Company Announcements

Mid Wynd International Investment Trust Plc - Annual Financial Report

 

Mid Wynd International Investment Trust plc ('the Company')

Legal Entity Identifier: 549300D32517C2M3A561

 

Annual Financial Results for the year ended 30 June 2025

Financial Highlights

 

Returns for the year ended 30 June 2025

 


                             Year ended   Year ended         21 months ended

                             30 June 2025 30 June 2024       30 June 20252

Total returns

Net asset value per ordinary (5.1)%       13.9%              8.1%
share1

Share price1                 (5.9)%       17.1%              7.0%

MSCI All Country World Index 7.2%         20.1%              27.9%
(GBP)

                                          Year ended         Year ended

                                          30 June 2025       30 June 2024

Revenue and dividends

Revenue earnings per share                5.54p              8.00p

Dividends per share3                      8.35p              8.00p

Ongoing charges1                          0.64%              0.60%

                                          As at 30 June 2025 As at 30 June 2024

Capital

Net asset value per share                 760.96p            810.22p

Share price                               742.00p            797.00p

Net cash1                                 1.3%               1.4%

Discount1                                 2.5%               1.6%



 

Source: Juniper, LSEG Datastream.

1 Alternative Performance Measure.

2 Performance under Lazard appointed as Investment Manager with effect from 1 October 2023.

3 A final dividend, if approved by shareholders, for the year to 30 June 2025 of 4.35 pence will be paid on 7 November 2025 to shareholders on the register at the close of business on 10 October 2025 (2024: final dividend of 4.15 pence). Together with the interim dividend paid of 3.85 pence, this will result in a total dividend paid of 8.35 pence for the year ended 30 June 2025 (2024: total ordinary dividend of 8.00 pence being an interim dividend of 3.85 pence together with the final dividend of 4.15 pence).

 


Total returns to 30 June 2025       1 year 3 years2 5 years2 10 years2

Net asset value per ordinary share1 (5.1)% 14.2%    31.3%    164.5%

Share price1                        (5.9)% 11.3%    28.3%    152.5%

MSCI All Country World Index (GBP)  7.2%   43.2%    71.0%    197.5%



 

Source: LSEG Datastream, total returns with dividends reinvested.

1 Alternative Performance Measure.

2 Total returns over 3, 5 and 10 years covers the period over which Artemis Fund Managers Limited (`Artemis') was the Company's Investment Manager, from 1 May 2014 to 30 September 2023.

 

 

 

Strategic Report

 

Chairman's Statement

 

This is my first report as Chairman of the Company, and it is disappointing to be reporting a significant degree of underperformance in the past year. Indeed, since Lazard, our new Investment Manager, took over management of the Trust on 1 October 2023, their quality growth style has been out of favour with the market. This is such that in the year ended 30 June 2025, despite our investee companies growing their earnings per share more than the comparator index and generating considerably higher cash flow returns on capital invested than the comparator index, the good growth and performance of the underlying portfolio (which are clearly seen in exhibit 1 in the Investment Manager's Review in the Annual Financial Report) have been exceeded by stock market deratings.

 

Investment performance

 

For the year ended 30 June 2025 the Company's share price decreased by 5.9% on a total return basis (with dividends assumed to be re-invested). This compares to a total return from the comparator index, the MSCI All Country World Index (GBP), of +7.2%. The Company's net asset value (`NAV') per share decreased by 5.1% on a total return basis. Further details on the performance of the Company during the period under review and the composition of the portfolio are included in the Investment Manager's Review.

 

Earnings and dividend

 

The net loss for the year ended 30 June 2025 was 43.54 pence per share, comprising a revenue gain of 5.54 pence and a capital loss of 49.08 pence. Net revenue return per share decreased by 31% on last year's revenue return per share, largely because 2024/25 was the first complete financial year under the new Investment Manager. As outlined in last year's Annual Financial Report, the decline in dividend income and hence net revenue was expected and reflects Lazard's focus on investing in companies which reinvest a higher proportion of their cashflow into their business, so that the portfolio can benefit from the compounding benefits of high internal rates of return. This means that in the current year and future years the Board will use the revenue reserves and, if required, the capital reserve to maintain or to grow the dividend.  

 

Since its inception in 2011, the Global Quality Growth strategy implemented by our Investment Manager has consistently produced an annual growth in investee company dividends. We would expect revenue growth such that the current use of reserves to cover the dividend should not continue for a prolonged period.

 

The Board is proposing a final dividend of 4.50 pence per share which, subject to approval by shareholders at the Annual General Meeting (`AGM'), will be paid on 7 November 2025 to those shareholders on the register at the close of business on 10 October 2025. An interim dividend of 3.85 pence per share was paid in March 2025 and so, together with the proposed final dividend, gives growth of the ordinary dividend of 4.4% over the prior year. This growth in the total dividend is above UK inflation over the period.

 

The Ongoing Charges Ratio (`OCR') for the year ended 30 June 2025 marginally increased to 0.64% of average net assets. This is predominantly due to the reduction of net assets as a result of the effective operation of our discount control mechanism as well as the poor performance.

 

Share capital and discount management

 

The sustained programme of buybacks undertaken by the Company since early 2023 continued throughout the year under review. The Company's policy, within normal market conditions, is to issue and repurchase shares where necessary to maintain the share price within a 2% band relative to the NAV. The Company's NAV is assessed on a real time basis when buying or selling the Company's shares using modelling that updates live prices and exchange rates to provide the most accurate valuation.

 

Our buybacks have been successful in maintaining a low discount to NAV for our share price. As at 30 June 2025 the share price stood at a 2.5% discount to NAV and the average discount during the year was 2.0%. These discounts compare favourably with the weighted average discount of the AIC's `Global' sector, of which the Company is a member, which averaged 8.7% during the year and stood at 7.5% as at the year end.

 

During the year to 30 June 2025, the Company bought back 9.47 million shares, representing 19% of the issued share capital at the start of the year (excluding treasury shares), at a total cost of £73.1 million (including costs) and an average discount of 2%. These share buybacks were accretive to net asset value for existing shareholders, enhancing the NAV total return by approximately £1.6 million, equivalent to 68% of the Company's annual operating expenses.

 

The discount control mechanism has a long history of success and shareholders regularly comment that they strongly support the Board's position on discount and premium management. To this end, to ensure that the Company maximises its ability to maintain the discount management mechanism, a General Meeting was held on 21 May 2025, at which the proposed cancellation of the Company's share premium account and creation of a special distributable reserve was approved by 99.9% of shares voted, (and subsequently approved by the Court of Session). At the same time, the proposal to replenish the Company's authority to buy back shares was approved by 91.8% of shares voted.

 

Since the year end and up until 5 September 2025, being the latest practicable time before the printing of this Annual Financial Report, the Company has bought back a further 3,643,000 shares at a total cost of £27,882,000. Since the Company started buying back shares in July 2023 up until 5 September 2025, the Company has repurchased 25,612,096 shares, representing 41.1% of the issued share capital at the start of the buyback programme and spent a total of £193,739,000 in repurchasing shares.

 

The rate of buybacks continues to be such that in order to ensure the Company has sufficient capacity to maintain the discount control mechanism until the date of the 2025 AGM (when new allotment and buyback authorities will be sought), a further General Meeting was held on 28 August 2025 at which a resolution to replenish the Company's buyback authority to cover the period until the 2025 AGM, was approved by 96.1% of shares voted.

 

All shares repurchased by the Company under the discount control mechanism are held in Treasury and the Board remains optimistic that investor sentiment will improve to such a point that the Company will have the opportunity once more to issue shares out of Treasury at a premium to NAV and thus at an advantage to existing shareholders.

 

Board succession

 

On 23 October 2024, Russell Napier stepped down as the Chairman and retired from the Board and I assumed the role of Chair. We are hugely grateful for his wise counsel and effective leadership. As reported in the previous Annual Report, the Board began a process to appoint a new Director in early 2024. Following a rigorous process, completed with the services of an external search agent, Anulika Malomo was appointed as an independent non - executive Director on 24 October 2024. Anulika brings extensive investment experience to the Board and has already made a positive contribution.

 

Shareholder engagement and communications

 

At a time when an increasing number of shareholders would like to engage with their investee companies in a wide variety of ways, the Directors have striven to improve our shareholder communication and marketing strategies. We believe that keeping existing shareholders fully informed and attracting new investors are key to the Company's long term health. Details of how the Board approaches this are available on page 42 of the Annual Financial Report. Some of the highlights in terms of developments this year include:  

 

    --  An overhaul of the Company's website
    --  Contacting all registered shareholders and inviting them to sign up for
        regular updates
    --  Increasing the production of digital and video content
    --  Presenting on a number of third party webinars and podcasts
    --  Producing informative and interesting content on the Company's
        investment strategy

 

If you have not already done so we would encourage you to sign up for updates using the QR code at the back of the Annual Financial Report, in order to benefit from ongoing improvements in this area.

 

The Board is always keen to hear from shareholders and, should you wish, you can contact me through Juniper Partners Limited, the Company Secretary, at cosec@junipartners.com .

 

Annual General Meeting

 

The Board looks forward to welcoming shareholders to the AGM which will be held at 12.00 noon on 16 October 2025 at the offices of Juniper Partners Limited, 28 Walker Street, Edinburgh, EH3 7HR. As well as the formal business of the meeting, the Investment Manager will deliver a short presentation and the Directors will be available to answer any shareholder questions. Irrespective of whether you are able to attend the AGM in person, the Board would strongly encourage you to make use of your proxy votes, and any questions may be submitted in advance of the AGM to the Company Secretary at cosec@junipartners.com. I would also remind those shareholders whose shareholding is held via a platform or nominee that it is possible to obtain a letter of representation from your provider that will allow you to vote your holding in person.

 

Outlook

 

Uncertainties and dangers abound. The geopolitical environment continues to be uncertain and shifting tariffs may cause further market dislocations. In such conditions, it is important to focus attention on the quality of the Company's investments. The Investment Manager's report summarises the characteristics of the Company's investments which give them a large degree of protection from market related headwinds, and which did indeed enable portfolio companies to grow during the last year. Whilst our portfolio companies have suffered from the style shift away from quality companies, such shifts in sentiment do not generally last for long periods. The Investment Manager's approach is designed to generate good returns for shareholders over the long term, and the Board is pleased that the Investment Manager has maintained its investment style and focus. The Company's investments are currently being held at remarkably attractive valuations, and the Board is optimistic that the coming year will bring a significant improvement in both absolute and relative performance.

 

The Board respects and is grateful for the considerable patience shown by shareholders.

 

David Kidd

Chairman

10 September 2025

 

Investment Manager's Review

 

Overview

 

The Company's NAV fell by 5.1% and the Company's share price fell by 5.94% between 1 July 2024 and 30 June 2025. Since Lazard assumed management for the Company assets, performance has been far below what we, and shareholders of Mid Wynd, would have expected. We apologise for that. We recognise we have made some mistakes with individual stocks, but we believe these do not fully explain the disappointing performance. 1

 

As you would imagine, we have spent considerable time trying to understand why this has happened and whether we need to refine an approach that has worked so well for us in the past. Our approach is to focus on "Quality" stocks - great companies that produce returns well above the cost of capital and therefore have the resources to reinvest in maintaining their competitive edge. This philosophy is reflected in the portfolio. The portfolio's return on capital, based on our preferred metric Cash Flow Return on Investment (CFROI), was 23.3%, more than three times the 7.4% CFROI of the MSCI All Country World Index 2 . Over the previous twelve months, portfolio earnings grew 12.0% and operating cash flow grew 15.0%. 3

 

Quality stocks have underperformed the market over the last year, and, unfortunately, the same applies to the stocks we held in the portfolio. Our analysis shows that, despite these companies continuing to deliver solid earnings growth over the period, these stocks have seen a meaningful derating of their valuation multiples relative to those of the market as a whole. The full analysis can be found within the Performance, Activity & Positioning section.

 

Be in no doubt, this is unusual. What we have just witnessed is the most significant relative derating in the valuation of these companies in at least the last 10 years. It has not been comfortable for us or our investors, but our conclusion is that high-quality stocks are now looking more attractively valued than they have been for most of the past decade. We continue to review our portfolio and ask hard questions, but our faith in Quality investing remains undimmed.

 

In short, we believe the current environment provides an excellent opportunity for long-term investors to invest in Quality businesses at unusually attractive valuations.

 

1 Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns.

2 As of 30 April 2025. Source: Lazard, UBS HOLT, MSCI, FactSet.

3 As of 30 June 2025. Source: Lazard, FactSet.

 

Market review

 

Global stock markets rose over the fiscal year (1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025) as risk appetites remained resilient despite pockets of uncertainty.

 

The market, as measured by the MSCI All Country World Index (`ACWI'), a broad global index, rose 7.2% in Pound sterling terms, has continued to be thematic over the last year as investor enthusiasm persisted for some artificial intelligence (`AI') related companies believed to have the potential to transform the economy. Although AI-exposed stocks came under pressure on the January news that Chinese startup DeepSeek had developed a lower-cost AI model that performed comparably to those created by its US Big Tech rivals, many of these companies subsequently rallied to new highs towards the end of the review period.

 

Geopolitical risks increased as the escalating war between Israel and Iran, which had drawn in the involvement of the US and its military, threatened to destabilise the region and disrupt global oil supplies. However, news of a ceasefire between Israel and Iran late in the period triggered a relief rally.

 

In the US, initial investor enthusiasm for the new administration's anticipated business-friendly policies was tempered by the country's push for higher import taxes. The early April rollout of US tariffs, including higher rates on goods from China, triggered a sharp sell-off in global markets, while China's subsequent reciprocal tariffs intensified the situation. However, the US's announcement of a 90-day pause in the implementation of these tariffs, followed by a truce between the US and China as they negotiated a trade deal, sparked a strong rally. Investors closely watched the US Federal Reserve's interest rate policy throughout the review period. After holding interest rates steady for nearly three years, the Fed began its highly anticipated monetary easing cycle in September 2024. The Fed has held interest rates steady year-to-date 2025, attributing its cautious approach to signs that the US economy remained strong, but that tariffs could spark inflation in the months ahead.

 

The central banks of the UK, Switzerland, Sweden, and Norway have all enacted rate cuts over the last year. In the eurozone, the European Central Bank (`ECB') also reduced rates. In June 2025, the ECB signalled that its rate-cutting cycle was near an end, as inflation in the common currency bloc had cooled materially. The central bank also stated that extra government spending on defence and infrastructure will increasingly support growth in the medium term.

 

In contrast, the Bank of Japan (`BOJ') has raised interest rates to their highest level since 2008 as it is grappling with rising inflation and a fragile economy weighed down by the potential impact of US tariffs. Elsewhere in Asia, China's central bank has cut interest rates and lowered bank lending barriers, and unveiled its largest stimulus package since the pandemic in an effort to address the country's faltering economy.

 

Performance, activity and positioning

 

Over the course of the last 12-months 4 , the Company's net asset value (`NAV') fell by 5.1% and the share price fell by 5.9%, both in Pound sterling terms. Shares traded at a discount to the NAV during this period, ending the period at a discount of 2.5%, which compares favourably with a discount of 7.5% for the Association of Investment Companies (`AIC') Global sector peer group.

 

As mentioned upfront in our Overview, our performance has been far below what we, and shareholders of Mid Wynd, would have expected, and we have spent considerable time trying to understand why this has happened and whether we need to refine an approach that has worked so well for us in the past 5 .

 

Our approach is to focus on "Quality" stocks - companies with strong fundamentals that can generate returns well above the cost of capital, providing them with the potential to reinvest in maintaining their competitive edge. This is reflected in the portfolio. The portfolio's return on capital, based on our preferred metric Cash Flow Return on Investment (CFROI), was 23.3%, more than three times the 7.4% CFROI of the MSCI All Country World Index 6 . Over the previous twelve months, portfolio earnings per share outgrew the MSCI ACWI. 7

 

The conclusion of our analysis is that overall, we appear to have been on the wrong side of changes in the multiple by the market. This derating has happened despite continued high returns on capital and strong earnings compounding by our companies, which we believe is what the market weighs over the long term. The operational performance of the companies we hold gives us the confidence to hold steadfastly to our approach, which has worked until the last few years, and we hope it will give shareholders that same confidence despite this difficult period.

 

By way of background to our analysis, Quality stocks on the whole have underperformed the broad market by approximately -1.8% in the second quarter, -4.0% calendar year to date, and -9.9% over the last 12-months. 8

 

While earnings of Quality stocks have held up reasonably well, as would be expected, their prices have declined i.e. their multiples have compressed relative to the broader market 9 .

 

We see the same trend reflected in the portfolio when examining our holdings. Decomposing returns between earnings and valuation over the last year, we find that while the median 8.9% increase in earnings estimates for portfolio holdings over the last year is moderately higher than that of the MSCI ACWI (8.6%), the portfolio has derated significantly, with the median price to earnings multiple declining 8.9% vs. the ACWI's multiple expanding 5.9% 10 .

 

We believe part of the derating over the last year is that high-quality stocks are perceived as most at-risk from the current trade tensions between the US and its economic partners, as they are more exposed to international trade. It is true that high-quality companies on average generate more of their revenue outside their domestic market than the average listed company, so on a very simplistic read of the impact of tariffs, these moves could make sense. However, we believe there are three factors this simplistic analysis misses:

 

  1. High-quality companies generally have strong barriers to competition and
     pricing power, which will mean the burden of tariffs will fall on their
     customers rather than their own margin structure.
  2. They tend to have high gross margins, which means they need to increase
     prices by far less to compensate for the tariff cost.
  3. They are generally quite defensive and perform better than their peers in
     difficult economic environments, which should be beneficial if the trade
     wars lead to a broader economic slowdown.

 

As a reminder, Quality as a style has outperformed Value, Growth and the broad market 11 for much of the last 25 years, generating positive relative returns in over 80% of rolling 3-year periods 12 .

 

For long-term investors, we believe the current environment provides an excellent opportunity to invest in high-quality businesses at unusually attractive valuations. We have just witnessed the most significant relative derating in the valuation of these companies in at least the last ten years, despite the fact that they have continued to deliver strong earnings growth. This has left high-quality stocks looking more attractively valued than they have been for most of the last decade.

 

While Quality companies have largely been overlooked by the market over the recent past, history tells us that the environment will change, and we believe Quality will reassert as an alpha source. We remain committed to owning the highest-quality companies globally and hope to report better relative performance results going forward.

 

4 1 July 2024 and 30 June 2025.

5 Note our investment philosophy has been validated by the work done by co-lead portfolio manager/analyst Louis Florentin-Lee in a long-term study of global financial markets. Please see Quality Investing for more details.

6 As of 30 April 2025. Source: Lazard, UBS HOLT, MSCI, MSCI, FactSet.

7 As of 30 June 2025. Source: Lazard, FactSet.

8 As of 30 June 2025. As defined by the MSCI All Country World Quality Index versus the MSCI All Country World Index. Source: Lazard, Bloomberg.

9 As of 30 June 2025. As defined by the MSCI All Country World Quality Index. Source: Lazard, Bloomberg.

10 For the period 30 June 2024 through 30 June 2025. EPS and PE are 12-Month Forward figures. Portfolio represented by the median stock.

Source: Lazard, Bloomberg.

11 MSCI AC World indices on a net total return in USD dollar terms. As of 30 June 2025. The performance quoted represents past performance. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. The indices mentioned are unmanaged and have no fees. One cannot invest directly in an index. Source: MSCI, FactSet.

12 As of 30 June 2025. Rolling 3-year returns calculated using monthly returns since 31 December 2000. All data is in USD. The performance quoted represents past performance. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. The indices mentioned are unmanaged and have no fees. One cannot invest directly in an index. Information and opinions presented have been obtained or derived from sources believed by Lazard to be reliable. Lazard makes no representation as to their accuracy or completeness. All opinions expressed herein are as of the published date and are subject to change. Source: MSCI, FactSet.

 

Key stock-level contributors to portfolio performance

 

The following stocks have been key contributors to the Company's absolute returns during the period covered in this report.

 

Five principal contributors

 


Company                                     Contribution to Total Return (%)

Amphenol                                    1.28

Dollarama                                   0.95

Visa                                        0.70

Intercontinental Exchange                   0.50

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (`TSMC') 0.50



 

Source: Lazard/FactSet.

Data in GBP and for the period from 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025.

 

    --  Amphenol is a diversified electrical connector and sensor maker. Company
        earnings have been driven by its solutions for AI datacenters, where it
        provides a critical component at low cost where performance and
        reliability are prioritised over price. Additionally, we are attracted
        to its capital discipline in consolidating fragmented markets.

 

    --  Dollarama,a Canadian discount retailer, has seen higher same-store sales
        growth and lower logistics costs. The company enjoys a dominant market
        position (its next four largest competitors have a combined store count
        that is only one-third of Dollarama's) and can reinvest cash flow into
        new stores and logistics efficiencies to further its competitive
        position.

 

    --  Visa,the global payments company, continues to generate a high level of
        financial productivity and has experienced both purchase volume and
        transaction growth. The company's brand and four-party ecosystem -
        card-issuing banks, consumers, merchants and merchant acquirers - serve
        as strong barriers to competition as digital payments increase.

 

    --  Intercontinental Exchangeoffers financial exchange services, fixed
        income data, and mortgage technology. The company has benefitted from
        positive volume trends. The futures business is tracking well, and the
        mortgage business appears set for new growth. The company's scale
        creates a barrier to new entrants, and the company can reinvest into
        adjacent capital light businesses.

 

    --  Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturingis a frontrunner in the leading-edge
        semiconductor manufacturing, and the company is seeing strong demand in
        highly complex chips required by AI developments. TSMC's economic moat
        is driven by a virtuous flywheel in which tech leadership drives market
        share gains, the subsequent scale fuels cost competitiveness and higher
        cash flows, which can then be reinvested in process innovation. For
        example, the company's investment in packaging technologies support
        increasingly complex chip designs.

 

Key stock-level detractors from portfolio performance

 

The following stocks have been key detractors from the Company's absolute returns during the period covered in this report.

 

Five principal detractors

 


Company                  Contribution to Total Return (%)

Apple                    (1.00)

Adobe                    (0.95)

Thermo Fisher Scientific (0.94)

IQVIA                    (0.90)

Alphabet                 (0.82)



 

Source: Lazard/FactSet.

Data in GBP and for the period from 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025.

 

    --  Apple remains the world's leading smartphone vendor. It benefits from a
        substantial installed base, the network effects of its iOS platform, and
        a diversified and growing high-margin revenue stream of software and
        services. We believe the market has overly discounted the impact of
        potential tariffs or Google Search royalties.

 

    --  Adobe, an established leader in digital transformation, should be a
        winner as AI is integrated into workflows, but the market seems to be
        concerned about the pace of AI-related revenues and low-end competition.
        We believe Adobe will be able to benefit from its leadership in core
        markets and innovation, which can drive double-digit earnings growth.
        Continued growth in content creation should generate increased need for
        the company's products, and Adobe's newly-introduced tiered pricing and
        AI monetisation levers should start to support growth.

 

    --  Thermo Fisher Scientific faced concerns that the new US administration's
        policies could impact academic, government, and R&D spending trends,
        while weaker demand in China was also a headwind. While the company
        reduced guidance, it emphasised its scale enables better navigation of
        these challenges and anticipates potential share gains. We hold Thermo
        Fisher as the company's portfolio of research products and development
        services provides a differentiated offering for customers, has
        attractive secular growth and financial characteristics, and is the
        market leader across very fragmented end markets.

 

    --  IQVIA the health information technology and clinical research provider,
        reporting strength in its Technology and Analytics Solutions segment,
        but management issued cautious guidance amid continued delays in its R&D
        Solutions segment and a challenging macro and regulatory environment. We
        remain confident in IQVIA's quality and resilience, particularly in its
        growing data business alongside its contract research organisation
        (`CRO') operations. We continue to like IQVIA's strong financial
        productivity, driven by solid revenue growth, consistent margin
        expansion, shrewd capital deployment, and a capital-light business
        model.

 

    --  Investors in Google-parent Alphabet debated the increased competitive
        risk and disruption to the company's core Search business as AI
        assistant/ chatbot/agent capabilities increasingly overlap with search
        use cases. Shares were also impacted by a negative Department of Justice
        ruling, higher than expected capex, and decelerating Cloud results. We
        continue to own the company as we believe in its technical expertise,
        competitive attributes, and potential to deliver financial returns over
        time. In our view, the company has many competitive attributes, the
        primary of which is centred on scale, and a strong position in AI given
        its large scale computing infrastructure, Gemini family of AI models,
        engineering talent, unique data, and distribution across its at least 15
        products with more than 500 million users. This creates potential upside
        optionality over time and can accelerate opportunity in areas like Cloud
        and Waymo.

 

Key sectoral and regional contributors to portfolio performance

 

As discussed above, our sectoral and regional exposures are driven by stock selection.

 

At the sectoral level, Financials and Consumer Discretionary contributed to total return. This was offset primarily by holdings in Health Care, Information Technology, and Industrials.

 

Sector contributions

 


Sector                 Contribution to Total Return (%)

Financials             1.83

Consumer Discretionary 0.31

Communication Services (0.25)

Consumer Staples       (0.35)

Industrials            (1.50)

Information Technology (1.91)

Health Care            (2.85)



 

Source: Lazard/FactSet.

Data in GBP and for the period from 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025.

 

At the regional level, holdings in Emerging Markets and Asia ex Japan made a positive contribution to performance. This was offset by headwinds in North America and Europe ex UK.

 

Regional contributions

 


Region           Contribution to Total Return (%)

Emerging Markets 0.97

Asia ex Japan    0.22

United Kingdom   0.00

Japan            (0.27)

Europe ex UK     (2.30)

North America    (3.34)



 

Source: Lazard/FactSet.

Defined by country of listing.

Data in GBP and for the period from 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025.

 

Our investment process

The search for Compounders

 

In light of the commentary so far, we thought it may be helpful to remind investors of our core investment principles. We manage the Company's portfolio in accordance with our Global Quality Growth strategy, which aims to invest in businesses we consider to be "Compounders".

 

We define a Compounder as a company we believe is capable of generating consistently high returns on capital and reinvesting in its business to drive future growth. This process should create a virtuous "compounding cycle" of wealth creation in which investors can share.

 

We believe the broader market undervalues Compounders because it adheres to the economic law of competition. This prescribes that high returns on capital attract competition, squeezing market share, driving down prices and resulting in an erosion of profitability. But we see plenty of real-world examples to show the theory does not work in practice.

 

In our view, Compounders have sustainable advantages that help them keep competitors at bay. Although the market assumes their profitability will fade, they deliver consistently high financial productivity for longer than expected.

 

As a result, investors who focus more on near-term earnings multiples rather than a company's long term earning power are likely to undervalue these exceptional businesses. This means that when these Compounders "beat the fade" they tend to beat the market, too.

 

We prefer to own Compounders for long periods to allow the compounding cycle to drive cash flows and share prices higher. This is reflected in the strategy's turnover, which during the past five years has averaged just 10%-15% annually - an approach that has also helped keep trading costs low.

 

Our investment process is reinforced by empirical research covering 25 years of markets and supported by Lazard's extensive fundamental research team of over 70 global sector specialists. Drawing on this expertise, we look to build a portfolio that is broadly diversified across sectors, regions and competitive advantages and which can generate attractive total returns for investors.

 

Portfolio activity: our process in practice

 

Although the average holding period for our Global Quality Growth strategy is between 7 and 10 years, we aim to take full advantage whenever the market gives us an opportunity. The following new buys and deeper dive "Stock in Focus" illustrate how we have applied this aspect of our investment process over the past twelve months.

 

We added Hilton Worldwide , a global hotel company with more than 8,000 hotels and more than 1.2 million rooms in its portfolio, to the Trust holdings. The company operates across more than 20 brands, including Hilton and Hampton, serving the premium economy through the luxury segments of consumers. Hilton operates an asset-light model with nearly three - quarters of rooms franchised, and as a result generates very high returns. The franchise business model allows independent hotel owners to operate under the Hilton brand name, systems, and support networks. The franchisees pay fees to Hilton, including an initial franchise fee, ongoing royalty fees (a percentage of gross revenue), and program fees. This business model allows Hilton to focus on brand marketing, loyalty programs, and faster, more efficient growth. Hotel industry supply and demand dynamics should remain favourable due to limited room supply in the next few years amid the tight financing environment, helping support pricing power. Hilton is planning for room growth of 6%-7% over the medium term, which is higher than other large peers. Large hotel operators such as Hilton enjoy a competitive advantage versus smaller peers as they can help franchisees secure more favourable financing. The company has been successful in organically rolling out new concepts to expand its family of brands. In particular, we see opportunity in business and group occupancy.

 

We also invested in Cadence System Designs , which designs and develops solutions required for semiconductors and electronic systems. The company operates in the Electronic Design Automation (`EDA') industry, and is also expanding into electronic design automation software, intellectual property (verification IP), and emulation hardware (enables a hardware piece to act like another). The company's solutions are integrated and used in every stage of design creation, implementation, verification, analysis and signoff from chips to printed circuit boards (`PCBs') to complete electromechanical systems. Cadence's designs, in combination with advances in semiconductor technology, optimise the power consumption of electronics while enabling significant performance increases across a wide array of clients, including data science and machine learning, 5G communications, automotive, mobile, aerospace, industrial and healthcare. We believe Cadence will benefit from higher unit growth with increasing chip designs and complexity, in addition the company can sustainably grow revenues while also expanding their operating margins.

 

We also purchased Diageo , a global producer and marketer of alcoholic beverages. The company has focused its portfolio on premium spirits in recent years, with strong positions in the most attractive spirits categories (tequila and whisky). It owns leading brands in most spirits categories, such as Johnnie Walker, Tanqueray, Don Julio, Casamigos, Smirnoff, and Baileys. We believe Diageo will benefit from its exposure to the global spirits industry, which offers an attractive growth rate driven by share gains from beer and wine in developed markets and per capita consumption growth in emerging markets. Diageo has also enhanced its portfolio over the last 5 years, with over 60% of sales at premium price points, driving higher margins and growth over time. Two-thirds of its business is brown or aged spirits, which are growing faster than other categories and provide the company with a competitive moat. These spirits often have strict requirements for aging and provenance (traceability), as well as large capital investment needs for distilling and distribution, which make it difficult for new entrants and cements Diageo's competitive advantage in the category. We believe the company's new Chief Financial Officer will be able to refocus the business's capital allocation strategy to drive improved margins and returns, providing further upside.

 

Stock in Focus

 

EssilorLuxottica (`EL') operates in the very attractive eyewear space (~25% market share). The company is the clear market leader in the manufacture of lenses, frames, and sunglasses, owns many of the biggest eyewear brands in the world, and distributes through the largest omnichannel network globally. EL also pioneers industry innovation and its impressive reinvestment allows it to create new products that have the potential to revolutionise eyewear and further reinforce barriers to competition. The company's main competitive advantages are:

 

    --  Scale and Dominance: EL has approximately 25% market share, making it
        five times larger than its next competitor. It is also the market leader
        in optician equipment, the largest distributor of contact lenses, and
        holds dominant market positions across the majority of eyewear
        categories (Lens, Frames, and Sunglasses). This scale gives EL
        significant expertise and the means for investment (e.g., marketing,
        R&D, M&A) versus smaller peers. EL is also well-diversified by
        geography, channel, product category, and price segment.

 

    --  Vertically Integrated across Value Chain: The company's business model
        is vertically integrated across the entire eyewear value chain, giving
        it speed, flexibility, and cost advantages. EL is also the only eyewear
        player with a fully integrated supply chain across both lenses and
        frames. Its supply chain dwarfs peers and is near impossible to
        replicate. With over 500 prescription labs and 100 distribution centres
        globally, EL generally has close proximity to its retail and wholesale
        networks, allowing for faster customer service and store replenishment.
        The breadth of EL's supply chain also creates more agility versus peers
        (e.g., the ability to shift production during COVID lockdowns quickly).

 

    --  Innovation and Brand: Innovation and brands are key to driving average
        selling price and building barriers against lower-cost entrants in the
        market. EL has more than 150 eyewear brands, including the two biggest
        eyewear brands in the world (#1 Ray-Ban and #2 Oakley) and notably
        Bolon, the #1 in China. EL is also the market-leading licensee for
        luxury brands (e.g., Prada, Chanel) and continues to add more licenses.
        The group has brand offerings across all price points, with its US
        online business "Eyebuydirect.com" offering $6 glasses, which is the
        lowest price in the industry and demonstrates EL's cost advantages.

 

EL is the innovation pioneer in the eyewear industry- with 50 R&D facilities and 13,000 patents. The company's R&D spend in lenses accounts for ~75% of the industry's total R&D, enabling EL to accelerate the cadence of product launches versus peers. Examples of innovations and growth opportunities include:

 

    --  Nuance Audio: These light and stylish glasses include an invisible
        hearing aid that amplifies sound through the frame and is controlled
        through an app. Nuance Audio addresses an untapped market of consumers
        with mild-to-moderate hearing loss (over 1 billion people globally).
        Individuals without hearing loss have purchased these glasses for use in
        loud environments, suggesting a larger market.
    --  Ray-Ban Meta: Through Ray-Ban, EL has developed smart glasses in
        conjunction with Meta. The glasses can receive calls, play music, take
        photos/videos, and live stream to social media all within the Ray-Ban
        frame. Despite a softer consumer demand environment, sales indications
        are very strong. The integrations with Meta's AI assistant and personal
        computing capabilities could dramatically change the addressable market.
    --  EL is also developing eye tracking technology, whereby the glasses can
        identify potential neurological health issues (e.g., early signs of
        stroke), meaning smart eyewear could become the most effective wearable
        health monitor.

 

Moving forward, we believe the business will grow organically, with substantial opportunities to further improve profitability. Impressive reinvestment allows EL to create new product categories (e.g., myopia management, smart glasses) that have the potential to revolutionise the eyewear industry and further reinforce barriers to competition.

 

Exposures by sector and region

In line with our investment process, our sectoral and regional exposures are driven by stock selection. Changes in exposure from 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025 resulted from market movements and the following purchases and sales, rather than any decision on sector and/or country views.

 

    --  Purchases: Alphabet (Communication Services), Apple (Information
        Technology), Cadence Design Systems (Information Technology), Corpay
        (Financials), Diageo (Consumer Staples), EssilorLuxottica (Health Care),
        Equifax (Industrials), HealthEquity (Health Care), Hilton Worldwide
        (Consumer Discretionary), and Meta Platforms (Communication Services).
    --  Sales: Alphabet (Communication Services), BRP (Consumer Discretionary),
        Danaher (Health Care), Estée Lauder (Consumer Staples), Intuit
        (Information Technology), Shimano (Consumer Discretionary).

 

Sector exposure rose in Information Technology and Financials and fell in Communications Services and Health Care. Typically, the strategy has zero weight in Real Estate, Energy, Materials and Utilities, as companies in these sectors tend not to generate sufficient returns on capital to be considered of high quality.

 

Outlook 13

 

Looking forward, for long-term investors, we believe the current environment provides an excellent opportunity to invest in high-quality businesses at unusually attractive valuations. We have just witnessed the most significant relative derating in the valuation of these companies in at least the last 10 years, despite the fact that they have continued to deliver strong earnings growth. This has left high-quality stocks looking more attractively valued than they have been for most of the last decade.

 

While Quality companies have largely been overlooked by the market over the recent past, history tells us that the environment will change, and we believe Quality will reassert as an alpha source. We remain committed to investing the Company's capital in Compounder stocks and hope to report better relative performance results going forward 14 .

 

Our confidence stems from our long-term study of the global markets and our fundamental research capabilities, and we firmly believe that the companies we are invested in should continue to deliver solid earnings and cash flow growth. We are reminded that share prices do not always follow fundamentals over the short term. As long-term investors, we need to have the patience and fortitude to follow our conviction and stay the course through challenging periods. We believe the market will assign a higher valuation to our companies over time if they continue to demonstrate strong operating performance.

 

AI has been a market theme over the review period, and we certainly do not underestimate its power. While the market has thus ascribed most of AI's value to those few businesses that are building AI infrastructure, we believe in time other Company holdings poised to benefit from this transformative technology, will also benefit.

 

We thank you for your continued investment.

 

Louis Florentin-Lee & Barnaby Wilson

Fund Managers

10 September 2025

 

13 Comments as of 30 June 2025.

14 Forecasted or estimated results do not represent a promise or guarantee of future results and are subject to change.

 

Portfolio of Investments as at 30 June 2025

 


Investment       Country        Market value % of total net MSCI Sector
                                £'000        assets

Apple            United States  14,822       4.8%           Information
                                                            Technology

Taiwan                                                      Information
Semiconductor    Taiwan         14,366       4.7%           Technology
Manufacturing

Amphenol         United States  13,226       4.3%           Information
                                                            Technology

Microsoft        United States  13,097       4.3%           Information
                                                            Technology

Visa             United States  12,811       4.2%           Financials

S&P Global       United States  11,093       3.6%           Financials

RELX             United Kingdom 10,428       3.4%           Industrials

Verisk Analytics United States  9,522        3.1%           Industrials

Aon              United States  9,114        3.0%           Financials

Dollarama        Canada         9,076        3.0%           Consumer
                                                            Discretionary

Intercontinental United States  8,926        2.9%           Financials
Exchange

Accenture        United States  8,263        2.7%           Information
                                                            Technology

HDFC Bank        India          8,098        2.6%           Financials

Ametek           United States  7,835        2.5%           Financials

Hexagon          Sweden         7,231        2.4%           Information
                                                            Technology

Salesforce       United States  7,200        2.3%           Information
                                                            Technology

Zoetis           United States  6,980        2.3%           Health Care

Clicks Group     South Africa   6,668        2.2%           Consumer Staples

Wolters Kluwer   Netherlands    6,619        2.2%           Industrials

Cadence Design   United States  6,607        2.1%           Information
Systems                                                     Technology

IQVIA            United States  6,024        2.0%           Health Care

Thermo Fisher    United States  5,903        1.9%           Health Care
Scientific

Partners Group   Switzerland    5,740        1.9%           Financials

ASML             Netherlands    5,677        1.8%           Information
                                                            Technology

Coca-Cola        United States  5,486        1.8%           Consumer Staples

Adobe            United States  5,463        1.8%           Information
                                                            Technology

Keyence          Japan          5,380        1.7%           Information
                                                            Technology

Nordson          United States  5,341        1.7%           Industrials

Rockwell         United States  5,275        1.7%           Industrials
Automation

Universal Music  Netherlands    5,173        1.7%           Communication
Group                                                       Services

VAT Group        Switzerland    5,083        1.7%           Industrials

Booz Allen       United States  5,024        1.6%           Industrials
Hamilton

Tencent          Hong Kong      4,979        1.6%           Communication
                                                            Services

HOYA             Japan          4,703        1.5%           Health Care

Equifax          United States  4,632        1.5%           Industrials

Toei Animation   Japan          4,309        1.4%           Communication
                                                            Services

Corpay           United States  4,179        1.4%           Financials

Hilton Worldwide United States  3,208        1.0%           Consumer
                                                            Discretionary

EssilorLuxottica France         3,176        1.0%           Health Care

Meta Platforms   United States  3,167        1.0%           Communication
                                                            Services

Diaego           United Kingdom 3,164        1.0%           Consumer Staples

Alphabet A       United States  2,981        1.0%           Communication
                                                            Services

HealthEquity     United States  2,919        0.9%           Health Care

SMS              Japan          2,510        0.8%           Industrials

Nike             United States  2,000        0.7%           Consumer
                                                            Discretionary

Total equity                    303.478      98.7%
investments (45)

Net current                     4,023        1.3%
assets

Total net assets                307,501      100%



 

Strategy and Business Review

 

This Strategic Report has been prepared in accordance with the Companies Act 2006 (Strategic Report and Directors' Report) Regulations 2013.

 

Purpose

 

Our purpose is to increase the real wealth and prosperity of our shareholders, thus helping them meet their long-term savings needs.

 

Mid Wynd International Investment Trust plc can trace its heritage back to 1797, when the founder of the Company set up a textiles business in Dundee. Its origins as an investment company date from 1949, when the Board began to manage the financial reserves as a separate entity from the main trading business. In September 1981, the shares of Mid Wynd International Investment Trust plc were floated on the London Stock Exchange. At that time, the Board was entrusted by shareholders to manage their wealth, with a focus on investing in global companies with strong growth prospects and sustainable businesses. This focus remains as true for the Board and its appointed investment manager today as it did back then.

 

Through our investment company structure, we enable shareholders, large or small, to invest in an actively-managed diversified portfolio of securities in a cost-effective way, giving them access to the growth opportunities offered by world markets.

 

Strategy

 

As stated above, the Company's purpose is to increase the real wealth and prosperity of our shareholders, thus helping them meet their long-term savings needs. To achieve this goal, the Company has adopted a number of policies which are set out below.

 

Objective and investment policy

 

The objective of the Company is to achieve capital and income growth by investing on a worldwide basis. Although the Company aims to provide dividend growth over time, its primary aim is to maximise total returns to shareholders.

 

The Company is prepared to move freely between different markets, sectors, industries, market capitalisations and asset classes as investment opportunities dictate. On acquisition, no holding shall exceed 15% of the portfolio. The Company will not invest more than 15% of its gross assets in UK listed investment companies. Assets other than equities may be purchased from time to time including but not limited to fixed interest holdings, unquoted securities and derivatives. Subject to prior Board approval, the Company may use derivatives for investment purposes or for efficient portfolio management (including reducing, transferring or eliminating investment risk in its investments and protection against currency risk).

 

The number of individual holdings will vary over time. To ensure diversification of opportunity and management of risk, the Company is permitted by its policy to hold between 40 and 140 holdings; however, the portfolio will generally hold a portfolio of shares at the lower end of this range. The portfolio will be managed on a global basis rather than as a series of regional sub-portfolios. As at 30 June 2025 there were 45 holdings in the portfolio.

 

The Board assesses investment performance with reference to the MSCI All Country World Index (GBP). However, the Directors expect the Investment Manager to pay little attention to the composition of this index when constructing the portfolio and the composition of the portfolio is likely to vary substantially from that of the index. A long-term view is taken and there may be periods when the net asset value per share declines in absolute terms and relative to the comparator index.

 

Business model

 

The Company is incorporated in Scotland and operates as an Investment Trust Company. It is an investment company within the meaning of section 833 of the Companies Act 2006 (the "Act") and is approved as an investment trust by HM Revenue and Customs subject to the Company continuing to comply with the requirements of section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010. The Company has a main market listing on the London Stock Exchange. The Company is also an Alternative Investment Fund whose Investment Manager is regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority.

 

The Company has no employees and the Board, which consists solely of non-executive Directors, has delegated most of the Company's operational functions to a number of key service providers. All key service providers are appointed under rolling contracts which are periodically reviewed, at which time the appropriateness of the continuing appointment of such service providers is considered. Details of the key service providers are set out later in this Annual Financial Report.

 

Dividend policy

 

The Company's main focus is on growing shareholders' capital. It pursues a flexible dividend policy which is not solely determined by the requirements of s1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 to retain no more than 15% of revenue earnings in any financial year. The Board intends to grow dividends, subject to the availability of distributable reserves. As previously communicated in the last Half-Yearly Financial Report, the Company's revenue returns are expected to be lower in the short term as a result of Lazard's investment strategy. This is focused on capital appreciation rather than income generation, driven by the investment portfolio typically reinvesting a significant portion of earnings in order to maximise growth. In future the Board intends at least to maintain the dividend, using the revenue reserve and, when required, the capital reserve, for a short period of time if necessary. This year the Company will need to utilise its accumulated revenue reserves to pay its dividend.

 

Gearing and leverage

 

The Company may use borrowings to support its investment strategy and can borrow up to 30% of its net assets. The Company had a US$60m multicurrency revolving credit facility with the Bank of Nova Scotia (London Branch) which was terminated on 11 September 2023.

 

Although no borrowing facility is currently in place, the Company's gearing is regularly reviewed by the Board following consultation with the Investment Manager.

 

Leverage is defined in the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (`AIFMD') as any method by which the Company can increase its exposure by borrowing cash or securities, or from leverage that is embedded in derivative positions. The Company is permitted to borrow up to 30% of its net assets (determined as 130% under the Commitment and Gross ratios). The Company is permitted to have additional leverage of up to 100% of its net assets, which results in permitted total leverage of 230% under both ratios. The Alternative Investment Fund Manager (the `AIFM') monitors leverage values on a daily basis, when leverage is utilised, and reviews the limits annually. No changes have been made to these limits during the year. At 30 June 2025, the Company's leverage was 0% as determined using the Commitment method and 0% using the Gross method. Further details can be found in the Alternative Performance Measures on page 82 of the Annual Report.

 

Current and future developments

 

A summary of the Company's developments during the year ended 30 June 2025, together with its prospects for the future, is set out in the Chairman's Statement on pages 5 to 7 and the Investment Manager's Review on pages 8 to 18. The Board's principal focus is the delivery of positive long-term returns for shareholders. This will be dependent on the success of the investment strategy, in the context of both economic and stock market conditions. The investment strategy, and factors that may have an influence on it, are discussed regularly by the Board and the Investment Manager. The Board furthermore considers the ongoing development and strategic direction of the Company, as well as any risks which could impact on the Company's ability to achieve its strategic objective.

 

Culture and values

 

Culture

 

Corporate culture for an externally-managed investment trust like Mid Wynd International Investment Trust plc, refers to the beliefs and behaviours that determine how the Directors interact with one another and how the Board manages relationships with shareholders and key service providers, such as the Investment Manager. The culture is defined by the values which are set out below. The s172 report included in this Strategy and Business Review provides further details of how the Board has operated in this regard.

 

Values

 

The Board is mindful that it is overseeing the management of a substantial investment portfolio on behalf of investors. In many cases, the investment in the Company may represent a large proportion of an individual's savings. As nearly all the Directors are invested in the Company, the Directors' interests are aligned with those of fellow shareholders in this regard.

 

Our approach to governing the Company is therefore underpinned by our determination to do the right thing for our shareholders. Key to this is having a constructive relationship with them, through monthly updates, half-yearly and annual financial reports, and the opportunity to meet with them at the Annual General Meeting.

 

We also believe in having strong relationships with our key service providers, one based on mutual trust and respect, with constructive challenge when required. Below is a summary of the Board's most important values:

 

    --  Excellence: the Board is focused on its purpose of delivering long-term
        value for all its shareholders, whether they are large or small.
        Focusing on this strategic imperative and adopting best practice
        wherever appropriate in all the Company's dealings are key to driving
        excellence. We will always put our shareholders first and will
        constantly look at how to enhance long term value, for example through
        the use of gearing, share issuance, and buybacks.
    --  Integrity: the Board seeks to be ethical and honest, to comply with all
        laws and regulations applicable to investment companies, to avoid
        conflicts of interest and to have zero tolerance to bribery and
        corruption, tax evasion or other fraudulent behaviour. It expects the
        same high standards to be adopted by all its service providers.
    --  Accountability: the Board recognises the need to explain the Company's
        performance to investors, including the upsides, the downsides and the
        risks in a clear, straightforward and transparent manner. Accountability
        also involves the Board challenging its key service providers to ensure
        the Company continues to receive a high standard of service to drive
        long term shareholder value. Each of the Directors recognises their
        individual responsibility to shareholders and accordingly each of the
        Directors will stand for re-election at each Annual General Meeting,
        other than in instances where a Director has signalled their intention
        to retire.
    --  Respect: the Board is collegiate and recognises the value of the diverse
        backgrounds and opinions of its Directors. It also recognises the
        importance of treating shareholders and key service providers with
        respect. Contact by shareholders via the Chairman's email address
        cosec@junipartners.com is welcomed; the Company adheres to key service
        provider terms and conditions such as prompt payment.
    --  Sustainable investing, Stewardship and Environmental, Social and
        Governance (`ESG') issues:the Board recognises the importance of such
        matters in the generation of long term returns for shareholders.

 

The Investment Manager's Approach to Sustainability, Stewardship and Environmental, Social & Governance (`ESG') Matters

 

The Board expects Lazard to invest in companies which can provide long-term value for the Company's shareholders, without damaging either society or the environment. Set out below is a summary of how Lazard integrates sustainability and ESG considerations into its investment approach and a report of its stewardship activities.

 

Lazard integrates ESG considerations into the fundamental analysis conducted on every potential investee company. When evaluating potential `Compounder' companies (see definition on page 14 of the Annual Financial Report) in which to invest, Lazard is focused on how ESG opportunities and risks may affect a company's competitive advantages, the sustainability of its financial productivity, its reinvestment opportunities, and its valuation. Lazard also has access to third party data sources to augment this proprietary fundamental research.

 

Lazard's research suggests that Compounders tend to have attractive environmental and/or governance attributes. This has generally resulted in the portfolio having a positive sustainability profile i.e., significantly lower carbon emissions, lower carbon intensity, and lower ESG risk versus its reference comparator index, the MSCI All Country World Index. This is an outcome of stock selection, not a target objective.

 

Portfolio carbon emissions

 

The challenges around climate change are of increasing importance. The portfolio's carbon emissions have remained consistently below the comparator index, the MSCI All Country World Index.

 

Stewardship and investee company engagement

 

The Board delegates authority to Lazard to invest responsibly, engaging actively with investee companies to understand their management ethos and to seek sustainable returns.

 

Here are some examples of this engaging in operation during the year ended 30 June 2025:

 

Coca-Cola

Objective

 

To understand better any changes to Coca- Cola's human capital strategy since the Trump administration's executive orders, as well as its revised ESG commitments focusing on water scarcity and plastic packaging.

 

Background

 

Coca-Cola, a leading global non-alcoholic beverage company, has seen growth through innovation, marketing, and strategic refranchising. Human capital is key to product innovation, while water is a material input into the production process.

 

Engagement Details and Analysis

Coca Cola has identified water security and plastic packaging as priority natural capital issues. We view the company's 2030 water security strategy as best in class and its investment in recycled PET production as beneficial to both financial productivity (via cost efficiency) as well as sustainability. Following the Trump administration's executive orders, the company is also aligning its human capital strategies with legal standards and merit principles, maintaining focus on talent as crucial for success. The company demonstrates financial benefits from optimising human capital and addressing supply chain human rights issues. Female representation has increased across various levels, with significant leadership roles filled internally. Although the company has reduced external reporting on non-financial metrics, we encouraged continued disclosure of metrics critical to assessing financial productivity.

 

Outcome

Positive engagement reaffirming our investment thesis. Future engagements will monitor progress towards 2030 goals.

 

IQVIA

Objective

 

To discuss IQVIA's diversity in clinical trials, cybersecurity, AI applications, and governance issues.

 

Background

 

IQVIA, a contract research consultant in healthcare, speeds up the time to market for new drugs (a key bottle neck in the value chain) by enabling more efficient and effective clinical trials. Highly diverse patient databases and the ability to leverage data at scale is a key part of its economic moat.

 

Engagement Details and Analysis

 

Diversity action plans for clinical trials are becoming the expectation, and due to ties to clinical outcomes are viewed as separate from the current administration's push to remove Diversity, Equity & Inclusion (`DEI'). We view it positively that IQVIA's use of diversity action plans is outstripping industry growth, driven in part by large pharma and full CRO customers who could enact the plans themselves but are looking to outsource. In addition, the company appears to be managing cybersecurity well; incremental improvements are being made to strengthen security for new direct-to-patient offerings. We see this as critical given the vast amount of sensitive data that the company manages. IQVIA did not provide many specific details on oversight actions being taken to manage AI risks, but we see no reason to view IQVIA as poorly positioned. Commentary on director time commitments and the existing special meeting threshold, two focuses of this year's AGM, were clear, but we found the company's answers on compensation to be lacking.

 

Outcome and future milestones

 

Overall, we are satisfied that IQVIA is managing its ESG-related risks well and that their strategy is supportive of our investment thesis. We plan to closely monitor the executive compensation portion of this year's AGM.

 

Voting

 

The Board gives discretion to Lazard to exercise the Company's voting rights. Lazard exercises the Company's voting rights in respect of investee companies with the aim of maximising sustainable shareholder value as a long-term investor and voting in the best interests of the Company's shareholders. Lazard undertakes regular due diligence with investee company managements on matters such as strategy, operational performance, capital allocation, and material sustainability considerations. Lazard is a signatory to the UK Stewardship Code; further details are included on page 42 of the Annual Financial Report.

 

The proxy voting instructions given by Lazard on behalf of the Company between 1 July 2024 and 30 June 2025 are detailed below.

 

Lazard voting on behalf of Mid Wynd

 


Instruction   Percentage

For           80%

Against       11%

Abstain       1%

Did not vote* 8%



 

* The Investment Manager's policy is to always maintain liquidity in their portfolio, therefore where a company prevents trading during their AGM, the Investment Manager will not vote.

 

Details of votes Against

 

 ______________________________________________________________________________
|Instruction|Percentage|Reason                                                 |
|___________|__________|_______________________________________________________|
|Against    |69%       |Oppose director re-elections and other director related|
|           |          |reasons                                                |
|___________|__________|_______________________________________________________|
|Against    |19%       |Other - including capitalisation, routine business and |
|           |          |take-over related                                      |
|___________|__________|_______________________________________________________|
|Against    |12%       |Environmental and social reasons                       |
|___________|__________|_______________________________________________________|


 

Industry and social responsibility initiatives

 

Further information on the industry-wide collaborations Lazard participates in and the social responsibility initiatives it engages with can be found on the Sustainable Investment section of the Lazard website at Sustainable Investing Lazard Asset Management

(https://www.lazardassetmanagement.com/gl/ sustainable-investment) .

 

Engagement Period: Q1 2025

All opinions expressed herein are as of the published date. For illustrative purposes only.

 

Key Performance Indicators (`KPIs')

 

The performance of the Company is reviewed regularly by the Board and it uses a number of KPIs to assess the Company's success in meeting its objective. The KPIs which have been established for this purpose are set out below:

 

    --  Net asset value performance compared to the MSCI All Country World Index
        (GBP)

The Board monitors the performance of the net asset value per share against that of the MSCI All Country World Index (GBP).

 

    --  Share price performance

The Board monitors the performance of the share price of the Company to ensure that it reflects the performance of the net asset value.

 

Discrete annual total returns

 


Year ended
           Net asset value Share price MSCI All Country World Index (GBP)
30 June

2021       24.3%           27.3%       24.6%

2022       (7.5)%          (9.5)%      (4.2)%

2023       5.6%            1.0%        11.3%

2024       13.9%           17.1%       20.1%

2025       (5.1)%          (5.9)%      7.2%



 

Source: LSEG Datastream.

 

Further details of the 2025 returns can be found within the Chairman's Statement and Investment Manager's Review contained in the Annual Financial Report for year ended 30 June 2025.

 

    --  Share price (discount)/premium to net asset value

The Board recognises that it is in the interests of shareholders to maintain a share price as close as possible to the net asset value (`NAV') per share. The policy of the Board is to limit the discount or premium to a maximum of 2 per cent of NAV in normal circumstances. The Company may issue shares at such times as demand is not being met by liquidity in the market and buy back shares when there is excess supply. This policy has proved consistently effective in generating value within the Company and helping to manage market liquidity. The Company's shares were trading at a discount of 2.5% to NAV at the year end. At all times the Company sought to manage the discount within the target parameters and achieved an average discount of 2% over the year. While the Company declares its NAV daily, markets are open almost twenty four hours per day and this accounts for the wider range in premium and discount in 2025 shown on the following chart. During the year the Company did not issue any shares and bought back 9,465,000 shares (representing 19.0% of the issued share capital (excluding Treasury shares) at the start of the year) at a cost of £73.1 million. As the Company had utilised a significant proportion of the authorities granted by shareholders at the last AGM to undertake buybacks, the Company convened a General Meeting on 21 May 2025 to apply for additional authorities up until the next AGM. The reason for doing this was to ensure the Company would be able to continue to operate its discount control programme efficiently up until the next AGM. The resolution was approved by 91.8% of shares voted. 8.2% of shares voted against the resolution and 5,238 were withheld.

 

The Company held a further General Meeting on 28 August 2025 to apply for additional authorities following the utilisation of the previous buyback authority from the May 2025 General Meeting. This was approved by 96.1% of shares voted, with 3.9% voting against and 6,197 votes being withheld.

 

Although the Company incurs modest costs for operating the policy and when renewing shareholder authority, issuance at a premium and buying back at a discount under the policy more than compensates and is consistently accretive to NAV.

 

    --  Ongoing charges

The Board is mindful of the ongoing costs to shareholders of running the Company and monitors operating expenses on a regular basis. The Company's ongoing charges ratio as at 30 June 2025 was 0.64% (2024: 0.60%). The increase in the ongoing costs for the year to 30 June 2025 is predominantly due to the reduction of gross assets as a result of the effective operation of our discount control mechanism.

 

    --  Dividend per share

In addition to seeking capital growth, the Board also continues to pursue its flexible dividend policy. It monitors the revenue returns generated by the Company during the year, its revenue reserves and expected future revenue and then determines the dividends to be paid. Revenue earnings during the year decreased by 31% compared to the prior financial year. As explained previously, the appointment of Lazard has led to a change in investment approach and lower dividend income from our investee companies. These companies reinvest a greater proportion of their cashflow back into their businesses where they expect to generate high internal rates of return, thereby increasing their capital value and future profits and dividends. The majority of Mid Wynd's revenues are earned in foreign currencies and changes in exchange rates can impact the sterling value of the Company's earnings. Subject to approval of the final dividend by shareholders, a total dividend of 8.35 pence per share (2024: 8.00 pence per share) will be paid in respect of the year ended 30 June 2025. This represents an increase of 4.4%.

 

Dividends paid in respect of the year ended June 2024 were fully covered by their current year earnings. Dividends payable/paid in respect of the year ended June 2025 will be funded from current year earnings and the Company's accumulated revenue reserve.

 

Principal Risks and Risk Management

 

The Board has carried out a robust assessment of the principal and emerging risks facing the Company. Following consideration of the principal risks, the Board has concluded that there are no emerging risks facing the Company that should be added to the principal risks set out below.

 

The Board has developed a risk map which sets out the principal risks faced by the Company and the controls established to mitigate these risks. This is an ongoing process and the risk map, including any emerging risks, is formally reviewed at least every six months. The Board pays particular attention to those risks that might threaten the long-term performance or viability of the Company. Further information on the Company's risk management process is set out in the corporate governance section on pages 42 and 43 of the Annual Financial Report.

 

A summary of the key areas of risk, their movement during the year and their mitigation is set out below:

 


Movement  Principal risk                     Mitigation/control

          Strategic risks

                                             The investment objective and policy
                                             of the Company is set by the Board
                                             and is subject to ongoing review
                                             and monitoring in conjunction with
                                             the Investment Manager.

                                             The Company's investments are
                                             selected on their individual merits
                                             and the performance of the
                                             portfolio may not track the wider
          Investment strategy                market (represented by the MSCI All
                                             Country World Index). The Board
No change The management of the portfolio of believes this approach will
          the Company may not achieve its    continue to generate good long-term
          investment objective and policy.   returns for shareholders. Risk is
                                             diversified through a broad range
                                             of investments being held. The
                                             Investment Manager has a proven
                                             track record of managing the Global
                                             Quality Growth strategy which the
                                             Company's portfolio is managed in
                                             accordance with. The Board
                                             discusses the investment portfolio
                                             and its performance with the
                                             Investment Manager at each Board
                                             meeting.

          Market risks

          Market prices

          The Company invests in a portfolio The Board considers that the risk
          of international quoted equities.  of market volatility is mitigated
          The prices of equity investments   by the longer-term nature of the
          may be volatile and are affected   investment objective and the
          by a wide variety of factors many  Company's closed-ended structure,
          of which can be unforeseen and are and that such investments should be
          outwith the control of the         a source of positive returns for
          investee company or the Investment shareholders over the long-term.
          Manager. These price movements
          could result in significant losses Risks are diversified through
          for the Company.                   having a range of investments in
                                             the portfolio with exposure to
          Current events such as the ongoing various geographies and sectors.
          wars in Ukraine and the Middle
          East have negatively impacted      The Investment Manager has a proven
          economic growth and may negatively track record and reports regularly
          affect investment values leading   to the Board on market
          to the inability to buy, sell or   developments. At each Board meeting
          value assets at a competitive      the Investment Manager is asked to
          price, thus having an adverse      provide explanations for the
          effect on the Company's results.   performance of the portfolio and
                                             the rationale for any changes in
          The Company's functional currency  equity investments, sectors and
          and that in which it reports its   geographies. Any use of derivatives
          results is Sterling. However, the  to manage market risks requires
No change majority of the Company's assets,  Board approval.
          liabilities and income are
          denominated in currencies other    The Board and its Investment
          than Sterling. Consequently,       Manager have regular discussions to
          movements in exchange rates will   assess the likely impact of
          affect the Sterling value of those inflation rates on global
          assets. The country in which a     economies, corporate profitability
          portfolio company is listed is     and asset prices.
          furthermore not necessarily where
          it earns its profits and movements The Board have assessed the Trust's
          in exchange rates on overseas      exposure to currency rates during
          earnings may have a more           the year to 30 June 2025, and
          significant impact upon a          discussed the advantages and
          portfolio company's valuation than disadvantages of introducing
          a simple translation of that       currency hedging. This is reviewed
          company's share price into         by the Board on a periodic basis.
          Sterling. The Company does not
          generally hedge its currency       The Investment Manager takes
          exposures and changes in exchange  material ESG risks into account
          rates may lead to a reduction in   when making investment decisions,
          the Company's NAV.                 as such risks can affect the
                                             prospects of a business. The
          Climate change, and the politics   Company invests in a broad
          around climate change, could       portfolio of businesses with
          impair the operations of           operations spread geographically,
          individual investee companies,     which should limit the impact of
          potential investee companies,      climate change events.
          their supply chains and their
          customers.

                                             The Company relies on the services
                                             of the Company Secretary and
                                             Investment Manager to monitor
                                             ongoing compliance with relevant
                                             regulations, accounting standards
                                             and legislation. The Company
                                             Secretary and Investment Manager
                                             also appraise the Board of any
                                             prospective changes to the legal
          Legal and regulatory risk          and regulatory framework so that
                                             any requisite actions can be
          Changes to the requirements of the planned.
          framework of regulation and
          legislation (including rules       The Board receives quarterly
          relating to listed closed-end      compliance reports from the
          investment companies), within      Investment Manager, the Alternative
          which the Company operates, could  Investment Fund Manager (`AIFM'),
No change have a material adverse effect on  Company Secretary and
          the ability of the Company to      Administrator, and the Depositary
          carry on its business and maintain confirming compliance with
          its listing. A change in the tax   regulations. These reports also
          rules applicable to investment     highlight any matter that the
          trusts, such as the introduction   relevant compliance team feel
          of capital gains tax, could affect should be brought to the Board's
          the viability of investment        attention.
          trusts.
                                             The Company is a member of the
                                             Association of Investment Companies
                                             (the `AIC'). The AIC monitors
                                             regulatory change on behalf of its
                                             members and keeps the investment
                                             trust sector informed on this.
                                             Furthermore, the AIC promotes
                                             investment trust interests in any
                                             consultations on proposed
                                             regulatory change.

          Operational risks

          Reliance on third-party service
          providers

          The Company has no employees and
          all of the Directors have been
          appointed on a non-executive
          basis; all operations are
          outsourced to third-party service  Experienced third-party service
          providers. Failure by any service  providers are employed by the
          provider to carry out its          Company under appropriate terms and
          obligations to the Company in      conditions and with agreed service
No change accordance with the terms of its   level specifications. The Board
          appointment, to protect against    receives regular reports from its
          breaches of the Company's legal    service providers and reviews the
          and regulatory obligations such as performance of its key service
          data protection or to perform its  providers at least annually.
          obligations to the Company at all
          as a result of insolvency, fraud,
          breaches of cybersecurity,
          failures in business continuity
          plans or other causes, could have
          a material adverse effect on the
          Company's operations.

          Reliance on key personnel
                                             The Lazard investment team is led
          The Company's portfolio is managed by two key individuals, the global
          by the Investment Manager and in   equity fund managers, each of whom
          particular the fund management     has worked for Lazard for many
No change team which has direct              years and has a successful track
          responsibility for portfolio       record. The fund managers are
          selection. Any change in relation  supported by a wider investment
          to the investment executives may   team.
          adversely affect the performance
          of the Company.



 

Further information on risks and the management of them are set out in note 20 of the notes to the financial statements on pages 69 to 72 of the Annual Financial Report.

 

Viability Statement

 

In accordance with the Association of Investment Companies (the `AIC') Code of Corporate Governance, the Board has considered the longer-term prospects for the Company beyond the twelve months required by the going concern basis of accounting. The period of assessment, in line with our Key Information Document, is five years to 30 June 2030. The Board has concluded that this period is appropriate, taking into account the Company's investment objective and policy and the long-term investor outlook.

 

In reviewing the Company's viability, the Board considered the Company's business model, the principal risks and uncertainties, including geopolitical risks, volatility of inflation and interest rates and the ensuing market volatility as well as climate change risks. The Company invests in listed securities and has a liquid portfolio.

 

The Board further considered the continued operation of the Company's buyback programme, as a discount control mechanism, in its viability assessment. It is assumed by the Board that the liquid nature of the portfolio means that investments can be sold as necessary to fund share buybacks.

 

In considering the Company's prospects over the next five years, the Directors have assumed that Lazard will, on behalf of the Company, continue to follow the Company's investment objective, that the Company's performance will continue to be attractive to shareholders, and that the Company will continue to meet the requirements to retain its status as an investment trust.

 

The Company is authorised to trade as an investment company and has the associated tax benefits. Any change to the Company's tax arrangements could affect the Company's viability as an effective investment vehicle.

 

The Board considered a five year forecast and a number of stress test scenarios in connection with a sustained fall in markets. The Board also considered the Company's ongoing income and expenses, the buyback programme and the liquidity of the Company's portfolio to ensure that the Company will be able to meet its liabilities as they fall due.

 

The conclusion of this review is that the Board has a reasonable expectation that the Company will be able to continue in operation and meet its liabilities as they fall due over the next five years.

 

Duty to Promote the Success of the Company

 

How the Directors discharge their duties under s172 of the Companies Act

 

Under section 172 of the Companies Act 2006, the Directors have a duty to act in good faith and to promote the success of the Company for the benefit of its shareholders as a whole, and in doing so have regard to:

 

a)       the likely consequences of any decision in the long-term;

b)       the interests of the company's employees;

c)        the need to foster the company's business relationships with suppliers, customers and others;

d)       the impact of the company's operations on the community and the environment;

e)       the desirability of the company maintaining a reputation for high standards of business conduct; and

f)         the need to act fairly as between members of the company.

 

As an externally managed investment trust, the Company has no employees or physical assets. Our shareholders, our investee companies, our key external service provider, the Investment Manager, and other professional service providers, such as the AIFM, Company Secretary and Administrator, Depositary, Registrar, Auditor, Corporate Broker, Tax Adviser and any lenders are all considered to fall within the scope of section 172.

 

Whilst certain responsibilities are delegated, the Board retains responsibility for promoting the success of the Company; the Directors' responsibilities are set out in the schedule of matters reserved for the Board and the terms of reference of its committees, all of which are reviewed regularly by the Board.

 

The Company's culture and values, as described on page 21 of the Annual Financial Report, have been established by the Board to manage its key business relationships. The Company's approach on anti-bribery and prevention of tax evasion can be found on page 42 of the Annual Financial Report and on the Company's website at midwynd.com.

 

Engagement with key stakeholders

 


Stakeholders               Benefits of engagement     How the Company engages
                                                      with Stakeholders

                                                      To achieve its objective
                                                      of promoting the success
                                                      of the Company, for the
                                                      benefit of the
                                                      shareholders, the Board
                                                      approaches engagement from
                                                      two angles - how the Board
                                                      communicates its strategy
                                                      and performance to
                                                      shareholders and potential
                                                      investors and how it
                                                      addresses feedback/
                                                      communications received
                                                      from shareholders and
                                                      potential investors.

                                                      Engagement with
                                                      shareholders and potential
                                                      investors is both by the
                                                      Board and the Company's
                                                      Investment Manager.
                                                      Through the publication of
                                                      the annual financial
                                                      reports, the half-yearly
                                                      reports, monthly
                                                      factsheets, RNS
                                                      announcements and updates
                                                      to the Company's website,
                                                      shareholders are kept
                                                      informed of developments
                                                      in Company strategy as
                                                      well as Company
                                                      performance and portfolio
                                                      activities. The Board has
                                                      also engaged Kepler
                                                      Intelligence to publish
                                                      regular updates on
                                                      different aspects of the
                                                      investment strategy and
                                                      Kepler report back to the
                                                      Board with readership
                                                      statistics and engagement.
                                                      The Investment Manager
                           The Board is responsible   presents at conferences
                           for promoting the success  and webinars throughout
                           of the Company for the     the year. The Annual
                           benefit of the             General Meeting presents a
                           shareholders, taken as a   further opportunity for
                           whole, having regard to    shareholders to meet the
                           the matters listed above   Board and Investment
                           and its stakeholders.      Manager in person.

                           Communicating with         During the year ended 30
                           shareholders and potential June 2025, the Company
Shareholders and potential investors is essential to  contacted all registered
investors                  ensure the Board is fully  shareholders to encourage
                           aware of shareholder       them to sign up for
                           requirements so that it    updates on the Trust via
                           can respond to evolving    the Company's website.
                           shareholder needs. It is   Potential investors can
                           also important that the    also subscribe in the same
                           Company communicates its   way. This allows the
                           strategy and performance   Company to engage directly
                           regularly and effectively  with shareholders and
                           to shareholders to ensure  potential investors and
                           there continues to be      share updates on the
                           demand for the Company's   investment strategy and
                           shares.                    forthcoming shareholder
                                                      events like webinars and
                                                      podcasts.

                                                      The Board receives regular
                                                      feedback on shareholder
                                                      meetings from the
                                                      Company's broker, the
                                                      Investment Manager and,
                                                      where appropriate, the
                                                      Chairman. Any
                                                      communications from
                                                      shareholders and potential
                                                      investors are reviewed and
                                                      discussed by the Board at
                                                      Board meetings to ensure
                                                      that shareholder views are
                                                      taken into consideration
                                                      as part of any decisions
                                                      taken.

                                                      Shareholders and potential
                                                      investors are encouraged
                                                      to raise questions and
                                                      communicate with the
                                                      Chairman and the
                                                      Investment Manager either
                                                      through the Company's
                                                      website or by attending
                                                      and asking questions at
                                                      the AGM.

                                                      The Board considers
                                                      communication with
                                                      shareholders and potential
                                                      investors an important
                                                      function and Directors are
                                                      always available to
                                                      respond to shareholder
                                                      queries. For further
                                                      information see `Relations
                                                      with shareholders' on page
                                                      42 of the Annual Financial
                                                      Report.

                                                      The Board, with the
                                                      support of its Management
                           Engagement with the        Engagement Committee,
                           Company's Investment       regularly reviews the
                           Manager is necessary to:   performance of the
                                                      Investment Manager to
                               --  evaluate its       ensure that services
                                   performance        provided to the Company
                                   against the        are managed efficiently
                                   Company's stated   and effectively for the
                                   investment         benefit of the Company's
                                   objective and to   shareholders.
                                   understand any
                                   risks or           The Board meets formally
                                   opportunities this with the Investment
                                   may present;       Manager at quarterly Board
                               --  ensure the         meetings. The Investment
                                   Investment Manager Manager presents a review
                                   operates within    of the quarter and any
                                   parameters set by  pertinent information on
                                   the Board;         the portfolio and its
                               --  ensure the Board   transactions. Informal
                                   understands key    calls and ad hoc meetings
Investment Manager                 performance issues may also occur throughout
                                   to inform strategy the year, especially at
                                   and enable good    times of heightened market
                                   communication with volatility.
                                   shareholders;
                               --  provide the Board  The Board reviews and
                                   with assurances    discusses plans for the
                                   that the           future marketing, strategy
                                   Investment         and development of the
                                   Manager's internal Company with the
                                   controls are       Investment Manager.
                                   operating
                                   effectively; and   Reports on the internal
                               --  ensure the         controls operated by the
                                   Investment         Investment Manager to
                                   Manager's approach safeguard the Company's
                                   to the management  assets and to ensure
                                   of environmental,  transactions are
                                   social and         materially correct are
                                   governance (`ESG') received from the
                                   issues accords     Investment Manager and
                                   with the Board's   reviewed by the Board and
                                   values.            Audit Committee as
                                                      appropriate.

                           As an investment company,
                           all services are
                           outsourced to third-party
                           service providers.

                           In addition to investment
                           management, other
                           outsourced services        The AIFM, Company
                           include the AIFM, Company  Secretary and
                           Secretary and              Administrator have
                           Administrator, the         frequent interaction with
                           Depositary, the Broker,    the key service providers
                           the Registrar, the         and their performance is
                           Company's Tax Adviser, the continually monitored
                           Auditor and any lender     throughout the year.
                           when applicable.
                                                      The Management Engagement
                           The Company has detailed   Committee annually reviews
                           the parameters within      the performance of key
                           which authority has been   service providers, along
                           delegated and set service  with their fee levels, and
Other third-party service  levels to monitor service  provides recommendations
providers                  provider performance.      to the Board as required.

                           Engagement is important to As and when appropriate,
                           ensure that:               third party providers
                                                      present to the Board.
                               --  all service
                                   providers are      Annual assurance reports
                                   delivering         are received to assist the
                                   services in        review of the internal
                                   accordance with    control environments of
                                   their service      the AIFM, Company
                                   level agreements;  Secretary and
                               --  any operational    Administrator and the
                                   issues are         Depositary and Registrar.
                                   discussed with the
                                   Board; and
                               --  the Board receives
                                   appropriate
                                   assurances that
                                   the providers'
                                   internal controls
                                   are operating
                                   effectively.
                           The Company's success
                           relies on its choice of
                           investments and the        The Board sets the
                           performance of those       investment objective and
                           investments.               discusses stock selection
                                                      and asset allocation with
                           Engagement by the          the Investment Manager at
                           Investment Manager with    each Board meeting. The
                           the investee companies has Board also receives
                           two principal aims:        reports from the
                                                      Investment Manager on
                               --  to aid the         engagement with investee
                                   Investment Manager companies.
                                   to understand
                                   investee           The Investment Manager
                                   companies, the     engages with the investee
                                   risks and          companies on an on-going
Investee companies                 opportunities      basis.
                                   associated with
                                   them and the       The Board discusses with
                                   factors which      Lazard Asset Management
                                   drive their        how Environmental, Social
                                   performance so as  and Governance (`ESG')
                                   to make better     factors are taken into
                                   investment         account when selecting and
                                   decisions: and     retaining investments for
                               --  to drive positive  the Company. The Board
                                   change in investee recognises the importance
                                   companies through  of ESG in the investment
                                   active             process.
                                   stewardship. The
                                   aim of such        Lazard Asset Management
                                   engagement is to   endorses the UK
                                   improve            Stewardship Code.
                                   performance and
                                   hence shareholder
                                   returns.
Board discussions and decisions

Key discussions and decisions made by the Board since the last Annual Financial
Report:

Topic                      Background & discussion    Decision

                                                      It was decided this
                                                      strategy was working as
                                                      required and the Board
                                                      continued to give
                                                      authority as required. The
                                                      Company has been
                                                      particularly active,
                                                      during this period, to
                                                      ensure that the Company's
                                                      shares trade at a narrow
                           The Board discussed the    discount to NAV,
                           on-going strategy of share benefiting existing
                           issuance and buyback to    shareholders. To ensure
                           assist in controlling the  the Company had sufficient
                           share premium/discount to  shareholder authority to
                           NAV for the benefit of     continue to operate the
Share issuance and buyback existing shareholders.     discount control mechanism
and share premium                                     (which seeks to maintain a
cancellation               The Board discussed the    share price within 2% of
                           cancellation of the full   the Company's NAV), and
                           share premium account and  reduce discount
                           the creation of a special  volatility, the Board
                           reserve to be used, for    resolved to seek
                           example, to carry out      additional authority from
                           further buybacks and/or    shareholders to continue
                           pay dividends.             to buy back the Company's
                                                      shares at two General
                                                      Meetings. The resolutions
                                                      were approved at both
                                                      General Meetings by
                                                      majorities of over 91.1%.

                                                      The resolution to cancel
                                                      the full share premium
                                                      account was approved by
                                                      99.9% of shareholders.

                                                      It was decided to contact
                                                      all registered
                           The Board discussed the    shareholders to allow the
                           benefits of contacting all Company to engage directly
                           registered shareholders to with shareholders and
Shareholder engagement     encourage them to sign up  potential investors and
                           for updates on the Trust   share updates on the
                           via the Company's website. investment strategy and
                                                      forthcoming shareholder
                                                      events like webinars and
                                                      podcasts.

                                                      The Board held regular
                                                      discussions with the
                                                      Marketing and Distribution
                           The Board discussed the    teams at Lazard and has
                           marketing and distribution requested regular updates
                           of the Company to ensure   from the Company's Broker
                           that this continues to     on the activities being
Marketing and Distribution align with the management  undertaken. Various
                           strategy adopted and       initiatives were completed
                           appeals to a wider         during the year to June
                           shareholder base.          2025 in respect of these
                                                      areas, including the
                                                      launch of a new website
                                                      and branding for the
                                                      Company.

                                                      Having considered the
                                                      option to use gearing the
                                                      Board decided that there
                                                      was no requirement in the
                           The Board discussed the    short-term. The future use
Gearing                    current policy and whether of gearing by the Company
                           gearing should be employed will be kept under review
                           by the Company.            by the Board, recognising
                                                      that the benefit to
                                                      shareholders needs to
                                                      outweigh the associated
                                                      costs.

                                                      A specialist headhunter
                                                      was engaged during the
                                                      previous year with the
                                                      remit of seeking
                                                      candidates from a broad
                                                      range of diverse
Director succession        The Board discussed        backgrounds whose skillset
                           succession of Directors.   would complement existing
                                                      Board members. Following
                                                      completion of this
                                                      process, the Board
                                                      appointed Anulika Malomo
                                                      to the Board effective
                                                      from 24 October 2024.



 

 

Directors & diversity

 

The Directors of the Company and their biographical details are set out on pages 35 and 36 of the Annual Financial Report.

 

No Director has a contract of service with the Company.

 

All of the Directors are considered to be independent in character and judgement and, in the opinion of the Board, there are no relationships or conflicts of interest which are likely to affect the judgement of any Director. Alan Scott has served for more than nine years. However, the Board subscribes to the view expressed within the AIC Code that long-serving Directors should not be prevented from forming part of an independent majority, and does not consider that a Director's length of tenure reduces her or his ability to act independently.

 

The Board supports the recommendations of the Hampton-Alexander Review on gender diversity and the Parker Review on ethnic representation on Boards.

 

The Directors consider diversity, including balance of skills, knowledge, gender, social and ethnic backgrounds, cognitive and personal strengths and experience, amongst other factors when reviewing the composition of the Board.

 

The current Directors have a range of relevant business, financial and asset management skills and experience. The Directors believe that ensuring that the Board and its Committees are comprised of the best combination of individuals to promote the success of the Company for shareholders over the long term is the priority. However, it is conscious of the diversity targets set out in the FCA Listing Rules and the AIC Code in appointing appropriately diverse, independent non-executive directors who set the operational and moral standards of the Company and aims to have an appropriate level of diversity on the Board.

 

In accordance with Listing Rule 9.8.6R (9), (10) and (11) the Board has provided the following information in relation to its diversity as at 30 June 2025, being the financial year-end of the Company. The information included in the tables below has been obtained following confirmation from the individual Directors. There have been no changes in the below data since 30 June 2025.

 


                 Number of               Number of    Number in   Percentage of
                 Board     Percentage of senior       executive   executive
                 members   the Board     positions on management3 management3
                                         the Board

Men              3         60%           21           N/A         N/A

Women            2         40%           12           N/A         N/A

Not
specified/prefer 0         0%            0            N/A         N/A
not to say



 

1 David Kidd is the Chairman of the Board and Hamish Baillie is the Senior Independent Director, both of which are senior positions as defined by the Listing Rules.

2 Diana Dyer Bartlett is the Chairman of the Audit Committee. Although this is not a senior position as defined by the Listing Rules, in the absence of executive roles, the Company considers this role to be a senior position.

3 Not applicable as the Company does not have an executive management team.

 

 __________________________________________________________________________________
|                             |Number |          |Number of|           |Percentage |
|                             |of     |Percentage|senior   |Number in  |of         |
|                             |Board  |of the    |positions|executive  |executive  |
|                             |members|Board     |on the   |management2|management2|
|                             |       |          |Board    |           |           |
|_____________________________|_______|__________|_________|___________|___________|
|White British or other White |4      |80%       |31       |N/A        |N/A        |
|_____________________________|_______|__________|_________|___________|___________|
|Mixed/Multiple ethnic groups |0      |0%        |0        |N/A        |N/A        |
|_____________________________|_______|__________|_________|___________|___________|
|Asian/Asian British          |0      |0%        |0        |N/A        |N/A        |
|_____________________________|_______|__________|_________|___________|___________|
|Black/African/Caribbean/Black|1      |20%       |0        |N/A        |N/A        |
|British                      |       |          |         |           |           |
|_____________________________|_______|__________|_________|___________|___________|
|Other ethnic group, including|0      |0%        |0        |N/A        |N/A        |
|Arab                         |       |          |         |           |           |
|_____________________________|_______|__________|_________|___________|___________|
|Not specified/prefer not to  |-      |-         |-        |N/A        |N/A        |
|say                          |       |          |         |           |           |
|_____________________________|_______|__________|_________|___________|___________|


 

1 The Chairman of the Board and Senior Independent Director are senior positions as defined by the Listing Rules. Although the Chairman of the Audit Committee is not a senior position as defined by the Listing Rules, in the absence of executive roles, the Company considers this role to be a senior position.

2 Not applicable as the Company does not have an executive management team.

 

Modern Slavery Act 2015

 

The Company does not fall within the scope of the Modern Slavery Act 2015 as its turnover is less than £36m. Therefore, no slavery and human trafficking statement is included in the Annual Financial Report.

 

For and on behalf of the Board,

 

David Kidd

Chairman

10 September 2025

 

Statement of Directors' Responsibilities in respect of the Annual Financial Report and the Financial Statements

 

Statement of Directors' Responsibilities

 

The Directors are responsible for preparing the Annual Financial Report and the financial statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations.

 

Company law requires the Directors to prepare financial statements for each financial year. Under that law the Directors have elected to prepare the financial statements in accordance with UK Accounting Standards, including FRS 102 `The Financial Reporting Standard Applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland'.

 

Under company law the Directors must not approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Company and of the profit or loss of the Company for that period. In preparing each of the financial statements, the Directors are required to:

 

    --  select suitable accounting policies and then apply them consistently;
    --  make judgements and estimates that are reasonable and prudent;
    --  state whether applicable UK Accounting Standards have been followed,
        subject to any material departures being disclosed and explained in the
        financial statements; and
    --  prepare the financial statements on the going concern basis unless it is
        inappropriate to presume that the Company will continue in business.

 

The Directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the Company's transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the Company and enable them to ensure that its financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They have general responsibility for taking such steps as are reasonably open to them to safeguard the assets of the Company and to prevent and detect fraud and other irregularities.

 

Under applicable law and regulations, the Directors are also responsible for preparing a Strategic Report, a Directors' Report and Corporate Governance Statement, and a Directors' Remuneration Report that complies with that law and those regulations.

 

The financial statements are published on our website, midwynd.com, maintained by the Company's Investment Manager. Responsibility for the maintenance and integrity of the corporate and financial information relating to the Company on this website has been delegated to the Investment Manager by the Directors. Legislation in the UK governing the preparation and dissemination of financial statements may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

 

We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:

 

(a)     the financial statements, prepared in accordance with the applicable set of accounting standards, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities and financial position of the Company as at 30 June 2025 and of the profit for the year then ended;

(b)     in the opinion of the Directors, the Annual Financial Report taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and understandable and it provides the information necessary to assess the Company's position and performance, business model and strategy; and

(c)      the Strategic Report includes a fair review of the development and performance of the business and the position of the Company, together with a description of the principal risks and uncertainties that it faces.

 

For and on behalf of the Board,

 

David Kidd

Chairman

10 September 2025

 

Financial Statements

 

Statement of Comprehensive Income

For the year ended 30 June

 


                               2025    2025     2025     2024    2024    2024

                               Revenue Capital  Total    Revenue Capital Total

                               £'000   £'000    £'000    £'000   £'000   £'000

(Losses)/gains on investments
held at fair value through     -       (20,732) (20,732) -       49,019  49,019
profit or loss

Currency (losses)/gains        -       (69)     (69)     -       61      61

Income                         3,763   -        3,763    5,650   110     5,760

Investment management fee      (147)   (1,327)  (1,474)  (134)   (1,207) (1,341)

Other expenses                 (619)   (257)    (876)    (665)   (218)   (883)

Net (loss)/return before       2,997   (22,385) (19,388) 4,851   47,765  52,616
finance costs and taxation

Finance costs of borrowings    -       -        -        (2)     (21)    (23)

Net (loss)/return on ordinary  2,997   (22,385) (19,388) 4,849   47,744  52,593
activities before taxation

Taxation on ordinary           (478)   71       (407)    (448)   (71)    (519)
activities

Net (loss)/return on ordinary  2,519   (22,314) (19,795) 4,401   47,673  52,074
activities after taxation

Net (loss)/return per ordinary 5.54p   (49.08)p (43.54)p 8.00p   86.66p  94.66p
share



 

The total column of this statement is the profit and loss account of the Company.

 

All revenue and capital items in this statement derive from continuing operations.

 

The net return for the year disclosed above represents the Company's total comprehensive income.

 

Statement of Financial Position

As at 30 June

 


                                                       2025    2024

                                                       £'000   £'000

Non-current assets

Investments held at fair value through profits or loss 303,478 398,094

Current assets

Debtors                                                660     1,950

Cash and cash equivalents                              4,068   5,742

                                                       4,728   7,692

Creditors

Amounts falling due within one year                    (705)   (1,692)

Net current assets                                     4,023   6,000

Total net assets                                       307,501 404,094

Capital and reserves

Called up share capital                                3,320   3,320

Capital redemption reserve                             16      16

Share premium                                          242,115 242,115

Capital reserve                                        57,234  152,673

Revenue reserve                                        4,816   5,970

Shareholders' funds                                    307,501 404,094

Net asset value per ordinary share                     760.96p 810.22p



 

These financial statements were approved by the Board of Directors and signed on its behalf on 10 September 2025.

 

David Kidd

Chairman

 

Statement of Changes in Equity

 


For the year ended 30
June 2025

                Share   Capital    Share   Capital
                        redemption                    Revenue  Shareholders'
                capital            premium reserve1,2 reserve2 funds
                        reserve
                £'000              £'000   £'000      £'000    £'000
                        £'000

Shareholders'
funds at 1 July 3,320   16         242,115 152,673    5,970    404,094
2024

Net loss on
ordinary        -       -          -       (22,314)   2,519    (19,795)
activities
after taxation

Repurchase of
shares into     -       -          -       (73,125)   -        (73,125)
Treasury

Dividends paid  -       -          -       -          (3,673)  (3,673)

Shareholders'
funds at 30     3,320   16         242,115 57,234     4,816    307,501
June 2025

For the year ended 30
June 2024

                Share   Capital    Share   Capital
                        redemption                    Revenue  Shareholders'
                capital            premium reserve1,2 reserve2 funds
                        reserve
                £'000              £'000   £'000      £'000    £'000
                        £'000

Shareholders'
funds at 1 July 3,320   16         242,115 196,730    6,845    449,026
2023

Net return on
ordinary        -       -          -       47,673     4,401    52,074
activities
after taxation

Repurchase of
shares into     -       -          -       (91,730)   -        (91,730)
Treasury

Dividends paid  -       -          -       -          (5,276)  (5,276)

Shareholders'
funds at 30     3,320   16         242,115 152,673    5,970    404,094
June 2024



 

1 Capital reserve as at 30 June 2025 includes realised gains of £33,046,000 (30 June 2024: £101,175,000).

2 The Company may pay dividends from both the capital reserve and the revenue reserve.

 

Statement of Cash Flows

For the year ended 30 June

 


                                           2025     2025     2024      2024

                                           £'000    £'000    £'000     £'000

Net cash outflow from operations before             (3,193)            (2,649)
dividends and interest

Dividends received from investments        3,748             5,672

Interest received                          21                133

Interest paid                                       -        (23)

                                                    3,769              5,782

Net cash inflow from operating activities           576                3,133

Cash flow from investment activities

Purchase of investments                    (68,655)          (375,073)

Sale of investments                        143,623           463,853

Realised currency (losses)/gains           (65)              65

Net cash generated from investing                   74,903             88,845
activities

Cash flow from financing activities

Repurchase of shares to Treasury, net of   (73,474)          (93,200)
costs

Dividends paid                             (3,673)           (5,276)

Net cash outflow from financing activities          (77,147)           (98,476)

Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents           (1,668)            (6,498)

Cash and cash equivalents at start of the           5,742              12,243
year

Decrease in cash in the year                        (1,668)            (6,498)

Currency losses on cash and cash                    (6)                (3)
equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents at end of the             4,068              5,742
year



 

Notes to the Financial Statements

  1. Accounting policies

 

The financial statements are prepared on a going concern basis under the historical cost convention modified to include the revaluation of investments.

 

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the Companies Act 2006, applicable United Kingdom accounting standards, including Financial Reporting Standard (`FRS') 102, and the Statement of Recommended Practice `Financial Statements of Investment Trust Companies and Venture Capital Trusts' (the `SORP') issued by the Association of Investment Companies (the `AIC') in July 2022.

 

In order to better reflect the activities of the Company and in accordance with guidance issued by the AIC, supplementary information which analyses the profit and loss account between items of a revenue and capital nature has been presented in the Statement of Comprehensive Income.

 

Financial assets and financial liabilities are recognised in the Company's Statement of Financial Position when it becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the instrument.

 

No significant estimates or judgements have been made in the preparation of the financial statements.

The Directors consider the Company's functional currency to be Sterling as the Company's shareholders are predominantly based in the UK and the Company is subject to the UK's regulatory environment.

 

  1. Income

 


                                                                   2025  2024

                                                                   £'000 £'000

Income from investments

Overseas dividends                                                 3,583 5,030

UK dividends                                                       159   597

                                                                   3,742 5,627

Other income

Bank interest                                                      21    133

Total income                                                       3,763 5,760

Total income comprises:

Dividends and UK interest from financial assets designated at fair 3,742 5,627
value through profit or loss

Other income                                                       21    133

Total income                                                       3,763 5,760



 

 

  1. Dividends paid and proposed

 


                                                               2025  2024
                                                   2025  2024
                                                               £'000 £'000

Amounts recognised as distributions in the year:

Previous year's final dividend                     4.15p 3.95p 1,960 2,253

Previous year's special dividend                   -     1.70p -     969

First interim dividend                             3.85p 3.85p 1,713 2,054

Total dividend                                     8.00p 9.50p 3,673 5,276

Set out below are the total dividends paid and payable in respect of the
financial year. The revenue available for distribution by way of dividend
for the year is £2,519,000 (2024: £4,401,000).

                                                               2025  2024
                                                   2025  2024
                                                               £'000 £'000

Dividends paid and payable in respect of the year:

First interim dividend                             3.85p 3.85p 1,713 2,054

Proposed final dividend                            4.50p 4.15p 1,654 1,960

Total dividend                                     8.35p 8.00p 3,367 4,014



 

  1. Net return per ordinary share

 


                          2025    2025     2025     2024    2024    2024

                          Revenue Capital  Total    Revenue Capital Total

Net return on ordinary    5.54p   (49.08)p (43.54)p 8.00p   86.66p  94.66p
activities after taxation



 

Revenue return per ordinary share is based on the net revenue return on ordinary activities after taxation for the financial year of £2,519,000 (2024: £4,401,000) and on 45,463,998 (2024: 55,010,567) ordinary shares, being the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue (excluding Treasury shares) during the year.

 

Capital return per ordinary share is based on the net capital loss on ordinary activities after taxation for the financial year of £22,314,000 (2024: gain £47,673,000) and on 45,463,998 (2024: 55,010,567) ordinary shares, being the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the year.

 

  1. Non-current assets - investments held at fair value through profit or loss

 

Investments in securities are financial assets designated at fair value through profit or loss on initial recognition in accordance with FRS 102. The following tables provide an analysis of these investments based on the fair value hierarchy as described below which reflects the reliability and significance of the information used to measure their fair value.

 

The levels are determined by the lowest (that is the least reliable or least independently observable) level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement for the individual investment in its entirety as follows:

 

Level 1 - investments using unadjusted quoted prices for identical instruments in an active market;

Level 2 - investments whose fair value is based on inputs other than quoted prices that are either directly or indirectly observable;

Level 3 - investments whose fair value is based on inputs that are unobservable (i.e. for which market data is unavailable).

 


                      Year ended 30 June 2025 Year ended 30 June 2024 £'000
                      £'000

Quoted (Level 1)      303,478                 398,094

Total financial asset 303,478                 398,094
investments

                      Year ended 30 June 2025 Year ended 30 June 2024 £'000
                      £'000

Opening book cost     346,596                 398,145

Fair value adjustment 51,498                  40,793

Opening valuation     398,094                 438,938

Purchases as cost     68,543                  375,186

Disposals - proceeds  (142,427)               (465,049)

(Losses)/gains on     (20,732)                49,019
investments

Closing valuation     303,478                 398,094

Closing book cost     279,290                 346,596

Fair value adjustment 24,188                  51,498

                      303,478                 398,094



 

The purchases and sales proceeds figures above include transaction costs of £46,000 on purchases (2024: £80,000) and £32,000 on sales (2024: £117,000), making a total of £78,000 (2024: £197,000).

 

The Company received £142,427,000 (2024: £465,049,000) from investments sold in the year. The book cost of these investments when they were purchased was £135,849,000 (2024: £426,735,000). These investments have been revalued over time and until they were sold any unrealised gains/losses were included in the fair value of the investments.

 

All investments are considered level 1. There have been no transfers between levels during the year.

 

  1. Net asset value per ordinary share

 

The net asset value per ordinary share and the net assets attributable to the ordinary shareholders at the year end were as follows:

 


                2025                2025       2024                2024

                Net asset value per Net assets Net asset value per Net assets
                share                          share
                                    £'000                          £'000

Ordinary shares 760.96p             307,501    810.22p             404,094

During the year the movements in the assets attributable to the ordinary
shares were as follows:

                                               2025                2024

                                               £'000               £'000

Total net assets as 1 July                     404,094             449,026

Total recognised (losses)/gains for the year   (19,795)            52,074

Repurchase of shares into Treasury             (73,125)            (91,730)

Dividends paid                                 (3,673)             (5,276)

Total net assets at 30 June                    307,501             404,094



 

Net asset value per ordinary share is based on net assets as shown above and on 40,409,356 (2024: 49,874,356) ordinary shares, being the number of ordinary shares in issue at the year end.

 

  1. Reconciliation of net return before finance costs and taxation to cash
     generated from operations before dividends and interest

 


                                                          2025     2024

                                                          £'000    £'000

Net return before finance costs and taxation              (19,388) 52,616

Losses/(gains) on investments held at fair value through  20,732   (49,019)
profit or loss

Currency losses/(gains)                                   69       (61)

Decrease/(increase) in accrued income and other debtors   94       (79)

Dividend income                                           (3,748)  (5,672)

Interest received                                         (21)     (133)

(Decrease)/increase in creditors                          (524)    218

Overseas tax suffered                                     (407)    (792)

Corporation tax refunded                                  -        273

Net cash outflow operations before dividends and interest (3,193)  (2,649)



 

  1. Transactions with the Investment Manager and related parties

 

The investment management fees payable to Lazard and the Company's former investment manager, Artemis are disclosed in the Statement of Comprehensive Income on page 57 of the Annual Financial Report. The amount outstanding to Lazard at 30 June 2025 was £296,000 (2024: £738,000). The existence of an independent Board of Directors demonstrates that the Company is free to pursue its own financial and operating policies and therefore the Investment Manager is not considered to be a related party.

 

Fees payable during the year to the Directors and their interests in shares of the Company are considered to be related party transactions and are disclosed within the Directors' Remuneration Report on pages 44 to 46 of the Annual Financial Report.

 

  1. Annual Financial Report

 

This Annual Financial Report announcement does not constitute the Company's statutory accounts for the years ended 30 June 2025 and 30 June 2024 but is derived from those accounts. Statutory accounts for the year ended 30 June 2024 have been delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The statutory accounts for the year ended 30 June 2025 and the year ended 30 June 2024 both received an audit report which was unqualified and did not include a reference to any matters to which the auditors drew attention by way of emphasis without qualifying the report and did not include statements under Section 498 of the Companies Act 2006 respectively. The statutory accounts for the year ended 30 June 2025 will be delivered to the Registrar of Companies shortly.

 

The audited Annual Financial Report for the year ended 30 June 2025 will be posted to shareholders shortly. Copies may be obtained from the Company's registered office at 28 Walker Street, Edinburgh, EH3 7HR or at midwynd.com.

 

The Annual General Meeting of the Company will be held on Thursday 16 October 2025.

 

For further information, please contact:

 

Juniper Partners Limited

Company Secretary

 

Email: cosec@junipartners.com

Enquiries: 0131 378 0500