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Harvest Technology Plc

Earnings Release Dec 8, 2020

2055_ir_2020-12-08_a4383fe2-2936-4139-9f42-a2839e08d676.html

Earnings Release

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National Storage Mechanism | Additional information

RNS Number : 8311H

ULS Technology PLC

08 December 2020

ULS Technology plc

(The "Group" or the "Company")

Half Yearly Report

"Robust financial performance with focus now on revolutionising home moving and ownership"

ULS Technology plc (AIM: ULS), the provider of online B2B platforms for the UK conveyancing and financial intermediary markets, announces its half year results for the six months to 30 September 2020. During this unprecedented period, the Company continued to generate profits and remained highly cash generative whilst further developing its DigitalMove platform.

Financial Highlights

·    Revenue declined by 31% to £10.06m (H1 2019: £14.55m) in line with the overall market

·    Gross margin fell slightly to 42.7% (H1 2019: 43.9%) due to changes in business mix

·    Underlying EBITDA reduced to £1.0m (H1 2019: £3.3m)

·    Underlying Profit before Tax1 declined to £0.33m (H1 2019: £2.78m)

·    Adjusted basic EPS1 declined to 0.51p (H1 2019: 3.60p)

·    Net debt reduced to £1.9m as of 30 September 2020 (FY 2019: £3.4m)

o  Part of improvement due to use of VAT deferral scheme worth £0.6m to be repaid in March-21 which does not show as debt

o  Pro-forma cash balances following the sale of CAL were £25m

·    Positive cash from operating activities of £2.1m

1  Before exceptional costs and amortisation of acquisition intangibles.

Operating Highlights

·    Increase in brokers actively using our platforms to 3,917, an increase of 9% over the 6-month period and 21% against September 2019

·    Over 20,000 cases have now been instructed through DigitalMove, compared to c.3,000 twelve months ago

·    DigitalMove Solicitor Portal launched as pilot in the period

·    The appointment of a new CEO, Jesper With-Fogstrup, who will be starting in the New Year

Significant Post-Balance Sheet Event

·    Disposal of wholly owned subsidiaries Conveyancing Alliance (Holdings) Limited and Conveyancing Alliance Limited ("CAL") for a cash consideration of £27.3m 

o  Proceeds to be used to repay debt, leaving c.£25m cash on balance sheet to invest in a digital platform aimed at revolutionising home moving and ownership

o  Continuing operations remain profitable at an EBITDA level immediately post-transaction

Martin Rowland, Chairman of ULS Technology plc, commented:

"We are pleased with our performance in the first half of the year in an unprecedented housing market which virtually came to a standstill in the first two months of the period in terms of existing pipeline and, in particular, new instructions. While the market has since come bouncing back to life with the number of instructions above pre-Covid levels, the lag between instruction and completion means that this will benefit H2 rather than H1. That said, our ability to make a profit and generate cash in the period against this backdrop, highlights the strength of the Company's model and relationships. Importantly, given the volume of instructions, we are now seeing an increasing run-rate of revenue and have good visibility of higher revenues over the coming months.

"The post-period sale of CAL was a pivotal moment for ULS providing the capital to help us achieve our vision of building a digital platform that will transform the entire home moving and home owning process for consumers. The broader functionality that we plan to offer and scale of opportunity we envisage provides a strong backdrop for future growth opportunities. 

"We have also announced the appointment of Jesper With-Fogstrup as our new CEO who we expect to take office in early 2021. He will now be armed with significant funds to help us achieve our vision and we look forward to him being able communicate his plans in Q2 2021."

Enquiries:

ULS Technology plc Via Walbrook PR
Martin Rowland, Chairman
John Williams, Chief Financial Officer
Numis Securities Limited (Nomad & Broker) Tel: 0207 260 1000
Stuart Skinner / William Wickham
Walbrook PR Limited [email protected] or Tel: 020 7933 8780
Tom Cooper
Nick Rome

Nicholas Johnson

Certain information contained in this announcement would have constituted inside information (as defined by Article 7 of Regulation (EU) No 596/2014) prior to its release as part of this announcement.

Chairman's Report

We have all been living through strange times and the housing market has epitomised some of the swings we have been going through. For a couple of months, the housing market almost ground to a halt with lots of people who were in the process of moving putting those moves on hold, while those thinking of moving deferred their plans as viewing houses, getting a survey and booking a removal firm became almost impossible. However, this pause in the housing market was shorter lived than was expected at the outset of the pandemic. The housing market was one of the first sectors to come out of lockdown and, once open, people set about making up for lost time. Paused moves started to complete and new instructions surged due to pent up demand, the stamp duty holiday and lockdown making people re-evaluate where they want to live. The lag between instruction and completion, however, did mean that completed house transactions were down 31% year-on-year for the period.

The surge in instructions that we have seen since June will mean that it should be a busy second half to the year as those instructions complete. There will be a particular rush to complete before the end of March for those chains impacted by the stamp duty holiday unless there is a decision to extend it. Much of the market upturn has been caused by the return of the home mover to the market on mass which had previously been dominated by first time buyers. For most first-time buyers there is no benefit from the stamp duty holiday and the mortgage market has tightened for them with the withdrawal of many higher loan-to-value mortgage offerings. This is likely to mean that, while housing transactions are going to be up for the next few months through to March against the same months a year ago, the growth in home-mover transactions will mask a fall in first time buyers.

What this period has shown is the resilience of the housing market. While there may be fluctuations in volumes people will always want to buy, sell and own homes and we still see the huge potential for us in this market. There remains a lot of 'grit' in the system of buying and selling houses and our aim is to remove as much of it as possible. We want to develop a platform from which consumers can arrange the finance necessary to complete their house purchase, obtain the legal support needed to complete the transaction and select the insurance, utilities and other providers of services they need to run their home in as easy-a-fashion as possible.

Sale of CAL

The post period-end sale of CAL which we recently announced clearly has a material impact on the Group going forwards. On the one hand, Group profit and cash generation will materially reduce, whilst on the other we now have a very strong balance sheet with c.£25m of available cash to invest in the business going forward.

During the period, and previous periods, CAL's contribution to results was as follows:

6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year to

31 Mar 2020
£'000s £'000s £'000s
Revenue 3,720 4,370 8,928
Gross margin 1,542 1,799 3,399
EBITDA 1,000 1,234 2,477
Profit before tax 971 1,200 2,410

CAL operates a conveyancing comparison business targeting estate agents and smaller mortgage brokers with a panel of around a dozen conveyancers. We had been very pleased by the growth of CAL under our ownership. However, the business had remained as a standalone entity and instructions through it were not using DigitalMove. Therefore, we did not see it as integral to our vision going forwards and believe that the consideration represents an attractive valuation, unlocking value for shareholders, whilst at the same time providing the capital to achieve our vision of building a digital platform that will transform the entire home moving and home owning process for consumers.

Remaining Business

eConveyancer

The Group retains a conveyancing comparison business in eConveyancer. Its main focus in terms of distribution is larger mortgage brokers, mainstream and specialist lenders as well as providing a B2C offering. It has a panel of over 50 solicitors or conveyancers and has been the launch pad for DigitalMove.

In its key mortgage broker market, while completions were down year-on-year due to the housing market, the number of mortgage brokers actively using the platform grew to over 1,800 which was up by 28% on the previous year.  It is also having success attracting an increasing number of niche lenders to its platform.

Having generated EBITDA of c.£5m in the year to 31 March 2020 and c. £1m in the pandemic impacted 6 months to 30 September 2020, eConveyancer continues to provide a strong platform for growth and remains well placed to take advantage of the growing pipeline of opportunities. Importantly, while the period under review was impacted by Covid-19, eConveyancer continues to gain new introducers and is well placed to benefit from further market recovery - especially in the first-time buyer's market.

DigitalMove

Over 20,000 instructions for sale, purchase and re-mortgage transactions have now gone through DigitalMove. We have received a lot of great feedback from consumers and we are cutting around two weeks from the start of the process. So far, most of these instructions have come through eConveyancer but we have also launched the pilot of our solicitor portal which is allowing solicitors to put through DigitalMove instructions they have received from other sources, which will provide increased diversification of revenue streams.

We are still in the early stages of the DigitalMove journey with much more we want to achieve. The sale of CAL provides us with the funding to significantly accelerate that journey. We are currently formulating our plans to broaden our digital platform and look forward to providing an update once these have been finalised.

Chief Financial Officer's Report

It has been an unusual period making comparisons with prior years difficult. However, we are pleased with our resilience and the decisions we made during this period. We were able to adapt to home-working seamlessly and we were in a financial position that enabled us to take actions that were for the long-term benefit of the business. As a result, we were able to keep a full-service offering throughout and be there to support our introducers, solicitors and consumers in difficult times.

Producing a positive IFRS and underlying profit before tax in the circumstances was a good result as was the positive cash flow we managed to produce. At this time last year, we announced that we were going to accelerate our ongoing investment in DigitalMove. Due to the pandemic, we did not do this as quickly as expected but the run rate in terms of committed additional overhead spend is now reaching planned levels.

The Group continued to generate significant operating cash flow. This was aided by use of the government's VAT deferral scheme which improved cash flow in the period by £0.7m. Overall net debt reduced by £1.5m with the fact that no dividend was paid contributing to that reduction.

The sale of CAL has clearly significantly altered the financial position of the business. The cash position of the Group has gone from having a small net debt to a significant cash balance of £25m. In terms of the Income Statement there will be an immediate reduction in revenue and profit due to the sale of CAL and then increased costs coming through as we invest further in DigitalMove. Clearly the plan will be to replace the lost revenue and profit as DigitalMove evolves.

Non-IFRS Profit Measures

In the Financial Highlights above we show the movement in Underlying Profit before Tax. This is a non-IFRS profit measure and the table below shows how that measure is arrived at from IFRS profit.

Underlying Profit before Tax                                            

6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year to

31 Mar 2020
£'000 £'000 £'000
Reported PBT 69 2,371 4,024
Amortisation of intangible assets arising on acquisition 260 270 538
Exceptional costs
M&A activity costs - 27 30
Adjustment of contingent consideration - 113 113
Impairment of Investment 100
329 2,781 4,805

Underlying Profit after Tax                                

6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year to

31 Mar 2020
£'000 £'000 £'000
Underlying Profit before tax 329 2,781 4,805
Tax on profit on ordinary activities 46 (414) (759)
Tax relating to amortisation of intangibles arising on acquisition (46) (48) (96)
329 2,319 3,950

We believe that providing details of how these non-IFRS profit measures are calculated by reference to the IFRS profit number helps aid the understanding of the movement in the IFRS number as well as giving an indication to the long-term profitability and cash generating ability of the Group.

Borrowing Facilities

As a result of the sale of CAL, the £5.75m of drawn debt facilities with HSBC were repaid after the period end. Additionally, all borrowing facilities with HSBC have been terminated as the Group could not foresee any imminent requirement to borrow funds.

Outlook

In the immediate term we expect a more buoyant second half to the year with a particular rush to complete before the stamp duty deadline. Beyond that there will be conflicting forces. There will be an inevitable lull straight after the stamp duty deadline unless the government delays its re-introduction or makes a permanent change to a tax which actively discourages people from moving house. Beyond that there will be financial impacts of the pandemic and possibly Brexit consequences. At the same time there is the expectation that there will be a prolonged increase in demand caused by those looking to move as a result of the pandemic. Consumers are increasingly prioritising access to outside space, as well as indoor space which can be used as home offices, with many waiting for more certainty as to whether they will be able to carry on working at home, at least in part, on a permanent basis. There is also the potential for growth amongst first-time buyers as higher loan-to-value mortgages return to the market.

Whatever the short-term fluctuations, the Group is in a strong financial position and is excited to be moving on to the next stage of DigitalMove, delivering a platform from which consumers can arrange the finance necessary to complete their house purchase, obtain the legal support needed to complete the transaction and select the insurance, utilities and other providers of services they need to run their home in as easy-a-fashion as possible.    

Martin Rowland

Chairman

UNAUDITED INCOME STATEMENT

Six months to 30 September 2020

Note 6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year ended 31 Mar 2020
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
£'000s £'000s £'000s
Revenue 10,060 14,546 28,272
Cost of sales (5,760) (8,154) (15,849)
Gross profit 4,300 6,392 12,423
Administrative expenses (4,147) (3,798) (7,975)
Operating profit before exceptional expenses 153 2,594 4,448
Exceptional administrative expenses 3 - (140) (243)
Operating profit 153 2,454 4,205
Finance income 7 7 14
Finance costs (91) (90) (195)
Profit on ordinary activities before taxation 69 2,371 4,024
Tax on profit on ordinary activities 46 (414) (759)
Profit for the financial period 115 1,957 3,265
Basic earnings per share (£) 4 0.0018 0.0303 0.0506
Diluted earnings per share (£) 4 0.0017 0.0289 0.0482

UNAUDITED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

Six months to 30 September 2020

6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year ended 31 Mar 2020
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
£'000s £'000s £'000s
Profit for the period 115 1,957 3,265
Total comprehensive income for the period 115 1,957 3,265

UNAUDITED BALANCE SHEET

At 30 September 2020

Note 30 Sep 2020 30 Sep 2019 31 Mar 2020
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
£'000s £'000s £'000s
NON-CURRENT ASSETS
Intangible assets 5,964 6,333 6,151
Goodwill 11,008 11,008 11,008
AFS financial assets - 100 -
Investment in Associates 578 528 533
Property, plant and equipment 1,971 2,016 2,140
Long-term receivables 200 200 250
Prepayments 103 152 123
19,824 20,337 20,205
CURRENT ASSETS
Inventory - 49 -
Trade and other receivables 1,506 2,151 1,874
Cash and cash equivalents 3,817 2,455 2,340
5,323 4,655 4,214
TOTAL ASSETS 25,147 24,992 24,419
EQUITY ATTRIBUTABLE TO EQUITY
HOLDERS OF THE COMPANY
Share capital 5 259 259 259
EBT reserve (453) (484) (453)
Share premium account 4,609 4,609 4,609
Capital redemption reserve 113 113 113
Share based payment reserve 344 367 427
Retained earnings 7,739 7,161 7,624
TOTAL EQUITY 12,611 12,025 12,579
NON-CURRENT LIABILITIES
Borrowings 6 750 1,250 750
Lease liabilities 1,236 1,389 1,309
Deferred taxation 999 983 1,045
2,985 3,622 3,104
CURRENT LIABILITIES
Trade and other payables 4,369 3,706 3,296
Borrowings 6 5,000 5,000 5,000
Lease liabilities 168 172 158
Current tax payable 14 467 282
9,551 9,345 8,736
TOTAL LIABILITIES 12,536 12,967 11,840
TOTAL EQUITY AND LIABILITIES 25,147 24,992 24,419

UNAUDITED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY

Six months to 30 September 2020

Share capital EBT reserve Share premium Capital redemption reserve Share- based payment reserve Retained earnings Total equity
£'000s £'000s £'000s £'000s £'000s £'000s £'000s
For the period ended 30 September 2020
At 1 April 2020 259 (453) 4,609 113 427 7,624 12,579
Profit for the period - - - - - 115 115
Total comprehensive income - - - - - 115 115
Share-based payments - - - - (83) - (83)
Total transactions with owners - - - - (83) - (83)
At 30 September 2020 259 (453) 4,609 113 344 7,739 12,611
For the period ended 30 September 2019
At 1 April 2019 259 (484) 4,585 113 293 5,973 10,739
Profit for the period - - - - - 1,957 1,957
Total comprehensive income - - - - - 1,957 1,957
Issue of shares - - 24 - - - 24
Exercise of options - - - - (5) 5 -
Share-based payments - - - - 79 - 79
Dividends paid - - - - - (774) (774)
Total transactions with owners - - 24 - 74 (769) (671)
At 30 September 2019 259 (484) 4,609 113 367 7,161 12,025
For the year ended 31 March 2020
At 1 April 2019 259 (484) 4,585 113 293 5,973 10,739
Profit for the year - - - - - 3,265 3,265
Total comprehensive income - - - - - 3,265 3,265
Issue of shares - - 24 - - - 24
Purchase of shares by EBT - (29) - - - - (29)
Exercise of options - 60 - - (9) (33) 18
Share-based payments - - - - 143 - 143
Payment of dividends - - - - - (1,581) (1,581)
Total transactions with owners - 31 24 - 134 (1,614) (1,425)
At 31 March 2020 259 (453) 4,609 113 427 7,624 12,579

UNAUDITED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS

Six months to 30 September 2020

6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year ended 31 Mar 2020
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
£'000s £'000s £'000s
Cash flows from operating activities
Profit before taxation 69 2,371 4,024
Finance income (7) (7) (14)
Finance costs 91 90 195
Share of (profit) / loss of associate (45) 23 18
Amortisation 681 557 1,196
Depreciation 179 128 324
Impairment of financial assets at FVOCI - - 100
Share-based payments (83) 79 143
Tax paid (268) (325) (793)
617 2,916 5,193
Changes in working capital
(Increase) / decrease in inventories - (1) 48
Decrease / (increase) in trade and other receivables 438 (278) (22)
Increase/ (decrease) in trade and other payables 1,073 211 (180)
Net cash generated from operating activities 2,128 2,848 5,039
Cash flows from investing activities
Purchase of intangible software assets (494) (447) (905)
Purchase of property, plant and equipment (10) (86) (405)
Payment of deferred and contingent consideration - (2,337) (2,337)
Interest received 7 7 14
Net cash used in investing activities (497) (2,863) (3,633)
Cash flows from financing activities
Share issue proceeds - 24 24
Dividends paid - (774) (1,581)
Interest paid (91) (90) (195)
Lease payments (63) (42) (155)
Repayment of term loan - (500) (1,000)
Movement on rolling cash flow facility - 2,000 2,000
Share transactions by EBT - - (11)
Net cash (used in) / generated from financing activities (154) 618 (918)
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents 1,477 603 488
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period 2,340 1,852 1,852
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period 3,817 2,455 2,340

Notes to the financial information

Six months to 30 September 2020

1.    GENERAL

The interim financial information for the six months to 30 September 2020 is unaudited and was approved by the Directors of the Company on 7 December 2020.  The condensed financial information set out above does not constitute statutory accounts within the meaning of Section 434 of the Companies Act 2006.

The Company's operations is subject to some seasonality and also some cyclicality both in line with the housing market.

No dividend has been paid in the six months ended 30 September 2020 (six months to 30 September 2019: £774,110).

2.    ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The interim financial information in this report has been prepared on the basis of the accounting policies set out in the Group's most recent annual financial statements for the year ended 31 March 2020.

IFRS is subject to amendment and interpretation by the International Accounting Standards Board ("IASB") and the IFRS Interpretations Committee and there is an on-going process of review and endorsement by the European Commission.

The financial information has been prepared using accounting policies that the Directors expect to be applicable as at 31 March 2021, with the exception of IAS 34.

The Directors have adopted the going concern basis in preparing the financial information.  In assessing whether the going concern assumption is appropriate, the Directors have taken into account all relevant available information about the foreseeable future. Particular attention has been given to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the Group. A number of measures to preserve cash were out in to place at the start of the period. In addition, the housing market has recovered more quickly than expected. This has meant that the Group has actually reduced its net debt position over the course of the period as monthly profitability has started to approached pre-pandemic levels.

The condensed financial information for the period ended 31 March 2020 set out in this interim report does not comprise the Group's statutory accounts as defined in section 434 of the Companies Act 2006.

3.    EXCEPTIONAL EXPENSES

Exceptional Administrative Expenses                                           

6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year to

31 Mar 2020
£'000s £'000s £'000s
Acquisition related expenses - 27 30
Adjustment to expected contingent consideration - 113 113
Impairment of financial assets at FVOCI - - 100
- 140 243

4.    EARNINGS PER SHARE

Basic earnings per share is calculated by dividing the profit attributable to ordinary shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the period.

Basic and diluted earnings per share                                             

6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year to

31 Mar 2020
£ £ £
Total basic earnings per share 0.0018 0.0303 0.0506
Total diluted earnings per share 0.0017 0.0289 0.0482

The earnings and weighted average number of ordinary shares used in the calculation of basic earnings per share are as follows:

6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year to

31 Mar 2020
£'000s £'000s £'000s
Earnings used in the calculation of total basic and diluted earnings per share 115 1,957 3,265
Number of shares 6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year to

31 Mar 2020
Number Number Number
Weighted average number of ordinary shares for the purposes of basic earnings per share 64,871,276 64,496,307 64,499,023

Taking the Group's dilutive potential ordinary shares into consideration in respect of the Group's weighted average number of ordinary shares for the purposes of diluted earnings per share, is as follows:

Number of shares 6 months to 30 Sep 2020 6 months to 30 Sep 2019 Year to

31 Mar 2020
Potential dilutive effect of share options and warrants 3,645,915 3,273,128 3,224,904
Weighted average number of ordinary shares for the purposes of diluted earnings per share 68,517,191 67,769,435 67,723,927

5.    SHARE CAPITAL

a)    Share Capital

The Company has one class of Ordinary share with 0.4p nominal value per share which carries no right to fixed income nor has any preferences or restrictions attached.

No new shares were issued in the current period. Previously, on the 24 April 2019, the Company issued 43,219 new ordinary shares of 0.4p with a share premium of £24,030. The issue of shares was in connection with an exercise of share options.

Issued and fully paid:

30 Sep 2020 30 Sep 2019 31 Mar 2020
£'000s £'000s £'000s
Ordinary shares of 0.40p each 259 259 259
30 Sep 2020 30 Sep 2019 31 Mar 2020
Number Number Number
At the beginning of the period 64,871,276 64,828,057 64,828,057
Shares issued in the period - 43,219 43,219
At the end of the period 64,871,276 64,871,276 64,871,276

b)    Share based payments

All options in issue vest in 3 equal tranches, three, four, and five years after date of grant. The options are settled in equity once exercised. If the options remain unexercised after a period of 10 years from the date of grant, the options expire. Options are forfeited if the employee leaves the Group before the options vest.

Number of options Weighted average exercise price
£
Outstanding at 1 April 2020 3,131,007 0.94
Granted 1,750,000 0.54
Lapsed (1,392,562) 0.89
Exercised - -
Outstanding at 30 September 2020 3,488,445 0.75

6.    BORROWINGS

Bank loans

£'000s
Total debt

£'000s
Balance at 1 April 2020 5,750 5,750
Loan repayments - -
Movement in revolving cash flow facility - -
Balance at 30 September 2020 5,750 5,750
Balance at 1 April 2019 4,750 4,750
Loan repayments (1,000) (1,000)
Movement in revolving cash flow facility 2,000 2,000
Balance at 31 March 2020 5,750 5,750

In December 2016, the Group took out a 5-year term loan for £5 million and a £2 million revolving cash flow facility. Both had an initial interest rate of 1.90% above LIBOR and this can fall to as low as 1.55% above LIBOR depending on performance against certain financial criteria. The term loan is subject to repayments of £250,000 plus accrued interest quarterly. In May 2019, the revolving cash flow facility was increased to £4 million with the interest rate remaining unchanged.

During the period, a 6 month repayment holiday was agreed on the term loan so that no repayments were made in the period. The impact of this deferral is to lengthen the term of the loan by 6 months. Additionally, a £1 million overdraft was agreed although this has not been used during the period.

Loans are secured by way of fixed and floating charges over all assets of the Group.

7.    POST-BALANCE SHEET EVENT

On 27 November 2020, the Group sold the entire share capital of Conveyancing Alliance (Holdings) Limited and Conveyancing Alliance Limited ("CAL") for a cash consideration of £27.3m. CAL's contribution to results for the period are shown in the Chairman's Report.

As a result of the sale, the Group repaid all borrowings shown under Note 6 and the fixed and floating charges were removed.  

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