments (see Note 2)
9,625
-
11.6
3,744
-
4.6
Adjusted basic earnings
13,819
83,150
16.6
11,379
82,576
13.8
Diluted earnings per ordinary share
Basic earnings
4,194
83,150
5.0
7,635
82,576
9.2
Effect of dilutive potential ordinary shares: share based payment awards
-
1,302
(0.0)
-
888
(0.1)
Diluted earnings
4,194
84,452
5.0
7,635
83,464
9.1
Adjustments (see Note 2)
9,625
-
11.4
3,744
-
4.5
Adjusted diluted earnings
13,819
84,452
16.4
11,379
83,464
13.6
7. Dividends
Amounts recognised as distributions to equity holders were:
Year ended
30 November 2021
Year ended
30 November 2020
£000
£000
Final dividend for the year ended 30 November 2020 - 3.0p per share (2019: nil p)
2,497
-
Interim dividend for the year ended 30 November 2021 - 1.70 p per share (2020: nil p)
1,416
-
3,913
-
The proposed final dividend of 3.00p per share for the year ended 30 November 2021 was approved by the board on 14 February 2021. The dividend is subject to approval by Shareholders at the annual general meeting. The anticipated cost of this dividend is £2,481,000.
8. Trade and other receivables
Restated
2021
2020
£000
£000
Current
Financial assets
Trade receivables
21,792
22,907
Other receivables
1,629
1,751
Derivative financial instruments
164
-
Accrued income from customer contracts
2,667
1,744
26,252
26,402
Non-financial assets
Prepayments
7,613
5,073
33,865
31,475
Non-current
Financial assets
Other receivables
82
63
82
63
33,947
31,538
9. Trade and other payables
2021
2020
£000
£000
Current liabilities
Financial liabilities
Trade payables
21,277
20,620
Lease liabilities
3,125
4,067
Other taxation and social security
4,603
6,847
Other payables
2,893
2,503
Derivative financial instruments
-
76
Accruals
15,444
10,740
47,342
44,853
Non-financial liabilities
Deferred income from customer contracts
14,027
16,638
61,369
61,491
Non-current liabilities
Financial liabilities
Lease liabilities
- due after one year but within two years
1,993
2,301
- due after two years but within five years
4,975
4,500
- after five years
10,835
11,346
Non-financial liabilities:
Deferred income from customer contracts:
- due after one year but within two years
1,496
1,356
- due after two years but within five years
1,138
1,309
- after five years
635
175
21,072
20,987
82,441
82,478
10. Borrowings
2021
2020
£000
£000
Bank loan
(20,000)
(5,000)
Add capitalised fees
256
221
Borrowings
(19,744)
(4,779)
Net debt is the total of borrowings, cash at bank and overdraft which was £18.3m as at 30 November 2021 (2020: £1.3 m).
11. Provisions
Dilapidations & onerous lease
Employee-related restructuring
Contract risk provisions
Total
Group
£000
£000
£000
£000
At 1 December 2019
853
2,220
2,380
5,453
Utilisation of provisions
-
(2,284)
-
(2,284)
Release of provisions
-
-
(525)
(525)
Increase in provisions
381
1,092
314
1,787
Impact of foreign exchange
2
-
-
2
At 30 November 2020
1,236
1,028
2,169
4,433
Utilisation of provisions
(90)
(80)
(358)
(528)
Release of provisions
-
(33)
(806)
(839)
Increase in provisions
316
-
170
486
Impact of foreign exchange
(12)
1
-
(11)
At 30 November 2021
1,450
916
1,175
3,541
Employee-related restructuring provisions refer to costs arising from restructuring to meet the future needs of the Group. As described in Note 2, the Group is undergoing an estates review and in 2020 £0.1m of the utilisation related to this programme. A separate restructuring programme was announced in December 2019 and completed during the prior year with £0.1m paid in 2021. The remaining restructuring provision is expected to be utilised during 2022 as we complete the estates strategy.
Contract risk provisions includes items not covered by any other category of which the most significant items are the risk provisions from ended long term contracts. During 2021, the release of £806,000 (2020: £525,000) primarily relates to onerous contract risks that have either been re-negotiated or terminated during the year and the increase in provisions relate to new contract risks identified in the year. During 2021 the Group utilised part of an onerous contract provision and was able to release the remaining provision on contract re-negotiation.
During the year the Group decided to leave one property that was no longer suitable in a post COVID environment requiring collaborative working and have expensed an onerous lease provision of £104,000. Dilapidations increased by £212,000 during the year and arise from an updated surveyors report on one lease.
12. Share capital
Ordinary shares of 22/7p
'000
£000
Allotted, called-up and fully paid:
At 30 November 2019, 2020 and 2021
83,875
1,917
13. Defined benefit schemes
a. Defined contribution scheme
The Group operates or contributes to a number of defined contribution schemes for the benefit of qualifying employees. The assets of these schemes are held separately from those of the Company. The total cost charged to income of £2,255,000 (2020: £2,861,000) represents contributions payable to these schemes by the Group at rates specified in employment contracts. At 30 November 2021 £257,000 (2020: £223,000) due in respect of the current financial year had not been paid over to the schemes.
b. Local government pension schemes
The Group has TUPE employees who retain membership of local government pension schemes. The Group makes payments to these schemes for current service costs in accordance with its contractual obligations. The total costs charged to income for these schemes was £165,000 (2020: £157,000). The amount due in respect of these schemes at 30 November 2021 was £77,000 (2020: £75,000). The balance sheet liability is included within provisions and incorporates information from over 17 local government pension schemes. The provision is calculated by reference to the latest published triennial valuations and the Group discloses the net position of the Group's share of assets and liabilities.
There is judgment in determining the appropriate accounting treatment for the participation in these schemes as either a defined benefit or defined contribution scheme, in particular as to whether actuarial and investment risk fall in substance on the Company.
c. Defined benefit pension schemes
The Group has both defined benefit and defined contribution pension schemes. There are three defined benefit pension schemes.
The Research Machines plc 1988 Pension Scheme (RM Scheme)
The Scheme provides benefits to qualifying employees and former employees of RM Education Limited, but was closed to new members with effect from 1 January 2003 and closed to future accrual of benefits from 31 October 2012. The assets of the Scheme are held separately from RM Education Limited's assets in a trustee-administered fund. The Trustee is a limited company. Directors of the Trustee company are appointed by RM Education Ltd and by members. The Scheme is a funded scheme.
Under the Scheme, employees were entitled to retirement benefits of 1/60th of final salary for each qualifying year on attainment of retirement age of 60 or 65 years and additional benefits based on the value of individual accounts. No other post-retirement benefits were provided by the Scheme.
The most recent actuarial valuation of Scheme assets and the present value of the defined benefit obligation was carried out for statutory funding purposes at 31 May 2018 by a qualified independent actuary. IAS 19 Employee Benefits (revised) liabilities at 30 November 2021 have been rolled forward based on this valuation's base data.
As at 31 May 2018, the triennial valuation for statutory funding purposes showed a deficit of £40,600,000 (31 May 2015: £41,800,000). The Group agreed with the Scheme Trustees that it will repay this amount via deficit catch-up payments of £3,700,000 per annum until 31 May 2026. The triennial valuation as at 31 May 2021 is in progress but not yet finalised.
At 30 November 2020 there were amounts outstanding of £308,300 (2020: £308,000) for one month's deficit payment and £nil (2020: £nil) for Scheme expenses.
The parent company RM plc has entered into a pension protection fund compliant guarantee in respect of scheme liabilities. No liability has been recognised for this within the Company as the Directors consider that the likelihood of it being called upon is remote.
The Consortium CARE scheme (CARE scheme)
Until 31 December 2005, The Consortium for Purchasing and Distribution Ltd ("The Consortium", acquired by the Company on 30 June 2017 and now RM Educational Resources Ltd) operated a pension scheme (the "Consortium CARE" scheme) providing benefits on both a defined benefit (final salary-linked) and a defined contribution basis. From 1 January 2006, the defined benefit (final salary- linked) and defined contribution sections were closed and all employees, subject to the eligibility conditions set out in the Trust Deed and Rules, joined a new defined benefit (Career Average Revalued Earnings) section. From 28 February 2011 the scheme was closed to future accruals.
The most recent actuarial valuation of Scheme assets and the present value of the defined benefit obligation was carried out for statutory funding purposes at 31 December 2019 by a qualified independent actuary. IAS 19 Employee Benefits (revised) liabilities at 30 November 2021 have been rolled forward based on this valuation's base data.
As at 31 December 2019, the triennial valuation for statutory funding purposes showed a deficit of £5.9m. The Group agreed with the Scheme Trustees that it will repay this amount via deficit catch-up payments of £703,000 per annum until 31 December 2028. The triennial valuation as at 31 May 2021 is in progress but not yet finalised.
Prudential Platinum Pension (Platinum scheme)
The Consortium acquired West Mercia Supplies in April 2012 (prior to the Company acquiring The Consortium). Upon acquisition by The Consortium of West Mercia Supplies, a pension scheme (the Platinum scheme) was set up providing benefits on both a defined benefit (final salary-linked) and a defined contribution basis for West Mercia employees. The most recent full actuarial valuation was carried out by the independent actuaries XPS Pensions Group on 31 December 2018. The results of the full valuation were adjusted and rolled forward to form the basis for the current year valuation. The scheme is administered within a legally separate trust from The Consortium and the Trustees are responsible for ensuring that the correct benefits are paid, that the scheme is appropriately funded and that the scheme assets are appropriately invested. The valuation of the scheme at 31 December 2018 was a surplus of £213,000 (31 December 2015: deficit £70,000).
Amounts recognised in the Income Statement and in the Statement of Comprehensive Income
Year ended 30 November 2021
Year ended 30 November 2020
Note
£000
£000
Administrative expenses and taxes
(52)
(7)
Current service costs
-
(30)
Operating expense
(52)
(37)
Interest cost
(4,827)
(5,611)
Interest on Scheme assets
4,573
5,528
Net interest expense
9
(254)
(83)
Past service cost
-
(350)
Expense recognised in the Income Statement
(306)
(470)
Effect of changes in demographic assumptions
620
(406)
Effect of changes in financial assumptions
(3,203)
(44,944)
Effect of experience adjustments
847
2,197
Total actuarial losses
(1,736)
(43,153)
Return on Scheme assets excluding interest on Scheme assets
46,596
26,851
Income/ (expense) recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income
44,860
(16,302)
Income/ (expense) recognised in Total Comprehensive Income
44,554
(16,772)
The effect of changes in financial assumptions is principally due to the reduction in the discount rate. The strong returns on assets over the period are largely as a result of the ongoing market recovery following the COVID-19 pandemic. In particular the RM Scheme invests significantly in return-seeking assets such as global equities which have seen very strong returns. The effect of strong equity returns coupled with the Scheme's high levels of hedging have had a positive impact on the assets over the year.
Reconciliation of the Scheme assets and obligations through the year
RM scheme
CARE scheme
Platinum scheme
Year ended 30 November 2021
Year ended 30 November 2020
£000
£000
£000
£000
£000
Assets
At start of year
268,149
15,918
2,994
287,061
257,164
Interest on Scheme assets
4,285
240
48
4,573
5,528
Return on Scheme assets excluding interest on Scheme assets
44,910
1,631
55
46,596
26,851
Administrative expenses
-
-
(52)
(52)
(7)
Contributions from Group
3,700
696
54
4,450
4,094
Contributions from employees
-
-
-
-
6
Benefits paid
(4,322)
(627)
(38)
(4,987)
(6,575)
At end of year
316,722
17,858
3,061
337,641
287,061
Obligations
At start of year
(280,888)
(22,497)
(2,329)
(305,714)
(263,139)
Interest cost
(4,460)
(331)
(36)
(4,827)
(5,611)
Actuarial (losses)
(1,152)
(342)
(242)
(1,736)
(43,153)
Benefits paid
4,322
626
39
4,987
6,575
Past service cost (GMP)
-
-
-
-
(350)
Current service costs
-
-
-
-
(30)
Contributions from employees
-
-
-
-
(6)
At end of year
(282,178)
(22,544)
(2,568)
(307,290)
(305,714)
Pension deficit
-
(4,686)
-
(4,686)
(19,318)
Pension surplus
34,544
-
493
35,037
665
Net pension surplus/ (deficit)
34,544
(4,686)
493
30,351
(18,653)
Included within the CARE Scheme obligations is an unfunded liability of £161,000 (2020: £183,000) which is a liability of the Group and not the Scheme.
Reconciliation of net defined benefit obligation
Year ended 30 November 2021
Year ended 30 November 2020
£000
£000
Net obligation at the start of the year
(18,653)
(5,975)
Cost included in Income Statement
(306)
(470)
Scheme remeasurements included in the Statement of Comprehensive Income
44,860
(16,302)
Cash contribution
4,450
4,094
Net pension surplus / (deficit)
30,351
(18,653)
Obligation by participant status
Year ended 30 November 2021
Year ended 30 November 2020
£000
£000
Active
1,611
1,463
Vested deferreds
243,139
254,650
Retirees
62,540
49,601
307,290
305,714
Value of Scheme assets
Fair Value hierarchy
Year ended 30 November 2021
Year ended 30 November 2020
£000
£000
Cash and cash equivalents, including escrow
Level 1
542
1,629
Equity instruments
Level 1
129,809
111,373
Equity instruments
Level 2
27,529
24,174
Debt instruments
Level 2
3,061
2,995
Liability driven investments
Level 2
150,147
117,486
Insurance contract
Level 3
26,553
29,404
337,641
287,061
Significant actuarial assumptions
Year ended 30 November 2021
Year ended 30 November 2020
Discount rate (RM scheme)
1.75%
1.60%
Discount rate (CARE scheme)
1.75%
1.50%
Discount rate (Platinum scheme)
1.75%
1.60%
Rate of RPI price inflation
3.15%
2.90%
Rate of CPI price inflation - period before 1 January 2030
2.15%
2.10%
Rate of CPI price inflation - period after 1 January 2030
3.15%
2.10%
Rate of salary increases (Platinum scheme)
NA
NA
Rate of pensions increases
pre 6 April 1997 service
1.50%
1.50%
pre 1 June 2005 service
2.90%
2.80%
post 31 May 2005 service
2.05%
2.00%
Post retirement mortality table
S2PA CMI 2020 1.25%
S2PA CMI 2019 1.25%
Weighted average duration of defined benefit obligation
24 years
23 years
Assumed life expectancy on retirement at age 65:
Retiring at the accounting date (male member aged 65)
21.9
22.4
Retiring in 20 years after the accounting date (male member aged 45)
23.3
23.7
14. Restatement for change in accounting policy
In April 2021, an IFRIC agenda decision was issued in relation to the accounting treatment for configuration and customisation costs in a cloud computing arrangement. This guidance clarified that in order for an intangible asset to be capitalised in relation to customisation and configuration costs in a software-as-a service (SaaS) arrangement, it is necessary for there to be control of the underlying software asset or for there to be a separate intangible asset which meets the definition in IAS 38 Intangible Assets. The Group's previous policy was to capitalise such customisation and configuration costs.
Our major investment IT systems programme, known as Evolution, is predominately is using SaaS arrangements and third party implementation partners to improve our systems and processes. Configuration and associated activity costs which had been previously capitalised during 2019 (£2.0m) and 2020 (£2.3m) will now be expensed following the IFRIC interpretation. The impairment charge expensed in 2020 of £0.7m relating to 2019 costs (now expensed), will be reversed. As the costs are material and do not relate to underlying trading, all Evolution Programme costs expensed through the Income Statement in both 2020 and 2021 will be disclosed as "Adjustments" in the financial statements and therefore not included within the Group's adjusted profit figures. These adjustments will include certain dual run costs such as the SaaS licenses themselves (prior to operational use of the system to which the licenses relate), training relating to the Evolution programme, data migration activities and other operating costs that were not previously capitalised (2020: £611,000 reclassified to adjusting expenses (see Note 2)).
In addition, as part of the strategy review currently underway the Directors consider that certain activities previously classified as Research and Development administration expenses and certain selling and distribution administration activities are more appropriately classified as Cost of Sales. Therefore for the year ended 30 November 2020, we have reclassified £0.1m from administration activities (£5.1m from R&D and £1.7m from selling & distribution) to cost of sales. This has had no impact on the operating profit reported.
These adjustments have the following impact on the primary statements for the year ended 30 November 2020:
Year ended 30 November 2020
Consolidated Income Statement
As reported
Restatement Impact
Restated
£000
£000
£000
Revenues
188,999
-
188,999
Cost of Sales
(115,034)
(6,882)
(121,916)
Gross Profit
73,965
(6,882)
67,083
Operating expenses
(61,489)
5,216
(56,273)
Impairment losses
(953)
705
(248)
Profit from operations
11,523
(961)
10,562
Investment income
21
21
Finance costs
(1,055)
(1,055)
Profit before tax
10,489
(961)
9,528
Tax
(2,075)
182
(1,893)
Profit for the year
8,414
(779)
7,635
Year ended 30 November 2020
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income
As reported
Restatement Impact
Restated
£000
£000
£000
Profit for the year
8,414
(779)
7,635
Other comprehensive income
(13,310)
-
(13,310)
Total comprehensive (expense)
(4,896)
(779)
(5,675)
Year ended 30 November 2020
Consolidated Balance Sheet
As reported
Restatement Impact
Restated
£000
£000
£000
Non-current assets
Goodwill
49,322
-
49,322
Intangible assets
22,354
(3,338)
19,016
Property, plant and equipment
8,423
-
8,423
Right of Use asset
19,391
-
19,391
Defined Benefit Pension Scheme surplus
665
-
665
Other receivables
63
-
63
Contract fulfilment assets
3,420
-
3,420
Deferred tax assets
5,333
-
5,333
108,971
(3,338)
105,633
Current assets
Inventories
18,594
-
18,594
Trade and other receivables
31,317
158
31,475
Contract fulfilment assets
728
-
728
Held for sale asset
4,793
-
4,793
Tax assets
2,030
603
2,633
Cash at bank
5,941
-
5,941
63,403
761
64,164
Total assets
172,374
(2,577)
169,797
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables
(61,491)
-
(61,491)
Tax liabilities
(163)
-
(163)
Provisions
(435)
-
(435)
Overdraft
(2,480)
-
(2,480)
(64,569)
-
(64,569)
Net current (liabilities) /assets
(1,166)
761
(405)
Non-current liabilities
Other payables
(20,987)
-
(20,987)
Provisions
(3,998)
-
(3,998)
Deferred tax liability
(3,339)
-
(3,339)
Defined Benefit Pension Scheme obligation
(19,318)
-
(19,318)
Borrowings
(4,779)
-
(4,779)
(52,421)
-
(52,421)
Total liabilities
(116,990)
-
(116,990)
Net assets
55,384
(2,577)
52,807
Equity attributable to shareholders
Share capital
1,917
-
1,917
Share premium account
27,080
-
27,080
Own shares
(841)
-
(841)
Capital redemption reserve
94
-
94
Hedging reserve
(65)
-
(65)
Translation reserve
(702)
-
(702)
Retained earnings
27,901
(2,577)
25,324
Total equity
55,384
(2,577)
52,807
Year ended 30 November 2020
Consolidated Cash Flow Statement
As reported
Restatement Impact
Restated
£000
£000
£000
Profit before tax
10,489
(960)
9,529
Investment income
(21)
-
(21)
Finance costs
1,055
-
1,055
Profit from operations
11,523
(960)
10,563
Adjustments for:
Pension GMP
170
-
170
Amortisation and impairment of intangible assets
3,778
(740)
3,038
Depreciation and impairment of property, plant and equipment
3,718
-
3,718
(Gain) on disposal of other asset
(713)
-
(713)
(Gain)/ loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment
(949)
-
(949)
(Gain) on foreign exchange derivatives
(625)
-
(625)
Share-based payment charge
705
-
705
Increase/(decrease) in provisions
1,443
-
1,443
Defined Benefit Pension Scheme administration cost
37
-
37
Operating cash flows before movements in working capital
19,087
(1,700)
17,387
Decrease /(increase) in inventories
3,557
-
3,557
Decrease in receivables
2,520
(158)
2,362
(Increase) in contract fulfilment assets
(1,111)
-
(1,111)
Movement in payables
- increase/ (decrease) in trade and other payables
6,012
-
6,012
- utilisation of provisions
(2,284)
-
(2,284)
Cash generated from operations
27,781
(1,858)
25,923
Defined benefit pension scheme cash contributions
(4,094)
-
(4,094)
Tax paid
(2,589)
-
(2,589)
Net cash inflow from operating activities
21,098
(1,858)
19,240
Investing activities
Interest received
21
-
21
Proceeds on disposal of investment asset
1,560
-
1,560
Proceeds on disposal of property, plant and equipment
2,900
-
2,900
Purchases of property, plant and equipment
(5,801)
-
(5,801)
Purchases of other intangible assets
(2,660)
1,858
(802)
Net cash used in investing activities
(3,980)
1,858
(2,122)
Financing activities
(Repayment)/ drawdown of borrowings
(12,000)
-
(12,000)
Borrowing facilities arrangement and commitment fees
(226)
-
(226)
Interest paid
(501)
-
(501)
Payment of leasing liabilities
(2,523)
-
(2,523)
Net cash (used in)/ generated by financing activities
(15,250)
-
(15,250)
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents
1,868
-
1,868
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the year
1,528
-
1,528
Effect of foreign exchange rate changes
65
-
65
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year
3,461
-
3,461
ISIN: GB00BJT0FF39 Category Code: FR TIDM: RM. LEI Code: 2138005RKUCIEKLXWM61 OAM Categories: 1.1. Annual financial and audit reports Sequence No.: 142967 EQS News ID: 1280454
End of Announcement EQS News Service