Civitas Social Housing — Strong financial and social returns continuing

Civitas Social Housing (LSE: CSH)

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79.80

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Market capitalisation

497m

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Research: Real Estate

Civitas Social Housing — Strong financial and social returns continuing

H120 results showed strong year-on-year growth in rental income and earnings. Dividend cover is increasing and full cover is in sight, with debt facilities in place to fund further portfolio growth as the company gears its existing equity. Through its investment adviser, the company continues to work closely with housing associations, other counterparties and the regulator to raise performance and delivery standards that will benefit all stakeholders over the longer term.

Martyn King

Written by

Martyn King

Director, Financials

Real Estate

Civitas Social Housing

Strong financial and social returns continuing

Company update

Real estate

17 January 2020

Price

99.5p

Market cap

£619m

Net debt (£m) at 30 September 2019

181.0

Net LTV

21.5%

Shares in issue

622.5m

Free float

99%

Code

CSH

Primary exchange

LSE

Secondary exchange

N/A

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

12.3

14.1

(4.3)

Rel (local)

11.3

7.1

(14.6)

52-week high/low

104p

77p

Business description

Civitas is the leading listed UK social housing REIT. Its investment objective is to provide an attractive level of income, with the potential for capital growth, from investing in a diversified portfolio of fully developed social homes, particularly specialist supported housing for vulnerable adults.

Next events

Q320 NAV update

Late Jan/early Feb 2020

Analyst

Martyn King

+44 (0)20 3077 5745

Civitas Social Housing is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

H120 results showed strong year-on-year growth in rental income and earnings. Dividend cover is increasing and full cover is in sight, with debt facilities in place to fund further portfolio growth as the company gears its existing equity. Through its investment adviser, the company continues to work closely with housing associations, other counterparties and the regulator to raise performance and delivery standards that will benefit all stakeholders over the longer term.

Year end

Net rental income (£m)

Adj earnings*
(£m)

EPRA EPS*
(p)

EPRA NAV/
share* (p))

DPS (p)

P/NAV
(x)

Yield
(%)

03/18

18.6

9.1

1.44

105.5

4.25

0.94

4.3

03/19

35.7

22.6

3.63

107.1

5.00

0.93

5.0

03/20e

46.7

29.8

4.80

108.0

5.30

0.92

5.3

03/21e

52.2

33.6

5.41

109.9

5.40

0.91

5.4

Note: *EPRA earnings and NAV are fully diluted.

Strong income growth and increasing DPS cover

H120 revenues increased by 45% year on year, driven by acquisitions and rent indexation, and EPRA earnings and diluted EPRA EPS increased by just over 40%. DPS paid (up 6% year on year) was 87% covered by earnings and the period-end run rate was 96%. With debt facilities in place to fund further portfolio growth, full cover is within reach. Rent indexation also supported property valuations and EPRA NAV increased modestly to 107.3p (FY19: 107.1p) despite dividend distributions and a drag from acquisition costs. Our estimates are slightly reduced by assumed slower investment, in line with the H120 experience. We continue to expect DPS growth, in line with inflation, with run-rate full cover (on the increased DPS) achieved during the next 12 months.

Supporting sector growth and development

The chronic shortage of specialist supported housing (SSH) homes is forecast to increase, yet compared with the alternatives of residential care or hospitals it is widely recognised to improve lives in a cost-effective manner. SSH funding comes 100% from central government via local authorities, with cross-party support. Civitas continues to work closely with its housing association partner providers to help them develop and mature and is actively engaged with the regulator, which has raised sector-wide concerns over corporate governance and/or financial viability. It has supported the establishment of a sector community interest company (CIC) to bring together housing associations and pool industry skills, expertise, and best practice. Most of Civitas’s housing association partners are profitable and it continues to operate as normal with those that are subject to regulatory notices and judgements, actively engaging with them to help effect any changes that may be necessary to allay the regulator’s concerns.

Valuation: Attractive yield and NAV discount

Despite recent share price strength, compared with a peer group of long income investors in social housing and healthcare property, Civitas shares provide an above-average prospective yield and trade at a larger discount to EPRA NAV.

Strong financial and social returns continuing

This report updates on the financial and operational progress of the company since our detailed initiation note published in June 2019 following publication of the FY19 results.

The six months to September 2019 (H120) saw strong year-on-year growth in income and cash flow, driven by the growing portfolio and consumer price inflation (CPI)-linked rental growth. Dividends paid increased by 6% and were 87% covered by EPRA earnings. The company estimates a period-end run rate of 96% and a full-year contribution from recent acquisitions and continuing planned investment should see cover soon reach 100%, consistent with our revised estimates.

Operationally, Civitas has continued to leverage its position as the leading provider of supported social housing, playing a hands-on role in bringing about direct improvements to its counterparties, particularly its housing association partners. It continues to work closely with these counterparties and engage with the regulator of social housing (RSH) to help address the sector risks identified by the RSH to the benefit of all stakeholders.

The company also continues to deliver a strong positive social return, providing much-needed private investment capital to housing associations so they may provide and manage additional care-based quality accommodation to some of the most vulnerable in society, improving tenant life outcomes in a cost-effective manner. Independent analysis indicates that Civitas created £114m of social value in the year to 31 March 2019, including £59m of direct cost savings for the public purse.

Strong H120 income growth and increasing dividend cover

Exhibit 1: Summary of H120 financial results

Year to 31 March (£m)

H210

H119

H120/H119

2019

Revenue

22.7

15.7

45.0%

35.7

Total expenses

(4.9)

(4.4)

10.8%

(9.6)

Operating profit/(loss) before revaluation of properties

17.8

11.3

58.4%

26.1

Change in fair value of investment properties

3.2

6.9

3.7

Operating profit/(loss)

21.0

18.2

15.5%

29.7

Net finance expense

(3.4)

(1.1)

(3.5)

Change in fair value of interest rate derivatives

(0.2)

0.0

C share amortisation

0.0

(6.5)

(6.4)

PBT

17.4

10.6

65.0%

19.9

Tax

0.0

0.0

0.0

IFRS net earnings

17.4

10.6

65.0%

19.9

Adjust for:

Change in fair value of investment properties

(3.2)

(6.9)

(3.7)

Finance costs associated with C share financial liability

0.0

6.5

6.4

EPRA earnings

14.3

10.1

41.2%

22.6

Basic IFRS EPS (p)

2.80

3.02

4.67

Diluted EPRA EPS (p)

2.29

1.63

41.1%

3.63

DPS declared (p)

2.65

2.50

6.0%

5.00

Investment portfolio

833.5

673.9

23.7%

820.1

Diluted EPRA NAV per share (p)

107.3

107.8

-0.5%

107.1

Net cash/(debt)

(181.0)

(7.3)

(161.3)

Net LTV*

21.5%

1.1%

19.5%

Source: Civitas data, Edison Investment Research. Note: *Net debt as a percentage of investment property at fair value.

The key financial highlights of the interim results were:

Revenues increased by 45% compared with H119, primarily driven by acquisitions but also rent indexation to CPI. With a period-end annualised rent roll of £46.5m, recent acquisitions are yet to fully contribute.

Total expense growth was well below the rate of growth of revenues and the investment portfolio value. Investment advisory fees were lower than in the prior year period (c £3.1m versus c £3.2m) reflecting the change to average IFRS NAV as the base for calculation compared with the previous use of average NAV on the higher portfolio basis. General and administrative expenses increased to c £1.7m compared with c £1.1m and included c £0.3m of items identified by the company as non-recurring including prior period fees, consultancy fees, offshore administration fees, and abortive project costs.

Demonstrating scale economies from the growth of the portfolio, the EPRA cost ratio (recurring EPRA costs as a percent of EPRA revenues) reduced to 21.6% (H119: 28.2%; FY19: 27.0%). The ongoing charge ratio (recurring costs as a percentage of average net assets) was 1.37% (FY19: 1.36%).

Rent indexation continued to drive the external portfolio valuation while yield compression had a smaller impact than in H119. The gross revaluation gain was c £7.0m or c 0.8% of the opening fair value of the portfolio. The net revaluation movement of £3.2m reported in the income statement included adjustment for lease incentives and the straight line recognition of fixed rent increases as well as for acquisition costs written off.

Exhibit 2: Revaluation movement

£m unless stated otherwise

H120

H119

FY19

Gross property revaluation

7.0

13.9

21.1

Gross property revaluation as % opening fair value

0.8%

2.7%

4.1%

Adjust for:

Acquisition costs written off

(2.7)

(2.6)

(10.9)

Change in straight line rent recognition adjustment

(0.2)

(0.2)

(0.5)

Change in debtor for lease incentive

(1.0)

(4.2)

(6.0)

Income statement revaluation movement

3.2

6.9

3.7

Source: Company data, Edison Investment Research

The increase in net finance expense compared with H119 reflects the debt taken on to grow the portfolio as Civitas moves towards its target 35% gearing.

EPRA earnings increased by more than 40% to £14.3m and diluted EPRA EPS increased to 2.29p.

Two quarterly dividends of 1.325p each were paid during the period, in line with the target for the year of 5.3p (FY19: 5.0p). Dividends paid were 87% covered by EPRA earnings during the period and the company estimates a period-end run rate of 96%. With a full-year contribution from recent acquisitions and continuing planned investment, Civitas expects cover to soon reach 100%.

At 30 September 2019 (H120) the Civitas investment portfolio was independently valued at £842m (the balance sheet value of £833m is adjusted for lease incentives). During H120, Civitas acquired eight SSH properties and including the £2.7m of acquisition costs, acquisition investment in the period was £10.2m. At c 35% the acquisition cost ratio appears high (including full land transfer tax we would expect c 6.8%) and we understand that a portion of the H120 costs relate to the determination of acquisition costs in respect of previously agreed transactions.

EPRA NAV per share increased slightly from end-FY19, from 107.1p per share to 107.3 per share.

We calculate end-H120 net LTV (net debt as a percentage of investment property assets measured on an IFRS basis) of 21.5% or 27.1% on a gross basis (ie before adjusting gross debt for cash balances). On the company definition (gross borrowings as a percentage of gross assets on a portfolio basis) gearing was 24%.

Driving sector improvements to benefit all stakeholders

Given its greater complexity and granularity and the continuing strong demand for general needs social housing, SSH has not generally been the focus of the longer-established housing associations and sector growth has been led by 40–50 more specialist providers that have been established in the past 10 years or so. These have typically utilised lease-based structures to provide the capital for growth and, in many cases being newer and smaller associations, inevitably have relatively thin capital bases and less sophisticated management and governance structures. Prompted by the financial distress of First Priority Housing Association in early 2018, the RSH has been closely monitoring the sector and has raised a number of concerns. In some specific cases it has issued regulatory judgements, primarily in relation to corporate governance and/or financial viability. Against this backdrop, the company’s investment adviser, Civitas Housing Advisors (CHA), has taken an active role, working in close consultation with its sector partners (housing associations, care providers, local authorities) and with the RSH to promote the delivery of as many improvements as possible. Alongside its ongoing dialogue with the RSH, the actions that have been taken by Civitas include:

Supporting the establishment of a new not-for-profit CIC, the Social Housing Family CIC. The CIC is governed by a board of experienced non-executive directors and chaired by CHA director Paul Bridge, although it is independent of CHA (and Civitas) and is funded by the sector. It intends to bring together a group of housing associations active in the SSH sector, providing a platform for the pooling of sector skills and resources to be able to support the performance and delivery of group members. Specifically, it is hoped the CIS will support housing associations in addressing the concerns of the RSH. Auckland Home Solutions, a leading housing association partner of Civitas accounting for 20% of the rent roll at end-H120, is the first housing association to join the group.

Assisting in the recruitment of new housing association board members and executives, to strengthen corporate governance and leadership.

Rolling programmes of housing association and performance seminars, hosted quarterly by Civitas.

Assisting housing associations with business planning reviews.

We believe current regulatory interventions in the fast-developing SSH segment are primarily aimed at identifying, assessing and making clear the risks so that these may be adequately managed as a means to safeguarding this financial resilience and maintaining the operational standards of the sector. Importantly, we believe the regulator recognises the important role played by private capital in supporting the much-needed growth and sustainable development of the sector. It is important to note that Civitas continues to operate as normal with those of its housing association partners that are subject to regulatory notices and judgements, with no material impacts on its ability to collect rents due, while it engages with them to help effect any changes that may be necessary to allay the regulator’s concerns. Research undertaken by CHA shows the company’s housing association partners are mostly generating increased net financial surpluses from their core activities. Westmoreland Supported Housing and Trinity Housing Association have been loss making but have implemented corrective business plans.

Portfolio update

At 30 September 2019 (H120) the Civitas investment portfolio was independently valued at £842m (the balance sheet value of £833m is adjusted for lease incentives). With an annualised rent roll of £46.5m the valuation reflects a net initial yield of 5.28%, similar to end FY19. The portfolio has been assembled at a cumulative cost (excluding acquisition expenses) of £764m with an average acquisition yield of 5.9% (or 5.6% after acquisition costs). The weighted average unexpired lease term was 23.9 years at end-H120, slightly down from 24.4 years at end-FY19, reflecting the passage of time.

The portfolio comprised 599 individual properties, fully let to 15 different registered providers that manage SSH homes for more than 4,000 tenants on behalf of 160 different local authorities.

Exhibit 3: Portfolio summary

30-Sep-19

31-Mar-19

Capital deployed (before acquisition costs)

£764m

£758m

External fair valuation

£842m

£827m

Weighted average unexpired lease term

23.9 years

24.4 years

Contracted annualised rent roll

£46.5m

£45.6m

Net initial yield

5.28%

5.27%

Number of properties

599

591

Number of tenancies

4,114

4,072

Number of local authorities

160

157

Number of registered providers

15

15

Number of care providers

114

113

Source: Civitas

Civitas has grown its portfolio strongly since IPO and by comparison, the pace of growth in H120 (eight assets and £10.2m of investment including acquisition costs) was relatively modest. The company indicates it was awaiting the completion of new debt facilities before committing to new acquisitions although we suspect the very active role that the investment adviser has played in supporting existing housing association partners to evolve and develop their business models may also have had an impact. With additional debt facilities now in place (see page 7), Civitas expects the pace of investment to pick up.

Exhibit 4: Strong asset growth since IPO

Source: Civitas

The portfolio is geographically diversified around major conurbations, with around one-third of the properties purpose built or repurposed and two-thirds well located community properties that have been adapted on a bespoke basis for long-term use by residents. The list of housing associations with which Civitas has chosen to work provides further diversification and has been assembled with the aim of establishing a housing association counterparty in each geographic area and to have several others in reserve to provide for contingencies. In some circumstances this approach facilitates the reassignment of leases from one housing association to another that may be better placed to undertake the management of the assets and meet the needs of tenants.

Exhibit 5: Spread of housing association counterparties (by share of rent roll)

Source: Civitas. Note: Data at 30 September 2019.

The spread of housing association counterparties (by share of rent roll) is shown in Exhibit 5. Unrelated to any changes in the composition of the portfolio, during H120 the share of rent roll accounted for by Auckland Home Solutions increased from 11.3% to 20.0% while that of Westmoreland Supported Housing reduced from 19.7% to 10.8%. We believe this change is likely to reflect a re-assignment of leases related to Westmoreland’s ongoing actions to improve its financial performance and corporate governance in response to concerns by the RSH, which in September enforced the appointment of three additional board members to support the process of change. Civitas welcomed the board changes and said that it remained supportive of the Westmoreland board and confident the new appointments would help it in meeting its objectives. It also said Westmoreland had continued to meet its financial obligations to Civitas and produce rental income as expected.

Further investment plans

Civitas plans further portfolio growth as it gears up its existing equity resources, targeting a gearing level of up to 35%. It has identified a number of potential investment transactions matched to its current available debt resources and these represent part of a wider pipeline of opportunities for which additional debt facilities are under negotiation.

The £60m NatWest debt facility agreed in September (of which £20m had been drawn at end-H120) has been allocated to:

Honouring existing commitments to counterparties, including a mix of investment in new properties to be acquired as well as existing properties that are being extended to meet demand.

Working with local authority partners to create bespoke high acuity schemes where Civitas is instrumental in selecting the properties, determining adaptions, then on-boarding care providers and/or housing associations. Civitas is preparing to take delivery of a new property in Wales that will provide state of the art quality care provision to 49 residents with acute learning disability, mental health, brain injury and degenerative illnesses.

Maintaining a conservative cash buffer, targeted at c £30, and supporting share repurchases while this remains accretive. Share repurchases commenced in early October 2019 and to date the company has acquired 815k shares, held in treasury, at a cost of c £694k or an average 85.2p per share. Although relatively modest in scale, the repurchases are accretive and underline the board’s confidence in the published NAV.

Aimed at the wider pipeline opportunity, additional borrowing of £80m is under advanced negotiation and the company expects completion during the first three months of 2020. Including the £40m undrawn from the NatWest facility at end-H119 this will take total additional debt funding capacity to £120m with the company targeting 5.5–6.0% yield (excluding acquisition costs).

Financials

Our forecasts assume further significant growth in income-earning property assets, although compared with our estimates published in June, the amount of capital committed is lower and occurs at a slower pace. We nevertheless expect a good level of EPRA earnings growth, further DPS growth and for run-rate dividend cover to be achieved in FY20 with increasing dividend cover in FY21. We also anticipate capital growth during the forecast period, driven by CPI-linked rental growth with a partial offset from property acquisition costs and an increasing NAV per share.

Our key forecasting assumptions are:

£43m of capital deployment by end-FY20 and an additional £80m by end-FY21 at an average yield (before acquisition costs) of 5.7% (5.4% after), adding £7m to rent roll (£46.5m at end-H120). The assumed acquisition yield compares with the average 5.9% (before acquisition costs) achieved since IPO. The lower assumed yield reflects investor demand for SSH assets and market-wide yield tightening.

Including assumed CPI-based rent indexation of 1.8% pa, we forecast an end-FY20 rent roll of £49.4m and £54.9m at end-FY21, although the full benefit is not seen in the income statement until FY22.

We have assumed acquisition costs of 5.8%, although the actual outcome will depend on the size, structure and complexity of the transactions.

We have assumed 2% pa growth in general and administrative expenses and investment advisory fees in line with the scaled fee schedule, since March 2019 applied to IFRS NAV (previously applied to the portfolio basis NAV). The marginal fee rate, applicable to average net assets of more than £500m and up to £1bn is 0.8% pa. On this basis we expect the total expense ratio (or total expenses as a percentage of average IFRS net assets) to be broadly flat in FY20 (1.37% compared with 1.36% in FY19) and then fall towards 1.3%.

Forecast revisions

Our previous forecasts had assumed slightly greater and faster gearing-up of the existing equity base than now seems likely, with £170m of debt funded acquisitions in FY20. With assumed investment of £123m by end-FY21 our revised forecasts indicate a slower build-up of rental income and earnings but the impact on DPS growth is minimal (Exhibit 6). We expect DPS to be covered on a run-rate basis over the next 12 months and on an annual basis for FY22.

Exhibit 6: Forecast revisions

Net rental income (£m)

EPRA earnings (£m)

EPRA EPS (p)

EPRA NAV/share (p)

DPS (p)

New

Old

% chg

New

Old

% chg

New

Old

% chg

New

Old

% chg

New

Old

% chg

03/20e

46.7

50.3

(7.2)

29.8

32.7

(8.7)

4.80

5.25

(8.7)

108.0

108.0

(0.0)

5.30

5.34

(0.7)

03/21e

52.2

56.8

(8.1)

33.6

36.5

(7.9)

5.41

5.86

(7.8)

109.9

111.3

(1.3)

5.40

5.46

(1.1)

03/22e

55.6

N/A

N/A

35.7

N/A

N/A

5.74

N/A

N/A

113.0

N/A

N/A

5.50

N/A

N/A

Source: Edison Investment Research

Debt facilities

Civitas increased its debt facilities by £60m in H120 to £272.5m, of which £228.4m was drawn at the period end. The new £60m facility arranged in September is a five-year term facility with National Westminster Bank that has the potential to be extended by a further £40m. Other debt facilities comprise a £52.5m 10-year fixed-rate facility and two floating-rate revolving credit facilities of a shorter-term nature. The average cost of debt at end-H120 was 2.63%. All covenants on the facilities were comfortably met during the year.

The additional £80m debt facility under negotiation will contribute towards moving gearing on a portfolio basis towards the 35% level targeted by the company (H120: 24%), defined as gross borrowings as a percentage of gross assets on a portfolio basis. To ease comparison across the sector, our calculation of net LTV represents net debt as a percentage of investment property assets measured on an IFRS basis. At H120 this was 21.5% or 27.1% on a gross basis (ie before adjusting gross debt for cash balances). Assuming a similar differential between portfolio gearing and gross LTV on an IFRS basis is maintained, our forecast c 35% gross LTV for end-FY21 suggests the company may still have further borrowing headroom to meet its 35% portfolio gearing target.

Exhibit 7: Debt portfolio summary

Lender

NatWest

Scottish Widows

Lloyds

HSBC

Facility

Loan notes

Loan notes

RCF*

RCF*

Facility size

£60.0m

£52.5m

£60m

£100m

Drawn at end-H120

£20.0m

£52.5m

£56m

£100m

Term

5 years+1+1**

10 years

3 years +1***

3 years +1 +1**

Cost

2.71% fixed****

2.99% fixed

1.50% margin over LIBOR

1.70% margin over LIBOR

Source: Civitas. Note: *RCF is revolving credit facility. **Facility may be extended for one year at the option of Civitas. ***Facility may be extended by one year and then a further year at the option of Civitas. ****Comprises 2.00% interest margin and 0.71% swap cost.

Valuation

Based on targeted quarterly DPS payments amounting to 5.34p for the current year, Civitas offers a yield of 6.1%, while trading at c 20% discount to H120 (IFRS and EPRA) NAV per share.

We calculate an EPRA NAV total return since the 18 November 2017 IPO to 30 September 2019 (H120) of 20.3%, or an average annualised 6.7% pa. This does not allow for reinvestment of dividends. Our forecasts for FY20–FY22 imply an average annualised return of 6.4% pa over the period, with FY20–FY21 returns held back slightly by assumed property acquisition costs. DPS paid represents around three-quarters of our forecast return and capital growth the balance. The capital growth results from our assumption that CPI rental income uplifts will feed through to property values (ie unchanged property yields) with a further benefit from gearing. Given the prospect for continued low interest rates and low investment returns generally, the forecast level of returns from Civitas, substantially income based, appears attractive.

Exhibit 8: EPRA NAV total return

Reported data

Forecast data

FY18*

FY19

H120

From IPO to end-H120

FY20e

FY21e

FY22e

FY20/FY22

Opening EPRA NAV per share (p)

98.0

105.5

107.1

98.0

107.1

108.0

109.9

107.1

Closing EPRA NAV per share (p)

105.5

107.1

107.3

107.3

108.0

109.9

113.0

113.0

Dividends paid (p)

3.0

5.0

2.7

10.7

5.3

5.4

5.5

16.2

EPRA NAV total return

10.8%

6.2%

2.6%

20.3%

5.8%

6.8%

7.8%

20.6%

Annualised compound total return

6.7%

6.4%

Source: Civitas, Edison Investment Research. Note: *18 November 2016 to 31 March 2018.

In Exhibit 8 we show a share price performance and valuation comparison with a group of companies that we would consider to be the closest peers to Civitas. The group includes Triple Point Social Housing and Residential Secure Income, which invests in affordable shared ownership, retirement and local authority housing (but not SSH), primary healthcare investors, PHP and Assura, and care home investors, Target Healthcare and Impact Healthcare. The peers are all focused on stable, growing, income returns, with the potential for capital appreciation, from investment in properties let on long leases to tenants whose income is provided, to differing degrees, by government funding. However, the peer group remains quite differentiated in terms of lease terms, which will naturally influence valuation levels. UK primary healthcare leases benefit from the security of being directly or indirectly backed by government, although the majority of rents are subject to open market rent reviews rather than indexed to inflation. For the care home investors, the lease counterparties are the care home operators, and rents are generally linked to RPI.

Civitas shares have a higher yield than the peer group average and its P/NAV remains well below the average. The one year share price performance still shows the effects of the regulatory intervention in the SSH market earlier in 2019, which primarily raised concerns about tenant covenant strength. The share price and the valuation have begun to improve again in recent months but there is still plenty of further potential is investors become more confident about the evolution of the SSH sector, the robustness of the Civitas income stream and its ability to further grow and diversify its portfolio to achieve full dividend cover.

Exhibit 9: Peer comparison

Price (p)

Market cap. (£m)

P/NAV* (x)

Yield** (%)

Share price performance

1 month

3 months

12 months

From 12m high

Assura

78

1882

1.46

3.5

1%

6%

44%

-3%

Impact Healthcare

109

348

1.03

5.7

1%

-1%

6%

-5%

Primary Health Properties

160

1949

1.49

3.5

4%

14%

40%

0%

Residential Secure Income

100

171

0.92

5.0

4%

9%

14%

0%

Triple Point Social Housing

102

356

0.97

5.0

12%

11%

-1%

-3%

Target Healthcare

122

556

1.13

5.4

3%

5%

12%

-1%

Average

1.17

4.7

4%

7%

19%

-2%

Civitas Social Housing

101

625

0.94

5.3

13%

16%

-2%

-4%

UK property index

1,932

3.5

2%

5%

19%

-2%

FTSE All-Share Index

4,260

4.4

2%

7%

13%

0%

Source: Company data. Refinitiv. Note: Prices at 17 January 2020. *Based on last reported EPRA NAV. **Based on trailing 12 month DPS declared.

Exhibit 10: Financial summary

Period ending 31 March (£'000s)

2018

2019

2020e

2021e

2022e

INCOME STATEMENT

Revenue

18,606

35,738

46,716

52,221

55,568

Directors' remuneration

(205)

(163)

(168)

(168)

(168)

Investment advisory fees

(5,773)

(6,457)

(6,169)

(6,184)

(6,321)

General & administrative expenses

(2,915)

(3,022)

(3,110)

(2,834)

(2,890)

Total expenses

(8,893)

(9,642)

(9,447)

(9,185)

(9,379)

Total recurring expense ratio (TER)

1.36%

1.36%

1.35%

1.35%

Operating profit/(loss) before revaluation of properties

9,713

26,096

37,269

43,035

46,189

Change in fair value of investment properties

30,633

3,652

8,264

11,843

17,684

Operating profit/(loss)

40,346

29,748

45,533

54,878

63,873

Net finance expense

(628)

(3,484)

(7,437)

(9,424)

(10,484)

C share amortisation

(2,792)

(6,400)

0

0

0

PBT

36,926

19,864

38,096

45,455

53,389

Tax

0

0

0

0

0

Net profit

36,926

19,864

38,096

45,455

53,389

Adjusted for:

Change in fair value of investment properties

(30,633)

(3,652)

(8,264)

(11,843)

(17,684)

C share amortisation

2,792

6,400

0

0

0

EPRA earnings

9,085

22,612

29,832

33,612

35,705

Average number of shares (m)

350.0

425.4

622.1

621.6

621.6

Average diluted shares (m)

633.1

622.5

622.1

621.6

621.6

Basic IFRS EPS (p)

10.55

4.67

6.12

7.31

8.59

Diluted EPRA EPS (p)

1.44

3.63

4.80

5.41

5.74

DPS declared (p)

4.25

5.00

5.30

5.40

5.50

EPRA EPS/DPS

0.34

0.73

0.90

1.00

1.05

BALANCE SHEET

Investment properties

516,222

820,094

884,085

980,568

998,252

Other receivables

0

6,824

8,079

8,193

8,307

Total non-current assets

516,222

826,918

892,164

988,761

1,006,559

Trade & other receivables

3,315

5,723

7,196

7,996

8,378

Cash & equivalents

249,608

54,347

46,600

43,355

46,103

Total current assets

252,923

60,070

53,796

51,351

54,481

Trade & other payables

(10,176)

(15,324)

(9,595)

(10,661)

(11,170)

C shares

(298,752)

0

0

0

0

Total current liabilities

(308,928)

(15,324)

(9,595)

(10,661)

(11,170)

Bank loan & borrowings

(90,822)

(205,156)

(265,245)

(346,445)

(347,645)

Total non-current liabilities

(90,822)

(205,156)

(265,245)

(346,445)

(347,645)

Net assets

369,395

666,508

671,120

683,006

702,224

Basic EPRA NAV

369,395

666,508

671,120

683,006

702,224

C shares

298,752

0

0

0

0

Fair value of interest rate derivatives

0

0

180

180

180

Diluted EPRA NAV

668,147

666,508

671,300

683,186

702,404

Period-end basic number of shares (m)

350.0

622.5

621.6

621.6

621.6

Period end diluted number of shares (m)

633.1

622.5

621.6

621.6

621.6

Basic IFRS NAV per share (p)

105.5

107.1

107.9

109.8

112.9

Diluted EPRA NAV per share (p)

105.5

107.1

108.0

109.9

113.0

CASH FLOW

Net cash flow from operating activity

8,057

23,335

36,479

43,188

46,203

Cash flow from investing activity

(483,898)

(302,577)

(61,877)

(84,640)

0

Net proceeds from equity issuance

343,000

(56)

0

0

0

Net proceeds from C share issuance

295,960

0

0

0

0

Loan interest paid

(417)

(2,958)

(6,031)

(8,224)

(9,284)

Bank borrowings drawn/(repaid)

92,457

115,990

60,000

80,000

0

Share repurchase

(694)

0

0

Dividends paid to ordinary shareholders

(10,073)

(17,591)

(32,883)

(33,569)

(34,171)

Dividends paid to C shareholders

0

(9,966)

0

0

0

Other cash flow from financing activity

(1,761)

(2,374)

(1,111)

0

0

Cash flow from financing activity

719,166

83,045

19,282

38,207

(43,455)

Change in cash

243,325

(196,197)

(6,117)

(3,245)

2,748

Opening cash

0

243,325

47,128

41,011

37,766

Closing cash (excluding restricted cash)

243,325

47,128

41,011

37,766

40,514

Restricted cash

6,283

7,219

5,589

5,589

5,589

Cash as per balance sheet

249,608

54,347

46,600

43,355

46,103

Debt as per balance sheet

(90,822)

(205,156)

(265,245)

(346,445)

(347,645)

Unamortised loan arrangement costs

(1,635)

(3,291)

(3,202)

(2,002)

(802)

Total debt

(92,457)

(208,447)

(268,447)

(348,447)

(348,447)

Net (debt)/cash excluding restricted cash

150,868

(161,319)

(227,436)

(310,681)

(307,933)

Net LTV (IFRS valuation basis)

n.m.

19.5%

25.5%

31.4%

30.6%

Source: Civitas data, Edison Investment Research


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This report has been commissioned by Civitas Social Housing and prepared and issued by Edison, in consideration of a fee payable by Civitas Social Housing. Edison Investment Research standard fees are £49,500 pa for the production and broad dissemination of a detailed note (Outlook) following by regular (typically quarterly) update notes. Fees are paid upfront in cash without recourse. Edison may seek additional fees for the provision of roadshows and related IR services for the client but does not get remunerated for any investment banking services. We never take payment in stock, options or warrants for any of our services.

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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

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60325 Frankfurt

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London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

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United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

1,185 Avenue of the Americas

3rd Floor, New York, NY 10036

United States of America

Sydney +61 (0)2 8249 8342

Level 4, Office 1205

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NSW 2000, Australia

General disclaimer and copyright

This report has been commissioned by Civitas Social Housing and prepared and issued by Edison, in consideration of a fee payable by Civitas Social Housing. Edison Investment Research standard fees are £49,500 pa for the production and broad dissemination of a detailed note (Outlook) following by regular (typically quarterly) update notes. Fees are paid upfront in cash without recourse. Edison may seek additional fees for the provision of roadshows and related IR services for the client but does not get remunerated for any investment banking services. We never take payment in stock, options or warrants for any of our services.

Accuracy of content: All information used in the publication of this report has been compiled from publicly available sources that are believed to be reliable, however we do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of this report and have not sought for this information to be independently verified. Opinions contained in this report represent those of the research department of Edison at the time of publication. Forward-looking information or statements in this report contain information that is based on assumptions, forecasts of future results, estimates of amounts not yet determinable, and therefore involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of their subject matter to be materially different from current expectations.

Exclusion of Liability: To the fullest extent allowed by law, Edison shall not be liable for any direct, indirect or consequential losses, loss of profits, damages, costs or expenses incurred or suffered by you arising out or in connection with the access to, use of or reliance on any information contained on this note.

No personalised advice: The information that we provide should not be construed in any manner whatsoever as, personalised advice. Also, the information provided by us should not be construed by any subscriber or prospective subscriber as Edison’s solicitation to effect, or attempt to effect, any transaction in a security. The securities described in the report may not be eligible for sale in all jurisdictions or to certain categories of investors.

Investment in securities mentioned: Edison has a restrictive policy relating to personal dealing and conflicts of interest. Edison Group does not conduct any investment business and, accordingly, does not itself hold any positions in the securities mentioned in this report. However, the respective directors, officers, employees and contractors of Edison may have a position in any or related securities mentioned in this report, subject to Edison's policies on personal dealing and conflicts of interest.

Copyright: Copyright 2020 Edison Investment Research Limited (Edison). All rights reserved FTSE International Limited (“FTSE”) © FTSE 2020. “FTSE®” is a trade mark of the London Stock Exchange Group companies and is used by FTSE International Limited under license. All rights in the FTSE indices and/or FTSE ratings vest in FTSE and/or its licensors. Neither FTSE nor its licensors accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the FTSE indices and/or FTSE ratings or underlying data. No further distribution of FTSE Data is permitted without FTSE’s express written consent.

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New Zealand

The research in this document is intended for New Zealand resident professional financial advisers or brokers (for use in their roles as financial advisers or brokers) and habitual investors who are “wholesale clients” for the purpose of the Financial Advisers Act 2008 (FAA) (as described in sections 5(c) (1)(a), (b) and (c) of the FAA). This is not a solicitation or inducement to buy, sell, subscribe, or underwrite any securities mentioned or in the topic of this document. For the purpose of the FAA, the content of this report is of a general nature, is intended as a source of general information only and is not intended to constitute a recommendation or opinion in relation to acquiring or disposing (including refraining from acquiring or disposing) of securities. The distribution of this document is not a “personalised service” and, to the extent that it contains any financial advice, is intended only as a “class service” provided by Edison within the meaning of the FAA (i.e. without taking into account the particular financial situation or goals of any person). As such, it should not be relied upon in making an investment decision.

United Kingdom

This document is prepared and provided by Edison for information purposes only and should not be construed as an offer or solicitation for investment in any securities mentioned or in the topic of this document. A marketing communication under FCA Rules, this document has not been prepared in accordance with the legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research.

This Communication is being distributed in the United Kingdom and is directed only at (i) persons having professional experience in matters relating to investments, i.e. investment professionals within the meaning of Article 19(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005, as amended (the "FPO") (ii) high net-worth companies, unincorporated associations or other bodies within the meaning of Article 49 of the FPO and (iii) persons to whom it is otherwise lawful to distribute it. The investment or investment activity to which this document relates is available only to such persons. It is not intended that this document be distributed or passed on, directly or indirectly, to any other class of persons and in any event and under no circumstances should persons of any other description rely on or act upon the contents of this document.

This Communication is being supplied to you solely for your information and may not be reproduced by, further distributed to or published in whole or in part by, any other person.

United States

Edison relies upon the "publishers' exclusion" from the definition of investment adviser under Section 202(a)(11) of the Investment Advisors Act of 1940 and corresponding state securities laws. This report is a bona fide publication of general and regular circulation offering impersonal investment-related advice, not tailored to a specific investment portfolio or the needs of current and/or prospective subscribers. As such, Edison does not offer or provide personal advice and the research provided is for informational purposes only. No mention of a particular security in this report constitutes a recommendation to buy, sell or hold that or any security, or that any particular security, portfolio of securities, transaction or investment strategy is suitable for any specific person.

Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

1,185 Avenue of the Americas

3rd Floor, New York, NY 10036

United States of America

Sydney +61 (0)2 8249 8342

Level 4, Office 1205

95 Pitt Street, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

1,185 Avenue of the Americas

3rd Floor, New York, NY 10036

United States of America

Sydney +61 (0)2 8249 8342

Level 4, Office 1205

95 Pitt Street, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

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