Final Results

Source: RNS
RNS Number : 0506U
Moonpig Group plc
27 June 2024
 

P1#y1 


27 June 2024

 

Moonpig Group plc ("Moonpig Group" or the "Group")

 

RESULTS ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 April 2024

 

Revenue and profit growth underpinned by technology and innovation

 

Summary financial results

 


 

Year ended

30 April 2024

 

Year ended

30 April 2023

 

Year-on-year

growth %

Revenue (£m)

341.1

320.1

6.6%

Gross profit (£m)

202.5

179.7

12.7%

Gross margin (%)

59.4%

56.1%

3.2%pts

Adjusted EBITDA (£m)1

95.5

84.2

13.5%

Adjusted EBITDA margin (%)1

28.0%

26.3%

1.7pts

Reported profit before taxation (£m)

46.4

34.9

32.9%

Adjusted profit before taxation (£m)2

58.2

55.4

5.0%

Earnings per share - basic (pence)

10.0

7.8

28.2%

Earnings per share - diluted (pence)

9.6

7.7

24.7%

 1 Before Adjusting Items of £3.5m in FY24 and £13.1m in FY23. See Adjusting Items at Note 6 and definition of Alternative Performance Measures below.

 2 Before Adjusting Items of £11.8m in FY24 and £20.6m in FY23. The Group has amended its definition of Adjusting Items such that £8.3m of acquisition amortisation (FY23: £7.5m) is treated as an Adjusting Item in both the current and prior year. See Adjusting Items at Note 6.

 

Results summary

·      Delivered revenue growth of 6.6% to £341.1m driven by strong performance at the Moonpig brand.

·      Adjusted EBITDA growth to £95.5m (FY23: £84.2m) reflecting revenue growth and improved gross margin rate.

·      Adjusted profit before taxation of £58.2m (FY23: £55.4m) reflecting stronger trading offset in part by higher interest charges and the amortisation of technology platform investments.

 

Strategic and operational highlights

 

Organic revenue growth accelerated through the year:

·      Underpinned by Moonpig, which grew revenue by 8.2% through growth in both orders and average order value.

·      New customer revenue returned to growth at Moonpig in the second half of the year.

·      Improving trajectory at Greetz, with revenue declines abating to 5.3% in H2 FY24 from 9.8% in H1 FY24 and 20.4% in FY23.

·      Across Moonpig and Greetz, growth in orders improved from a decrease of 5.1% in H1 to an increase of 5.2% in H2 FY24.

·      At Experiences, pro forma revenue increased by 1.5% year-on-year to £48.6m. This includes mid-single-digit million upside from temporarily higher breakage on gift boxes and vouchers that were sold during Covid with extended expiry dates; these expiry dates have now passed, so this benefit is not expected to recur in future years.

 

Strong cash generation:

·      The Group remains strongly cash generative, with operating cash inflows of £74.2m (FY23: £56.2m).

·      Net leverage improved to 1.31x at 30 April 2024, from 1.99x at 30 April 2023.

·      Significant liquidity and covenant headroom, with a new £180m four-year, committed revolving credit facility in place.

 

Continued technology innovation to drive higher customer lifetime value:

·      89% of Moonpig and Greetz revenue (FY23: 89%) delivered from existing customers.

·      Moonpig Plus subscriptions surpassed our expectations with over half a million members within a year of launch.

·      Greetz Plus launched in January 2024 and is following a similar encouraging trajectory to the UK.

·      Database of customer occasion reminders grew to 90 million (April 2023: 84 million).

·      Our creativity features were used over 10 million times to add video and audio messages, "sticker" images, digital gift vouchers and AI-driven customised messages to the inside of greeting cards.

·      Same-day gifting launched on Moonpig, by combining of e-cards with new digital gift experiences. Encouraging early traction across peak event days so far.

·      Technology re-platforming of the Red Letter Days and Buyagift websites continues at pace with a full rebuild of the front end now complete.

 

Enhanced deployment of AI to personalise customer experience:

·      Significant upgrade to our algorithms by incorporating individual customer level data into our gift recommendation engine, unlocking the ability to show different price ranges to different cohorts.

·      Introduced personalisation elements into all parts of the journey, including homepage banners and promotions unique to the individual customer.

·      Enhanced the capabilities of our AI-powered Customer Service chatbot, driving a significant reduction in the number of customer contacts being handled by agents.

·      Launched AI semantic search capability, using large language models to better understand and interpret customer search terms, which will drive increasingly more relevant search results over time.

 

Capital allocation

 

We remain disciplined in our approach to allocation of capital and continue to prioritise organic investment to drive growth, including investment in technology and marketing. Future investments may extend to new geographical markets, contingent upon achieving optimal customer acquisition costs and confidence in customer lifetime value. We will also selectively consider value-accretive M&A opportunities, maintaining a high threshold for strategic and financial returns.

 

Over the past two financial years, we have also focused on balance sheet deleveraging. In FY24, we reduced net leverage from 1.99x to 1.31x, a decrease of approximately 0.7 turns. Given our strong cash generation, there is potential for a similar reduction in net leverage in FY25. To maintain an efficient capital structure, our target is to operate with net leverage of approximately 1.0x over the medium term, with flexibility to move beyond this as business needs require.

 

We will continue to prioritise investment to drive the execution of our growth strategy. With our consistent strong operating cash generation and the progress being made with deleveraging, we will also have the financial flexibility to consider returning excess capital to shareholders.

 

Outlook

 

Trading since the start of the year has been in line with our expectations with both new and existing customer orders in growth. In the context of the current macroeconomic environment, we expect FY25 revenue growth (after adjusting for temporarily higher breakage on experience vouchers in FY24) at a mid to high single digit percentage rate, underpinned by growth in orders at the Moonpig brand.

 

Our business is well positioned to deliver sustained growth in revenue, profit and free cash flow, driven by our continued focus on data and technology. With respect to the medium-term, we are targeting double digit percentage annual revenue growth, an Adjusted EBITDA margin rate of approximately 25% to 26% and growth in Adjusted earnings per share at a mid-teens percentage rate.

 

Nickyl Raithatha, CEO, commented

 

"We are delighted that the Group has delivered full-year growth in both revenue and profit, with trading performance strengthening across our peak trading periods in the second half of the year. This has been driven by our multi-year investments in technology and innovation, which continue to foster extraordinary customer loyalty.

 

The Moonpig Plus subscription scheme has exceeded our expectations, passing the milestone of half a million members within one year. Our investments in new AI technologies are delivering an increasingly personalised experience for our customers. As the clear online leader in greetings cards, Moonpig Group is well positioned to benefit from the long-term structural market shift to online."

 

Investor and analyst meeting

 

The full year results presentation will be available on the Investor Relations section of Moonpig Group's corporate website (www.moonpig.group/investors) shortly after 7:00 am on 27 June 2024.

 

Nickyl Raithatha (CEO) and Andy MacKinnon (CFO) will host a Q&A for analysts and investors via webcast at 9:30am. Please note that the presentation will not be repeated during the webcast.

 

Analysts wishing to register for the event should email investors@moonpig.com.

 

Investors wishing to listen to the Q&A should register via the following link:

https://www.lsegissuerservices.com/spark/MoonpigGroup/events/d8692b0f-da5f-4bd7-8080-e6a925bfb67d

 

Capital market event

 

The Group intends to hold a capital markets event on 16 October 2024. Further information will be provided in due course.

 

Enquiries

 

Brunswick Group

+44 20 7404 5959

Sarah West, Fiona Micallef-Eynaud, Sofie Brewis

moonpig@brunswickgroup.com

 

 

Moonpig Group

investors@moonpig.com, pressoffice@moonpig.com

Nickyl Raithatha, Chief Executive Officer

 

Andy MacKinnon, Chief Financial Officer

 

 

About Moonpig Group

 

Moonpig Group plc (the "Group") is a leading online greeting cards and gifting platform, comprising the Moonpig, Red Letter Days and Buyagift brands in the UK and the Greetz brand in the Netherlands. The Group's leading customer proposition includes an extensive range of cards, a curated range of gifts, personalisation features and next day delivery offering.

 

The Group offers its products through its proprietary technology platforms and apps, which utilise unique data science capabilities designed by the Group to optimise and personalise the customer experience and provide scalability. Learn more at https://www.moonpig.group/.

 

Forward Looking Statements

 

This announcement contains certain forward-looking statements with respect to the financial condition, results or operation and businesses of Moonpig Group plc. Such statements and forecasts by their nature involve risks and uncertainty because they relate to future events and circumstances. There are a number of other factors that may cause actual results, performance or achievements, or industry results to be materially different from those projected in the forward-looking statements.

 

These factors include general economic and business conditions; changes in technology; timing or delay in signing, commencement, implementation and performance of programmes, or the delivery of products or services under them; industry; relationships with customers; competition and ability to attract personnel. You are cautioned not to rely on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this announcement. We undertake no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect any change in our expectations or any change in events, conditions or circumstances.

 

Business review

 

Overview

 

FY24 has been a period of strong financial and strategic delivery, with activity focused in the following key areas:

 

·      Innovation on our unified technology platform, which drove a strengthening in revenue growth to 6.6% in the second half of the year. Our product, data and technology teams have significantly increased the velocity of delivery for customer-facing growth initiatives. These include Moonpig Plus and Greetz Plus subscriptions, card creativity features (such as audio and video messages, group cards, digital delivery of gift experiences) and AI technologies that leverage data on previous customer purchase behaviour to enhance gifting recommendation algorithms.

 

·      Continued execution of the transformation project at Experiences, including phased migration to a new technology platform and the launch of a new visual identity for both brands to support differentiated market positioning.

 

·      Developing our pipeline of initiatives intended to drive medium-term growth, including marketing investment in Ireland, targeted testing to identify profitable ways to scale customer acquisition in Australia and the US, and testing of our prototype Moonpig for Work solution for SME business to employee gifting.

 

Moonpig Group has maintained its investment in technology, marketing and operations through the economic cycle due to the resilience, profitability and cash generation of our business:

 

·      Our focus on customer lifetime value equips us with resilience in more challenging conditions. Our approach at Moonpig and Greetz is focused on acquiring loyal customer cohorts that drive recurring revenue and 89% of revenue at these brands was generated from existing customers (FY23: 89%). The long-term "sticky" nature of these customer cohorts is supported by our data and technology platform, which allows us to personalise the user experience. More generally, the greeting cards market has a long track record of recession-resilience.

 

·      Adjusted EBITDA margin rate increased to 28.0% (FY23: 26.3%) through a combination of gross margin rate improvement and disciplined control of indirect costs. Our low-inventory strategy means that profit margins are not exposed to significant stock-related risks.

 

·      Our business is highly cash generative. We improved the ratio of net debt to Adjusted EBITDA to 1.31x at 30 April 2024, from 1.99x at 30 April 2023.

 

Leveraging data and technology

 

Last year, we completed a multi-year project to unite Moonpig and Greetz onto a single technology platform. This freed most of our technology teams to focus on innovation and experimentation, driving an acceleration of the pace at which we deploy new features.

 

We have further enhanced our use of AI to personalise customer experience:

 

·      Significant upgrade to our algorithms by incorporating individual customer level data into our gift recommendation engine, unlocking the ability to show different price ranges to different cohorts.

·      Introduced personalisation elements into all parts of the journey, including homepage banners and promotions unique to the individual customer.

·      Enhanced the capabilities of our AI-powered Customer Service chatbot, driving a significant reduction in the number of customer contacts being handled by agents.

·      Launched AI semantic search capability, using large language models to better understand and interpret customer search terms, which will drive increasingly more relevant search results over time.

 

We are leveraging technology to drive higher customer lifetime value:

 

·      Moonpig Plus subscriptions passed the milestone of half a million members, with continued strong sign-up rates and promising renewal rates for the first cohort who joined in June 2023.

·      Greetz Plus launched in January 2024 and is following a similar encouraging trajectory to the UK.

·      Our creativity features were used over 10 million times, allowing customers to add video and audio messages, "sticker" images, digital gift vouchers and AI-driven customised messages to greeting cards.

 

We are building deeper network effects:

 

·      We have deployed features that enable online interaction with recipients (such as video messages and digital gifts) and message contributors (group cards), increasing the potential to convert them into new customers.

·      Moonpig for Work is live in beta version for several customers ahead of planned launch in FY25. This solution is initially targeted at SME business-to-employee card giving and gifting around events such as birthdays, work anniversaries and Christmas.

 

We are investing in technology at Experiences, and upgrading how we cross-sell gift experiences to Moonpig customers:

 

·      We have launched same-day gifting capability on Moonpig by combining e-cards with digital gift experiences, with encouraging early traction across peak event days so far.

·      Technology re-platforming of the Red Letter Days and Buyagift websites continues at pace with a full rebuild of the front end now complete.

·      We completed an integration with a premium dining partner unlocking access to restaurants in London such as Harvey Nichols, Benihana, Colonel Saab, Corrigan's Mayfair and Harrods.

 

Building our brands

 

Our strategy remains focused on delivering revenue growth through our existing customer base and we grew Moonpig and Greetz revenue from existing customers by 5.9% to £261.3m (FY23: £246.8m). Our key areas of focus remain:

 

·      Continuously improving how we leverage our database of 90 million customer occasion reminders (April 2023: 84 million) to communicate with customers. Reminders represent a powerful ecosystem, enabling us to engage with customers at moments of high card-giving intent, and drive a significant proportion of Moonpig and Greetz revenue.

 

·      Encouraging customer sign-up to Moonpig Plus and Greetz Plus, as well as migrating Greetz customers to the app that we launched in FY23. Greetz app penetration increased during the year to 33% (April 2023: 22%).

 

·      Raising customer awareness of differentiated card creativity options that we believe will drive customer loyalty and increase lifetime value. By showcasing innovative features such as video and audio messages, we emphasise that our offering is superior to the online and offline competition. This message is delivered through our website real estate, social media and video on demand. Initiatives include the "With Greetz you give more than a card" campaign in the Netherlands and new creative advertising copy for Moonpig, which we plan to launch across all channels including TV in the UK in FY25.

 

We were pleased that revenue from newly acquired customers moved back into year-on-year growth at Moonpig in H2 FY24, whilst the behaviour of cohorts acquired in the past year remained consistent with historical cohorts. Our brands are powerful assets, built over several decades, with high levels of consumer awareness and a strong association with convenience, service and range. Across FY24 we have maintained significant investment in marketing in the UK and the Netherlands, in line with prior year levels. We continue to acquire loyal customer cohorts that deliver lifetime value rather than pursuing short-term, transactional revenue.

 

We want to build a pipeline of early-stage revenue expansion initiatives and have increased our activity in new geographical markets. Revenue from Moonpig websites in Ireland, Australia and the US grew by 34.3% to £8.7 million (FY23: £6.5 million). We successfully increased new customer acquisition in Ireland and are conducting tests to identify scalable marketing strategies in Australia and the US. Additionally, we are enhancing the customer proposition by introducing localised card design ranges, expanding the gifting range (through physical gifts in Ireland and Australia and retail gift vouchers in the US) and building partnerships with local gifting providers. Where we gain confidence in customer lifetime value in any of these markets, we would look to further scale our marketing investment.

 

At Experiences, we have continued the process of differentiating the Red Letter Days and Buyagift brands, so that the former emphasises iconic experiences and a more curated range, whilst the latter is more value-led. A new, fresh visual identity has been rolled-out at each brand. We have also increased marketing investment during the key pre-Christmas trading period, supplementing the optimisation of performance marketing with new brand marketing activity focused around online video and social media to build awareness and purchase consideration.

 

Evolving our range

 

Our customers love well-known brands that provide reassurance that the gift will delight the recipient. As part of our ongoing programme to onboard "trusted brands" at Moonpig, we expanded our partnership with Virgin Wines to cover personalised still and sparkling wine and launched Hotel Chocolat in February 2024, which instantly became one of our most popular gifting options. Similarly, at Greetz we are likewise strengthening our roster of trusted brands, for instance through the recent launch of Lindt chocolate.

 

We have established a unified global team responsible for all designs on greeting cards and personalised gifts. This team continues to negotiate with global licensors to bring internationally recognised properties to Greetz that already feature on Moonpig. Given the popularity of "sticker" images that customers can use to personalise the inside of greeting cards on Moonpig and Greetz, we have also expanded our range of sticker designs to include images from franchises such as Disney Princess, Marvel, Star Wars and Harry Potter.

 

In FY24, our Experiences division onboarded "hero" brands such as Champneys Health Spa and W Hotels. With Moonpig scaling sales of gift experiences as both physically printed codes in cards and instantly delivered digital attachments to e-cards, we are now focused on expanding our range of mid-priced experiences in categories such as casual dining that resonate well with Moonpig customers.

 

In the current trading environment, we have also focused on operational process efficiency and the delivery of improvements in gross margin. We delivered an increase in Group gross margin rate to 59.4% (FY23: 56.1%), the reduction in inventories to £7.1m (April 2023: £12.3m) and an extension in the Greetz cut-off time for same-day dispatch to 11pm for all cards, gifts and flowers.

 

Maintaining high ethical, environmental and sustainability standards

 

We continue to execute against our sustainability strategy, which commits the Group to eight long-term goals focused on the environment, its people and its communities. In particular, the Group has made strong progress against its target to obtain commitments from suppliers to set net zero emissions reduction targets aligned with SBTi criteria, representing 67% of Scope 3 emissions by 30 April 2030. At the end of the financial year, the Group had obtained supplier commitments covering 19.3% of Scope 3 emissions, compared to 9.7% at 30 April 2023.

 

A key area of focus remains customer net promoter score, which has been impacted by the delivery performance of postal service providers in the UK and the Netherlands. To address this, we have implemented a clear strategy focused on:

 

·      Encouraging earlier ordering and delivery, including sending the first reminder message to customers 14 days before each occasion.

 

·      Improving how we communicate estimated delivery dates. Our new "date first" user experience flows at the checkout on our website and apps clearly inform customers about the possibility of scheduling their orders for cards and gifts in advance.

 

·      Providing more options for tracked delivery. We have collaborated with Royal Mail to introduce a tracked delivery service at an attractive consumer price. This service, available during peak demand periods such as Christmas, Valentine's Day, and Mother's Day, allows customers to send greeting cards even after the cut-off for first-class letter post.

 

·      Expanding our digital offering to include e-cards with same-date digital delivery of a gift experience, leveraging the range of Red Letter Days and Buyagift.

 

We are passionate about diversity in the technology sector. As at 30 April 2024, the combined representation of women and ethnic minorities on our extended leadership team stands at 49% (April 2023: 52%). Female representation at this level is 41%, exceeding the 40% target set by the FTSE Women Leaders Review Target. We were proud to be ranked 32nd in the FTSE 250 for women on boards and in leadership by the FTSE Women Leaders Review 2023.

 

Financial review

 

Overview

 

The Group delivered consolidated revenue growth at 6.6% in FY24, underpinned by revenue at the Moonpig brand, which grew year-on-year at 8.2%, and by the consolidation of a full year of trading at Experiences.

 

Alongside positive and strengthening Group revenue growth, we have continued to focus on profitability, raising Adjusted EBIT margin rate to 22.9% (FY23: 21.6%) through a combination of gross margin rate improvement and disciplined control of indirect costs. Our low-inventory strategy means that profit margins are not exposed to significant stock-related risks.

 

The Group has amended its definition of Adjusting Items such that amortisation of intangible assets arising on business combinations (acquisition amortisation) is now treated as an Adjusting Item. The change has been made in response to investor feedback that it would bring the Group's approach into closer alignment with majority market practice and result in the reporting of Alternative Performance Measures that are more readily comparable with those of other listed businesses. As a result, current year and prior year Adjusted EBIT, Adjusted profit before taxation and Adjusted EPS are stated excluding acquisition amortisation of £8.3m (FY23: £7.5m).

 

The Group remains strongly cash generative, with operating cash inflows of £74.2m in FY24, compared to £56.2m in FY23. Net debt to Adjusted EBITDA decreased from 1.99x at 30 April 2023 to 1.31x at 30 April 2024. In February 2024, the Group agreed a new four-year, committed, multi-currency revolving credit facility ("RCF") of £180m with a syndicate of banks. The Group's previous £175m term loan and £80m revolving credit facilities have been fully repaid and cancelled. The RCF is fully available for general corporate purposes.

 

Financial performance - Group


 

Year ended

30 April 2024

 

Year ended

30 April 2023

 

Year-on-year

growth %

Revenue (£m)

341.1

320.1

6.6%

Gross profit (£m)

202.5

179.7

12.7%

Gross margin (%)

59.4%

56.1%

3.3%pts

Adjusted EBITDA (£m)1

95.5

84.2

13.5%

Adjusted EBITDA margin (%)1

28.0%

26.3%

1.7%pts

Adjusted EBIT (£)2

78.1

69.0

13.2%

Adjusted EBIT margin (%)2

22.9%

21.6%

1.3%pts

Reported profit before taxation (£m)

46.4

34.9

32.9%

Adjusted profit before taxation (£m)2

58.2

55.4

5.0%

Earnings per share - basic (pence)

10.0

7.8

28.2%

Earnings per share - diluted (pence)

9.6

7.7

24.7%

Net debt (£m)3

(125.1)

(167.7)

25.4%

 1 Before Adjusting Items of £3.5m in FY24 and £13.1m in FY23. See Adjusting Items at Note 6 and definition of Alternative Performance Measures below.

 2 Before Adjusting Items of £11.8m in FY24 and £20.6m in FY23. The Group has amended its definition of Adjusting Items such that £8.3m of acquisition amortisation (FY23: £7.5m) is treated as an Adjusting Item in both the current and prior year. See Adjusting Items at Note 6 and definition of Alternative Performance Measures below.

 3 Net debt is defined as total borrowings, inclusive of lease liabilities, less cash and cash equivalents.

 

The Group delivered revenue of £341.1m in FY24, representing year-on-year growth of 6.6% on a consolidated basis. This reflects the inclusion of a full year of Experiences revenue in FY24, which would have contributed an additional £6.3m of prior year revenue if owned throughout FY23. Pro forma revenue growth was 4.5%, underpinned by the Moonpig brand.

 

Gross margin rate strengthened by 3.3%pts year-on-year reflecting the benefits from insourcing fulfilment in the UK, the full year impact of changes to card prices and shipping prices for gifts and the mix impact of a full year of trading at Experiences. Combined with continued disciplined control of indirect costs, this enabled the Group to deliver increases in Adjusted EBITDA margin to 28.0% (FY23: 26.3%) and Adjusted EBIT margin to 22.9% (FY23: 21.6%).

 

FY24 revenue and Adjusted EBIT include a mid-single-digit millions uplift from temporarily higher breakage on gift boxes (primarily distributed through high street retail partners) and individual experience vouchers that were sold during Covid with extended expiry dates. As these extended expiry dates have now passed, this benefit is not expected to recur in future years.

 

Reported profit before taxation increased by 32.9% to £46.4m (FY23: £34.9m), as a lower charge for Adjusting Items was offset in part by higher depreciation and amortisation and higher finance costs. Net finance costs increased from £13.6m in FY23 to £19.9m in FY24, primarily reflecting higher SONIA charges on the unhedged element of borrowings, the accelerated amortisation of loan arrangement fees arising on refinancing and the imputation of interest on the Experiences merchant liability balance. Adjusted profit before taxation increased year-on-year by 5.0% to £58.2m. Adjusting Items were lower in FY24 as there were no M&A transaction fees and the cost of only the final tranche of the pre-IPO award which vested on 30 April 2024.

 

Net debt is a non-GAAP measure and is defined as total borrowings, inclusive of lease liabilities, less cash and cash equivalents. Group net debt as at 30 April 2024 was £125.1m (30 April 2023: £167.7m), resulting in a ratio of net debt to Adjusted EBITDA of 1.31x (30 April 2023: 1.99x). Net debt excluding lease liabilities was £108.8m (30 April 2023: £148.1m).

 

Revenue


 

Year ended

30 April 2024

 

Year ended

30 April 2023

 

Year-on-year

growth %

Moonpig and Greetz orders (m)

33.9

33.8

0.1%

Moonpig and Greetz average order value (£ per order)

8.6

8.2

5.1%

Moonpig and Greetz revenue (£m)

292.5

278.5

5.0%





Moonpig revenue (£m)

241.3

223.1

8.2%

Greetz revenue (£m)

51.2

55.4

(7.5%)

Moonpig and Greetz revenue (£m)

292.5

278.5

5.0%

Experiences revenue (£m)

48.6

41.6

16.8%

Group revenue (£m)

341.1

320.1

6.6%

 

Moonpig and Greetz orders were flat year-on-year for full year FY24. However, there has been a positive trend in performance, with new technology features delivering volume growth in the second half of the year. Orders decreased by 14.9% in full year FY23, decreased by 5.1% in H1 FY24 and increased by 5.2% in H2 FY24. The key driver of orders growth in H2 FY24 was the strong performance of existing customer cohorts at Moonpig, reflecting initiatives including Moonpig Plus subscriptions. New customer orders at Moonpig decreased year-on-year but with an improving trajectory, reaching flat year-on-year in the final quarter. Greetz order performance also improved although the exit run-rate was not yet in growth.

 

Average order value at Moonpig and Greetz increased by 5.1% year-on-year, reflecting the full annual impact of card price increases implemented at the end of H1 FY23, stamp price increases and subscription membership fee income.

 

This was reflected in the strengthening of Moonpig revenue, which increased by 8.2% across the full year and by 11.0% in H2 FY24, underpinned by orders growth in the second half. However this includes annualisation against prior year disruption from industrial action at Royal Mail, excluding which, growth would have been at a high single digit rate.

 

The revenue trajectory at Greetz has continued to improve, with year-on-year revenue declines abating to 5.3% in H2 FY24 from 9.8% in H1 FY24 and 20.4% in FY23. This reflects organisational changes that have enabled Greetz to better leverage Group capabilities, the roll-out of new technology features such as audio and video messaging for Dutch customers, a sharper brand marketing focus on the differentiated features of Greetz cards and encouraging customer adoption of functionality that drive lifetime value such as Greetz Plus subscription membership and the Greetz app. Trading across the last two years has been impacted by the migration of Greetz onto our unified technology platform, which features a clearly card-first online customer journey and has therefore led to the foregoing of standalone gifting revenue, which is not core to our strategy; however, the resulting card-first business is now positioned for growth in FY25.

 

Trading at Red Letter Days and Buyagift has been resilient, in the context of its higher average selling price and the more discretionary nature of its gifting offering. We continue to make good progress with strategic delivery, including the technology re-platforming of Red Letter Days and Buyagift and launch of same-day gifting on Moonpig by combining e-cards with digital gift experiences. Experiences revenue totalled £48.6m, which represents an increase of 1.5% relative to full-year revenue for FY23 of £47.9m (stated pro forma to include the period prior to acquisition). Pro forma revenue would have decreased year-on-year if not for the mid-single-digit million upside from temporarily higher breakage on gift boxes and vouchers that were sold during Covid with extended expiry dates; these expiry dates have now passed, so this benefit is not expected to recur in future years.

 

Breakage is revenue earned in respect of vouchers that expire without being redeemed. When a voucher is purchased, the expected value of future amounts that will become payable to merchant providers is recorded within trade and other payables on the consolidated balance sheet. The Group considers historical redemption rates when estimating future payments to merchant providers and estimates are trued up for actual customer redemption rates. For cohorts of vouchers where non-redemption exceeds the expected rate, the Group recognises revenue from the additional unredeemed vouchers and derecognises the accrued merchant payable once its legal obligations to the merchants expire.

 

Gifting mix of revenue


 

Year ended

30 April 2024

 

Year ended

30 April 2023

 

Year-on-year

growth %

Moonpig and Greetz cards revenue (£m)

172.0

157.7

9.1%

Moonpig and Greetz attached gifting revenue (£m)

110.8

109.4

1.3%

Moonpig and Greetz standalone gifting revenue (£m)

9.7

11.4

(14.8)%

Moonpig and Greetz revenue (£m)

292.5

278.5

5.0%

Experiences gifting revenue (£m)

48.6

41.6

16.8%

Group revenue (£m)

341.1

320.1

6.6%


Moonpig / Greetz total gifting revenue (£m)

120.5

120.8

(0.2)%

Moonpig / Greetz gifting revenue mix (%)

41.2%

43.4%

(2.2)%pts

Group gifting mix of revenue (%)

49.6%

50.7%

(1.1)%pts

 

Gifting mix of revenue remained broadly flat at 49.6% (FY23: 50.7%), reflecting a full year of consolidated revenue at Experiences. Excluding the Experiences segment, gifting revenue mix decreased from 43.4% in FY23 to 41.2% in FY24. This primarily reflected the full year impact of greeting card price increases implemented during the prior year. Gift attachment rate was stable notwithstanding the more challenging market environment for gifting. Standalone gifting revenue decreased by 14.8% year-on-year; however, this is not an area of focus as our strategy at Moonpig and Greetz is to drive growth in cards and attached gifting.

 

Gross margin rate

 


 

Year ended

30 April 2024

 

Year ended

30 April 2023

 

Year-on-year

growth %

Moonpig gross margin (%)

55.2%

51.8%

3.4%pts

Greetz gross margin (%)

47.1%

46.8%

0.3%pts

Moonpig and Greetz gross margin (%)

53.8%

50.8%

3.0%pts

Experiences gross margin (%)

92.9%

92.0%

0.9%pts

Group gross margin (%)

59.4%

56.1%

3.3%pts

 

Management has maintained its focus on margin rate improvement, increasing the Group's gross margin rate to 59.4% (FY23: 56.1%). This primarily reflects a 3.4%pts year-on-year improvement in gross margin rate at Moonpig, which was driven by operational efficiencies in the UK delivered in the year after opening new operational facilities, and the full year impact of FY23 greeting card price increases.

 

Experiences gross margin rate remained relatively consistent year-on-year at 92.9% (FY23: 92.0%). The relatively high gross margin rate at Experiences reflects the nature of revenue recognised at this segment, which comprises agency commission earned from partners for the distribution of experiences, rather than gross transaction value. Cost of goods at the Experiences segment relates primarily to packaging and distribution for those orders where the consumer elects to pay for a physical gift box rather than digital delivery.

 

Adjusted EBITDA margin


Year ended

30 April 2024

Year ended

30 April 2023

Year-on-year

growth %

Moonpig Adjusted EBITDA margin (%)

30.1%

26.8%

3.3%pts

Greetz Adjusted EBITDA margin (%)

15.3%

20.3%

(5.0)%pts

Moonpig and Greetz Adjusted EBITDA margin (%)

27.5%

25.5%

2.0%pts

Experiences Adjusted EBITDA margin (%)

30.9%

31.4%

(0.5)%pts

Group Adjusted EBITDA margin (%)

28.0%

26.3%

1.7%pts

 

Adjusted EBITDA margin rate at Moonpig increased by 3.3%pts, reflecting pass-through of the higher gross margin rate. The reduction in Adjusted EBITDA margin rate at Greetz reflects the operational leverage impact of lower revenue. Across both businesses, we have applied disciplined management of indirect costs.

 

Adjusted EBITDA margin at Experiences was 30.9%, which is comparable to a pro forma Adjusted EBITDA margin rate of 29.2% for FY23 (stated as though the business had been owned throughout the year). The reported prior year Adjusted EBITDA margin rate of 31.4% relates to only part of the year and is therefore impacted by the seasonality of trading, which is typically lower in the pre-acquisition months that were excluded from consolidation.

 

Adjusted EBIT margin


Year ended

30 April 2024

Year ended

30 April 2023

Year-on-year

growth %

Moonpig Adjusted EBIT margin (%)

24.1%

21.5%

2.6%pts

Greetz Adjusted EBIT margin (%)

11.6%

16.6%

(5.0)%pts

Moonpig and Greetz Adjusted EBIT margin (%)

21.9%

20.6%

1.3%pts

Experiences Adjusted EBIT margin (%)%

28.7%

28.3%

0.4%pts

Adjusted EBIT margin (%)

22.9%

21.6%

1.3%pts

 

Adjusted EBIT increased year-on-year by 13.2% to £78.1m reflecting revenue growth and the pass through of higher gross margin rates. Adjusted EBIT margin rate increased year-on-year by 1.3%pts to 22.9%, whereas Adjusted EBITDA margin rate increased by 1.7%pts to 28.0%. This reflects an increase in depreciation and amortisation (excluding acquisition amortisation) from £15.2m in FY23 to £17.4m in FY24, resulting from additional investment in operational facilities and technology development. There has been no change in the Group's accounting policies or practices relating to the capitalisation of costs as internally generated intangible assets. We continue to amortise internally generated intangible assets over a relatively short useful life of three years.

 

Profit before taxation


Year ended

30 April 2024

Year ended

30 April 2023

Year-on-year

growth %

Adjusted EBIT (£m)1

78.1

69.0

13.2%

Net finance costs (£m)

(19.9)

(13.6)

(46.7)%

Adjusted profit before taxation (£m)

58.2

55.4

5.0%

Adjusting Items (£m)

(11.8)

(20.6)

42.6%

Reported profit before taxation (£m)

46.4

34.9

32.9%

1 Adjusted EBIT for both FY24 and FY23 excludes acquisition amortisation following a change in the definition of Adjusting Items. The impact of this change on Adjusted EBIT is set out in the Alternative Performance Measures section below.

 

Reported profit before taxation increased by 32.9% to £46.4m (FY23: £34.9m), as stronger operating profit and a lower charge for Adjusting Items were only partially offset by higher net finance costs.

 

Net finance costs increased from £13.6m in FY23 to £19.9m in FY24:

 

●      Interest on bank borrowings increased from £11.6m in FY23 to £12.3m in FY24. The impact of a higher reference rate on the unhedged element of the Group's interest rate exposure was offset in part by lower draw-down of the Group's revolving credit facilities.

 

●      Amortisation of fees increased from £2.0m in FY23 to £5.0m in FY24, reflecting a non-cash interest charge of £3.1m in FY24 for the accelerated amortisation of loan arrangement fees arising on refinancing (which would otherwise have been recognised in FY25 and FY26).

 

●      There was an additional £1.6m relating to imputation of interest on the Experiences merchant liability balance, which we treat as a financial liability and discount to present value in accordance with IFRS 9.

 

●      Interest on lease liabilities remained unchanged year-on-year at £0.9m.

 

●      There was a £1.3m year-on-year movement in the monetary foreign exchange impact of Euro-denominated intercompany loan balances. The Group recognised a £0.4m loss (FY23: £0.9m gain), with the corresponding intercompany gain recognised in other comprehensive income in accordance with IAS 21.

 

Adjusted profit before taxation increased year-on-year by 5.0% to £58.2m. Adjusting Items were lower in FY24 as there were no M&A transaction fees and the cost of the pre-IPO award related only to the final tranche following vesting of the first tranche in June 2023.

 

Taxation

 

The taxation charge of £12.2m (FY23: £8.3m) represents an effective taxation rate of 26.4% (FY23: 23.8%). This exceeded the prevailing rates of corporation tax of 25.0% in the UK and 25.8% in the Netherlands primarily because of the impact of the Group's share schemes. Expressed as a percentage of Adjusted profit before taxation, the effective tax rate was 25.1% (FY23: 19.9%).

 

Earnings Per Share ("EPS")

 

Basic EPS for FY24 was 10.0p (FY23: 7.8p) and Adjusted Basic EPS, which is stated before Adjusting Items was 12.7p

(FY23: 13.1p). After accounting for the effect of employee share arrangements, diluted earnings per share was 9.6p

(FY23: 7.7p).

 

The calculation of basic EPS is based on the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during FY24 of 343,093,868 (FY23: 340,061,402), which includes the issue of 1,198,394 shares to employees following vesting of the first tranche of the pre-IPO award and in relation to the DSBP where shares have been awarded to good leavers.

 

Throughout FY23, total issued share capital was 342,111,621, however 3,075,329 shares issued to employees prior to the IPO remained subject to recall within a two-year period if employment conditions were not met. These shares were excluded from the relevant portion of FY23 in accordance with paragraph 24 of IAS 33 on the basis that they were contingently returnable. The employment condition fell away in January 2023 therefore these shares are included in the number of ordinary shares outstanding throughout FY24.

 

Alternative Performance Measures

 

The Group has identified certain Alternative Performance Measures ("APMs") that it believes provide additional useful information on the performance of the Group. These APMs are not defined within IFRS and are not intended to substitute or be considered as superior to IFRS measures. Furthermore, these APMs may not necessarily be comparable to similarly titled measures used by other companies. The Group's Directors and management use these APMs in conjunction with IFRS measures when budgeting, planning and reviewing business performance. Executive management bonus targets for FY25 include an Adjusted EBIT measure (FY24: Adjusted EBITDA) and long-term incentive plans include an Adjusted Basic Pre-Tax Earnings Per Share ("EPS") measure.

 


Year ended 30 April 2024

Year ended 30 April 2023

 


Adjusted

Measures1

Adjusting

Items1

IFRS

Measures

Adjusted

Measures1

Adjusting

Items1,2

IFRS

Measures

 

EBITDA (£m)

95.5

(3.5)

92.0

84.2

(13.1)

71.1

 

Depreciation and amortisation (£m)

(17.4)

(8.3)

(25.7)

(15.2)

(7.5)

(22.7)

 

EBIT (£m)

78.1

(11.8)

66.3

69.0

(20.6)

48.5

 

Finance costs (£m)

(19.9)

-

(19.9)

(13.6)

-

(13.6)

 

Profit before taxation (£m)

58.2

(11.8)

46.4

55.4

(20.6)

34.9

 

Taxation (£m)

(14.6)

2.4

(12.2)

(11.0)

2.7

(8.3)

 

Profit after taxation (£m)

43.6

(9.4)

34.2

44.4

(17.9)

26.6

 

 

 

 

 




 

Basic earnings per share (pence)

12.7p

(2.7)p

10.0p

13.1p

(5.3)p

7.8p

 

EBITDA margin (%)

28.0%

-

27.0%

26.3%

-

22.2%

 

EBIT margin (%)

22.9%

-

19.5%

21.6%

-

15.2%

 

PBT margin (%)

17.1%

-

13.6%

17.3%

-

10.9%

 

1 See Adjusting Items at Note 6 and Alternative Performance Measures below.

2 The Group has amended its definition of Adjusting Items, which now include acquisition amortisation in both the current and prior year.

Note: figures in this table are individually rounded to the nearest £0.1m As a result, there may be minor discrepancies in the subtotals and totals due to rounding differences.

 

The definitions for the adjusted measures in the table are as follows:

●      Adjusted profit after taxation is profit after taxation and before Adjusting Items.

●      Adjusted profit before taxation is profit before taxation and Adjusting Items. Adjusted PBT margin is Adjusted profit before taxation divided by total revenue.

●      Adjusted EBIT is profit before taxation, interest and Adjusting Items. Adjusted EBIT margin is Adjusted EBIT divided by total revenue.

●      Adjusted EBITDA is profit before taxation, interest, depreciation, amortisation and Adjusting Items. Adjusted EBITDA margin is Adjusted EBITDA divided by total revenue.

 


Year ended

30 April 2024

Year ended

30 April 2023

Year-on-year

movement

Pre-IPO share-based payment charges (£m)

(1.1)

(5.4)

     4.3

Pre-IPO bonus awards (£m)

(2.4)

(3.3)

0.9

M&A related transaction costs (£m)

-

(4.4)

4.4

Acquisition amortisation (£m)

(8.3)

(7.5)

(0.8)

Adjusting Items (£m)

(11.8)

(20.6)

8.8

 

Adjusting Items comprise:

 

●      Pre-IPO incentive scheme costs, consisting of £1.1m (FY23: £5.4m) share-based payment charges and £2.4m

(FY23: £3.3m) cash bonus awards. These relate to one-off compensation arrangements, which have now fully vested, granted prior to IPO and set out in the Prospectus. The Group treats these costs as Adjusting Items as they relate to one-off awards implemented whilst the Group was under private equity ownership and are not part of the Group's ongoing remuneration arrangements.

 

●      M&A-related transaction costs of £nil (FY23: £4.4m). The prior year costs comprise advisers' fees, stamp duty and other costs directly relating to the acquisition of Experiences. The Group treats these costs as Adjusting Items as they are not part of normal business operations.

 

●      Acquisition amortisation of £8.3m (FY23: £7.5m). For FY24, the Group has changed its definition of Adjusting Items to include acquisition amortisation. The change means that the Group now reports Alternative Performance Measures on a basis that is more readily comparable with other listed businesses. Adjusted taxation includes the deferred taxation impact of acquisition amortisation.

 

The impact of changing the definition of Adjusting Items to include acquisition amortisation is summarised below.

 

 

Revised Definition

Previous Definition

 

FY24

FY23

Year-on-year %

FY24

FY23

Year-on-year %

Revenue (£m)

341.1

320.1

6.6%

341.1

320.1

6.6%


 



 



Adjusted EBITDA (£m)

95.5

84.2

13.5%

95.5

84.2

13.5%

Adjusted depreciation and amortisation (£m)

(17.4)

(15.2)

(14.9)%

(25.7)

(22.7)

(13.6)%

Adjusted EBIT (£m)

78.1

69.0

13.2%

69.8

61.5

13.5%

Net finance costs (£m)

(19.9)

(13.6)

(46.7)%

(19.9)

(13.6)

(46.7)%

Adjusted profit before taxation (£m)

58.2

55.4

5.0%

49.9

48.0

4.2%

Adjusted taxation (£m)

(14.6)

(11.0)

(36.8)%

(12.5)

(10.1)

(28.7)%

Adjusted profit after taxation (£m)

43.6

44.4

(2.9)%

37.4

37.9

(2.6)%


 



 



Adjusted basic earnings per share (pence)

12.7p

13.1p

(3.1)%

10.9p

11.1p

(1.8)%

Adjusted EBITDA margin (%)

28.0%

26.3%

1.7%pts

28.0%

26.3%

1.7%pts

Adjusted EBIT margin (%)

22.9%

21.6%

1.3%pts

20.5%

19.2%

1.3%pts

Adjusted PBT margin (%)

17.1%

17.3%

(0.2)%pts

14.6%

15.0%

(0.4)%pts

 

 

Determining which items should be classified as Adjusting Items involves the exercise of judgement. We do not classify the following as Adjusting Items on the basis that they are recurring costs associated with delivery of financial performance. However, we have observed that certain users of our accounts adopt a different approach in their own financial modelling and have therefore provided the information below to assist these users:


 

Year ended

30 April 2024

 

Year ended

30 April 2023

Share-based payment charges relating to operation of post-IPO Remuneration Policy1 (£m)

(3.1)

(2.5)

1 Stated inclusive of employer's national insurance of £0.5m (FY23: £0.3m).

 

Net debt

 

Net debt decreased during the period, from £167.7m at 30 April 2023 to £125.1m as at 30 April 2024. Net leverage improved to 1.31x (30 April 2023: 1.99x). Net debt is a non-GAAP measure and is defined as total borrowings, inclusive of lease liabilities, less cash and cash equivalents.

 


As at

30 April 2024

£m

As at

30 April 2023

£m

Borrowings1

(118.4)

(170.5)

Cash and cash equivalents

9.6

22.4

Borrowings less cash and cash equivalents

(108.8)

(148.2)

Lease liabilities

(16.3)

(19.5)

Net debt

(125.1)

(167.7)

 

 


Last twelve months Adjusted EBITDA

95.5

84.2

Net debt to last twelve months' Adjusted EBITDA

1.31:1

1.99:1

Committed debt facilities (£m)

180.0

255.0

 1 Borrowings are stated net of capitalised loan arrangement fees and hedging instrument fees of £2.7m as at 30 April 2024 (30 April 2023: £4.6m).

 

In February 2024, the Group agreed a new four-year, committed, multi-currency revolving credit facility ("RCF") of £180m with a syndicate of banks. The Group's previous £175m term loan and £80m revolving credit facilities have been fully repaid and cancelled. The RCF is fully available for general corporate purposes.

 

The RCF has an initial maturity date of 29 February 2028 with an option to extend by one year, subject to lender approval. Borrowings are subject to interest at a margin over the relevant currency reference interest rate dependent on net leverage, with margins of between 2.00%-2.50% at net leverage levels of 1.0x-2.0x. The facility covenants are tested semi-annually and comprise a maximum ratio of net debt to Adjusted EBITDA of 3.5x until 30 April 2025 and 3.0x thereafter and a minimum Adjusted EBITDA interest cover ratio of 3.5x for the term of the facility. For FY24 the actual interest cover was 7.5x calculated as the ratio of Adjusted EBITDA (£95.5m) plus share based payments (£3.1m) to the total of bank interest payable (£12.3m) and interest payable on leases (£0.9m). Other line items within finance income and charges are excluded from the covenant definition in the facility agreement.

 

The Group's interest rate hedging arrangements now comprise an interest rate cap in place with a cap strike rate of 3.00% on £70m notional until 30 November 2024 and a new cap, put in place during the current financial year, of 5.00% on £50m notional from this date until 1 June 2025 and £35m until 30 November 2025. This follows the expiry of an interest rate swap (a rate of 2.4725% on £90m notional) on 30 November 2023.

 

Cash flow

 

Cash generated from operations was £85.3m (FY23: £57.9m):

 

●      There was a cash inflow from lower inventory of £5.2m (FY23: £0.8m outflow) driven through more efficient stock management. Net inventory at 30 April 2024 was £7.1m (FY23: £12.3m).

 

●      Trade and other receivables remained broadly unchanged year-on-year, with a net inflow of £0.3m (FY23: £5.3m). The prior year inflow includes the collection of a £3.2m receivable balance in the Experiences opening balance sheet at acquisition, consisting of funds placed in escrow to settle deferred legacy incentive obligations.

 

●      There was a cash outflow from trade and other payables of £16.2m (FY23: £25.3m). This reflects lower trade creditors and a reduction in the Experiences merchant accrual, including the impact of additional breakage on vouchers sold during Covid with extended expiry dates. The prior year outflow includes the impact of the one-off settlement in FY23 of £13.5m of legacy incentive obligations associated with the acquisition, which were fully provided for in the opening balance sheet.

 

·      Capital expenditure decreased year-on-year to £13.7m (FY23: £22.6m) reflecting one-time expenditure on plant and equipment in the prior year to fit out new operational facilities in both the UK and the Netherlands.

 

Within trade and other payables as at 30 April 2023, we have reclassified £2.3m from merchant accrual to other taxation and social security. As such, merchant accrual balances of £45.3m as at 30 April 2024 and £53.5m as at 30 April 2023 are stated excluding the corresponding VAT.

 

Adjusted Operating Cash Conversion

 

The Group is strongly cash generative, with operating cash inflows of £74.2m (FY23: £56.2m) representing Adjusted Operating Cash Conversion of 78% (FY23: 67%). The increase in Operating Cash Conversion reflects prior year one-time capital expenditure on new operational facilities in both the UK and the Netherlands.

 


Year ended

30 April 2024

£m

Year ended

30 April 20234

£m

 

Profit before taxation

46.4

34.9

 

Add back: Finance costs

19.9

13.6

 

Add back: Adjusting Items1 (excluding share-based payments)

10.7

15.1

 

Add back: Adjusting Items - Share-based payments

1.1

5.4

 

Add back: Depreciation and amortisation1 (excluding acquisition amortisation)

17.4

15.2

 

Adjusted EBITDA

95.5

84.2

 

Less: Capital expenditure (fixed and intangible assets)

(13.7)

(22.6)

 

Adjust: Impact of share-based payments2

3.1

1.9

 

Add back: Decrease / (increase) in inventories3

5.2

(0.8)

 

Add back: Increase in trade and other receivables3

0.3

5.3

 

Add back: (Decrease) in trade and other payables3

(16.2)

(11.8)

 

Operating cash flow3

74.2

56.2

 

Adjusted Operating Cash Conversion

78%

67%

 

Add back: Capital expenditure

13.7

22.6

 

Add back: Loss on disposal and right of use asset impairment

0.2

0.5

 

Add back: (Decrease) / increase in debtors and creditors with
undertakings formerly under common control

-

0.3

 

Less: Adjusting Items (excluding share-based payments and amortisation)

(2.4)

(7.7)

 

Less: Research and development tax credit

(0.4)

(0.4)

 

Cash generated from underlying operations

85.3

71.5

 

Settlement of M&A related employee bonuses at Experiences4

-

(13.5)

 

Cash generated from / (used in) operations

85.3

57.9

 

1 The prior year Adjusting Items (excluding share-based payments) and Depreciation and Amortisation numbers have been restated to reflect the classification of acquisition amortisation as an Adjusting Item.

2 Comprises: (1) the add back of non-cash share-based payment charges of £2.6m (FY23: £2.2m) relating to operation of post-IPO Remuneration Policy, which are not classified as an Adjusting item; offset by (2) the cash impact of employer's national insurance of £0.2m (FY23: £0.3m) arising on pre-IPO share based payment charges which are classified as an Adjusting Item. Refer to Note 6. In FY24, the charge was offset by a release of £0.7m in relation to a true up of NI at year end to reflect the share price at the vesting date of the pre-IPO share awards.

3 Working capital movements for the year ended 30 April 2023 have been adjusted for the opening balances arising upon acquisition of Experiences.

4 Operating cash flow excludes settlement of legacy incentive obligations in FY23 associated with the acquisition, which were fully provided for in the opening balance sheet.

 

 

Operating cash flow and Adjusted Operating Cash Conversion are non-GAAP measures. Adjusted Operating Cash Conversion is defined as operating cash flow divided by Adjusted EBITDA, expressed as a ratio. Adjusted Operating Cash Conversion informs management and investors about the cash operating cycle of the business and how efficiently operating profit is converted into cash.

 

Capital allocation

 

We remain disciplined in our approach to allocation of capital and continue to prioritise organic investment to drive growth, including investment in technology and marketing. Future investments may extend to new geographical markets, contingent upon achieving optimal customer acquisition costs and confidence in customer lifetime value. We will also selectively consider value-accretive M&A opportunities, maintaining a high threshold for strategic and financial returns.

 

Over the past two financial years, we have also focused on balance sheet deleveraging. In FY24, we reduced net leverage from 1.99x to 1.31x, a decrease of approximately 0.7 turns. Given our strong cash generation, there is potential for a similar reduction in net leverage in FY25. To maintain an efficient capital structure, our target is to operate with net leverage of approximately 1.0x over the medium term, with flexibility to move beyond this as business needs require.

 

We will continue to prioritise investment to drive the execution of our growth strategy. With our consistent strong operating cash generation and the progress being made with deleveraging, we will also have the financial flexibility to consider returning excess capital to shareholders.

 

Outlook

 

Trading since the start of the year has been in line with our expectations with both new and existing customer orders in growth. In the context of the current macroeconomic environment, we expect FY25 revenue growth (after adjusting for temporarily higher breakage on experience vouchers in FY24) at a mid to high single digit percentage rate, underpinned by growth in orders at the Moonpig brand.

 

Our business is well positioned to deliver sustained growth in revenue, profit and free cash flow, driven by our continued focus on data and technology. With respect to the medium-term, we are targeting double digit percentage annual revenue growth, an Adjusted EBITDA margin rate of approximately 25% to 26% and growth in Adjusted earnings per share at a mid-teens percentage rate.

 

Technical guidance

 

Capital expenditure

We expect total recurring tangible and intangible capital expenditure to equate to between 4% and 5% of revenue in FY25, and we plan to maintain this ratio in the same range going forward. Within this, we expect that tangible capital expenditure will be in the region of £2m per year.

 

We are evaluating potential for investment in automation and robotics at our UK fulfilment centre to increase efficiency and provide additional capacity at periods of peak throughput for gifting. If pursued, this would require additional capital expenditure in the range of low to mid-single digit millions.

 

Depreciation and amortisation

We expect depreciation and amortisation of between £20m and £23m in FY25. This includes depreciation of purchased tangible fixed assets (including right-of-use assets) and amortisation of internally generated intangible fixed assets but excludes the amortisation of intangible fixed assets arising on business combinations.

 

Acquisition amortisation

We expect the amortisation of intangible fixed assets arising on business combinations to be approximately £8m in FY25 and anticipate that this will be the only Adjusting Item for the year.

 

Net finance costs

We expect net finance costs in FY25 to be in the region of £12m. This includes expected interest payments on the new RCF of approximately £8m (based on the Group's expected deleveraging profile, current forward market expectations for SONIA and hedging arrangements currently in place). Deemed interest on the merchant accrual is expected to be approximately £2m. The remainder relates to deemed interest on lease liabilities and the amortisation of up-front RCF arrangement fees and hedging fees. We have assumed no monetary gain or loss on Euro-denominated intercompany loan balances.

 

Taxation

We expect the Group's effective tax rate to be between 25% and 26% of reported profit before taxation in FY25 and thereafter.

 

Share based payments

We expect the total charge for share based payments (relating to the LTIP, DSBP and SAYE share schemes) to be approximately £6m in FY25. The actual charge may vary to the extent that there are "bad" leavers and, for the element of each LTIP award which is subject to an EPS performance condition, in the event of profit outcomes that vary from current expectations. These share based payment charges will not be classified as an Adjusting Item.

 

Pre-IPO Award

The final tranche of the pre-IPO award vested on 30 April 2024. This is expected to result in cash outflows of approximately £5m (excluding national insurance costs) and the issue of 1,413,971 shares, both arising in Q1 FY25.

 

 

 

 

 

Consolidated income statement

For the year ended 30 April 2024

 


Note

2024

£000

2023

£000

Revenue

3

341,141

320,125

Cost of sales

4

(138,608)

(140,449)

Gross profit


202,533

179,676

Selling and administrative expenses

5,6

(137,598)

(132,534)

Other income

5

1,349

1,319

Operating profit


66,284

48,461

Finance income

7

198

21

Finance costs

7

(20,082)

(13,577)

Profit before taxation


46,400

34,905

Taxation

9

(12,231)

(8,298)

Profit after taxation


34,169

26,607

Profit attributable to:


 


Equity holders of the Company


34,169

26,607

Earnings per share (pence)


 


Basic

10

10.0

7.8

Diluted

10

9.6

7.7

 

All activities relate to continuing operations.

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

 

Consolidated statement of comprehensive income

For the year ended 30 April 2024

 


Note

2024

£000

2023

£000

Profit for the year

5

34,169

26,607

Items that may be reclassified to profit or loss


 


Exchange differences on translation of foreign operations


30

(158)

Cash flow hedge:


 


Fair value changes in the year

22

715

1,891

Cost of hedging reserve

22

243

126

Fair value movements on cash flow hedges transferred to the profit or loss

22

(2,222)

(136)

Deferred tax on other comprehensive income

9

(95)

-

Total other comprehensive income


(1,329)

1,723

Total comprehensive income for the year


32,840

28,330

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.


Consolidated balance sheet

As at 30 April 2024

 


Note

2024

£000

2023

£000

Non-current assets




Intangible assets

11

203,591

210,455

Property, plant and equipment

12

26,900

32,311

Other non-current assets

14

1,611

2,153

Financial derivatives

22

164

1,757



232,266

246,676

Current assets


 


Inventories

13

7,094

12,333

Trade and other receivables

14

6,577

6,331

Current tax receivable


2,113

1,260

Financial derivatives

22

838

711

Cash and cash equivalents

15

9,644

22,394



26,266

43,029

Total assets


258,532

289,705

Current liabilities


 


Trade and other payables

16

96,739

110,119

Provisions for other liabilities and charges

17

2,073

1,617

Current tax payable


4,211

805

Contract liabilities

18

4,008

2,589

Lease liabilities

19

3,257

3,443

Borrowings

19

73

27



110,361

118,600

Non-current liabilities


 


Trade and other payables

16

1,552

4,858

Borrowings

19

118,292

170,493

Lease liabilities

19

13,072

16,082

Deferred tax liabilities

9

8,903

10,978

Provisions for other liabilities and charges

17

2,516

2,413



144,335

204,824

Total liabilities


254,696

323,424

Equity


 


Share capital

21

34,331

34,211

Share premium

21

278,083

278,083

Merger reserve


(993,026)

(993,026)

Retained earnings


642,056

603,849

Other reserves

21

42,392

43,164

Total equity


3,836

(33,719)

Total equity and liabilities


258,532

289,705

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

The condensed consolidated financial statements were approved by the Board of Directors of Moonpig Group plc (registered number 13096622) on 26 June 2024 and were signed on its behalf by:

 

 

 

 

 

Nickyl Raithatha

Chief Executive Officer

26 June 2024

Andy MacKinnon

Chief Financial Officer

26 June 2024

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Consolidated statement of changes in equity

For the year ended 30 April 2024

 


Note

Share capital

£000

Share premium

£000

Merger reserve

£000

Retained earnings

£000

Other reserves

£000

Total equity

£000

Balance at 1 May 2022


34,211

278,083

(993,026)

576,507

34,906

(69,319)

Profit for the year


-

-

-

26,607

-

26,607

Foreign currency translation reserve reclassification


-

-

-

735

(735)

-

Other comprehensive (expense)/income:


 

 

 

 

 

 

Exchange differences on translation of foreign operations


-

-

-

-

(158)

(158)

Cash flow hedges:


 

 

 

 

 

 

Fair value changes in the year


-

-

-

-

1,891

1,891

Cost of hedging reserve


-

-

-

-

126

126

Fair value movements on cash flow hedges transferred to profit and loss


-

-

-

-

(136)

(136)

Total comprehensive income for the year


-

-

-

27,342

988

28,330

Share-based payments

20, 21

-

-

-

-

7,270

7,270

As at 30 April 2023


34,211

278,083

(993,026)

603,849

43,164

(33,719)

Profit for the year


-

-

-

34,169

-

34,169

Other comprehensive (expense)/income:


 

 

 

 

 

 

Exchange differences on translation of foreign operations


-

-

-

-

30

30

Cash flow hedges:


 

 

 

 

 

 

Fair value changes in the year


-

-

-

-

715

715

Cost of hedging reserve


-

-

-

-

243

243

Fair value movements on cash flow hedges transferred to profit and loss


-

-

-

-

(2,222)

(2,222)

Deferred tax on other comprehensive income


-

-

-

-

(95)

(95)

Total comprehensive income for the year


-

-

-

34,169

(1,329)

32,840

Share-based payments

20, 21

-

-

-

-

4,179

4,179

Issue of ordinary shares

20,21

120

-

-

-

-

120

Deferred tax on share based payment transactions


-

-

-

-

536

536

Share options exercised

20, 21

-

-

-

4,038

(4,158)

(120)

As at 30 April 2024


34,331

278,083

(993,026)

642,056

42,392

3,836

 


The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.


Consolidated cash flow statement

For the year ended 30 April 2024

 


Note

2024

£000

2023

£000

Cash flow from operating activities




Profit before taxation


46,400

34,905

Adjustments for:


 


Depreciation, amortisation and impairment

11,12

25,729

22,653

Impairment of right-of-use asset

12

-

428

Loss on disposal of tangible assets


4

48

Loss on foreign exchange


272

-

Net finance costs

7

19,884

13,556

R&D tax credit


(503)

(423)

Share-based payment charges


4,179

7,270

Changes in working capital:


 


Decrease/(Increase) in inventories


5,192

(835)

Decrease in trade and other receivables


246

2,112

Decrease in trade and other payables


(16,154)

(22,092)

Decrease/(increase) in trade and other receivables and payables with undertakings formerly under common control


14

308

Cash generated from operations


85,263

57,930

Income tax paid


(10,688)

(8,590)

Net cash generated from operating activities


74,575

49,340

Cash flow from investing activities


 


Capitalisation of intangible assets

11

(12,782)

(12,949)

Purchase of property, plant and equipment

12

(965)

(9,680)

Acquisition of subsidiary, net of cash acquired


-

(88,598)

Bank interest received


198

-

Net cash used in investing activities


(13,549)

(111,227)

Cash flow from financing activities


 


Proceeds from new borrowings

19

157,266

60,000

Payment of fees related to new borrowings


(2,070)

(988)

Repayment of borrowings

19

(212,000)

(60,000)

Payment of interest rate cap premium


(150)

(940)

Interest paid on borrowings

19

(14,469)

(12,144)

Interest received on swap derivatives


2,222

327

Lease liabilities paid

19

(3,742)

(2,641)

Interest paid on leases

19

(682)

(863)

Net cash used in financing activities


(73,625)

(17,249)

Net cash flows (used in)/generated from operating, investing and financing activities


(12,599)

(79,136)

Differences on exchange


(151)

(147)

(Decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents in the year


(12,750)

(79,283)

Net cash and cash equivalents at 1 May


22,394

101,677

Net cash and cash equivalents at 30 April


9,644

22,394

 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.


Notes to the consolidated financial statements

 

1 General information

 

Moonpig Group plc (the "Company" or "Parent Company") is a public limited company incorporated in the United Kingdom under the Companies Act 2006, whose shares are traded on the London Stock Exchange. The condensed consolidated financial statements of the Company as at and for the year ended 30 April 2024 comprise the Company and its interests in subsidiaries (together referred to as the "Group"). The Company is domiciled in the United Kingdom and its registered address is Herbal House, 10 Back Hill, London, EC1R 5EN, England, United Kingdom. The Company's LEI number is 213800VAYO5KCAXZHK83.

 

Basis of preparation

The condensed consolidated financial statements of Moonpig Group plc have been prepared in accordance with UK adopted international accounting standards in conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006.

 

All figures presented are rounded to the nearest thousand (£000), unless otherwise stated.

 

The condensed consolidated financial statements have been prepared on the going concern basis and under the historical cost convention modified by revaluation of financial assets and financial liabilities held at fair value through profit and loss.

 

Basis of consolidation

Subsidiaries are entities over which the Group has control. Control exists when the Group has existing rights that give it the ability to direct the relevant activities of an entity and has the ability to affect the returns the Group will receive as a result of its involvement with the entity. In assessing control, potential voting rights that are currently exercisable or convertible are taken into account. The condensed financial statements of subsidiaries are included in the condensed consolidated financial statements from the date that control commences until the date that control ceases.

 

Intercompany transactions and balances between Group companies are eliminated on consolidation.

 

The condensed financial statements of all subsidiary undertakings are prepared to the same reporting date as the Company. All subsidiary undertakings have been consolidated.

 

The subsidiary undertakings of the Company at 30 April 2024 are detailed at the end of the notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements below.

 

Consideration of climate change

In preparing the condensed consolidated financial statements, the Directors have considered the impact of climate change, particularly in the context of the risks identified in the TCFD disclosures within the Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 30 April 2024. There has been no material impact identified on the financial reporting judgements and estimates. In particular, the Directors considered the impact of climate change in respect of the following areas:

·    Going concern and viability of the Group over the next three years.

·    Cash flow forecasts used in the impairment assessments of non-current assets including goodwill and other intangible assets.

·    Carrying amount and useful economic lives of property, plant and equipment.

 

Whilst there is currently no material financial impact expected from climate change in the short or medium term, the Directors will assess climate-related risks at each reporting date against judgements and estimates made in preparation of the Group's condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

Going concern

The Group's business activities, together with the factors likely to affect its future development, performance and position, are set out in the Strategic report of the Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 30 April 2024.

 

The Group has continued to generate positive operating cash flow and finished the year with liquidity headroom of £69,378,000 (2023: £102,394,000) comprising gross cash and unutilised committed facilities.

 

During the financial year the Group completed a refinancing, replacing its term loan and revolving credit facility with a new £180,000,000 committed four-year Revolving Credit Facility (the "RCF"). The RCF has an initial maturity date of 29 February 2028 with an option to extend by one year (subject to lender approval).

 

The amounts drawn under the RCF bear interest at a floating reference rate plus a margin. The reference rates are SONIA for loans in Sterling, EURIBOR for loans in Euro and SOFR for loans in US Dollars. As at 30 April 2024 the Group had drawn down £113,000,000 and €8,500,000 of the available revolving credit facility.

 

The Group's interest rate hedging arrangements now comprise a SONIA interest rate cap with a cap strike rate of 3.00% on £70m notional until 30 November 2024 and a SONIA interest rate cap, put in place during the current financial year, of 5.00% on £50m notional from 29 November 2024 until 1 June 2025, reducing thereafter to £35m notional until expiry on 30 November 2025. This follows the expiry of a SONIA interest rate swap (at a rate of 2.4725% on £90m notional) on 30 November 2023.



 

The RCF is subject to two covenants, each tested at six-monthly intervals. The leverage covenant, measuring the ratio of net debt to last twelve months Adjusted EBITDA, is a maximum of 3.5x until April 2025 and 3.0x thereafter. The interest cover covenant, measuring the ratio of last twelve months Adjusted EBITDA (excluding share based payments, as specified in the facilities agreement) to the total of bank interest payable and interest payable on leases, is a minimum of 3.5x for the term of the facility. The Group has complied with all covenants from entering the RCF until the date of these condensed consolidated financial statements and is forecast to comply with these during the going concern assessment period.

 

To support the Group's assessment of going concern, detailed trading and cash flow forecasts, including forecast liquidity and covenant compliance, were prepared for the 22-month period to 30 April 2026.The Directors have reviewed the severe but plausible scenarios as described within the viability statement of the Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 30 April 2024; in these scenarios, the Group continues to have sufficient resources to continue in operational existence. In the event that more severe impacts occur, controllable mitigating actions are available to the Group should they be required.

 

The Directors also reviewed the results of reverse stress testing performed throughout the going concern and viability periods, to provide an illustration of the extent to which existing customer purchase frequency and levels of new customer acquisition would need to deteriorate in order that their cumulative effect should either trigger a breach in the Group's covenants under the RCF or else exhaust liquidity. The probability of this scenario occurring was deemed to be remote given the resilient nature of the business model and strong cash conversion of the Group.

 

After making enquiries, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the Group has adequate resources to continue in operational existence for at least 12 months from the date of signing these condensed consolidated financial statements. Accordingly, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing these condensed consolidated financial statements, in accordance with those parts of the Companies Act 2006 applicable to companies reporting under IFRS.

 

Critical accounting judgements and estimates

In preparing these condensed consolidated financial statements, management has made judgements and estimates that affect the application of the accounting policies and the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income and expenses. Actual results may differ from these estimates. Estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis. Revisions to estimates are recognised prospectively.

 

The areas of judgement which have the greatest potential effect on the amounts recognised in the condensed consolidated financial statements are:

 

Capitalisation of internally generated assets

Certain costs incurred in the developmental phase of an internal project, which include the development of technology, app and platform enhancements and internally generated software and trademarks, are capitalised as intangible assets if a number of criteria are met. The costs of internally developed assets include capitalised expenses of employees working full time on software development projects, third-party firms and software licence fees. Management has made judgements and assumptions when assessing whether development meets these criteria and on measuring the costs attributed to such projects. The amounts of, and movements in, such assets are set out in Note 11.

 

The areas of estimates which have the greatest potential effect on the amounts recognised in the condensed consolidated financial statements are:

 

Useful life of internally generated assets

The estimated useful lives which are used to calculate amortisation of internally generated assets (the Group's platforms and applications) are based on the length of time these assets are expected to generate income and be of benefit to the Group. The uncertainty included in this estimate is that if the useful lives are estimated to differ from the actual useful lives of the intangible assets, this could result in accelerated amortisation in future years and/or impairments. The economic lives of internally generated intangible assets are estimated at three years. Amortisation methods, useful lives and residual values are reviewed at each reporting date and adjusted if appropriate. If the useful life of internally generated assets were estimated to be shorter or longer by one year, than the current useful life of three years, the net book value would (decrease)/increase by (£5,393,000)/£4,556,000 from the amount recognised as at 30 April 2024. The amounts of, and movements in, such assets are set out in Note 11.

 

Experiences merchant accrual

The merchant accrual has been identified as a significant estimate following the acquisition of Experiences, which acts as an agent at the point of sale. When a voucher is purchased, the expected value of future amounts that will become payable to merchant providers is recognised within trade and other payables on the balance sheet. The Group takes into account historical redemption rates when estimating future payments to merchant providers, with the span between the upper and the lower ends of the range in historical trends for these rates equivalent to a £2,453,000 movement in the amount recognised in revenue. The estimates are trued up for actual customer utilisation rates in the year.

 

Carrying amount of Experiences goodwill

Goodwill is tested annually for impairment. The critical accounting estimates made in the calculation of the recoverable amount are:

·   Pre-perpetuity period of six years (2023: seven years).

·   Pre-perpetuity compound annual revenue growth rate of 6.6% (2023: 10.5%).

·   Discount rate of 15.1% (2023: 13.5%).

Sensitivity analysis and further disclosure relating to these critical accounting estimates is set out in Note 11.

 

2 Summary of significant accounting policies

 

New standards, amendments and interpretations adopted from 1 May 2023

The following amendments are effective for the year beginning 1 May 2023:

·    Disclosure of Accounting Policies (Amendments to IAS 1 and IFRS Practice Statement 2).

·    Definition of Accounting Estimates (amendments to IAS 8).

·    Deferred Tax Related to Assets and Liabilities arising from a Single Transaction (Amendments to IAS 12).

·    International Tax Reform - Pillar Two Model Rules (Amendments to IAS 12).

 

These amendments to various IFRS standards are mandatorily effective for reporting periods beginning on or after 1 May 2023 and had no material impact on the year-end condensed consolidated financial statements of the Group.

 

New standards, amendments and interpretations not yet adopted

The following adopted IFRSs have been issued but have not been applied by the Group in these condensed consolidated financial statements. Their adoption is not expected to have material effect on the condensed consolidated financial statements unless otherwise indicated:

 

The following amendments are effective for the year beginning 1 May 2024:

·    IFRS 16 Leases (Amendment - Liability in a Sale and Leaseback).

·    IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements (Amendment - Classification of Liabilities as Current or Non-current).

·    IAS 1 Presentation of Financial statements (Amendment - Non-current Liabilities with Covenants).

 

The following amendments are effective for the year beginning 1 May 2025:

·    Lack of Exchangeability (Amendments to IAS 21 The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange rates)

 

The following amendments are effective for the year beginning 1 May 2027:

·    IFRS 18 'Presentation and Disclosure in the Financial Statements.

 

The principal accounting policies are set out below. Policies have been applied consistently, other than where new policies have
been applied.

 

a) Foreign currency translation

The condensed consolidated financial statements are presented in Pounds Sterling, which is the Group's presentational currency and are rounded to the nearest thousand. The income and cash flow statements of Group undertakings that are expressed in other currencies are translated to Sterling using exchange rates applicable on the dates of the underlying transactions. Average rates of exchange in each year are used where the average rate approximates the relevant exchange rate on the date of the underlying transactions. Assets and liabilities of Group undertakings are translated at the applicable rates of exchange at the end of each year.

 

The differences between retained profits translated at average and closing rates of exchange are taken to the foreign currency translation reserve, as are differences arising on the retranslation to Sterling (using closing rates of exchange) of overseas net assets at the beginning of the year and are presented as a separate component of equity. They are recognised in the income statement when the gain or loss on disposal of a Group undertaking is recognised.

 

Foreign currency transactions are initially recognised in the functional currency of each entity in the Group using the exchange rate ruling at the date of the transaction. Foreign exchange gains and losses resulting from the settlement of such transactions and from the translation of foreign currency assets and liabilities at year-end rates of exchange are recognised in the income statement. Foreign exchange gains or losses recognised in the income statement are included in operating profit or finance costs / income depending on the underlying transactions that gave rise to these exchange differences.

 

b) Revenue

The Group recognises revenue when it has satisfied its performance obligations to external customers and control of the goods has been transferred. The Group is principally engaged in the sale of cards, physical gifts and gift experiences.

 

i) Sale of cards and physical gifts

The Group generates revenue from the sale of cards and physical gifts. Shipping and handling is not a separate performance obligation and any shipping fees charged to the customer are included in the transaction price. The sale of goods and any shipping and handling represents a single performance obligation which is satisfied upon delivery of the relevant goods and the transfer of control to that customer. Revenue is measured at the transaction price received net of value added tax, discounts and is reduced for provisions of customer returns and remakes based on the history of such matters. The cost of shipping is directly associated with generating revenue and therefore presented within cost of sales.

 

ii) Subscription revenue

The Group operates subscription membership schemes whereby customers are charged an upfront annual fee in return for discounts on subsequent greeting card purchases and other ancillary benefits over the following 12-month period. In addition, for new members, the initial greeting card purchase is typically subject to a discount.

 

Revenue is measured at the transaction price, which is the standalone selling price of the subscription membership. The membership contract gives rise to a performance obligation because it grants the customer an option to acquire additional goods and services and that option provides material rights that the customer would not receive without entering that contract. Revenue is recognised as goods or services are transferred in line with the exercise of those material rights.

 

The material rights provided to subscription members currently comprise:

•     The discount on the initial greeting card purchase, in the first year of subscription membership only, to the extent that this exceeds the price that a customer could access through generally available discounts.

•     Expected usage of the discount on subsequent card purchases, to the extent that this exceeds the price that a customer could otherwise access through generally available discounts.

•     Expected usage of ancillary benefits, such as free postcards.

 

iii) Sale of gift experiences

The Group operates a platform for the distribution of gift experience vouchers that may be redeemed for a wide choice of experiences provided by third party merchant partners and either gifted or kept for a consumer's own use. Revenue is recognised when a consumer purchases a gift experience, acting as an agent at the point of sale. At this point, the Group's obligations are substantially complete, subject to a provision for refunds as stipulated in the terms of the sale, as the Group's merchant partners provide gift experience services, following redemption either through the Group's websites or directly with the recipient's chosen merchant partner.

 

The amount of revenue recognised primarily comprises the expected value of fees and any other income receivable in accordance with the Group's contracts with third party merchant partners, rather than the gross value of vouchers purchased. This includes an estimate of the revenue to be recognised in relation to vouchers which are not redeemed based on historical rates.

 

Each voucher is multi-purpose and can be exchanged for any experience at any point until redemption, on account of which merchants are not paid a share of the gross value of a voucher until after redemption. The expected value of future amounts that will become payable to merchants is included within trade and other payables on the balance sheet and estimates are trued up for actual customer redemption rates. See further information within critical accounting estimates below. Where non-redemption exceeds the expected rate for a cohort of vouchers, the Group recognises revenue from the additional unredeemed vouchers and derecognises the accrued merchant payable once its legal obligations to the merchants expire.

 

c) Taxation

Taxation is chargeable on the profits for the year, together with deferred taxation.

 

The current income tax charge is calculated based on tax laws enacted or substantively enacted at the balance sheet date in the countries where the Group's subsidiaries operate and generate taxable income.

 

Deferred taxation is provided in full using the liability method for temporary differences between the carrying amount of assets and liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amount used for taxation purposes. A deferred tax asset is recognised only to the extent that it is probable that future taxable profits will be available against which the asset can be utilised.

 

Deferred tax is determined using the tax rates that have been enacted or substantively enacted by the balance sheet date and are expected to apply when the related deferred tax asset is realised, or deferred tax liability is settled. Deferred tax relating to items recognised outside of profit or loss is also recognised outside profit or loss. Deferred tax items are recognised in correlation to the underlying transaction either in other comprehensive income or directly in equity. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are offset if a legally enforceable right exists to set off current tax assets against current income tax liabilities and the deferred taxes relate to the same taxable entity and the same taxation authority.

 

Tax is recognised in the income statement except to the extent that it relates to items recognised in other comprehensive income or directly in equity, in which case it is recognised in the statement of other comprehensive income or the statement of changes in equity.

 

d) Business combinations

Business combinations are accounted for using the acquisition method. The cost of an acquisition is measured as the aggregate of the consideration transferred which is measured at the acquisition date. The acquiree's identifiable assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities that meet the conditions for recognition under IFRS 3 Business Combinations are recognised at their fair values at the acquisition date.

 

Acquisition-related items such as legal or professional fees are recognised as expenses in the year in which the costs are incurred as Adjusting Items.

 

e) Goodwill

Goodwill arising on the acquisition of an entity represents the excess of the cost of acquisition over the Group's interest in the net fair value of the identifiable assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities of the entity recognised at the date of acquisition. Goodwill relates to the Greetz and Experiences cash-generating units.

 

Goodwill is initially recognised as an asset at cost and is subsequently measured at cost less any accumulated impairment losses. Goodwill is not subject to amortisation but is tested for impairment annually or whenever there is evidence that it may be required. Any impairment of goodwill is recognised immediately in the income statement and is not subsequently reversed. Goodwill is denominated in the currency of the acquired entity and revalued to the closing exchange rate at each reporting year date.

 

Goodwill in respect of subsidiaries is included in intangible assets. On disposal of a subsidiary, the attributable amount of goodwill is included in the determination of the profit or loss on disposal.

 

f) Intangible assets other than goodwill

i) Separately acquired intangible assets

Intangible assets acquired separately are measured on initial recognition at fair value at the acquisition date, provided they are identifiable and capable of reliable measurement.

 

Intangible assets with a finite useful life that are acquired separately are carried at cost less accumulated amortisation and impairment losses. These intangible assets are amortised on a straight-line basis over their remaining useful lives, consistent with the pattern of economic benefits expected to be received. The amortisation charge is included within selling and administrative expenses in the income statement.

 

ii) Internally generated research and development costs

Research expenditure is charged to the income statement in the year in which it is incurred. Development expenditure is charged to the income statement in the year it is incurred unless it meets the recognition criteria of IAS 38 Intangible Assets to be capitalised as an intangible asset.

 

Following initial recognition of the development expenditure as an asset, the asset is carried at cost less any accumulated amortisation and impairment losses. Amortisation begins when development is complete and the asset is available for use; the charge is included within selling and administrative expenses in the income statement. The estimated useful lives of separately acquired and internally generated assets are as follows:

 


Straight-line amortisation period

Trademark

10 years

Technology and development costs

3 years

Customer relationships

1 to 12 years

Software

3 to 5 years

Other intangibles

2 to 4 years

 

g) Impairment of non-financial assets

Assets are reviewed for impairment whenever events indicate that the carrying amount of a cash-generating unit or the carrying amounts of non-financial assets may not be recoverable. In addition, assets that have indefinite useful lives are tested annually for impairment. An impairment loss is recognised to the extent that the carrying amount exceeds the higher of the asset's fair value less costs to sell and its value in use.

 

A cash-generating unit is the smallest identifiable group of assets that generates cash flows which are largely independent of the cash flows from other assets or groups of assets. At the acquisition date, any goodwill acquired is allocated to the relevant cash-generating unit or group of cash-generating units expected to benefit from the acquisition for the purpose of impairment testing of goodwill.

 

h) Impairment of financial assets held at amortised cost

As permitted by IFRS 9 Financial Instruments, loss allowances on trade receivables arising from the recognition of revenue under IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers are initially measured at an amount equal to lifetime expected losses. Allowances in respect of loans and other receivables are initially recognised at an amount equal to 12-month expected credit losses. Allowances are measured at an amount equal to the lifetime expected credit losses where the credit risk on the receivables increases significantly after initial recognition.

 

i) Property, plant and equipment

Property, plant and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment. Depreciation is calculated on a straight-line basis to write off the assets over their useful economic life. No depreciation is provided on freehold land. The estimated useful lives are as follows:


Straight-line depreciation period

Freehold property

25 years

Plant and machinery

4 years

Fixtures and fittings

4 years

Leasehold improvements

10 years or the unexpired term of lease if lower

Computer equipment

3 years

Right-of-use assets (plant and machinery, land and buildings)

Lease length

 

Climate change is not considered to materially impact the estimated useful lives of assets. Although extreme weather events could potentially damage manufacturing and distribution facilities, the probability of this occurring at the Group's most vulnerable location, Guernsey, is only 0.2% annually over the expected lifespan of the assets. Furthermore, the Group has flexibility in its production network and could shift production to other locations to mitigate any business interruptions.

 

j) Leased assets

Group as lessee

The Group records its lease obligations in accordance with the principles for the recognition, measurement, presentation and disclosures of leases as set out in IFRS 16. The Group applies IFRS 16 Leases to contractual arrangements which are, or contain, leases of assets and consequently recognises right-of-use assets and lease liabilities at the commencement of the leasing arrangement, with the asset included in Note 13 and the liabilities included as part of borrowings in Note 20. The nature of the Group's leases are offices, warehouses, and printing machinery.

 

Lease liabilities are initially recognised at an amount equal to the present value of estimated contractual lease payments at the inception of the lease, after taking into account any options to extend the term of the lease to the extent they are reasonably certain to be exercised. Lease commitments are discounted to present value using the interest rate implicit in the lease if this can be readily determined, or the applicable incremental rate of borrowing, as appropriate. Right-of-use assets are initially recognised at an amount equal to the lease liability, adjusted for initial direct costs in relation to the assets, then depreciated over the shorter of the lease term and their estimated useful lives.

 

Group as lessor

The Group has entered into a lease agreement as a lessor with respect to one of its properties. This is accounted for as an operating lease as the lease does not transfer substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership to the lessee.

 

When the Group is an intermediate lessor, it accounts for the head lease and the sublease as two separate contracts. The sublease is classified as a finance or operating lease by reference to the right-of-use asset arising from the head lease.

 

Rental income from operating leases is recognised on a straight-line basis over the term of the relevant lease. Initial direct costs incurred in negotiating and arranging an operating lease are added to the carrying amount of the leased asset and recognised on a straight-line basis over the lease term.

 

k) Inventories

Inventories include raw materials and finished goods and are stated at the lower of cost and net realisable value. Cost is based on the weighted average cost incurred in acquiring inventories and bringing them to their existing location and condition, which will include raw materials, direct labour and overheads, where appropriate.

 

l) Cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash in hand, call deposits, cash held by payment service providers and other short-term highly liquid investments that are readily convertible to a known amount of cash and are subject to an insignificant risk of changes in value, with a maturity of three months or less. Cash equivalents relate to cash in transit from various payment processing intermediaries that provide receipting services to the Group.

 

For the purposes of the consolidated cash flow statement, cash and cash equivalents consist of cash and short-term deposits as defined above and are shown net of bank overdrafts, which are included as current borrowings in the liabilities section on the balance sheet.

 

m) Financial instruments

The primary objective of the Group's business model for managing financial assets, with regard to the management of cash, is to protect against the loss of principal. Additionally, the Group aims to maximise liquidity by concentrating cash centrally; to align the maturity profile of external investments with that of the forecast liquidity profile; to wherever practicable, match the interest rate profile of external investments to that of debt maturities or fixings; and to optimise the investment yield within the Group's investment parameters.

 

Financial assets and liabilities are recognised when the Group becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the relevant instrument and derecognised when it ceases to be a party. Such assets and liabilities are classified as current if they are expected to be realised or settled within 12 months after the balance sheet date. If not, they are classified as non-current. In addition, current liabilities include amounts where the entity does not have an unconditional right to defer settlement of the liability for at least 12 months after the balance sheet date.

 

Non-derivative financial assets are classified on initial recognition in accordance with the Group's business model as investments, loans and receivables, or cash and cash equivalents and accounted for as follows:

 

·    Loans and other receivables: These are non-derivative financial assets with fixed or determinable payments that are solely payments of principal and interest on the principal amount outstanding, that are primarily held to collect contractual cash flows. These balances include trade and other receivables and are measured at amortised cost, using the effective interest rate method and stated net of allowances for credit losses.

 

·    Cash and cash equivalents: Cash and cash equivalents include cash in hand, deposits held on call and cash in transit. Cash equivalents normally comprise instruments with maturities of three months or less at their date of acquisition. In the cash flow statement, cash and cash equivalents are shown net of bank overdrafts, which are included as current borrowings in the liabilities section on the balance sheet.

 

Non-derivative financial liabilities, including borrowings, trade payables and the merchant accrual, are stated at amortised cost using the effective interest method. For borrowings, their carrying amount includes accrued interest payable. The effective interest method takes into account both the contractual cash flows and the time value of money. The carrying amount of the financial liability is adjusted over time to reflect the unwinding of the discount, whereby the discount represents the difference between the initial fair value and the amount paid or received. The discounting process involves applying a discount rate to the future cash flows associated with the financial liability. The effect of discounting is recognised as an interest expense in the profit and loss over the expected term of the financial liability

 

Derivative financial instruments are used to manage risks arising from changes in interest rates relating to the Group's external debt. The Group does not hold or issue derivative financial instruments for trading purposes. The Group uses the derivatives to hedge highly probable forecast transactions and therefore, the instruments are designated as cash flow hedges.

 

Derivatives are initially recognised at fair value on the date a contract is entered into and are subsequently remeasured at their fair value at each reporting date. At inception of designated hedging relationships, the Group documents the risk management objective and strategy for undertaking the hedge. The Group also documents the economic relationship between the hedged item and the hedging instrument, including whether the changes in the cash flows of the hedged item and hedging instrument are expected to offset each other.

 

The effective element of any gain or loss from remeasuring the derivative instrument is recognised in other comprehensive income ("OCI") and accumulated in the hedging reserve (presented in "other reserves" in the statement of changes in equity). Any change in the fair value of time value of the derivative instrument is also recognised in OCI as part of cash flow hedges and accumulated in the cost of hedging reserve (presented in "other reserves" in the statement of changes in equity). Any element of the remeasurement of the derivative instrument that does not meet the criteria for an effective hedge is recognised immediately in the Group income statement within finance costs.

 

When a hedging instrument expires or is sold, or when a hedge no longer meets the criteria for hedge accounting, any cumulative gain or loss existing in OCI at that time remains in OCI and is recognised when the forecast transaction is ultimately recognised in the income statement within finance costs. When a forecast transaction is no longer expected to occur, the cumulative gain or loss that was reported in OCI is recycled to the Income Statement. The full fair value of a hedging derivative is classified as a non-current asset or liability if the remaining maturity of the hedged item is more than 12 months or, as a current asset or liability, if the remaining maturity of the hedged item is less than 12 months.

 

n) Segmental analysis

The Group is organised and managed based on its segments (Moonpig, Greetz and Experiences). These are the reportable and operating segments for the Group as they form the focus of the Group's internal reporting systems and are the basis used by the chief operating decision maker ("CODM"), identified as the CEO and CFO, for assessing performance and allocating resources. The prices agreed between Group companies for intra-group services and fees are based on normal commercial practices which would apply between independent businesses.

 

o) Provisions

Provisions are recognised when either a legal or constructive obligation as a result of a past event exists at the balance sheet date, it is probable that an outflow of economic resources will be required to settle the obligation and a reasonable estimate can be made of the amount of the obligation.

 

p) Pensions and other post-employment benefits

The Group contributes to defined contribution pensions schemes and payments to these are charged as an expense and accrued over time.

 

q) Adjusting Items

Adjusting Items are significant items of income or expense which individually or, if of a similar type, in aggregate, are relevant to an understanding of the Group's underlying financial performance because of their size, nature or incidence. In identifying and quantifying Adjusting Items, the Group consistently applies a policy that defines criteria that are required to be met for an item to be classified as an Adjusting Item. These items are separately disclosed in the segmental analyses or in the notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements as appropriate.

The Group believes that these items are useful to users of the condensed consolidated financial statements in helping them to understand the underlying business performance and are used to derive the Group's principal non-GAAP measures of Adjusted EBITDA, Adjusted EBIT and Adjusted PBT, which exclude the impact of Adjusting Items and which are reconciled from operating profit and profit before taxation.

 

r) Equity

Called-up share capital

Ordinary shares are classified as equity. Incremental costs directly attributable to the issue of new shares are shown in equity as a deduction from the proceeds.

 

Share premium

The amount subscribed for the ordinary shares in excess of the nominal value of these new shares is recorded in share premium. Costs that directly relate to the issue of ordinary shares are deducted from share premium net of corporation tax.

 

Merger reserve

The merger reserve relates to the merger reserve arising from the prior group restructuring, accounted for under common control.

 

Other reserves

Share-based payment reserve

The share-based payment reserve is built up of charges in relation to equity-settled share-based payment arrangements which have been recognised within the consolidated income statement.

 

Hedging reserve

The hedging reserve comprises the effective portion of the cumulative net change in the fair value of cash flow hedging instruments related to hedged transactions that have not yet occurred and the cumulative net change in the fair value of time value on the cash flow hedging instruments.

 

Foreign currency translation reserve

The foreign currency translation reserve represents the accumulated exchange differences arising since the acquisition of Greetz from the impact of the translation of subsidiaries with a functional currency other than Sterling.

 

s) Earnings per share

The Group presents basic and diluted EPS for its ordinary shares. Basic EPS is calculated by dividing the profit attributable to ordinary shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the year. For diluted EPS, the weighted average number of ordinary shares is adjusted to assume conversion of all dilutive potential ordinary shares.

 

t) Share-based payments

The Group has equity-settled compensation plans.

 

Equity-settled share-based payments are measured at fair value at the date of grant. The fair value determined at the grant date of the equity-settled share-based payments is expensed over the vesting period, based on the Group's estimate of awards that will eventually vest. For plans where the vesting conditions are based on a market condition, such as total shareholder return, the fair value at date of grant reflects the probability that this condition will not be met and therefore is fixed thereafter, irrespective of actual vesting.

 

Fair value is measured using the Black-Scholes and Monte Carlo option pricing model, except where vesting is subject to market conditions when the Stochastic option pricing model is used. A Chaffe model is used to value the holding period. The expected term used in the models has been adjusted based on management's best estimate, for the effects of non-transferability, exercise restrictions and behavioural considerations.

 

3 Segmental analysis

 

The CODM reviews external revenue, Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBIT to evaluate segment performance and allocate resources to the overall business. Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBIT are non-GAAP measures. Adjustments are made to the statutory IFRS results to arrive at an underlying result which is in line with how the business is managed and measured on a day-to-day basis. Adjustments are made for items that are individually important to understand the financial performance. If included, these items could distort understanding of the performance for the year and the comparability between periods. Management applies judgement in determining which items should be excluded from underlying performance. See Note 6 for details of these adjustments.

 

The Group is organised and managed based on its segments, namely Moonpig and Experiences in the UK and Greetz in the Netherlands. These are the reportable and operating segments for the Group as they form the focus of the Group's internal reporting systems and are the basis used by the CODM for assessing performance and allocating resources.

 

Most of the Group's revenue is derived from the sale of cards, gifts and related services to consumers, or from the distribution of gift experiences acting as agent. No single customer accounted for 10% or more of the Group's revenue.

 

Finance income and expense are not allocated to the reportable segments, as this activity is managed centrally.

 

In common with many retailers, revenue and trading profit are subject to seasonal fluctuations and are weighted towards the second half of the year which includes the majority of the Group's peak trading periods.

 

Segment analyses

 

The following table shows revenue by segment that reconciles to the consolidated revenue for the Group.


2024

£000

2023

£000

Moonpig

241,326

223,127

Greetz

51,238

55,421

Experiences

48,577

41,577

Total external revenue

341,141

320,125

 

The following table shows revenue by key geography that reconciles to the consolidated revenue for the Group. The geographical split of revenue is based on the customer's country selection on the website or app at the time of order:

 


2024

£000

2023

£000

UK

281,217

258,234

Netherlands

51,238

55,421

Ireland

3,899

2,633

US

1,352

1,133

Australia

3,435

2,704

Total external revenue

341,141

320,125

 

The following table shows the information regarding assets by segment that reconciles to the consolidated Group.

 


2024

£000

2023

£000

Moonpig



Non-current assets1

37,075

41,063

Capital expenditure2

(786)

(7,317)

Intangible expenditure

(9,534)

(11,668)

Depreciation and amortisation

(14,498)

(11,851)

Greetz

 


Non-current assets1

22,984

27,336

Capital expenditure2

(156)

(8,770)

Intangible expenditure

-

-

Depreciation and amortisation

(3,679)

(3,861)

Experiences

 


Non-current assets1

170,433

174,342

Capital expenditure

(23)

(25)

Intangible expenditure

(3,248)

(1,281)

Depreciation and amortisation

(7,552)

(6,941)

Group

 


Non-current assets1

230,492

242,741

Capital expenditure2

(965)

(16,112)

Intangible expenditure

(12,782)

(12,949)

Depreciation and amortisation

(25,729)

(22,653)

1    Comprises intangible assets, property, plant and equipment (inclusive of ROU assets).

2    Includes ROU assets capitalised in each year.

 

The Group's measures of segment profit are Adjusted EBIT, which excludes Adjusting Items; refer to the APMs section of the Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 30 April 2024 for calculation.


2024
£000

2023

£000

Moonpig

72,709

59,891

Greetz

7,815

11,262

Experiences

15,006

13,046

Group Adjusted EBITDA

95,530

84,199




Moonpig

14,498

11,851

Greetz1

1,884

2,053

Experiences1

1,062

1,292

Group depreciation and amortisation excluding amortisation on acquired intangibles1

17,444

15,196

 



Moonpig

58,211

48,040

Greetz1

5,931

9,209

Experiences1

13,944

11,754

Group Adjusted EBIT2

78,086

69,003

1    Excludes amortisation arising on Group consolidation of intangibles, which is now included in Adjusting Items - see Note 6.

2   The Adjusted EBIT number in the prior year has been restated to adjust for acquisition amortisation, which is now included in Adjusting Items - see Note 6.

 

The following table shows Adjusted EBIT that reconciles to the consolidated results of the Group:

 


Note

2024

£000

2023

£000

Adjusted EBITDA


95,530

84,199

Depreciation and amortisation1


17,444

15,196

Adjusted EBIT


78,086

69,003

Adjusting Items

6

(11,802)

(20,542)

Operating profit


66,284

48,461

Finance income

7

198

21

Finance costs

7

(20,082)

(13,577)

Profit before taxation


46,400

34,905

Taxation charge

9

(12,231)

(8,298)

Profit for the year


34,169

26,607

1    Depreciation and amortisation excludes amortisation on acquired intangibles of £8,285,000 (2023: £7,457,000) included in Adjusting Items - see Note 6 for more information.

 

4 Cost of sales


2024

£000

2023

£000

Wages and salaries

13,750

16,970

Inventories

48,088

49,453

 Shipping and logistics

73,306

71,811

 Depreciation on warehouses and machinery

3,464

2,215

Total cost of sales

138,608

140,449

 

 

 

 

5 Operating profit

 

Nature of expenses charged/(credited) to operating profit from continuing operations:

 

 

2024

£000

2023

£000

Depreciation on property, plant and equipment

6,610

6,941

Amortisation of intangible assets1

19,119

15,712

Research and development expenses

2,301

1,732

IPO-related bonuses

2,367

3,263

Share-based payment charges (excluding NI)

4,179

7,270

Foreign exchange loss

272

67

Salaries and wages

48,129

35,580

Cost of inventories

48,088

49,453

Other income2

(1,349)

(1,319)

Auditors' remuneration:

 


 - Fees to auditors for the audit of the consolidated financial statements

875

934

 - Fees to auditors' firms and associates for local audits

88

82

Total audit fees expense

963

1,016

Fees to auditors' firms and associates for other services:

 


 - Assurance services

139

141


1,102

1,157

1   Amortisation of intangible assets includes a charge of £8,285,000 (2023: £7,457,000 relating to the amortisation on acquired intangibles, which is classified as an Adjusting Item as set out in  Note 6.

2   Other income relates to a sublease with an associate of the Former Parent Undertaking for its portion of the space used at the Group's head offices at Herbal House.

 

During the year, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP charged the Group as follows:

●      In respect of audit-related assurance services: £139,000 (2023: £141,000).

●      In respect of non-audit-related services: £nil (2023: £nil).

 

6 Adjusting Items

 


2024

£000

20231

£000

Pre-IPO bonus awards

(2,367)

(3,263)

Pre-IPO share-based payment charges

(1,150)

(5,419)

M&A-related transaction costs

-

(4,403)

Total adjustments made to Adjusted EBITDA

(3,517)

(13,085)

Amortisation on acquired intangibles

(8,285)

(7,466)

Total adjustments made to Adjusted EBIT

(11,802)

(20,551)

1 The prior year Adjusting Items number has been restated to include the amortisation on acquired intangibles.

 

Pre-IPO bonus awards

Pre-IPO bonus awards are one-off cash-settled bonuses, and the cash component of the Pre-IPO schemes, awarded in relation to the IPO process that completed during the year ended 30 April 2021.

 

Pre-IPO share-based payment charges

Pre-IPO share-based payment charges relate to the Legacy Schemes, Pre-IPO awards that were granted in relation to the IPO process that completed during the year ended 30 April 2021.

 

M&A-related transaction costs

M&A related transaction costs relate to fees and costs incurred in relation to the acquisition of the Experiences segment.

 

Amortisation on acquired intangibles

Acquisition amortisation is a non-cash expense relating to intangible assets. These expenses are excluded from adjusted earnings because they are non-operational and thus distort the underlying performance of the business. To present a clearer picture of the Group's ongoing operational performance the costs are adjusted for and will be on an ongoing basis.

 

Cash paid in the year in relation to Adjusting Items totalled £4,057,000 (2023: £5,490,000).

 

7 Finance income and costs

 

Finance income and costs

 

2024

£000

2023

£000

Bank interest receivable

198

21

Interest payable on leases

(901)

(863)

Bank interest payable

(12,258)

(11,639)

Amortisation of capitalised borrowing costs

(4,604)

(1,619)

Amortisation of interest rate cap premium

(353)

(352)

Interest on discounting of financial liability

(1,568)

-

Net foreign exchange gain/(loss) on financing activities

(398)

896

Net finance costs

(19,884)

(13,556)

 

8 Employee benefit costs

 

The average monthly number of employees (including Directors) during the year was made up as follows:

 


2024

Number

2023

Number

Administration

558

582

Production

150

148

Total employees

708

730

 


2024

£000

2023

£000

Wages and salaries

51,435

41,664

Social security costs

6,752

5,047

Other pension costs

2,487

1,619

Share-based payment expense

4,179

7,270

Total gross employment costs

64,853

55,600

Staff costs capitalised as intangible assets

(12,545)

(12,750)

Total net employment costs

52,308

42,850

 

The FY24 wages and salaries amount includes the impact of a full year of Experiences employees' wages, the full year impact of operating in-house UK operational facilities and a higher annual bonus outcome (as threshold financial targets were not met in FY23).

The Group's employees are members of defined contribution pension schemes with obligations recognised as an operating cost in the income statement as incurred.

 

The Group pays contributions into separate funds on behalf of the employee and has no further obligations to employees. The risks associated with this type of plan are assumed by the member. Contributions paid by the Group in respect of the current year are included within the consolidated income statement.

 

9 Taxation

 

(a) Tax on profit

 

The tax charge is made up as follows:


2024

£000

2023

£000

Profit before taxation

46,400

34,905

Current tax:

 


UK corporation tax on profit for the year

13,057

8,385

Foreign tax charge

1,009

1,644

Adjustment in respect of prior years

(278)

(992)

Total current tax

13,788

9,037

Deferred tax:

 


Origination and reversal of temporary differences

(1,746)

(820)

Adjustment in respect of prior years

189

81

Total deferred tax

(1,557)

(739)

Total tax charge in the income statement

12,231

8,298

 

 

(b) The tax assessed for the year is higher than the standard UK rate of corporation tax applicable of 25% (2023: 19.4%); the 19.4% in the prior year reflects eleven months of the financial year at a 19% rate of corporation tax and one month at 25%. The differences are explained below:

 


2024

£000

2023

£000

Profit before taxation

46,400

34,905

Profit on ordinary activities multiplied by the UK tax rate

11,600

6,775

Effects of:

 


Expenses not deductible for tax purposes

336

1,048

Non-taxable income

(356)

(20)

Effect of higher tax rates in overseas territories

16

287

Adjustment in respect of prior years

(89)

(912)

Change in UK deferred tax rate

-

282

Share based payments

736

1,045

Other permanent differences

(12)

(207)

Total tax charge for the year

12,231

8,298

 

Taxation for other jurisdictions is calculated at the rates prevailing in each jurisdiction.

 

The effective tax rate is higher than the UK tax rate, which primarily reflects impact of the Group's share schemes (refer to
Note 6 and Alternative Performance Measures in the financial review).

 

(c) Deferred tax:


Accelerated capital allowances

£000

Intangible assets

£000

Share-based payments

£000

Right of use assets

£000

Lease liabilities

£000

Other short-term temporary differences

£000

Total

£000

Balance at 1 May 2023

(1,889)

(11,231)

1,192

(1,488)

1,629

809

(10,978)

Adjustments in respect of prior years

(54)

(245)

(256)

1

-

452

(102)

Adjustments posted through other comprehensive income (OCI)

-

59

-

-

-

(154)

(95)

Adjustments posted through equity

-

-

536

-

-

-

536

Current year credit/(charge) to income statement

77

1,923

455

304

(267)

(746)

1,746

Effects of movements in exchange rates

-

(6)

-

-

-

(4)

(10)

Balance at 30 April 2024

(1,866)

(9,500)

1,927

(1,183)

1,362

357

(8,903)

 


Accelerated capital allowances

£000

Intangible assets

£000

Share-based payments

£000

Right of use assets

£000

Lease liabilities

£000

Other short-term temporary differences

£000

Total

£000

Balance at 1 May 2022

(1,028)

(2,818)

783

(127)

126

896

(2,168)

Adjustments in respect of prior years

-

(10)

(73)

-

-

2

(81)

Current year credit/(charge) to income statement

(1,018)

1,331

482

(1,346)

1,486

(117)

818

Acquired through business combinations

157

(9,581)

-

-

-

28

(9,396)

Effects of movements in exchange rates

-

(153)

-

(15)

17

-

(151)

Balance at 30 April 2023

(1,889)

(11,231)

1,192

(1,488)

1,629

809

(10,978)

 

The Finance Bill 2021 included legislation to increase the main rate of corporation tax from 19% to 25% from 1 April 2023. According to the Netherlands 2024 Tax Plan, the general corporate income tax rate will remain 25.8% for the year 2024 whereby the first €200K profit is taxed at 19%.

 

10 Earnings per share

 

Basic earnings per share

Basic earnings per share is calculated by dividing the earnings attributable to ordinary shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the period. For the purposes of this calculation, the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the period was 343,093,868 (2023: 340,061,402). The period-on-period increase reflects the release of 3,075,329 shares, on 7 January 2023, from repurchase obligations that were deducted from ordinary shares outstanding at 30 April 2023 as well as the issue of 1,198,394 (2023: nil) shares to satisfy the Group's obligation to its employees in relation to the vested Tranche 1 of the pre-IPO share based payment scheme in April 2023 and some shares in relation to the DBSP scheme (see Note 20):

Shares in issue

Year ended

30 April 2024

Year ended

30 April 2023

As at 1 May

342,111,621

342,111,621

Issue of shares during the period

1,198,394

-

As at 30 April

343,310,015

342,111,621

 


2024

Number of shares

2023

Number of shares

Weighted average number of shares in issue

343,093,868

342,111,621

Less: weighted average number of shares held subject to potential repurchase

-

(2,050,219)

Weighted average number of shares for calculating basic earnings per share

343,093,868

340,061,402

 

Diluted earnings per share

For diluted earnings per share, the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue is adjusted to assume conversion of all potentially dilutive ordinary shares. The Group has potentially dilutive ordinary shares arising from share options granted to employees under the share schemes as detailed in Note 20 of these condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

Adjusted earnings per share

Earnings attributable to ordinary equity holders of the Group for the year, adjusted to remove the impact of Adjusting Items and the tax impact of these; divided by the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the year.

 


2024

Number of shares

2023

Number of shares

Weighted average number of shares for calculated basic earnings per share

343,093,868

340,061,402

Weighted average number of dilutive shares

11,693,937

6,860,822

Total number of shares for calculated diluted earnings per share

354,787,805

346,922,224

 


2024

£000

20231

£000

Basic earnings attributable to equity holders of the Company

34,169

26,607

Adjusting Items (see Note 6)

11,802

20,542

Tax on Adjusting Items

(2,385)

(2,749)

Adjusted earnings attributable to equity holders of the Company before Adjusting Items

43,586

44,400

 


2024

20231

Basic earnings per ordinary share (pence)

10.0

7.8

Diluted earnings per ordinary share (pence)

9.6

7.7

Basic earnings per ordinary share before Adjusting Items (pence)

12.7

13.1

Diluted earnings per ordinary share before Adjusting Items (pence)

12.3

12.8

1 The prior year numbers have been restated to include the amortisation on acquired intangibles as an Adjusting Item - see Note 6 and Alternative Performance Measures (see financial review).

 

11 Intangible assets


Goodwill

£000

Trademark

£000

Technology and development costs1

£000

Customer relationships

£000

Software

£000

Other intangibles

£000

Total

£000

Cost

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 May 2023

143,811

16,683

30,255

48,071

691

-

239,511

Additions

-

-

12,582

-

200

-

12,782

Disposals

-

-

(3,779)

-

(627)

-

(4,406)

Foreign exchange

(189)

(260)

-

(466)

(3)

-

(918)

30 April 2024

143,622

16,423

39,058

47,605

261

-

246,969


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Accumulated amortisation
and impairment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 May 2023

-

4,851

10,160

13,486

559

-

29,056

Amortisation charge

-

1,653

10,979

6,252

235

-

19,119

Disposals

-

-

(3,779)

-

(627)

-

(4,406)

Foreign exchange

-

(129)

-

(255)

(7)

-

(391)

At 30 April 2024

-

6,375

17,360

19,483

160

-

43,378

Net book value 30 April 2024

143,622

10,048

21,698

28,122

101

-

203,591

1          The technology and development costs include assets under construction of £4,735,000 (2023: £3,821,000).

 

 


 

 

Goodwill

£000

Trademark

£000

Technology and development costs1

£000

Customer relationships

£000

Software

£000

Other intangibles

£000

Total

£000

Cost








1 May 2022

6,236

8,579

19,982

15,188

487

1,519

51,991

Additions

-

-

12,749

-

200

-

12,949

Additions from acquisition of subsidiary

137,267

7,686

1,177

32,133

-

-

178,263

Disposals

-

-

(3,653)

-

-

(1,594)

(5,247)

Foreign exchange

308

418

-

750

4

75

1,555

30 April 2023

143,811

16,683

30,255

48,071

691

-

239,511









Accumulated amortisation
and impairment








1 May 2022

-

3,178

5,417

7,439

410

1,519

17,963

Amortisation charge

-

1,494

8,396

5,675

147

-

15,712

Disposals

-

-

(3,653)

-

-

(1,594)

(5,247)

Foreign exchange

-

179

-

372

2

75

628

At 30 April 2023

-

4,851

10,160

13,486

559

-

29,056

Net book value 30 April 2023

143,811

11,832

20,095

34,585

132

-

210,455

1        The technology and development costs include assets under construction of £3,821,000 (2022: £3,950,000).

 

(a) Goodwill

Goodwill of £6,353,000 (2023: £6,544,000) relates to the acquisition of Greetz in 2018, recognised within the Greetz CGU.

Goodwill of £137,269,000 (2023: £137,267,000) relates to the acquisition of Experiences and is allocated to the Experiences CGU.

 

(b) Trademark

£3,744,000 (2023: £4,267,000) of the asset balance are trademarks relating to the acquisition of Greetz with finite lives. The remaining useful economic life at 30 April 2024 on the trademark is 4 years 4 months (2023: 5 years 4 months).

 

£6,304,000 (2023: £7,072,000) of trademark assets relate to the brands valued on the acquisition of Experiences. The remaining useful economic life at 30 April 2023 on these trademarks is 8 years and 3 months (2023: 9 years and 3 months).

 

(c) Technology and development costs

Technology and development costs of £21,227,000 (2023: £19,232,000) relate to internally developed assets. The costs of these assets include capitalised expenses of employees working full-time on software development projects and third-party consulting firms.

 

Technology and development costs of £471,000 (2023: £864,000) relate to the acquisition of Experiences and are allocated to the Experiences CGU. The remaining useful economic life at 30 April 2024 is 1 years and 3 months (2023: 2 years and 3 months).

 

(d) Customer relationships

£6,041,000 (2023: £7,173,000) of the asset balance relates to the valuation of existing customer relationships held by Greetz on acquisition. The remaining useful economic life at 30 April 2024 on these customer relationships is 6 years 4 months (2023: 7 years 4 months).

 

£22,081,000 (2023: £27,411,000) of customer relationship assets relates to those valued on the acquisition of the Experiences segment. The remaining useful economic life at 30 April 2024 on these customer relationships is a range of 5 years and 3 months and 2 years and 3 months (2023: a range of between 6 years 3 months and 5 months).

 

(e) Software

Software intangible assets include accounting and marketing software purchased by the Group and software licence fees from third-party suppliers.

 

(f) Other intangibles

Other intangible assets include non-compete agreements and information content for products and software that have been valued and separately recognised.

 

(g) Annual impairment tests

 

Goodwill

Goodwill is allocated to two cash-generating units ("CGUs"), namely the Greetz and Experiences segments, based on the smallest identifiable group of assets that generates cash inflows independently in relation to the specific goodwill. The recoverable amount of a CGU or group of CGUs is determined as the higher of its fair value less costs of disposal and its value in use ("VIU"). In determining VIU, estimated future cash flows are discounted to their present value. The Group performed its annual impairment test as at 30 April 2024.

 

The estimated future cash flows are based on the approved plan, including the FY25 budget, for the three years ending 30 April 2027. The estimated future cash flows are identical to those used for the viability statement. They have been extended by a further three years before applying a perpetuity using an estimated long-term growth rate. When estimating value in use, the Group does not include estimated future cash flows that are expected to arise from improving or enhancing the asset's performance.

 

The use of a pre-perpetuity projections period of more than five years is an accounting judgement. The reasons why the Group considers that a six-year period is appropriate, and why it considers that the Group meets the reliability requirements of IAS 36, are set out at Note 4 to the Company Financial Statements within the FY24 Annual Report and Accounts.

 

The Group has considered the potential impact of climate change on estimated future cash flows, including the primary climate risks discussed in the TCFD report within the Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 30 April 2024. These risks are not considered to have a material impact on estimated future cash flows and therefore have not been modelled as part of the Group's forecasts. Any revenue upsides from climate opportunities are not expected to be significant and have also not been modelled. The Group does not operate in an energy-intensive industry and any cash outflows needed to factor in any incremental costs, other operational disruption that could impact operating margin or reduced trade, are not expected to be material.

 

The Group has identified the following key assumptions as having the most significant impact on the VIU calculation:

 


Greetz CGU

Experiences CGU

2024

2023

2024

2023

Pre-tax discount rate1

13.5%

12.2%

15.1%

13.5%

Revenue compound annual growth rate ("CAGR")2

8.8%

12.4%

6.6%

10.5%

Pre-perpetuity period (years)

6

7

6

7

1          The discount rate is a pre-tax rate that reflects the current market assessment of the time value of money and the risks specific to the cash generating units. The pre-tax discount rates used to calculate value in use are derived from the Group's post-tax weighted average cost of capital. The decline in the discount rate from the previous year is due to reducing the equity premium and betas used in the calculation.

2          The compound annual growth rate represents the average yearly growth rate over the pre-perpetuity period.

 

The Group has performed sensitivity analysis to assess the impact of a change in each key assumption in the VIU. The relevant scenario, in relation to a revenue decrease, is consistent with the more severe downside scenario (Plausible Scenario 2) prepared in connection with the viability statement within the Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 30 April 2024.

 

For the goodwill allocated to the Experiences and Greetz CGUs the Group modelled the impact of a 1%pts increase in the discount rate, 5.4% decrease in the compound annual growth rate and a reduction in the pre-perpetuity period from six to five years. The Group also modelled a scenario in which all three of these changes arise concurrently. The results of this sensitivity analysis are summarised below:


Greetz CGU

Experiences CGU

2024

£m

2023

£m

2024

£m

2023

£m

Original headroom

80.8

193.6

23.3

89.7

Headroom using a discount rate increased by 1%pts

70.4

167.7

11.1

64.1

Headroom using a 5.4%pts decrease in the forecast revenue CAGR1 (2023: 15% decrease in forecast revenue)

54.1

123.1

(36.7)

2.7

Headroom using a pre-perpetuity period reduced by one year

76.3

180.1

8.2

77.3

Headroom combining all three sensitivity scenarios detailed above

45.0

97.7

(54.6)

(21.2)

1    The compound annual growth rate represents the average yearly growth rate over the pre-perpetuity period. 

 

For goodwill allocated to the Greetz CGU, the headroom over carrying amount is more than adequate and there is no reasonably possible change in key assumptions including those relating to future sales performance that would lead to an impairment.

 

For goodwill allocated to the Experiences CGU, further modelling was undertaken to assess the point at which headroom would be reduced to £nil for each of the individual sensitivities. For the carrying amount and recoverable amount to be equal, the pre-tax discount rate would need to increase by 2.5%pts from 15.1% to 17.6%, the revenue CAGR would need to decrease by 1.9%pts to 4.7% (assuming no action was taken to reduce indirect costs from the forecasted level) and the pre-perpetuity period would need to reduce from six to four years (each sensitivity applied individually).

 

No impairment to the carrying amount of Experiences goodwill has been recorded in the current period, reflecting the fact that it remains lower than the recoverable amount. However, in view of the outcome of the sensitivity analysis, the Directors have identified that each of the three key assumptions are a major source of estimation uncertainty. We have therefore provided the disclosure above of quantification of all key assumptions in the value in use estimate and the impact of a change in each key assumption.

 

Other finite-life intangible assets

At each reporting year date, the Group reviews the carrying amounts of other finite-life intangible assets to determine whether there is any indication that those assets have suffered an impairment loss. If any such indication exists, the recoverable amount of the asset is estimated in order to determine the extent, if any, of the impairment loss. Where it is not possible to estimate the recoverable amount of an individual asset, the Group estimates the recoverable amount of the cash-generating unit to which the asset belongs.

 

12 Property, plant and equipment

 


Freehold property

£000

Plant and machinery

£000

Fixtures and fittings

£000

Leasehold improvements

£000

Computer equipment

£000

Right-of-use assets plant and machinery

£000

Right-of-use assets land and buildings

£000

Total

£000

Cost

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 May 2023

3,905

6,862

4,182

10,482

2,507

1,355

23,374

52,667

Additions

-

468

89

205

203

575

-

1,540

Remeasurements

-

-

-

-

-

-

162

162

Disposals

-

(115)

(170)

(89)

(136)

(366)

(220)

(1,096)

Foreign exchange

-

(13)

(46)

(63)

(27)

(28)

(222)

(399)

30 April 2024

3,905

7,202

4,055

10,535

2,547

1,536

23,094

52,874

Accumulated depreciation and impairment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 May 2023

2,207

3,958

2,886

2,310

1,642

187

7,166

20,356

Depreciation charge

155

1,130

661

1,079

547

455

2,583

6,610

Disposals

-

(115)

(170)

(89)

(136)

(181)

(220)

(911)

Foreign exchange

-

(7)

(29)

(5)

(18)

(8)

(14)

(81)

30 April 2024

2,362

4,966

3,348

3,295

2,035

453

9,515

25,974

Net book value
30 April 2024

1,543

2,236

707

7,240

512

1,083

13,579

26,900


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Freehold property

£000

Plant and machinery

£000

Fixtures and fittings

£000

Leasehold improvements

£000

Computer equipment

£000

Right-of-use assets plant and machinery

£000

Right-of-use assets land and buildings

£000

Total

£000

Cost









1 May 2022

3,907

6,674

1,264

3,708

2,393

1,253

18,744

37,943

Additions

-

2,146

268

6,679

587

880

5,552

16,112

Acquired additions

-

-

2,875

-

564

371

933

4,743

Disposals

(2)

(331)

(1,867)

(149)

(961)

(1,196)

(2,063)

(6,569)

Transfers

-

(1,701)

1,619

207

(125)

-

-

-

Foreign exchange

-

74

23

37

49

47

208

438

30 April 2023

3,905

6,862

4,182

10,482

2,507

1,355

23,374

52,667

Accumulated depreciation and impairment









1 May 2022

2,053

4,100

976

1,638

1,503

962

5,470

16,702

Depreciation charge

156

979

768

808

631

391

3,208

6,941

Acquired accumulated depreciation

-

-

2,182

-

421

-

-

2,603

Disposals

(2)

(331)

(1,867)

(149)

(941)

(1,211)

(2,020)

(6,521)

Transfers

-

(821)

814

7

-

-

-

-


Impairment

-

-

-

-

-

-

428

428

Foreign exchange

-

31

13

6

28

45

80

203

30 April 2023

2,207

3,958

2,886

2,310

1,642

187

7,166

20,356

Net book value
30 April 2023

1,698

2,904

1,296

8,172

865

1,168

16,208

32,311

 

13 Inventories


2024

£000

2023

£000

Raw materials and consumables

1,411

2,128

Finished goods

8,374

13,425

Total inventory

9,785

15,553

Less: Provision for write off of:

 


Raw materials and consumables

(380)

(153)

Finished goods

(2,311)

(3,067)

Net inventory

7,094

12,333

 

14 Trade and other receivables


2024

£000

2023

£000

Current:



Trade receivables

1,569

1,901

Less: provisions

(243)

(470)

Trade receivables - net

1,326

1,431

Other receivables

2,523

2,117

Other receivables with entities formerly under common control

-

151

Prepayments

2,728

2,632

Total current trade and other receivables

6,577

6,331

 

The movements in provisions are as follows:


2024

£000

2023

£000

At 1 May

(470)

-

Acquired

-

(310)

Charge for the year

(32)

(160)

Utilised

172

-

Released

74

-

Foreign exchange

13

-

At 30 April

(243)

(470)

 

Trade and other receivables are predominantly denominated in the functional currencies of subsidiary undertakings. There is no material difference between the above amounts for trade and other receivables (including loan receivables) and their fair value due to their contractual maturity of less than 12 months.

 

As at 30 April 2023 other receivables with entities formerly under common control relate to costs in connection with leased property. The relevant entities are no longer considered a related party as at 30 April 2024 and therefore the balance in this financial year is reported as part of other liabilities.

 

As permitted by IFRS 9, the Group applies the simplified approach to measuring expected credit losses which uses a lifetime expected loss allowance for all trade receivables. To measure the expected credit losses, trade receivables have been grouped based on shared credit risk characteristics such as ageing of the debt and the credit risk of the customers. A historical credit loss rate is then calculated and then adjusted to reflect expectations about future credit losses. A customer balance is written off when it is considered that there is no reasonable expectation that the amount will be collected and legal enforcement activities have ceased.

 

The Group's credit risk on trade and other receivables is primarily attributable to trade receivables. There are no significant concentrations of credit risk since the risk is spread over a large number of unrelated counterparties.

 

The Group's businesses implement policies, procedures and controls to manage customer credit risk. Outstanding balances are regularly monitored and reviewed to identify any change in risk profile.

 

The Group considers its credit risk to be low with Group revenue derived from electronic payment processes (including credit card, debit card, PayPal, iDEAL and Single Euro Payments Area) executed over the internet, with most receipts reaching the bank accounts in one to two days.

 

At 30 April 2024, the Group had net trade receivables of £1,326,000 (2023: £1,431,000). Trade receivables are reviewed regularly for any risk of impairment and provisions are booked where necessary.

 

The maximum exposure to credit risk is the trade receivable balance at the year-end. The Group has assessed its exposure below:

 

Trade receivables ageing


2024

£000

2023

£000

Up to 30 days

1,258

973

Past due but not impaired:

 


30 to 90 days

110

250

More than 90 days

201

678

Gross

1,569

 1,901

Less: provisions (all relating to balances more than 90 days)

(243)

(470)

Net trade receivables

1,326

1,431

 


2024

£000

2023

£000

Non-current other receivables:



Other receivables

1,611

2,153

Total non-current trade and other receivables

1,611

2,153

 

Non-current other receivables relate to security deposits in connection with leased property.

 

15 Cash and cash equivalents


2024

£000

2023

£000

Cash and bank balances

6,422

19,597

Cash equivalents

3,222

2,797

Total cash and cash equivalents

9,644

22,394

 

The carrying amount of cash and cash equivalents approximates their fair value. Cash equivalents relate to cash in transit from various payment processing intermediaries that provide receipting services to the Group.

 

Cash and cash equivalents are denominated in Pounds Sterling or other currencies as shown below.


2024

£000

2023

£000

Pounds Sterling

6,303

16,467

Euro

2,981

4,989

Australian Dollar

190

841

US Dollar

170

97

Total cash and cash equivalents

9,644

22,394

 

16 Trade and other payables


2024

£000

2023

£000

Current



Trade payables

14,440

26,726

Other payables

5,515

4,569

Other taxation and social security1

8,710

9,048

Accruals

22,800

16,272

Merchant accrual1

45,274

53,504

Total current trade and other payables

96,739

110,119

1 An amount of £2,292,000 has been reclassified from merchant accrual to other taxation and social security in 2023. This amount relates to the VAT element on the merchant accrual.

 

Trade and other payables are predominantly denominated in the functional currencies of subsidiary undertakings. There are no material differences between the above amounts for trade and other payables and their fair value due to the short maturity of these instruments.

 


2024

£000

2023

£000

Non-current



Other payables

638

3,168

Other taxation and social security

914

1,052

Other payables with entities formerly under common control

-

638

Total non-current trade and other payables

1,552

4,858

 

As at 30 April 2023, the amounts due to entities formerly under common control amounted to £638,000. The relevant entities are no longer considered a related party as at 30 April 2024 following Exponent Private Equity ceasing to be a Significant Shareholder. Therefore, in the current year, the relevant balance is included within other payables.

 

The decrease in other payables year-on-year is due the accrual for tranche 2 of the pre-IPO cash bonus award becoming a current liability, as the scheme vested on 30 April 2024.

 

17 Provisions for other liabilities and charges

 


Other

provisions

£000

Dilapidations

provisions

£000

Total

£000

At 1 May 2023

1,461

2,569

4,030

Charged in the year

891

-

891

Utilisation

(74)

(215)

(289)

Release of provisions in the year

(15)

-

(15)

Foreign exchange

(8)

(20)

(28)

At 30 April 2024

2,255

2,334

4,589

Analysed as:

 

 

 

Current

1,894

179

2,073

Non-current

361

2,155

2,516


 

 

 


Other

provisions

£000

Dilapidations

provisions

£000

Total

£000

At 1 May 2022

1,837

1,509

3,346

Acquired

494

317

811

Charged in the year

1,093

724

1,817

Utilisation

(938)

-

(938)

Release of provisions in the year

(1,051)

-

(1,051)

Foreign exchange

26

19

45

At 30 April 2023

1,461

2,569

4,030

Analysed as:




Current

1,240

377

1,617

Non-current

221

2,192

2,413

 

Current provisions

Other provisions primarily relate to royalty provisions, a refund provision and a sabbatical provision. The above provisions are due to be settled within the year. The current dilapidation provision is for the former head office of the Experiences segment, it is expected to be settled during the next financial year.

 

Non-current provisions

Dilapidations provisions relate to the Herbal House head office, the Almere facility in the Netherlands and the Tamworth facility in the UK and are non-current due to their settlement date. The earliest current lease end date of one of these three locations is 2027.

 

18 Contract liabilities

In all material respects, current deferred revenue at 30 April 2023 and 30 April 2024 was recognised as revenue during the respective subsequent year. Other than business-as-usual movements there were no significant changes in contract liability balances during the year.

 

19 Borrowings


2024

£000

2023

£000

Current



Lease liabilities

3,257

3,443

Borrowings

73

27

Non-current

 


Lease liabilities

13,072

16,082

Borrowings

118,292

170,493

Total borrowings and lease liabilities

134,694

190,045

 

During the financial year the Group completed a refinancing, replacing its previous term loan and revolving credit facility with a new £180,000,000 committed multi-currency RCF. The RCF has an initial maturity date of 29 February 2028 with an option to extend it by one year. As at 30 April 2024 the Group had drawn down £113,000,000 and €8,500,000 of the available revolving credit facility. There was no foreign exchange impact on borrowings during the year as the Euro draw down occurred on the last day of the financial year.

 

The amounts drawn under the RCF bear interest at a floating reference rate plus a margin. The reference rates are SONIA for loans in Sterling, EURIBOR for loans in Euro and SOFR for loans in US Dollars.

 

The Group's interest rate hedging arrangements now comprise a SONIA interest rate cap with a cap strike rate of 3.00% on £70m notional until 30 November 2024 and a SONIA interest rate cap, put in place during the current financial year, of 5.00% on £50m notional from 29 November 2024 until 1 June 2025, reducing thereafter to £35m notional until expiry on 28 November 2025. This follows the expiry of a SONIA interest rate swap (at a rate of 2.4725% on £90m notional) on 30 November 2023.

 

The RCF is subject to two covenants, each tested at six-monthly intervals. The leverage covenant, measuring the ratio of net debt to last twelve months Adjusted EBITDA, is a maximum of 3.5x until April 2025 and 3.0x thereafter. The interest cover covenant, measuring the ratio of last twelve months Adjusted EBITDA (excluding share based payments, as specified in the facilities agreement) to the total of bank interest payable and interest payable on leases, is a minimum of 3.5x for the term of the facility. The Group has complied with all covenants from entering the RCF until the date of these condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

Borrowings are repayable as follows:

 

 

 

2024

£000

2023

£000

Within one year

73

27

Within one and two years

-

-

Within two and three years

-

170,493

Within three and four years

118,292

-

Within four and five years

-

-

Beyond five years

-

-

Total borrowings1

118,365

170,520

1    Total borrowings include £73,000 (2023: £27,000) in respect of accrued unpaid interest and are shown net of capitalised borrowing costs of £1,973,000 (2023: £4,507,000).

 

The table below details changes in liabilities arising from financing activities, including both cash and non-cash changes.

 


Borrowings

£000

Lease liabilities

£000

Total

£000

1 May 2022

170,163

15,320

185,483

Cash flow

(12,144)

(3,504)

(15,648)

Foreign exchange

-

98

98

Interest and other1

12,501

7,611

20,112

30 April 2023

170,520

19,525

190,045

Cash flow

(71,271)

(4,424)

(75,695)

Foreign exchange

-

(129)

(129)

Interest and other1

19,116

1,357

20,473

30 April 2024

118,365

16,329

134,694

1    Interest and other within borrowings comprises amortisation of capitalised borrowing costs and the interest expense in the year. Interest and other within lease liabilities comprises interest on leases as disclosed in Note 7 as well as the lease liability addition in relation to the new Netherlands facility and office and the lease liability recognised on acquisition of the Experiences segment.

 

20 Share-based payments

 

Legacy schemes

Prior to Admission to the London Stock Exchange during the year ended 30 April 2021, share and cash-based incentives were awarded by the Former Parent Undertaking in relation to legacy compensation agreements for certain employees, senior management and Directors. Such shares have been converted into separate shares in Moonpig Group plc and other companies formerly under common control. These were accounted for in accordance with IFRS 2 and disclosed in the Prospectus, which can be accessed at www.moonpig.group/investors. The awards included 3,075,329 shares in Moonpig Group plc that did not vest at the date of Admission, and which vested on the 7 January 2023. In respect of these shares there were non-cash charges of £nil in FY24 (2023: £2,251,000). National Insurance is not included on these schemes as they operated at an unrestricted tax market value.

 

Pre-IPO awards

Awards were granted on 27 January 2021 and comprise two equal tranches, with the vesting of both subject to the achievement of revenue and Adjusted EBITDA performance conditions for the year ended 30 April 2023 and for participants to remain employed by the Company over the vesting period. The Group exceeded maximum performance for both measures, including on an organic basis without the post-acquisition revenue and profit from Experiences. Accordingly, the first tranche vested on 30 April 2023 and was paid in July 2023; the second tranche vested on 30 April 2024 and will be payable shortly thereafter. Given the constituents of the scheme, no attrition assumption has been applied. The scheme rules provide that when a participant leaves employment, any outstanding award may be reallocated to another employee (excluding the Executive Directors), in accordance with which share awards were granted in May, September, October and December 2022 and January, February and April 2023, all of which will vest on 30 April 2024.

 

There were no shares granted during the financial year, the below tables detail the shares outstanding:

 

 

 

 

Pre-IPO awards

2024

Number of shares

2023

Number of shares

Outstanding at the beginning of the year

2,616,716

2,546,859

Granted

-

295,357

Exercised

(1,165,744)

-

Forfeited

(37,001)

(225,500)

Outstanding at 30 April

1,413,971

2,616,716

Exercisable at 30 April

1,413,971

1,165,744

 

The weighted average market value per ordinary share of Pre-IPO options exercised during the year was 1.48p (2023: N/a).

 

Long-Term Incentive Plan ("LTIP")

Awards were granted on 1 February 2021 and will vest on 2 July 2024. Half of the share awards vesting is subject to a relative Total Shareholder Return ("TSR") performance condition measured against the constituents of the FTSE 250 Index (excluding Investment Trusts). The other half of the share awards vesting is subject to the achievement of an Adjusted Basic Pre-Tax EPS performance condition (calculated as Adjusted Profit Before Taxation, divided by the undiluted weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the year). Participants are also required to remain employed by the Company over the vesting period. Given the constituents of the scheme, no attrition assumption has been applied. On 4 July 2023 and 19 September 2023 new awards were granted under the existing scheme and will vest on 4 July and 19 September 2026 respectively. Consistent with the existing scheme, participants are required to remain employed by the Company over the vesting period. Vesting may arise sooner where a former employee is a "good leaver" and the Remuneration Committee exercises discretion to permit vesting at cessation of employment. The below tables give the assumptions applied to the options granted in the period and the shares outstanding:

 


September 2023

July 2023

Valuation model

Stochastic and Black-Scholes and Chaffe

Stochastic and Black-Scholes and Chaffe

Weighted average share price (pence)

164.90

159.40

Exercise price (pence)

0

0

Expected dividend yield

0%

0%

Risk-free interest rate

4.47%/4.54%

5.13%/4.80%

Volatility

32.54%/33.25%

33.79%/33.21%

Expected term (years)

3.00/2.00

3.00/2.00

Weighted average fair value (pence)

137.25/164.90

129.70/159.40

Attrition

0%

0%

Weighted average remaining contractual life (years)

3.90

3.70

 

LTIP awards

2024

Number of shares

2023

Number of shares

Outstanding at the beginning of the year

3,064,998

871,275

Granted

6,991,966

2,296,209

Exercised

-

-

Forfeited

(730,108)

(102,486)

Outstanding at the end of the year

9,326,856

3,064,998

Exercisable at the end of the year

-

-

 

Deferred Share Bonus Plan ("DSBP")

The Group has bonus arrangements in place for Executive Directors and certain key management personnel within the Group whereby a proportion of the annual bonus is subject to deferral over a period of three years with vesting subject to continued service only. Vesting may arise sooner where a former employee is a "good leaver" and the Remuneration Committee exercises discretion to permit vesting at cessation of employment.

 

The outstanding number of shares at the end of the period is 386,842 (2023: 392,289), with an expected vesting profile as follows:

 


FY25

FY26

FY27

Total

Share options granted on 6 August 2021

86,371

-

-

86,371

Share options granted on 5 July 2022

-

255,593

-

255,593

Share options granted on 4 July 2023

-

-

44,878

44,878

 

 

 

July 2023

Valuation model

Black-Scholes

Weighted average share price (pence)

159.40

Exercise price (pence)

0

Expected dividend yield

0%

Risk-free interest rate

N/A

Volatility

N/A

Expected term (years)

3.00

Weighted average fair value (pence)

159.40

Attrition

0%

Weighted average remaining contractual life (years)

3.50

 

DSBP

2024

Number of shares

 

2023

Number of shares

Outstanding at the beginning of the year

392,289

92,970

Granted

47,164

299,319

Exercised

(32,650)

-

Forfeited

(19,961)

-

Outstanding at the end of the year

386,842

392,289

Exercisable at the end of the year

-

-

 

The weighted average market value per ordinary share of DSBP options exercised during the year was 1.59p (2023: N/a).

 

Save As You Earn ("SAYE")

 

The Group entered a SAYE scheme for all eligible employees under which employees are granted an option to purchase ordinary shares in the Company at an option price set at a 20% discount to the average market price over the three days before the invitation date, in three years' time, dependent on their entering into a contract to make monthly contributions into a savings account over the relevant period.

 

The FY22 awards were granted on 3 September 2021 and will vest on 1 October 2024, with a six-month exercise period following vesting. The awards are subject only to service conditions with the requirement for the recipients of awards to remain in employment with the Company over the vesting period. FY23 awards were granted on 8 September 2022 and will vest on 1 October 2025, they are subject to the same conditions as the FY22 grant. The FY24 awards were granted on 28 July 2023 and will vest on 1 October 2026, they are subject to the same conditions as the FY23 grant.

 

The below tables give the assumptions applied to the options granted in the year and the shares outstanding:


July 2023

Valuation model

Black-Scholes

Weighted average share price (pence)

176.40p

Exercise price (pence)

117.00p

Expected dividend yield

0%

Risk-free interest rate

3.93%

Volatility

32.54%

Expected term (years)

3.00

Weighted average fair value (pence)

67.09p

Attrition

15%

Weighted average remaining contractual life (years)

2.75

 

 

 

SAYE

2024

Number of shares

Weighted average exercise price

 

2023

Number of shares

Weighted average exercise price

Outstanding at the beginning of the year

783,819

1.78p

318,021

3.02p

Granted

842,552

1.17p

692,957

1.62p

Exercised

-

-

-

-

Cancelled

(616,736)

1.62p

(209,399)

3.02p

Forfeited

-

-

(17,760)

3.02p

Outstanding at the end of the year

1,009,635

1.37p

783,819

1.78p

Exercisable at the end of the year

1,111

1.62p

-

-

 

The fair value of awards under the Pre-IPO and DSBP awards are equal to the share price on the date of award as there is no price to be paid and employees are entitled to dividend equivalents. For awards with a market condition, volatility is calculated over the period commensurate with the remainder of the performance period immediately prior to the date of grant. For all other conditions, volatility is calculated over the period commensurate with the expected term. As the Company had only recently listed, a proxy volatility equal to the median volatility of the FTSE 250 (excluding Investment Trusts) over the respective periods has been used. Consideration has also been made to the trend of volatility to return to its mean, by disregarding extraordinary periods of volatility.

 

Share-based payments expenses recognised in the income statement:

 


2024

£000

2023

£000

Legacy schemes

-

2,251

Pre-IPO awards

1,152

3,168

LTIP

2,340

1,876

SAYE

455

351

DSBP

305

273

Share-based payments expense1

4,252

7,919

1    The £4,252,000 (FY23: £7,919,000) stated above is presented inclusive of employer's National Insurance contributions of £92,000 (2023: £649,000). This is made up of contributions of £790,000 (2023: £649,000) offset by a release of £698,000 (2023: £nil) in relation to a true up of NI at year end based on market share price data.

 

 

21 Share capital and reserves

The Group considers its capital to comprise its ordinary share capital, share premium, merger reserve, retained earnings, share-based payments reserve and foreign exchange translation reserve. Quantitative detail is shown in the consolidated statement of changes in equity. The Directors' objective when managing capital is to safeguard the Group's ability to continue as a going concern in order to provide returns for the shareholder and benefits for other stakeholders.

 

Called-up share capital

Ordinary share capital represents the number of shares in issue at their nominal value. Ordinary shares in the Company are issued, allotted and fully paid up.

 

The holders of ordinary shares are entitled to receive dividends as declared from time to time and are entitled to one vote per share at meetings of the Company. The shareholding as at 30 April 2024 is:

 


2024 Number of shares

2024

£000

2023 Number of shares

2023

£000

343,310,015

34,331

342,111,621

34,211

 

Share premium

Share premium represents the amount over the par value which was received by the Company upon the sale of the ordinary shares. Upon the date of listing the par value of the shares was £0.10 but the initial offering price was £3.50. Share premium is stated net of direct costs of £736,000 (2023: £736,000) relating to the issue of the shares.

 

Merger reserve

The merger reserve arises from the Group reorganisation accounted for under common control.

 

Other reserves

Other reserves represent the share-based payment reserve, the foreign currency translation reserve and the hedging reserve.

 

Share-based payment reserve

The share-based payment reserve is built up of charges in relation to equity-settled share-based payment arrangements which have been recognised within the consolidated income statement.

 

Hedging reserve

The hedging reserve comprises the effective portion of the cumulative net change in the fair value of cash flow hedging instruments related to hedged transactions that have not yet occurred and the cumulative net change in the fair value of time value on the cash flow hedging instruments.

 

Foreign currency translation reserve

The foreign currency translation reserve represents the accumulated exchange differences arising since the acquisition of Greetz from the impact of the translation of subsidiaries with a functional currency other than Sterling.

 

 


Share-based payment reserve

£000

Foreign currency translation reserve

£000

Hedging reserve

£000

Total other reserves

£000

At 1 May 2022

34,941

(35)

-

34,906

Other comprehensive income:





Foreign currency translation reserve reclassification

-

(735)

-

(735)

Cash flow hedges:





Fair value changes in the year

-

-

1,891

1,891

Cost of hedging reserve

-

-

126

126

Fair value movements on cash flow hedges transferred to profit and loss

-

-

(136)

(136)

Exchange differences on translation of foreign operations

-

(158)

-

(158)

Share-based payment charge (excluding National Insurance)

7,270

-

-

7,270

30 April 2023

42,211

(928)

1,881

43,164

 

At 1 May 2023

42,211

(928)

1,881

43,164

Other comprehensive income:





Cash flow hedges:

 

 

 

 

Fair value changes in the year

-

-

715

715

Cost of hedging reserve

-

-

243

243

Fair value movements on cash flow hedges transferred to profit and loss

-

-

(2,222)

(2,222)

Deferred tax on other comprehensive income

-

-

(95)

(95)

Exchange differences on translation of foreign operations

-

30

-

30

Share-based payment charge (excluding National Insurance)

4,179

-

-

4,179

Deferred tax on share based payment transactions

536

-

-

536

Share options exercised

(4,158)

-

-

(4,158)

30 April 2024

42,768

(898)

522

42,392

 

22 Financial instruments

 

Accounting classifications and fair values

 

The amounts in the Consolidated Balance sheet and related notes that are accounted for as financial instruments and their classification under IFRS 9, are as follows:


Note

2024

£000

2023

£000

Financial assets at amortised cost:




Current assets




Trade and other receivables1

14

3,849

3,699

Cash

15

9,644

22,394

Non-current assets


 


Trade and other receivables

14

1,611

2,153

Financial assets at fair value through other comprehensive income ("OCI"):


 


Current assets


 


Financial derivatives


838

711

Non-current assets




Financial derivatives


164

1,757

 

 

16,106

30,714

Financial liabilities at amortised cost:


 


Current liabilities


 


Trade and other payables2

16

42,755

47,567

Merchant accrual3

16

45,274

53,504

Lease liabilities

19

3,257

3,443

Borrowings

19

73

27

Non-current liabilities


 


Trade and other payables2

16

638

3,806

Lease liabilities

19

13,072

16,082

Borrowings

19

118,292

170,493

 

 

223,361

294,922

1    Excluding prepayments.

2    Excluding other taxation and social security (as not classified as financial liabilities) and merchant accrual, which is disclosed separately below.

3   An amount of £2,292,000 has been reclassified from Merchant accrual to Other taxation and social security in 2023. This amount relates to the VAT element on the merchant accrual.

 

The fair values of each class of financial assets and liabilities is the carrying amount, with the exception of Borrowings, based on the following assumptions:

 

Trade receivables, trade payables and borrowings

The fair value approximates to the carrying amount, predominantly, because of the short maturity of these instruments.

Forward currency contracts

The fair value is determined using the mark to market rates at the reporting date and the outright contract rate.

Interest rate swap and cap

The fair value is determined by discounting the estimated future cash flows at a market rate that reflects the current market assessment of the time value if money and the risks specific to the instrument.

 

With regards to Borrowings, the fair values of bank loans and other loans approximates to the carrying value reported in the balance sheet, gross of amortised costs of £1,973,000 (2023: £4,507,000), as the majority are floating rate where payments are reset to market rates at intervals of less than one year.

 

Fair value hierarchy

 

Financial instruments carried at fair value are required to be measured by reference to the following levels:

·      Level 1: quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.

·      Level 2: inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly (i.e. as prices) or indirectly (i.e. derived from prices).

·      Level 3: inputs for the asset or liability that are not based on observable market data (unobservable inputs).

 

All financial instruments carried at fair value have been measured by a Level 2 valuation method.

 

Financial risk management

 

The Group has exposure to the following risks arising from financial instruments:

·      Credit risk

·      Liquidity risk

·      Market risk

 

i) Risk management framework

In line with the Group's Risk Appetite statement, the Group's treasury objective is to ensure that it adopts a prudent approach to managing financial risk, ensuring that excessive financial risks are mitigated whilst maintaining a balance between cost efficiency and calculated risk tolerance. The Group does not enter financial instruments for speculative purposes but maintains discretion to decide when to hedge financial exposures, within the parameters set out in its Group Treasury Policy.

 

ii) Credit risk

Credit risk is the risk of financial loss if a counterparty fails to discharge its contractual obligations under a customer contract or financial instrument.

 

·      The Group's credit risk from its operations primarily arises from trade and other receivables. This risk is assessed as low, as the balances are short maturity, arise principally as a result of high volume, low value transactions, and have no significant concentration as there is no counterparty balance that represents a significant credit risk concentration.

·      The Group's credit risk on cash and cash equivalents is considered to be low. Financial assets are held with bank and financial institution counterparties that have a long-term credit rating of A3 or higher from Moody's Investor Services and/or a long-term credit rating of A- or higher from Standard & Poor's. The Group's treasury policy is to monitor cash (when applicable deposit balances) daily and to manage counterparty risk whilst also ensuring efficient management of the Group's RCF.

 

Further information on the credit risk management procedures applied to trade receivables is given in Note 14 and to cash and cash equivalents in Note 15. The carrying amounts of trade receivables and cash and cash equivalents shown in those notes represent the Group's maximum exposure to credit risk.

 

iii) Liquidity risk

Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group will encounter difficulties in meeting the obligations associated with its financial liabilities that are settled by delivering cash. The Group's approach to managing liquidity is to ensure, as far as possible, that it will always have sufficient liquidity to meet its liabilities when due, under both normal and stressed conditions, without incurring unacceptable losses or risking damage to the Group's reputation.

 

Cash flow forecasting is performed centrally with rolling forecasts of the Group's liquidity requirements regularly monitored to ensure it has sufficient cash to meet operational needs. The Group's revenue model results in a strong level of cash conversion allowing it to service working capital requirements.

 

The Group's sources of borrowing for liquidity purposes comprise a committed RCF of £180,000,000, provided by a strong syndicate of banks. The RCF has an initial maturity date of 29 February 2028 with an option to extend it by one year, subject to lender approval. Lease liabilities are also reported in borrowings.

 

Liquidity risk management requires that the Group continues to operate within the financial covenants set out in its facilities. The RCF is subject to two covenants, each tested at six-monthly intervals. The leverage covenant, measuring the ratio of net debt to last twelve months Adjusted EBITDA, is a maximum of 3.5x until April 2025 and 3.0x thereafter. The interest cover covenant, measuring the ratio of last twelve months Adjusted EBITDA (excluding share based payments, as specified in the facilities agreement) to the total of bank interest payable and interest payable on leases, is a minimum of 3.5x for the term of the facility. Covenant forecasting is performed centrally, with regular monitoring to ensure that the Group continues to expect to meet its financial covenants.

 

The following tables provide an analysis of the anticipated contractual cash flows including interest payable for the Group's financial liabilities and derivative instruments on an undiscounted basis. Where interest payments are calculated at a floating rate, rates of each cash flow until maturity of the instruments are calculated based on the forward yield curve prevailing at the respective year ends. All derivative contracts are presented on a net basis:

 

Contractual cash flows

2024

Due within
1 year

£000

Due between 1 and 3 years

£000

Due between 3 and 5 years

£000

Due after
5 years

£000

Total

£000

Carrying amount
at balance sheet date

£000

Borrowings1

-

-

120,266

-

120,266

118,292

Interest on borrowings

8,025

15,364

6,031

-

29,420

73

Lease capital repayments

3,257

6,251

3,085

3,736

16,329

16,329

Lease future interest payments

655

843

371

229

2,098

-

Merchant accrual

48,133

-

-

-

48,133

45,274

Trade and other financial liabilities2

42,755

638

-

-

43,393

43,393

Non-derivative financial liabilities

102,825

23,096

129,753

3,965

259,639

223,361

 

 

Interest rate swap

-

-

-

-

-

-

Interest rate caps

935

92

-

-

1,027

1,002

Derivative financial assets

935

92

-

-

1,027

1,002

 

Contractual cash flows

2023

Due within
1 year

£000

Due between 1 and 3 years

£000

Due between 3 and 5 years

£000

Due after
5 years

£000

Total

£000

Carrying amount
at balance sheet date

£000

Borrowings1

-

175,000

-

-

175,000

170,493

Interest on borrowings

12,533

24,804

-

-

37,337

27

Lease capital repayments

3,444

6,212

4,946

4,923

19,525

19,525

Lease future interest payments

776

1,089

532

379

2,776

-

Merchant accrual3

53,504

-

-

-

53,504

53,504

Trade and other financial liabilities2

47,567

3,806

-

-

51,273

51,373

Non-derivative financial liabilities

117,824

210,911

5,478

5,302

339,415

294,922

 

Interest rate swap

723

-

-

-

723

706

Interest rate cap

1,216

422

-

-

1,638

1,762

Derivative financial assets

1,923

422

-

-

2,361

2,468

1    For the purpose of these tables, borrowings are defined as gross borrowings excluding lease liabilities and fair value of derivative instruments.

2    Consists of trade and other payables that meet the definition of financial liabilities under IAS 32 (excluding merchant accrual, which is split our separately above).

3   The merchant accrual balance as at 30 April 2023 has been restated to exclude VAT in relation to this liability of £2,292,000

 

IFRS 7 requires the contractual future interest cost of a financial liability to be included within the above table. As disclosed in Note 19 of these condensed consolidated financial statements, borrowings are currently drawn under a revolving credit facility and repayments can be made at any time without penalty. As such there is no contractual future interest cost. Interest is payable on borrowings' drawn amounts at a floating reference rate plus margin. The reference rates are SONIA for loan in Sterling, EURIBOR for loans in Euro and SOFR for loans in US Dollars.

 

The merchant accrual contractual cash flows amount due within one year represents the undiscounted gross value. The contractual cash flows being due within one year is different from the forecast cash flow profile used to discount the liability under IFRS 9. Amounts are due when the customer redeems the voucher which is outside of the control of the Group, hence its classification as a current liability and its contractual cash flows being within one year. However, historical redemption periods show that actual redemptions differ from the contractual period and therefore on a forecast basis the cash flows span more than one year, as a result the liability is discounted.

 

It is not expected that the cash flows included in the maturity analysis could occur significantly earlier, or at significantly different amounts.

 

iv) Market risk

Currency risk

Currency risk involves the potential for financial loss arising from changes in foreign exchange rates:

 

·      Translation risk is exposure to changes in values of items in the condensed consolidated financial statements caused by translating items into Sterling. This is the Group's principal currency exposure in view of its overseas operations.

·      Transaction risk arises from changes in exchange rates from the time a foreign currency transaction is entered into until it is settled. This is relevant to the Group's operating activities outside the UK, which are generally conducted in local currency. Transaction risk is not considered significant, as the Group primarily transacts in Sterling and Euros and generates cash flows in each currency which are sufficient to cover operating costs.

·      Other currency exposures comprise currency gains and losses recognised in the income statement, relating to other monetary assets and liabilities that are not denominated in the functional currency of the entity involved. At 30 April 2024 and 30 April 2023, these exposures were not material to the Group.

 

For the mitigation of currency risk, the Group has implemented strategies, including the use of flexible forward contracts to purchase Euros, US Dollars, and Australian Dollars in exchange for Sterling.

 

Interest rate risk

Interest rate risk involves the potential for financial loss arising from changes in market interest rates. The Group is exposed to interest rate risk arising from borrowings under the Revolving Credit Facility, which incurs interest at a floating reference rate plus a margin. The reference rates are SONIA for loans in Sterling, EURIBOR for loans in Euro and SOFR for loans in US Dollars. As at 30 April 2024 the Group had drawn down £113,000,000 and €8,500,000 of the available revolving credit facility. There was no foreign exchange impact on borrowings during the year as the Euro draw down occurred on the last day of the financial year.

 

To mitigate this risk, the Group has implemented hedging strategies. The Group's interest rate hedging arrangements now comprise a SONIA interest rate cap with a cap strike rate of 3.00% on £70m notional until 30 November 2024 and a SONIA interest rate cap, put in place during the current financial year, of 5.00% on £50m notional from 28 November 2024 until 1 June 2025, reducing thereafter to £35m notional until expiry on 30 November 2025. This follows the expiry of a SONIA interest rate swap (at a rate of 2.4725% on £90m notional) on 30 November 2023.

 

The Group has elected to adopt the hedge accounting requirements of IFRS 9 Financial Instruments. The Group enters hedge relationships where the critical terms of the hedging instrument and the hedged item match, therefore, for the prospective assessment of effectiveness a qualitative assessment is performed. Hedge effectiveness is determined at the origination of the hedging relationship. Quantitative effective tests are performed at each year end to determine the continuing effectiveness of the relationship.

 

The Group determines the existence of an economic relationship between the hedging instrument and hedged item based on the interest rate, amount and timing of their respective cash flows. The Group assesses whether the derivative designated in each hedging relationship is expected to be, and has been, effective in offsetting changes in cash flows of the hedging item using the hypothetical derivative method.

 

In these hedge relationships, the main sources of ineffectiveness are:

 

·      The effect of the counterparty and Group's own credit risk on the fair value of the cap and swap, which is not reflected in the change in the fair value of the hedged cash flows attributable to the change in interest rates; and

·      Changes in the timing of the hedged item.

 

The derivative financial assets are all net settled; therefore, the maximum exposure to interest rate risk at the reporting date is the fair value of the derivative assets which are included in the consolidated balance sheet:

 

Derivative financial assets

2024

£000

2023

£000

Derivatives designated as hedging instruments



Interest rate swaps - cash flow hedges

-

706

Interest rate caps - cash flow hedges

1,002

1,762

Total derivatives financial assets

1,002

2,468

 


2024

£000

2023

£000

Current and non-current:



Current

838

711

Non-current

164

1,757

Total derivatives financial assets

1,002

2,468

 

Cash flow interest rate swap and cap

There was no ineffective portion recognised in finance expense that arose from cash flow hedges during the year (2023: £nil).

 

At 30 April 2024, the main floating rates were SONIA. Gains and losses recognised in the cash flow hedging reserve in equity on interest rate swap and cap contracts as at 30 April 2024 will be released to the consolidated statement of comprehensive income as the related interest expense is recognised.

 

The effects of the cash flow interest rate swap and cap hedging relationships are as follows at 30 April:

 


Interest rate swap

Interest rate cap 3%

Interest rate cap 5%1

2024

2023

2024

2023

2024

2023

Carrying amount of derivatives (£000)

-

706

838

1,762

164

-

Changes in fair value of the designated hedged item (£000)

84

842

630

1,175

1

-

Notional amount (£000)

-

55,000

70,000

70,000

42,500

-

Hedge ratio

-

1:1

1:1

1:1

1:1

-

Maturity date

-

30/11/2023

30/11/2024

30/11/2024

30/11/2025

-

1    The Group put in place an interest rate cap during the year of 5.00% on £50m notional from 29 November 2024 until 1 June 2025, reducing thereafter to £35m notional until expiry on 28 November 2025.

 

Interest rate movements on deposits, lease liabilities, trade payables, trade receivables and other financial instruments do not present a material exposure to the Group's balance sheet.

 

The table below details changes in derivative assets arising from financing activities, including both cash and non-cash changes.

 


 

 

Derivative assets

£000

1 May 2022



-

Cash outflow/ (inflow)



612

Non-cash movement



1,856

30 April 2023



2,468

Cash outflow/ (inflow)

 

 

(2,072)

Non-cash movement

 

 

606

30 April 2024

 

 

1,002

 

Market risk sensitivity analysis

Financial instruments affected by market risks include borrowings and deposits.

 

The following analysis, required by IFRS 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures, is intended to illustrate the sensitivity to changes in market variables, being Sterling interest rates, and Sterling/Euro exchange rates.

 

The sensitivity analysis assumes reasonable movements in foreign exchange and interest rates before the effect of tax. The Group considers a reasonable interest rate movement in SONIA to be 3%, based on current interest rate projections. Similarly, sensitivity to movements in Sterling/Euro exchange rates of 10% are shown, reflecting changes of reasonable proportion in the context of movement in that currency pair over the last year.

 

The following table shows the illustrative effect on profit before tax resulting from a 10% change in Sterling/Euro exchange rates:

 


Income

(losses)/gains

2024

£000

Equity

(losses)/gains

2024

£000

Income

(losses)/gains

2023

£000

Equity

(losses)/gains

2023

£000

10% strengthening of Sterling versus the Euro

(340)

(1,312)

(390)

(814)

10% weakening of Sterling versus the Euro

416

1,604

477

995

 

The following table shows the illustrative effect on the consolidated income statement from a 3% change in market interest rates on the Group's interest expense. Refer to borrowings in Note 19.


2024

£000

2023

£000

3% increase in market interest rates

(2,913)

(6,350)

3% decrease in market interest rates

3,592

6,350

 

Capital risk management

 

Capital risk is the risk that the Group will not be able to sustain its operations in the long term due to an inability to secure sufficient capital or maintain an adequate return on capital investment. This encompasses financing risk (the risk that the Group cannot raise necessary funds to continue its operations or finance expansion activities) and cost of capital risk (associated with fluctuations in the cost of capital, which may influence investment decisions and affect long-term strategic planning).

 

The Group's capital management objectives are focused on maintaining investor confidence and supporting the sustainable development of the business. Future actions to manage capital may include dividends, return capital through share buybacks, issue new shares or take other steps to increase share capital and reduce or increase debt facilities.

 

23 Commitments and contingencies

 

a) Commitments

The Group entered a financial commitment in respect of floristry supplies of £212,000 (2023: £59,000) and rental commitments of £17,000 (2023: £12,000) which are due within one year.

 

b) Contingencies

Group companies have given a guarantee in respect of the external bank borrowings of the Group which amounted to £180,000,000 at 30 April 2024. This comprises of the RCF of £180,000,000, as at 30 April 2024 the Group had drawn down £113,000,000 and €8,500,000 of the available revolving credit facility.

 

24 Related party transactions

 

Transactions with related parties

The Group has earned other income from subletting space at its head office to an entity formerly under common control and was considered a related party during the year.


2024

£000

2023

£000

Other income from related parties formerly under common control

1,349

1,319

 

The relevant entity concerning the transaction above was no longer considered a related party as at 30 April 2024 following Exponent Private Equity ceasing to be a Significant Shareholder. Balances in relation to this entity have been included within other payables or other receivables where relevant. Therefore, as at the balance sheet date, the Group had the following balances with entities formerly under common control:

 


2024

£000

2023

£000

Trade and other receivables from other related parties formerly under common control

-

150

Trade and other payables with other related parties formerly under common control

-

(638)

 

There is no expected credit loss provision recognised in relation to the above receivables as the probability of default and any corresponding expected credit loss are immaterial to the Group.

 

Compensation of key management personnel of Moonpig Group plc

The amounts disclosed in the table are the amounts recognised as an expense during the reporting year related to key management personnel. Key management personnel are defined as the Directors as they are the members of the Group with the authority and responsibility for planning, directing and controlling the activities of the Group.

 

 

Further detail in respect of the Directors remuneration can be found within the Directors' Remuneration report within the Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 30 April 2024.


2024

£000

2023

£000

Short-term employee benefits

2,513

1,655

Post-employment pension and medical benefits

53

54

Share-based payment schemes

101

7,435

Total compensation relating to key management personnel

2,667

9,144

 

25 Related undertakings

 

A full list of subsidiary undertakings as defined by Companies Act 2006 as at 30 April 2024 is disclosed below. Titan Midco Limited is held directly by the Company and all other subsidiary undertakings are held indirectly.

 

The equity shares held are in the form of ordinary shares or common stock. The effective percentage of equity shares held in subsidiary undertakings is 100% in all cases.

 

Subsidiary undertakings

Number

Country of incorporation

Principal activity

Cards Holdco Limited1

12170467

England and Wales

Trading company, management services

Moonpig.com Limited1

03852652

England and Wales

Trading company

Experience More Limited1

03883868

England and Wales

Trading company

Titan Midco Limited1

13014525

England and Wales

Holding company

Horizon Bidco B.V.2

72238402

Netherlands

Holding company

Greetz B.V.2

34312893

Netherlands

Trading company

Full Colour B.V.2

34350020

Netherlands

Trading company

1    Registered office address is Herbal House, 10 Back Hill, London, EC1R 5EN, United Kingdom.

2    Registered office address is Herikerbergweg 1-35, 1101 CN Amsterdam, Noord-Holland.

 

All subsidiaries have a year-end of 30 April.

 

Titan Midco Limited is exempt from the Companies Act 2006 requirements relating to the audit of their individual financial statements by virtue of Section 479A of the Companies Act as this Company has guaranteed its subsidiary companies under Section 479C of the Companies Act.

 

In accordance with article 408 of the Dutch Civil Code, Horizon Bidco B.V. issued a declaration of joint and several liability in respect of its consolidated participants. The declaration covered and resulted in the standalone Horizon Bidco B.V. entity being exempt from an audit. Additionally, Full Colour B.V. is exempt from an audit under the Dutch Civil Code by virtue of its size.

 

26 Events after the balance sheet date

 

There were no adjusting or non-adjusting events after the balance sheet date.

This information is provided by RNS, the news service of the London Stock Exchange. RNS is approved by the Financial Conduct Authority to act as a Primary Information Provider in the United Kingdom. Terms and conditions relating to the use and distribution of this information may apply. For further information, please contact rns@lseg.com or visit www.rns.com.

RNS may use your IP address to confirm compliance with the terms and conditions, to analyse how you engage with the information contained in this communication, and to share such analysis on an anonymised basis with others as part of our commercial services. For further information about how RNS and the London Stock Exchange use the personal data you provide us, please see our Privacy Policy.
 
END
 
 
FR FFMLTMTITBTI