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Odyssean Investment Trust PLC

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INVESTMENT TRUST PLC

Annual Report and Financial Statements
for the year ended 31 March 2022

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About Us

Odyssean Investment Trust PLC (the “Company”, the “Trust” or “OIT”) is an investment 
trust which is listed on the premium segment of the Official List of the FCA and admitted 
to trading on the premium segment of the main market for listed securities of the LSE. The 
Company had total net assets of £157.8m as at 31 March 2022.

The Board of the Company comprises four non-executive Directors, all of whom are independent of the portfolio 
manager, Odyssean Capital LLP (“Odyssean” or the “Portfolio Manager”).

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCContents

1 

OVERVIEW

2 
3 
5 

Investment Objective
Investment Policy
Financial Summary

6 

STRATEGIC REPORT

Chairman’s Statement
Portfolio Manager’s Report
Portfolio of Investments

7 
10 
24 
25  Distribution of Investments
26 
38 

Business Review
Risk Management

46  GOVERNANCE

47 
Board of Directors
48  Directors’ Report
52  Corporate Governance Statement
58 
Audit Committee Report
61  Directors’ Remuneration Report
65 

Statement of Directors’ Responsibilities

67 

 INDEPENDENT AUDITOR’S REPORT TO THE MEMBERS OF ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT 
TRUST PLC

72 

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Statement of Comprehensive Income
73 
Statement of Changes in Equity
74 
Balance Sheet
75 
76  Cash Flow Statement
77  Notes to the Financial Statements

91 

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND NOTICE OF AGM

Shareholder Information

92 
93  Glossary
96  Notice of Annual General Meeting
103  Explanatory Notes to the Resolutions
106  Corporate Information

1

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewInvestment Objective

The  investment  objective  of  the 
Company  is  to  achieve  attractive 
total  returns  per  share  principally 
through capital growth over a long- 
term period.

2

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCInvestment Policy

The  Company  primarily  invests  in  smaller 
company equities quoted on markets operated 
by  the  London  Stock  Exchange,  where  the 
Portfolio  Manager  believes  the  securities 
are  trading  below  intrinsic  value  and  where 
this value can be increased through strategic, 
operational,  management  and/or  financial 
initiatives.  Where  the  Company  owns  an 
influencing  stake,  it  will  engage  with  other 
stakeholders  to  help  improve  value.  The 
Company  may,  at  times,  invest  in  securities 
quoted on other recognised exchanges and/or 
unquoted securities.

It  is  expected  that  the  majority  of  the  Portfolio  by  value 
will be invested in companies too small to be considered 
for inclusion in the FTSE 250 Index, although there are no 
specific restrictions on the market capitalisation of issuers 
into which the Company may invest.

The  portfolio  will  typically  consist  of  up  to  25  holdings, 
with  the  top  10  holdings  accounting  for  the  majority  of 
the Company’s aggregate Net Asset Value (“NAV”) across 
a  range  of  industries.  The  Company  will  adhere  to  an 
exclusion-based investment approach to avoid investment 
in  companies  involved  in  activities  the  Company  deems 
unethical and/or unsustainable.

The Company may hold cash in the Portfolio from time to 
time  to  maintain  investment  flexibility. There  is  no  limit 
on the amount of cash which may be held by the Company 
from time to time.

– 

– 

 The Company may invest up to 20 per cent. of Gross 
Assets  at  the  time  of  investment  in  quoted  securities 
not traded on the London Stock Exchange.

 The Company will not invest more than 10 per cent., 
in aggregate, of Gross Assets at the time of investment 
in other listed closed-end investment funds.

Ethical and sustainability investment restrictions
The Company will not invest1 in companies which derive 
any revenue from, or are engaged in:

– 

 the production or direct distribution of pornography;

– 

 the manufacture, production or retail of controversial 
weapons2 (e.g. chemical, biological or nuclear weapons, 
cluster  munitions,  landmines),  civilian  firearms  and 
ammunition;

– 

 the manufacture of alcohol and tobacco products;

– 

 the ownership or operation of gambling facilities;

– 

 sub-prime and/or predatory lending;

– 

– 

 oil  and  gas  production  (both  conventional  and 
unconventional, including shale oil and gas, coal seam 
gas,  coal  bed  methane,  thermal  coal,  tar  sands,  Arctic 
onshore/offshore  deepwater,  shallow  water  and  other 
onshore/offshore) and includes extraction and refining;

 animal  experimentation  or  animal  testing,  (a)  where 
there  is  a  proven  alternative  and/or  where  testing 
is  not  mandated  by  regulation;  or  (b)  where  there  is 
no  proven  alternative  and/or  the  experimentation 
or  testing  is  mandated  by  regulation,  but  where  the 
investee  company  is  not  adhering  to  the  “three  Rs” 
ethics of Replacement, Reduction and Refinement.

Investment restrictions
– 

 No  exposure  to  any  investee  company  will  exceed 
15 per cent. of Net Asset Value at the time of investment.

The Company will not invest more than 10 per cent.,  in 
aggregate,  of  Gross  Assets  at  the  time  of  investment  in 
companies involved in distributing, licensing, retailing or 
supplying tobacco and/or alcohol beverage products.

– 

 The Company may invest up to 20 per cent. of Gross 
Assets at the time of investment in unquoted securities 
where the issuer has its principal place of business in 
the UK.

1 

2 

 The Company will base its analysis of an investee company’s revenues and 
activities on publicly available information, and will exclude revenues and 
activities that are considered to be de-minimis, being those that represent less 
than 1% of the investee company’s revenue.
 Controversial weapons are those that have an indiscriminate and 
disproportional humanitarian impact on civilian populations, the effects of 
which can be felt long after military conflicts have ended.

3

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewInvestment Policy (continued)

Borrowings
The  Company  does  not  intend  to  incur  borrowings  for 
investment  purposes,  although  the  Company  may,  from 
time  to  time,  utilise  borrowings  over  the  short  term  for 
working capital purposes up to 10 per cent. of Net Asset 
Value at the time of borrowing.

Derivatives and Hedging
The  Company  will  not  use  derivatives  for  investment 
purposes.  It  is  expected  that  the  Company’s  assets  will 
be  predominantly  denominated  in  Sterling  and,  as  such, 
the  Company  does  not  intend  to  engage  in  hedging 
arrangements,  however,  the  Company  may  do  so  if 
the  Board  deems  it  appropriate  for  efficient  portfolio 
management purposes. 

General
The Company will not be required to dispose of any asset 
or to rebalance the Portfolio as a result of a change in the 
respective valuations of its assets.

The Company intends to conduct its affairs so as to qualify 
as an investment trust for the purposes of section 1158 of 
the CTA 2010.

Any material change to the Company’s investment policy 
set  out  above  will  require  the  approval  of  Shareholders 
by  way  of  an  ordinary  resolution  at  a  general  meeting 
and  the  approval  of  the  Financial  Conduct  Authority. 
Non-material  changes  to  the  investment  policy  may  be 
approved by the Board.

4

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCFinancial Summary

Company performance

As at 31 March 2022

As at 31 March 2021

Change

Shareholders’ funds
NAV per share
Share price per share
Share price premium/(discount) to NAV per share#

£157.8m
164.0p
166.0p
1.2%

£122.6m
139.3p
129.0p
(7.4)%

28.7%
17.7%
28.7%

Income per ordinary share revenue (loss)*
Capital return per ordinary share*
Total return per ordinary share*
NAV Total Return per share#
NSCI ex IC plus AIM Total Return Index#**

Year ended  
31 March 2022

Year ended  
31 March 2021

0.5p
23.5p
24.0p
17.7%
(2.1)%

(0.7)p
49.2p
48.5p

53.4%

71.3%

Cost of running the Company

Year ended  
31 March 2022

Year ended  
31 March 2021

Annualised ongoing charges#

1.45%

1.41%

#  Alternative Performance Measures (see Glossary on page 93).
*  Based on the weighted average number of shares in issue during the period.
** Used by the Company as comparator, not Benchmark. Source: Bloomberg.

Past performance is not a guide to future performance.

5

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewStrategic Report

STRATEGIC REPORT

7 
Chairman’s Statement
10  Portfolio Manager’s Report
24  Portfolio of Investments
25  Distribution of Investments
26  Business Review
38  Risk Management

6

ODYSSE AN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC

Chairman’s Statement

Introduction 
I am pleased to present the Annual Report and Financial 
Statements  for  Odyssean  Investment  Trust  PLC  (“OIT” 
or “the Company”) covering the year from 1 April 2021 to 
31 March 2022. 

The  Company  has  recently  passed  its  fourth  anniversary 
and  continues  to  deliver  on  its  objective  of  delivering 
attractive  differentiated  returns.  The  Company’s  returns 
have  been  very  different  to  both  the  typical  growth  and 
value funds in the broader peer group. 

Performance 
In  yet  another  period  marked  by  huge  volatility  and 
uncertainty,  the  net  assets  of  the  Company  increased  by 
£35.2 million to £157.8 million and represented a strong 
increase  in  net  asset  value  per  share  of  17.7%.  Over  the 
same period, the NSCI ex IT plus AIM Total Return Index 
(the “comparator index”) fell by 2.1%, leading to the NAV 
per share outperforming by almost 20% in the year. 

Of  particular  note  is  that  in  the  first  three  months  of 
calendar  2022,  the  NAV  grew  moderately,  during  which 
time  the  comparator  index  fell  by  more  than  10%.  This 
continues  the  trend  of  the  investment  approach  tending 
to deliver a resilient performance during difficult markets. 

There were several bid approaches for portfolio companies 
during  the  year,  where  the  average  premium  on  takeover 
has exceeded 50%. The Board takes this activity as a strong 
validation  of  the  Portfolio  Manager’s  ability  to  identify 
mispriced companies.

The  Portfolio  Manager’s  approach  to 
fundamental 
valuation  discipline  has  also  added  value.  A  number  of 
strong  performing  holdings  were  materially  sold  down 
close to the peak of markets in August, only to be bought 
back  at  considerably  lower  levels  in  the  first  quarter  of 
2022. Cash rose marginally to 11.8% in September 2021 
and by March 2022 had fallen to 1.3%. It is also notable 
how the sector exposure has changed over time, with the 
Portfolio  Manager  being  unconstrained  by  a  benchmark 
when seeking out returns. This ability to invest away from 
a benchmark is one of our greatest strengths.

Despite an average cash position of c.20%, the Company’s 
NAV  per  share  has  grown  at  c.14%  per  annum 
since  inception.  I  am  delighted  that  this  continued 
outperformance of our NAV over its hurdle has resulted in 
a performance fee of £2.346 million being payable to the 
Portfolio Manager. The performance fee was measured on 
a rolling three-year basis to 31 March 2022 and settlement 
is  expected  to  be  in  early  June  2022.  Similar  to  last  year 
50% of the net sum will be invested and held in our shares 
subject to a lock up for a period of 3 years. Including the 
performance  fee  the  total  cost  of  running  this  fund  was 
1.98%.  The  NAV  performance  is  net  of  these  fees  and  I 
am content with this as value for money for our excellent 
team, exclusive as they are to this pool of capital.

Discount and premium management 
The share price exceeded NAV growth over the year due to 
the discount narrowing from 7.4% to close at a premium of 
1.2%. The move from a mid to high single digit discount, 
to a premium happened during June 2021, and the shares 
remained  trading  at  a  small  premium  for  most  of  the 
rest  of  the  financial  year.  The  Company  issued  a  total  of 
8.3  million  shares  during  the  year  to  both  satisfy  buying 
demand  as  well  as  control  the  premium.  As  a  result,  the 
shareholder base has continued to diversify. Over time this 
should lead to improved liquidity, a lower bid-offer spread, 
and  the  scope  to  attract  new  shareholders  for  whom  the 
Company is currently a little too small.

Post the year end, the shares are trading at a mid-single digit 
discount  to  NAV,  as  discounts  in  the  market  have  come 
under more pressure. The Board remains open to  buying 
shares back again should the discount become excessive. 

7

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC[Page Header] (continued)Strategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewOutlook 
There  are  an  unusual  number  of  material  uncertainties 
impacting  investor  sentiment  at  present.  The  real  world 
impact  of  inflation,  the  potential  for  stagflation,  the 
prospect of a recession in 2023, the pace that interest rates 
will  rise,  allied  with  geopolitical  risk  from  the  Russian 
incursion  into  Ukraine.  In  addition,  current  reports  of 
material  backlogs  in  port  operations  in  China  driven  by 
Covid-19  lockdowns  may  lead  to  a  prolonging  of  supply 
chain challenges.

In  such  times,  it  gives  the  Board  great  comfort  that  the 
Company’s  assets  are  being  looked  after  by  a  Portfolio 
Manager  with  experience  and  focus.  Stuart  and  Ed 
have  combined  almost  40  years  of  relevant  investment 
experience,  but  many  of  the  macroeconomic  features  of 
the current market have not been seen for several decades.

As  a  result  of  this,  the  Board  is  reassured  that  Stuart 
Widdowson  and  Ed  Wielechowski  can  seek  for  input 
and advice from both the Non-Executives of the Portfolio 
Manager,  as  well  as  the  three-strong  Panel  of  Industry 
Advisors  that  they  have  retained.  This  input  is  crucial  in 
helping to understand the potential impact on existing and 
potential  portfolio  companies  of  the  convergent  factors 
influencing demand, cost bases, competition and financing. 

Never before has it been so important for companies to be 
able to improve themselves to create value. The scope for 
operational and strategic improvement amongst portfolio 
companies  provides  the  Board  with  comfort  that  NAV 
per  share  progression  is  not  solely  reliant  upon  market 
re-rating  and  benign  trading  conditions.  The  Board  also 
notes that the revenues of the portfolio, in aggregate, are 
much more geographically balanced than the UK Smaller 
Companies market. Balance sheets are typically strong too, 
with 40% of the portfolio having net cash balance sheets as 
at the end of March.

Chairman’s Statement (continued)

Dividend 
The  Board  has  not  recommended  a  dividend  for  the 
year ended 31 March 2022 and does not expect to do so 
in  the  near  future.  The  Directors  expect  that  returns  for 
shareholders will be primarily driven by capital growth of 
the shares rather than dividend income. The Company will 
pay a dividend only if the need arises to retain investment 
trust status.

The Board 
In  another  turbulent  year,  I  would  like  to  thank  my 
colleagues for their help and support.

There  were  no  changes  to  the  membership  of  the  Board 
during the year. As in previous years and in line with good 
corporate governance, an annual review of the effectiveness 
of the Board and its committees was performed, which is 
described  on  page  55.  The  Board  remains  satisfied  that 
each  Director  has  the  capacity  to  be  fully  engaged  with 
the  Company’s  business.  All  Directors  will  stand  for  
re-election at the forthcoming AGM and the appropriate 
resolutions can be found in the Notice of AGM on page 96.

Merger Proposal with Strategic Equity Capital
On 23 December 2021, both the Company and Strategic 
Equity  Capital  plc  (“SEC”),  another  closed  ended 
investment  company  in  the  same  sector,  announced  that 
they  were  in  merger  discussions.  On  9  February  2022, 
SEC  announced  that  it  had  withdrawn  from  talks  with 
the  Company  alongside  various  proposals  to  address  its 
discount. 

The Board of OIT believes that this represented a missed 
opportunity  to  create  a  leading  and  growing,  premium 
investment  trust  of  greater  scale  differentiated  from  the 
wider UK small cap sector.

Annual General Meeting 
The  fourth  AGM  of  the  Company  will  take  place  at 
12.00  noon  on  Wednesday,  21  September  2022.  The 
AGM will be held at the offices of Odyssean Capital LLP, 
6 Stratton Street, Mayfair, London W1J 8LD. The Notice 
convening  the  AGM  together  with  explanations  of  the 
proposed resolutions can be found on pages 96 to 105. 

8

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCChairman’s Statement (continued)

My statement from the interim report in November 2021 
described  how  the  Board  shared  the  Portfolio  Manager’s 
concern that inflation will be more persistent than many 
expect. That has proven to be the case so far. The Portfolio 
Manager’s actions in April 2021 to consider the potential 
impact of rising inflation on the portfolio companies has 
proven  to  be  extremely  timely.  The  Portfolio  Manager’s 
focus on niche market leaders with strong positions in their 
supply chains should provide overall insulation against the 
worst  impacts  of  inflation.  Moreover  the  Portfolio  has 
negligible exposure to the UK consumer, where leisure and 
retail  companies  are  likely  to  see  demand  under  pressure 
from rising prices as well as the cost of living increasing. 

The Board shares the views of the Portfolio Manager of the 
considerable medium to long term upside in the valuations 
of the portfolio as a whole. 

Jane Tufnell
Chairman

1 June 2022

9

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewStuart Widdowson

Ed Wielechowski

Portfolio Manager’s Report

Details of the Portfolio Manager
The  Company’s  Portfolio  Manager  is  Odyssean  Capital 
LLP.

The  Portfolio  Manager  was  founded  in  2017  by  Stuart 
Widdowson and Harwood Capital Management Limited, 
an independently owned investment group, and is jointly 
owned by both parties. The Chairman of Odyssean Capital 
LLP  is  Ian  Armitage,  former  CEO  and  Chairman  of 
HgCapital.

investment 

The  Portfolio  Manager’s 
team,  Stuart 
Widdowson and Ed Wielechowski, identify and undertake 
research  on  potential  investee  companies  as  well  as 
managing the portfolio. They draw on the experience of a 
three-strong Panel of Advisors, who have run and invested 
in  multiple  quoted  and  unquoted  smaller  companies.  In 
addition, the investment team draws on the expertise and 
experience  of  Mr  Armitage  and  Mr  Christopher  Mills, 
who sits on Odyssean Capital’s Board as a Non-Executive 
JV  Partner.  Mr  Armitage  and  Mr  Mills  have  more  than 
85 years’ combined investment experience in quoted and 
unquoted smaller companies.

Stuart Widdowson, Co-fund Manager
Stuart has spent the last 21 years investing in public and 
private  UK  small  and  mid-size  corporates  and  a  further 
two  years  providing  investment  advisory  services  in  the 
same field.

Prior  to  founding  the  Portfolio  Manager,  Stuart  was 
at  GVQ  Investment  Management  (“GVQ”),  where  he 
held  the  position  of  fund  manager  and  head  of  strategic 
investments for more than seven years. During his time at 
GVQ,  Stuart  led  the  transformation  of  the  performance 
of Strategic Equity Capital plc (“SEC”) and significantly 
improved shareholder value. Stuart led SEC to win several 
industry awards and was recognised as Fund Manager of 
the Year at both the PLC and QCA awards in 2015.

Stuart began his career as a strategy consultant undertaking 
commercial due diligence and strategy projects for private 
equity and corporate clients. In 2001, he joined HgCapital 
and spent five years working on small and mid-cap leveraged 
buyouts  in  the  UK  and  Germany.  During  this  time,  he 
worked  on  a  number  of  public  to  private  transactions  of 
UK quoted companies.

Ed Wielechowski, Co-fund Manager
Ed joined the Portfolio Manager in December 2017 as a 
Fund Manager.

Prior  to  joining  Odyssean,  Ed  was  a  Principal  in  the 
technology  team  at  HgCapital.  He  joined  HgCapital 
in  2006  and  worked  on  numerous  completed  deals, 
including multiple bolt-on transactions made by portfolio 
companies. He has additional quoted market experience, 
having  led  the  successful  IPO  of  Manx  Telecom  plc  in 
2014,  as  well  as  having  evaluated  and  executed  public  to 
private transactions. Ed started his career as an analyst in 
the UK mergers and acquisitions department of JPMorgan 
in 2004.

10

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC[Page Header] (continued)Portfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

The investment approach
Our investment approach applies the core elements of the 
private  equity  investment  philosophy  –  highly  focused, 
long-term,  engaged  ‘ownership’  style  investment  –  to 
public  markets.  We  believe  that  this  approach  creates  a 
portfolio unlike that of many typical public equity funds 
and that, well executed, can offer attractive, differentiated, 
risk-adjusted returns.

– 

– 

– 

– 

 Highly  concentrated  portfolio:  We  look  to  build 
a  highly  concentrated  portfolio  of  no  more  than  25 
investee  companies  where  we  carry  out  intensive 
diligence, only investing behind our highest conviction 
ideas. 

 Narrow  focus:  We  focus  on  companies  which  are 
typically  too  small  for  inclusion  in  the  FTSE  250 
index. We believe this market is less efficient, offering 
more  opportunities  to  find  mis-pricings.  Further,  we 
believe  the  best  investment  decisions  are  made  from 
a  base  of  knowledge  and  experience,  and  we  will 
make the majority of investments in industry sectors 
that we and our advisors, know well (TMT, Services, 
Industrials and Healthcare).

 Targeting 
long-term  holding  periods:  We  will 
evaluate each investment opportunity over a 3 to 5-year 
investment horizon. We have structured our business 
to  reflect  this  belief  and  do  not  intend  to  run  any 
capital  which  is  redeemable  over  short  time  periods. 
To think like an ‘owner’ of a business we believe your 
capital should behave like one too.

 Engaged investment style: We are engaged investors. 
We like investing in companies which, whilst good, are 
underperforming their potential and where we see the 
opportunity  for  constructive  corporate  engagement 
to  unlock 
improved  sustainable  returns  for  all 
stakeholders.

The  Company’s  investment  objective  is  to  deliver  long 
term  capital  growth  rather  than  outperform  a  specific 
index.  Our  differentiated  investment  approach,  allied 
with our sector focus and the recently revised investment 
restrictions approved in January 2021, is likely to lead to 
periods of NAV per share performance materially different 
to  those  of  the  broader  market.  We  fully  anticipate  this 
potential short-term performance variance and will focus 
on comparative investment performance on a rolling three-
year basis. 

The absolute return mentality of the strategy, allied with 
the  desire  to  avoid  being  a  forced  seller,  may  lead  to  net 
cash balances being held over the long-term. We anticipate 
a core range of 5-15% over the long term. Net cash balances 
will not be used as an attempt to market time, but to enable 
us to invest where blocks of stock are available rather than 
being required to sell a less liquid holding on short notice.                           

Implementing the investment strategy 
There are three key factors we look for when we analyse a 
potential investment; 

1) a valuation opportunity; 

2) in a higher-quality company; and 

3) with improvement potential. 

Our  view  is  that  buying  at  a  fair  price  and  supporting 
improved performance generates capital growth, while our 
quality  filters  mitigate  losses  in  the  event  of  unexpected 
headwinds.

Valuation
We  look  for  two  valuation  factors  in  every  investment. 
Firstly,  what  we  refer  to  as  “static  valuation”  –  does  the 
company trade at a discount to its current value? This is not 
only  judged  by  traditional  public  market  ratios.  We  also 
seek to model every company through the lens of a private 
equity buyer (of which we have considerable experience) as 
well as evaluating its attractiveness to strategic trade buyers.

Secondly,  we  are  looking  for  companies  which  can  grow 
their value over time – “dynamic valuation”. We particularly 
look for situations where there are multiple, independent 
drivers of value creation present, and where management 
actions can unlock these. We believe seeking multiple value 
drivers  makes  an  investment  case  more  secure  and  less 
exposed to single areas of uncertainty or misjudgement. 

Quality
We  assess  every  potential  investment  against  qualitative 
and  quantitative  quality  criteria.  The  quality  assessment 
is  important  to  mitigate  the  risk  of  permanent  capital 
destruction  from  investments  which  fail  to  achieve 
their  value  potential.  In  our  experience,  higher  quality 
companies are more likely to maintain a minimum value 
through difficult times and are more able to attract high 
calibre management teams to rectify underperformance.

11

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

Improvement potential and engagement
We  particularly  like  companies  that  are  in  some  way 
underperforming  relative  to  their  potential,  and  where 
the  current  valuation  does  not  price  in  the  potential  for 
improvement.  Once 
invested,  constructive  corporate 
engagement can help to unlock value. Our mantra is to buy 
good businesses and sell excellent businesses. The spectrum 
of  areas  which  can  be  improved  is  broad  and  includes 
operating  performance,  asset  utilisation,  overly  complex 
business structures/organisation, strategic direction, poor 
M&A, investor relations, and governance and pay. 

ESG in our investment process
We  have  historically  focused  on  evaluating  and  engaging 
on corporate governance (“G”) and financial performance 
as part of our investment process. 

In  January  2021,  shareholders  approved  a  change  in  the 
investment policy of the Company to implement negative 
screening of certain investments, deemed unethical and/or 
involved  in  activities  which  were  deemed  unsustainable. 
These  restrictions  augment  our  approach  to  corporate 
engagement and provide clarity and certainty to investors 
and largely formalises the approach we have taken since we 
launched. 

Our partnership with the specialist ESG data provider for 
smaller quoted companies, announced in December 2020, 
has enabled us to analyse all our portfolio companies ESG 
performance.  Many  of  these  companies  are  too  small  to 
have attracted ratings from the major ESG rating agencies. 
As at the time of preparation, we have shared these reports 
with each of our portfolio companies.

This  is  in  line  with  the  pragmatic  approach  to  E&S 
engagement  given  the  more  resource-constrained  nature 
of smaller quoted companies. Our focus is on how boards 
approach sustainability, where the scope for improvement 
is,  how  progress  is  evaluated  and  how  it  is  reported  to 
investors.  Our  belief  is  that  performing  ahead  of  peers 
and  market  expectations  on  ESG  should  attract  new 
shareholders, a higher rating and a lower cost of equity, all 
things which will drive enhanced returns and benefit the 
Company’s shareholders.

Progress and performance during the year
The  year  ending  March  2022  saw  markets  begin  in  a 
positive and seemingly sanguine fashion, with the market 
unconcerned  about  the  prospects  of  rising  inflation  and 

interest  rates.  However,  as  concerns  around  these  issues 
began to become more prominent, there was a notable style 
change in equity performance. In April 2021, we became 
increasingly concerned about the potential for inflation to 
rise and be less “transitory” than commentators suggested. 
As a result, we evaluated the portfolio companies’ abilities 
to  manage  their  way  through  inflation.  The  aspects  we 
considered included: their ability to pass on price increases; 
how often and how quickly they could raise prices; whether 
there  were  inflation  linked  price  increases  in  contracts 
and  how  those  might  operate;  particular  cost  exposures 
–  e.g.  commodity  prices  and  labour;  the  position  of  the 
company  in  its  supply  chain  (e.g.  customer  and  supplier 
concentration/fragmentation);  competitive  position  and 
dynamics; the capital intensity of the business and historic 
level  of  capital  investment;  working  capital  dynamics. 
Fortunately as a result of this analysis, we did not believe 
that material change to the existing portfolio was needed. 
However, it did inform our decisions on considering which 
new  investments  to  make  over  the  period,  leading  to  an 
even more selective approach. 

Growth and momentum appeared to peak in late August/
early  September  2021.  The  latter  half  of  calendar  2021 
and  early  2022  saw  growth  stocks  continuing  to  de-rate, 
regardless  of  trading  updates,  as  the  markets  began  to 
anticipate rises in interest rates. Newsflow in the last month 
of  the  period  was  dominated  by  the  tragic  situation  in 
Ukraine. Markets fell heavily with the onset of the invasion, 
before clawing back some of the losses. Commodity prices 
have  risen  sharply  due  to  the  convergence  of  shortages 
caused by disrupted supply chains, the impact of sanctions, 
and concerns on availability of certain materials for which 
Ukraine and Russia are important suppliers. In addition, it 
seems as the world recovers from Covid-19 certain sectors 
need  to  rebuild  inventory  and  capacity  has  been  slow  to 
satisfy the restocking. Growth stocks continued to perform 
relatively poorly, as bond yields continued to rise. 

The  Company’s  net  asset  value  (NAV)  per  share  rose 
17.7% in the year, materially exceeding the performance of 
the  NSCI  &  AIM  index  (which  we  use  as  a  comparator 
and not a benchmark) which fell by 2.1%. This is a pleasing 
result in absolute and relative terms (to both broader peers 
and the market). It is notable that resource stocks, in which 
the Company does not invest, outperformed over the year, 
meaning that the relative performance excluding resources 
was  even  stronger.  In  addition,  the  forward  P/E  of  the 
comparator  index  fell  from  15.4x  to  11.8x,  some  24% 
during the year. On an absolute basis the net cash balance 
averaged 7% across the year.

12

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

AIM stocks underperformed both full list small and mid-
cap  indices,  falling  12%  over  the  period,  with  the  index 
falling almost 20% from the peak in early September. AIM’s 
performance was a major driver in the comparator index 
underperforming  both  Small  and  Mid  Cap  indices.  The 
Numis All Share index rose 10.3% across the year, whereas 
the Numis Mid-Cap fell by 2.5% and the Numis 1,000 (the 
smallest 1,000 UK quoted companies) fell by 0.9%. 

The  top  five  positive  contributors  to  performance  were 
Xaar, Vectura, Flowtech, Chemring and Spire. 

Xaar’s  shares  rose  by  more  than  80%  over  the  year.  We 
added to the holding during the period, taking advantage 
of  periods  where  the  shares  were  over  sold  and  where 
markets were under particular stress. Whilst this has been a 
successful investment to date, if the management continues 
to  execute  on  the  recovery  well,  we  believe  that  there  is 
considerable remaining long term upside. Vectura and Spire 
were subject to bid approaches as detailed in the interim 
report.  Flowtech’s  shares  continued  their  progression 
through the period as the investment community shifted 
its  focus  away  from  cyclical  recovery  towards  the  scope 
for  the  business  to  drive  improved  organic  growth  from 
online  initiatives.  Chemring’s  shares  were  volatile,  but 
ended the period strongly as the conflict in Ukraine drove 
expectations of increases in defence spending over the next 
few years. 

The  M&A  activity  experienced  in  the  half  year  to 
September  continued  throughout  the  rest  of  the  period, 
with bids for Clinigen (immediately prior to the bid it was 
the 3rd largest holding) and Intertrust. These take the tally 
of  bids  of  portfolio  companies  to  eight  since  November 
2019.  The  average  day  1  premium  of  these  bids  to  the 
undisturbed  share  price  is  more  than  50%,  an  indication 
of  the  considerable  value  that  the  bidders  have  seen  in 
these  companies.  Whilst  we  do  not  invest  in  companies 
because we believe they will be acquired, we believe that 
the M&A activity seen is a strong validation of both our 
ability to identify assets which others will covet, and invest 
at a valuation considerably lower than fair value.

The  top  five  negative  contributors  to  performance  were 
NCC, RWS, Elementis, De La Rue and Benchmark. The 
first two holdings, both in the tech sector, had been sold 
down materially prior to the de-rating of technology and 
growth  stocks.  In  both  cases,  we  believed  that  the  de-
ratings experienced from late August 2021 were overdone 
and the shares ended the period at undemanding ratings. 
Elementis shares were hit hard during the first three months 
of 2022, despite the company continuing to hold guidance 

and marginally increase forecasts. The shares still trade at 
a 50% discount to their previous peak, despite not having 
to undertake any dilutive equity raise during the Covid-19 
period. De La Rue, a small holding, warned on profits in 
late January 2022 due to lag in passing on price increases 
combined  with  labour  disruption  from  Covid-19.  Order 
books remain strong. Benchmark released positive trading 
updates  showing  progression  in  all  areas  of  the  business. 
The true free float is very limited and there was little reason 
for the shares to perform poorly.

The  portfolio  was  on  average  93%  invested  across  the 
period. Net cash began the period at 10.9% and ended the 
period at 1.6%. 

Portfolio development
The  significant  shifts  in  market  sentiment  and  style 
leadership presented opportunities for active management 
of the portfolio. In addition, exit activity was higher than 
usual,  driven  by  takeovers  of  portfolio  companies.  As  a 
result, portfolio turnover was above that which we would 
normally expect. 

We  invested  £90.6m  into  stock  purchases,  a  higher 
proportion of NAV than is typical. This high number was 
influenced by three factors: high portfolio M&A leading 
to  accelerated  exits;  a  cash  inflow  of  £13.2m  following 
the  issuance  of  new  shares;  and  a  reduction  in  the  cash 
weighting from 10.9% to 1.6% over the year.

We  invested  £17.6m  into  four  new  positions,  with  the 
remaining £73.0m deployed into existing positions where 
further  research  supported  an  increased  weighting  or 
where  share  price  weakness  offered  an  opportunity  to 
enhance existing holdings in higher quality companies. 

Given  what  we  believe  to  be  excellent  risk/reward 
characteristics  of  many  of  our  existing  investments,  new 
positions  had  to  exceed  a  significant  hurdle  to  meet  our 
criteria. We have continued to look for companies which 
we  believe  enjoy  higher  quality  franchises  and  market 
leading  positions,  but  where  self-help  actions  within  the 
gift  of  management  can  drive  superior  returns  regardless 
of wider market conditions. Where these conditions were 
satisfied, we looked to enter a new position at a discount to 
what we see as ‘fair’ value either compared with the public 
markets or the price an outright acquiror might pay. This 
approach layers in multiple ‘margins of safety’ protecting 
against capital loss but giving many ways to drive an upside 
return.  Our  mid-weight  investment  in  Dialight  initiated 

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ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

Through  the  period  we  realised  £68.2m  from  disposals, 
with  six  positions  fully  exited  raising  £45.5m.  Of  this, 
£33.6m  was  realised  from  three  companies  which  had 
received  takeover  offers  and  were  fully  exited  by  the  end 
of March 2022. We also decided to exit some of the <2% 
“toe hold” positions, where companies had delivered ahead 
of expectations and/or where we believed that better risk/
reward opportunities were elsewhere in the portfolio. 

The  largest  single  position  exited  was  that  of  Clinigen 
which  returned  £18.9m  following  the  takeover  of  the 
group by Triton Private Equity in January. The bid came 
following  a  number  of  disappointing  trading  updates 
from  Clinigen  and  a  period  where  we  had  been  actively 
engaged with the company (alongside other shareholders) 
to encourage changes in corporate governance to help the 
company  to  achieve  its  potential.  We  regarded  the  final 
premium of c.51% as attractive. The investment delivered a 
cash multiple of 1.4x and IRR of 32%. 

Vectura was first bid for in May 2021 and we commented 
upon  this  in  the  interim  report.  This  disposal  returned 
£11.6m,  and  an  achieved  cash  multiple  of  1.7x  and  40% 
IRR. A smaller holding in Intertrust, a Dutch listed fund 
administration  services  company,  was  also  subject  to  bid 
approaches from multiple suitors in November 2021. The 
winning bid from CSC represented a premium of 59% to 
the undisturbed share price. 

These corporate actions mean that, since November 2019, 
six  portfolio  companies  have  been  subject  to  completed 
bids,  with  an  average  Day  1  bid  premium  of  more  than 
50%.

Engagement  with  portfolio  companies  was  centred 
around corporate governance, investor relations and ESG 
disclosure  during  the  period.  Of  the  235  resolutions  we 
voted on at general meetings, there were 22 votes against and 
1 abstention. At one AGM we voted against or abstained 
against  more  than  40%  of  the  resolutions.  On  a  positive 
note,  it  is  pleasing  to  see  that  our  portfolio  companies’ 
ESG disclosure is improving, with the proprietary scoring 
system used by our ESG data partner showing encouraging 
progress for many companies. 

during the period is an example of this approach in practice, 
other new positions started are below the top 10 but have 
the potential to scale further in the future.

We have been particularly active in the period in making 
further  investments  into  existing  positions.  This  reflects 
our conviction in what we already held, alongside the sharp 
moves in markets seen during the year offering attractive 
opportunities for investment in names we know well. 

Our  positions  in  Curtis  Banks,  a  leading  SIPP  platform 
provider,  and  Xaar,  a  provider  of  digital  inkjet  heads 
for  industrial  use,  which  were  both  initiated  at  a  small 
weighting in the prior year, were built to full weight during 
the  period  as  our  diligence  confirmed  our  conviction  in 
these exciting opportunities and we were able to identify 
pockets  of  liquidity  at  attractive  prices.  Both  have 
performed well in absolute and relative terms.

Significant  further  investments  were  also  made  into 
some of our larger positions where market moves offered 
opportunity.  Elementis,  a  specialist  chemicals  and 
minerals company, and Euromoney, one of our B2B media 
investments,  both  suffered  significant  share  price  falls 
during  the  broader  market  sell  off  in  Q1  2022  despite 
continuing to deliver robust trading performances. We saw 
the share price falls in both as unwarranted, and used this 
weakness to grow our weightings. 

Through  the  year  the  share  prices  and  ratings  of  NCC, 
a  provider  of  cyber  security  services,  and  Chemring  a 
provider  of  countermeasures  and  technology  to  the 
defence sector, were volatile as sentiment to their sectors 
(technology and defence respectively) shifted. In both we 
took profits when share prices were high and redeployed 
capital into other holdings. Conversely, we were happy to 
make  material  further  investments  when  shares  fell  later 
in the period despite robust trading updates, and we saw 
the risk/reward balance in each becoming highly attractive 
again.

As  a  result  of  this  investment  activity,  industrials  has 
become  the  largest  sector  exposure  of  the  portfolio, 
reflecting the variety of special situations we have found in 
this  sector  where  we  see  self-help  and  ongoing  Covid-19 
recovery as being overlooked by the market. It is notable 
that almost half of the industrials exposure is in the B2B 
electronics area, where the portfolio had zero exposure at 
the beginning of the period. In our view the B2B electronics 
holdings exhibit very distinctive investment cases and are 
not simply a cyclical play.

14

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

Portfolio detail
At the end of the period under review, the portfolio comprised 15 companies. 

Key updates for each position through the period are detailed below:

Elementis  is  a  leading  producer  of  specialty  chemicals  focused  on 
personal care, talc and coatings markets.

% NAV: 14% 
Sector: Industrials

Performance in period
The year started for Elementis with a bid approach from US peer Innospec Inc at a proposed 160p per share. This was 
rebuffed by the board in short order as materially undervaluing the group – a view we supported. 

Trading for the group through the year was subsequently strong, with an ongoing demand recovery in its Coatings, 
Personal Care and Chromium businesses, offsetting slower recovery in the more auto market exposed Talc division. 
With the public markets broadly concerned on the outlook for inflation and its impact on industrial names, it was 
particularly pleasing to see Elementis deliver strong price rises and express confidence that its unique products and 
market position leave it well placed to protect margins through a period of rising prices.

Outlook
We continue to view Elementis as one of the most attractive industrial investment opportunities in the market. As 
long as Covid-19 variants do not further disrupt the global economy, the business is well placed to see ongoing volume 
recovery,  has  been  successfully  raising  prices  to  offset  input  cost  increases  and  is  benefitting  from  self-help  actions 
(notably the opening of a new low-cost facility in India). With the current value of the group largely underpinned by 
the mineral assets the group owns and having already seen strategic interest, there are multiple routes for value growth 
from current levels with a well-protected downside. A recently-muted sale of the chromium chemicals division would 
accelerate the de-gearing from the company’s strong cashflow and likely lead to a re-rating.

Leading independent designer and manufacturer of industrial inkjet 
print heads

% NAV: 11% 
Sector: Industrials

Performance in period
Results for Xaar through the year have shown strong growth in printer head sales notably in the group’s core ceramics 
and glass end markets. This growth has been delivered through the self-help actions of the new management team in 
correcting past mistakes and re-building credibility of the group with its channel partners. This revenue growth has 
led to rapidly improving profitability as the well invested manufacturing infrastructure of the group is better utilised. 
Alongside the financial performance, the group has continued to deliver on time and on budget new product releases 
from its R&D pipeline, and through small bolt-ons has added additional product ranges. Both these actions stand to 
significantly increase the total addressable market of the group going forward.

Outlook
We remain positive on the medium and long term prospects of Xaar. The strong growth in OEM partners developing 
new printing systems based on Xaar print heads bodes well for future sales in the near to mid-term. Beyond this, we 
are particularly excited by Xaar’s planned development and launch of new printer heads compatible with aqueous inks. 
These will allow the group to increase its addressable market very materially by accessing new segments in textile and 
wide format graphics printing, which combined are more than 5x the size of the glass and ceramics market. The group’s 
unique technology and its ability to print high viscosity fluids offer material cost savings and environmental benefits 
to customers.

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ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

Global B2B information business providing data, pricing information 
and  insight  to  the  asset  management,  commodities  and  a  range  of 
financial services markets.

% NAV: 10% 
Sector: TMT

Performance in period
Euromoney’s performance through the year has been characterised by ongoing robust growth in its data subscription 
businesses (notably the pricing business – FastMarkets) and the start of a Covid-19 recovery in the in-person events 
driven parts of the business. Alongside this, the group has continued to use its strong net cash balance sheet to complete 
a number of bolt-on acquisitions, notably building an interesting, fast growth subscription-based people intelligence 
business.

Outlook
We see Euromoney as offering significant value at current levels. The group has been transformed in recent years, with 
a growing share of revenues from subscription-based business lines in growth markets. The group is well positioned to 
benefit from the ongoing Covid-19 recovery in the events focused business and the turnaround in the historically more 
challenged Asset Management division being delivered ahead of expectations. Shares do not reflect the value in the 
group today when evaluated on a sum-of-the-parts basis, and we note significant strategic and private equity interest in 
B2B information assets at ratings significantly above that currently ascribed to Euromoney. The recent Investor Teach-
In on its People Intelligence business demonstrated additional potential hidden value in the group.

Leading independent provider of software escrow services and cyber 
security consulting provided through the Assurance division.

% NAV: 9% 
Sector: TMT

Performance in period
The key event for NCC in the first half of the year was the £156m acquisition of the software resilience assets from 
peer Iron Mountain. This acquisition gave NCC the leading position in the highly fragmented US market for software 
escrow and was executed at an attractive valuation of c.10x EBITDA before synergies.

Through  the  year  group  trading  has  been  broadly  in-line  with  expectations.  The  cyber  security  consulting  focused 
Assurance division delivered improving revenue growth as client demand flowed back following Covid-19 lockdowns. 
Pleasingly this division delivered improving gross margins with rising consultant costs being offset by increased prices, 
global sourcing and improving utilisation. 

The software resilience (escrow) division showed weaker performance at the beginning of the period with sales force 
churn impacting revenue growth and potentially the division suffering from some distraction during the integration of 
the Iron Mountain acquisition. Pleasingly, improving momentum in recent months, a now fully staffed sales force and 
easier comparatives bode well for improving performance.

Outlook
NCC is playing in a market exposed to strong secular growth driven by demand for cyber security consulting. The 
group has leading depth of expertise, a strong client base and a unique global footprint making it well placed to benefit 
from this trend. The software resilience division is lower growth, but still provides a service needed even as software 
increasingly shifts to SaaS delivery, and offers highly attractive profit and cash margins. 

The current rating is in our view very undemanding for the company’s growth profile, strong cash generation and leading 
positions in strategically interesting markets.

16

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

Leading UK distributor of hydraulic and pneumatic components.

% NAV: 9% 
Sector: Business 
Services

Performance in period
Flowtech saw a strong recovery from Covid-19 during the period with volumes approaching 2019 levels by the end 
of the year. This recovery fed into strongly improving margins. Particularly pleasingly the group managed to maintain 
gross margins and appears well positioned in its market to weather any inflationary pressures.

The year also saw encouraging operational progress. The group had delivered on self-help actions around cost savings 
and working capital improvement ahead of and through the pandemic. Focus through the period shifted towards the 
potential to accelerate revenue growth through investing in an improved digital platform for driving online sales and a 
new customer data platform to give better insights into opportunities within the group’s existing client base.

Outlook
We believe that Flowtech is well placed to see continuing improving performance through the coming year. With a fair 
macro outlook, volumes should continue to see the final benefits from a Covid-19 recovery with the reorganised group 
structure and cost base delivering a strong drop through to profits. 

We are particularly excited to see the launch of the group’s new digital platform. The ability to directly access customers 
and drive demand (for example through SEO) gives the scope for the group to gain share in a market characterised by 
underdeveloped online offerings. Delivery of this new stage of the self-help programme would demonstrate that the 
group has built a high-quality operating platform. We see this as then potentially attractive to larger trade acquirors 
(who  would  bring  significant  synergies)  or  alternatively  leaves  Flowtech  well  placed  to  return  to  looking  at  M&A 
offering a further leg to the equity story.

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ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

New top 10 position Leading provider of SIPP administration services

% NAV: 9% 
Sector: Financial 
Services

Curtis Banks is a leading provider of administration services to SSIP and SSAS schemes in the UK. The group manages 
over c.80,000 schemes with c.£37bn of assets including c.£1bn of client cash. We materially scaled our weighting in 
Curtis Banks in late 2021 moving it to be a top 10 position.

Curtis Banks enjoys a strong market position serving clients with larger, more complex SIPPs. For this client group 
Curtis’s high service level, flexibility, range of investment options and fixed fee model (rather than charging a % of 
assets) is an attractive proposition. This book of SIPP clients offers a highly visible base of recurring fee income which 
has inflation linked pricing. With the potential to grow the volumes of clients in Curtis’s key focus areas as the SIPP 
market matures, the group is well placed to generate long term revenue growth and high levels of cash generation.

The above characteristic of Curtis’s business – high stability, cash generation and inflation linkage, offers high levels of 
downside protection to an investment, but excitingly we see multiple ways to drive an attractive upside return. Firstly, 
the group is undergoing a process of self-help to better integrate multiple legacy IT systems brought together through 
M&A.  This  program  will  reduce  annual  IT  spend  but  also  offer  significant  opportunities  to  improve  operational 
efficiency at the group. Current group margins of c.23% are below those of peers and management’s target of reaching 
30% through their actions look readily achievable.

Secondly, Curtis generates interest income on client cash balances. Some of this is passed to clients and some retained 
by the group. In recent years low bank base rates have significantly reduced this income stream, however in a rising rate 
environment this income stream should grow meaningfully. 

Further, Curtis currently only provides administration services to its clients a number of whom do not receive any 
financial  advice  around  their  pensions  (neither  investment  advice  nor  financial  planning).  This  pool  of  relatively 
wealthy clients represents an interesting opportunity for cross sale of advice either by a partner of or by Curtis itself. 
This capture of more of the value chain represents a longer-term opportunity for the group.

Finally, we note the pensions advice and administration market is one where there has been significant M&A in recent 
years with material synergies available to acquirors. We see Curtis as a highly attractive asset in any consolidation, or in 
a strong position to continue rolling up smaller players.

We have four mid-sized investments in Dialight, Chemring, Wilmington, and Benchmark. Dialight is a new position, 
built during the past six months; our investment thesis was detailed in the September 2021 interim report. The investment 
cases for the other names have been described in prior reports.

18

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC 
Portfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

Designer and manufacturer of LED lighting solutions primarily sold 
into hazardous industrial environments

% NAV: 6% 
Sector: Industrials

Performance in period
Dialight demonstrated strong revenue progression through the year as the group recovered from Covid-19. The group 
moved rapidly early in the period to build inventory to manage supply chain challenges and also successfully raised 
prices  to  offset  cost  inflation.  The  self-help  story  for  the  group  continued,  with  strong  progress  in  MRO  revenues 
demonstrating that management’s actions were rebuilding market share lost through historic missteps. The revenue 
performance was matched with expanding gross margins which saw the group return to profitability. With demand for 
capex projects coming through in the market and Dialight’s pipeline strong, the group flagged a positive outlook for 
2022.

Outlook
Dialight’s self-help story continues to progress. Management have corrected past mistakes around manufacturing and 
supply chain and have managed the group well through Covid-19. The business is now well placed to continue to regain 
lost share in its core industrial end markets (notably in the US).

We see Dialight as a strong recovery ‘special situation’ where its sales footprint and market position (especially in North 
America) has significant strategic value. The EV/Sales multiple appears undemanding given this, and the group’s growth 
prospects.

Chemring produces countermeasures for aircraft, sophisticated sensor 
products,  and  energetic  devices  including  rocket  components  and 
provides  contracted  R&D  for  governments  –  primarily  serving  the 
defence sector.

% NAV: 6% 
Sector: Industrials

Performance in period
Chemring continued its recent record of delivering to expectations during the year. The group achieved decent organic 
revenue growth, improving margins and strong cash generation. At a divisional level the Roke cyber security business 
continued  its  impressive  recent  performance  delivering  double  digit  growth. This  part  of  the  business  continues  to 
increase in importance and was bolstered with bolt on M&A through the year. We see significant overlooked value in 
this leading business in a long-term growth area.

Outlook
We see Chemring as well placed to continue to deliver going forward. The group will benefit from growth in its end 
markets, both the roll out of the F-35 platform and growing spend on detection, cyber and electronic warfare defence 
technologies. The tragic recent events in Ukraine are likely to only accelerate these trends. Near term order books are 
strong, and key further large US contract decision points are expected in late 2022, and with the group nearing a net 
cash position we would expect further bolt-on M&A. We believe that there are significant opportunities to drive future 
value. 

19

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

B2B  information,  training  and  media  provider  focused  on  the 
compliance, healthcare and professional business markets.

% NAV: 6% 
Sector: TMT

Performance in period
Wilmington  delivered  strong  results  through  the  year  delivering  upgrades.  The  group’s  significant  subscription 
businesses continued their steady track record of growth and pleasingly towards the end of the period the group saw a 
strong return of in-person events and training. Notably the group’s large US healthcare conference ran successfully in 
March 2022 delivering revenue above that seen in 2019.

An improving top line was delivered alongside strong margins. The group has benefitted from significant management 
action before and through the pandemic. The group has been reorganised into two division with a clear view on what 
makes a ‘Wilmington’ business with non-core divisions being disposed of or shut down. This greater focus has been 
coupled with investment in back-office IT platforms and increased sharing of resources across business units. We believe 
this offers exciting opportunities for accelerating growth and building margins going forward.

Outlook
Wilmington has made significant progress in recent years and is now well placed to continue to deliver going forward. 
The  group  should  benefit  from  some  further  Covid-19  recovery  and  continue  to  drive  attractive  growth  in  its 
subscription businesses. The groups strong cash generation has left it with a net cash balance sheet and we would expect 
to see it completing further bolt-on M&A in its core focus areas going forward.

Wilmington has built a clearer, simpler operating model. The high levels of recurring subscription revenue combined 
with  cash  generation  make  this  a  highly  valuable  asset  in  a  sector  where  we  have  seen  significant  M&A  activity  at 
attractive valuations. We believe that this optionality is not reflected in the current share price.

20

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

Benchmark  has  leading  positions  in  key  parts  of  the  growing  global 
aquaculture market. The group is a leading provider of genetics services 
to  the  salmon  market,  production  of  early-stage  nutrition  products 
primarily  for  the  shrimp  market  and  a  developer  of  health  products 
for the salmon market.

% NAV: 5% 
Sector: Healthcare

Performance in period
Benchmark’s results showed some consistent trends through the year driving improving performance and upgrades. 
Performance in the Genetics division remained strong on the back of continued demand for salmon eggs, the Nutrition 
division saw a bounce back from Covid-19 lows as re-opening drove increased demand through the market for shrimp. 

Critically, the year also saw the regulatory approval and commercial launch of the Health division’s new sea lice treatment 
for salmon – ‘BMK08/Cleantreat’. This drug and treatment method combination is the first new sea lice treatment 
released  to  market  in  a  decade  and  addresses  the  salmon  farming  industry’s  number  one  health  issue.  Benchmark’s 
unique Cleantreat system ensures that no chemicals are released into the environment and the efficacy of the treatment 
is very high. Initial sales and interest for this key product have been very positive.

Outlook
We see 2022 as a critical year of delivery for Benchmark. The group will look to roll out the BMK08/Cleantreat offer to 
an increasing number of clients through the year, the nutrition division should continue its Covid-19 recovery and the 
genetics business should benefit from new salmon facilities reaching maturity. All of these should support continued 
profit progression and move the group towards positive cash generation.

Benchmark remains a highly interesting asset with leading positions in markets exposed to the growing demand for 
aquaculture.  This  potential  appears  somewhat  overlooked  by  the  wider  UK  market  at  current  prices.  We  note  the 
company is considering a move of listing to Oslo where there is more depth of expertise in aquaculture, investors who 
may better appreciate the value the business, and where its two largest shareholders hail from. We are able to hold Oslo 
listed shares and view such a move as potentially interesting.

The remaining five investments represent between c.1% and 4% of NAV each. These are spread across our core focus 
sectors and all offer scope to scale, subject to further due diligence and pricing remaining attractive.

At the end of the period, 40% of the invested portfolio by value was invested in companies which had net cash on their 
balance sheets. Only two portfolio companies had higher debt than would be normal. One of these, Elementis, enjoys 
considerable asset backing due to the decades of mineral resources it owns. The portfolio traded through the worst of 
March 2020 without any company needing to raise equity. As a result of these factors, and given the strong cashflow of 
many portfolio companies, we believe that portfolio companies balance sheets are well placed to withstand any short-term 
economic difficulties.

21

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

Outlook
At  the  time  of  preparation,  the  investment  community 
seems pre-occupied by the possible outcomes for inflation 
and  interest  rates,  the  prospects  of  stagflation,  monetary 
policy  errors  and  whether  2023  will  herald  a  recession. 
The  Ukraine  war  remains  ongoing,  but  the  market  has 
seemingly decided it will either drag on for some time and/
or a managed exit with no significant aftermath is likely.

The  yield  on  10  year  US  treasuries  is  now  nearly  3.0%, 
compared with 0.5% at the trough in August 2020, with 
yields increasing notably since the start of 2022.

Volatility  at  a  market  and  at  a  stock  level  is  clearly 
increasing. As monetary stimulus is being withdrawn, there 
is  less  cheap  money  to  back  speculative  investments,  and 
the risk-free rate has gone up. Whilst growth stocks have 
generally de-rated, we cannot rule out further declines in 
valuations. We are still struggling to justify the ratings that 
some UK growth companies trade at, despite in many cases 
very material share price drops since last August. 

In current markets, delivering to expectation or even giving 
a  small  earnings  upgrade  is  not  always  rewarded  by  an 
increase in the share price. Highly rated growth companies 
which  disappoint  are  experiencing  material  falls  in  their 
share prices. The market is becoming much more discerning 
on  which  growth  investment  situations  it  believes  are 
sustainable, and the price for which it is prepared to pay 
for  growth  as  interest  rates  rise.  This  is  likely  to  provide 
investment  opportunities  as  perfectly  decent  companies 
de-rate on more modest earnings expectations. 

In  lower  growth,  and  more  lowly  rated  companies,  an 
ability  to  deal  with  inflation  will  provide  opportunity. 
Where  companies  are  able  to  pass  on  price  increases 
quickly  and  at  least  recover  or  over-recover  costs,  shares 
should  perform  well.  Uncertainty  or  temporary  de-
ratings  of  these  companies  provides  opportunity.  Where 
companies  disappoint  by  only  passing  on  inflation  with 
a  time  lag,  it’s  possible  that  their  shares  get  temporarily 
de-rated.  These  situations  provide  opportunity  provided 
there is confidence that the business model and customer, 
competitor and supplier dynamics are such that costs will 
get passed through.

supply  chain  unwinds  leading  to  lower  inflation  data  in 
Q4 2022 and early 2023. In any event, consumers have got 
used to low interest rates and it’s likely that any increases, 
combined with the “cost of living” increase could starve off 
discretionary expenditure. 

In many industrial markets, inventories are at a low level, 
demand is strong and order books are long. In several cases 
(e.g. European Automotive) production is still way below 
both  demand  and  previous  production  peaks.  Material 
long term downside in these industries seems unlikely. 

Overall,  we  believe  it  will  be  a  period  where  there  will 
be  considerable  divergence  in  performance  in  individual 
companies  and  across  sectors.  In  such  an  environment, 
we  will  continue  our  investment  strategy  of  a)  having 
protected  a  downside  case  b)  being  valuation  aware 
(i.e.  not  buying  or  continuing  to  hold  stocks  which  are 
over  priced)  c)  seeking  above  average  quality  assets  with 
market  leadership  positions  and  ideally  geographically 
diverse revenues and d) focusing on companies with self-
help  opportunities  to  improve  their  fundamental  value 
regardless  of  the  gyrations  of  the  stock  market.  One  of 
the greatest benefits of being unconstrained investors (i.e. 
not attempting to beat an index) is that we can invest in 
sectors as and where we see there is value, and equally avoid 
sectors which are hot or fundamentally overvalued and/or 
unattractive. Sectors go in and out of fashion and having a 
clear framework to be able to evaluate fair-value helps us to 
use these fashions to unearth good opportunities.

Across  the  portfolio,  there  are  many  companies  which 
exhibit  multiple  self-help  and  special  situations,  where 
value  can  be  created  through  initiatives  such  as:  cost 
reduction;  enhanced  sales  growth  through  better  R&D 
efficacy; disposing of assets or business units to help close 
a valuation which is below the sum of parts value; recovery 
or growth of market share through better sales execution. 

Whilst  the  portfolio  has  benefitted  from  considerable 
M&A  over  the  past  two  years,  we  would  not  rule  out 
further  upside  from  M&A  involving  bids  for  portfolio 
companies. Indeed, post the period end RWS (which we 
inherited  through  the  all-shares  takeover  for  SDL)  has 
been involved in bid speculation. 

We expect that the spectre of recession and the instability 
caused  by  the  Ukraine  situation  will  probably  temper 
enthusiasm to raise interest rates as much and as quickly as 
initially expected. The optimists on inflation have pointed 
to resource prices peaking in the autumn, combined with 

In our view, many portfolio companies offer considerable 
cost  synergies  to  potential  trade  buyers,  as  well  as 
possessing  strategic  value  and  potential  which  perhaps 
other larger industry players can extract more value from 
than can be achieved as a standalone business. Corporate 

22

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCPortfolio Manager’s Report (continued)

balance  sheets  are  generally  strong  and  large  corporates 
are  generally  buyers  rather  than  sellers  of  assets.  There 
are  also  a  number  of  companies  where  we  think  there  is 
an  arbitrage  opportunity  given  the  source  of  its  revenue. 
For  example,  a  portfolio  company  with  largely  North 
American  and  international  revenues  (typically  in  US$) 
can be undervalued by the UK stock market as there are 
few comparators for valuation. If their shares continue to 
trade at a discount to international peers, it is likely that 
they may become targets for overseas corporate buyers. 

Meanwhile, with nominal interest rates remaining low and 
real rates still probably negative, it seems unlikely that the 
private equity industry, with its material “dry powder” of 
uninvested funds, will suddenly pull back from seeking to 
takeover UK quoted companies.

We always tend to prefer a trade or corporate buyer to a 
private  equity  buyer  of  our  portfolio  companies.  This 
is  because  corporate  buyers  tend  to  have  a  lower  cost  of 
capital for acquisitions and bring cost synergies. Many of 
our  companies  have  net  cash  balance  sheets  and/or  have 
materially less gearing than their cashflows could manage, 
and  more  conservative  gearing  than  they  would  do  in 
private ownership. 

Absent a deep and protracted recession, we believe there is 
good medium to long term upside in the existing portfolio, 
even without any further M&A interest. 

Stuart Widdowson | Ed Wielechowski  
Odyssean Capital LLP

1 June 2022

23

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewPortfolio of Investments

as at 31 March 2022

Company
Elementis
XAAR
Euromoney Institutional In
NCC Group
Flowtech Fluidpower
Curtis Banks Group
Dialight
Chemring Group
Wilmington
Benchmark Holdings

Top ten equity investments
Other equity investments*

Total equity investments
Cash and other net current assets
Net assets

Sector
Industrials
Industrials
TMT
TMT
Business Services
Financial Services
Industrials
Industrials
TMT
Healthcare

Country of 
Listing
UK
UK
UK
UK
UK
UK
UK
UK
UK
UK

Cost
£’000
16,446
8,459
14,042
15,423
10,514
12,215
8,428
7,075
5,542
7,562

105,706
22,776

128,482

Valuation
£’000
21,420
16,655
15,264
13,961
13,894
13,338
9,828
9,765
9,030
7,560

130,715
24,633

155,348
2,468
157,816

% of  
Net Assets
13.6
10.6
9.7
8.8
8.8
8.5
6.2
6.2
5.7
4.8

82.9
15.5

98.4
1.6
100.0

*    Other equity investments include five investments, each representing between c.1% and 4% of NAV. These are spread across our core focus sectors and all offer 

scope to scale, subject to further due diligence and pricing remaining attractive.

24

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCDistribution of Investments

as at 31 March 2022 (% of net assets)

Portfolio holdings

Holdings by sector

1.6%

15.5%

13.6%

4.8%

5.7%

6.2%

10.6%

9.7%

6.2%

8.8%

8.5%

8.8%

Elementis
XAAR
Euromoney
NCC Group
Flowtech 
Fluidpower
Curtis Banks
Dialight
Chemring
Wilmington
Benchmark
Other equity 
investments
Cash and other
net current assets

8.4%

8.7%

8.8%

1.6%

4.3%

39.8%

28.4%

Industrials

TMT

Healthcare
Financials 
Services
Business
Services 
Other equity
Cash and other 
net current assets

Geographical revenue exposure  
(% of invested capital)

Market capitalisation  
(% of invested capital)

3.2%

19.8%

31.5%

23.2%

25.5%

43.3%

UK
US
Rest of the
World
Europe Other

Below £150m
£150m-£750m
Over £750m

53.5%

As at 31 March 2022, the net assets of the Company were £157.8m.

25

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewBusiness Review

The Strategic Report, set out on pages 6 to 45, contains a 
review of the Company’s business model and strategy, an 
analysis of its performance during the financial year ended 
31 March 2022 and its future developments and details of 
the principal risks and challenges it faces. In particular, the 
Chairman’s  Statement  on  pages  7  to  9  and  the  Portfolio 
Manager’s  Report  on  pages  10  to  23  concentrate  on  the 
outlook for the current year and the factors likely to affect 
the position of the business. The Strategic Report has been 
prepared solely to provide information to shareholders to 
enable  them  to  assess  how  the  Directors  have  performed 
their duty to promote the success of the Company.

The  Strategic  Report  contains  certain  forward-looking 
statements.  These  statements  are  made  by  the  Directors 
in good faith based on the information available to them 
up to the date of this report and such statements should 
be treated with caution due to the inherent uncertainties, 
including  both  economic  and  business  risk  factors, 
underlying any such forward-looking information.

Further information on how the Directors have discharged 
their duty under Section 172 of the Companies Act 2006 
can be found on pages 27 to 32.

Business model
Status of the Company
The  Company  was  incorporated  on  21  December  2017 
and  the  IPO  took  place  on  1  May  2018.  It  is  registered 
in England and Wales as a public limited company and is 
an  investment  company  within  the  terms  of  section  833 
of the Companies Act 2006. The principal activity of the 
Company is to carry on business as an investment trust. The 
Company has been approved by HM Revenue & Customs 
as an authorised investment trust under sections 1158 and 
1159  of  the  Corporation  Tax  Act  2010,  subject  to  there 
being  no  subsequent  serious  breaches  of  regulations.  In 
the  opinion  of  the  Directors,  the  Company  is  directing 
its affairs so as to enable it to continue to qualify for such 
approval.

The  Company’s  shares  have  a  listing  on  the  premium 
segment of the Official List of the FCA and trade on the 
LSE’s main market for listed securities.

The Company is a member of the AIC, a trade body which 
promotes  investment  companies  and  also  develops  best 
practice for its members.

Strategy for the year ended 31 March 2022 and Strategic 
Review
Throughout the year ended 31 March 2022, the Company 
continued  to  operate  as  an  approved  investment  trust, 
following its investment objective and policy.

During  the  year,  the  Board  made  all  strategic  decisions 
for  the  Company.  Odyssean  Capital  LLP  and  Frostrow 
Capital  LLP  undertook  all  strategic  and  administrative 
activities  on  behalf  of  the  Board,  which  retained  overall 
responsibility.

Purpose
The purpose of the Company is to achieve predominantly 
capital  growth  in  our  shareholders’  wealth  over  time.  It 
aims  to  achieve  this  by  using  its  closed-ended  structure 
to invest in a concentrated number of less liquid, higher- 
quality  smaller  quoted  companies,  which  the  Portfolio 
Manager believes are undervalued and could be generating 
higher returns for their shareholders. The long-term nature 
of the Company’s capital enables the Portfolio Manager to 
undertake  constructive  corporate  engagement  with  the 
underlying  portfolio  companies  and  their  stakeholders, 
on  financial  and  operating  performance,  strategy  and 
sustainability, specifically ESG practices.

Sustainable  improvement  in  a  smaller  quoted  company’s 
financial and operational performance, and ESG practices, 
not  only  benefit  the  shareholders  of  the  Company,  but 
also  the  shareholders  and  stakeholders  in  the  underlying 
portfolio companies.

Investment objective
The  investment  objective  of  the  Company  is  to  achieve 
attractive total returns per share principally through capital 
growth over a long-term period.

Investment policy
The Company’s full investment policy is set out on pages 3 
and  4  and  contains  information  on  the  policies  which  the 
Company  follows,  including  in  relation  to  borrowings, 
derivatives,  hedging  as  well  as  ethical  and  sustainability 
investment  restrictions.  The  Company  invests  primarily  in 
smaller  company  equities  quoted  on  markets  operated  by 
the LSE, where the Portfolio Manager believes the securities 
are trading below intrinsic value and where this value can be 
increased through strategic, operational, management and/or 
financial initiatives.

26

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCBusiness Review (continued)

Any material change to the Company’s investment policy 
would  require  the  approval  of  shareholders  by  way  of  an 
ordinary resolution at a general meeting and the approval 
of  the  FCA.  Non-material  changes  to  the  investment 
policy may be approved by the Board.

Portfolio analysis
A  detailed  review  of  how  the  Company’s  assets  have  been 
invested is contained in the Chairman’s Statement on pages 7 
to 9 and the Portfolio Manager’s Report on pages 10 to 23. 
A  list  of  all  the  Company’s  investments  is  contained  in  the 
Portfolio of Investments on page 24.

Dividend Policy
It is the Company’s policy to pursue attractive total returns 
principally through growth over the long term. The Company 
will  comply  with  the  investment  trust  rules  regarding 
distributable  income,  which  require  investment  trusts  to 
retain  no  more  than  15%  of  their  investment  income  each 
year.  The  Company  will  only  pay  the  minimum  dividend 
required to maintain investment trust status. No dividend will 
be proposed for the year ended 31 March 2022.

The Board
The  Board  of  the  Company  comprises  Jane  Tufnell 
(Chairman), Arabella Cecil, Peter Hewitt and Richard King, 
all  of  whom  are  independent  non-executive  Directors  and 
served during the whole year under review and up to the date 
of signing the report. All Directors will stand for re-election 
at  the  forthcoming  Annual  General  Meeting.  Further 
information on the Directors can be found on page 47.

Board Focus and Responsibilities
With  the  day  to  day  management  of  the  Company 
outsourced to service providers the Board’s primary focus at 
each Board meeting is reviewing the investment performance 
and  associated  matters,  such  as,  inter  alia,  future  outlook 
and  strategy,  gearing,  asset  allocation,  investor  relations, 
marketing, and industry issues.

In line with its primary focus, the Board retains responsibility 
for all the key elements of the Company’s strategy and business 
model, including:

● 

● 

 Investment  Objective  and  Policy,  incorporating  the 
investment guidelines and limits, and changes to these; 

 whether  the  Manager  should  be  authorised  to  gear  the 
portfolio up to a pre-determined limit; 

● 

● 

● 

 review  of  performance  against  the  Company’s  key 
performance indicators (“KPIs”); 

 review of the performance and continuing appointment 
of service providers; and 

 maintenance  of  an  effective  system  of  oversight,  risk 
management and corporate governance. 

Details of the principal KPIs, along with details of the principal 
risks, and how they are managed, are given on page 33.

Section 172 statement
Overview
The Directors’ overarching duty is to act in good faith and 
in a way that is the most likely to promote the success of the 
Company as set out in Section 172 of the Companies Act 
2006. In doing so, Directors must take into consideration 
the interests of the various stakeholders of the Company, 
the impact the Company has on the community and the 
environment,  take  a  long-term  view  on  consequences  of 
the  decisions  they  make  as  well  as  aim  to  maintaining  a 
reputation for high standards of business conduct and fair 
treatment between the members of the Company.

Fulfilling  this  duty  naturally  supports  the  Company  in 
achieving its investment objective and helps to ensure that 
all decisions are made in a responsible and sustainable way. 
In  accordance  with  the  requirements  of  the  Companies 
the 
(Miscellaneous  Reporting)  Regulations  2018, 
Company  explains  how  the  Directors  have  discharged 
their duty under Section 172 below.

To ensure that the Directors are aware of, and understand, 
their  duties  they  are  provided  with  the  pertinent 
information when they first join the Board as well as receive 
regular and ongoing updates and training on the relevant 
matters.  Induction  and  access  to  training  is  provided  for 
new  Directors.  They  also  have  continued  access  to  the 
advice and services of the Company Secretary, and when 
deemed  necessary,  the  Directors  can  seek  independent 
professional  advice.  The  schedule  of  Matters  Reserved 
for  the  Board,  as  well  as  the  Terms  of  Reference  of  its 
committees  are  reviewed  on  an  annual  basis  and  further 
describe  Directors’  responsibilities  and  obligations  and 
include  any  statutory  and  regulatory  duties.  The  Audit 
Committee has the responsibility for the ongoing review 
of  the  Company’s  risk  management  systems  and  internal 
controls  and,  to  the  extent  that  they  are  applicable,  risks 
related to the matters set out in Section 172 are included 

27

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewBusiness Review

in the Company’s risk register and are subject to periodic 
and regular reviews and monitoring.

Stakeholders
A  company’s  stakeholders  are  normally  considered  to 
comprise  its  shareholders,  its  employees,  its  customers, 
its  suppliers  as  well  as  the  wider  community  in  which 
the  company  operates  and  impacts.  The  Company  is 
different in that as an investment trust it has no employees 
and,  significantly,  its  customers  are  synonymous  with  its 
shareholders. In terms of suppliers, the Company receives 
professional services from a number of different providers, 
principal  among  them  being  the  Portfolio  Manager.  The 
Board  believes  that  the  wider  community  in  which  the 
Company  operates  encompasses  its  portfolio  of  investee 
companies and the communities in which they operate.

Details of how the Board considers the needs and priorities 
of  the  Company’s  stakeholders  and  how  these  are  taken 
into  account  during  all  its  discussions  and  as  part  of  its 
decision-making are detailed below. All discussions involve 
careful considerations of the longer- term consequences of 
any decisions and their implications for stakeholders.

28

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCBusiness Review (continued)

Stakeholder

Board Engagement

Shareholders

Continued  shareholder 
support and engagement 
are  critical  to  existence 
of  the  business  and  the 
delivery  of  the 
long- 
term  strategy  of  the 
Company.

The Board is committed to maintaining open channels of communication and to engage 
with  shareholders  in  a  manner  which  they  find  most  meaningful,  in  order  to  gain  an 
understanding of the views of shareholders. These include:

– 

– 

– 

– 

– 

 Annual General Meeting – The Company welcomes and encourages attendance, voting 
and participation from shareholders at the AGM, during which the Directors and the 
Portfolio Manager are available to discuss issues affecting the Company and answer any 
questions. The Portfolio Manager provides a presentation at the AGM on the Company’s 
performance and its future outlook. The Company values any feedback and questions it 
may receive from shareholders ahead of and during the AGM.

 Publications – The Annual and Interim Reports of the Company are made available on 
its website and the Annual Report is circulated to shareholders. These reports provide 
shareholders with a clear understanding of the Company’s portfolio and financial position. 
This information is supplemented by a monthly factsheet and regular presentations which 
are  available  on  the  website.  Feedback  and/or  questions  the  Company  receives  from 
the  shareholders  help  the  Company  evolve  its  reporting,  aiming  to  render  the  reports 
and updates transparent and understandable.

 Shareholder  meetings  –  The  Portfolio  Manager  and  the  Company’s  Broker  are  in 
regular  contact  with  major  shareholders.  The  Chairman  and  the  other  Directors  are 
available  to  meet  with  shareholders  to  understand  their  views  on  governance  and  the 
Company’s performance where they wish to do so. Shareholders are also able to meet with 
the Portfolio Manager and the Marketing Team of Frostrow Capital LLP (“Frostrow”) 
throughout the year, either in person or via video conference. The results from all meetings 
between the Portfolio Manager, Frostrow, the Broker and shareholders, and the views of 
the shareholders are reported to the Board on a regular basis.

 Shareholder  concerns  –  In  the  event  shareholders  wish  to  raise  issues  or  concerns 
with the Directors, they are welcome to do so at any time by writing to the Chairman. 
Other members of the Board are also available to shareholders if they have concerns 
that have not been addressed through the normal channels. Shareholders wishing to 
communicate  directly  with  the  Board  should  contact  the  Company  Secretary  at  the 
registered office address on page 106.

 Investor  relations  updates  –  At  every  Board  meeting,  the  Directors  receive  updates 
from the Company’s Broker on the share trading activity, share price performance and 
any shareholders’ feedback, as well as updates from the Portfolio Manager and from 
Frostrow. To gain a deeper understanding of the views of its shareholders and potential 
investors, the Portfolio Manager and Frostrow also meet regularly with shareholders. 
Any pertinent feedback is taken into account when Directors discuss the share capital 
and  any  possible  fundraisings.  The  willingness  of  the  shareholders,  including  the 
partners and staff of the Portfolio Manager, to maintain their holdings over the long-
term period is another way for the Board to gauge how the Company is meeting its 
objectives and suggests a presence of a healthy corporate culture.

– 

 Consultations with Shareholders – As noted in the Chairman’s Statement on page 8, 
the  Board  proposed  a  merger  with  Strategic  Equity  Capital  plc  at  the  end  of  2021. 
In the course of its deliberations, the Board also sought the views of large shareholders 
to gauge support for the proposal.

29

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewBusiness Review (continued)

Stakeholder

Board Engagement

The Portfolio Manager

The Portfolio Manager’s 
performance  is  critical 
for  the  Company  to 
successfully  deliver  its 
investment  strategy  and 
its  objective  to 
meet 
shareholders 
provide 
with 
total 
attractive 
return  over  a  long-term 
period.

The management of the Company’s portfolio is delegated to the Portfolio Manager, which 
manages the assets in accordance with the Company’s objectives and policies. At each Board 
meeting, representatives from the Portfolio Manager are in attendance to present reports to 
the Directors covering the Company’s current and future activities, portfolio of assets and 
its investment performance over the preceding period.

Maintaining a close and constructive working relationship with the Portfolio Manager is 
crucial as the Board and Odyssean both aim to continue to achieve consistent, long-term 
returns in line with its investment objective. Important components in the collaboration 
with the Portfolio Manager, representative of the Company’s culture, are:
– 

 Operating  in  a  fully  supportive,  co-operative  and  open  environment  and  maintaining 
ongoing communication with the Board between formal meetings;
 Encouraging open discussion with the Portfolio Manager, allowing time and space for 
original and innovative thinking;
 Recognising  that  the  interests  of  shareholders  and  the  Portfolio  Manager  are  for  the 
most part well aligned, adopting a tone of constructive challenge, balanced with robust 
negotiation of the Portfolio Manager’s terms of engagement if those interests should not 
be fully united;
 Drawing  on  Board  members’  individual  experience  and  knowledge  to  support  the 
Portfolio Manager in its monitoring of and engagement with portfolio companies; and
 Willingness to make the Board members’ experience available to support the Portfolio 
Manager in the sound long-term development of its business and resources, recognising 
that the long-term health of the Portfolio Manager is in the interests of shareholders in the 
Company.

– 

– 

– 

– 

The management arrangements are set out in greater detail on pages 34 and 35. In addition 
to  the  management  fee,  the  Portfolio  Manager  also  receives  a  performance  fee  if  certain 
circumstances  are  met.  In  respect  of  the  year  ended  31  March  2022,  a  performance  fee 
of  £2,436,000  (2021:  £1,825,000)  has  been  accrued.  The  Board  is  very  happy  with  the 
outperformance which is being rewarded in this fashion and, as detailed in the prospectus, 
that 50% of the performance fee will be invested by the Portfolio Managers in purchasing 
shares in the Company, thus further aligning their interests with those of other shareholders.

The  relationship  with  the  Portfolio  Manager  is  fundamental  to  ensuring  the  Company 
meets its purpose. Day-to-day engagement with portfolio companies is undertaken by the 
Portfolio Manager. Details of how Odyssean carries out portfolio management, as well as 
information on its differentiated investment approach and the structuring of investments 
can be found in the Portfolio Manager’s report on pages 10 to 23. The Board receives updates 
at  each  scheduled  Board  meeting  from  the  Portfolio  Manager  on  specific  investments 
including regular valuation reports and detailed portfolio and returns analyses. Odyssean’s 
engagement with portfolio companies incorporates recurring due diligence reviews, active 
voting at their annual general meetings, discussions with their stakeholders (including but 
not limited to executives, non-executives, other shareholders and corporate advisors) and 
on-site visits.

In  particular,  the  Board  strongly  supports  the  Portfolio  Managers  in  engaging  with 
portfolio companies on ESG issues with the aim of improving operations, ESG standards 
and performance as well as company culture.

Portfolio companies

The Company invests into 
available  opportunities, 
allocating  capital  across 
different 
portfolio 
companies  to  meet  the 
investment 
Company’s 
the 
objectives  within 
pre-defined 
portfolio 
limits  and  with  a  focus 
on 
level 
portfolio 
diversification.

30

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCBusiness Review (continued)

Stakeholder

Board Engagement

Other service providers

In  order  to  function  as 
an investment trust with 
a  premium  listing  on 
the  LSE,  the  Company 
relies on a diverse range 
of reputable advisors for 
support  in  meeting  all 
relevant obligations.

The Company’s main functions are delegated to a number of service providers, each engaged 
under  separate  contracts.  The  Board,  together  with  Frostrow  as  Company  Secretary, 
maintains  regular  contact  with  its  key  external  providers  and  receives  regular  reporting 
from  them,  both  through  the  Board  and  committee  meetings,  as  well  as  outside  of  the 
regular meeting cycle. Their advice and views are routinely taken into account. This regular 
interaction provides an environment where issues and business developments needs can be 
dealt with efficiently and collegiately.

The Audit Committee reviews and evaluates the financial reporting control environments 
in place at each service provider.

Through  its  Management  Engagement  Committee,  the  Board  formally  assesses  their 
performance,  fees  and  continuing  appointment  annually  to  ensure  that  the  key  service 
providers continue to function at an acceptable level and are appropriately remunerated to 
deliver the expected level of service.

The above mechanisms for engaging with stakeholders are kept under review by the Directors and will be discussed on a 
regular basis at Board meetings to ensure that they remain effective.

31

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewBusiness Review (continued)

Key topics of engagement with stakeholders and outcomes

Key topics of engagement with investors
● 

 Ongoing dialogue with shareholders concerning the 
strategy of the Company, performance, the portfolio 
and ESG issues.

Key topics of engagement with the Portfolio Manager on 
an ongoing basis
● 

 Portfolio  composition,  performance,  outlook  and 
business  updates  as  well  as  ESG  engagement  with 
portfolio companies.

● 

 The  impact  of  Covid-19  on  their  business  and 
the portfolio.

Key topics of engagement with other service providers
● 

 The  Directors  have  frequent  engagement  with  the 
Company’s other service providers through the annual 
cycle  of  reporting  and  due  diligence  meetings  and 
conversations with the Portfolio Manager. Frostrow, 
as Company Secretary, has regular conversations with 
all other service providers on behalf of the Board and 
the Management Engagement Committee.

● 

 This  engagement  is  completed  with  the  aim  of 
maintaining  an  effective  working  relationship  and 
oversight of the services provided.

Actions taken and principal decisions
● 

 The Portfolio Manager, Frostrow and the Broker meet 
regularly  with  shareholders  and  potential  investors 
to discuss the Company’s Strategy, performance, the 
portfolio and any ESG issues which might be raised.

● 

● 

 Shareholders are provided with performance updates 
via  the  Company’s  website  as  well  as  the  usual 
financial reports and monthly factsheets.

 Large  shareholders  were  consulted  in  respect  of  the 
proposed merger with Strategic Equity Capital plc to 
gauge investor support.

Actions taken and principal decisions 

● 

● 

 Updates  are  received  by  the  Board  at  every  Board 
meeting.

 Regular  updates  were  received  by  the  Board 
throughout  the  year  in  respect  of  the  impact  of  the 
ongoing  pandemic  on  investment  decision  making 
and working practices.

Actions taken and principal decisions
● 

 During the year, no other specific action was required 
in respect of the other service providers, as the reviews 
of their services have been positive and the Directors 
believe  that  their  continued  appointment  is  in  the 
best interest of the Company.

32

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCBusiness Review (continued)

Culture
The  Directors  agree  that  establishing  and  maintaining 
a  healthy  corporate  culture  among  the  Board  and  in  its 
interaction with the Portfolio Manager, shareholders and other 
stakeholders  supports  the  delivery  of  the  Company’s  goals. 
The Board seeks to promote a culture of openness, debate and 
integrity through ongoing dialogue and engagement with its 
service providers, principally, the Portfolio Manager.

The  Board  strives  to  ensure  that  its  culture  is  in  line  with 
the Company’s purpose, values and strategy. As detailed in 
the  Corporate  Governance  Statement,  the  Company  has 
a number of policies and procedures in place to assist with 
maintaining a culture of good governance including those 
relating  to  diversity,  Directors’  conflicts  of  interest  and 
Directors’  dealings  in  the  Company’s  shares.  The  Board 
assesses and monitors compliance with these policies as well 
as the general culture of the Board through Board meetings 
and  in  particular,  during  the  annual  evaluation  process 
which is undertaken by each Director (for more information 
see the performance evaluation section on page 55).

The  Board  is  cognisant  of  the  nature  of  companies  that 
the Company invests in and notes that their performance 
could  fluctuate  while  the  Portfolio  Manager  actively 
engages with them. This requires a culture of patience from 
the Board, supported by an orderly, disciplined investment 
management  process  by  the  Portfolio  Manager.  The 
Board  pays  particular  attention  to  Odyssean’s  corporate 
engagement 
initiatives  and  proxy  voting  policies. 
Additional information on the Board’s approach to ESG 
matters is detailed on pages 36 and 37.

The  Board  seeks  to  appoint  the  best  possible  service 
providers  and  evaluates  their  remit,  performance  and 
cost effectiveness on a regular basis. The Board considers 
the  culture  of  the  Portfolio  Manager  and  other  service 
providers, including their policies, practices and behaviour, 
through regular reporting from these stakeholders and, in 
particular,  during  the  annual  review  of  the  performance 
and  continuing  appointment  of  all  service  providers 
through its Management Engagement Committee.

Responsible and Sustainable Investing
It  is  the  Board’s  view  that,  in  order  to  achieve  long-term 
success,  companies  need  to  maintain  high  standards  of 
corporate  governance  and  corporate  responsibility.  More 
information is given in the Portfolio Manager’s Report on 
pages 10 to 23.

* Alternative Performance Measures (see Glossary on page 93).

Climate Change
The  risks  associated  with  climate  change  represent  an 
increasingly  important  issue  and  the  Board  and  the 
Portfolio Manager are aware that the transition to a low-
carbon  economy  will  affect  all  businesses,  irrespective  of 
their  size,  sector  or  geographic  location.  Therefore,  no 
company’s revenues are immune and the assessment of such 
risks  must  be  considered  within  any  effective  investment 
approach.

Key performance indicators
At  each  Board  meeting,  the  Directors  consider  several 
performance measures to assess the Company’s success in 
achieving  its  objective.  The  key  performance  indicators 
used  to  measure  the  progress  and  performance  of  the 
Company  over  time  are  established  industry  measures. 
These are as follows:

Net asset value
The NAV at 31 March 2022 was 164.0p per ordinary share, 
compared  to  139.3p  per  ordinary  share  at  the  end  of  the 
previous period, an increase of 17.7%. The NAV total return* 
since the launch of the Company on 1 May 2018 to 31 March 
2022 was 64.0% . The total return from the NSCI ex IC plus 
AIM Total Return Index* was 17.2% for the same period.

A full description of the Company’s performance for the 
year ended 31 March 2022 can be found in the Portfolio 
Manager’s Report on pages 10 to 23.

Share price total return*
The  Company’s  share  price  at  the  previous  year  end  was 
129.0p  and  increased  to  166.0p  as  at  31  March  2022, 
resulting in a return of 28.7%* during the year.

Share price premium/(discount) to NAV*
The share price discount to NAV changed from (7.4)% at 
the previous year end to premium of 1.2% as at 31 March 
2022.  During  the  year  ended  31  March  2022,  the  shares 
traded at an average premium to NAV of 0.7%.

Revenue return per ordinary share
In  the  year  to  31  March  2022,  the  Company  made  a 
revenue  income  of  0.5p  per  share  (2021:  revenue  loss  of 
0.7p per share).

Ongoing charges*
The  Company’s  ongoing  charges 
the 
year  ended  31  March  2021  was  1.45%  (year  ended 
31 March 2021: 1.41%).

ratio 

for 

33

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewBusiness Review (continued) 

Management arrangements – Portfolio Manager
The  Company  is  an  internally  managed  investment 
company  for  the  purposes  of  the  UK’s  Alternative 
Investment  Fund  Managers  Directive  and  is  its  own 
alternative  investment  fund  manager.  The  Board  is 
therefore responsible for the portfolio management and 
risk management functions of the Company.

Pursuant  to  the  terms  of  the  Portfolio  Management 
Agreement,  the  Board  has  delegated  responsibility 
for  discretionary  portfolio  management  functions  to 
Odyssean  Capital  LLP  as  Portfolio  Manager,  subject 
always to the overall supervision and control of the Board.

The Company may terminate the Portfolio Management 
Agreement by giving the Portfolio Manager not less than 
six  months’  prior  written  notice.  The  Portfolio  Manager 
may  terminate  the  Portfolio  Management  Agreement  by 
giving the Company not less than six months’ prior written 
notice.

Management Fee
The  Portfolio  Manager  is  entitled  to  receive  an  annual 
management fee equal to the lower of: (i) 1% of the NAV 
(calculated  before  deduction  of  any  accrued  but  unpaid 
management fee and any performance fee) per annum; or 
(ii) 1% per annum of the Company’s market capitalisation. 
The annual management fee is calculated and accrues daily 
and is payable quarterly in arrears.

The  Portfolio  Manager  is  also  entitled  to  reimbursement 
for  all  costs  and  expenses  properly  incurred  by  it  in  the 
performance of its duties under the Portfolio Management 
Agreement.

Performance Fee
In  addition,  the  Portfolio  Manager  is  entitled  to  a 
performance fee in certain circumstances.

The  Company’s  performance  is  measured  over  rolling 
three-year  periods  ending  on  31  March  each  year  (each  a 
“Performance Period”), by comparing the NAV total return 
per  ordinary  share  over  a  Performance  Period  against  the 
total  return  performance  of  the  NSCI  ex  IC  plus  AIM 
Total  Return  Index  (the  “Comparator  Index”).  The  first 
Performance Period ran from IPO to 31 March 2021.

A Performance Fee is payable if the NAV per ordinary share 
at the end of the relevant Performance Period (as adjusted 
to: (i) add back the aggregate value of any dividends per 
ordinary share paid (or accounted as paid for the purposes 
of  calculating  the  NAV)  to  shareholders  during  the 

34

relevant Performance Period; and (ii) exclude any accrual 
for  unpaid  Performance  Fee  accrued  in  relation  to  the 
relevant Performance Period) (the “NAV Total Return per 
Share”) exceeds both:

i) 

 the NAV per ordinary share on the first business day 
of  a  Performance  Period;  in  each  case  as  adjusted  by 
the  aggregate  amount  of  (i)  the  total  return  on  the 
Comparator  Index  (expressed  as  a  percentage);  and 
(ii)  1%  per  annum  over  the  relevant  Performance 
Period (the “Target NAV per Share”);

ii) 

 the  highest  previously  recorded  NAV  per  ordinary 
share as at the end of the relevant Performance Period 
in  respect  of  which  a  Performance  Fee  was  last  paid 
(the “High Watermark”); and

iii)   with any resulting excess amount being known as the 

“Excess Amount”.

The  Portfolio  Manager  will  be  entitled  to  10%  of  the 
Excess  Amount  multiplied  by  the  time  weighted  average 
number  of  ordinary  shares  in  issue  during  the  relevant 
Performance Period to which the calculation date relates. 
The Performance Fee will accrue daily.

Payment  of  a  Performance  Fee  that  has  been  earned 
will  be  deferred  to  the  extent  that  the  amount  payable 
exceeds  1.75%  per  annum  of  the  NAV  at  the  end  of  the 
relevant  Performance  Period  (amounts  deferred  will  be 
payable when, and to the extent that, following any later 
Performance Period(s) with respect to which a Performance 
Fee  is  payable,  it  is  possible  to  pay  the  deferred  amounts 
without  causing  that  cap  to  be  exceeded  or  the  relevant 
NAV total return per share to fall below both the relevant 
target NAV per share and the relevant High Watermark for 
such Performance Period, with any amount not paid being 
retained and carried forward).

Subject at all times to compliance with relevant regulatory and 
tax requirements, any Performance Fee paid or payable shall:

– 

 where as at the relevant calculation date, the ordinary 
shares  are  trading  at,  or  at  a  premium  to,  the  latest 
published  NAV  per  ordinary  share,  be  satisfied  as  to 
50% of its value by the issuance of new ordinary shares 
by the Company to the Portfolio Manager (rounded 
down to the nearest whole number of ordinary shares) 
(including the reissue of treasury shares) issued at the 
latest published NAV per ordinary share applicable at 
the date of issuance;

– 

 where as at the relevant calculation date, the ordinary 
shares are trading at a discount to the latest published 

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCBusiness Review (continued) 

NAV per ordinary share, be satisfied as to 100% of its 
value in cash and the Portfolio Manager shall, as soon 
as  reasonably  practicable  following  receipt  of  such 
payment, use 50% of such Performance Fee payment 
to make market purchases of ordinary shares (rounded 
down to the nearest whole number of ordinary shares) 
within  four  months  of  the  date  of  receipt  of  such 
Performance Fee payment.

Each such tranche of shares issued to, or acquired by, the 
Portfolio Manager will be subject to a lock-up undertaking 
for  a  period  of  three  years  post  issuance  or  acquisition 
(subject to customary exceptions).

At  no  time  shall  the  Portfolio  Manager  (and/or  any 
persons  deemed  to  be  acting  in  concert  with  it  for  the 
purposes of the Takeover Code) be obliged, in the absence 
of a relevant whitewash resolution having been passed in 
accordance with the Takeover Code, to receive, or acquire, 
further  ordinary  shares  where  to  do  so  would  trigger  a 
requirement to make a mandatory offer pursuant to Rule 
9  of  the  Takeover  Code.  Where  any  restriction  exists  on 
the  issuance  of  further  ordinary  shares  to  the  Portfolio 
Manager, the relevant amount of the Performance Fee may 
be paid in cash.

Based on the performance of the Company to 31 March 
2022, a performance fee of £2,436,000 (2021: £1,825,000) 
has been accrued and is expected to be cash settled upon 
approval of the annual report in respect of the year ended 
31 March 2022.

Administration Manager, Company Secretary 
and Marketing Specialist
Frostrow  Capital  LLP  (“Frostrow”)  was  appointed  as 
the  Company’s  Administration  Manager  and  Company 
Secretary  as  well  as  Marketing  Manager.  Frostrow  is 
an  independent  provider  of  services  to  the  investment 
companies sector and currently has a total of 17 investment 
trust and investment company clients whose assets totalled 
approximately £16.4 billion as at the date of this report.

Administrative, company secretarial and marketing services 
are  provided  by  Frostrow  under  an  agreement  dated 
23 June 2020. An annual administration and management 
services fee of 22.5 basis points of the market capitalisation 
of the Company up to (but not including) £150 million, 
charged monthly in arrears, is payable. Frostrow’s fees will 
reduce from 22.5 basis points to 20 basis points on market 
capitalization  of  the  Company  in  excess  of  £150  million 
in size up to and including £500 million, and to 17.5 basis 

points on market capitalisation in excess of £500 million. 
The  agreement  may  be  terminated  by  either  party  on 
six months’ written notice. Further details can be found in 
note 4 to the financial statements.

Custodian
RBC  Investor  Services  Trust  (“RBC”)  was  appointed  as 
the Company’s Custodian pursuant to an agreement dated 
22 March 2018. RBC is in charge of, inter alia, safekeeping 
and custody of the Company’s assets, investments and cash, 
processing  transactions  and  foreign  exchange  services,  if 
necessary. The Company and the Custodian may terminate 
the Custody Agreement with 90 days’ written notice. 

Portfolio Manager evaluation and continuing 
appointment
The Board keeps the ongoing performance of the Portfolio 
Manager  under  continual  review  and  the  Management 
Engagement  Committee  conducts  an  annual  appraisal 
of  the  Portfolio  Manager’s  performance  and  makes  a 
recommendation  to  the  Board  about  the  continuing 
appointment of the Portfolio Manager.

The  Management  Engagement  Committee  has  reviewed 
Odyssean’s  performance,  with  respect  to  their  provision 
of  portfolio  management  and  other  services.  Due 
consideration was given to the quality and continuity of its 
personnel, succession planning and investment processes. 
Alongside  the  performance  review,  the  Committee 
completed  an  appraisal  of  the  terms  of  the  Portfolio 
Management Agreement to ensure that the terms remained 
competitive  and  in  the  interest  of  the  Company.  The 
Portfolio  Manager  has  executed  the  investment  strategy 
according to the Board’s expectations and it is the opinion 
of  the  Directors  that  the  continuing  appointment  of  the 
Portfolio Manager on the terms agreed is in the interests of 
shareholders as a whole.

review  of 

Frostrow’s evaluation and continuing 
appointment
The 
the  performance  of  Frostrow  as 
Administration  Manager,  Company  Secretary  and 
Marketing  Specialist  is  a  continuous  process  carried  out 
by the Board and a formal evaluation was undertaken by 
the  Management  Engagement  Committee  in  May  2022. 
The  Board  believes  that  the  continuing  appointment  of 
Frostrow Capital LLP under the terms described above, is 
in the interests of shareholders. In coming to this decision, 
the  Board  also  took  into  consideration  the  quality  and 
depth  of  experience  of  the  management,  administrative 

35

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewBusiness Review (continued) 

and  company  secretarial  team  that  Frostrow  allocates  to 
the Company.

research on the Company to their respective professional 
investor clients.

Company promotion
The  Company  has  appointed  Frostrow  to  promote 
the  Company’s  shares  to  professional  investors  in  the 
UK  and  Ireland.  As  Investment  Company  Specialists, 
the  Frostrow  team  provides  a  continuous,  pro-active 
marketing, distribution and investor relations service that 
aims to promote the Company by encouraging demand for 
the shares.

Frostrow  actively  engages  with  professional  investors, 
typically discretionary wealth managers, some institutions 
and  a  range  of  execution-only  platforms.  Regular 
engagement  helps  to  attract  new  investors  and  retain 
existing shareholders, and over time results in a stable share 
register made up of diverse, long-term holders.

Frostrow arranges and manages a continuous programme 
of one-to-one meetings with professional investors around 
the UK. These include regular meetings with “gate keepers”, 
the senior points of contact responsible for their respective 
organisations’ research output and recommended lists. The 
programme of regular meetings also includes autonomous 
decision makers within large multi-office groups, as well as 
small independent organisations. Some of these meetings 
involve Odyssean Capital LLP, but most of the meetings 
do  not,  which  means  the  Company  is  being  actively 
represented both to existing and potential investors, while 
the Portfolio Managers concentrate on the portfolio. Due 
to  the  continuing  Covid-19  pandemic,  most  of  these 
meetings have been held via video conference.

The Company also benefits from involvement in the regular 
professional  investor  seminars  run  by  Frostrow  in  major 
centres,  notably  London  and  Edinburgh,  and  webinars 
which are focused on buyers of investment companies.

Frostrow  produces  many  key  corporate  documents, 
monthly  factsheets,  annual  and  half-yearly  reports.  All 
Company information and invitations to investor events, 
including  updates  from  the  Portfolio  Managers  on 
portfolio and market developments, are regularly emailed 
to a growing database, overseen by Frostrow, consisting of 
professional investors.

Frostrow  maintains  close  contact  with  all  the  relevant 
investment  trust  broker  analysts,  particularly  those  from 
Winterflood Securities Limited, the Company’s corporate 
broker,  but  also  others  who  publish  and  distribute 

36

The Company further benefits from regular press coverage, 
with  articles  appearing  in  respected  publications  that  are 
widely read by both professional and self-directed private 
investors.  The  latter  typically  buy  their  shares  via  retail 
platforms,  which  account  for  a  significant  proportion  of 
the Company’s share register.

Employees, human rights, social and 
community issues
The Board recognises the requirement under Companies 
Act  2006  to  detail  information  about  human  rights, 
employees  and  community  issues,  including  information 
about any policies it has in relation to these matters  and 
the effectiveness of these policies. These requirements do 
not apply to the Company as it has no employees, all the 
Directors  are  non-executive  and  it  has  outsourced  all  its 
functions to third party service providers. The Company 
has  therefore  not  reported  further  in  respect  of  these 
provisions, however, it does expect its service providers and 
portfolio companies to respect these requirements.

Integrity and business ethics
The  Company  is  committed  to  carrying  out  business  in 
an honest and fair manner with a zero-tolerance approach 
to  bribery,  tax  evasion  and  corruption.  As  such,  policies 
and  procedures  are  in  place  to  prevent  the  above.  The 
Board’s expectations are that its principal service providers 
have  similar  governance  policies  in  place.  The  Company 
Secretary, on behalf of the Board, will seek assurances from 
service providers on a regular basis.

Environmental, social and governance issues
The  Company  has  no  employees,  property  or  activities 
other  than  investments,  so  its  direct  environmental 
impact is minimal. In carrying out its activities and in its 
relationships with service providers, the Company aims to 
conduct itself responsibly, ethically and fairly.

The Board is comprised entirely of non-executive Directors 
and the day-to-day management of the Company’s business 
is  delegated  to  the  Portfolio  Manager.  The  Portfolio 
Manager aims to be a responsible investor and believes it 
is important to invest in companies that act responsibly in 
respect of environmental, ethical and social issues.

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCBusiness Review (continued) 

The  Portfolio  Manager  is  specifically  looking  to  invest 
in  companies  which  have  average  or  above  average  ESG 
improvement 
characteristics  or  practices,  but  where 
potential  exists.  Being  mindful  of  the  smaller  company 
nature of many of the portfolio companies, the Portfolio 
Manager  has  a  pragmatic  engagement  approach,  focused 
on  dialogue  with  portfolio  companies  around  their 
performance,  disclosure  and  general  practices  compared 
with  best-in-class  peers,  and  seeking  positive  changes 
in  specific  areas.  The  Portfolio  Managers  will  not  invest 
in  non-ethical  or  unsustainable  businesses  as  set  out  on 
pages 3 and 4.

The  Directors  believe  that  proxy  voting  is  an  important 
part of the corporate governance process. It is the policy 
of  the  Company  to  vote  at  all  shareholder  meetings  of 
investee  companies,  and  the  Board  has  delegated  voting 
activities to the Portfolio Manager. The Portfolio Manager 
follows  relevant  regulatory  requirements  with  an  aim  to 
make voting decisions which will best support growth in 
shareholder  value  and  will  commonly  take  into  account 
best  practices  regarding  corporate  governance,  board 
composition, remuneration and ESG issues. The Portfolio 
Manager  also  provides  the  Directors  with  a  six-monthly 
update regarding the voting decisions made in respect of 
the investee companies.

Modern Slavery Act 2015
The  Company  does  not  provide  goods  or  services  in  the 
normal  course  of  business,  and  as  a  financial  investment 
vehicle  does  not  have  customers.  The  Directors  do  not 
therefore consider that the Company is required to make a 
statement under the Modern Slavery Act 2015 in relation 
to slavery or human trafficking.

The Company’s suppliers are typically professional advisers 
and the Company’s supply chains are considered to be low 
risk in this regard.

In light of the nature of the Company’s business there are 
no relevant human rights issues and the Company does not 
have a human rights policy.

37

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewRisk Management

Principal Risks, Emerging Risks and Risk 
Management
The  Board  considers  that  the  risks  detailed  within  this 
report are the principal risks currently facing the Company 
to deliver its strategy.

The  Board  is  responsible  for  the  ongoing  identification, 
evaluation  and  management  of  the  of  the  principal  risks 
faced  by  the  Company  and  the  Audit  Committee,  on 
behalf  of  the  Board,  has  established  a  process  for  the 
regular  review  of  these  risks  and  their  mitigation.  This 
process  accords  with  the  UK  Governance  Code  and  the 
FRC’s  Guidance  on  Risk  Management,  Internal  Control 
and  Related  Financial  and  Business  Reporting.  The 
impact of the ongoing global Covid-19 pandemic on the 
operations of the Company and its service providers was 
also considered as part of this process.

those 

threaten 

that  would 

During  the  year  ended  31  March  2022,  the  Audit 
Committee  has  again  carried  out  a  robust  assessment  of 
the  emerging  and  principal  risks  facing  the  Company, 
its  business 
including 
model,  future  performance,  solvency  and  liquidity.  The 
Committee  also  considered  the  controls  in  place  to 
mitigate the inherent risks and whether additional controls 
or actions were required to bring the residual risk down to 
an acceptable level. The Committee was satisfied with the 
controls that are in place. In respect of the ongoing impact 
of Covid-19 on business everywhere, the Committee was 
again reassured that all service providers of the Company 
had  adequate  business  continuity  measures  in  place 
to  ensure  that  no  operational  issues  would  arise  out  of 
working-from-home practices and that cyber and IT risks 
were properly addressed.

Further  details  as  well  as  a  summary  of  the  Company’s 
approach to risk and how principal risks and uncertainties 
were dealt with during the year under review, are set out on 
pages 40 to 45.

Key  procedures  established  with  a  view  to  providing 
effective financial control, have been in place throughout 
the year ended 31 March 2022 and up to the date of this 
Report.  The  internal  control  systems  are  designed  to 
ensure that proper accounting records are maintained, that 
the financial information on which business decisions are 
made and which are issued for publication is reliable and 
that the assets of the Company are safeguarded.

The  risk  management  process  and  systems  of  internal 
control  are  designed  to  manage  rather  than  eliminate 
the  risk  of  failure  to  achieve  the  Company’s  investment 
objective.  It  should  be  recognised  that  such  systems  can 
only  provide  reasonable,  not  absolute,  assurance  against 
material misstatement or loss.

The Directors have carried out a review of the effectiveness 
of  the  Company’s  risk  management  and  internal  control 
systems  as  they  have  operated  during  the  year  and  up  to 
the date of approval of this Report. There were no matters 
arising from this review that required further investigation 
and no significant failings or weaknesses were identified.

Internal control assessment process
Robust  risk  assessments  and  reviews  of  internal  controls 
are undertaken regularly in the context of the Company’s 
overall investment objective. During the year, the Board –
through the Audit Committee and together with Frostrow 
–  has  confirmed  its  risk  management  controls  under  the 
key  headings  of:  Corporate  Strategy;  Accounting,  Legal 
and  Regulatory;  Operational;  Investment  and  Business 
Activities. In evaluating the risks the Company faces, the 
Board  has  considered  the  Company’s  operations  in  the 
light of the following factors:

– 

 the  nature  and  extent  of  risks  which  it  regards  as 
acceptable for the Company to bear within its overall 
business objective;

– 

the threat of such risks becoming reality;

Internal control review
The  Board  is  also  responsible  for  the  internal  controls 
relating  to  the  Company,  including  the  reliability  of 
the  financial  reporting  process,  and  for  reviewing  their 
effectiveness.

– 

– 

 the  Company’s  ability  to  reduce  the  incidence  and 
impact of risk on its performance;

 the  cost  to  the  Company  and  benefits  related  to  the 
review of risk and associated controls of the Company; 
and

– 

 the  extent  to  which  the  third  parties  operate  the 
relevant controls.

38

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCRisk Management (continued)

A risk matrix helps to monitor the risks which have been 
identified and the controls in place to mitigate those risks. 
The  risks  are  assessed  on  the  basis  of  the  likelihood  of 
them happening, the impact on the business if they were 
to  occur  and  the  effectiveness  of  the  controls  in  place  to 
mitigate them. This risk register is reviewed by the Audit 
Committee regularly at every meeting.

Most  of  the  day-to-day  management  functions  of  the 
Company are sub-contracted, and the Directors therefore 
obtain regular assurances and information from key third 
party suppliers regarding the internal systems and controls 
operating  in  their  organisations.  In  addition,  each  of  the 
third parties is requested to provide a copy of its report on 
internal controls each year, which is reviewed by the Audit 
Committee.

39

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewRisk Management (continued)

Principal risks and uncertainties

Key mitigation

Investment performance is not comparable to the 
expectations of investors

Consistently poor performance could lead to a fall in the 
share price and a widening of the discount. The success of 
the Company depends on the Portfolio Manager’s ability 
to identify, acquire and realise investments in accordance 
with  the  Company’s  investment  policy.  This,  in  turn, 
depends on the ability of the Portfolio Manager to apply 
its investment processes and identify suitable investments.

Share price performance

The market price of the Company’s shares, like shares in 
all investment companies, may fluctuate independently of 
the NAV and thus may not reflect the underlying NAV 
of  the  shares.  The  shares  could  trade  at  a  discount  or 
premium to NAV at different times, depending on factors 
such as market conditions, investors’ perceptions of the 
merits of the Company’s objective and investment policy, 
supply and demand for the shares and the extent investors 
value the activities of the Company and/or the Portfolio 
Manager.

the  Company’s 
The  Board  reviews  and  discusses 
performance  against  its  investment  objective  and  policy, 
and assesses performance in comparison to industry peers 
and the broader comparative market. The Board also keeps 
the performance of the Portfolio Manager under continual 
review,  along  with  a  review  of  significant  stock  decisions 
and the overall rationale for holding the current portfolio. 
In  addition,  the  Management  Engagement  Committee 
conducts an annual appraisal of the Portfolio Manager.

The  Board  monitors  the  relationship  between  the  share 
price  and  the  NAV,  including  regular  review  of  the  level 
of discount relative to that of companies in the sector. The 
Company has taken powers to re-purchase shares and will 
consider doing so to reduce the volatility of any share price 
discount.  The  Company  has  also  taken  powers  to  issue 
shares  (only  at  a  premium  to  NAV)  to  provide  liquidity 
to the market to meet investor demand by way of issue of 
further shares.

No  buybacks  were  undertaken  during  the  year,  but  the 
Company issued 275,000 shares out of treasury and a total 
of 7,990,842 new shares through tap issuances all through 
the year and a placing on 8 July 2021.

The  Board  and  the  Portfolio  Managers  all  own  shares  in 
the Company, by way of aligning their own interests with 
those of all other shareholders. The Directors invest their 
Directors’  fees  in  shares,  which  are  bought  at  the  end  of 
every  quarter,  and  the  Portfolio  Managers  invest  at  least 
50%  of  any  performance  fee  in  shares.  For  more  details 
about the performance fee, please see pages 34 and 35.

In  addition,  in  the  seventh  year  following  the  IPO  (and 
every  seventh  year  thereafter),  the  Board  will  provide 
shareholders with an opportunity to realise their shares at 
the applicable NAV.

40

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCRisk Management (continued)

Principal risks and uncertainties

Key mitigation

Portfolio Manager – loss of personnel or reputation

and 

identification 

selection  of 

The 
investment 
opportunities  and  the  management  of  the  day-to-day 
activities  of  the  Company  depends  on  the  diligence, 
skill,  judgement  and  business  contacts  of  the  Portfolio 
Manager’s investment professionals and the information 
and deal flow they generate during the normal course of 
their  activities.  The  Company’s  future  success  depends 
on the continuing ability of these individuals to provide 
services and the Portfolio Manager’s ability to strategically 
recruit,  retain  and  motivate  new  talented  personnel  as 
required.  The  departure  of  some  or  all  of  the  Portfolio 
Manager’s  investment  professionals  could  prevent  the 
Company  from  achieving  its  investment  objective  and 
give rise to a significant public perception risk regarding 
the potential performance of the Company.

The Board maintains a good level of communication and 
has  a  good  relationship  with  the  Portfolio  Manager,  and 
regularly  reviews  the  Portfolio  Manager’s  performance 
at  Board  meetings.  The  Portfolio  Manager’s  Compliance 
Officer also reports to the Board regularly and the Portfolio 
Manager  would  report  to  the  Board  immediately  in  the 
event of any change in key personnel.

Odyssean Capital LLP as Portfolio Manager has appointed 
an investment team consisting of Stuart Widdowson and 
Ed Wielechowski, both of whom are very experienced in 
managing the portfolio in accordance with the Company’s 
principles and investment strategy.

Material changes within the Portfolio Manager’s 
organisation

Material  changes  could  occur  within  the  Portfolio 
Manager’s  organisation  or  its  affiliates  which  are  to  the 
detriment  of  the  Company’s  standing  in  respect  of  its 
competitors and its profitability.

The  Portfolio  Manager  has  advance  notice  of  any  material 
changes within its organisation and would report to the Board 
immediately  in  the  event  of  any  such  changes,  including 
within its organisation and affiliates or to its key personnel.

Valuation of unquoted investments

The Company may invest in unquoted companies from 
time to time. Such investments, by their nature, involve a 
higher degree of valuation and performance uncertainties 
and liquidity risks than investments in listed and quoted 
securities and they may be more difficult to realise.

All  financial  information  is  reviewed  by  the  Board  at 
regular  meetings.  The  Board  and/or  Chairman  of  the 
Audit Committee will approve the valuation of unquoted 
investments  prior  to  their  reflection  in  the  Company’s 
NAV. No unquoted investments were held by the Company 
during the year.

41

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewRisk Management (continued)

Principal risks and uncertainties

Key mitigation

Reliance on the performance of third-party service 
providers

The Company has no employees and the Directors have 
been appointed on a non-executive basis. The Company 
is  reliant  upon  the  performance  of  third-party  service 
providers for its executive function. Failure by any service 
provider to carry out its obligations to the Company in 
accordance with the terms of its appointment could have 
a material adverse effect on the operation of the Company.

This  encompasses  disruption  or  failure  caused  by  cyber 
crime  or  the  ongoing  Covid-19  pandemic  and  covers 
dealing, 
services, 
trade  processing,  administrative 
financial and other operational functions.

The Board has appointed third party service providers with 
relevant  experience.  Each  third  party  service  provider  is 
monitored by the Board and their roles are evaluated at least 
annually by the Management Engagement Committee.

The Board further receives a monthly report from Frostrow, 
which  includes  details  of  compliance  with  applicable 
law and regulations; reviews internal control reports and 
key  policies  of  its  service  providers;  has  considered  the 
increased risk of cyber-attacks and has received assurances 
from its service providers regarding the controls in place; 
and maintains a risk matrix with details of risks to which 
the  Company  is  exposed,  the  approach  to  those  risks, 
key  controls  relied  on  and  the  frequency  of  the  controls 
operation. 

The Board has considered the operational risks associated 
with  Covid-19  relating  to  the  functioning  of  all  of  the 
service providers to the Company. Each service provider has 
continued to operate with its employees working remotely 
and service has not been disrupted. The Board continues 
to monitor the performance of all service providers given 
the  ability  of  many  employees  to  work  remotely  even  
post-lockdowns.

Global Risk

Global  events,  such  as  the  Covid-19  pandemic,  acts  of 
war or terrorist attacks, might affect the performance of 
portfolio  companies  or  result  in  the  Company’s  service 
providers being unable to meet their contractual duties. 

Towards  the  end  of  the  year  under  review,  the  invasion 
of  Ukraine  by  Russia  has  led  to  new  shock  waves  in 
the  markets  as  sanctions  against  Russia  and  supply 
emergencies have led to price increases everywhere. 

During  the  year,  and  particularly  in  view  of  the  ongoing 
Covid-19  pandemic,  the  Portfolio  Managers  successfully 
continued  their  dialogue  with  investee  companies  and 
the  Board  has  stayed  in  close  contact  with  the  Portfolio 
Manager  and  has  been  monitoring  portfolio  and  share 
price developments. The Board has also received assurances 
from all of the Company’s service providers in respect of 
business continuity plans as well as cyber security measures. 
The Board will monitor developments as they occur.

Again,  the  Board  has  stayed  in  close  contact  with  the 
Portfolio Manager and has been monitoring portfolio and 
share price developments in view of the war in Ukraine.

UK Regulatory Risk

The  regulatory  environment  in  which  the  Company 
operates  changes  materially,  affecting  the  Company’s 
modus operandi.

The Board monitors regulatory change with the assistance 
of Frostrow and external professional advisers to ensure that 
the Board is aware of any likely changes in the regulatory 
environment and will be able to adapt as required.

42

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCRisk Management (continued)

Principal risks and uncertainties

Key mitigation

UK Legal Risk

The Company and/or the Directors fail to comply with 
legal  requirements  in  relation  to  FCA  dealing  rules 
and  procedures,  the  AIFMD,  the  Listing  Rules,  the 
Companies  Act  2006,  relevant  accounting  standards, 
the  Bribery  Act  2010,  the  Criminal  Finances  Act 
2017,  GDPR,  tax  regulations  or  any  other  applicable 
regulations.

The Board monitors regulatory change with the assistance of 
its external professional advisers to ensure compliance with 
applicable laws and regulations including the Companies 
Act  2006,  the  AIFM  Rules,  the  Corporation  Tax  Act 
2010  (“Section  1158”),  the  Market  Abuse  Regulation 
(“MAR”),  the  Disclosure  Guidance  and  Transparency 
Rules (“DTRs”) and the FCA’s Listing Rules.

Governance Risk

Poor adherence to corporate governance best practice or 
errors  or  irregularities  in  published  information  could 
lead to censure and/or result in reputational damage to 
the Company.

ESG and Climate Change Risk

Risks  related  to  the  environment,  social  issues  and 
governance (ESG) such as the impact of climate change 
or bad governance of portfolio companies could have an 
adverse  impact  on  the  portfolio  companies’  operational 
performance.

The Board reviews compliance reports and internal control 
reports  provided  by  its  service  providers,  as  well  as  the 
Company’s financial statements and revenue forecasts.

The Directors attend seminars and conferences to keep up 
to date on regulatory changes and receive industry updates 
from the Company Secretary. The Company Secretary also 
presents  a  quarterly  report  on  changes  in  the  regulatory 
environment,  including  AIC  updates,  and  how  changes 
have been addressed.

The Board reviews all information supplied to shareholders 
and Frostrow’s marketing activity at each meeting.

Details  of  the  Company’s  compliance  with  corporate 
governance  best  practice, 
information  on 
relationships with shareholders, are set out in the Corporate 
Governance Report in the Annual Report.

including 

At every Board meeting, the Board receives ESG updates, 
which  include  information  on  any  climate  change  and 
governance  related  engagement,  from  the  Portfolio 
Manager  together  with  monthly  portfolio  updates.  The 
Board challenges the Investment Manager on ESG matters 
to  ensure  that  the  portfolio  companies  are  acting  in 
accordance with the Board’s ESG approach.

The  Portfolio  Manager  supports  the  UK  Stewardship 
Code  and  actively  engages  with  portfolio  companies  on 
ESG matters including climate change.

Details  of  the  Portfolio  Manager’s  ESG  approach  can 
be  found  in  the  Portfolio  Manager’s  Report  and  on  the 
Company’s website at www.oitplc.com.

Furthermore,  the  Board  has  decided  to  hold  some  of 
its  meetings,  when  possible,  not  in  person  but  via  video 
conference,  to  save  on  travel  and  reduce  the  Directors’ 
carbon footprints on behalf of the Company.

43

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewRisk Management (continued)

Emerging Risks
The  Company  has  carried  out  a  detailed  assessment  of 
its  emerging  and  principal  risks.  The  International  Risk 
Governance  Council’s  definition  of  an  “emerging”  risk  is 
one that is new, or is a familiar risk in a new or unfamiliar 
context  or  under  new  context  conditions  (re-emerging). 
Failure to identify emerging risks may cause reactive actions 
rather  than  being  proactive  and,  in  a  worst  case  scenario, 
could cause the Company to become unviable or otherwise 
fail or force the Company to change its structure, objective 
or strategy.

The Audit Committee reviews the Company’s risk register 
at its half-yearly meetings. Emerging risks are discussed in 
detail as part of this process to try to ensure that emerging 
as well as well-known risks are identified and mitigated as 
far as possible.

Any  emerging  risks  and  mitigations  are  added  to  the 
risk  register,  such  as  the  invasion  of  Ukraine  by  Russia, 
which has led to shock waves in the markets immediately 
following  the  invasion,  followed  by  increasingly  severe 
sanctions against Russia such as the boycott of Russian oil 
and gas by many countries and the blacklisting of Russian 
banks, to name but a few. Supply emergencies, distribution 
problems and price increases ensued and the Board and all 
its advisers will keep the developments under close review.

The  experience  and  knowledge  of  the  Directors  is  useful 
in  these  discussions,  as  are  update  papers  and  advice 
received from the Board’s key service providers such as the 
Portfolio Manager, Frostrow and the Company’s brokers. 
In addition, the Company is a member of the AIC, which 
provides  regular  technical  updates,  draws  members’ 
attention  to  forthcoming  industry  and  regulatory  issues 
and advises on compliance obligations.

Going Concern
The content of the Company’s portfolio, trading activity, 
the  Company’s  cash  balances  and  revenue  forecasts,  and 
the  trends  and  factors  likely  to  affect  the  Company’s 
performance  are  reviewed  and  discussed  at  each  Board 
meeting.

For the year ended 31 March 2022, Covid-19 had remained 
a  global  factor  and  has  had  an  effect  on  the  general 
operations  of  the  Company  and  its  service  providers  by 
bringing  about  a  fundamental  re-thinking  of  the  way  we 
work.  With  the  increasing  number  of  people  vaccinated 
and social restrictions being lifted again in many countries, 

the  outlook  is  cautiously  positive,  but  the  Board  will 
continue to monitor developments as they occur. 

Added  to  the  concerns  of  a  global  pandemic  was,  on 
24  February  2022,  the  invasion  of  Ukraine  by  Russia 
and  the  ensuing  war,  which  at  the  time  of  writing  is  still 
ongoing.  As  sanctions  against  Russia  are  becoming 
increasingly  severe,  economies  are  suffering  from  supply 
chain  disruptions  and  price  increases.  Again,  the  Board 
will monitor developments as they occur.

The  Board  has  considered  a  detailed  assessment  of  the 
Company’s  ability  to  meet  its  liabilities  as  they  fall  due, 
including  tests  which  modelled  the  effects  of  further 
substantial  falls  in  markets  and  significant  reductions  in 
market liquidity to that experienced to date in connection 
with the coronavirus pandemic, on the Company’s NAV, 
its  cash  flows  and  its  expenses.  Further  information  is 
provided in the Audit Committee report.

Based  on  the  information  available  to  the  Directors  at 
the date of this report, including the results of these stress 
tests,  the  conclusions  drawn  in  the  Viability  Statement, 
the  Company’s  cash  balances,  and  the  liquidity  of  the 
Company’s  listed  investments,  the  Directors  are  satisfied 
that  the  Company  has  adequate  financial  resources  to 
continue in operation for at least the next 12 months and 
that, accordingly, it is appropriate to continue to adopt the 
going concern basis in preparing the financial statements.

Long Term Viability Statement
In accordance with the UK Corporate Governance Code, 
the  Directors  have  carefully  assessed  the  Company’s 
position  and  prospects  as  well  as  the  principal  risks  and 
have formed a reasonable expectation that the Company 
will be able to continue in operation and meet its liabilities 
as  they  fall  due  over  the  next  three  financial  years.  The 
Board  has  chosen  a  three-year  horizon  in  view  of  the 
long-term nature and outlook adopted by the Investment 
Manager when making investment decisions.

To make this assessment and in reaching this conclusion, 
the  Audit  Committee  has  considered  the  Company’s 
financial position and its ability to liquidate its portfolio 
and meet its liabilities as they fall due:

– 

 the  portfolio  is  principally  comprised  of  investments 
listed and traded on stock exchanges. These are actively 
traded  and,  whilst  perhaps  less  liquid  than  larger 
quoted companies, the portfolio is well diversified;

44

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCRisk Management (continued)

– 

– 

– 

 the portfolio is typically run with a net cash position 
(average of 7.1% in net cash over the past two years) 
and as a result there is ample liquidity on a day-to-day 
basis for the Company to meet its obligations;

 the  expenses  of  the  Company  are  predictable  and 
modest in comparison with the assets and there are no 
capital commitments foreseen which would alter that 
position; and 

 the  Company  has  no  employees,  only  its  non-
executive  Directors.  Consequently,  it  does  not  have 
redundancy or other employment related liabilities or 
responsibilities. 

Furthermore,  the  Audit  Committee  considered  the 
operational resilience of the Company’s service providers, 
and  thereby  the  operational  viability  of  the  Company. 
During  the  year  under  review,  the  majority  of  meetings 
were held online, and all key service providers have again 
been  contacted  with  regard  to  their  business  continuity 
systems  in  place  due  to  the  pandemic  as  well  as  their  IT 
and  cyber  security  systems  to  prevent  fraudulent  activity 
of any kind. There have been no issues raised and the Audit 
Committee  was  reassured  that  all  key  service  providers 
were  operating  well  and  to  their  normal  high  service 
standards while ensuring the safety of their employees by 
enabling them to work remotely.

The Audit Committee, as well as considering the potential 
impact of the Company’s principal risks and various severe 
but plausible downside scenarios, has also considered the 
following  assumptions  in  considering  the  Company’s 
longer-term viability:

Looking to the Future
The  Board  concentrates  its  attention  on  the  Company’s 
investment  performance  and  Odyssean  Capital  LLP’s 
investment  approach  and  on  factors  that  may  have  an 
effect on this approach.

– 

there will continue to be demand for investment trusts; 

– 

– 

– 

– 

 the Board and the Portfolio Manager will continue to 
adopt a long-term view when making investments; 

 the  Company  invests  principally  in  the  securities  of 
UK listed companies to which investors will wish to 
continue to have exposure; 

 regulation  will  not  increase  to  a  level  that  makes 
running the Company uneconomical; and 

 the  performance  of  the  Company  will  continue  to 
be satisfactory. 

Covid-19  and  the  war  in  Ukraine  were  also  factored 
into the key assumptions made by assessing its impact on 
the  Company’s  key  risks  and  whether  the  key  risks  had 
increased in their potential to affect the normal, favourable 
and stressed market conditions. As part of this review the 
Board considered the impact of a significant and prolonged 
decline in the Company’s performance and prospects. This 
included  a  range  of  plausible  downside  scenarios  such  as 
reviewing  the  effects  of  substantial  falls  in  investment 
values and the impact of the Company’s ongoing charges 
ratio, which were the subject of stress testing.

The Board is regularly updated by Frostrow Capital LLP 
on  wider  investment  trust  industry  issues  and  regular 
discussions  are  held  concerning  the  Company’s  future 
development and strategy.

A  review  of  the  Company’s  year  ended  31  March  2022, 
its performance and the outlook for the Company can be 
found in the Chairman’s Statement and in the Investment 
Manager’s Review.

The Company’s overall strategy remains unchanged.

Approval
This Strategic Report has been approved by the Board of 
Directors and signed on its behalf by:

Jane Tufnell
Chairman

1 June 2022

45

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewGovernance

GOVERNANCE

47  Board of Directors
48  Directors’ Report
52  Corporate Governance Statement
58  Audit Committee Report
61  Directors’ Remuneration Report
65 

Statement of Directors’ Responsibilities

46

ODYSSE AN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC

Board of Directors

as at 31 March 2022

Jane Tufnell
Chairman
Jane started her career in 1986 joining County NatWest, firstly in corporate finance and 
then  moving  to  fund  management  where  she  jointly  ran  the  NatWest  pension  fund’s 
exposure to UK smaller companies.

In 1994, Jane co-founded Ruffer Investment Management Limited where she worked for 
over 20 years to build the business to an AUM of £20 billion, before leaving in 2015. Jane 
now has a variety of directorships including Schroder UK Public Private Trust plc. She is 
also chairman of ICG Enterprise Trust plc.

Date of appointment: 21 December 2017

Arabella Cecil
Senior Independent Director
Arabella began working in finance in 1987, training in Milan and Paris before CL-Laing 
in London, where she headed the firm’s Extel-rated food producers research team.

From 1996, she worked as a freelance photojournalist and filmmaker, and in 1998, she 
founded a media company which specialised in the IMAX® format. Between 2008 and 
2012, she worked for Culross Global Management, ultimately as a member of the firm’s 
Investment and Risk Committees. In 2012, she co-founded BACIT Limited serving as 
Chief Investment Officer, and from 2015, as a non-executive director until the company 
became Syncona. She served as Chief Investment officer of Syncona’s fund portfolio until 
April 2019.

Date of appointment: 31 January 2018

Peter Hewitt
Chairman of the Management Engagement Committee
Peter has over 35 years’ investment management experience. In 1983, he joined Ivory & 
Sime managing first US equities and then moving onto UK smaller companies from 1987 
to 1992. He then focussed on management of UK pension fund accounts until 1996. He 
moved to Murray Johnstone as Head of UK Equities with a focus on UK income funds. 
In 2000, he re-joined Friends Ivory & Sime and specialised in management of investment 
trust funds and products.

In 2008, he launched BMO Managed Portfolio Trust (formerly F&C Managed Portfolio 
Trust) onto the LSE and remains the current investment manager of the company. He 
is currently a director of Global Equities at BMO Global Asset Management Limited.

Date of appointment: 31 January 2018

Richard King
Chairman of the Audit Committee
Richard  spent  35  years  with  Ernst  and  Young  LLP  (EY)  becoming  deputy  managing 
partner  of  UK  &  Ireland  and  a  member  of  both  the  Europe,  Middle  East,  India  and 
Africa (EMEIA) Board and Global management group. Since leaving EY, Richard has 
been involved either as chairman or non-executive director on a variety of private and 
public companies and has been involved in company disposals in excess of £400 million.

Richard is a non-executive director of GYG plc. He is also the chair of trustees for the 
Willow Foundation, a director of Fareshare and a partner of Rockpool Investments LLP 
and Beach Private Equity LLP.

Date of appointment: 21 December 2017

47

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewDirectors’ Report

The  Directors  are  pleased  to  present  the  Annual  Report 
and  Financial  Statements  for  the  year  ended  31  March 
2022.  In  accordance  with  Companies  Act  2006  (as 
amended), the Listing Rules and the Disclosure Guidance 
and  Transparency  Rules,  the  Corporate  Governance 
Statement, Directors’ Remuneration Report, Report from 
the  Audit  Committee  and  the  Statement  of  Directors’ 
Responsibilities  should  be  read  in  conjunction  with 
one  another,  and  the  Strategic  Report.  As  permitted  by 
legislation,  some  of  the  matters  normally  included  in 
the  Directors’  Report  have  instead  been  included  in  the 
Strategic  Report,  as  the  Board  considers  them  to  be  of 
strategic importance.

Directors
The Directors in office during the year and at the date of 
this  report,  and  their  biographical  details,  are  shown  on 
page 47.

None of the Directors or any persons connected with them 
had a material interest in the transactions and arrangements 
of,  or  the  agreement  with,  the  Portfolio  Manager  during 
the year.

On  25  January  2022,  the  Company  was  granted  a  new 
block  listing  of  5.0  million  ordinary  shares  to  be  listed 
to the premium segment of the Official List of the FCA 
and admitted to trading on the premium segment of the 
LSE’s main market. During the year ended 31 March 2022, 
4.2  million  shares  were  issued  under  the  previous  block 
listing,  and  a  further  98,500  shares  under  the  new  block 
listing (year ended 31 March 2021: none). As at the date 
of this report, a balance of 4.9 million shares remain under 
this new block listing.

During the year ended 31 March 2022, a total of 4,298,500 
new  shares  were  issued  under  both  block  listings,  and  a 
further 3,692,342 new shares were issued separately under 
a placing (year ended 31 March 2021: none). Furthermore, 
275,000 shares were issued out of treasury. 

Since  the  year  end  and  up  to  the  date  of  this  report,  no 
further shares were issued to the market.

Purchase of own shares
At the AGM held on 22 September 2021, the Directors 
were granted the authority to buy back up to 13,985,602 
ordinary  shares,  being  14.99%  of  the  ordinary  shares  in 
issue at the time of the passing of the resolution. 

Performance and outlook
A summary of the Company’s performance during the year 
ended 31 March 2022 and the outlook for the forthcoming 
year is set out in the Strategic Report on pages 6 to 45.

No  shares  were  bought  back  during  the  year  and  up  to 
the  date  of  this  report.  Proposals  for  the  renewal  of  the 
Directors' authority to buy back shares will be set out in 
the Notice of AGM.

Corporate governance
The  Company’s  Corporate  Governance  Statement  is  set 
out on pages 52 to 57 and forms part of this report. Details 
regarding independent professional advice, insurance and 
indemnity are set out in that statement on page 56.

Share capital
Share issues
At the AGM held on 22 September 2021, the Directors 
were granted authority to issue up to 18,659,910 ordinary 
shares, being 20% of the ordinary shares in issue at the time 
of the passing of the resolution. Proposals for the renewal 
of the Directors' authority to issue shares will be set out in 
the Notice of the forthcoming AGM.

Current share capital
As  at  31  March  2022,  there  were  96,248,053  ordinary 
shares  in  issue.  No  shares  are  held  in  treasury.  The  total 
voting rights of the Company as at 31 March 2022 and as 
at the date of this report were 96,248,053.

There  are  no  restrictions  concerning  the  transfer  of 
securities in the Company or on voting rights; no special 
rights  with  regard  to  control  attached  to  securities;  no 
agreements  between  holders  of  securities  regarding  their 
transfer  known  to  the  Company;  and  no  agreements 
which the Company is party to that might affect its control 
following a successful takeover bid.

48

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCDirectors’ Report (continued)

Substantial shareholdings
The  Company  has  been  informed  of  the  following 
notifiable interests in the voting rights of the Company:

31 March 2022 
Shareholder

Harwood Capital
Cazenove Capital 
Management
Brewin Dolphin, 
stockbrokers
Mr Ian Armitage
Investec Wealth & 
Investment
Close Brothers Asset 
Management
Raymond James 
Investment Services
AJ Bell, stockbrokers 
(EO)
Hargreaves Lansdown, 
stockbrokers (EO)
Charles Stanley

30 April 2022 
Shareholder

Harwood Capital
Cazenove Capital 
Management
Brewin Dolphin, 
stockbrokers
Mr Ian Armitage
Investec Wealth & 
Investment
Raymond James 
Investment Services
Close Brothers Asset 
Management
AJ Bell, stockbrokers 
(EO)
Hargreaves Lansdown, 
stockbrokers (EO)
Charles Stanley

EO = execution only

Number of 
ordinary 
shares held

16,258,227

10,601,557

7,708,435
6,946,540

6,218,066

3,739,277

3,717,378

3,406,843

3,001,088
2,976,299

Number of  
ordinary 
shares held

16,258,227

10,543,576

7,624,379
6,996,540

6,296,911

3,726,378

3,715,027

3,446,683

3,143,906
2,993,703

% of voting 
rights

16.89

11.02

8.01
7.21

6.46

3.89

3.86

3.54

3.12
3.09

% of voting 
rights

16.89

10.96

7.92
7.27

6.54

3.87

3.86

3.58

3.27
3.11

Interests of key management personnel in the shares of the 
Company as at 31 March 2022:

Stuart Widdowson
Ed Wielechowski

Ordinary  
Shares

% of voting 
rights

1,668,878
417,805

1.73
0.43

Beneficial Owners of Ordinary Shares – 
Information Rights
The  beneficial  owners  of  ordinary  shares  who  have  been 
nominated by the registered holder of those shares to receive 
information  rights  under  Section  146  of  the  Companies 
Act  2006  are  required  to  direct  all  communications  to 
the  registered  holder  of  their  shares  rather  than  to  the 
Company’s registrar, Equiniti, or to the Company directly.

Requirements of the Listing Rules
Listing Rule 9.8.4 requires the Company to include certain 
information in a single identifiable section of the Annual 
Report  or  a  cross-reference  table  indicating  where  the 
information  is  set  out.  The  information  required  under 
Listing  Rules  9.8.4(5)  and  9.8.4(6)  in  relation  to  Peter 
Hewitt waiving his Director’s fee is set out on page 62. The 
Directors confirm that there are no additional disclosures 
to be made in relation to Listing Rule 9.8.4.

Anti-Bribery and Corruption Policy
The  Board  has  adopted  a  zero-tolerance  approach  to 
instances  of  bribery  and  corruption.  Accordingly,  it 
expressly  prohibits  any  Director  or  associated  persons 
when  acting  on  behalf  of  the  Company,  from  accepting, 
soliciting, paying, offering or promising to pay or authorise 
any payment, public or private, in the United Kingdom or 
abroad to secure any improper benefit for themselves or for 
the Company.

The  Board  applies  the  same  standards  to  its  service 
providers in their activities for the Company.

A  copy  of  the  Company’s  Anti  Bribery  and  Corruption 
Policy can be found on its website at www.oitplc.com. The 
policy is reviewed annually by the Audit Committee.

Prevention of the Facilitation of Tax Evasion
In  response  to  the  implementation  of  the  Criminal 
Finances Act 2017, the Board has adopted a zero-tolerance 

49

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewDirectors’ Report (continued)

approach to the criminal facilitation of tax evasion. A copy 
of  the  Company’s  policy  on  preventing  the  facilitation 
of  tax  evasion  can  be  found  on  the  Company’s  website 
www.oitplc.com.  The  policy  is  reviewed  annually  by  the 
Audit Committee.

Political Donations
The Company has not made any political donations in the 
past, nor does it intend to do so in the future.

Corporate Governance
The Corporate Governance Statement, which includes the 
Company’s  Corporate  Governance  policies  is  set  out  on 
pages 52 to 57.

Global Greenhouse Gas Emissions for the Year 
ended 31 March 2022
The  Company  is  an  investment  trust,  with  neither 
employees  nor  premises,  nor  has  it  any  financial  or 
operational control of the assets which it owns. It has no 
greenhouse gas emissions to report from its operations nor 
does it have responsibility for any other emissions producing 
sources under the Companies Act 2006 (Strategic Report 
and Directors’ Report) Regulations 2013, including those 
within  the  Company’s  underlying  investment  portfolio. 
Consequently,  the  Company  consumed  less  than  40,000 
kWh  of  energy  during  the  year  in  respect  of  which  the 
Directors’ Report is prepared and therefore is exempt from 
the disclosures required under the Streamlined Energy and 
Carbon Reporting criteria.

The Directors have decided to hold some of the Company's 
meetings  not  in  person  but  via  video  conference  when 
possible,  to  save  on  travel  and  reduce  their  carbon 
footprints on behalf of the Company.

Common Reporting Standard (CRS)
CRS  is  a  global  standard  for  the  automatic  exchange 
information  commissioned  by  the  Organisation 
of 
for  Economic  Cooperation  and  Development  and 
incorporated  into  UK  law  by  the  International  Tax 
Compliance Regulations 2015. CRS requires the Company 
to provide certain additional details to HMRC in relation 
to certain shareholders. The reporting obligation began in 
2016  and  will  be  an  annual  requirement  going  forward. 
The  Registrars,  Equiniti  Limited,  have  been  engaged  to 
collate such information and file the reports with HMRC 
on behalf of the Company.

Other Statutory Information
The following information is disclosed in accordance with 
the Companies Act 2006:

– 

– 

 The  rules  on  the  appointment  and  replacement  of 
directors  are  set  out  in  the  Company’s  articles  of 
association  (the  “Articles”).  A  change  to  the  Articles 
would be governed by the Companies Act 2006. 

 Subject  to  the  provisions  of  the  Companies  Act 
2006,  to  the  Articles,  and  to  any  directions  given  by 
special resolution, the business of the Company shall 
be  managed  by  the  Directors  who  may  exercise  all 
the powers of the Company. The powers shall not be 
limited  by  any  special  powers  given  to  the  Directors 
by  the  Articles  and  a  meeting  of  the  Directors  at 
which a quorum is present may exercise all the powers 
exercisable by the Directors. The Directors’ powers to 
buy  back  and  issue  shares,  in  force  at  the  end  of  the 
year, are recorded in the Directors’ Report. 

There are no agreements:

(i)   to which the Company is a party that might affect its 

control following a takeover bid; and/or 

(ii)   between  the  Company  and  its  Directors  concerning 

compensation for loss of office. 

Auditor
The  Directors  who  held  office  at  the  date  of  approval  of 
the  Directors’  Report  confirm  that,  so  far  as  they  are 
aware,  there  is  no  relevant  audit  information  of  which 
the  Company’s  Auditor  is  unaware;  and  each  Director 
has taken all the steps that they ought to have taken as a 
Director  to  make  themself  aware  of  any  relevant  audit 
information and to establish that the Company’s Auditor 
is aware of that information.

KPMG  LLP  has  expressed  its  willingness  to  continue  in 
office as Auditor of the Company and resolutions for its re- 
appointment and for the Audit Committee to determine 
its  remuneration  will  be  proposed  at  the  forthcoming 
AGM.

Financial risk management
The  Company’s  financial 
its 
investment portfolio, cash balances, debtors and creditors 
that  arise  directly  from  its  operations  such  as  sales  and 
purchases  awaiting  settlement  and  accrued  income.  The 

instruments  comprise 

50

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCDirectors’ Report (continued)

financial  risk  management  objectives  and  policies  arising 
from  its  financial  instruments  and  the  exposure  of  the 
Company to risk are disclosed in note 12 to the Financial 
Statements.

Ordinary  resolutions  require  that  more  than  50%  of  the 
votes cast at the relevant meeting must be in favour of the 
resolutions.  Special  resolutions  require  that  at  least  75% 
of  the  votes  cast  must  be  in  favour  of  the  resolution  to 
be passed.

Post Balance Sheet Events
Details  of  the  post  Balance  Sheet  events  are  set  out  in 
note 14 to the Financial Statements.

Articles of Association
The  Company’s  Articles  of  Association  may  only  be 
amended  by  a  special  resolution  at  a  general  meeting  of 
the shareholder.

Annual General Meeting (AGM)
The  fourth  AGM  of  the  Company  will  be  held  at 
12.00  noon  on  Wednesday,  21  September  2022  at  the 
offices of Odyssean Capital LLP, 6 Stratton Street, Mayfair, 
London W1J 8LD. The full text of the Notice of the AGM 
together with explanatory notes can be found on pages 96 
to 105.

Resolutions  relating  to  the  following  items  of  special 
business  will  be  proposed  at  the  forthcoming  Annual 
General Meeting.

Resolution  10:  Authority  to  allot  shares  up  to 
approximately 10% of the ordinary shares in issue;

Resolution  11:  Authority  to  allot  shares  up  to 
approximately a further 10% of the ordinary shares in issue;

Resolution 12: Authority to disapply pre-emption rights 
in respect of the shares to be allotted under Resolution 10;

Resolution 13: Authority to disapply pre-emption rights 
in respect of the shares to be allotted under Resolution 11;

Resolution  14:  Authority  to  buy  back  up  to  14.99%  of 
shares in issue; and

Resolution 15: Authority to hold General Meetings (other 
than the AGM) on at least 14 clear days’ notice.

Resolutions  10  and  11  will  be  put  to  shareholders  as 
ordinary  resolutions  and  Resolutions  12  to  15  will  be 
asked as special resolutions.

Recommendation
The  Directors  consider  that  all  the  resolutions  to  be 
proposed  at  the  AGM  are  in  the  best  interests  of  the 
Company  and  its  members  as  a  whole.  The  Directors 
unanimously recommend that shareholders vote in favour 
of all the resolutions, as they intend to do in respect of their 
own beneficial holdings. 

AGM Arrangements
The Board hopes that it will be possible to hold the AGM 
in  person  on  21  September  2022.  However,  in  case  the 
decision  has  to  be  made  that  it  will  not  be  possible  for 
shareholders  to  meet  with  the  Board  in  person  then 
arrangements  will  be  made  for  a  partially  digital,  or 
hybrid  meeting.  Shareholders  are  encouraged  to  view 
the  Company’s  website,  www.oitplc.com  for  further 
information nearer the time. Questions can be submitted 
to the Company Secretary at info@frostrow.com.

Shareholders are also strongly encouraged to exercise their 
votes in respect of the meeting in advance by returning their 
forms of proxy. This will ensure that all shareholders’ votes 
are registered in the event that attendance is not possible 
or restricted or if the meeting is postponed. Further details 
about  the  voting  process  can  be  found  in  the  Notice  of 
Meeting.

By order of the Board

Frostrow Capital LLP  
Company Secretary

1 June 2022

51

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewCorporate Governance Statement

This Corporate Governance Statement forms part of the 
Directors’ Report.

The Board is accountable to shareholders for the governance 
of the Company’s affairs and is committed to maintaining 
the highest standard of corporate governance for the long-
term sustainable success of the Company, generating value 
for  shareholders,  other  stakeholders  and  contributing 
to  the  wider  society  through  investing  in  its  portfolio 
companies. In this statement, the Company reports on its 
compliance with the AIC Code of Corporate Governance 
published  in  February  2019  (the  “AIC  Code”),  sets  out 
how  the  Board  and  its  committees  have  operated  during 
the  past  year  and  describes  how  the  Board  exercises 
effective stewardship over the Company’s activities in the 
interests  of  shareholders  and  other  stakeholders  of  the 
Company. The AIC Code addresses all the principles set 
out  in  the  UK  Corporate  Governance  Code  (the  “UK 
Code”),  as  well  as  setting  out  additional  provisions  on 
issues that are of specific relevance to the Company as an 
investment trust.

The Board is confident that is has properly undertaken its 
duties to shareholders and other stakeholders, and taken a 
long-term approach to the management of the Company. 

Statement of compliance with the AIC Code
The Board of the Company has considered the principles 
and recommendations of the AIC Code and considers that 
reporting against the principles and recommendations of 
the  AIC  Code  (which  incorporates  the  UK  Code),  will 
provide better information to shareholders.

The Financial Reporting Council (the “FRC”) has endorsed 
the AIC Code. The terms of the FRC’s endorsement mean 
that AIC members who report against the AIC Code meet 
fully their obligations under the UK Code and the related 
disclosure requirements contained in the Listing Rules of 
the  FCA.  A  copy  of  the  AIC  Code  can  be  obtained  via 
the AIC’s website at www.theaic.co.uk. A copy of the UK 
Code can be obtained at www.frc.org.uk.

The Board recognises the importance of a strong corporate 
governance  culture  and  has  established  a  framework  for 
corporate governance which it considers to be appropriate 
to the business of the Company.

The  Board  considers  that  it  has  managed  its  affairs 
in  compliance  with  the  AIC  Code  and  the  relevant 
provisions  of  the  UK  Code  throughout  the  year  ended 
31  March  2022,  except  where  it  has  concluded  that 

52

adherence or compliance with any particular principle or 
recommendation  of  either  of  the  Codes  would  not  have 
been appropriate to the Company’s circumstances. Similar 
to  the  UK  Code,  the  AIC  Code  specifies  a  “comply  or 
explain”  basis  and  the  Board’s  report  under  this  section 
explains any deviation from its recommendations.

The UK Code includes provisions relating to:

– 

– 

the role of the chief executive; and

executive directors’ remuneration.

The  Board  considers  these  provisions  are  not  relevant  to 
the position of the Company, being an externally-managed 
investment  company.  The  Company  has  therefore  not 
reported further in respect of these provisions.

The Board of Directors
The Board of Directors is collectively responsible for the 
long-term  success  of  the  Company.  It  provides  overall 
leadership,  sets  the  strategic  aims  of  the  Company  and 
ensures  that  the  necessary  resources  are  in  place  for  the 
Company  to  meet  its  objectives  and  fulfil  its  obligations 
to  shareholders  within  a  framework  of  high  standards 
of  corporate  governance  and  effective  internal  controls. 
The  Directors  are  responsible  for  the  determination 
of  the  Company’s  investment  policy  and  investment 
strategy and have overall responsibility for the Company’s 
activities,  including  the  review  of  investment  activity 
and  performance  and  the  control  and  supervision  of  the 
Portfolio Manager.

The  Board  consists  of  four  non-executive  Directors, 
who  have  substantial  recent  and  relevant  experience 
of  investment  trusts  and  financial  and  public  company 
management.

Other than their letters of appointment as Directors, none 
of the Directors has a contract of service with the Company 
nor  has  there  been  any  other  contract  or  arrangement 
between the Company and any Director at any time during 
the  year.  Directors  are  not  entitled  to  any  compensation 
for loss of office. Copies of the letters of appointment are 
available on request from the Company Secretary and will 
be available at the AGM.

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCCorporate Governance Statement (continued)

Chairman and Senior Independent Director
The  Chairman,  Jane  Tufnell,  is  deemed  by  her  fellow 
independent Board members to be independent in character 
and  judgement,  and  free  of  any  conflicts  of  interest.  She 
leads the Board and is responsible for its overall effectiveness 
in  directing  the  Company.  In  liaison  with  the  Company 
Secretary,  she  ensures  that  the  Directors  receive  accurate, 
timely and clear information. Mrs Tufnell considers herself to 
have sufficient time to spend on the affairs of the Company. 
She has no significant commitments other than those disclosed 
in her biography on page 47. The role and responsibilities of 
the Chairman are clearly defined and set out in writing, a copy 
of which is available on the Company’s website.

Arabella  Cecil  is  the  Senior  Independent  Director  of  the 
Company. She provides a sounding board for the Chairman 
and  serves  as  an  intermediary  for  the  other  Directors  and 
shareholders.  Miss  Cecil  also  provides  a  channel  for  any 
shareholder concerns regarding the Chairman and will take 
the  lead  in  the  annual  evaluation  of  the  Chairman  by  the 
other independent Directors. The role and responsibilities 
of  the  Senior  Independent  Director  are  clearly  defined 
and set out in writing, a copy of which is available on the 
Company’s website.

Culture
judgement, 
The  Chairman  demonstrates  objective 
promotes a culture of openness and debate, and facilitates 
effective contributions by all Directors. The Directors are 
required to act with integrity, lead by example and promote 
this culture within the Company.

The Board seeks to ensure the alignment of the Company’s 
purpose,  values  and  strategy  with  the  culture  of  openness, 
integrity  through  ongoing  dialogue,  and 
debate  and 
engagement with the Portfolio Manager and the Company’s 
other service providers. The culture of the Board is considered 
as part of the annual performance evaluation process which is 
undertaken by each Director. The culture of the Company’s 
service providers is also considered by the Board during the 
annual  review  of  their  performance  and  while  considering 
their continuing appointment.

Purpose and Strategy
The Board assesses the basis on which the Company generates 
and preserves value over the long term. The Strategic Report 
describes  how  opportunities  and  risks  to  the  future  success 
of  the  business  have  been  considered  and  addressed,  the 
sustainability of the Company’s business model and how its 
governance contributes to the delivery of its strategy.

The Company’s Objective and Investment Policy are set out 
on pages 2 to 4.

The purpose and strategy of the Company are described in the 
Strategic Report on page 26. 

Strategy  issues  and  all  material  operational  matters  are 
considered at Board meetings.

Board operation
The Directors have adopted a formal schedule of matters 
specifically  reserved  for  their  approval.  A  copy  of  this 
schedule  is  available  on  the  Company’s  website.  These 
matters include, but are not limited to, the following:

– 

– 

– 

– 

– 

– 

 approval  of  the  Company’s  investment  policy,  long- 
term objectives and business strategy;

 approval of the policies regarding insurance, hedging, 
borrowing limits and corporate security;

 approval  of  the  Company’s  Annual  and  Interim 
Reports,  financial 
accounting 
statements 
policies,  prospectuses,  circulars  and  other  shareholder 
communications;

and 

 approval  for  raising  new  capital  and  major  financing 
facilities;

 Board appointments and removals;

 appointment  and  removal  of  the  Portfolio  Manager, 
Auditor and the Company’s other service providers; and

– 

 approval of the Company’s annual operating budgets.

investment  management 

Day-to-day 
is  delegated  to 
Odyssean  Capital  LLP  and  operational  management  is 
delegated to Frostrow Capital LLP.

The  Board  takes  responsibility  for  the  content  of 
communications regarding major corporate issues even if 
Odyssean Capital LLP and Frostrow act as spokesman. The 
Board  is  kept  informed  of  relevant  promotional  material 
that is issued on behalf of the Company.

Board meetings
The Company has four scheduled Board meetings a year 
with additional meetings in respect of share issuances and 
regulatory matters arranged as necessary.

At  each  scheduled  Board  meeting,  the  Directors  follow 
a  formal  agenda  which  is  circulated  in  advance  by  the 
Company  Secretary.  The  Company  Secretary, 
the 
Administration  Manager  and  the  Portfolio  Manager 
regularly  provide  the  Board  with  financial  information, 
including  an  annual  expenses  budget,  together  with 
briefing  notes  and  papers  in  relation  to  changes  in  the 
Company’s economic and financial environment, statutory 
and  regulatory  changes  and  corporate  governance  best 

53

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewCorporate Governance Statement (continued)

practice. A description of the Company’s risk management 
and  internal  control  systems  is  set  out  in  the  Strategic 
Report on pages 38 to 45.

Board Committees
Given  the  number  of  Directors,  the  Board  does  not 
consider it necessary for the Company to establish separate 
nomination  and  remuneration  committees  and  all  of 
the  matters  that  can  be  delegated  to  such  committees  are 
considered  by  the  Board  as  a  whole.  The  Board  considers 
that the combined knowledge and experience of its members 
enable it to successfully fulfil the role of these committees.

The Board has established three committees to assist with 
its  operations:  the  Audit  Committee;  the  Management 
Engagement Committee and the Disclosure Committee. 
Each  committee’s  delegated  responsibilities  are  clearly 
defined  in  formal  terms  of  reference,  which  are  available 
on the Company’s website.

Audit Committee
The  Audit  Committee  is  chaired  by  Richard  King  and 
comprises all Directors. It meets formally at least twice a 
year. The Board believes it is appropriate for the Chairman 
of the Company to be a member of the Audit Committee as 
she provides a valuable contribution to the Committee and 
her membership enhances the operation of the Committee 
and its interaction with the Board.

The  Board  considers  that  the  members  of  the  Audit 
Committee  have  the  requisite  skills  and  experience  to 
fulfil  the  responsibilities  of  the  Committee  and  that  the 
Committee,  as  a  whole,  has  the  competence  relevant  to 
the  investment  trust  sector.  The  Chairman  of  the  Audit 
Committee  has  significant  recent  and  relevant  financial 
experience.

The Audit Committee has direct access to the Company’s 
Auditor, and provides a forum through which the Auditor 
reports to the Board. Representatives of the Auditor attend 
meetings of the Audit Committee at least twice a year.

Further  details  about  the  Audit  Committee  and  its 
activities  during  the  year  under  review  are  set  out  on 
pages 58 to 60.

Management Engagement Committee
Peter  Hewitt  is  the  Chairman  of  the  Management 
Engagement  Committee,  which  comprises  all  Directors. 
The  Committee  meets  at  least  once  a  year  to  review  the 
ongoing  performance  and  the  continuing  appointment 
of  all  service  providers  of  the  Company,  including  the 
Portfolio  Manager.  The  Committee  also  considers  any 
variation to the terms of all service providers’ agreements 
and reports its findings to the Board. 

The  performance  of  the  Company’s  service  providers  is 
closely  monitored  by  the  Committee  and  in  arriving  at 
its decisions regarding the continuing appointment of the 
service providers, it is aided by the feedback received from 
the Portfolio Manager and the Company Secretary on the 
performance of those service providers.

Disclosure Committee
The Disclosure Committee is chaired by Jane Tufnell, the 
Chairman of the Board, and includes Arabella Cecil as its 
member.  The  Committee  has  been  established  to  ensure 
the  identification  and  disclosure  of  inside  information 
and the Company’s ongoing compliance with the Market 
Abuse  Regulation.  No  meetings  of  the  Committee  were 
held during the year. All ad hoc meetings were attended by 
the whole Board.

Meeting attendance
The number of scheduled Board and Audit Committee meetings held during the year ended 31 March 2022 and the 
attendance of the individual Directors is shown below:

Board Meetings

Audit Committee

Management Engagement  
Committee

Number entitled 
to attend

Number  
attended

Number entitled 
to attend

Number  
attended

Number entitled 
to attend

Number  
attended

Jane Tufnell
Arabella Cecil
Peter Hewitt
Richard King

4
4
4
4

4
4
4
4

2
2
2
2

2
2
2
2

1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1

In addition, one strategy meeting and six ad hoc committee and Board meetings were held during the year. All meetings 
were attended by all Directors. 

54

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCCorporate Governance Statement (continued)

Performance evaluation
The  Directors  are  aware  that  they  need  to  continually 
monitor  and  improve  Board  performance  and  recognise 
that this can be achieved through regular evaluation of the 
Board,  its  committees  and  the  individual  Directors;  this 
provides  a  valuable  feedback  mechanism  for  improving 
Board’s effectiveness.

An  evaluation  of  the  Board  and  its  Committees  as  well 
as  the  Chairman  and  the  individual  Directors  is  carried 
out annually. 

The Chairman acts on the results of the Board’s evaluation 
by recognising the strengths and addressing the weaknesses 
of the Board and recommending any areas for development. 

each  Director’s 

During the year ended 31 March 2022, the performance 
of  the  Board,  its  committees  and  individual  Directors 
independence)  was 
(including 
evaluated  through  a  formal  assessment  process  led  by 
the  Chairman.  This  involved  the  circulation  of  a  Board 
and  Committee  evaluation  checklist,  tailored  to  suit 
the  nature  of  the  Company,  followed  by  discussions 
between  the  Chairman  and  each  of  the  Directors.  The 
performance of the Chairman was evaluated by the Senior 
Independent Director.

As  part  of  the  Board  evaluation  discussions,  each  of  the 
Directors  also  assessed  the  overall  time  commitment  of 
their external appointments and it was concluded that all 
Directors  have  sufficient  time  to  discharge  their  duties. 
During the year and since the year-end, all Directors have 
without fail attended all Board and Committee meetings.

The Chairman is satisfied that the structure and operation 
of  the  Board  continues  to  be  effective  and  relevant  and 
that  there  is  a  satisfactory  mix  of  skills,  experience  and 
knowledge  of  the  Company.  The  Board  has  considered 
the position of all the Directors including the Chairman 
as  part  of  the  evaluation  process  and  believes  that  it 
would be in the Company’s best interests to propose them 
for re-election.

Independence of Directors
The  independence  of  the  Directors  was  reviewed  as  part 
of  the  annual  evaluation  process  and  it  was  found  that 
each Director is considered to be independent in character 
and judgement and entirely independent of the Portfolio 
Manager. None of the Directors sits on the boards of any 
other companies managed by the Portfolio Manager.

Tenure
The Company has no set policy on the length of the tenure 
of the Directors. It is intended that all Directors, including 
the  Chairman,  would  remain  on  the  Board  no  longer 
than  nine  years.  However,  the  Board  has  agreed  that  to 
facilitate a phased and efficient refreshment of the Board, if 
necessary, the Chairman could stay on for more than nine 
years as a Director.

Re-election of Directors
In accordance with the AIC Code, all Directors are subject 
to annual re-election.

Accordingly, all Directors will be standing for re-election 
at the Company’s forthcoming AGM. As detailed above, 
following formal performance evaluation, it is considered 
that  each  current  Director  has  the  necessary  skills  and 
experience,  and  continues  to  contribute  effectively  to 
the  management  of  the  Company.  In  addition,  it  is 
believed  that  the  Board  has  the  relevant  expertise  and 
sufficient  time  to  provide  the  appropriate  leadership  and 
direction for the Company. Therefore, the Board strongly 
recommends  the  re  election  of  each  of  the  Directors  on 
the  basis  of  their  experience  and  expertise  in  investment 
matters,  their  independence  and  continuing  effectiveness 
and commitment to the Company.

Diversity
The Board supports the principle of boardroom diversity, 
of  which  gender  is  one  important  aspect,  and  the 
recommendations of the Lord Davies review. The Board’s 
aim is to have a broad range of approaches, backgrounds, 
skills, knowledge and experience represented and to make 
appointments on merit against objective criteria, including 
diversity  in  its  broadest  sense.  The  Board  believes  that 
this  will  promote  the  long-term  sustainable  success  of 
the  Company  and  generate  value  for  all  shareholders  by 
ensuring there is cognitive diversity among the Directors 
and the challenge needed to support good decision making.

To  this  end,  achieving  a  diversity  of  perspectives  and 
backgrounds on the Board will be a key consideration in 
any  future  Director  search  process.  The  gender  balance 
of,  currently,  two  women  and  two  men  exceeds  the 
recommendations of Lord Davies’ reports on Women on 
Boards.  The  Board  is  aware  that  gender  representation 
objectives  have  been  set  for  FTSE  350  companies  and 
that  targets  concerning  ethnic  diversity  have  been 
recommended. The Parker Review, which includes research 
undertaken  by  the  FRC,  set  a  target  for  each  FTSE  100 

55

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewCorporate Governance Statement (continued)

board  to  have  at  least  one  director  of  colour  by  2021 
and for each FTSE 250 board to have the same by 2024. 
The  Directors  will  continue  to  monitor  developments 
in  this  area.  When  appointing  new  Board  members,  the 
Directors will consider gender and ethnic diversity besides 
knowledge, skills and experience. However, the Board does 
not  feel  that  it  would  be  appropriate  to  set  targets  as  all 
appointments are made on merit.

Conflicts of interest
Company Directors have a statutory obligation to avoid a 
situation in which they (and connected persons) have, or 
can have, a direct or indirect interest that conflicts, or may 
possibly conflict, with the interests of the Company.

In line with the Companies Act 2006, the Board has the 
power  to  sanction  any  potential  conflicts  of  interest  that 
may  arise  and  impose  such  limits  or  conditions  that  it 
thinks fit. A register of interests and external appointments 
is maintained by the Company Secretary and is reviewed at 
every Board meeting to ensure that all details are kept up 
to date. Should a conflict arise, the Board has the authority 
to request that the Director concerned abstains from any 
relevant discussion, or vote. Appropriate authorisation will 
be sought prior to the appointment of any new directors or 
if any new conflicts or potential conflicts arise.

No conflicts of interest arose during the year under review.

Induction of new Directors
The  Company  has  an  established  process  in  place  for  the 
induction of new Directors. An induction pack will be provided 
to  new  Directors  by  the  Company  Secretary,  containing 
relevant  information  about  the  Company,  its  constitutional 
documents and its processes and procedures. New appointees 
will also have the opportunity of meeting with the Chairman 
and relevant persons at the Portfolio Manager.

Training and Advice
On an ongoing basis, and further to the annual evaluation 
process,  the  Company  Secretary  will  make  arrangements 
for  Directors  to  develop  and  refresh  their  skills  and 
knowledge in areas which are mutually identified as being 
likely to be required, or of benefit to them, in carrying out 
their  duties  effectively.  Directors  will  endeavour  to  make 
themselves  available  for  any  relevant  training  sessions 
which may be organised for the Board.

The  AIC  holds  regular  Director  Roundtable  events 
throughout  the  year,  which  are  designed  to  cover  the 

56

latest  issues  and  regulatory  developments  affecting  the 
investment company sector. The Director Roundtables are 
open to all member investment company directors.

Insurance and indemnity provisions
The Board has agreed arrangements whereby Directors may 
take independent professional advice in the furtherance of 
their  duties.  The  Company  has  Directors’  and  Officers’ 
liability insurance to cover legal defence costs and public 
offering  of  securities  insurance  in  place  in  respect  of  the 
IPO.  Under  the  Company’s  Articles  of  Association,  the 
Directors  are  provided,  subject  to  the  provisions  of  UK 
legislation,  with  an  indemnity  in  respect  of  liabilities 
which they may sustain or incur in connection with their 
appointment. The Company has also entered into a deed 
of  indemnity  with  each  Director  pursuant  to  which  it 
has agreed to insure, indemnify and/or loan funds to the 
Director in relation to certain specific liabilities incurred 
by them in the performance of their duties as a Director of 
the Company.

Relations with stakeholders
As  the  Company  does  not  have  employees,  its  main 
stakeholders comprise a small number of service providers 
and  its  shareholders.  Details  regarding  the  Company’s 
engagement with its stakeholders are set out in the Strategic 
Report on pages 27 to 32.

Internal control review and assessment process 
Details of the Company’s internal control review and the 
assessment process are outlined in the Strategic Report on 
pages 38 and 39.

Company Secretary
The Board has direct access to the advice and services of 
the  Company  Secretary,  Frostrow  Capital  LLP,  which 
is  responsible  for  ensuring  that  Board  and  Committee 
procedures  are  followed  and  that  applicable  regulations 
are  complied  with.  The  Company  Secretary  is  also 
responsible to the Board for ensuring timely delivery of the 
information and reports which the Directors require and 
that the statutory obligations of the Company are met.

Independent Professional Advice
The Board has formalised arrangements under which the 
Directors,  in  the  furtherance  of  their  duties,  may  seek 
independent professional advice at the Company’s expense.

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCCorporate Governance Statement (continued)

Legal advice was sought during the year in respect of the 
amendments  to  the  Company’s  Articles  of  Association, 
which were approved by shareholders at the 2021 Annual 
General Meeting, and in respect of the placing which was 
undertaken in July 2021. 

UK Stewardship Code and Exercise of Voting 
Powers
The Board and the Investment Manager support the UK 
Stewardship  Code,  issued  by  the  FRC,  which  sets  out 
the  principles  of  effective  stewardship  by  institutional 
investors. The Company’s investment portfolio is managed 
by Odyssean Capital LLP who have extensive experience 
and a strong commitment to effective stewardship.

The  Board  has  delegated  discretion  to  Odyssean  Capital 
LLP to exercise voting powers on its behalf in respect of 
shares owned by the Company.

The Audit Committee Report on pages 58 to 60 explains 
the  work  undertaken  to  allow  the  Directors  to  make 
this  statement  and  to  apply  the  going  concern  basis  of 
accounting. It also sets out the main roles and responsibilities 
and  the  work  of  the  Audit  Committee  throughout  the 
year, and describes the Directors’ review of the Company’s 
risk management and internal control systems.

A  description  of  the  principal  risks  facing  the  Company 
and  an  explanation  of  how  they  are  being  managed  is 
provided in the Strategic Report on pages 38 to 45.

The  Board’s  assessment  of  the  Company’s  longer-term 
viability is set out in the Business Review on pages 44 and 45.

Remuneration
The  Directors’  Remuneration  Report  on  pages  61  to  64 
sets out the levels of remuneration for each Director and 
explains how Directors’ remuneration is determined.

Nominee Share Code
Where  the  Company’s  shares  are  held  via  a  nominee 
company name, the Company undertakes:

Frostrow Capital LLP  
Company Secretary

1 June 2022

– 

– 

 to  provide  the  nominee  company  with  multiple 
copies  of  shareholder  communications,  so  long  as 
an  indication  of  quantities  has  been  provided  in 
advance; and 

 to  allow  investors holding shares through  a  nominee 
company  to  attend  general  meetings,  provided 
the  correct  authority  from  the  nominee  company 
is available. 

Nominee  companies  are  encouraged  to  provide  the 
necessary authority to underlying shareholders to attend, 
speak and vote at the Company’s general meetings.

Significant Holdings and Voting Rights
Details of the shareholders with substantial interests in the 
Company’s shares, the Directors’ authorities to issue and 
repurchase the Company’s shares, and the voting rights of 
the shares are set out in the Report of the Directors.

Audit, Risk and Internal Control
The Statement of Directors’ Responsibilities on pages 65 
and 66 describes the Directors’ responsibility for preparing 
this annual report.

57

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewAudit Committee Report

I am pleased to present the Audit Committee Report for 
the year ended 31 March 2022.

– 

 to  ensure  the  effective  operation  of  the  Company’s 
data protection policy.

Role of the Audit Committee
The primary responsibilities of the Audit Committee are:

– 

– 

– 

– 

– 

– 

– 

– 

– 

 to monitor the integrity and contents of the Company’s 
half-yearly  reports,  annual  reports  and  financial 
statements  and  accounting  policies,  and  to  review 
compliance  with  regulatory  and  financial  reporting 
requirements;

 to  advise  the  Board,  where  requested,  on  whether 
the  annual  report  and  financial  statements,  taken  as 
a  whole,  are  fair,  balanced  and  understandable  and 
provide  the  information  necessary  for  shareholders 
to  assess  the  Company’s  position  and  performance, 
business model and strategy;

 to review the principal and emerging risks facing the 
Company  that  would  threaten  its  business  model, 
future performance, solvency or liquidity;

 to  review  the  Company’s  internal  financial  controls 
and  review  the  adequacy  and  effectiveness  of  the 
Company’s risk management systems;

 to assess the prospects of the Company for the next 12 
months and to consider its longer-term viability;

 to  consider  annually  whether  there  is  a  need  for  the 
Company to have its own internal audit function;

 to  oversee  the  selection  process  of  possible  new 
appointees as external auditor;

 to make recommendations to the Board in relation to 
the appointment, re-appointment and removal of the 
Auditor;

 to approve the Auditor’s remuneration and its terms of 
engagement;

– 

 to review the adequacy and scope of the external audit;

 to  consider  the 
independence,  objectivity  and 
effectiveness  of  the  Auditor  and  the  effectiveness  of 
the audit;

 to  approve  any  non-audit  services  to  be  provided  by 
the Auditor and the fees paid for such services; and

– 

– 

58

Matters considered during the period
During  the  year  ended  31  March  2022,  the  Committee 
met twice and each Director’s attendance at these meetings 
is set out in the table on page 54. The Committee also met 
once following the year end. The Committee has:

– 

– 

– 

– 

 reviewed  the  internal  controls  and  risk  management 
systems  of  the  Company  and  its  third  party  service 
providers;

 agreed the audit plan with the Auditor, including the 
principal areas of focus, and the fees in respect of the 
audit;

 received and discussed with the Auditor their report 
on the results of the audit; and

 reviewed  the  Company’s  Half-Yearly  Report  and 
Annual  Report  and  Financial  Statements,  discussed 
the appropriateness of the accounting policies adopted 
and advised the Board accordingly.

The Committee has direct access to the Auditor, KPMG 
LLP,  who  attends  Committee  meetings  on  a  regular 
basis.  The  Committee  has  the  opportunity  to  meet  with 
the  Auditor  without  the  Portfolio  Manager  nor  the 
Administrator being present.

The issues considered by the Committee in relation to the 
Annual Report and Financial Statements were:

Significant issue
(a)  Valuation of investments

 The  Board  relies  on  the  Administrator  and  the 
Portfolio Manager to use correct listed prices and seeks 
comfort  in  the  testing  of  this  process  through  their 
internal  controls  reports.  The  Committee  reviewed 
with the Portfolio Manager and the Administrator the 
valuation  process  of  the  Company’s  investments  and 
the  systems  in  place  to  ensure  the  accuracy  of  these 
valuations. The Committee, in consultation with the 
Portfolio  Manager,  has  decided  not  to  change  any 
valuations  in  light  of  Covid-19  given  investments 
were  all  quoted  on  recognised  stock  exchanges. 
The  Company  uses  the  services  of  an  independent 
custodian, RBC Investor Services Trust (UK Branch), 
to hold the assets of the Company. The custodian’s and 
the Portfolio Manager’s records are reconciled daily.

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC 
Audit Committee Report (continued)

Other issues
(a)  Internal controls

 During the year, the Committee reviewed and updated 
the Company’s risk register. The register is updated on 
an ongoing basis and reviewed at every meeting of the 
Committee.

 The  Audit  Committee  receives  a  report  on  internal 
control  and  compliance  from  the  Portfolio  Manager 
and discusses this with the Portfolio Manager. Reports 
from  the  Company’s  other  service  providers  are  also 
reviewed. No significant matters of concern arose from 
these discussions.

 The  Company  does  not  have  an  internal  audit 
function  as  most  of  its  day-to-day  operations  are 
delegated  to  third  parties,  all  of  whom  have  their 
own  internal  control  procedures.  The  Committee 
discussed whether it would be appropriate to establish 
an internal audit function, and agreed that the existing 
system  of  monitoring  and  reporting  by  third  parties 
remains appropriate and sufficient.

(b)  Going concern and long-term viability

 In line with the AIC Code, the Committee considered 
the Company’s financial requirements and viability for 
the forthcoming year and over a longer period of three 
years.  Their  considerations  have  again  included  the 
impact of Covid-19 on the markets, society as a whole 
and the Company. Also included in the Committee’s 
considerations was the war in Ukraine and its effects 
in the UK and globally. As a result of this assessment, 
the  Committee  concluded  that  the  Company  had 
adequate resources to continue in operation and meet 
its liabilities as they fall due both for the forthcoming 
year and over the next two years. Related disclosures 
are set out on pages 44 and 45.

(c)  Maintenance of investment trust status

 The  Portfolio  Manager  and  the  Administrator 
have  reported  to  the  Audit  Committee  to  confirm 
continuing  compliance  with  the  requirements  for 
maintaining  investment  trust  status.  The  position  is 
also  discussed  with  the  Auditor  as  part  of  the  audit 
process.

Following  the  consideration  of  the  above  issues  and  its 
detailed  review,  the  Committee  was  of  the  opinion  that 
the  Annual  Report  and  Financial  Statements,  taken  as  a 
whole, are fair, balanced and understandable and provide 
the  information  necessary  for  shareholders  to  assess  the 
Company’s position and performance, business model and 
strategy and advised the Board accordingly.

Audit fees and non-audit services
An  audit  fee  of  £39,300  has  been  agreed  in  respect  of 
the audit for the year ended 31 March 2022 (year ended 
31 March 2021: £37,600).

In  accordance  with  the  Company’s  non-audit  services 
policy, the Audit Committee reviews the scope and nature 
of  all  proposed  non-audit  services  before  engagement, 
to  ensure  that  auditor  independence  and  objectivity 
are  safeguarded.  The  policy  includes  a  list  of  non-audit 
services which may be provided by the Auditor provided 
there  is  no  apparent  threat  to  independence,  as  well  as  a 
list  of  services  which  are  prohibited.  In  respect  of  any 
permissible  non-audit  service  up  to  a  fee  of  £10,000  or 
where  any  urgent  matters  arise,  the  Audit  Committee 
has  delegated  authority  to  the  Portfolio  Manager  to 
approve  these  between  meetings.  Non-audit  services  are 
capped  at  70%  of  the  average  of  the  statutory  audit  fees 
for the preceding three years. No non-audit services were 
provided by the Auditor during the year ended 31 March 
2022 (2021: none).

Further information on the fees paid to the Auditor is set 
out in note 4 to the Financial Statements on page 83.

Effectiveness of the external audit
The  Audit  Committee  monitors  and  reviews  the 
effectiveness  of  the  external  audit  carried  out  by  the 
Auditor, including a detailed review of the audit plan and 
the audit results report, and makes recommendations to the 
Board on the re-appointment, remuneration and terms of 
engagement of the Auditor. This review takes into account 
the experience and tenure of the audit partner and team, the 
nature and level of services provided, and confirmation that 
the  Auditor  has  complied  with  independence  standards. 
Any concerns with the effectiveness of the external audit 
process would be reported to the Board. No concerns were 
raised in respect of the year ended 31 March 2022.

59

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverview 
 
 
 
 
Audit Committee Report (continued)

Independence and objectivity of the Auditor
The  Committee  receives  an  annual  assurance  from  the 
Auditor  that  its  independence  is  not  compromised.  No 
non-audit  services  were  provided  by  the  Auditor  to  the 
Company  during  the  year.  Following  a  review  of  the 
performance  of  the  Auditor,  the  Committee  is  satisfied 
that  the  Auditor  remains  independent  and  objective, 
and  has  fulfilled  its  obligations  to  the  Company  and  its 
shareholders.  There  are  no  contractual  obligations  that 
would  restrict  the  Committee  in  selecting  an  alternative 
external auditor.

KPMG  LLP  has  been  the  Auditor  to  the  Company 
since  launch  in  2018.  The  auditor  is  required  to  rotate 
the  audit  partner  every  five  years  and  the  current  audit 
partner is Jatin Patel, who has been in place for four years. 
It is therefore anticipated that Mr Patel will serve as audit 
partner  for  one  more  year  until  completion  of  the  audit 
process in 2023. No tender for the audit of the Company 
has  been  undertaken.  The  Committee  will  review  the 
continuing appointment of the Auditor on an annual basis 
and  give  regular  consideration  to  the  Auditor’s  fees  and 
independence, along with matters raised during each audit.

Re-appointment of the Auditor
Following  consideration  of  the  performance  of  the 
Auditor, the services provided during the year and a review 
of  its  independence  and  objectivity,  the  Committee  has 
recommended to the Board the re-appointment of KPMG 
LLP as Auditor to the Company.

In  accordance  with  the  requirements  relating  to  the 
appointment  of  auditors,  the  Company  would  need  to 
conduct an audit tender no later than for the accounting 
period beginning 1 April 2028.

Richard King 
Chairman of the Audit Committee

1 June 2022

60

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCDirectors’ Remuneration Report

Statement from the Chairman
I  am  pleased  to  present  the  Directors’  Remuneration 
Report for the year ended 31 March 2022.

As  the  Company  has  no  employees  and  the  Board  is 
comprised  wholly  of  non-executive  Directors,  the  Board 
has  not  established  a  separate  Remuneration  Committee. 
Directors’  remuneration  is  determined  by  the  Board  as 
a  whole,  at  its  discretion  within  an  aggregate  ceiling  of 
£300,000 per annum, as prescribed in the Company’s Articles 
of Association. Each Director abstains from voting on their 
own individual remuneration. During the period, the Board 
reviewed the levels of Directors’ remuneration while having 
regard to the Company’s financial position and performance, 
remuneration  in  other  companies  of  comparable  scale  and 
complexity and market statistics generally.

During the year ended 31 March 2022, the annual fees were 
set out at the rate of £35,500 for the Chairman, £28,500 
for the Chairman of the Audit committee and £25,000 for 
a Director. 

For the year ending 31 March 2023, it is proposed that all 
Directors’  fees  be  increased  by  3.5%  and  rounded  up  to 
the nearest £100 with effect from 1 April 2022 in order to 
bring them more in line with the market. The new annual 
fee rates for the year ending 31 March 2022 are £36,800 

for the Chairman, £29,500 for the Chairman of the Audit 
Committee and £25,900 for a Director.

Each  of  the  Directors  has  agreed  to  use  their  applicable 
Directors’  fees  (net  of  applicable  taxes)  to  acquire  the 
Company’s  ordinary  shares  in  the  secondary  market, 
subject  to  regulatory  requirements.  In  relation  to  any 
dealings, the Directors will comply with the share dealing 
code  adopted  by  the  Company  in  accordance  with  the 
Market Abuse Regulation.

An ordinary resolution will be put to shareholders at the 
forthcoming AGM to be held on 21 September 2022 to 
receive and approve the Directors’ Remuneration Report.

The  Directors’  Remuneration  Policy  was  last  approved 
by  shareholders  at  the  AGM  held  on  27  June  2019  and 
will  again  be  on  the  agenda  for  the  forthcoming  AGM 
to be held on 21 September 2022. The provisions of the 
Remuneration  Policy,  as  detailed  on  page  64,  will  apply 
until they are next put to shareholders for renewal of that 
approval,  which  must  be  at  intervals  of  not  more  than 
three  years,  or  earlier,  if  proposals  are  made  to  vary  the 
policy.  The  Remuneration  Policy  is  binding  and  sets  the 
parameters  within  which  Directors’  remuneration  may 
be set. There will be no significant change in the way the 
Remuneration Policy will be implemented in the course of 
the next financial year.

Company performance
The graph below compares the total return to holders of ordinary shares since they were first admitted to trading on 
the LSE, compared to the total return of the NSCI ex IC plus AIM Total Return Index. Further information about the 
Company’s performance during the year is detailed in the Chairman’s Statement and the Portfolio Manager’s Report on 
pages 7 to 23.

OIT Share Price 

NSCI ex IC plus AIM Total Return Index

180
180

160
160

140
140

120
120

100
100

80
80

60
60

M ay 2018

Jul 2018

Sep 2018

N ov 2018

Jan 2019

M ar 2019

M ay 2019

Jul 2019

Sep 2019

N ov 2019

Jan 2020

M ar 2020

M ay 2020

Jul 2020

Sep 2020

N ov 2020

Jan 2021

M ar 2021

M ay 2021

Jul 2021

Sep 2021

N ov 2021

Jan 2022

M ar 2022

As at 31 March 2022. Performance measured from close of business on 1 May 2018. Share performance since inception assumes IPO price of 100.0p. 
Source: Bloomberg. Rebased to 100.

61

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewDirectors’ Remuneration Report (continued)

Directors’ remuneration for the year ended 31 March 2022 (audited)
The single total figure table below details the remuneration received by the Directors who served during the year:

Director

Fees

Jane Tufnell¹
Arabella Cecil2
Peter Hewitt2
Richard King1

£35,500
£25,000
–3
£28,500
£89,000

Year ended 31 March 2022

Year ended 31 March 2021

Taxable  
benefits

–
–
£493
–
£493

Total

Fees

Taxable  
benefits

£35,500
£25,000
£493
£28,500
£89,493

£34,000
£24,000
–3
£27,500
£85,500

–
–
–
–
–

Total

£34,000
£24,000
–
£27,500
£85,500

Percentage 
change fees 
(%)

4.4%
4.2%
–
3.6%

¹  Appointed on 21 December 2017.
²  Appointed on 31 January 2018.
3 

 Peter Hewitt is not receiving a fee in respect of his services as a Director to the Company; this is owing to his employment as a director of Global Equities in BMO 
Global Asset Management Limited.

There  are  no  variable  elements  in  the  remuneration  payable  to  the  Directors.  Taxable  benefits  included  in  the  above 
table are in respect of the amounts reimbursed to Directors as travel and other expenses properly incurred by them in the 
performance of their duties.

Relative importance of spend on pay
The table below shows the amount of the Company’s income spent on pay.

Year ended  
31 March 2022

Year ended  
31 March 2021

Spend on Directors’ fees* 
Management fee and other expenses

£89,493
£2,122,000

£85,500
£1,442,000

*  As the Company has no employees, the total spend on pay on remuneration comprises only the Directors’ fees.

In  the  absence  of  any  employees,  dividend  payments  made  during  the  year  and  amount  spent  on  shares  buybacks, 
the  management  fee  and  other  expenses  have  been  included  because  the  Directors  believe  it  will  help  shareholders’ 
understanding of the relative importance of the spend on pay. The figures for this measure are the same as those shown in 
notes 3 and 4 to the Financial Statements.

62

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCDirectors’ Remuneration Report (continued)

 Directors’ interests (audited)
The Company’s Articles of Association do not require a Director to own shares in the Company. The interests of the 
Directors and any connected persons in the ordinary shares of the Company at 31 March 2022 and 1 June 2022, the date 
of this report, are shown in the table below:

Jane Tufnell
Arabella Cecil
Peter Hewitt
Richard King

1 June
2022
Number of shares

31 March
2022
Number of shares

31 March
2021
Number of shares

654,225
178,896
35,000
76,453

651,125
175,755
35,000
74,315

572,910
152,618
35,000
67,800

None  of  the  Directors  or  any  person  connected  with  them  had  a  material  interest  in  the  Company’s  transactions, 
arrangements or agreements during the year.

Voting at AGM
The Directors’ Remuneration Report for the year ended 31 March 2021 was approved at the AGM held on 22 September 
2021. The votes cast by proxy on the resolution were:

For
Against
Total votes cast
Votes withheld

Directors’ Remuneration Report

Number of votes

% of votes cast

45,171,443
4,000
45,175,443
6,846

99.99
0.01
100.0
0.0

Any proxy votes which were at the discretion of the Chairman were included in the “For” total.
A vote withheld is not a vote in law and is not counted in the calculations of votes cast by proxy.

63

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewDirectors’ Remuneration Report (continued)

Remuneration policy
The  Company  follows  the  recommendation  of  the  AIC 
Code that non executive Directors’ remuneration should 
reflect  the  time  commitment  and  responsibilities  of 
the  role.  The  Board’s  policy  is  that  the  remuneration  of 
non- executive  Directors  should  reflect  the  experience  of 
the Board as a whole, and be determined with reference to 
comparable organisations and appointments.

All Directors are non-executive, appointed under the terms 
of letters of appointment. There are no service contracts in 
place. The Company has no employees.

The  fees  for  the  non-executive  Directors  are  determined 
within  the  limits  (not  to  exceed  £300,000  per  annum) 
set  out  in  the  Company’s  Articles  of  Association,  or  any 
greater sum that may be determined by special resolution 
of  the  Company.  Directors  are  not  eligible  for  bonuses, 
share  options,  long-term  incentive  schemes  or  other 
performance-related benefits as the Board does not believe 
that this is appropriate for non-executive Directors. There 
are  no  pension  arrangements  or  retirement  benefits  in 
place for the Directors of the Company.

Under  the  Company’s  Articles  of  Association,  if  any 
Director  is  called  upon  to  perform  or  render  any  special 
duties or services outside their ordinary duties as a Director, 
they may be paid such reasonable additional remuneration 
as the Board, or any committee authorised by the Board, 
may from time to time determine.

The  Directors  are  entitled  to  be  repaid  all  reasonable 
travelling,  hotel  and  other  expenses  properly  incurred 
by  them  in  or  about  the  performance  of  their  duties  as 
Director,  including  any  expenses  incurred  in  attending 
meetings of the Board or any committee of the Board or 
general meetings of the Company.

insurance  cover 
Directors’  and  Officers’ 
maintained by the Company on behalf of the Directors.

liability 

is 

Directors’ fee levels

Component Role

Annual fee

Chairman

Rate at  
1 April
2022

Purpose of  
Remuneration

£36,800 Commitment as Chair-
man1

Annual fee

Non-executive 
Director

£25,900

Commitment as 
non-executive Director2

Additional fee Chairman of  

£3,600

the Audit  
Committee

Additional fee All Directors

N/A

Expenses

All Directors

N/A

For additional respon-
sibilities and time 
commitments3

For extra or special  
services performed in 
their role as a Director4

Reimbursement of  
expenses incurred in 
the performance of 
duties as a Director

1   The Chairman of the Board is paid a higher fee than the other Directors to 

reflect the more onerous role.

2   The Company’s Articles of Association limit the aggregate fees payable to the 

Board of Directors to £300,000 per annum.

3   The Chairman of the Audit Committee is paid a higher fee than the other 

Directors to reflect the more onerous role.

4   Additional fees would only be paid in exceptional circumstances in relation 

to the performance of extra or special services.

Each  of  the  Directors  has  agreed  to  use  their  applicable 
Directors’  fees  (net  of  applicable  taxes)  to  acquire  the 
Company’s  ordinary  shares  in  the  secondary  market, 
subject to regulatory requirements.

Fees are reviewed annually in accordance with the  above 
policy.  The  fee  for  any  new  Director  appointed  to  the 
Board will be determined on the same basis. The Company 
is  committed  to  ongoing  shareholder  dialogue  and  any 
views expressed by shareholders on the fees being paid to 
Directors would be taken into consideration by the Board 
when reviewing the Directors’ remuneration policy and in 
the annual review of Directors’ fees.

Compensation will not be made upon early termination of 
appointment.

Approval
The Directors’ Remuneration Report was approved by the 
Board and signed on its behalf by:

Jane Tufnell  
Chairman

1 June 2022

64

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStatement of Directors’ Responsibilities

The  Directors  are  responsible  for  preparing  the  Annual 
Report  and  Financial  Statements  in  accordance  with 
applicable law and regulation.

Company law requires the Directors to prepare financial 
statements  for  each  financial  period.  Accordingly, 
the  Directors  have  prepared  the  Financial  Statements 
in  accordance  with  IFRS  as  adopted  by  the  United 
Kingdom.  Under  company  law,  the  Directors  must  not 
approve the Financial Statements unless they are satisfied 
that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of 
the Company and of the profit or loss of the Company 
for that period.

In  preparing  the  Financial  Statements,  the  Directors  are 
required to:

 select suitable accounting policies in accordance with 
IAS 8: “Accounting Policies, Changes in  Accounting 
Estimates  and  Errors”  and 
them 
consistently;

then  apply 

 present information, including accounting policies, in 
a manner that provides relevant, reliable, comparable 
and understandable information;

 provide  additional  disclosures  when  compliance 
with  specific  requirements  in  IFRS  is  insufficient  to 
enable  users  to  understand  the  impact  of  particular 
transactions,  other  events  and  conditions  on 
the  Company’s  financial  position  and  financial 
performance;

 state  whether  applicable  IFRS  have  been  followed, 
subject  to  any  material  departures  disclosed  and 
explained in the Financial Statements;

The  Directors  are  responsible  for  keeping  adequate 
accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain 
the  Company’s  transactions  and  disclose  with  reasonable 
accuracy at any time the financial position of the Company 
and  enable  them  to  ensure  that  the  Financial  Statements 
comply  with  Companies  Act  2006  and  Article  4  of  the 
IAS Regulation. They are also responsible for safeguarding 
the assets of the Company and hence for taking reasonable 
steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other 
irregularities.

Under  applicable  law  and  regulations,  the  Directors  are 
also responsible for preparing a Strategic Report, Directors’ 
Report,  Directors’  Remuneration  Report  and  Corporate 
Governance  Statement  that  comply  with  that  law  and 
those regulations, and for ensuring that the Annual Report 
includes information required by the Listing Rules of the 
FCA.

The Financial Statements are published on the Company’s 
website, www.oitplc.com, which is maintained on behalf of 
the Company by Frostrow Capital LLP. The work carried 
out by the Auditor does not involve consideration of the 
maintenance and integrity of this website and accordingly, 
the Auditor accepts no responsibility for any changes that 
have occurred to the Financial Statements since they were 
initially presented on the website.

Under  the  Portfolio  Management  Agreement,  the 
Portfolio  Manager  is  responsible  for  the  maintenance 
and integrity of the corporate and financial information 
included  on  the  Company’s  website.  Visitors  to  the 
website  need  to  be  aware  that  legislation  in  the  United 
Kingdom  covering  the  preparation  and  dissemination 
of the financial statements may differ from legislation in 
their jurisdiction.

 make  judgements  and  accounting  estimates  that  are 
reasonable and prudent; and

We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:

 prepare the Financial Statements on the going concern 
basis  unless  it  is  inappropriate  to  presume  that  the 
Company will continue in business.

– 

– 

 the  Financial  Statements,  which  have  been  prepared 
in  accordance  with  IFRS  as  adopted  by  the  United 
Kingdom,  give  a  true  and  fair  view  of  the  assets, 
liabilities, financial position and loss of the Company; 
and

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

65

– 

– 

– 

– 

– 

– 

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewStatement of Directors’ Responsibilities (continued)

The  Directors  consider  that  the  Annual  Report  and 
Financial Statements, taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and 
understandable  and  provides  the  information  necessary 
for  shareholders  to  assess  the  Company’s  position  and 
performance, business model and strategy.

On behalf of the Board

Jane Tufnell  
Chairman

1 June 2022

66

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCIndependent 
auditor’s report

to the members of Odyssean Investment Trust PLC

We were first appointed as auditor by the shareholders 
on 29 November 2018. The period of total uninterrupted 
engagement is for the four financial years ended 
31 March 2022. We have fulfilled our ethical responsibilities 
under, and we remain independent of the Company in 
accordance with, UK ethical requirements including the 
FRC Ethical Standard as applied to listed public interest 
entities. No non-audit services prohibited by that standard 
were provided.

Overview

Materiality:
Financial statements as 
a whole

£1.6m (2021: £1.25m) 
1% of Total Assets (2021: 1%)

Key audit matter:

vs 2021

Recurring risks:

Carrying amount of quoted 
investments

1. Our opinion is unmodified

 We have audited the financial statements of Odyssean 
Investment Trust PLC (“the Company”) for the year 
ended 31 March 2022 which comprise the statement of 
comprehensive income, balance  sheet, statement of 
changes in equity, cash flow statement, and the related 
notes, including the accounting policies in note 1.

In our opinion:

 –

 –

 –

 the financial statements give a true and fair view of 
the state of the Company’s affairs as at 31 March 2022 
and its return for the year then ended;

 have been properly prepared in accordance with 
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) as 
adopted by the UK; and

 have been prepared in accordance with the  
requirements of the Companies Act 2006.

Basis for opinion
We conducted our audit in accordance with International 
Standards on Auditing (UK) (“ISAs (UK)”) and applicable 
law. Our responsibilities are described below. We believe 
that the audit evidence we have obtained is a sufficient 
and appropriate basis for our opinion. Our audit opinion is 
consistent with our report to the audit committee.

ODYSSE AN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC

67

Strategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverview2. Key audit matters: our assessment of risks of material misstatement

2. Key audit matters: our assessment of risks of material misstatement

Key audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgment, were of most significance in the audit of the financial  
statements and include the most significant assessed risks of material misstatement (whether or not due to fraud) identified by  
Key audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgment, were of most significance in the audit of the financial  
us, including those which had the greatest effect on: the overall audit strategy; the allocation of resources in the audit; and  
statements and include the most significant assessed risks of material misstatement (whether or not due to fraud) identified by  us, 
directing the efforts of the engagement team. We summarise below the key audit matter (unchanged from 2021), in arriving at  
including those which had the greatest effect on: the overall audit strategy; the allocation of resources in the audit; and  directing the 
our audit opinion above, together with our key audit procedures to address this matter and, as required for public interest  
efforts of the engagement team. We summarise below the key audit matter (unchanged from 2021), in arriving at our audit opinion 
entities, our results from those procedures. This matter was addressed, and our results are based on procedures undertaken,  in 
above, together with our key audit procedures to address this matter and, as required for public interest entities, our results from 
the context of, and solely for the purpose of, our audit of the financial statements as a whole, and in forming our opinion  
those procedures. This matter was addressed, and our results are based on procedures undertaken, in the context of, and solely for the 
thereon, and consequently are incidental to that opinion, and we do not provide a separate opinion on this matter.
purpose of, our audit of the financial statements as a whole, and in forming our opinion thereon, and consequently are incidental to that 
opinion, and we do not provide a separate opinion on this matter.

The risk

Our response

Carrying amount of quoted  
investments

The risk

Low risk, high value

Low risk, high value:

Carrying amount of quoted 
investments
(£155m; (2021: £109m))

(£155m; (2021: £109m))

Refer to page 58 (Audit  
Committee Report), page 77
(accounting policy) and page 85 
and 86 (financial disclosures).

Refer to page 58 (Audit Committee 
Report), page 77 (accounting policy) 
and page 85 and 86 (financial 
disclosures).

The Company’s portfolio of quoted  
investments makes up 97% (2021:  87%) of 
The Company’s portfolio of quoted  
the Company’s total assets by  value and is 
investments makes up 97% (2021: 87%) 
considered to be one of the  key drivers of 
of the Company’s total assets by value 
results. We do not  consider these 
and is considered to be one of the  key 
investments to be at a  high risk of 
drivers of results. We do not consider these 
significant misstatement, or  to be subject to 
investments to be at a high risk of significant 
a significant level of  judgement because 
misstatement, or to be subject to a significant 
they comprise  liquid, quoted investments. 
level of judgement because they comprise  
However,  due to their materiality in the 
liquid, quoted investments. However, due to 
context of  the financial statements as a 
their materiality in the context of the financial 
whole,  they are considered to be one of the  
statements as a whole, they are considered 
areas which had the greatest effect on  our 
overall audit strategy and allocation  of 
to be one of the areas which had the 
resources in planning and completing  our
greatest effect on our overall audit strategy 
audit.
and allocation of resources in planning and 
completing our audit.

Our response

We performed the detailed tests below rather
than seeking to rely on any of the Company’s 
We performed the detailed tests below rather
controls, because the nature of the balance is 
than seeking to rely on any of the Company’s 
such that we would expect to obtain audit 
controls, because the nature of the balance 
evidence primarily through the detailed 
is such that we would expect to obtain audit 
procedures described below.
evidence primarily through the detailed 
procedures described below.

Our procedures included:

Our procedures included:

Tests of detail: Agreeing the valuation of 
100%  of quoted investments in the 
portfolio to  externally quoted prices; and
Tests of detail: Agreeing the valuation of 
100% of quoted investments in the portfolio 
to  externally quoted prices; and

Enquiry of custodians: Agreeing 100% of  
investment holdings in the portfolio to  
independently received third party 
Enquiry of custodians: Agreeing 100% 
confirmations from investment custodians.
of investment holdings in the portfolio 
to independently received third party 
Our findings
confirmations from investment custodians.
We found the carrying amount of
quoted  investments to be 
Our findings: We found the carrying amount 
acceptable (2021:  acceptable).
of quoted investments to be acceptable 
(2021: acceptable).

3.  Our application of Company materiality and 

an overview of the scope of our audit

3. Our application of materiality and  an 
overview of the scope of our audit

Materiality for the financial statements as a whole was set 
at £1.6m (2021: £1.25m), determined with reference to a 
benchmark of total assets, of which it represents 1% (2021: 1%).

Materiality for the financial statements as a whole was set  
In line with our audit methodology, our procedures on  
at £1.6m (2021: £1.25m), determined with reference to a  
individual account balances and disclosures were performed 
benchmark of total assets, of which it represents 1%  
to a lower threshold, performance materiality, so as to reduce 
(2021: 1%).
to an acceptable level the risk that individually immaterial 
misstatements in individual account balances add up to a 
In line with our audit methodology, our procedures on  
material amount across the financial  statements as a whole. 
individual account balances and disclosures were  
Performance materiality was set at 75% (2021: 75%) of 
performed to a lower threshold, performance materiality,  
materiality for the financial statements as a whole, which 
so as to reduce to an acceptable level the risk that  
equates to £1.2m (2021: £0.94m). We applied this percentage 
individually immaterial misstatements in individual account  
in our determination  of performance materiality because we did 
balances add up to a material amount across the financial  
not identify any factors indicating an elevated level of risk.
statements as a whole. Performance materiality was set at  
75% (2021: 75%) of materiality for the financial  
statements as a whole, which equates to £1.2m (2021:
£0.94m). We applied this percentage in our determination  
of performance materiality because we did not identify any  
factors indicating an elevated level of risk.

68

Total Assets
£160.97m (2021: £125.1m)

Materiality
£1.6m (2021: £1.25m)

£1.6m
Whole financial  
statements materiality

£1.2m
Performance materiality  
(2021: £0.94m)

Materiality  
Total assets

£80k
Misstatements reported to the  
audit committee (2021: £63k)

We agreed to report to the Audit Committee any corrected 
or uncorrected identified misstatements exceeding £80k 
(2021: £63k), in addition to other identified misstatements that 
warranted reporting on qualitative grounds.

We agreed to report to the Audit Committee any 
corrected  or uncorrected identified misstatements 
exceeding £80k  (2021: £63k), in addition to other 
identified misstatements  that warranted reporting on 
qualitative grounds.

Our audit of the Company was undertaken to the materiality 
Our audit of the Company was undertaken to the  
level specified above and was performed by a single audit team.
materiality level specified above and was performed by a 
single audit team.

The scope of the audit work was fully substantive as we did not 
rely upon the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

The scope of the audit work was fully substantive as we 
did not rely upon the Company’s internal control over 
financial reporting.

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC4. Going Concern

The Directors have prepared the financial statements on 
the  going concern basis as they do not intend to liquidate 
the  Company or to cease their operations, and as they have 
concluded that the Company’s financial position means that this 
is realistic. They have also concluded that there are no material 
uncertainties that could have cast significant doubt over their 
ability to continue as a going concern for at least a year from 
the date of approval of the financial statements (“the going 
concern period”).

We used our knowledge of the Company, its industry, and the 
general economic environment to identify the inherent risks 
to its business model and analysed how those risks might 
affect the Company’s financial resources or ability to continue 
operations over the going concern period. The risks that we 
considered most likely to adversely affect the Company’s 
available financial resources and its ability to operate over this 
period were:

 –

 –

the impact of a significant reduction in the valuation of 
investments;

the liquidity of the investment portfolio and its ability to 
meet the liabilities of the Company as and when they fall 
due; and

 –

the operational resilience of key service organisations.

We considered whether these risks could plausibly affect the 
liquidity in the going concern period by assessing the degree of 
downside assumption that, individually and collectively, could 
result in a liquidity issue, taking into account the Company’s 
liquid investment position (and the results of their stress 
testing).

We considered whether the going concern disclosure in  note 1 
to the financial statements gives a full and accurate description 
of the Directors’ assessment of going concern, including the 
identified risks and related sensitivities.

Our conclusions based on this work:

 – we consider that the directors’ use of the going concern 
basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial 
statements is appropriate;

 – we have not identified, and concur with the directors’ 

assessment that there is no material uncertainty related to 
events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may 
cast significant doubt on the Company's ability to continue 
as a going concern for the going concern period;

 – we have nothing material to add or draw attention to 

in  relation to the directors’ statement in Note 1 to the 
financial statements on the use of the going concern basis 
of accounting with no material uncertainties that may cast 
significant doubt over the Company’s use of that basis for 
the going concern period, and we found the going concern 
disclosure in note 1 to be acceptable; and

 –

the related statement under the Listing Rules set out 
on  page 44 is materially consistent with the financial  
statements and our audit knowledge.

However, as we cannot predict all future events or conditions 
and as subsequent events may result in outcomes that are 
inconsistent with judgements that were reasonable at the time 
they were made, the above conclusions are not a guarantee that 
the Company will continue in operation.

5.  Fraud  and  breaches  of  laws  and  regulations  –  ability 

to detect

Identifying and responding to risks of material misstatement 
due to fraud
To identify risks of material misstatement due to fraud (“fraud 
risks”) we assessed events or conditions that could indicate an 
incentive or pressure to commit fraud or provide an opportunity 
to commit fraud. Our risk assessment procedures included:

 –

 –

enquiring of Directors as to the Company’s high-level 
policies and procedures to prevent and detect fraud, 
as  well as whether they have knowledge of any actual, 
suspected or alleged fraud;

assessing the segregation of duties in place between the 
Directors, the Administrator and the Company’s Investment 
Manager; and

 –

reading Board and Audit Committee minutes.

As required by auditing standards, we perform procedures 
to address the risk of management override of controls, in 
particular to the risk that management may be in a position 
to make inappropriate accounting entries. We evaluated the 
design and implementation of the controls over journal entries 
and other adjustments and made inquiries of the Administrator 
about inappropriate or unusual activity relating to the processing 
of journal entries and other adjustments. We substantively 
tested all material post-closing entries and, based on the 
results of our risk assessment procedures and understanding 
of the process, including the segregation of duties between 
the Directors and the Administrator, no further high-risk journal 
entries or other adjustments were identified.

On this audit we have rebutted the fraud risk related to  revenue 
recognition because the revenue is non-judgemental and 
straightforward, with limited opportunity for manipulation. We 
did not identify any significant unusual transactions or additional 
fraud risks.

Identifying and responding to risks of material misstatement 
due to non-compliance with laws and regulations
We identified areas of laws and regulations that could 
reasonably be expected to have a material effect on the financial 
statements from our general commercial and sector experience 
and through discussion with the Directors, the Investment 
Manager and the Administrator (as required by auditing 
standards) and discussed with the Directors the policies and 
procedures regarding compliance with laws and regulations. 
As the Company is regulated, our assessment of risks 
involved gaining an understanding of the control environment 
including the entity’s procedures for complying with regulatory 
requirements.

ODYSSE AN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC

69

Strategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverview5.  Fraud and breaches of laws and regulations – 

ability to detect (continued)

The potential effect of these laws and regulations on the 
financial statements varies considerably.

Firstly, the Company is subject to laws and regulations that 
directly affect the financial statements including financial 
reporting legislation (including related companies legislation), 
distributable profits legislation, and its qualification as an 
Investment Trust under UK taxation legislation, any breach of 
which could lead to the Company losing various deductions 
and exemptions from UK corporation tax, and we assessed the 
extent of compliance with these laws and regulations as part of 
our procedures on the related financial statement items.

Secondly, the Company is subject to many other laws and 
regulations where the consequences of non-compliance 
could have a material effect on amounts or disclosures in the 
financial statements, for instance through the imposition of 
fines or litigation. We identified the following areas as those 
most likely to have such an effect: money laundering, data 
protection, bribery and corruption legislation and certain aspects 
of company legislation recognising the financial and regulated 
nature of the Company’s activities and its legal form. Auditing 
standards limit the required audit procedures to identify 
non-compliance with these laws and regulations to enquiry of 
the Directors and the Administrator and inspection of regulatory 
and legal correspondence, if any. Therefore if a breach of 
operational regulations is not disclosed to us or evident from 
relevant correspondence, an audit will not detect that breach.

Context of the ability of the audit to detect fraud or breaches 
of law or regulation
Owing to the inherent limitations of an audit, there is an  
unavoidable risk that we may not have detected some material 
misstatements in the financial statements, even though we 
have properly planned and performed our audit in accordance 
with auditing standards. For example, the further removed 
non-compliance with laws and regulations is from the events 
and transactions reflected in the financial statements, the less 
likely the inherently limited procedures required by auditing 
standards would identify it.

In addition, as with any audit, there remained a higher risk of 
non-detection of fraud, as these may involve collusion, forgery, 
intentional omissions, misrepresentations, or the override of 
internal controls. Our audit procedures are designed to detect 
material misstatement. We are not responsible for preventing 
non-compliance or fraud and cannot be expected to detect 
non-compliance with all laws and regulations.

6.  We have nothing to report on the other information in 

the Annual Report

The directors are responsible for the other information 
presented in the Annual Report together with the financial 
statements. Our opinion on the financial statements does not 
cover the other information and, accordingly, we do not express 
an audit opinion or, except as explicitly stated below, any form 
of assurance conclusion thereon.

Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in 
doing so, consider whether, based on our financial statements 
audit work, the information therein is materially misstated 
or inconsistent with the financial statements or our audit 
knowledge. Based solely on that work we have not identified 
material misstatements in the other information.

Strategic report and directors’ report
Based solely on our work on the other information:

 – we have not identified material misstatements in the 

strategic report and the directors’ report;

 –

 –

in our opinion the information given in those reports for the 
financial year is consistent with the financial statements; 
and

in our opinion those reports have been prepared in  
accordance with the Companies Act 2006.

Directors’ remuneration report
In our opinion the part of the Directors’ Remuneration Report to 
be audited has been properly prepared in accordance with the 
Companies Act 2006.

Disclosures of emerging and principal risks and longer-term 
viability
We are required to perform procedures to identify whether 
there is a material inconsistency between the Directors’ 
disclosures in respect of emerging and principal risks and 
the viability statement, and the financial statements and our 
audit knowledge.

Based on those procedures, we have nothing material to add or 
draw attention to in relation to:

 –

 –

 –

the directors’ confirmation within the principal risks, 
emerging risks and risk management section on page 
38 that they have carried out a robust assessment of the 
emerging and principal risks facing the Company, including 
those that would threaten its business model, future 
performance, solvency and liquidity;

The Emerging and Principal Risks disclosures describing 
these risks and explaining how they are being managed  
and mitigated; and

the directors’ explanation in the viability statement of how 
they have assessed the prospects of the Company, over 
what period they have done so and why they considered 
that period to be appropriate, and their statement as to 
whether they have a reasonable expectation that the 
Company will be able to continue in operation and meet 
its liabilities as they fall due over the period of their 
assessment, including any related disclosures drawing 
attention to any necessary qualifications or assumptions.

We are also required to review the Viability Statement, set 
out on page 44 under the Listing Rules. Based on the above 
procedures, we have concluded that the above disclosures 
are materially consistent with the financial statements and our 
audit knowledge.

70

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC6. We have nothing to report on the other information 

8. Respective responsibilities

in the Annual Report (continued)

Our work is limited to assessing these matters in the context 
of only the knowledge acquired during our financial statements 
audit. As we cannot predict all future events or conditions and as 
subsequent events may result in outcomes that are inconsistent 
with judgments that were reasonable at the time they were 
made, the absence of anything to report on these statements is 
not a guarantee as to the Company’s longer-term viability.

Corporate governance disclosures
We are required to perform procedures to identify whether 
there is a material inconsistency between the Directors’ 
corporate governance disclosures and the financial statements 
and our audit knowledge.

Based on those procedures, we have concluded that each of the 
following is materially consistent with the financial statements 
and our audit knowledge:

 –

 –

 –

the Directors’ statement that they consider that the annual 
report and financial statements taken as a whole is fair, 
balanced and understandable, and provides the information 
necessary for shareholders to assess the Company’s 
position and performance, business model and strategy;

the section of the annual report describing the work of 
the Audit Committee, including the significant issues that 
the audit committee considered in relation to the financial 
statements, and how these issues were addressed; and

the section of the annual report that describes the review 
of the effectiveness of the Company’s risk management 
and internal control systems.

We are required to review the part of Corporate Governance 
Statement relating to the Company’s compliance with the 
provisions of the UK Corporate Governance Code specified by 
the Listing Rules for our  review. We have nothing to report in 
this respect

Directors’ responsibilities
As explained more fully in their statement set out on page 65, 
the Directors are responsible for: the preparation of the financial 
statements including being satisfied that they give a true and 
fair view; such internal control as they determine is necessary 
to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free 
from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error; 
assessing the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern, 
disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern; and 
using the going concern basis of accounting unless they either 
intend to liquidate the Company or to cease operations, or have 
no  realistic alternative but to do so.

Auditor’s responsibilities
Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about 
whether the financial statements as a whole are free from 
material misstatement, whether due to fraud or other 
irregularities (see below), or error, and to issue our opinion  in 
an auditor’s report. Reasonable assurance is a high level of 
assurance, but does not guarantee that an audit conducted 
in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material 
misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from 
fraud, other irregularities or error and are  considered material if, 
individually or in aggregate, they could reasonably be expected 
to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis 
of the financial statements.

The Company is required to include these financial statements 
in an annual financial report prepared using the single electronic 
reporting format specified in the TD ESEF Regulation. This 
auditor's report provides no assurance over whether the 
annual financial report has been prepared in accordance with 
that format.

A fuller description of our responsibilities is provided on the  
FRC’s website at www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities

9.  The purpose of our audit work and to whom we owe 

7.  We  have  nothing  to  report  on  the  other  matters  on 

our responsibilities

which we are required to report by exception

Under the Companies Act 2006, we are required to report to you 
if, in our opinion:

 –

 –

 –

adequate accounting records have not been kept by the 
Company, or returns adequate for our audit have not been 
received from branches not visited by us; or

the financial statements and the part of the Directors’ 
Remuneration Report to be audited are not in agreement 
with the accounting records and returns; or

certain disclosures of directors’ remuneration specified by 
law are not made; or

 – we have not received all the information and explanations 

we require for our audit.

We have nothing to report in these respects.

This report is made solely to the Company’s members, as a 
body, in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies 
Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might 
state to the Company’s members those matters we are required 
to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose. 
To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or 
assume responsibility to anyone other than the Company and 
the Company’s members, as a body, for our audit work, for this  
report, or for the opinions we have formed.

Jatin Patel (Senior Statutory Auditor)
for and on behalf of KPMG LLP, Statutory Auditor
Chartered Accountants
15 Canada Square 
London
E14 5GH

1 June 2022

71

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewFinancial Statements

72

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Statement of Comprehensive Income
Statement of Changes in Equity

73 
74 
75  Balance Sheet
76  Cash Flow Statement
77  Notes to the Financial Statements

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStatement of Comprehensive Income

for the year ended 31 March 2022

Year ended 31 March 2022

Year ended 31 March 2021

Notes

Revenue
£’000

Capital
£’000

Total
£’000

Revenue
£’000

Capital
£’000

Total
£’000

Income
Net gains on investments at fair value

Total income

Expenses
Portfolio management and performance fees
Other expenses

Total expenses

Return/(loss) before taxation
Taxation

2
7

3
4

5

2,573
–

–
24,137

2,573
24,137

852
–

–
45,113

852
45,113

2,573

24,137

26,710

852

45,113

45,965

(1,459)
(663)

(2,436)
–

(3,895)
(663)

(943)
(499)

(1,825)
–

(2,768)
(499)

(2,122)

(2,436)

(4,558)

(1,442)

(1,825)

(3,267)

451
–

21,701
–

22,152
–

(590) 43,288
–

(3)

42,698
(3)

Return/(loss) for the period

451

21,701

22,152

(593) 43,288

42,695

Basic and diluted return/(loss) per share 
(pence)

6

0.5

23.5

24.0

(0.7)

49.2

48.5

The total column of this statement is the Income Statement of the Company prepared in accordance with International 
Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”), as adopted by the United Kingdom. The supplementary revenue and capital 
columns are presented in accordance with the Statement of Recommended Practice issued by the AIC (“AIC SORP”).

All revenue and capital items in the above statement derive from continuing operations. No operations were acquired or 
discontinued during the period.

There is no other comprehensive income, and therefore the profit for the period after tax is also the total comprehensive 
income.

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

73

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewStatement of Changes in Equity

for the year ended 31 March 2022

Share
capital
£’000

Share
premium
account
£’000

Special
distributable
reserve
£’000

Notes

Capital
reserve
£’000

Revenue
reserve
£’000

Total
£’000

Year ended 31 March 2022
Opening balance as at 1 April 2021
Total comprehensive income for the year
Net proceeds from share issuance 
Shares released from treasury 

883

449

85,245

79
–

12,583
212

–
230

36,562
21,701
–
–

(579) 122,560
22,152
451
12,662
–
442
–

As at 31 March 2022

962

13,244

85,475

58,263

(128) 157,816

Share
capital
£’000

Share
premium
account
£’000

Special
distributable
reserve
£’000

Notes

Capital
reserve
£’000

Revenue
reserve
£’000

Total
£’000

Year ended 31 March 2021
Opening balance as at 1 April 2020
Total comprehensive income for the period
Share purchases into treasury

883
–
–

449
–
–

85,475
–
(230)

(6,726)
43,288
–

14
(593)
–

80,095
42,695
(230)

As at 31 March 2021

883

449

85,245

36,562

(579) 122,560

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

74

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCBalance Sheet

as at 31 March 2022

Non current assets
Investments at fair value through profit or loss

Current assets
Trade and other receivables
Cash and cash equivalents

Total assets

Current liabilities
Trade and other payables

Total liabilities

Total assets less current liabilities

Net assets

Represented by:
Share capital
Share premium account
Special distributable reserve
Capital reserve
Revenue reserve

31 March
2022
£’000

31 March
2021
£’000

Notes

7

8

155,348

109,259

420
5,197

143
15,689

5,617

15,832

160,965

125,091

9

(3,149)

(2,531)

(3,149)

(2,531)

157,816

122,560

157,816

122,560

10

10

962
13,244
85,475
58,263
(128)

883
449
85,245
36,562
(579)

Total equity attributable to equity holders of the Company

157,816

122,560

Basic and diluted NAV per ordinary share (pence)

11

164.0

139.3

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

These statements were approved and authorised for issue by the Board on 1 June 2022 and signed on its behalf by:

Jane Tufnell 
Chairman

Company Registered Number: 11121934

75

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewCash Flow Statement

for the year ended 31 March 2022

Reconciliation of total return before taxation to net cash outflow from 
operating activities
Return before tax
Gains on investments held at fair value through profit and loss
Decrease in receivables
Increase in payables
Taxation paid
Net cash outflow from operating activities

Investing activities
Purchases
Sales
Net cash (outflow)/inflow from investing activities 

Financing activities
Net proceeds from share issuance
Shares released from/(repurchased into) treasury
Net cash inflow/(outflow) from financing activities 

Year ended
31 March 2022
£’000

Year ended
31 March 2021
£’000

Notes

22,152
(24,137)
28
710
–
(1,247)

42,698
(45,113)
44
1,881
(3)
(493)

(90,568)
68,223
(22,345)

(42,138)
48,758
6,620

12,662
442
13,104

–
(230)
(230)

(Decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents 

(10,488)

5,897

Reconciliation of net cash flow movements in funds
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the year

Exchange rate movements
(Decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents
(Decrease)/increase in net cash

Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

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

15,689

9,800

(4)
(10,488)
(10,492)

(8)
5,897
5,889

5,197

15,689

76

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCNotes to the Financial Statements

1.  Accounting Policies

 Odyssean  Investment  Trust  PLC  is  a  listed  public  company  incorporated  and  registered  in  England  and 
Wales. The registered office of the Company is 25 Southampton Buildings, London WC2A 1AL. The principal 
activity of the Company is that of an investment trust company within the meaning of sections 1158/1159 of the 
Corporation Tax Act 2010 and its investment approach is detailed in the Strategic Report.

a)  Basis of preparation 

 The financial statements of the Company have been prepared in accordance with IFRS as adopted by the 
United Kingdom which comprise standards and interpretations approved by the International Accounting 
Standards Board (“IASB”), and as applied in accordance with the provisions of the Companies Act 2006. 
The annual financial statements have also been prepared in accordance with the AIC SORP for the financial 
statements  of  investment  trust  companies  and  venture  capital  trusts,  except  to  any  extent  where  it  is  not 
consistent with the requirements of IFRS. 

 In  order  to  better  reflect  the  activities  of  an  investment  trust  company  and  in  accordance  with  guidance 
issued  by  the  AIC,  supplementary  information  which  analyses  the  Income  Statement  between  items  of  a 
revenue and capital nature has been prepared alongside the Income Statement.

 The functional currency of the Company is Sterling because this is the currency of the primary economic 
environment in which the Company operates. The financial statements are also presented in Sterling rounded 
to the nearest thousand, except where otherwise indicated.

b)  Going concern 

 The financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis that approval as an investment trust 
company will continue to be met. 

 The  Directors  have  made  an  assessment  of  the  Company’s  ability  to  continue  as  a  going  concern  and  are 
satisfied that the Company has the resources to continue in business for the foreseeable future, being a period 
of at least 12 months from the date these financial statements were approved. In making the assessment, the 
Directors  have  considered  the  likely  impacts  of  the ongoing  Covid-19  pandemic  and  the  Russia/Ukraine 
conflict on the Company, operations and the investment portfolio. The Directors noted the cash balance 
exceeds any short-term liabilities, the Company has no debt and the Company holds a portfolio of investments 
listed on the LSE. The Company is a closed end fund, where assets are not required to be liquidated to meet 
redemptions. Whilst the economic future is uncertain, and the Directors believe it is possible the Company 
could experience further reductions in income and/or market value that this should not be to a level which 
would threaten the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern. The Directors, the Portfolio Manager 
and other service providers have put in place contingency plans to minimise disruption. Furthermore, the 
Directors are not aware of any material uncertainties that may cast doubt upon the Company’s ability to 
continue as a going concern, having taken into account the liquidity of the Company’s investment portfolio 
and  the  Company’s  financial  position  in  respect  of  its  cash  flows,  debt  and  investment  commitments. 
Therefore, the financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis. 

c)  Segmental reporting 

 The Directors are of the opinion that the Company is engaged in a single segment of the business, being 
investment business. The Company invests in small companies principally based in countries bordering the 
North Atlantic Ocean. 

77

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1.  Accounting Policies (continued) 
d)  Accounting developments 

 In the current year, the Company has applied a number of amendments to IFRS, issued by the IASB. These 
include annual improvements to IFRS, changes in standards, legislative and regulatory amendments, changes 
in disclosure and presentation requirements.  

 The adoption of the changes has had no material impact on the current or prior years’ financial statements. 

e)  Critical accounting judgements and key sources of estimation uncertainty 

 The preparation of financial statements in conformity with IFRS requires management to make judgements, 
estimates and assumptions that affect the application of policies and the reported amounts in the Balance 
Sheet, the Income Statement and the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial 
statements. The estimates and associated assumptions are based on historical experience and various other 
factors  that  are  believed  to  be  reasonable  under  the  circumstances,  the  results  of  which  form  the  basis  of 
making judgements about carrying values of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other 
sources. Actual results may differ from these estimates. 

 The  areas  requiring  the  most  significant  judgement  and  estimation  in  the  preparation  of  the  financial 
statements are: recognising and classifying unusual or special dividends received as either revenue or capital 
in nature; when determining any deferred performance fee, this may be affected by future changes in the 
Company’s portfolio and other assets and liabilities; and setting the levels of dividends paid and proposed 
in satisfaction of both the Company’s long-term objective and its obligations to adhere to investment trust 
status rules under Section 1158 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010. 

 The estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis. Any revisions to accounting 
estimates are recognised in the period in which the estimate is revised if the revision affects only that period, 
or in the period of the revision and future period if the revision affects both current and future periods. There 
are no significant judgements or estimates in these financial statements. 

f )  Investments

 The  Company’s  business  is  investing  in  financial  assets  with  a  view  to  profiting  from  their  total  return  in 
the form of income and capital growth. This portfolio of financial assets is managed and its performance 
evaluated on a fair value basis in accordance with the documented investment strategy and information is 
provided internally on that basis to the Company’s Board of Directors and other key management personnel.

 The investments held by the Company are designated by the Company as ‘at fair value through profit or loss’. 
All gains and losses are allocated to the capital return within the Statement of Comprehensive Income as 
‘Gains or losses on investments held at fair value through profit or loss’. Also included within this heading are 
transaction costs in relation to the purchase or sale of investments. When a sale or purchase is made under a 
contract, the terms of which require delivery within the timeframe of the relevant market, the investments 
concerned are recognised or derecognised on the trade date.

78

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1.  Accounting Policies (continued)

f )  Investments (continued)

 All investments are designated upon initial recognition as held at fair value through profit or loss, and are 
measured at subsequent reporting dates at fair value, which is either the bid price or the closing price for 
Stock Exchange Electronic Trading Service (“SETS”). The Company derecognises a financial asset only when 
the  contractual  rights  to  the  cash  flows  from  the  asset  expire,  or  when  it  transfers  the  financial  asset  and 
substantially  all  the  risks  and  rewards  of  ownership  of  the  asset  to  another  entity.  On  derecognition  of  a 
financial asset, the difference between the asset’s carrying amount and the sum of consideration received and 
receivable and the cumulative gain or loss that had been accumulated is recognised in profit or loss.

 Fair  values  for  unquoted  investments,  or  investments  for  which  the  market  is  inactive,  are  established  by 
using various valuation techniques in accordance with the International Private Equity and Venture Capital 
Valuation  (the  “IPEV”)  guidelines.  These  may  include  recent  arm’s  length  market  transactions,  earnings 
multiples and the net asset basis.

 All investments for which a fair value is measured or disclosed in the financial statements are categorised 
within the fair value hierarchy levels set out in note 7.

g)  Foreign currency translation 

 Transactions in currencies other than Sterling are recorded at the rates of exchange prevailing on the date of 
the transaction. Items that are denominated in foreign currencies are retranslated at the rates prevailing on 
the Balance Sheet date. Any gain or loss arising from a change in exchange rate subsequent to the date of the 
transaction is included as an exchange gain or loss in the capital reserve or the revenue account depending on 
whether the gain or loss is capital or revenue in nature. 

h)  Cash and Cash Equivalents 

 Cash comprises cash in hand and demand deposits. Cash equivalents are short-term, highly liquid investments 
that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash and which are subject to insignificant risk of changes 
in value. 

 For the purpose of the Cash Flow Statement, cash and cash equivalents consist of cash and cash equivalents 
as defined above, net of outstanding bank overdrafts when applicable. 

i)  Other receivables and payables 

 Trade receivables and trade payables are measured at amortised cost and balances revalued for exchange rate 
movement. 

j) 

Income 
 Dividends  receivable  on  quoted  equity  shares  are  taken  to  revenue  on  an  ex-dividend  basis.  Dividends 
receivable  on  equity  shares  where  no  ex-dividend  date  is  quoted  are  brought  into  account  when  the 
Company’s right to receive payment is established. Dividends from overseas companies are shown gross of 
any withholding taxes which are disclosed separately in the Statement of Comprehensive Income. 

 Special dividends are taken to the revenue or capital account depending on their nature. In deciding whether 
a dividend should be regarded as capital or revenue receipt, the Board reviews all relevant information as to 
the sources of the dividend on a case-by-case basis. 

79

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)Strategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverview 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1.  Accounting Policies (continued)

j) 

Income (continued)
 When the Company has elected to receive scrip dividends in the form of additional shares rather than in 
cash, the amount of the cash dividend foregone is recognised as income. Any excess in the value of the cash 
dividend is recognised in the capital column.

 All other income is accounted on a time-apportioned accruals basis and is recognised in the Statement of 
Comprehensive Income.

k)  Expenses

 All expenses are accounted on an accruals basis and are allocated wholly to revenue with the exception of the 
Performance Fees and transaction costs which are allocated wholly to capital, as the fee payable by reference 
to the capital performance of the Company.

l)  Taxation

 The charge for taxation is based on the net revenue for the year and takes into account taxation deferred 
or accelerated because of temporary differences between the treatment of certain items for accounting and 
taxation purposes.

 Deferred tax is provided using the liability method on temporary differences between the tax bases of assets 
and liabilities and their carrying amount for financial reporting purposes at the reporting date. Deferred tax 
assets are only recognised if it is considered more likely than not that there will be suitable profits from which 
the future reversal of timing differences can be deducted. In line with recommendations of the SORP, the 
allocation method used to calculate the tax relief expenses charged to capital is the ‘marginal’ basis. Under this 
basis, if taxable income is capable of being offset entirely by expenses charged through the revenue account, 
then no tax relief is transferred to the capital account.

m)  Dividends payable to shareholders

 Dividends to shareholders are recognised as a liability in the period in which they are paid or approved in 
general meetings and are taken to the Statement of Changes in Equity. Dividends declared and approved 
by the Company after the Balance Sheet date have not been recognised as a liability of the Company at the 
Balance Sheet date.

n)  Share capital and reserves
  The share capital represents the nominal value of equity shares.

 The share premium account represents the accumulated premium paid for shares issued above their nominal 
value less issue expenses.

 The special distributable reserve was created on 7 August 2018. This reserve may be used for the costs of share 
buybacks, the cancellation of shares, and distribution by way of dividends.

 The capital reserve represents realised and unrealised capital and exchange gains and losses on the disposal 
and revaluation of investments and of foreign currency items. In addition, performance fee costs are allocated 
to the capital reserve.

 The revenue reserve represents the surplus of accumulated revenue profits being the excess of income derived 
from holding investments less the costs associated with running the Company. This reserve may be distributed 
by way of dividends, if positive.

80

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2. 

Income

Income from investments
UK dividends

Total income

3.  Portfolio management fee

Year ended
31 March
2022
Income
£’000

Year ended
31 March
2022
Capital
£’000

Year ended
31 March
2022
Total
£’000

Year ended
31 March
2021
Income
£’000

Year ended
31 March
2021
Capital
£’000

Year ended
31 March
2021
Total
£’000

2,573

2,573

–

–

2,573

2,573

852

852

–

–

852

852

Year ended 31 March 2022

Year ended 31 March 2021

Revenue
£’000

Capital
£’000

Total
£’000

Revenue
£’000

Portfolio management fee
Performance fee

1,459
–

–
2,436

1,459
2,436

943
–

Capital
£’000

–
1,825

Total
£’000

943
1,825

1,459

2,436

3,895

943

1,825

2,768

 The Company is liable to pay a performance fee depending on the performance of the Company over a three-year 
period and thereafter a rolling three-year period as set out in the Company’s prospectus dated 26 March 2018. 
Based on the performance of the Company to 31 March 2022, a performance fee of £2,436,000 has been accrued 
(2021: £1,825,000) and is expected to be cash settled upon approval of this Annual Report in accordance with 
details set out on pages 82 and 83.

 Pursuant to the terms of the Portfolio Management Agreement, the Portfolio Manager is entitled, with effect 
from  IPO  on  1  May  2018,  to  receive  an  annual  management  fee  equal  to  the  lower  of:  (i)  1%  of  the  NAV 
(calculated before deduction of any accrued but unpaid Management fee and any performance fee) per annum; 
or  (ii)  1%  per  annum  of  the  Company’s  market  capitalisation.  The  annual  management  fee  is  calculated  and 
accrues daily and is payable quarterly in arrears.

 In addition, the Portfolio Manager will be entitled to a performance fee in certain circumstances.

81

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)Strategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverview 
 
 
3.  Portfolio management fee (continued)

 The Company’s performance is measured over rolling three-year periods ending on 31 March each year (each a 
“Performance Period”), by comparing the NAV total return per ordinary share over a Performance Period against 
the total return performance of the NSCI ex IC plus AIM Total Return Index (the “Comparator Index”). The 
first Performance Period ran from IPO to 31 March 2021.

 A Performance Fee is payable if the NAV per ordinary share at the end of the relevant Performance Period (as 
adjusted to: (i) add back the aggregate value of any dividends per ordinary share paid (or accounted as paid for 
the purposes of calculating the NAV) to shareholders during the relevant Performance Period; and (ii) exclude 
any accrual for unpaid Performance Fee accrued in relation to the relevant Performance Period) (the “NAV Total 
Return per Share”) exceeds both:

(i) 

 (a) the NAV per ordinary share at IPO, in relation to the first Performance Period; and (b) thereafter the 
NAV per ordinary share on the first business day of a Performance Period; in each case as adjusted by the 
aggregate amount of (i) the total return on the Comparator Index (expressed as a percentage); and (ii) 1% 
per annum over the relevant Performance Period (the “Target NAV per Share”); 

(ii) 

 the highest previously recorded NAV per ordinary share as at the end of the relevant Performance Period in 
respect of which a Performance Fee was last paid (or the NAV per ordinary share as at IPO, if no Performance 
Fee has been paid) (the “High Watermark”); and 

(iii)  with any resulting excess amount being known as the “Excess Amount”. 

 The Portfolio Manager will be entitled to 10% of the Excess Amount multiplied by the time weighted average 
number of ordinary shares in issue during the relevant Performance Period to which the calculation date relates. 
The Performance Fee will accrue daily.

 Payment of a Performance Fee that has been earned will be deferred to the extent that the amount payable exceeds 
1.75% per annum of the NAV at the end of the relevant Performance Period (amounts deferred will be payable 
when, and to the extent that, following any later Performance Period(s) with respect to which a Performance Fee 
is payable, it is possible to pay the deferred amounts without causing that cap to be exceeded or the relevant NAV 
total return per share to fall below both the relevant target NAV per share and the relevant High Watermark for 
such Performance Period, with any amount not paid being retained and carried forward).

 Subject at all times to compliance with relevant regulatory and tax requirements, any Performance Fee paid or 
payable shall:

 where as at the relevant calculation date, the ordinary shares are trading at, or at a premium to, the latest 
published NAV per ordinary share, be satisfied as to 50% of its value by the issuance of new ordinary shares 
by the Company to the Portfolio Manager (rounded down to the nearest whole number of ordinary shares) 
(including the reissue of treasury shares) issued at the latest published NAV per ordinary share applicable at 
the date of issuance;

 where as at the relevant calculation date, the ordinary shares are trading at a discount to the latest published 
NAV per ordinary share, be satisfied as to 100% of its value in cash and the Portfolio Manager shall, as soon 
as reasonably practicable following receipt of such payment, use 50% of such Performance Fee payment to 
make market purchases of ordinary shares (rounded down to the nearest whole number of ordinary shares) 
within four months of the date of receipt of such Performance Fee payment. 

– 

– 

82

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
3.  Portfolio management fee (continued)

 Each  such  tranche  of  shares  issued  to,  or  acquired  by,  the  Portfolio  Manager  will  be  subject  to  a  lock-up 
undertaking for a period of three years post issuance or acquisition (subject to customary exceptions).

 At  no  time  shall  the  Portfolio  Manager  (and/or  any  persons  deemed  to  be  acting  in  concert  with  it  for  the 
purposes of the Takeover Code) be obliged, in the absence of a relevant whitewash resolution having been passed 
in accordance with the Takeover Code, to receive, or acquire, further ordinary shares where to do so would trigger 
a requirement to make a mandatory offer pursuant to Rule 9 of the Takeover Code. Where any restriction exists 
on the issuance of further ordinary shares to the Portfolio Manager, the relevant amount of the Performance Fee 
may be paid in cash.

 In addition, the Portfolio Manager is entitled to reimbursement for all costs and expenses properly incurred by it 
in the performance of its duties under the Portfolio Management Agreement.

 The Company may terminate the Portfolio Management Agreement by giving the Portfolio Manager not less than 
six months’ prior written notice. The Portfolio Manager may terminate the Portfolio Management Agreement by 
giving the Company not less than six months’ prior written notice.

4.  Other expenses

Directors’ fees*
Company Secretarial and Administration fee – Link**
Frostrow Capital***
Auditor's remuneration for the audit of the Company's financial statements
Other expenses

Year ended
31 March
2022
£’000

Year ended
31 March
2021
£’000

89
–
334
39
201

663

86
43
164
38
168

499

No non-audit services were provided by the Company's external auditor during the year (2021: none).

* 

 Peter Hewitt is not receiving a Director fee in respect of his services to the Company. Each of the Directors has agreed to use their applicable Directors’ 
fees (net of applicable taxes) to acquire ordinary shares in the secondary market, subject to regulatory requirements. In relation to any dealings, the 
Directors  will  comply  with  the  share  dealing  code  adopted  by  the  Company  in  accordance  with  the  Market  Abuse  Regulation.  The  Board  will  be 
responsible for taking all proper and reasonable steps to ensure compliance with the share dealing code by the Directors. 
 Link Company Matters Ltd was appointed as Company Secretary and Administrator until 12 July 2020.

** 
***  Frostrow Capital LLP was appointed with effect from 13 July 2020. 

83

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)Strategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverview 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
5.  Taxation

Analysis of charge in year
Current tax:
Overseas tax suffered

Year ended 31 March 2022

Year ended 31 March 2021

Revenue
£’000

Capital
£’000

Total
£’000

Revenue
£’000

Capital
£’000

Total
£’000

–

–

–

–

–

–

3

3

–

–

3

3

The  tax  assessed  for  the  year  is  the  standard  rate  of  Corporation  Tax  in  the  UK  of  19%  (2021:  19%).  The 
differences are explained below:

Year ended 31 March 2022

Year ended 31 March 2021

Revenue
£’000

Capital
£’000

Total
£’000

Revenue
£’000

Capital
£’000

Total
£’000

Net return/(loss) before taxation

451

21,701

22,152

(590)

43,288

42,698

Theoretical tax at UK corporation tax 
rate of 19% (2021: 19%)
Effects of:
UK dividends that are not taxable
Non-taxable investment gains
Irrecoverable overseas tax
Unrelieved excess expenses

86

4,123

4,209

(112)

8,225

8,113

(489)
–
–
403

–
(4,586)
–
463

(489)
(4,586)
–
866

(162)
–
3
274

–
(8,572)
–
347

(162)
(8,572)
3
621

–

–

–

3

–

3

Factors that may affect future tax charges
 At 31 March 2022, the Company had no unprovided deferred tax liabilities (2021: £nil). At that date, based on 
current estimates and including the accumulation of net allowable losses, the Company had unrelieved losses 
of £10,386,000 (2021: £5,828,000) that are available to offset future taxable revenue. A deferred tax asset of 
£2,597,000  (2021:  £1,107,000)  has  not  been  recognised  because  the  Company  is  not  expected  to  generate 
sufficient  taxable  income  in  future  periods  in  excess  of  the  available  deductible  expenses  and  accordingly,  the 
Company is unlikely to be able to reduce future tax liabilities through the use of existing surplus losses

 Deferred  tax  is  not  provided  on  capital  gains  and  losses  arising  on  the  revaluation  or  disposal  of  investments 
because the Trust meets (and intends to continue for the foreseeable future to meet) the conditions for approval 
as an Investment Trust company.

84

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued) 
6.  Return/(loss) per ordinary share

 The capital, revenue and total return per ordinary share are based on the net return/(loss) shown in the 
Income Statement and the weighted average number of ordinary shares during the period of 92,499,592 
(2021: 88,020,635).

  There are no dilutive instruments issued by the Company.

7. 

Investments held at fair value through profit or loss

Opening book cost
Opening investment holding losses

Opening fair value

Analysis of transactions made during the year
Purchases at cost
Sales proceeds received
Gains on sales of investments
Gains on investment holding

Closing fair value

Closing book cost
Closing investment holding gains

Closing fair value

Transaction costs

As at
31 March
2022
£’000

As at
31 March
2021
£’000

83,896
25,363

83,719
(11,453)

109,259

72,266

90,472
(68,528)
22,642
1,503

40,637
(48,758)
8,298
36,816

155,348

109,259

128,482
26,866

83,896
25,363

155,348

109,259

521

269

85

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)Strategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverview 
7. 

Investments held at fair value through profit or loss (continued)
 The  Company  is  required  to  classify  fair  value  measurements  using  a  fair  value  hierarchy  that  reflects  the 
significance of the inputs used in making the measurements. The fair value hierarchy consists of the following 
three levels:

–  Level 1 – Quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or liabilities. 

 An active market is a market in which transactions for the asset or liability occur with sufficient frequency 
and volume on an ongoing basis such that quoted prices reflect prices at which an orderly transaction would 
take place between market participants at the measurement date. Quoted prices provided by external pricing 
services, brokers and vendors are included in Level 1, if they reflect actual and regularly occurring market 
transactions on an arms length basis. 

– 

 Level 2 – Inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, 
either directly (that is, as prices) or indirectly (that is, derived from prices). 

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

 The  level  in  the  fair  value  hierarchy  within  which  the  fair  value  measurement  is  categorised  in  its  entirety  is 
determined on the basis of the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement in its entirety. 
For this purpose, the significance of an input is assessed against the fair value measurement in its entirety. If a 
fair value measurement uses observable inputs that require significant adjustment based on unobservable inputs, 
that  measurement  is  a  Level  3  measurement.  Assessing  the  significance  of  a  particular  input  to  the  fair  value 
measurement in its entirety requires judgement, considering factors specific to the asset or liability.

As at 31 March 2022

As at 31 March 2021

Total
£’000

Level 1
£’000

Level 2
£’000

Level 3
£’000

Total
£’000

Level 1
£’000

Level 2
£’000

Level 3
£’000

Quoted at fair value

155,348 155,348

Total

155,348 155,348

There were no transfers between levels during the period.

–

–

– 109,259 109,259

– 109,259 109,259

–

–

–

–

8.  Trade and other receivables

As at
31 March
2022
£’000

As at
31 March
2021
£’000

305
115

420

–
143

143

Due from brokers
Other receivables

86

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued) 
 
 
9.  Trade and other payables

Due to brokers
Portfolio management and performance fees
Other payables

10.  Share capital

As at
31 March
2022
£’000

208
2,815
126

As at
31 March
2021
£’000

300
2,106
125

3,149

2,531

Year ended 31 March 2022

Year ended 31 March 2021

Number of
Shares

£’000

Number of
Shares

£’000

Issued and fully paid:
Ordinary shares of 1p:
Balance at beginning of the period

88,257,211

883

88,257,211

883

Shares issued during the year
Balance at end of the period

7,990,842
96,248,053

79
962

88,257,211

883

Special distributable reserve
Upon initial placing and subsequent issuance of the Company’s ordinary shares on 1 May 2018 and 27 June 2018 
respectively, the Company accumulated a premium account of £85,495,000. Following approval of the Court, 
effective on 8 August 2018, the share premium account was cancelled and the balance after cancellation cost of 
£20,000 was transferred to the special distributable reserve.

On 22 May 2020, the Company purchased 275,000 of its own ordinary shares at a total cost of £230,000 and 
these  shares  have  been  placed  into  treasury.  During  the  year  under  review,  these  275,000  were  issued  out  of 
treasury into the market. The Company currently has no shares in treasury. During the year, the Company also 
issued 7,990,842 new ordinary shares.

11.  Net asset value per ordinary share

The basic net asset value per ordinary share is based on net assets of £157,816,000 (2021: £122,560,000) and the 
number of ordinary shares in issue of 96,248,053 (2021: 87,982,211).

There are no dilutive instruments issued by the Company.

87

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)Strategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverview 
12.  Financial Instruments

Investment objective and policy
The  Company  primarily  invests  in  smaller  company  equities  quoted  on  markets  operated  by  the  LSE,  which 
the Portfolio Manager believes are trading below intrinsic value and where this value can be increased through 
strategic, operational, management and financial initiatives.

The Company’s investment objective and policy are detailed on pages 2 to 4.

The  Company’s  financial  instruments  include  its  investment  portfolios,  cash  balances,  trade  receivables  and 
trade payables that arise directly from its operations. Adherence to the Company’s investment policy is key to 
mitigating risk.

Risks
The Portfolio Manager monitors the financial risks affecting the Company on an ongoing basis and the Board 
regularly receive financial information, which is used to identify and monitor risk. All risks are actively reviewed 
and managed by the Board.

The risks identified arising from the Company’s financial instruments are:

(i)  market risk, including market price risk, interest rate risk and currency risk; 

(ii) 

liquidity risk; 

(iii)  credit and counterparty risk 

(i)  Market risk
 Market risk is the risk of loss arising from movements in observable market variables. The fair value of future 
cash flows of a financial instrument held by the Company may fluctuate because of changes in market prices. The 
Portfolio Manager assesses the exposure to market risk when making each investment decision and these risks are 
monitored by the Portfolio Manager on a regular basis and the Board at meetings with the Portfolio Manager.

  Market price risk

 The Company is exposed to market price risk (i.e. changes in market prices other than those arising from 
currency or interest rate risk) which may affect the value of investments whose future prices are uncertain. The 
Company’s exposure to market price risk comprises movements in the value of the Company’s investments. 
If the fair value of the Company’s investments at the year-end increased or decreased by 10%, then it would 
have had an impact on the Company’s capital return and equity of £15,535,000 (2021: £10,926,000).

The Portfolio Manager manages this risk by following the investment objective as set out in the prospectus. 
The Portfolio Manager assesses the exposure to market price risk when making each investment decision and 
monitors the overall level of market price risk on the whole investment portfolio on an ongoing basis. The 
Portfolio Manager maintains a net cash position and intends to maintain this for the foreseeable future.

88

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
12.  Financial instruments (continued)

  Currency risk

Currency risk is the risk that fair values of future cash flows of a financial instrument fluctuate because of 
changes in foreign exchange rates. The Company held no investments in foreign currencies as at 31 March 2022 
(2021:  one  investment  in  EUR  fair  valued  at  £2,226,000).  Whilst  the  Company’s  other  investments  are 
denominated  in  Sterling,  the  Company  may  have  currency  exposure  through  the  trading  activities  of  its 
investee companies.

The Portfolio Manager does not hedge underlying portfolio companies.

Interest rate risk
Interest rate risk is the risk that fair value of future cash flows of a financial instrument will fluctuate because 
of changes in market interest rates. Interest rate movements may potentially affect future cash flows from the 
level of income receivable on cash deposits.

The Company’s bank balances are subject to a variable rate of interest, it does not generate significant income 
from  interest  and  the  Portfolio  Manager  does  not  hedge  against  this.  The  Company  has  no  gearing  and 
therefore there is limited downside risk from increasing interest costs on borrowings.

If  the  Company  maintained  the  following  level  of  cash  for  a  year  £5,197,000  (2021:  £15,689,000),  a  1% 
increase in interest rates would increase the revenue return and net assets by £52,000 (2021: £157,000). If 
there was a fall of 1% in interest rates, it would potentially impact the Company by turning positive interest 
to negative interest. The total effect would be a revenue reduction/cost increase of £52,000 (2021: £157,000).

The portfolio Manger actively manages the cash positions of the Company.

(ii)  Liquidity risk
The  Company’s  assets  mainly  comprise  readily  realisable  securities  which  can  be  easily  sold  to  meet  funding 
commitments  and  obligations.  Liquidity  risk  is  mitigated  by  the  fact  that  the  Company  has  £5,197,000 
(2021: £15,689,000) cash at bank and the assets are readily realisable. The Company is a closed-end fund, assets 
do not need to be liquidated to meet redemptions.

The  Portfolio  Manager  maintains  a  net  cash  position  and  intends  to  maintain  this  for  the  foreseeable  future. 
The Portfolio Manager will manage the portfolio to maintain sufficient cash balances to meet its obligations or 
liabilities as they fall due.

(iii) Credit risk
This is the risk a counterparty of the Company will not meet their obligations to the Company.

The Company does not have any significant exposure to credit risk arising from one individual party. Credit risk 
is spread across a number of counterparties, each having an immaterial effect on the Company’s cash flows, should 
a default happen. The credit standing of all counterparties is reviewed periodically and assesses the debtors to 
ensure they are neither past due or impaired.

All  the  investments  of  the  Company  which  are  traded  on  a  recognised  exchange  are  held  by  the  Company’s 
custodian, RBC Investor Services Trust (“RBC”). All the Company’s cash is also held by RBC. The Portfolio 
Manager and the Board actively monitor the relationship with RBC and review RBC’s internal control report.

89

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)Strategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverview 
 
 
 
 
13.  Related party transactions

The  amounts  incurred  in  respect  of  Portfolio  Management  fees  during  the  period  to  31  March  2022  was 
£1,459,000 (2021: 943,000), of which £379,000 (2021: £281,000) was outstanding at 31 March 2021. The amount 
accrued in relation to the performance fee provision as at 31 March 2022 was £2,436,000 (2021: £1,825,000).

Fees paid to the Company’s Directors and Directors shareholdings, are disclosed in the Directors’ Remuneration 
Report. At the year end, there were no outstanding fees payable to Directors (2021: £nil).

14.  Subsequent events

There have been no events with material impact on the Company since the Balance Sheet date.

90

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCfor the year ended 31 March 2022Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)Additional Information and Notice of AGM

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Shareholder Information

92 
93  Glossary
96  Notice of Annual General Meeting 
103  Explanatory Notes to the Resolutions 
106  Corporate Information

ODYSSE AN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC

91

Share capital and NAV information
Ordinary 1p shares 
SEDOL number  
ISIN 
Ticker 
LEI  

96,248,053 as at 31 March 2022
BFFK7H5
GB00BFFK7H57
OIT
213800RWVAQJKXYHSZ74

The  Company’s  NAV  is  released  daily  to  the  LSE  and 
published on the Company’s website.

Sources of further information
Copies of the Company’s Annual and Interim Reports, Stock 
Exchange  announcements  and  further  information  on  the 
Company can be obtained from its website: www.oitplc.com.

Share register enquiries
The register for the ordinary shares is maintained by Equiniti 
Limited.  In  the  event  of  queries  regarding  your  holding, 
please  contact  the  Registrar  on  0371  384  2030.  Changes 
of name and/or address must be notified in writing to the 
Registrar, at the address shown on page 106. You can check 
your  shareholding  and  find  practical  help  on  transferring 
shares or updating your details at www.shareview.co.uk.

Key dates
Company’s year end 
Annual results announced 
AGM 
Company’s half-year end   
Half-yearly results announced 

31 March
May/June
September
30 September
November/December

Association of Investment Companies
The Company is a member of the AIC, which publishes 
monthly  statistical  information  in  respect  of  member 
companies.  The  AIC  can  be  contacted  on  020  7282 
5555,  enquiries@theaic.co.uk  or  visit  the  website:  
www.theaic.co.uk.

Shareholder Information

Investing in the Company
The  Company’s  shares  are  traded  openly  on  the  London 
Stock  Exchange  and  can  be  purchased  through  a  stock 
broker  or  other  financial  intermediary.  The  shares  are 
available  through  savings  plans  (including  Investment 
Dealing  Accounts,  ISAs,  Junior  ISAs  and  SIPPs)  which 
facilitate both regular monthly investments and lump sum 
investments in the Company’s shares. There are a number 
of investment platforms that offer these facilities. A list of 
some of them, that is neither comprehensive nor constitutes 
any form of recommendation, can be found below:

AJ Bell YouInvest 
Barclays Smart Investor 
Bestinvest 
Charles Stanley Direct 
EQi 
Halifax Investing  
Hargreaves Lansdown 
HSBC 
iDealing  
interactive investor 
iWeb 
Saxo Markets 
WealthClub 

www.youinvest.co.uk
 www.barclays.co.uk/smart-investor
www.bestinvest.co.uk
 www.charles-stanley-direct.co.uk
www.eqi.co.uk
 www.halifax.co.uk/investing.html
www.hl.co.uk  
www.hsbc.co.uk/investments
www.idealing.com
www.ii.co.uk
www.iweb-sharedealing.co.uk
www.home.saxo
www.wealthclub.co.uk

Risk warnings
Past  performance  is  no  guarantee  of  future  performance. 
The value of your investment and any income from it may 
go down as well as up and you may not get back the amount 
invested. This is because the share price is determined by 
the  changing  conditions  in  the  relevant  stock  markets  in 
which the Company invests and by the supply and demand 
for the Company’s shares. As the shares in an investment 
trust  are  traded  on  a  stock  market,  the  share  price  will 
fluctuate in accordance with the supply and demand and 
may not reflect the underlying net asset value of the shares; 
where the share price is less than the underlying value of the 
assets, the difference is known as the ‘discount’. For these 
reasons  investors  may  not  get  back  the  original  amount 
invested. Although the Company’s shares are denominated 
in  sterling,  it  may  invest  in  stocks  and  shares  which  are 
exposed to currencies other than sterling and to the extent 
they do so, they may be affected by movements in exchange 
rates. Investors should note that tax rates and reliefs may 
change  at  any  time  in  the  future.  The  value  of  ISA  tax 
advantages  will  depend  on  personal  circumstances.  The 
favourable tax treatments of ISAs may not be maintained.

92

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Glossary

AGM
Annual General Meeting

ESG
Environmental, social and governance

AIC
Association of Investment Companies

EU
European Union

FCA
Financial Conduct Authority

Gearing
Gearing  refers  to  the  ratio  of  the  Company’s  debt  to  its 
equity capital. The Company may borrow money to invest 
in additional investments for its portfolio. If the Company’s 
assets grow, the shareholders’ assets grow proportionately 
more because the debt remains the same. If the Company’s 
assets fall, the situation is reversed. Gearing can therefore 
enhance performance in rising markets but can adversely 
impact performance in falling markets. The Company had 
no borrowings during the year (2021:nil).

IPO
Initial public offering

Key Performance Indicators (‘KPIs’)
KPIs  are  a  shortlist  of  corporate  attributes  that  are  used 
to  assess  the  general  progress  of  the  Company. These  are 
outlined on page 33.

LSE
London Stock Exchange

M&A
Mergers and acquisitions

Alternative Performance Measure (‘APM’)
An APM is a numerical measure of the Company’s current, 
historical  or  future  financial  performance,  financial 
position  or  cash  flows,  other  than  a  financial  measure 
defined or specified in the applicable financial framework.

Comparator Benchmark
The  Company’s  Comparator  Benchmark  is  the  NSCI 
(Numis Smaller Companies Index) ex IC plus AIM Total 
Return Index. The benchmark is used only as a yard stick to 
compare investment performance.

Cost
The book cost of each investment is the total acquisition 
value,  including  transaction  costs,  less  the  value  of  any 
disposals  or  capitalised  distributions  allocated  on  a 
weighted average cost basis.

Discount/premium (APM)
A  description  of  the  difference  between  the  share  price 
and the net asset value per share. The size of the discount is 
calculated by subtracting the share price from the NAV per 
share and is usually expressed as a percentage of the NAV 
per  share.  If  the  share  price  is  higher  than  the  net  asset 
value per share the result is a premium. If the share price 
is lower than the net asset value per share, the shares are 
trading at a discount. 

Premium/(Discount) Calculation

Closing NAV per share (p)

Closing share price (p)

31 March 
2022

31 March 
2021

164.0

166.0

139.3

129.0

a

b

Discount

(c=((b-a)/a) x 100) (%)

1.2%

(7.4)% c

The discount and performance are calculated in accordance 
with  guidelines  issued  by  the  AIC.  The  discount  is 
calculated using the net asset values per share inclusive of 
accrued income with debt at market value.

93

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewGlossary (continued)

Net Asset Value (‘NAV’) per Share
The NAV is shareholders’ funds expressed as an amount per 
individual share. Shareholders’ funds are the total value of 
all of the Company’s assets, at their current market value, 
having deducted all liabilities and prior charges at their par 
value, or at their asset value as appropriate. The total NAV 
per  share  is  calculated  by  dividing  shareholders’  funds  of 
£157,816,000  (2021:  £122,560,000)  by  the  number  of 
Ordinary  Shares  in  issue  96,248,053  (2021:  87,982,211) 
at the year end.

NAV Total Return (APM)
NAV total return is the closing NAV per share including 
any  cumulative  dividends  paid  as  a  percentage  over  the 
opening  NAV.  NAV  total  return  is  an  alternative  way 
of  measuring  investment  management  performance  of 
investment trusts which is not affected by movements in 
the share price.

31 March 
2022

31 March 
2021

Inception
to 
31 March 
2022

164.0

139.3

164.0

139.3

90.8

100.0

a

b

–

–

–

17.7%

53.4%

64.0% c

Closing NAV per 
share (p)

Opening NAV Per 
share (p)

Dividend 
reinvested (p)

NAV total return

(c= ((a-b)/b x 
100) (%)

NSCI ex IT plus AIM Index
Numis Smaller Companies ex Investment Trust plus AIM 
Index.

31 March 
2022

31 March 
2021

1 May 
2018 to 
31 March 
2022

Closing index

17,530.0

17,913.1

17,530.0

Opening index

17,913.1

10,456.6

14,954.8

Ongoing Charges Ratio (APM)
As  recommended  by  the  AIC  in  its  guidance,  ongoing 
charges are the Company’s annualised expenses (excluding 
finance  costs  and  certain  non-recurring  items)  expressed 
as  a  percentage  of  the  average  monthly  net  assets  of  the 
Company during the year as disclosed to the LSE.

Ongoing charges (a)

31 March 
2022

31 March 
2021

2,122,000

1,442,000

Average net asset value (b)

145,968,000 101,160,000

Ongoing charges (a/b) expressed as 
a %

1.45%

1.41%

P/E
Price earnings ratio

R&D
Research and development

TMT
Technology, media and telecom

Total assets
Total  assets  are  the  sum  of  both  fixed  and  current  assets 
with no deductions.

Share Price Total Return (APM)
Total  return  statistics  enable  the  investor  to  make 
performance comparisons between investment trusts with 
different  dividend  policies.  The  combined  effect  of  any 
dividends paid, together with the rise or fall in the share 
price. This is calculated by the movement in the share price 
plus  dividend  income  reinvested  by  the  Company  at  the 
prevailing share price.

Share Price Total Return

Closing share price (p)

Opening share price (p)

Dividend reinvested (p)

a
b

31 March 
2022

31 March 
2021

166.0

129.0

–

a

b

129.0

90.0

–

-2.1%

71.3%

17.2% c

Share price total return

(c= ((a-b)/b x 100) (%)

28.7%

43.3% c

NAV total return

(c= ((a-b)/b x 
100) (%)

94

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCGlossary (continued)

UCITS
Undertakings for the Collective Investment in Transferable 
Securities

Volatility
The term volatility describes how much and how quickly 
the share price or net asset value has tended to change in 
the  past.  Those  investments  with  the  greatest  movement 
in  their  share  prices  are  known  as  having  high  volatility, 
whereas those with a narrow range of change are known as 
having low volatility.

95

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewNotice of Annual General Meeting

This document is important and requires your immediate attention. If you are in any doubt as to what action you 
should take, you are recommended to seek your own financial advice from your stockbroker or other independent 
adviser authorised under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 immediately.

If you have sold or otherwise transferred all of your shares in Odyssean Investment Trust plc, please forward this 
document as soon as possible to the purchaser or transferee or to the stockbroker, bank or other agent through 
whom the sale or transfer was effected for transmission to the purchaser or transferee.

NOTICE  IS  HEREBY  GIVEN  that  the  fourth  ANNUAL  GENERAL  MEETING  of  Odyssean  Investment  Trust 
plc will be held at the offices of Odyssean Capital LLP, 6 Stratton Street, Mayfair, London W1J 8LD at 12 noon on 
Wednesday, 21 September 2022 to consider and vote on the resolutions below:

Resolutions  1  to  11  (inclusive)  will  be  proposed  as  ordinary  resolutions  and  resolutions  12  to  15  (inclusive)  will  be 
proposed as special resolutions.

1. 

 To receive and, if thought fit, to accept the Strategic Report, Directors’ Report, Auditors Report and the audited 
Financial Statements for the year ended 31 March 2022.

2.  To receive and approve the Directors’ Remuneration Report for the year ended 31 March 2022.

3.  To approve the Company's Remuneration Policy.

4.  To re-elect Mrs Jane Tufnell as a Director of the Company.

5.  To re-elect Miss Arabella Cecil as a Director of the Company.

6.  To re-elect Mr Peter Hewitt as a Director of the Company.

7.  To re-elect Mr Richard King as a Director of the Company.

8. 

 To re-appoint KPMG LLP as Auditor to the Company, to hold office from the conclusion of this meeting until the 
conclusion of the next general meeting at which financial statements are laid before the Company.

9.  To authorise the Audit Committee to determine the remuneration of the Auditor of the Company.

10.   THAT, the Directors be generally and unconditionally authorised in accordance with section 551 of the Companies 
Act 2006 (the “Act”) to exercise all the powers of the Company to allot ordinary shares up to 9,624,805 (representing 
approximately  10%  of  the  ordinary  shares  in  issue  as  at  the  date  of  this  Notice,  excluding  treasury  shares)  or,  if 
changed, 10% of the ordinary shares in issue immediately following the passing of this resolution, such authority to 
expire at conclusion of the Company’s AGM to be held in 2023, unless renewed, varied or revoked by the Company 
in a general meeting, save that the Company may, at any time prior to the expiry of such authority, make an offer 
or enter into an agreement which would or might require ordinary shares to be allotted in pursuance of such offer 
or agreement as if such authority had not expired. This resolution revokes and replaces all unexercised authorities 
previously granted to the Directors to allot ordinary shares but without prejudice to any allotment of ordinary shares 
or grant of rights made, offered or agreed to be made pursuant to such authorities.

96

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCNotice of Annual General Meeting (continued)

11.   THAT,  subject  to  the  passing  of  Resolution  10,  the  Directors  be  generally  and  unconditionally  authorised  in 
accordance with section 551 of the Companies Act 2006 (the “Act”) to exercise all the powers of the Company to 
allot ordinary shares up to a further 9,624,805 (representing approximately 10% of the ordinary shares in issue as 
at the date of this Notice, excluding treasury shares) or, if changed, 10% of the ordinary shares in issue immediately 
following the passing of this resolution, such authority to expire at conclusion of the Company’s AGM to be held 
in 2023, unless renewed, varied or revoked by the Company in a general meeting, save that the Company may, at 
any  time  prior  to  the  expiry  of  such  authority,  make  an  offer  or  enter  into  an  agreement  which  would  or  might 
require ordinary shares to be allotted in pursuance of such offer or agreement as if such authority had not expired. 
This resolution revokes and replaces all unexercised authorities previously granted to the Directors to allot ordinary 
shares but without prejudice to the authority granted to the Directors pursuant to Resolution 10, or any allotment of 
ordinary shares or grant of rights made, offered or agreed to be made pursuant to such authorities.

12   THAT, subject to the passing of Resolution 10, the Directors be generally empowered (pursuant to sections 570 and 
573 of the Companies Act 2006 (the “Act”)) to allot ordinary shares and to sell ordinary shares from treasury for 
cash as if section 561 of the Act did not apply to any such allotment or sale, provided that this power shall be limited 
to the issue of up to 9,624,805 shares (representing approximately 10% of the ordinary shares in issue as at the date 
of this Notice, excluding treasury shares) or, if changed, 10% of the ordinary shares in issue immediately following 
the passing of this resolution. This power will expire at the conclusion of the Company’s AGM to be held in 2023 
(unless previously revoked, varied or renewed by the Company in general meeting), save that the Company may, at 
any time prior to the expiry of such power, make an offer or enter into an agreement which would or might require 
ordinary shares to be allotted or sold from treasury after the expiry of such power and the Directors may allot or sell 
from treasury ordinary shares in pursuance of such an offer or agreement as if such power had not expired.

13.   THAT, subject to the passing of Resolution 11, the Directors be generally empowered (pursuant to sections 570 and 
573 of the Companies Act 2006 (the “Act”)) to allot ordinary shares and to sell ordinary shares from treasury for 
cash as if section 561 of the Act did not apply to any such allotment or sale, provided that this power shall be limited 
to the issue of up to a further 9,624,805 shares (representing approximately 10% of the ordinary shares in issue as 
at the date of this Notice, excluding treasury shares) or, if changed, 10% of the ordinary shares in issue immediately 
following the passing of this resolution. This power will expire at the conclusion of the Company’s AGM to be held 
in 2023 (unless previously revoked, varied or renewed by the Company in general meeting), save that the Company 
may, at any time prior to the expiry of such power, make an offer or enter into an agreement which would or might 
require ordinary shares to be allotted or sold from treasury after the expiry of such power and the Directors may allot 
or sell from treasury ordinary shares in pursuance of such an offer or agreement as if such power had not expired. This 
resolution is in addition to the authority granted pursuant to, but without prejudice to that granted to, the Directors 
in Resolution 12 above.

14.   THAT, the Company be authorised in accordance with section 701 of the Companies Act 2006 (the “Act”) to make 
market purchases (within the meaning of section 693(4) of the Act) of ordinary shares provided that the maximum 
number of ordinary shares authorised to be purchased will be up to 14.99% of the ordinary shares in issue at the date 
of this Notice (excluding treasury shares) or, if changed, 14.99% of the ordinary shares in issue immediately following 
the passing of this resolution. The minimum price which may be paid for an ordinary share is £0.01. The maximum 
price which may be paid for an ordinary share must not be more than the higher of:

(i) 

 5% above the average of the mid-market value of the ordinary shares for the five business days before the purchase 
is made; or

(ii)   the higher of the price of the last independent trade and the highest current independent bid for the ordinary 

shares on the trading venue where the purchase is carried out.

97

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverview 
 
Notice of Annual General Meeting (continued)

 Such authority will expire at the AGM of the Company to be held in 2023, save that the Company may contract to 
purchase ordinary shares under the authority thereby conferred prior to the expiry of such authority, which contract 
will  or  may  be  executed  wholly  or  partly  after  the  expiry  of  such  authority  and  may  purchase  ordinary  shares  in 
pursuance of such contract. This resolution revokes and replaces all unexercised authorities previously granted to the 
Directors to make market purchases of ordinary shares.

15.   THAT, a general meeting, other than an AGM, may be called on not less than 14 clear days’ notice.

All  shareholders  should  look  on  the  Company’s  website,  www.oitplc.com,  for  any  final  changes  to  the  AGM 
arrangements and whether attendance will be possible. In any case, all shareholders are strongly advised to exercise 
their votes in advance of the meeting by proxy, by following the voting instructions overleaf.

By order of the Board

Frostrow Capital LLP 
Company Secretary

1 June 2022

Registered Office: 25 Southampton Buildings, London WC2A 1AL

98

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC 
Notice of Annual General Meeting (continued)

Notes
1. 

 Holders of ordinary shares are entitled to attend, speak and vote at the AGM. A member entitled to attend, speak and 
vote at this meeting may appoint one or more persons as his/her proxy to attend, speak and vote on his/her behalf 
at the meeting. A proxy need not be a member of the Company. If multiple proxies are appointed, they must not 
be appointed in respect of the same shares. To be effective, the enclosed form of proxy, together with any power of 
attorney or other authority under which it is signed or a certified copy thereof, should be lodged at the office of the 
Company’s Registrar, Equiniti Limited, Aspect House, Spencer Road, Lancing, West Sussex BN99 6DA by no later 
than 12.00 noon on Monday, 19 September 2022.

 If you return more than one proxy appointment, either by paper or electronic communication, that received last by 
Equiniti before the latest time for the receipt of proxies will take precedence. You are advised to read the terms and 
conditions of use carefully. Electronic communication facilities are open to all shareholders and those who use them 
will not be disadvantaged.

 The  appointment  of  a  proxy  will  not  prevent  a  member  from  attending  the  meeting  and  voting  in  person  if  he/
she so wishes. A member present in person or by proxy shall have one vote on a show of hands and on a poll every 
member present in person or by proxy shall have one vote for every ordinary share of which he/she is the holder. 
The termination of the authority of a person to act as proxy must be notified to the Company in writing. Amended 
instructions must be received by the Company’s Registrar by the deadline for receipt of proxies.

 To  appoint  more  than  one  proxy,  shareholders  will  need  to  complete  a  separate  proxy  form  in  relation  to  each 
appointment, stating clearly on each proxy form the number of shares in relation to which the proxy is appointed. 
A failure to specify the number of shares to which each proxy appointment relates or specifying an aggregate number 
of shares in excess of those held by the member will result in the proxy appointment being invalid. Please indicate if 
the proxy instruction is one of multiple instructions being given. If you require additional proxy forms, please contact 
the Registrar’s helpline on 0371 384 2030 (+44 (0) 121 415 7047 from outside the UK). Lines are open 8.30 a.m. to 
5.30 p.m. Monday to Friday (excluding public holidays in England and Wales). All proxy forms must be signed and 
should be returned together in the same envelope if possible.

 In the case of joint holders, where more than one of the joint holders purports to appoint a proxy, only the appointment 
submitted by the most senior holder will be accepted. Seniority is determined by the order in which the names of the 
joint holders appear in the Company’s Register of Members in respect of the joint holders (the first named being the 
most senior).

2. 

 Only those ordinary shareholders registered in the register of members of the Company as at 6.30 pm on Monday, 
19 September 2022 (the “specified time”) shall be entitled to attend or vote at the aforesaid AGM in respect of the 
number of shares registered in their name at that time. Changes to entries on the relevant register of securities after 
6.30 pm on 19 September 2022 shall be disregarded in determining the rights of any person to attend or vote at 
the meeting. If the meeting is adjourned to a time not more than 48 hours after the specified time applicable to the 
original meeting, that time will also apply for the purpose of determining the entitlement of members to attend and 
vote (and for the purpose of determining the number of votes they may cast) at the adjourned meeting. If however the 
meeting is adjourned for a longer period then, to be so entitled, members must be entered on the Company’s register 
of members at the time which is 48 hours before the time fixed for the adjourned meeting, or if the Company gives 
notice of the adjourned meeting, at the time specified in that notice.

3. 

 Shareholders who hold their shares electronically may submit their votes through CREST. Instructions on how to 
vote through CREST can be found by accessing the following website: www.euroclear.com.

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Notice of Annual General Meeting (continued)

 CREST members who wish to appoint a proxy or proxies by utilising the CREST electronic proxy appointment 
service may do so for this meeting and any adjournment thereof by following the procedures described in the CREST 
manual. CREST personal members or other CREST sponsored members, and those CREST members who have 
appointed a voting service provider(s), should refer to their CREST sponsor or voting service provider(s), who will 
be able to take the appropriate action on their behalf.

 In order for a proxy appointment or instruction made by means of CREST to be valid, the appropriate CREST 
message (a “CREST Proxy Instruction”) must be properly authenticated in accordance with Euroclear UK & Ireland 
Limited’s specifications and must contain the information required for such instructions, as described in the CREST 
manual (available via www.euroclear.com). The message, in order to be valid, must be transmitted so as to be received 
by them Company’s agent (ID RA19) by the latest time for receipt of proxy appointments specified in note 1 above. 
For this purpose, the time of receipt will be taken to be the time (as determined by the timestamp applied to the 
message by the CREST Applications Host) from which the Company’s agent is able to retrieve the message by enquiry 
to CREST in the manner prescribed by CREST. After this time, any change of instructions to proxies appointed 
through CREST  should be communicated  to the appointee through other means. CREST members and,  where 
applicable, their CREST sponsors or voting service providers should note that Euroclear UK & Ireland Limited does 
not make available special procedures in CREST for any particular messages. Normal system timings and limitations 
will therefore apply in relation to the input of CREST Proxy Instructions. It is the responsibility of the CREST 
member concerned to take (or, if the CREST member is a CREST personal member or sponsored member or has 
appointed a voting service provider(s), to procure that his CREST sponsor or voting service provider(s) take(s)) such 
action as shall be necessary to ensure that a message is transmitted by means of the CREST system by any particular 
time.

 In this connection, CREST members and, where applicable, their CREST sponsors or voting service providers are 
referred, in particular, to those sections of the CREST manual concerning practical limitations of the CREST system 
and timings.

 The Company may treat as invalid a CREST Proxy Instruction in the circumstances set out in Regulation 35(5) (a) 
of the Uncertificated Securities Regulations 2001.

 A person to whom this notice is sent who is a person nominated under section 146 of the Companies Act 2006 to 
enjoy information rights (a “Nominated Person”) may, under an agreement between him/her and the shareholder 
by whom he/she was nominated, have a right to be appointed (or to have someone else appointed) as a proxy for 
the AGM. If a Nominated Person has no such proxy appointment right or does not wish to exercise it, he/she may, 
under any such agreement, have a right to give instructions to the shareholder as to the exercise of voting rights. 
The statements of the rights of members in relation to the appointment of proxies in note 1 above do not apply to a 
Nominated Person. The rights described in those notes can only be exercised by registered members of the Company.

 Shareholders (and any proxies or representatives they appoint) agree, by attending the meeting, that they are expressly 
requesting  and  that  they  are  willing  to  receive  any  communications  (including  communications  relating  to  the 
Company’s securities) made at the meeting.

 As at 1 June 2022 (being the date of the publication of this notice), the Company’s issued share capital amounted to 
96,248,053 ordinary shares carrying one vote each. Therefore, the total voting rights of the Company as at the date of 
this notice of meeting were 96,248,053.

 Any corporation which is a member may appoint one or more corporate representatives who may exercise on its 
behalf all of its powers as a member provided that they do not do so in relation to the same shares. To be able to attend 
and vote at the meeting, corporate representatives will be required to produce prior to their entry to the meeting 
evidence satisfactory to the Company of their appointment. Corporate shareholders may also appoint one or more 
proxies in accordance with note 1.

4. 

5. 

6. 

7. 

100

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLC 
 
 
 
Notice of Annual General Meeting (continued)

8. 

 Any  question  relevant  to  the  business  of  the  AGM  may  normally  be  asked  at  the  meeting  by  anyone  permitted 
to speak at the meeting. You can also submit your question in advance by letter addressed to the Secretary at the 
registered office of the Company or by email to info@frostrow.com. The Company must answer any question asked 
by a member relating to the business being dealt with at the meeting unless:

– 

 answering the question would interfere unduly with the preparation for the meeting or involve the disclosure of 
confidential information;

– 

the answer has already been given on a website in the form of an answer to a question; or

– 

it is undesirable in the interests of the Company or the good order of the meeting that the question be answered.

9. 

 Members  should  note  that  it  is  possible  that,  pursuant  to  requests  made  by  members  of  the  Company  under 
section 527 of the Companies Act 2006, the Company may be required to publish on a website a statement setting 
out any matter relating to: (i) the audit of the Company’s financial statements (including the Auditor’s report and the 
conduct of the audit) that are to be laid before the AGM; or (ii) any circumstances connected with an auditor of the 
Company ceasing to hold office since the previous meeting at which annual financial statements and reports were laid 
in accordance with section 437 of the Companies Act 2006. The Company may not require the members requesting 
any such website publication to pay its expenses in complying with sections 527 or 528 of the Companies Act 2006. 
Where the Company is required to place a statement on a website under section 527 of the Companies Act 2006, it 
must forward the statement to the Company’s Auditor no later than the time when it makes the statement available 
on the website. The business which may be dealt with at the AGM includes any statement that the Company has been 
required under section 527 of the Companies Act 2006 to publish on a website.

10.   Members satisfying the thresholds in section 338 of the Companies Act 2006 may require the Company to give, to 
members of the Company entitled to receive notice of the AGM, notice of a resolution which those members intend 
to move (and which may properly be moved) at the AGM. A resolution may properly be moved at the AGM unless 
(i) it would, if passed, be ineffective (whether by reason of any inconsistency with any enactment or the Company’s 
constitution or otherwise); (ii) it is defamatory of any person; or (iii) it is frivolous or vexatious. A request made 
pursuant to this right may be in hard copy or electronic form, must identify the resolution of which notice is to be 
given, must be authenticated by the person(s) making it and must be received by the Company not later than six 
weeks before the date of the AGM.

11.   Members satisfying the thresholds in section 338A of the Companies Act 2006 may request the Company to include 
in the business to be dealt with at the AGM any matter (other than a proposed resolution) which may properly be 
included in the business at the AGM. A matter may properly be included in the business at the AGM unless (i) it is 
defamatory of any person, or (ii) it is frivolous or vexatious. A request made pursuant to this right may be in hard copy 
or electronic form, must identify grounds for the request, must be authenticated by the person(s) making it and must 
be received by the Company not later than six weeks before the date of the AGM.

12.   Any person holding 3% or more of the total voting rights of the Company who appoints a person other than the 
chairman of the meeting as his/her proxy is to ensure that both he/she and his/her proxy comply with their respective 
disclosure obligations under the UK Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules.

13.   Copies of the letters of appointment of the Directors of the Company will be available for inspection at the registered 
office  of  the  Company  during  normal  business  hours  on  any  weekday  (Saturdays,  Sundays  and  public  holidays 
excepted) from the date of this Notice until the conclusion of the AGM and on the date of the AGM at the offices 
of Odyssean Capital LLP, 6 Stratton Street, Mayfair, London W1J 8LD from 11.45 a.m. until the conclusion of 
the meeting.

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Notice of Annual General Meeting (continued)

14.   This notice, the information required by section 311A of the Companies Act 2006 and, if applicable, any members’ 
statements, members’ resolutions or members’ matters of business received by the Company after the date of this 
notice, will be available on the Company’s website at www.oitplc.com.

15.   Members  may  not  use  any  electronic  address  provided  either  in  the  Notice  of  Meeting  or  any  related  documents 
(including the form of proxy) to communicate with the Company for any purpose other than those expressly stated.

102

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCExplanatory Notes to the Resolutions

Resolutions  1  to  11  will  be  proposed  as  ordinary  resolutions  and  Resolutions  12  to  15  will  be  proposed  as  special 
resolutions.

Resolution 1 – To receive the Annual Report and Financial Statements
The Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 31 March 2022 will be presented to the AGM and 
shareholders will be given an opportunity at the meeting to ask questions. The Annual Report and Financial Statements 
can be found on the Company’s website at www.oitplc.com under Corporate Information.

Resolution 2 – To receive and approve the Directors’ Remuneration Report
The Directors’ Remuneration Report is set out in full on pages 61 to 64 of the Annual Report.

Resolution 3 – To approve the Company's Remuneration Policy 
The Company's Remuneration policy is set out on page 64.

Resolutions 4 to 7 – Re-election of Directors
Resolutions  4  to  7  deal  with  the  re-election  of  each  Director.  Biographies  of  each  of  the  Directors  can  be  found  on 
page 47 of the Annual Report.

The Board has confirmed, following a performance review, that the Directors standing for re-election continue to perform 
effectively.

Resolutions 8 and 9 – Re-appointment of auditors
Resolution 8 relates to the re-appointment of KPMG LLP as the Company’s independent auditors to hold office until 
the  next  Annual  General  Meeting  of  the  Company  and  Resolution  9  authorises  the  Audit  Committee  to  set  their 
remuneration.  Following  the  implementation  of  the  Competition  and  Markets  Authority  order  on  Statutory  Audit 
Services only the Audit Committee may negotiate and agree the terms of the auditors’ service agreement.

Resolutions 10 and 11 – Authority to allot ordinary shares
Resolutions 10 and 11, ordinary resolutions as set out in the Notice of AGM, if passed, will renew the Directors’ authority 
to allot shares in accordance with statutory pre-emption rights. These resolutions will authorise the Board to allot:

– 

– 

 ordinary shares generally and unconditionally in accordance with section 551 of Companies Act 2006 up to an 
aggregate  nominal  value  of  £96,248,  representing  approximately  10%  of  the  Company’s  issued  share  capital 
(excluding treasury shares) as at the date of the Notice of AGM or, if changed, the number representing 10% of the 
issued share capital of the Company at the date at which this resolution is passed (Resolution 10); and

 further ordinary shares generally and unconditionally in accordance with section 551 of Companies Act 2006 up to 
an additional aggregate nominal value of £96,248, representing approximately 10% of the Company’s issued share 
capital (excluding treasury shares) as at the date of the Notice of AGM or, if changed, the number representing 10% 
of the issued share capital of the Company at the date at which this resolution is passed (Resolution 11).

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ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewExplanatory Notes to the Resolutions (continued)

If  both  these  resolutions  are  passed,  shareholders  will  be  granting  the  Directors  authority  to  allot  up  to  20%  of  the 
Company’s issued share capital. The Board believes that passing of Resolutions 10 and 11 is in the shareholders’ interests 
as the authority is intended to be used for funding investment opportunities sourced by the Portfolio Manager, thereby 
mitigating any potential dilution of investment returns for existing shareholders, and the Directors will only issue new 
ordinary shares at a price above the prevailing NAV per ordinary share. If only Resolution 10 is passed and Resolution 11 
is not passed, shareholders will only be granting Directors the authority to allot up to 10% of the existing issued ordinary 
share capital of the Company. These authorities, if given, will lapse at the conclusion of the 2023 AGM of the Company.

The Directors do not currently intend to allot shares other than to take advantage of opportunities in the market as they 
arise and only if they believe it would be advantageous to the Company’s shareholders to do so.

In the event that Resolution 10 is not passed, Resolution 11 will not be proposed at the AGM.

Resolutions 12 and 13 – Disapplication of pre-emption rights
Resolution 12, a special resolution, is being proposed to authorise the Directors to disapply the statutory preemption 
rights of existing shareholders in relation to the issue of shares under Resolution 10, for cash or the sale of shares out of 
treasury up to an aggregate nominal amount of £96,248, being approximately 10% of the Company’s issued share capital 
(excluding treasury shares) as at the date of the Notice of AGM or, if changed, 10% of the issued share capital immediately 
upon the passing of this resolution.

Resolution 13, a special resolution, is being proposed to authorise the Directors to disapply the statutory preemption 
rights of existing shareholders in relation to the further issue of shares under Resolution 11, for cash or the sale of shares 
out of treasury up to an aggregate nominal amount of £96,248, being approximately 10% of the Company’s issued share 
capital (excluding treasury shares) as at the date of the Notice of AGM or, if changed, 10% of the issued share capital 
immediately upon the passing of this resolution.

In respect of Resolutions 12 and 13, shares would only be issued at a price above the prevailing NAV per share. The 
Directors will only issue shares on a non-pre-emptive basis if they believe it would be in the best interests of the Company’s 
shareholders.

If  both  these  resolutions  are  passed,  shareholders  will  be  granting  the  Directors  authority  to  allot  up  to  20%  of  the 
Company’s  issued  share  capital  on  a  non-pre-emptive  basis.  Although  this  percentage  authority  is  higher  than  the 
authority typically sought by investment companies, the Board believes that in order to have the maximum flexibility to 
raise finance to enable the Company to take advantage of suitable opportunities, the passing of Resolutions 12 and 13 is 
in the shareholders’ interests. These authorities, if given, will lapse at the 2023 AGM of the Company.

Resolution 14 – Purchase of own shares
Resolution 14, a special resolution, will renew the Company’s authority to make market purchases of up to 14,427,583 
ordinary shares (being 14.99% of the issued share capital as at the date of the Notice of AGM), either for cancellation or 
placing into treasury at the determination of the Directors. Purchases of ordinary shares will be made within guidelines 
established from time to time by the Board. Any purchase of ordinary shares would be made only out of the available 
cash resources of the Company. The maximum price which may be paid for an ordinary share must not be more than the 
higher of (i) 5% above the average of the mid-market value of the ordinary shares for the five business days before the 
purchase is made, or (ii) the higher of the price of the last independent trade and the highest current independent bid 
for the ordinary shares on the trading venue where the purchase is carried out. The minimum price which may be paid is 
£0.01 per ordinary share.

104

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCExplanatory Notes to the Resolutions (continued)

The Directors would only use this authority in order to address any significant imbalance between the supply and demand 
for the ordinary shares and to manage the discount to NAV at which the ordinary shares trade. Ordinary shares will be 
repurchased only at prices below the NAV per ordinary share, which should have the effect of increasing the NAV per 
ordinary share for remaining shareholders.

This authority, if approved by shareholders, will expire at the AGM to be held in 2023, when a resolution for its renewal 
will be proposed.

Resolution 15 – Notice period for general meetings
In terms of the Companies Act 2006, the notice period for general meetings (other than an AGM) is 21 clear days’ notice 
unless the Company: (i) has gained shareholder approval for the holding of general meetings on 14 clear days’ notice by 
passing a special resolution at the most recent AGM; and (ii) offers the facility for all shareholders to vote by electronic 
means. The Company would like to preserve its ability to call general meetings (other than an annual general meeting) 
on less than 21 clear days’ notice. The shorter notice period proposed by resolution 15, a special resolution, would not be 
used as a matter of routine, but only where the flexibility is merited by the business of the meeting and is thought to be in 
the interests of shareholders as a whole. The approval will be effective until the date of the AGM to be held in 2023, when 
it is intended that a similar resolution will be proposed.

Directors’ Recommendation
The  Directors  consider  each  resolution  being  proposed  at  the  AGM  to  be  in  the  best  interests  of  the  Company  and 
shareholders as a whole and they unanimously recommend that all shareholders vote in favour of them, as they intend to 
do in respect of their own beneficial shareholdings.

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ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCStrategic ReportIndependent Auditor’s ReportGovernanceFinancial StatementsAdditional Information and Notice of AGMOverviewCorporate Information

Directors
Jane Tufnell (Chairman) 
Arabella Cecil 
Peter Hewitt 
Richard King

Company Secretary and Registered Office
Frostrow Capital LLP 
25 Southampton Buildings 
London WC2A 1AL 
Tel: 0203 008 4910 
Email: info@frostrow.com

Auditor
KPMG LLP 
15 Canada Square 
Canary Wharf 
London E14 5GL

Registrar
Equiniti Limited 
Aspect House 
Spencer Road 
Lancing BN99 6DA 
Tel: 0371 384 2030; +44 (0) 121 415 7047 
www.shareview.co.uk

Portfolio Manager
Odyssean Capital LLP 
6 Stratton Street 
Mayfair 
London W1J 8LD 
Tel: 020 7640 3280 
Email: info@odysseancapital.com

Broker
Winterflood Securities Limited 
Cannon Bridge House 
25 Dowgate Hill 
London EC4R 2GA 

Solicitor
Gowling WLG (UK) LLP 
4 More London Riverside 
London SE1 2AU 

Custodian
RBC Investor Services Trust (UK Branch) 
Riverbank House 
2 Swan Lane 
London EC4R 3AF

Corporate website
www.oitplc.com

Shareholder warning
Many  companies  are  aware  that  their  shareholders  have  received  unsolicited  phone  calls  or  correspondence  concerning 
investment matters. These calls typically come from fraudsters operating in ‘boiler rooms’ offering investors shares that often 
turn out to be worthless or non-existent, or an inflated price for shares they own. While high profits are promised, those who buy 
or sell shares in this way usually lose their money. These fraudsters can be very persistent and extremely persuasive. Shareholders 
are therefore advised to be very wary of any unsolicited advice, offers to buy shares at a discount or offers of free company reports.

It is very unlikely that either the Company or the Company’s Registrar would make unsolicited telephone calls to shareholders 
and that any such calls would relate only to official documentation already circulated to shareholders and never in respect of 
investment ‘advice’.

If you have been contacted by an unauthorised firm regarding your shares, you can report this using the FCA helpline on  
0800 111 6768 or by using the share fraud reporting form at www.fca.org.uk/consumers/scams.

106

ODYSSEAN INVESTMENT TRUST PLCBe ScamSmart

Investment scams are  
designed to look like  
genuine investments

Spot the warning signs

Have you been:

•  contacted out of the blue
•  promised tempting returns  

and told the investment is safe

•  called repeatedly, or
•  told the offer is only available  

for a limited time?

If so, you might have been  
contacted by fraudsters.

Avoid investment fraud
1  Reject cold calls 

If you’ve received unsolicited contact about 
an investment opportunity, chances are 
it’s a high risk investment or a scam. You 
should treat the call with extreme caution. 
The safest thing to do is to hang up.

2  Check the FCA Warning List 

The FCA Warning List is a list of firms and 
individuals we know are operating without 
our authorisation.

3  Get impartial advice 

Think about getting impartial financial 
advice before you hand over any money. 
Seek advice from someone unconnected to 
the firm that has approached you.

Report a Scam
If you suspect that you have been 
approached by fraudsters please tell the 
FCA using the reporting form at  
www.fca.org.uk/consumers/report-
scam-unauthorised-firm. You can also call 
the FCA Consumer Helpline on  
0800 111 6768

If you have lost money to investment fraud, 
you should report it to Action Fraud on  
0300 123 2040 or online at  
www.actionfraud.police.uk

Find out more at  
www.fca.org.uk/scamsmart

Remember: if it sounds too  
good to be true, it probably is!

This report is printed on Revive 100% White Silk a totally recycled paper 
produced using 100% recycled waste at a mill that has been awarded the 
ISO 14001 certificate for environmental management.

The pulp is bleached using a totally chlorine free (TCF) process.
This report has been produced using vegetable based inks.

Odyssean Investment Trust plc 
25 Southampton Buildings, London WC2A 1AL
www.oitplc.com

Perivan  263014

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INVESTMENT TRUST PLC

Company Registered Number:  11121934

www.oitplc.com