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BARONSMEAD SECOND VENTURE TRUST PLC

Annual Report Dec 31, 2012

4806_10-k_2012-12-31_c941e231-c818-48b7-9a2f-dacc19817f76.pdf

Annual Report

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Baronsmead VCT 3 plc

Annual report & accounts for the year ended 31 December 2012 2012

Contents

PERFORMANCE
Investment objective 1
Financial headlines 2
Performance summary 3
Chairman's statement 5
Manager's review 7
Summary investment portfolio 10
Table of investments and realisations 11
Creating shareholder value 13
Ten largest investments 14
DIRECTORS' REPORTS
Board of Directors 19
Report of the Directors 20
Corporate governance 2 9
Directors' remuneration report 3 2
Statement of Directors' responsibilities 3 4
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Independent Auditor's report 3 5
Income statement 3 7
Reconciliation of movements in
shareholders' funds
3 7
Balance sheet 3 8
Cash fl ow statement 3 9
Notes to the accounts 40
Notice of annual general meeting 5 4

APPENDIX

Dividend history since launch 5 8
Cash returned to shareholders 5 8
Performance record since launch 5 9
Dividends paid since launch 5 9
Breakdown of shareholdings 60
Full investment portfolio 60
INFORMATION
Shareholder information and contact details 6 2
Corporate information 6 4

Warning to Shareholders

Many companies are aware that their shareholders have received unsolicited phone calls or correspondence concerning investment matters. These are typically from overseas based "brokers" who target UK shareholders offering to sell them what often turn out to be worthless or high risk shares in US or UK investments. They 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 for free company reports.

Please note that it is very unlikely that either the Company or the Company Registrar, Computershare, would make unsolicited telephone calls to shareholders and that any such calls would relate only to offi cial documentation already circulated to shareholders and never in respect of investment "advice".

If you are in any doubt about the veracity of an unsolicited phone call, please call either the Company or the Registrar at the numbers provided on page 6 2.

www.baronsmeadvct3.co.uk

If you have sold or otherwise transferred all of your shares in Baronsmead VCT 3 plc, please forward this document and the accompanying form of proxy as soon as possible to the purchaser or transferee, or to the stockbroker, bank or other agent through whom the sale or transfer was, or is being, effected, for delivery to the purchaser or transferee.

Investment Objective

Baronsmead VCT 3 is a tax effi cient listed company which aims to achieve long-term investment returns for private investors.

Investment policy

  • To invest primarily in a diverse portfolio of UK growth businesses, whether unquoted or traded on AIM.
  • Investments are made selectively across a range of sectors in companies that have the potential to grow and enhance their value.

Full details of the Company's published investment policy and risk management are contained in the Report of the Directors on pages 20 to 2 3.

Dividend policy

The Board of Baronsmead VCT 3 has the objective to maintain a minimum annual dividend level of around 4.5p per ordinary share if possible, but this depends primarily on the level of realisations achieved and cannot be guaranteed. There will be variations in the amount of dividends paid year on year. Since launch, the average annual tax-free dividend paid to shareholders (including the proposed fi nal dividend of 4.5p) has been 5.9p per ordinary share (equivalent to a pre-tax return of 7.9p per ordinary share for a higher rate taxpayer). For shareholders who received up front tax reliefs, their returns would have been higher.

Shareholder choice

The Board wishes to provide shareholders with a number of choices that enable them to utilise their investment in Baronsmead VCT 3 in ways that best suit their personal investment and tax planning and in a way that treats all shareholders equally.

  • Fund raising | From time to time the Company seeks to raise additional funds by issuing new shares at a premium to the latest published net asset value to account for issue costs. In December 2012, the Company's offer for subscription raised £5 .0 million (£4.7 million net).
  • Dividend Reinvestment Plan | The Company offers a Dividend Reinvestment Plan which enables shareholders to purchase additional shares through the market in lieu of cash dividends. Approximately 260,000 shares were bought in this way during the year to 3 1 December 2012.
  • Buy back of shares | From time to time the Company buys its own shares through the market in accordance with its share price discount policy. The Board has undertaken a review of this policy and will seek to maintain a mid share price discount of approximately 5 per cent. to net asset value. This constitutes a revision to the Company's previous policy of buying back shares through the market at an approximate 10 per cent. discount to the latest published net asset value. Further details are provided in the Chairman's Statement. In the year to 3 1 December 2012, 1, 306,897 shares were bought back representing 2per cent. of the shares in issue at 3 1 December 2012 at an average price which represented a 9 per cent. discount to the latest published net asset value.
  • Secondary market | The Company's shares are listed on the London Stock Exchange and can be bought using a stockbroker or authorised share dealing service in the same way as shares of any other listed company. Approximately 305,000 shares were bought by investors in the Company's existing shares in the year to 3 1 December 2012.

Financial Headlines

Net asset value per share

Net asset value ("NAV") per share increased 14.4 per cent. to 114.6p in the twelve months ended 31 December 2012, before deduction of the interim dividend.

$$
+14.4\%
$$

Dividends in the year

Dividends totalled 7.5p for the year to 31 December 2012, including the proposed fi nal dividend of 4.5p.

7.5p

Net annual dividend yield of 7.1 per cent. and gross annual yield of 9.5 per cent.

7.1%

Net asset value total return

NAV total return to shareholders for every 100.0p invested at launch.

217.4p

Performance Summary

Performance Record in the last ten years

Source: ISIS EP LLP

* Includes proposed fi nal dividend of 4.5p .

Performance Summary

Cash Returned to Shareholders by date of investment

Source: ISIS EP LLP

* Includes proposed fi nal dividend of 4.5p .

Chairman's Statement

This Chairman's Statement forms part of the Report of the Directors.

Anthony Townsend Chairman

In the year to 31 December 2012 the Net Asset Value ("NAV") before payment of dividends grew by 14. 5p per share representing an increase of 14.4per cent. A fi nal dividend of 4.5p per share is proposed resulting in total dividends of 7.5 p per share for the year which will be paid predominantly out of profi ts generated from successful portfolio realisations in recent years.

INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE

The change in the NAV per share over the year is summarised in the table below:

Pence per
ordinary
share
NAV as at 1 January 2012
Valuation uplift (14.44 per cent.)
100.16
14.46
114.62
Interim dividend paid on 21 September 2012 (3.0)
Proposed fi nal dividend of 4.5p, payable after
shareholder approval, on 15 April 2013
(4.5)
NAV as at 31 December 2012 assuming fi nal
dividend paid
107.12

We are pleased with the consistent performance of the portfolio despite the poor economic environment since 2008. For instance, over the past three years the Company's top ten investments as at 31 December 2012, representing 52 per cent. of the portfolio by value , have generated an average annual growth of 17 per cent. in sales and 15 per cent. in profi ts. The number of jobs created by these portfolio companies has been signifi cant with the top ten investments now employing some 2,500 people, an increase of 22 per cent. over the last year. This helps to validate the wider aims of the VCT legislation which are to assist in generating growth in the UK economy. Overall, our portfolio of 67 companies remains in good health with 8 5 per cent. demonstrating steady to strong growth.

This strong performance has resulted in a steady fl ow of successful realisations which has enabled the Company to maintain a consistent annual dividend of 7.5p since 2007, which is tax free for qualifying shareholders. This dividend equates to an annual tax free dividend yield of 7.1 per cent. on the mid share price of 105. 4 p at 31 December 2012. Over the year, the valuations of the unquoted and AIM portfolios increased by 8and 38per cent. respectively. The largest gains came from the AIM investments in IDOX and Independent Living Services Limited, which increased in value by £3.12 million and £2.03 million respectively as a result of signifi cantly better trading results.

LONGER TERM PERFORMANCE AND BENEFIT OF THE VCT TAX RELIEFS

The Company's policy of investing in a diverse portfolio of established and profi table companies capable of strong growth aims to generate consistent returns over the long term.

The NAV total return over the past ten years has been 206.3 p for each 100p invested by Baronsmead VCT 3 compared with the sector average of 172.9p for VCT generalists over the same period (source AIC). Assuming the fi nal dividend is approved, founder shareholders will have received dividends totalling 70.8p per share compared to the initial net cost of 80.0p per share, after taking account of the maximum initial VCT income tax relief of 20 per cent. of amounts invested in new VCT shares that was available to qualifying investors in 2001. These dividends are tax free for qualifying investors.

Chairman's Statement

SHAREHOLDER CHOICE

The Company raised gross proceeds of £4. 1 million (£3.9 million net) in February 2012 by way of a top up share offer. A further offer for subscription by way of a prospectus launched in November 2012 raised its target of £5.0 million (£4.7 million net) proceeds by 21 December 2012. In deciding how much to raise during 2012 the Directors considered the level of cash that will be required by the Company for investment over the next few years as well as the need to maintain suffi cient liquidity to pay dividends and cover annual running costs.

Since inception the Board has, as a service to shareholders, maintained a buy back policy of acquiring shares through the market at a discount to NAV of approximately 10 per cent. Each year the level of shares bought back by the Company is relatively low. (For instance in the past three fi nancial years the Company has bought back an annual average of 2 per cent. of the shares in issue at the fi nancial year end). In addition, the results of the shareholder survey carried out in October 2012 confi rmed that a signifi cant majority of our shareholders intend to hold their shares for the long term. As a result, in November 2012 the Directors decided that in order to enable those shareholders who do wish to sell their shares to achieve a return closer to net asset value they would in future seek to buy back shares at a 5 per cent. discount to NAV. This should also improve the price of the Company's shares for ongoing shareholders and increase their attractiveness.

This discount control policy will be kept under review based on the number of shares bought back over the next 12 months and may therefore be subject to revision. The buying back of shares will depend on market conditions at the time and will only happen when the Directors believe any such purchase would be in the best interests of shareholders as a whole.

OUTLOOK

As anticipated in my half-yearly report the continued scarcity of bank debt in the UK and concerns regarding the stability of the European Union have resulted in both uncertain and slower growth for the UK economy.

Against this unpromising backdrop there has been steady progress across many of our portfolio companies as witnessed by the 'top ten' investees showing increases in turnover and profi ts. The relatively low levels of debt in the companies concerned should ensure that our investments are more resilient if trading conditions continue to be diffi cult.

We therefore view the next year with a mixture of caution and optimism as we continue to believe that good quality companies of the size in which we invest can prosper even in the current tough environment. We are fortunate that the investment manager ISIS has a strong track record of partnering with such companies and has the experience and knowledge to support them along a growth path.

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING

I look forward to seeing as many shareholders as possible at our 12th Annual General Meeting which will be held this year on Wednesday 10 April 2013 at the Plaisterers' Hall, One London Wall, EC2Y 5JU at 10:30 am. The AGM will be followed by presentations from the Manager and one of our investee companies. Following these presentations we would be delighted if you could join us for a light lunch.

Anthony Townsend Chairman 1 5 February 2013

Manager's Review

Andrew Garside Sheenagh Egan Michael Probin

Considering the ongoing uncertainty during the period under review in the national and European economies, the progress made by the Company's investees is creditable. Overall , the portfolio has performed very well including a number of signifi cant gains by a number of quoted shareholdings.

PORTFOLIO REVIEW

Overview

The net assets of £75 million were invested as follows:

Asset class NAV % of
NAV
Number of
investees
Annual
return %
Unquoted 37,084,000 50 25 8
Quoted 22,641,000 30 42 38
Wood Street Microcap 4,525,000 6 33 18
Cash and near cash 10,312,000 14

During the year in total there were;

  • New investments of £7.2 million in six new companies and eight follow ons;
  • Divestments of £3.0 million from nine investments and a partial loan note realisation.

Each quarter the direction of general trading and profi tability of all investee companies is recorded so that the Board can monitor the overall health and trajectory of the portfolio. At 31 December 2012, 85 per cent. of the 67 companies in the portfolio were progressing steadily or better.

Unquoted Private Equity

The unquoted portfolio has again performed well and there has been a steady increase in unquoted values of 8 per cent. The unquoted portion of the portfolio is valued using a consistent process every three months which the Board oversees and approves. Almost all of the value creation in unquoted investments has come from operational improvements (revenue and margin growth), rather than fi nancial leverage.

The sale of TVC to the Economist Group realised £1.3 million in March 2012.

Quoted (AIM traded and other listed investments)

There has also been a signifi cant uplift in the quoted portfolio of 38 per cent. partially refl ecting a positive rerating of the small cap sector in the fi rst quarter of 2012. This recovery has been helpful to the quoted portfolio following several years of headwinds from a challenging AIM market environment and weak share prices.

Manager's Review

The largest contributor to the uplift in the quoted portfolio was IDOX, a supplier of document management software to the UK local government, and global engineering sectors. The IDOX share price appreciated by 125 per cent. during the period aided by a combination of good organic growth and accretive acquisitions which led to successive earnings forecast upgrades.

Over the three years to 3 1 December 2012, the approach in quoted investments has been to concentrate on making fewer AIM investments and becoming a more engaged shareholder where possible and appropriate. This has taken time to implement as only a small minority of AIM companies qualify for VCT purposes. The average size by value of the AIM & Listed investments in the portfolio in December 2009 was £271,000 but this had increased by 99 per cent. to £539,000 by December 2012.

Due to the signifi cant uplift in the AIM and listed portfolio of £6.3 million during the year, the opportunity was taken to divest seven investments, mainly in legacy companies that were valued below cost, largely to reduce the tail of older and poorer performing investments. Of these, three were sold through trade sales (Clarity Commerce Solutions, Prologic and Stagecoach Theatre Arts), one through a market sale (The Real Good Food Company) and three written off (Colliers International UK, Music Festivals and Adventis Group). Proceeds from these seven divestments totalled £0.7 million. This represented an overall uplift in recognised value during the year of £0.2 million but a loss against cost of £1.5 million. Some profi ts were taken from the investment in IDOX, with 11 per cent. of the holding sold for £593,000 realising a profi t of £475,000 against cost.

Wood Street

Wood Street Microcap Investment Fund ("Wood Street") was established by ISIS in May 2009 to provide fl exibility for the Baronsmead VCTs to invest in generally larger and more liquid non VCT qualifying AIM and Small Cap opportunities. During the year, a further investment of £1 million was made into Wood Street. The Manager receives no additional fee for managing this fund. At 31 December 2012, Baronsmead VCT 3 had invested £3.5 million through Wood Street into a portfolio of 33 companies, valued at £4.5 million. Wood Street generated a positive return of 18 per cent. over the year.

Liquid assets (cash and near cash)

Baronsmead VCT 3 had cash and near cash resources of approximately £10 million at the year-end. This asset class is conservatively managed to take minimal or no capital risk.

In addition, investments within the Wood Street fund are expected to be relatively more liquid than other investments as covered in the section above. This gives the Manager the possibility of realising cash from Wood Street should this ever be required to supplement liquid assets.

Unquoted Investments

During the year £5.2 million was invested in 6 unquoted companies including three new companies seeking acquisitions of which one was used to make the investment in Impetus Holdings described below. Three new unquoted investments were;

  • Happy Days Consultancy, a children's nursery business, is based in the South West of the UK. The business has 17 sites already and the investment will help accelerate growth in new sites. This is a sector that the Manager has invested in before with a successful investment in Kidsunlimited which was realised in 2008.
  • Pho Holdings is a group of traditional Vietnamese restaurants based in London. The Pho sites are informal, fast casual environments, specialising in Vietnam's national dish of Pho, a tasty and nutritious noodle soup. Pho was awarded 'Best Emerging Concept' at this year's Retailer of the Year Awards. The fi rst Pho location opened on St. John Street, Clerkenwell, London, in June 2005 and the group now has a total of seven sites across London and the South East. The new investment enables the team to open new sites, but with each site retaining a unique and independent feel.

Manager's Review

• Impetus Holdings is a specialist business consultancy, supplying Sales and After Sales support services to the automotive industry. The business delivers a diverse range of programmes and projects for Vehicle Manufacturers, with much of their work taking place within Dealerships and National Sales Companies. Impetus Automotive has achieved strong growth in recent years with revenues increasing by 50 per cent. since 2010. Clients include VW, Land Rover, Audi, Toyota, BMW, Citro ën, Fiat, Ford and Jaguar. Approximately 15 per cent. of work is delivered outside of the UK. The investment by ISIS will support the business in its continued expansion into new markets, building on the strong presence established in the UK and further development of new services to clients.

Top Ten investments

The average investment value of the top ten companies held by Baronsmead VCT 3 is £3.1 million per company. Because these investments are normally held by the other four Baronsmead VCTs, the total managed by ISIS in each investee is signifi cantly larger than this, which enables ISIS to dedicate signifi cant resource to manage each investment and their progress. The top ten investees employ some 2, 500 people, which is an increase of 22 per cent. over the last year. Their turnover and profi ts had also grown by some 15 per cent. annually for the last three years. In this year's Annual Report, each of the top ten companies are described in more detail on pages 1 4 to 18 .

Investment Management

ISIS continues to invest in its skills and capacity with over 40 of its total team of 60 devoted to investment management activities across all its investing activities. Its focus is on generating strong investment returns from its portfolio through a mixture of intelligent investment selection and hands on portfolio management. Its ability to select good investments owes much to its in depth sector research and specialisation and to its strong origination team that help the team to generate proprietary deal fl ow.

Its investments are supported from the outset by an experienced internal value enhancement team together with a panel of proven Operating Partners that work exclusively with ISIS to assist management teams to deliver both strategic development and operational effi ciencies. Both have enabled ISIS to build a strong track record of producing consistent returns from its unquoted investments.

ISIS has pursued a strategy of sector specialisation over the past fourteen years and in that time its executives have developed in-depth knowledge of these sectors and valuable networks of contacts which have enabled it to capitalise on opportunities that have presented themselves in an ever changing environment. Its key sectors are:

  • Business Services
  • Financial Services
  • Consumer Markets
  • Healthcare & Education
  • Technology, Media & Telecommunications

OUTLOOK

A number of commentators believe that the UK economy is unlikely to experience signifi cant growth in the near future. At this stage of the recovery, this is hard to dispute and it is a fair working assumption for investors.

However many of our portfolio companies and their management teams are now more experienced at handling the economic uncertainties including managing their growth and operations in a tougher environment than in previous decades. Low bank borrowings within the portfolio give them robust fi nancial structures.

ISIS is an active investment manager who works with our investee to help them to grow revenue and earnings whilst continuing to enhance customer service and build resilient businesses with good momentum. Our intention is to seek out the best opportunities where growth is driven by innovation and gaining market share through differentiation rather than relying on favourable economic growth. We continue to be confi dent that good levels of performance can be maintained despite the ongoing challenging environment.

ISIS EP LLP

Investment Manage r 1 5 February 2013

Summary Investment Portfolio

Investment Classifi cation at 31 December 2012

Table of Investments and Realisations

Investments in the year

Book cost
Company Location Sector Activity £'000
Unquoted investments
New
Impetus Holdings Limited London Business Services Automotive consultancy and outsourced
service provider
1,057
Consumer Investment
Partners Limited†
London Consumer Markets Company seeking to acquire businesses in
the consumer markets sector
1,000
Riccal Investments Limited‡ London Business Services Company seeking to acquire businesses in
the business services sector
1,000
Pho Holdings Limited London Consumer Markets Restaurant group specialising in
Vietnamese street food
987
Happy Days Consultancy Limited Newquay Healthcare & Education Provider of nursery based childcare in
Cornwall & Plymouth across 16 settings
833
Follow on
Crew Clothing Holdings Limited London Consumer Markets Multi-channel clothing retailer 360
Total unquoted investments 5,237
AIM-traded & listed investments
New
Zattikka plc London TMT* Online games development 316
Follow on
Dods (Group) plc London TMT* Political information and communication 678
Hangar8 plc Oxford Business Services Business jet management 344
Tangent Communications plc London Business Services Digital direct marketing 215
Accumuli plc Salford TMT* Managed IT security 132
Inspired Energy plc Kirkham Business Services Energy procurement consultancy services 100
Electric Word plc London TMT* Business to business publisher 80
Driver Group plc Rossendale Business Services Dispute resolution 60
Total AIM-traded & listed investments 1,925
Collective investment vehicle
Follow on
Wood Street Microcap Investment Fund 1,000
Total collective investment vehicle 1,000
Total investments in the year 8,162

* Technology, Media & Telecommunications ("TMT").

† Formerly named Ingleby (1887) Limited.

‡ Formerly named Ingleby (1885) Limited.

Table of Investments and Realisations

Realisations in the year

31 December Realised
First 2011 profi t/(loss) Overall
investment valuation this period multiple
Company date £'000 £'000 return
Unquoted realisations
TVC Group Limited Full trade sale Jul 08 1,298 26 1.1
MLS Limited Loan repayment Jul 06 417 0 1.0
Total unquoted realisations 1,715 26
AIM-traded & listed realisations
IDOX plc Market sale Jan 09 357 236 5.0
Stagecoach Theatre Arts plc Full trade sale Feb 01 153 140 0.7
Real Good Food Company (The) plc Full market sale Dec 03 160 65 0.4
Prologic plc Full trade sale Jun 04 103 48 0.5
Clarity Commerce Solutions plc Full trade sale Oct 09 29 3 0.6
Colliers International UK plc Written off Jul 01 4 (4) 0.0
Adventis Group plc Written off Jun 04 10 (9) 0.0
Music Festivals plc Written off Jun 11 87 (87) 0.0
Total AIM-traded & listed realisations 903 392
Total realisations in the year 2,618 418†

† Proceeds of £8,000 were also received in respect of Getting Personal Limited, which had been sold in the year ended 31 December 2011.

Creating Shareholder Value

HOW ISIS CREATES AND REALISES VALUE FOR THE SHAREHOLDERS OF BARONSMEAD VCT 3 PLC

Access to an attractive, diverse portfolio

Baronsmead VCT 3 plc gives shareholders access to a diverse portfolio of growth businesses, both unquoted private equity and AIM-traded companies.

Each business has already demonstrated profi table success from its business model before investment to provide a degree of stability and foundation from which to build. Each business is led by entrepreneurial management teams that are aspiring to achieve above average growth from attractive and differentiated market positions.

The Manager's approach to investing

The Manager, ISIS, aspires to select the best opportunities and has a distinctive selection criteria based on;

  • Businesses that demonstrate elements of market leadership in their niche
  • Management teams that can develop and deliver profi table and sustained growth
  • The company being able to be an attractive asset appealing to a range of buyers at the appropriate time to exit

In order to ensure there is a strong pipeline of opportunities, ISIS invests in sector knowledge and networks. It then undertakes signifi cant pro-active marketing to interesting unquoted targets in preferred sectors. This is building a database of businesses that are keen to maintain a relationship with ISIS ahead of possible investment opportunities.

ISIS as an infl uential shareholder

For unquoted private equity investments, ISIS is an involved shareholder and representatives of the Manager join the investee board. The role of ISIS is to ensure that strategy is clear, the business plan is well thought through and the management resources are in place to deliver profi table growth. The intention is to build on the initial platform and grow the business so that it can become an attractive target able to be either sold or fl oated in the medium term.

The investment strategy for AIM-traded companies has increasingly focused on taking more infl uential stakes through the collective shareholdings of the Baronsmead family of VCTs.

The top ten investments by current value at 31 December 2012 illustrate the diversity and size of investee companies within the portfolio. This fi nancial information is taken from publicly available information published at Companies House, which has been audited by the auditors of the investee companies.

1
IDOX PLC
London
All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 31 October
First investment: May 2002 2011 2010
Total cost: £2,460,000 £million £million
Total equity held: 7.51% Revenue: 38.6 31.3
EBITA: 9.5 7.5
Baronsmead VCT 3 only Net Assets: 34.4 31.0
Cost: £920,000
Valuation: £5,184,000 No of employees: 363 332
Valuation basis: Traded Price
% of equity held: 2.80%
www.investors.idoxgroup.com (Source: IDOX Plc, Directors' Report and Financial Statements 31 October 2011)

IDOX group is a leading software and information management solutions provider. These deliver seamless integration and automation from consumer websites through to document storage. In the private sector, its engineering information management software combines McLaren and CTSpace, who are leaders in their markets.

The Baronsmead VCTs fi rst invested in IDOX in 2002, approximately two years after the company fl oated on AIM. Over the last decade IDOX has shown strong growth through a combination of organic growth and acquisition, and is now seeking to diversify from its core local authority markets into the private sector to become a leading player in industries like oil, gas and pharmaceuticals.

NEXUS VEHICLE HOLDINGS LIMITED Leeds

First investment: February 2008 2011 2010 Total cost: £9,500,000 £million £million Total equity held: 56.00% Revenue: 38.3 33.5 EBITA: 4.3 4.0 Baronsmead VCT 3 only Net Assets: 1.7 0.8 Cost: £2,368,000 Valuation: £4,768,000 No of employees: 90 73 Valuation basis: Earnings Multiple % of equity held: 12.32%

All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 30 September

www.nexusrental.co.uk (Source: Nexus Vehicle Holdings Limited, Report and Financial Statements 30 September 2011)

Nexus enables corporate users to source all their vehicle rental needs from one source – a highly effi cient and cost effective online based process. The service is provided using its proprietary system, IRIS, an advanced web based IT tool that is highly regarded in the industry. It offers fast access to a large range of rental fl eets and enables customers to benefi t from the buying scale of Nexus.

Vehicle rental in the UK represents a large market and Nexus is gaining market share through its innovative approach. Two acquisitions have also added to the growth of Nexus.

2

3

4

CABLECOM NETWORKING HOLDINGS LIMITED Clevedon

All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 30 September
First investment: May 2007 2011 2010
Total cost: £5,600,000 £million £million
Total equity held: 48.00% Revenue: 12.2 8.2
EBITA: 1.4 0.9
Baronsmead VCT 3 only Net Assets: 0.3 0.5
Cost: £1,381,000
Valuation: £4,328,000 No. of employees: 61 52
Valuation basis: Earnings Multiple
% of equity held: 10.56%
EBITA: 1.4

www.cablecomnetworking.co.uk (Source: CableCom Networking Holdings Limited, Report and Financial Statements 30 September 2011)

Cablecom is a leader in the provision of IT and communication managed services to accommodation blocks for the UK student and key worker sectors. Under term contracts, it manages the full range of communication services including broadband, telephony and TV at university sites. The business is also a provider of networking solutions to corporate clients.

Since investment, the proposition has been transformed by adding additional services such as a fully interactive web portal offering a wide range of services to both the accommodation owner and user. This is allowing Cablecom to capture a strong share of newly outsourced contracts.

INDEPENDENT LIVING SERVICES LIMITED

Aberdeen

All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 30 September Cost: £1,599,000 Valuation basis: Earnings Multiple % of equity held: 15.60%

All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 30 September
First investment: September 2005 2011 2010
Total cost: £5,829,000 £million £million
Total equity held: 65.68% Revenue: 20.1 17.2
EBITA: 0.4 0.1
Baronsmead VCT 3 only Net Liabilities: (1.9) (0.7)
Cost: £1,599,000
Valuation: £3,322,000 No of employees: 1,468 1,254
Valuation basis: Earnings Multiple

www.ilsscotland.com ( Source: ILS Group Limited, Annual Report year ended 30 September 2011)

ILS is one of the largest independent providers of domiciliary care in Scotland, providing carers to support individuals to live independently in their own homes. The business has grown from its single base at the time of investment to now cover a signifi cant part of the Scottish geography.

The market in Scotland is very fragmented and a signifi cant volume of this type of care is provided by Local Authorities. ILS is well placed to benefi t as some of this care is outsourced to the best private providers over time. The business has completed several acquisitions, expanding its footprint across Scotland.

5

CREW CLOTHING HOLDINGS LIMITED London

All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 30 October
First investment: November 2006 2011 2010
Total cost: £5,395,000 £million £million
Total equity held: 25.51% Revenue: 40.7 34.6
EBITA: 3.3 2.7
Baronsmead VCT 3 only Net Assets: 5.7 3.8
Cost: £1,344,000
Valuation: £3,020,000 No. of employees: 311 284
Valuation basis: Earnings Multiple
% of equity held: 6.08%

www.crewclothing.co.uk (Source: Crew Clothing Holdings Limited, Report and Financial Statements 30 October 2011)

Crew Clothing Co. is an English clothing brand with a wide range of active, outdoor and casual wear for men and women. Since it was founded in 1993, the brand has since evolved into the fast growing premium active and casual wear sectors, but retained its unique heritage and positioning. Today it is a well known, respected and aspirational clothing brand in the UK.

The business is a multi-channel retailer with its own signifi cant retail estate, wholesale accounts and direct mail order channels. It is growing by expanding all these routes to market as the brand grows in presence.

6

KAFEVEND HOLDINGS LIMITED Crawley

All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 30 September
First investment: October 2005 2011 2010
Total cost: £5,024,000 £million £million
Total equity held: 66.50% Revenue: 18.4 15.6
EBITA: 1.9 2.0
Baronsmead VCT 3 only Net Assets: 1.5 1.2
Cost: £1,252,000
Valuation: £2,956,000 No of employees: 105 95
Valuation basis: Earnings Multiple
% of equity held: 15.79%

www.kafevend.co.uk ( Source: Kafevend Holdings Limited, Directors' Report and Financial Statements 30 September 2011)

Kafevend is a leading supplier of workplace refreshments and vending machines in the UK. The business offers a wide range of quality commercial coffee and vending machines for sale, rental and also an arrangement based on paying just for consumables. The revenues are predominantly recurring sales of consumables used in its installed base.

Kafevend is building a reputation as a quality supplier for UK companies of all sizes. The market is fragmented and the company is one of the few UK players with a true national presence and a network of engineers available at short notice to service clients.

7

CSC (WORLD) LIMITED Pudsey, Leeds

www.cscworld.com
All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 31 March
First investment: January 2008 2012 2011
Total cost: £6,450,000 £million £million
Total equity held: 40.03% Revenue: 7.9 7.3
EBITA: 2.4 2.3
Baronsmead VCT 3 only Net Liabilities: (2.0) (1.3)
Cost: £1,606,000
Valuation: £2,410,000 No of employees: 59 58
Valuation basis: Earnings Multiple
% of equity held: 8.81%
EBITA: 2.4 2.3

www.cscworld.com (Source: Cobco 867 Limited, Financial Statements 31 March 2012)

CSC provides market leading software solutions for structural engineers, including structural analysis and modelling, steelwork and concrete design. The business has been developing innovative software and providing technical support to structural engineers for over 35 years. The software tools allow engineers to deliver complex solutions and with effective compliance back up.

The current customer base comprises companies in the UK, Ireland, USA, Asia, Australia and India. CSC is a business with strong growth prospects and with plans to continue international market development opportunities.

8

VALLDATA GROUP LIMITED Melksham

All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 31 March First investment: January 2011 2012 2011 Total cost: £6,475,000 £million £million Total equity held: 39.84% Revenue: 7.1 6.3 EBITA: 0.8 0.9 Baronsmead VCT 3 only Net Assets: 0.8 0.6 Cost: £1,616,000 Valuation: £1,754,000 No of employees: 137 126 Valuation basis: Earnings Multiple

www.valldata.co.uk ( Source: Valldata Services Limited, Directors Report and Financial Statements 31 March 2012)

Valldata is the UK's leading provider of outsourced donation processing and fulfi lment services for the UK not-forprofi t sector. Using its advanced technology and IT systems it manages over 8 million interactions with donors every year covering paper-based donation, donations via telephone and online services, and also manages the database updates for its customers. Investment in technology and infrastructure means it can typically process payments faster and at lower cost than a client could do in-house.

% of equity held: 8.76%

Many functions of this nature are undertaken in house by large charities and Valldata is growing as some of this work is outsourced.

9

FISHER OUTDOOR LEISURE HOLDINGS LIMITED St. Albans

All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 31 July
First investment: June 2006 20112 20101
Total cost: £5,700,000 £million £million
Total equity held: 44.00% Revenue: 43.6 26.5
EBITA: 2.7 2.3
Baronsmead VCT 3 only Net Assets: 1.2 1.4
Cost: £1,423,000
Valuation: £1,656,000 No of employees: 110 96
Valuation basis: Earnings Multiple
% of equity held: 10.45%

www.fi sheroutdoor.co.uk ( Source: Fisher Outdoor Leisure Holdings Limited, Directors' Report and Financial Statements 31 July 2011)

Fisher Outdoor Leisure is one of the UK's leading distributors of cycles and cycle accessories to retailers. Fisher's product range consists of over 30 exclusively distributed industry leading brands from international manufacturers which want Fisher's support for their brands. It also provides a strong range of service and spares products essential for the specialist cycle retailer and its own range of house brands.

Since investment in 2006, the business has grown on the back of signifi cant investment in people and systems, and improving its services for its end customers. It is a key added value distributor within a buoyant end market.

1 12 month period ended 31 January 2010

2 18 month period ended 31 July 2011. The Company changed its year end from 31 January to 31 July

10 INSPIRED THINKING GROUP LIMITED Birmingham

All ISIS EP LLP managed funds Year ended 31 August
First investment: May 2010 2011 2010
Total cost: £3,200,000 £ million £ million
Total equity held: 22.50% Revenue: 21.5 12.9
EBITA: 1.4 1.0
Baronsmead VCT 3 only Net Assets: 0.8 0.9
Cost: £796,000
Valuation: £1,571,000 No. of employees: 117 96
Valuation basis: Earnings Multiple
% of equity held: 4.95%

www.inspiredthinkinggroup.com (Source: Inspired Thinking Group Holdings Limited, Report of the Directors and Consolidated Financial Statements for the year ended 31 August 2011)

ITG provides services that help marketing departments to operate more effi ciently. This includes outsourced print management services to major retailers and consumer facing businesses. ITG also owns and provides a workfl ow and content system called MediaCentre that enables their clients to gain tighter control over their marketing operations. The combined services are already saving some major retailers considerable sums within their marketing departments, enabling them to make fi xed budgets more effective.

The ITG management team are known as experienced and innovative in this fi eld and have been successful in winning large new accounts over time from blue chip clients.

Board of Directors

As at 31 December 2012

Anthony Townsend (Chairman)

(Date of appointment 4 August 2009)

(age 6 5) has over 40 years experience in fi nancial services and in industry. He is chairman of British & American Investment Trust plc, F&C Global Smaller Companies plc, Finsbury Growth & Income Trust plc and Miton Worldwide Growth Investment Trust plc, and a non-executive director of Hansa Capital Limited and the Worldwide Healthcare Trust plc. He was previously a director of Rea Brothers Group plc and was chairman of the Association of Investment Companies.

Andrew Karney

(Senior Independent Director)

(Date of appointment 10 January 2001)

(age 70) was deputy chairman and a shareholder of Language Line Limited in which Baronsmead VCT 3, was an investor. He is a trustee (formerly chairman) of Integrity Action, an international integrity reform non governmental organisation. He was previously a director of The Guardian Media Group plc, Guardian News and Media Limited, Integrated Micro Products plc and a number of unquoted companies. He was a founder director of Cable London plc and an executive director of Logica plc. He is also a chartered engineer.

Gillian Nott OBE

(Audit and Risk Committee Chairman)

(Date of appointment 10 January 2001)

(age 6 7) has in-depth understanding of private investors as chief executive of ProShare (1994– 1999). Previously she was responsible for the private equity portfolio at BP and has been on the board of the FSA. She is currently a non-executive director of BlackRock Smaller Companies Trust plc, Martin Currie Global Portfolio Investment Trust plc and JP Morgan Russian Securities plc and is chairman of Witan Pacifi c Investment Trust plc as well as a deputy chairman of the Association of Investment Companies. She was also a director of Liverpool Victoria Friendly Society from May 2005 to May 2011. Gill is a non-executive director of Baronsmead VCT 2 and Baronsmead VCT 5.

Ian Orrock

(Date of appointment 21 October 2010)

(age 6 6) has wide experience having founded, developed and sold a number of businesses particularly focusing on the international media, technology and telecoms sectors, and has also worked at board level in quoted global organisations. He is currently a non-executive director of Henderson Private Equity Investment Trust Plc and is a director of a number of private companies.

As a fully listed Company, Baronsmead VCT 3 plc is required to comply with the Financial Reporting Council's UK Corporate Governance Code. This Code requires the Company to be headed by an effective Board of Directors who provide entrepreneurial leadership of the Company within a framework of prudent and effective controls.

The directors of a VCT and the investment manager are required under the listing rules and continuing obligations of the London Stock Exchange to have suffi cient and satisfactory experience in the management of a portfolio of unquoted investments of the size and type in which the VCT proposes to invest. The Directors are all members of the Audit and Risk Committee, Management Engagement and Remuneration Committee and Nomination Committee.

The Chairman's Statement on pages 5 and 6 and the Corporate Governance Statement on pages 2 9 to 3 1 form part of the Report of the Directors.

Results and Dividends

The Directors present the twelfth Report and audited fi nancial statements of the Company for the year ended 31 December 2012.

Ordinary Shares £'000
Profi t on ordinary activities after taxation 8,959
Interim dividend of 3.0p per ordinary share paid on
21 September 2012
(1,893)
Total dividends paid during the year (1,893)

Subject to approval at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting the fi nal proposal dividend in respect of the year ended 31 December 2012 of 4.5 p per ordinary share will be paid on 15 April 2013 to shareholders recorded on the register on 1 March 2013.

Principal Activity and Status

The Company is registered in England as a Public Limited Company (Registration number 04115341). The Directors have managed and intend to continue to manage the Company's affairs in such a manner so as to comply with Section 274 of the Income Tax Act 2007 which grants approval as a VCT. A review of the Company's business during the year is contained in the Chairman's Statement and Manager's Review.

Business Review

The Business Review has been prepared in accordance with the requirements of Section 417 of the Companies Act 2006 and best practice. The purpose of this review is to provide shareholders with a summary setting out the business objectives of the Company, the Board's strategy to achieve those objectives, the risks faced, the regulatory environment and the key performance indicators ("KPIs") used to measure performance.

Strategy for achieving objectives

Baronsmead VCT 3 plc is a tax effi cient company listed on the London Stock Exchange's main market for listed securities and aims to achieve long-term investment returns for private investors.

Investment Policy

The Company's investment policy is to invest primarily in a diverse portfolio of UK growth businesses, whether unquoted or traded on AIM. Investments are made selectively across a range of sectors in companies that have the potential to grow and enhance their value.

Investment securities

The Company invests in a range of securities including, but not limited to, ordinary and preference shares, loan stocks, convertible securities, and fi xed interest bearing securities as well as cash. Unquoted investments are usually structured as a combination of ordinary shares and loan stocks, while AIM-traded investments are primarily held in ordinary shares. Pending investment in VCT qualifying and non-VCT qualifying unquoted , AIM-traded and other quoted securities (which may be held directly or indirectly through collective investment vehicles), cash is primarily held in interest bearing accounts, money market open ended investment compan ies ("OEICs"), UK gilts and treasury bills.

UK companies

Investments are primarily made in companies which are substantially based in the UK, although many of these investees may have some trade overseas .

VCT regulation

The investment policy is designed to ensure that the Company continues to qualify and is approved as a VCT by HM Revenue and Customs. Amongst other conditions, the Company may not invest more than 15 per cent. by value of its investments calculated in accordance with Section 278 of the Income Tax Act 2007 (as amended) ("VCT Value ") in a single company or group of companies and must have at least 70 per cent. of its investments by VCT Value throughout the period in shares and securities comprised in qualifying holdings. At least 70 per cent. by VCT Value of qualifying holdings must be in "eligible shares ", which are ordinary shares which have no preferential rights to assets on a winding up and no rights to be redeemed, but may have certain preferential rights to dividends. For funds raised before 6 April 2011, at least 30 per cent. by VCT Value of qualifying holdings must be in "eligible shares " which are ordinary shares which do not carry any rights to be redeemed or preferential rights to dividends or to assets on a winding up. At least 10 per cent. of each qualifying investment must be in "eligible shares ".

The companies in which investments are made must have no more than £15 million of gross assets at the time of investment to be classed as a VCT qualifying holding.

Asset mix

The Company aims to be at least 90 per cent. invested , directly or indirectly, in VCT qualifying and nonqualifying growth businesses subject always to the quality of investment opportunities and the timing of realisations. It is intended that at least 75 per cent. of any funds raised by the Company will be invested in VCT qualifying investments. Non-VCT qualifying investments held in unquoted, AIM-traded and other quoted companies may be held directly or indirectly through collective investment vehicles.

Risk diversifi cation and maximum exposures

Risk is spread by investing in a number of different businesses within different qualifying industry sectors using a mixture of securities. Generally no more than £2.5 million, at cost, is invested in the same company. The maximum the Company will invest in a single company (including a collective investment vehicle) is 15 per cent. of its investments by VCT value. The value of an individual investment is expected to increase over time as a result of trading progress and a continuous assessment is made of its suitability for sale.

Investment style

Investments are selected in the expectation that the application of private equity disciplines including an active management style for unquoted companies will enhance value and enable profi ts to be realised from planned exits.

Co-investment with other Baronsmead VCTs

The Company aims to invest in larger more mature unquoted and AIM -traded companies and to achieve this it invests alongside the other Baronsmead VCTs .

Management retention

The Manager's members and staff invest in unquoted investments alongside the Company. This scheme is in line with current practice of private equity houses and its objective is to attract, recruit and retain and incentivise the Manager's team and is made on terms which align the interests of Shareholders and the Manager.

Borrowing powers

The Company's policy is to use borrowing for short term liquidity purposes only up to a maximum of 25 per cent. of the Company's gross assets , as permitted by the Company's articles.

Management

The Board has delegated the management of the investment portfolio to the Manager. The Manager also provides or procures the provision of company secretarial, administrative, accounting and custodian services to the Company.

The Manager has adopted a 'top-down, sector-driven' approach to identifying and evaluating potential investment opportunities, by assessing a forward view of fi rstly the business environment, then the sector and fi nally the specifi c potential investment opportunity. Based on its research, the Manager has selected a number of sectors that it believes will offer attractive growth prospects and investment opportunities. Diversifi cation is also achieved by spreading investments across different asset classes and making investments for a variety of different periods.

The Manager's Review on pages 7 to 9 provides a review of the investment portfolio and of market conditions during the year.

Principal risks, risk management and regulatory environment

The Board believes that the principal risks faced by the Company are:

Economic risk

Events such as a continuing economic recession and movement in interest rates could affect smaller companies' valuations. The Manager's strategy to invest in a diverse portfolio of companies seeks to mitigate this risk.

Regulatory risks

General changes in legislation, regulations or government policy could signifi cantly infl uence the decisions of investors or impact upon the markets in which the Company invests and the status of the Company as a VCT.

– Loss of approval as a Venture Capital Trust – the Company must comply with Section 274 of the Income Tax Act 2007 which allows it to be exempted from capital gains tax on investment gains. Any breach of these rules may lead to the Company losing its approval as a VCT, qualifying shareholders who have not held their shares for the designated holding period having to repay the income tax relief they obtained and future dividends paid by the Company becoming subject to tax. The Company would also lose its exemption from corporation tax on capital gains.

  • CP12/19 as outlined in the Financial Services Authority consultation paper CP12/19, VCTs are potentially within the scope of proposed new regulations restricting the distribution of unregulated collective investment schemes and close substitutes to retail investors. Although the FSA has been receptive to concerns raised in response to the consultation paper, there is no certainty that VCTs will be excluded from the scope of the fi nal regulations. However, if ultimately within scope, it is likely that such regulation would adversely affect the Company's ability to raise new funds in the future.
  • The Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive ("AIFMD") – The AIFMD, 2011/61/EU, entered into force on 21 July 2011. European Member States are required to implement the AIFMD into national law by 22 July 2013. The AIFMD seeks to regulate managers ("AIFMs") of alternative investment funds ("AIFs") which are marketed or managed in the EU. AIFs, such as the Company, may, subject to satisfying certain requirements, obtain authorisation as an internally managed AIF or appoint a third party manager, such as the Manager, to act as its AIFM. Depending on how the Directive is implemented, this could have cost implications for the Company. The Board and the Company's advisers will continue to monitor the progress and likely implications of the AIFMD.
  • Regulatory the Company is required to comply with the Companies Act 2006, the rules of the UK Listing Authority and United Kingdom Accounting Standards. Breach of any of these might lead to suspension of the Company's Stock Exchange listing, fi nancial penalties or a qualifi ed audit report.

Investment and strategic risk

An inappropriate strategy, lack of good investment opportunities and increased competitiveness for deals, and poor asset allocation might lead to under performance and poor returns to shareholders. The Company's investment strategy is regularly reviewed by the Board and performance of the investment portfolio is considered at each meeting.

Credit risk

Cash management risk may occur by placing cash deposits with high risk institutions or not spreading cash effectively. The cash management strategy is set by the Board and the Investment Committee of the Manager approves all liquid asset investments. Due diligence is undertaken on the sponsor or manager of any non -government instruments invested in and this is updated on a regular basis to minimise the risk.

Competitive risk

Retention of key personnel of the Manager is vital to the success of the Company. The Manager provides appropriate incentive schemes and a career development strategy to ensure retention of key personnel.

Market risk

Investments in AIM-traded and unquoted companies, by their nature, involve a higher degree of risk than investment in companies traded on the main market. In particular, smaller companies often have limited product lines, markets or fi nancial resources and may be dependent for their management on a smaller number of key individuals.

Liquidity risk

The Company's investments may be diffi cult to realise. The fact that a share is traded on AIM does not guarantee its liquidity. The spread between the buying and selling price of such shares may be wide and thus the price used for valuation may not be achievable.

Reputational risk

Inadequate or failed controls might result in breaches of regulations or loss of shareholder trust.

Operational risk

Failure of the Manager's and administrator's accounting systems or disruption to its business might lead to an inability to provide accurate reporting and monitoring. Internal controls reporting on all service providers is provided to the Board for review on a regular basis.

Financial risk

The Board has identifi ed the Company's principal fi nancial risks which are set out in the notes to the Financial Statements on pages 50 to 53. Inadequate controls might lead to misappropriation of assets. Inappropriate accounting policies might lead to misreporting or breaches of regulations.

The Board seeks to mitigate the internal risks by setting policy, regular review of performance, enforcement of contractual obligations and monitoring progress and compliance. In the mitigation and management of these risks, the Board applies rigorously the principles detailed in the FRC's "Internal Controls: Guidance to Directors". Details of the Company's internal controls are contained in the Corporate Governance section on page 3 1.

Performance and key performance indicators ("KPIs")

The Board expects the Manager to deliver a performance which meets the objective of achieving long term investment returns, including tax-free dividends, for private investors. A review of the Company's performance during the fi nancial period, the position of the Company at the year end and the outlook for the coming year is contained within the Chairman's Statement on pages 5 and 6.

The Board assesses the performance of the Manager in meeting the Company's objective against the primary KPIs highlighted on pages 2 to 4 and 59 of the Report.

Issue and Buy-Back of Shares

Pursuant to a top-up offer in February 2012, the Company allotted 3,853,400 ordinary shares at a price of 107.30p representing 5.4 per cent. of the then issued share capital with an aggregate nominal value of £ 385,340 raising £4,135,000 of new funds in total. The terms of issue were set out in the Offer Document dated 12 January 2012 and the offer price was set on 20 February 2012.

As a result of an offer for subscription launched on 20 November 2012, the Company allotted a further 4,258,668 ordinary shares at a price of 117.40p representing 5.6 per cent. of the then issued share capital with an aggregate nominal value of £425,8 66.80 raising £5,000,000 of new funds in total. The terms of issue were set out in the Securities Note dated 20 November 2012 and the offer price was set on 21 December 2012.

During the period the Company bought back 1,306,897 ordinary shares with a nominal value of 10p to be held in treasury representing 1. 7 per cent. of the issued share capital at a cost of £ 1,257,743 . No shares were sold from treasury during the period. Shares will not be sold at a discount wider than the discount prevailing at the time the shares were initially bought back by the Company. The Company holds 8,929,214 ordinary shares in treasury, being the maximum number of ordinary shares held in treasury during the year, representing 11.8 per cent. of the issued share capital as at 15 February 2013.

Directors

Biographies of the Directors who served during the year and at the date of this report are shown on page 19.

As explained in more detail under Corporate Governance on pages 2 9 to 3 1 and in accordance with the provisions of the AIC Code of Corporate Governance, the Board has agreed that Directors who have held offi ce for more than nine years will retire annually. Accordingly, as Mr A Karney and Mrs G Nott have held offi ce for a period of more than nine years, they will retire by rotation at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting of the Company and, being eligible, offer themselves for re-election. Mrs G Nott who is a director of Baronsmead VCT 2 plc and Baronsmead VCT 5 plc is also required to seek annual re-election under the terms of the UKLA's Listing Rules.

Mr Orrock, who was elected at the Company's Annual General Meeting held in 201 1, will in accordance with the Company's Articles of Association and the provisions of the AIC Code of Corporate Governance, retire at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting of the Company and, being eligible, offer himself for re-election.

The Board confi rms that, following formal performance evaluations, the performance of each of the Directors continues to be effective and demonstrates commitment to the role. The Board believes that it is therefore in the best interests of shareholders that the retiring Directors be re-elected.

The interests of the Directors in the shares of the Company at the end of the current and prior year were as follows:

31 December 2012 31 December 2011
Ordinary
10p shares
Ordinary
10p shares
44,439 7,609
86,548 82,709
82,739 55,900
15,535
229,261 146,218

There have been no changes in the holdings of the Directors between 31 December 2012 and 15 February 2013 .

No Director has a service contract with the Company.

All Directors are members of the Audit and Risk, Management Engagement and Remuneration and Nomination Committees. With a relatively small Board, it is deemed both practical and proportionate to involve all the Directors in each committee.

The Directors who held offi ce at the date of approval of this Directors' Report confi rm that, so far as they are each aware, there is no relevant audit information of which the Company's auditors are unaware; and each Director has taken all the steps that they ought to have taken as a Director to make themselves aware of any relevant audit information and to establish that the Company's auditors are aware of that information.

Companies Act 2006 Disclosure

In accordance with Schedule 7 of the Large and Medium Size Companies and Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008 the Directors disclose the following information:

  • the Company's capital structure and voting rights are summarised in Note 11, and there are no restrictions on voting rights nor any agreement between holders of securities that result in restrictions on the transfer of securities or on voting rights;
  • there exist no securities carrying special rights with regard to the control of the Company;
  • the Company does not have an employees' share scheme;

  • the rules concerning the appointment and replacement of Directors, amendment of the Articles of Association and powers to issue or buy back the Company's shares are contained in the Articles of Association of the Company and the Companies Act 2006;

  • there exist no agreements to which the Company is party that may affect its control following a takeover bid; and
  • there exist no agreements between the Company and its Directors providing for compensation for loss of offi ce that may occur because of a takeover bid.

The Board recognises the requirement under Section 417(5) of the Companies Act 2006 to detail information about environmental matters (including the impact of the Company's business on the environment), any Company employees and social and community issues; including information about any policies it has in relation to these matters and effectiveness of these policies. The Company has no employees and has limited direct impact on the environment. The Company aims to conduct itself responsibly, ethically and fairly.

Directors' Professional Development

When a new Director is appointed he or she is offered an induction programme that is arranged with the Manager. Directors are also provided on a regular basis with key information on the Company's policies, regulatory and statutory requirements and internal controls. Changes affecting directors' responsibilities are advised to the Board as they arise. Directors also regularly participate in industry seminars.

Directors' Indemnity

Directors' and offi cers' liability insurance cover is in place in respect of the Directors. The Company's Articles of Association provide, subject to the provisions of UK legislation, an indemnity for Directors in respect of costs which they may incur relating to the defence of any proceedings brought against them arising out of their positions as Directors, in which they are acquitted or judgement is given in their favour by the Court. Save for such indemnity provisions in the Company's Articles of Association and in the Directors' letters of appointment, there are no qualifying third party indemnity provisions.

Confl icts of Interest

The Directors have declared any confl icts or potential confl icts of interest to the Board of Directors which has the authority to approve such situations. The Company Secretary maintains the Register of Directors' Confl icts of Interests which is reviewed quarterly by the Board and when changes are notifi ed. The Directors advise the Company Secretary and Board as soon as they become aware of any confl icts of interest. Directors who have confl icts of interest do not take part in discussions which relate to any of their confl icts.

Whistleblowing

The Board has considered the UK Corporate Governance Code's recommendations in respect of arrangements by which staff of the Manager or Secretary of the Company may, in confi dence, raise concerns within their respective organisations about possible improprieties in matters of fi nancial reporting or other matters. It has concluded that adequate arrangements are in place for the proportionate and independent investigation of such matters and, where necessary, for appropriate follow-up action to be taken within their respective organisations.

Management

ISIS EP LLP manages the investments for the Company. The liquid assets within the portfolio (being cash, gilts and other assets, which are not categorised as venture capital investments for the purpose of the FSA's rules) have been managed by FPPE LLP. This is a limited liability partnership, which is authorised and regulated by the FSA and which has the same controlling members as the Manager. The Manager has continued to act as the Manager of the Company and as the investment manager of the Company's illiquid assets (being all AIM-traded and other venture capital investments).

The Manager also provides or procures the provision of accounting, secretarial, administrative and custodian services to the Company. The management agreement may be terminated at any date by either party giving twelve months' notice of termination. Under the management agreement, the Manager receives a fee of 2.5 per cent. per annum of the net assets of the Company. If the management agreement is terminated, the Manager is only entitled to the management fees paid to it and any interest due on unpaid fees.

In addition, the Manager receives an annual secretarial and accounting fee that was initially fi xed at £33,816 in 2006 and is revised annually to refl ect the movement in RPI, plus a variable fee of 0.125 per cent. of the net assets of the Company which exceed £5 million. The annual fee was initially capped at £102,212 per annum and is also revised annually to refl ect the movement in RPI.

Annual running costs are capped at 3.5 per cent. of the net assets of the Company (excluding any performance fee payable to the Manager and irrecoverable VAT), any excess being refunded by the Manager by way of an adjustment to its management fee. The running cost as at 31 December 2012 was 3.0 per cent.

During the year the Management Engagement and Remuneration Committee met to discuss and consider the continuing appointment of the Manager. The Committee reviewed and considered the agreements between the Company and the Manager and the Manager's performance and after careful consideration the Committee recommended to the Board that ISIS EP LLP should continue as Manager of the Company. It is the Board's opinion that the continuing appointment of ISIS EP LLP on the terms agreed is in the best interests of shareholders as a whole. The Board believes that the knowledge and experience accumulated by the Manager in the period since the launch of the fi rst Baronsmead VCT in 1995 is refl ected in processes which are designed to fi nd, manage and realise good quality growth businesses.

Co-investment Scheme

The Co-investment Scheme was introduced in November 2004. Members of the Manager's investment team invest their own capital into a proportion of the ordinary shares of each and every unquoted investment made by the Baronsmead VCTs. The shares held by the members of the Co-investment Scheme in any portfolio company can only be sold at the same time as the investment held by the Baronsmead VCTs is sold. In addition, any prior ranking fi nancial instruments, such as loan stock, held by the Baronsmead VCTs have to be repaid in full together with the agreed priority annual return before any gain accrues to the ordinary shares. This ensures that the Baronsmead VCTs achieve a good priority return before profi ts accrue to the Coinvestment S cheme.

The Board is keen to ensure that the Manager continues to have one of the best investment teams in the VCT and private equity market place and considers the Scheme to be essential in order to attract, retain and incentivise the best talent. The Scheme is in line with current market practice in the private equity industry and the Board believes that it aligns the interests of the Manager with those of the Baronsmead VCTs since executives have to invest their own capital in every unquoted transaction and cannot decide selectively in which investments to participate. In addition the Co-investment only delivers a return after each VCT has realised a priority return built into the structure.

The executives participating in the Co-investment Scheme subscribe jointly for a proportion (currently 12 per cent.) of the ordinary shares available to the Baronsmead VCTs in each unquoted investment. The level of participation was increased from 5 per cent. in 2007 when the Manager's performance fee was reduced from 20 per cent. to its current level of 10 per cent.

Since the formation of the Scheme in 2004, 52 executives have invested a total of £696k in 32 companies. At 31 December 2012 nine of these investments have been realised generating proceeds of £81million for the Baronsmead VCTs and £4.7 million for the co-investment scheme. For Baronsmead VCT 3 the average money multiple on these nine realisations was 2.3 times cost. Had the co-investment shares been held instead by the Baronsmead VCTs that money multiple would have been 2.4 times cost. Over the period of eight years (based upon the current number of shares in issue) this equates to approximately 1.8p a share.

Performance Incentive

A performance fee is payable to the Manager when the total return on net proceeds of the ordinary share offers exceeds 8 per cent. per annum (simple) on net funds raised. The performance fee payable in any one year is capped at 5 per cent. of net assets.

To the extent that the total return exceeds the threshold, a performance fee (plus VAT) will be paid to the Manager of 10 per cent. of excess performance. No performance fee was paid in 2011 and there is no performance fee payable for the year to 31 December 2012.

ISIS Equity Partners – Advisory Fees

During the year to 31 December 2012, ISIS EP LLP received net income of £ 96,550 (2011: £71,250) in connection with advisory fees and incurred abort fees of £ 59 , 382 (2011: £15,246) with respect to investments attributable to Baronsmead VCT 3.

VCT Status Adviser

The Company has retained PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP ('PwC') as its VCT Tax Status Advisers to advise it on compliance with VCT requirements. PwC reviews new investment opportunities, as appropriate, and reviews regularly the investment portfolio of the Company. PwC works closely with the Manager but reports directly to the Board.

Creditor Payment Policy

The Company's payment policy is to settle investment transactions in accordance with market practice and to ensure settlement of supplier invoices in accordance with stated terms. At 31 December 2012, there were no outstanding supplier invoices (2011: none).

Environment

The Company seeks to conduct its affairs responsibly and environmental factors are, where appropriate, taken into consideration with regard to investment decisions.

Substantial Interests

At 15 February 2013 the Company was not aware of any benefi cial interest exceeding 3 per cent. of ordinary share capital in circulation.

Going Concern

After making enquires, and bearing in mind the nature of the Company's business and assets, the Directors consider that the Company has adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future. In arriving at this conclusion the Directors have considered the liquidity of the Company and its ability to meet obligations as they fall due for a period of at least twelve months from the date that these fi nancial statements were approved. As at 31 December 2012 the Company held cash balances & investments in interest bearing securities and Money Market Funds with a combined value of £ 5,72 8,000. Cash fl ow projections have been reviewed and show that the Company has suffi cient funds to meet both its contracted expenditure and its discretionary cash outfl ows in the form of the share buy-back programme and dividend policy. The Company has no external loan fi nance in place and therefore is not exposed to any gearing covenants.

Annual General Meeting

A notice for the Annual General Meeting of the Company to be held at 1 0:30 am on Wednesday, 10 April 2013 at Plaisterers' Hall, One London Wall , London EC 2Y 5JU is set out on pages5 4 to 5 7. The following notes provide an explanation of Resolutions 7 to 1 2 which together with Resolutions 1 to 6 , will be proposed at the meeting. Resolutions 1 to 9 will be proposed as ordinary resolutions requiring the approval of more than 50 per cent. of the votes cast at the meeting and Resolutions 10 to 1 2 will be proposed as special resolutions requiring the approval of 75 per cent. of the votes cast at the meeting. The Board considers that the resolutions to be put to the meeting are in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders as a whole. The Directors will be voting in favour of all the resolutions and the Board unanimously recommends that shareholders do so as well.

Auditors

KPMG Audit Plc have expressed their willingness to continue in offi ce as auditors and Resolution 7 propos es their re-appointment for the forthcoming year. The authority proposed under Resolution 8 will authorise the Directors to determine the remuneration of the auditors.

Authority to Allot Shares and Disapplication of Pre-Emption Rights

The authority proposed under Resolution 9 will authorise Directors, until the fi fth anniversary of the passing of the resolution, to allot shares in the Company or grant rights to subscribe for or to convert any security into shares in the Company up to an aggregate nominal amount of £ 3,340,135, representing 50 per cent. of the issued share capital (excluding treasury shares) as at the date of this document. Any consequent increase in the size of the Company will, in the opinion of the Directors, be in the interests of shareholders generally. Any issue proceeds will be available for investment in line with the Company's investment policy and may be used to purchase ordinary shares of the Company.

The Directors intend to use this authority for the purposes described below under Resolution 10.

Resolution 10 renews and extends, subject to the passing of Resolution 9, the Directors' authority to allot equity securities for cash without pre-emption rights applying in certain circumstances. This resolution will authorise the Directors, until the date falling 15 months after the date of the passing of the resolution or, if earlier, the conclusion of the next Annual General Meeting of the Company, to issue ordinary shares for cash without pre-emption rights applying of (i) up to an aggregate nominal amount representing 30 per cent. of the Company's issued share capital (excluding treasury shares) as at the date of the passing of the resolution pursuant to one or more offers for subscription, (ii) up to an aggregate nominal amount representing 10 per cent. of the issued share capital (excluding treasury shares) from time to time pursuant to a dividend reinvestment scheme (which may be at a discount to NAV) and (iii) up to an aggregate nominal amount representing 10 per cent. of the issued share capital (excluding treasury shares) from time to time (which may be at a discount to NAV) for allotments from time to time. This power will be exercised only if, in the opinion of the Directors, it would be in the best interests of shareholders as a whole .

Treasury Shares

The Company currently holds 8,929,214 ordinary shares in treasury representing 11.8 per cent. of the Company's issued ordinary shares. If Resolution 9 is passed, the Board will be authorised to reissue ordinary shares out of treasury through a dividend reinvestment scheme or at a discount to the prevailing NAV per ordinary share if the Board considers it in the best interests of the Company to do so. However, ordinary shares will never be re-issued out of treasury at a discount wider than the discount prevailing at the time the shares were initially bought back by the Company. The resolution will also allow the Company to issue shares out of treasury without pre-emption rights applying.

Currently there is a two way secondary market in the Company's shares. It is the Board's intention only to use the mechanism of re-issuing treasury shares when demand for the Company's shares is greater than the supply available in the market place. Although shares re-issued from treasury will not attract the 30 per cent. initial income tax relief, under existing tax legislation all further dividends will be tax-free and if these shares are subsequently sold no capital gains tax will be payable by qualifying shareholders.

Directors' Authority to Purchase Shares

The current authority of the Company to make market purchases of up to approximately 14.99 per cent. of its issued share capital expires at the end of the Annual General Meeting and Resolution 1 1 seeks renewal of such authority until the next Annual General Meeting (or the expiry of 15 months after the passing of the resolution, if earlier). The price paid for shares will not be less than the nominal value nor more than the maximum amount permitted to be paid in accordance with the rules of the UK Listing Authority. This power will be exercised only if, in the opinion of the Directors, a repurchase would be in the best interests of shareholders as a whole. Any shares repurchased under this authority will either be cancelled or held in treasury for future re-sale in appropriate market conditions.

Notice of General Meeting

The Board believes that it is in the best interests of shareholders of the Company to have the ability to call meetings on 14 days' clear notice should a matter require urgency. The Board is therefore proposing Resolution 1 2 to approve the reduction in the minimum notice period from 21 clear days to 14 clear days for all general meetings other than annual general meetings. The Directors do not intend to use less than 21 clear days' notice unless prompt action is required.

By Order of the Board, ISIS EP LLP Secretary 100 Wood Street London EC2V 7AN

15 February 2013

Corporate Governance

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

Corporate Governance Codes

Arrangements in respect of corporate governance, appropriate to a venture capital trust, have been made by the Board. The Board has considered the principles and recommendations of the Association of Investment Companies' Code of Corporate Governance issued in October 2010 ('AIC Code') by reference to the AIC Corporate Governance Guide for Investment Companies ('AIC Guide'). A copy of the AIC Code can be found at www.theaic.co.uk. The AIC Code, as explained by the AIC Guide, addresses all the principles set out in the UK Corporate Governance Code issued by the Financial Reporting Council in June 2010 ('UK Code'), as well as setting out additional principles and recommendations on issues which are of specifi c relevance to the Company. A copy of the UK Code can be found at www.frc.org.uk.

The Board considers that reporting against the principles and recommendations of the AIC Code, and by reference to the AIC Guide (which incorporates the UK Code) will provide better information to shareholders.

Except as disclosed below, the Company complied throughout the period with the recommendations of the AIC Code and the relevant provisions of the UK Code. Since all the Directors are non-executive the provisions of the UK Code in respect of the role of the chief executive are not relevant to the Company and, likewise, the provisions of the UK Code relating to directors' remuneration are not relevant except in so far as they relate specifi cally to non-executive directors. For the reasons set out in the AIC Guide, and in the preamble to the UK Code, the Board considers that these provisions are not relevant to the Company, being an externally managed venture capital trust. The Company has therefore not reported further in respect of these provisions.

Directors

In view of the requirement in the Articles of Association that all Directors be subject to retirement by rotation, the Board considers that it is not appropriate for the Directors to be appointed for a specifi ed term as recommended by principle 3 of the AIC Code and provision B.2.3 of the UK Code. However, the Board has agreed that each Director will retire and, if appropriate, seek re-election after each three years' service, and annually after serving on the Board for more than nine years.

The Board, of which Mr Townsend is Chairman, consists solely of non-executive Directors and Mr Karney is Senior Independent Director. All Directors are considered by the Board to be independent of the Company's Manager.

As explained earlier, Mrs Nott is a director of Baronsmead VCT 2 plc and Baronsmead VCT 5 plc, both of which are managed by ISIS EP LLP. The Board believes that appointments to other companies managed by ISIS EP LLP does not impede independence of character and judgement. The Board also does not consider that a Director's tenure reduces their ability to act independently. The Board believes that, as a whole, it comprises an appropriate balance of skills, experience and diversity of background and knowledge. It also believes that each Director is independent in character and judgement and that there are no relationships or circumstances which are likely to affect the judgement of any Director.

The Company has no executive Directors or employees.

Division of Responsibilities

A management agreement between the Company and its Manager, ISIS EP LLP, sets out the matters over which the Manager has authority and the limits above which Board approval must be sought. All other matters, including strategy, investment and dividend policies, approval of valuations, gearing, and corporate governance procedures, are reserved for the approval of the Board of Directors. The Board meets at least quarterly and receives full information about the Company's investment performance, assets, liabilities and other relevant information in advance of Board meetings. The Manager, in the absence of explicit instructions from the Board, is empowered to exercise discretion in the use of the Company's voting rights. All shareholdings are voted, where practicable, in accordance with the Manager's own corporate governance policy, which is to seek to maximise shareholder value by constructive use of votes at company meetings and by endeavouring to use its infl uence as an investor with a principled approach to corporate governance.

Corporate Governance

Committees

Throughout the period a number of committees have been in operation. The committees are the Audit and Risk Committee, the Management Engagement and Remuneration Committee and the Nomination Committee. The terms of reference of all the committees are available from the Company on request.

The Audit and Risk Committee, chaired by Mrs Nott, comprises the full Board and operates within clearly defi ned terms of reference. The duties of the Audit and Risk Committee include reviewing the annual and interim accounts, the system of internal controls, the terms of appointment of the auditors together with their remuneration, and ensuring that auditor objectivity and independence is safeguarded in the provision of non–audit services by the auditors. It meets at least twice yearly and provides a forum through which the auditors may report to the Board of Directors.

The Management Engagement and Remuneration Committee, chaired by Mr Townsend, comprises the full Board and reviews the remuneration and terms of appointment of the Manager and the Boards' fees. The recommendations of the AIC Code under Principle 5 state that the Chairman may be a member of, but not chair, the Management Engagement and Remuneration Committee. The Board, having considered the recommendations, believe that Mr Townsend remains the most suitable Director to chair the committee. When considering the chairmanship of the committee, the Board took account of factors including the size of the Board and the remit of the committee; which extends to the consideration of nonexecutive remuneration only. Matters relating to the remuneration of the Chairman are considered by the committee in the absence of the Chairman and under the leadership of the Senior Independent Director.

The Nomination Committee, chaired by Mr Townsend, comprises the full Board and is convened for the purpose of considering the appointment of additional Directors as and when considered appropriate. In considering appointments to the Board, the Nomination Committee takes into account the ongoing requirements of the Company and the need to have a balance of skills and experience within the Board.

Principle 7 of the AIC Code and Principle B.6 of the UK Code recommends that the Board should undertake a formal and rigorous annual evaluation of its own performance and that of its committees and individual directors. It is the Board's policy to evaluate the performance of the Board, Committees and individual Directors annually through an assessment process, led by the Chairman, with the performance of the Chairman being evaluated by the other Directors under the leadership of the Senior Independent Director. During this process the Directors considered each Director's independence and discussed performance during the year, the existing corporate governance arrangements and areas where the Board and individual Directors could develop.

All of the Directors meet quarterly to consider in detail the valuations of the unquoted investments in the Company's portfolio.

Individual Directors may, at the expense of the Company, seek independent professional advice on any matter that concerns them in the furtherance of their duties.

Corporate Governance

Board of
Directors
(Quarterly)
(4 meetings held)
Board of
Directors
(ad hoc)
(2 meetings held)
Audit and Risk
Committee
(2 meetings held)
Management
Engagement and
Remuneration
Committee
(1 meeting held)
Nomination
Committee
(1 meeting held)
Eligible Attended Eligible Attended Eligible Attended Eligible Attended Eligible Attended
Anthony Townsend 4 4 2 0 2 2 1 1 1 1
Andrew Karney 4 4 2 1 2 2 1 1 1 1
Gillian Nott 4 4 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1
Ian Orrock 4 4 2 1 2 2 1 1 1 1

The table below sets out the number of Board and Committee meetings held during the year to 31 December 2012 and the number of meetings attended by each Director.

Relations with Shareholders

The Company welcomes the views of shareholders and places great importance on communication with its shareholders. The Chairman and other Directors are available to meet shareholders if required. The Annual General Meeting of the Company provides a forum both formal and informal, for shareholders to meet and discuss issues with the Directors and Manager of the Company.

Details of the resolutions to be proposed at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting on 10 April 2013 can be found in the Notice of Meeting on pages 5 4 and 5 5. Shareholders seeking to communicate with the Board can do so by contacting the Investor Relations Manager in the fi rst instance.

Internal Controls

The Board is responsible for the Company's system of internal controls and for reviewing its effectiveness. The Board has therefore established an ongoing process designed to meet the particular needs of the Company in managing the risks to which it is exposed. The process adopted is one whereby the Board identifi es all of the risks to which the Company is exposed including, among others, market risk, investment risk, operational and regulatory risks which are recorded on a risk register. The controls employed to mitigate these risks are identifi ed and the residual risks are rated taking into account the impact of the mitigating factors.

This register is updated at least twice a year and reports are produced to the board highlighting any material changes in the nature of each risk and where necessary corrective action taken. A formal annual review of the risks and related controls is carried out by the Audit and Risk Committee.

These procedures are designed to manage, rather than eliminate, risk and by their nature can provide reasonable, but not absolute, assurance against material misstatement or loss. The Board monitors the investment performance of the Company in comparison to a benchmark index and to comparable venture capital trusts at each Board meeting. The Board also reviews the Company's activities since the previous Board meeting to ensure that the Manager adheres to the agreed investment policy and approved investment guidelines and, if necessary, approve changes to such policy and guidelines.

The Board has reviewed the need for an internal audit function and has concluded that the systems and procedures employed by the Manager, provide suffi cient assurance that a sound system of internal control, which safeguards shareholders' investment and the Company's assets, is maintained. An internal audit function, specifi c to the Company, is therefore considered unnecessary.

Directors' Remuneration Report

The Board has prepared this report, in accordance with the requirements of Schedule 8 of the Large and Medium Sized Companies and Groups (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008. An ordinary resolution for the approval of this report will be put to the members at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting.

The law requires the Company's auditors, KPMG Audit Plc, to audit certain of the disclosures provided. Where disclosures have been audited, they are indicated as such.

The auditors' opinion is included in the 'Independent Auditors' Report'.

Board of Directors and their Fees

The Board which is profi led on page 19 consists solely of independent non-executive Directors and is considered to be entirely independent. The Management Engagement and Remuneration Committee comprises all the Directors of the Company and is chaired by Mr Townsend. The Company has no executive Directors, but the Management Engagement and Remuneration Committee meets, at least annually, to review the remuneration and terms of appointment of the Manager and the level of the Board's fees, in accordance with the AIC Code of Corporate Governance. The Company Secretary provides information on comparative levels of directors fees to the Board in advance of each review.

The Management Engagement and Remuneration Committee (or Board) concluded following a review of the level of Directors' fees for the forthcoming year, that, to refl ect the increase in the level and quality of work that the Directors were required to undertake, it was appropriate to increase the Directors' fees to £18,000 per annum, the Chairman of the Audit and Risk Committee's fees to £20,500 per annum and the Chairman's fee to £25,750 with effect from 1 January 2013.

Policy on Directors' Fees

The Board's policy is that the remuneration of nonexecutive Directors should refl ect the experience of the Board as a whole, be fair and comparable to that of other relevant venture capital trusts that are similar in size and have similar investment objectives and structures. Furthermore the level of remuneration should be suffi cient to attract and retain the Directors needed to oversee properly the Company and to refl ect the specifi c circumstances of the Company, the duties and responsibilities of the Directors and the value and amount of time committed to the Company's affairs. It is intended that this policy will continue for the year ending 31 December 201 3 and subsequent years.

Directors' Service Contracts

It is the Board's policy that Directors do not have service contracts, but new Directors are provided with a letter of appointment. The terms of Directors' appointments provide that Directors should retire and be subject to election at the fi rst Annual General Meeting after their appointment.

Directors are thereafter obliged to retire by rotation and, if willing, to offer themselves for re-election by shareholders at least every three years after that. In accordance with the AIC Code, Directors who have served on the Board for more than 9 years must offer themselves for re-election on an annual basis. There is no notice period and no provision for compensation upon early termination of appointment. Below is a table which sets out each Director's date of appointment and due date for re-election/election.

Director Date of
original
appointment
Due date for
re-election
Anthony Townsend 4 August 2009 AGM 2014
Andrew Karney 10 January 2001 AGM 2013
Gillian Nott 10 January 2001 AGM 2013
Ian Orrock 21 October 2010 AGM 2013

Directors' Remuneration Report

Company performance

The Board is responsible for the Company's investment strategy and performance, although the management of the Company's investment portfolio is delegated to the Manager through the management agreement, as referred to in the 'Report of the Directors'. The graph below compares, for the fi veyears ended 31 December 2012, the percentage change over each period in the share price total return (assuming all dividends are reinvested) to shareholders compared to the share price total return of approximately 50 generalist VCTs (Source: AIC). An explanation of the performance of the Company is given in the Chairman's Statement and Manager's Review.

Share Price and VCT Gene ralist Sector Share Price Total Return performance graph

*Source: AIC

Directors' Emoluments for the Year (Audited)

The Directors who served in the year received the following emoluments in the form of fees:

Fees Fees
2012 2011
£ £
Anthony Townsend 25,000 23,875
Andrew Karney 17,500 16,000
Gillian Nott 20,000 16,625
Ian Orrock 17,500 16,000
Total 80,000 72,500

Approved by the Board of Directors and signed by:

Anthony Townsend

Chairman of the Management Engagement and Remuneration Committee

15 February 2013

Statement of Directors' Responsibilities

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

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

Company law requires the Directors to prepare fi nancial statements for each fi nancial year. Under that law they have elected to prepare the fi nancial statements in accordance with UK Accounting Standards.

The fi nancial statements are required by law to give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Company and of the profi t or loss of the Company for that period.

In preparing these fi nancial statements, the Directors are required to:

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

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

Under applicable law and regulations, the Directors are also responsible for preparing a Directors' Report (including Business Review), Directors' Remuneration Report and Corporate Governance Statement that comply with that law and those regulations.

The Directors are responsible for the maintenance and integrity of the corporate and fi nancial information included on the Company's website, www.baronsmeadvct3.co.uk. Visitors to the website should be aware that legislation in the UK governing the preparation and dissemination of fi nancial statements may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

Responsibility Statement of the Directors in respect of the Annual Financial Report

We confi rm that to the best of our knowledge:

  • the fi nancial statements, prepared in accordance with the applicable set of accounting standards, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, fi nancial position and profi t of the Company; and
  • the Report of the Directors 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.

On behalf of the Board, Anthony Townsend Chairman

15 February 2013

Independent Auditor's Report

Independent Auditor's Report to the members of Baronsmead VCT 3 plc

We have audited the fi nancial statements of Baronsmead VCT 3 plc for the period ended 31 December 2012 set out on pages 3 7 to 5 3. The fi nancial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and UK Accounting Standards (UK Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

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.

Respective responsibilities of directors and auditor

As explained more fully in the Statement of Directors' Responsibilities set out on page 3 4, the directors are responsible for the preparation of the fi nancial statements and for being satisfi ed that they give a true and fair view. Our responsibility is to audit, and express an opinion on, the fi nancial statements in accordance with applicable law and International Standards on Auditing (UK and Ireland). Those standards require us to comply with the Auditing Practices Board's (APB's) Ethical Standards for Auditors.

Scope of the Audit of the Financial Statements

A description of the scope of an audit of fi nancial statements is provided on the APB's website at www.frc.org.uk/a uditscopeukprivate.

Opinion on Financial Statements

In our opinion the fi nancial statements:

  • give a true and fair view of the state of the Company's affairs as at 31 December 2012 and of its profi t for the year then ended;
  • have been properly prepared in accordance with UK Generally Accepted Accounting Practice; and
  • have been prepared in accordance with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006.

Opinion on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion:

  • the part of the Directors' Remuneration Report to be audited has been properly prepared in accordance with the Companies Act 2006 ;
  • the information given in the Report of the Directors for the fi nancial year for which the fi nancial statements are prepared is consistent with the fi nancial statements; and
  • the information given in the Corporate Governance Statement set out on pages 2 9 to 3 1 with respect to internal control and risk management systems in relation to fi nancial reporting processes and about share capital structures is consistent with the fi nancial statements.

Independent Auditor's Report

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

We have nothing to report in respect of the following:

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

  • adequate accounting records have not been kept, or returns adequate for our audit have not been received from branches not visited by us; or
  • the fi nancial 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 specifi ed by law are not made; or
  • we have not received all the information and explanations we require for our audit; or
  • a Corporate Governance Statement has not been prepared by the Company.

Under the Listing Rules we are required to review:

  • the directors' statement, set out on page 2 7, in relation to going concern;
  • the part of the Corporate Governance Statement on pages 2 9 to 3 1 relating to the Company's compliance with the nine provisions of the June 2010 UK Corporate Governance Code specifi ed for our review; and
  • certain elements of the report to shareholders by the Board on directors' remuneration.

Catherine Burnet (Senior Statutory Auditor) for and on behalf of KPMG Audit Plc, Statutory Auditor

Chartered Accountants Saltire Court 20 Castle Terrace Edinburgh EH1 2EG

15 February 2013

Income Statement

For the year ended 31 December 2012

2012 2011
Notes Revenue
£'000
Capital
£'000
Total
£'000
Revenue
£'000
Capital
£'000
Total
£'000
Unrealised gains on investments 8 9,373 9,373 1,403 1,403
Realised gains on investments 8 426 426 1,824 1,824
Income 2 1,187 1,187 1,963 1,963
Investment management fee 3 (409) (1,228) (1,637) (385) (1,155) (1,540)
Other expenses 4 (390) (390) (365) (365)
Profi t on ordinary activities before taxation 388 8,571 8,959 1,213 2,072 3,285
Taxation on ordinary activities 5 (25) 25 (244) 244
Profi t on ordinary activities after taxation 363 8,596 8,959 969 2,316 3,285
Return per ordinary share:
Basic 7 0.58p 13.67p 14.25p 1.61p 3.85p 5.46p

The 'Total' column of this statement is the profi t and loss account of the Company.

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

No operations were acquired or discontinued in the year.

There are no recognised gains and losses other than those disclosed in the Income Statement therefore a separate statement of total recognised gains and losses has not been prepared.

Reconciliation of Movements in Shareholders' Funds

For the year ended 31 December 2012

Closing shareholders' funds (474)
(1,893)
74,562
(7,214)
60,095
Dividends paid
6
Expenses of share issue and buybacks
12
(6)
Purchase and sale of shares for treasury
12
(1,260) (613)
Gross proceeds of share issues
11/12
9,135
Profi t for the year 8,959 3,285
Opening shareholders' funds 60,095 64,643
Notes 2012
£'000
2011
£'000

Balance Sheet

As at 31 December 2012

2012 2011
Notes £'000 £'000
Fixed assets
Investments 8 66,740 59,312
Current assets
Debtors 9 5,261 562
Cash at bank 1,438 683
Cash on deposit 1,800
8,499 1,245
Creditors (amounts falling due within one year) 10 (677) (462)
Net current assets 7,822 783
Net assets 74,562 60,095
Capital and reserves
Called-up share capital 11 7,573 6,762
Share premium account 12 22,866 15,012
Capital redemption reserve 12 10,862 10,862
Capital reserve 12 18,928 24,262
Revaluation reserve 12 13,649 2,876
Revenue reserve 12 684 321
Equity shareholders' funds 13 74,562 60,095
Net asset value per share
– Basic 13 111.62p 100.16p
– Treasury 13 110.88p 99.16p

The fi nancial statements on pages 3 7 to 5 3 were approved by the Board of Directors on 15 February 2013 and were signed on its behalf by:

Anthony Townsend (Chairman)

Cash Flow Statement

For the year ended 31 December 2012

Notes 2012
£'000
2011
£'000
Operating activities
Investment income received 1,337 1,787
Deposit interest received 7 3
Other income received 63
Investment management fees paid (1,572) (1,570)
Other cash payments (378) (357)
Net cash outfl ow from operating activities
15
(606) (74)
Capital expenditure and fi nancial investment
Purchases of investments (63,220) (91,893)
Disposals of investments 65,620 99,215
Net cash infl ow from capital expenditure and fi nancial investment 2,400 7,322
Dividends
Equity dividends paid 6 (1,893) (7,214)
Net cash (outfl ow)/infl ow before fi nancing (99) 34
Financing
Gross proceeds of share issues 4,135
Purchase and sale of shares for treasury (1,260) (613)
Expenses on share issue and buybacks (221) (6)
Net cash infl ow/(outfl ow) from fi nancing 2,654 (619)
Increase/(decrease) in cash at bank and on deposit in the year 2,555 (585)
Reconciliation of net cash fl ow to movement in net cash at bank and on deposit
Increase/(decrease) in cash at bank and on deposit 2,555 (585)
Opening cash at bank and on deposit 683 1,268
Closing cash at bank and on deposit
14
3,238 683

1. Accounting policies

(a) Basis of accounting

These fi nancial statements have been prepared under UK Generally Accepted Accounting Practice ("UK GAAP") and in accordance with the Statement of Recommended Practice ("SORP") for investment trust companies and venture capital trusts issued by the Association of Investment Companies ("AIC") in January 2009, and on the assumption that the Company maintains VCT status.

The Company is no longer an investment company as defi ned by Section 833 of the Companies Act 2006, as investment company status was revoked on 4 February 2004 in order to permit the distribution of capital profi ts.

The principal accounting policies adopted are set out below.

Presentation of the Income Statement

In order to better refl ect the activities of a VCT and in accordance with the SORP, supplementary information which analyses the income statement between items of a revenue and capital nature has been presented alongside the income statement.

Profi t/(loss) on ordinary activities after taxation is the measure the Directors believe appropriate in assessing the Company's compliance with certain requirements set out in Section 274 of the Income Tax Act 2007.

(b) Valuation of investments

Purchases or sales of investments are recognised at the date of transaction.

Investments are valued at fair value. For AIM traded, listed securities and collective investment vehicles this is either bid price or the last traded price, depending on the convention of the exchange on which the investment is traded.

In respect of unquoted investments, these are fair valued by the Directors using methodology which is consistent with the International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation ("IPEV") guidelines. This means investments are valued using an earnings multiple, which has a discount or premium applied which adjusts for points of difference to appropriate stock market or comparable transaction multiples. Alternative methods of valuation will include application of an arm's length third party valuation, a provision on cost or a net asset value basis.

Gains and losses arising from changes in the fair value of the investments are included in the income statement for the period as a capital item. Transaction costs on acquisition are included within the initial recognition and the profi t or loss on disposal is calculated net of transaction costs on disposal.

(c) Income

Interest income on loan stock and dividends on preference shares are accrued on a daily basis. Provision is made against this income where recovery is doubtful. Where the terms of unquoted loan stocks only require interest or a redemption premium to be paid on redemption, the interest and redemption premium is recognised as income once redemption is reasonably certain. Until such date interest is accrued daily and included within the valuation of the investment.

Income from fi xed interest securities and deposit interest is included on an effective interest rate basis.

Dividends on quoted shares are recognised as income on the date that the related investments are marked exdividend and where no dividend date is quoted, when the Company's right to receive payment is established.

(d) Expenses

All expenses are recorded on an accruals basis.

(e) Revenue/capital

The revenue column of the income statement includes all income and expenses. The capital column accounts for the realised and unrealised profi t and loss on investments and the proportion of management fee charged to capital.

(f) Issue costs

Issue costs are deducted from the share premium account.

1. Accounting policies (continued)

(g) Deferred taxation

Deferred taxation is recognised in respect of all timing differences that have originated but not reversed at the balance sheet date where transactions or events that result in an obligation to pay more, or the right to pay less, tax in future have occurred at the balance sheet date. This is subject to deferred tax assets only being recognised if it is considered more likely than not that there will be suitable profi ts from which the future reversal of the underlying timing differences can be deducted. Timing differences are differences arising between the Company's taxable profi ts and its results as stated in the fi nancial statements which are capable of reversal in one or more subsequent periods.

2. Income 2012 £'000 2011 £'000 Income from investments† UK franked UK unfranked UK unfranked – reinvested Redemption premium 285 820 29 45 281 1,242 – 374 Other income‡ Deposit interest Other income 1,179 8 – 1,897 3 63 Total income 1,187 1,963 Total income comprises: Dividends Interest 285 902 282 1,681 1,187 1,963 Income from investments: AIM-traded & listed securities Unquoted securities 298 881 309 1,588 1,179 1,897

† All investments have been designated fair value through profi t or loss on initial recognition, therefore all investment income arises on investments at fair value through profi t or loss.

‡ Other income on fi nancial assets not designated fair value through profi t or loss.

(h) Capital reserves

(i) Capital Reserve

Gains and losses on realisation of investments of a capital nature are dealt with in this reserve. Purchase of the Company's own shares to be either held in treasury or cancelled are also funded from this reserve. 75 per cent. of management fees are allocated to the capital reserve in accordance with the Board's expected split between long term income and capital returns.

(ii) Revaluation Reserve

Changes in fair value of unrealised investments, are dealt with in this reserve.

3. Investment management fee

2012
£'000
2011
£'000
Investment management fee 1,637 1,540
Performance fee
1,637 1,540

For the purposes of the revenue and capital columns in the income statement, the management fee has been allocated 25 per cent. to revenue and 75 per cent. to capital, in line with the Board's expected long term return in the form of income and capital gains respectively from the Company's investment portfolio.

The management agreement may be terminated by either party giving twelve months notice of termination. The Manager, ISIS EP LLP, receives a fee of 2.5 per cent. per annum of the net assets of the Company, calculated and payable on a quarterly basis.

The Manager is entitled to a performance fee when the total return on net proceeds of the ordinary share offers exceeds 8 per cent. per annum (on a simple basis) on net funds raised. To the extent that the Total Return exceeds this threshold, a performance fee (plus VAT) will be paid to the Manager of 10 per cent. of the excess. The performance fee payable in any one year will be capped at 5 per cent. of the Shareholders' funds at the end of the calculation period. No performance fee is payable for the year ended 31 December 2012 (2011: £nil).

In addition, the Manager receives an annual secretarial and accounting fee that was initially fi xed at £33,816 in 2006 and is revised annually to refl ect the movement in RPI, plus a variable fee of 0.125 per cent. of the net assets of the Company which exceed £5 million. The annual fee was initially capped at £102,212 per annum and is also revised annually to refl ect the movement in RPI. It is chargeable 100 per cent. to revenue.

Amounts payable to the Manager at the year end are disclosed in note 10.

4. Other expenses

2012
£'000
2011
£'000
Directors' fees 80 73
Secretarial and accounting fees 121 113
Remuneration of the auditors and their associates:
– audit 21 22
– other services supplied pursuant to legislation (interim review) 5 5
– other services supplied relating to taxation 7 9
Other 156 143
390 365

The Chairman received £25,000 per annum (2011: £23,875) and the Audit Chairman received £20,000 per annum (2011: £ 16, 625). Each of the other Directors received £17,500 per annum (2011: £16,000).

Charges for other services provided by the auditors in the year ended 31 December 2012 were in relation to the interim review and tax compliance work (including iXBRL). The Audit and Risk Committee reviews the nature and extent of non-audit services to ensure that independence is maintained. The Directors consider the auditors were best placed to provide these services.

All fi gures include VAT, where applicable. The Company is not registered for VAT.

5. Tax on ordinary activities

5a. Analysis of charge for the year

2012 2011
£'000 £'000
UK corporation tax

The income statement shows the tax charge allocated between revenue and capital.

5b. Factors affecting tax charge for the year

The tax charge for the year is lower than the standard rate of corporation tax in the UK for a company. The differences are explained below:

Revenue
£'000
2012
Capital
£'000
Total
£'000
Revenue
£'000
2011
Capital
£'000
Total
£'000
Profi t on ordinary activities before taxation 388 8,571 8,959 1,213 2,072 3,285
Corporation tax at a rate of 24.5 per cent. (2011: 26.5 per cent.) 95 2,100 2,195 321 549 870
Effect of:
Non-taxable dividend income (70) (70) (74) (74)
Non-taxable investment gains (2,401) (2,401) (855) (855)
Marginal relief (3) 3
Losses carried forward 276 276 59 59
Tax charge for the year (note 5a) 25 (25) 244 (244)

At 31 December 2012 the Company had surplus management expenses of £ 3,045,000 (2011: £1,856,000) which have not been recognised as a deferred tax asset. This is because the Company is not expected to generate taxable income in a future period in excess of the deductible expenses of that future period and, accordingly, the Company is unlikely to be able to reduce future tax liabilities through the use of existing surplus expenses. Due to the Company's status as a VCT, and the intention to continue meeting the conditions required to obtain approval in the foreseeable future the Company has not provided deferred tax on any capital gains and losses arising on the revaluation or disposal of investments.

6. Dividends

Revenue
£'000
2012
Capital
£'000
Total
£'000
Revenue
£'000
2011
Capital
£'000
Total
£'000
Amounts recognised as distributions to equity holders in the year:
For the year ended 31 December 2010
– Final dividend of 4.5p per ordinary share paid on 8 April 2011 546 2,183 2,729
For the year ended 31 December 2011
– Interim dividend of 3.0p per ordinary share paid on
29 September 2011
389 1,407 1,796
– Second interim dividend of 4.5p per ordinary share paid on
9 December 2011
597 2,092 2,689
For the year ended 31 December 2012
– Interim dividend of 3.0p per ordinary share paid on
21 September 2012
1,893 1,893
1,893 1,893 1,532 5,682 7,214

A fi nal dividend of 4.5p per share is proposed.

In the 201 1 fi nancial year Baronsmead VCT 3 paid a second interim dividend in lieu of a fi nal dividend which resulted in three dividend payments in th at year.

7. Returns per share

The 14.25p return per ordinary share (2011: 5.46p return) is based on the net profi t from ordinary activities after taxation of £ 8,959,000 (2011: £3,285,000 profi t) and on 62,863,845 ordinary shares (2011: 60,112,945), being the weighted average number of shares in circulation during the year.

8. Investments

All investments are designated fair value through profi t or loss at initial recognition, therefore all gains and losses arise on investments designated at fair value through profi t or loss.

Financial Reporting Standard 29 'Financial Instruments: Disclosures' (the Standard) requires an analysis of investments valued at fair value based on the reliability and signifi cance of the information used to measure their fair value. The level is determined by the lowest (that is the least reliable or independently observable) level of input that is signifi cant to the fair value measurement for the individual investment in its entirety as follows:

  • Level 1 investments whose prices are quoted in an active market.
  • Level 2 investments whose fair value is based directly on observable current market prices or indirectly being derived from market prices.
  • Level 3 investments whose fair value is determined using a valuation technique based on assumptions that are not supported by observable current market prices or based on observable market data.
2012 2011
£'000 £'000
Level 1
Listed interest bearing securities 2,490 9,979
Investments traded on AIM 20,833 14,402
Investments listed on LSE 1,808 1,318
25,131 25,699
Level 2
Collective investment vehicle (Wood Street Microcap Investment Fund) 4,525 2,826
Level 3
Unquoted investments 37,084 30,787
66,740 59,312
2012
£'000
2011
£'000
Equity shares 38,946 28,324
Loan notes 25,226 21,009
Preference shares 78
Fixed income securities 2,490 9,979
66,740 59,312

8. Investments (continued)

Level 1 Level 2 Level 3
Listed
interest
bearing
securities
£'000
Traded
on AIM
£'000
Listed
on LSE
£'000
Collective
investment
vehicle
£'000
Unquoted
£'000
Total
£'000
Opening book cost 9,979 17,310 1,729 2,525 24,893 56,436
Opening unrealised (depreciation)/appreciation (2,908) (411) 301 5,894 2,876
Opening valuation 9,979 14,402 1,318 2,826 30,787 59,312
Movements in the year:
Purchases at cost 55,087 1,925 1,000 5,237 63,249
Sales – proceeds (62,576) (1,295) (1,749) (65,620)
– realised gains on sales 392 34 426
Unrealised (losses)/gains realised during the year (1,465) 65 (1,400)
Increase in unrealised appreciation 6,874 490 699 2,710 10,773
Closing valuation 2,490 20,833 1,808 4,525 37,084 66,740
Closing book cost 2,490 16,867 1,729 3,525 28,480 53,091
Closing unrealised appreciation 3,966 79 1,000 8,604 13,649
Closing valuation 2,490 20,833 1,808 4,525 37,084 66,740

During the year the Company incurred brokerage costs on purchases of £ 1,500 (2011: £1,800) and brokerage costs on sales of £ 2,100 (2011: £1,000) in respect of ordinary shareholder interests.

The gains and losses included in the above table have all been recognised in the income statement on page 3 7.

The Standard requires disclosure, by class of fi nancial instruments, if the effect of changing one or more inputs to reasonably possible alternative assumptions would result in a signifi cant change to the fair value measurement. The information used in determination of the fair value of Level 3 investments is chosen with reference to the specifi c underlying circumstances and position of the investee company. The portfolio has been reviewed and both downside and upside reasonable possible alternatives have been identifi ed and applied to the valuation of each of the unquoted investments. Applying the downside alternatives the value of the unquoted investments would be £ 2.5 million or 6.8 per cent. lower. Using the upside alternative the value would be increased by £ 2.6 million or 7.0 per cent.

9. Debtors

2012
£'000
2011
£'000
Prepayments and accrued income 375 562
Amounts due from fundraising 4,886
5,261 562

10. Creditors (amounts falling due within one year)

2012
£'000
2011
£'000
Management, performance, secretarial and accounting fees due to the Manager 474 405
Fundraising costs 139
Other creditors 64 57
677 462

11. Called-up share capital

Allotted, called-up and fully paid:
Ordinary shares £'000
67,619,851 ordinary shares of 10p each listed at 31 December 2011 6,762
8,112,068 ordinary shares of 10p each issued during the year 811
75,731,919 ordinary shares of 10p each listed at 31 December 2012 7,573
7,622,317 ordinary shares of 10p each held in treasury at 31 December 2011 (762)
1,306,897 ordinary shares of 10p each repurchased during the year and held in treasury (131)
8,929,214 ordinary shares of 10p each held in treasury at 31 December 2012 (893)
66,802,705 ordinary shares of 10p each in circulation at 31 December 2012 6,680

As at 15 February 2013 the Company's issued share capital was 75,731,919 ordinary shares of 10 pence each, of which 8,929,214 were held in treasury. The number of shares in circulation was 66,802,705 ordinary shares carrying one vote each.

The capital of the Company is managed in accordance with its investment policy, in pursuit of its investment objectives, both of which are detailed in the Report of the Directors on pages 20 and 21.

11. Called-up share capital (continued)

Treasury shares

The Companies (Acquisition of Own Shares) (Treasury Shares) Regulations 2003 came into force on 1 December 2003 and allowed the Company to hold shares acquired by way of market purchase as treasury shares, rather than having to cancel them. Shareholders have previously approved a resolution permitting the Company to issue shares from treasury at a discount to the prevailing NAV if the Board considers it in the best interests of the Company to do so. However, treasury shares will not be sold at a discount wider than the discount prevailing at the time the shares were initially bought back by the Company. It is the Board's intention only to use the mechanism of reissuing treasury shares when demand for the Company's shares is greater than the supply available in the market place. Treasury shares would not be considered by HM Revenue & Customs to be new shares entitling the purchaser to initial income tax relief, and therefore shares are unlikely to be issued from treasury in the same year as a ''top up'' offer for subscription.

The Company does not have any externally imposed capital requirements. Where shares are bought back but not cancelled the issued share capital remains unchanged. The NAV is calculated by using the number of shares in issue less those bought back and held in treasury.

Share
premium
account
£'000
Capital
redemption
reserve
£'000
Capital
reserve
£'000
Revaluation
reserve
£'000
Revenue
reserve
£'000
At 31 December 2011 15,012 10,862 24,262 2,876 321
Gross proceeds of share issues 8,324
Purchase of shares for treasury (1,260)
Expenses of share issue and buybacks (470) (4)
Reallocation of prior year unrealised gains (1,400) 1,400
Realised gain on disposal of investments* 426
Net increase in value of investments* 9,373
Management fee capitalised* (1,228)
Taxation relief from capital expenses* 25
Revenue profi t on ordinary activities after taxation* 363
Dividends paid in the year (1,893)
At 31 December 2012 22,866 10,862 18,928 13,649 684

12. Reserves

At 31 December 2012, reserves distributable by way of dividend amounted to £ 19, 612,000 (2011: £21,264,000), comprising the capital reserve and revenue reserve less the net unrealised loss on those level one investments whose prices are quoted in an active market and deemed readily realisable.

* The total of these items is £ 8,959,000 which agrees to the total profi t on ordinary activities after taxation on page 3 7.

13. Net asset value per share

The net asset value per share and the net asset values attributable to the ordinary shares at the year end are calculated in accordance with their entitlements in the Articles of Association and were:

Net asset value
Number of shares per share attributable Net asset value attributable
2012 2011 2012 2011 2012 2011
number number pence pence £'000 £'000
Ordinary shares (basic) 66,802,705 59,997,534 111.62 100.16 74,562 60,095
Ordinary shares (treasury) 75,731,919 67,619,851 110.88 99.16 83,971 67,050

Basic net asset value per share is based on net assets at the year end, and on 66,802,705 (2011: 59,997,534) ordinary shares, being the respective number of shares in circulation at the year end.

The treasury net asset value per share as at 31 December 2012 included ordinary shares held in treasury valued at the mid share price of 105.3 8p at 31 December 2012 (2011: 91.25p).

14. Analysis of changes in cash

2012
£'000
2011
£'000
Beginning of year 683 1,268
Net cash infl ow/(outfl ow) 2,555 (585)
As at 31 December 2012 3,238 683

15. Reconciliation of profi t on ordinary activities before taxation to net cash outfl ow from operating activities

2012
£'000
2011
£'000
Profi t on ordinary activities before taxation 8,959 3,285
Gains on investments (9,799) (3,227)
Decrease/(increase) in debtors 187 (101)
Increase/(decrease) in creditors 76 (31)
Income reinvested (29)
Net cash outfl ow from operating activities (606) (74)

16. Contingencies, guarantees and fi nancial commitments

At 31 December 2012 there were no contingent liabilities, guarantees or fi nancial commitments of the Company.

17. Signifi cant interests

There are no interests of 20 per cent. or more of any class of share capital in any underlying holdings in investee companies.

Further information on the signifi cant interests is disclosed on page 26.

18. Financial instruments and associated risks

The Company's fi nancial instruments comprise equity and fi xed interest investments, cash balances and liquid resources. The Company holds fi nancial assets in accordance with its investment policy to invest in a diverse portfolio of established and profi table UK unquoted companies and companies raising new share capital on AIM.

Fixed asset investments held (see note 8) are valued at fair value. For quoted securities this is either bid price or the last traded price, depending on the convention of the exchange on which the investment is quoted. In respect of unquoted investments, these are valued at fair value by the Directors (using rules consistent with IPEV (International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation) guidelines). The fair value of all other fi nancial assets and liabilities is represented by their carrying value in the Balance sheet.

The Company's investing activities expose it to various types of risk that are associated with fi nancial instruments and markets in which it invests. The most important types of fi nancial risk to which the Company is exposed are market risk, interest rate risk, credit risk and liquidity risk. The nature and extent of the fi nancial instruments held at the balance sheet date and the risk management policies employed by the Company are discussed in notes 19 to 22.

19. Market risk

Market risk embodies the potential for both losses and gains and includes interest rate risk and price risk.

The Company's strategy on the management of investment risk is driven by the Company's investment objective as outlined in note 18. The management of market risk is part of the investment management process and is typical of private equity investment. The portfolio is managed in accordance with policies and procedures in place as described in more detail in the Report of the Directors on pages 20 to 22 , with an awareness of the effects of adverse price movements through detailed and continuing analysis, with an objective of maximising overall returns to shareholders. Investments in unquoted stocks and AIM traded companies, by their nature, involve a higher degree of risk than investments in the main market. Some of that risk can be mitigated by diversifying the portfolio across business sectors and asset classes. The Company's overall market positions are monitored by the Board on a quarterly basis.

Details of the Company's investment portfolio at the balance sheet date are disclosed in the schedule of investments set out on pages 60 and 6 1. An analysis of investments between debt and equity instruments is disclosed in note 8.

41 per cent. (2011: 31 per cent.) of the Company's investments are listed on the London Stock Exchange, traded on AIM or invested through Wood Street Microcap Fund. A 5 per cent. increase in stock prices as at 31 December 2012 would have increased the net assets attributable to the Company's shareholders and the total profi t for the year by £ 1,358,000 (2011: £927,000); an equal change in the opposite direction would have decreased the net assets attributable to the Company's shareholders and the total profi t for the year by an equal amount.

56 per cent. (2011: 52 per cent.) of the Company's investments are in unquoted companies held at fair value. Valuation methodology includes the application of earnings multiples derived from either listed companies with similar characteristics or recent comparable transactions. Therefore the value of the unquoted element of the portfolio may also be indirectly affected by price movements on the listed exchanges. A 5 per cent. increase in the valuations of unquoted investments at 31 December 2012 would have increased the net assets attributable to the Company's shareholders and the total profi t for the year by £ 1,854,000 (2011: £1,539,000); an equal change in the opposite direction would have decreased the net assets attributable to the Company's shareholders and the total profi t for the year by an equal amount.

20. Interest rate risk

At 31 December 2012 £ 2,000,000 (2011: £6,799,000) fi xed rate securities were held by the Company. As a result, the Company is exposed to fair value interest rate risk due to fl uctuations in the prevailing levels of market interest rates. However the effect of these interest rate changes is not materially signifi cant.

At 31 December 2012 £ 25,226,000 (2011: £21,009,000) fi xed rate loan notes were held by the Company. The weighted average coupon rate for the loan note securities is 9.38 per cent. as at 31 December 2012 (2011: 9.34 per cent.). Due to the complexity of the instruments and uncertainty surrounding timing of redemption the weighted average time for which the rate is fi xed has not been calculated.

The table below summarises weighted average effective interest rates for the other fi xed interest-bearing fi nancial instruments:

Fixed rate

2012 2011
Weighted Weighted
Total Weighted average Total Weighted average
fi xed average time for fi xed average time for
rate interest which rate rate interest which rate
portfolio rate is fi xed portfolio rate is fi xed
£'000 % days £'000 % days
Fixed interest instruments 2,000 0.12 21 6,799 0.2 3

Floating rate

When the Company retains cash balances, the majority of cash is ordinarily held on interest bearing deposit accounts and, where appropriate, within an interest bearing money market open ended investment company ("OEIC"). The benchmark rate which determines the interest payments received on interest bearing cash balances is the bank base rate which was 0.5 per cent. as at 31 December 2012 (2011: 0.5 per cent.).

2012
£'000
2011
£'000
Floating rate
Floating rate instruments ("OEIC") 490 3,180
Cash at bank 1,438 683
Cash on deposit 1,800
3,728 3,863

21. Credit risk

Credit risk is the risk that a counterparty to a fi nancial instrument will fail to discharge an obligation or commitment that it has entered into with the Company. The Investment Manager has in place a monitoring procedure in respect of counterparty risk which is reviewed on an ongoing basis. The carrying amounts of fi nancial assets represent the maximum credit risk exposure at the balance sheet date.

At the reporting date, the Company's fi nancial assets exposed to credit risk amounted to the following:

2012
£'000
2011
£'000
Investments in fi xed interest instruments 2,000 6,799
Investments in fl oating rate instruments 490 3,180
Cash at bank 1,438 683
Cash on deposit 1,800
Interest, dividends and other receivables 5,261 562
10,989 11,224

Credit risk arising on unquoted loan notes is considered in conjunction with the associated equity investment in the portfolio company.

Credit risk arising on fi xed interest instruments is mitigated by investing in UK Government Stock.

Credit risk arising on fl oating rate instruments is mitigated by investing in money market open ended investment companies managed by BlackRock. Credit risk on unquoted loan stock held within unlisted investments is considered to be part of market risk as disclosed in note 19.

Credit risk arising on transactions with brokers relates to transactions awaiting settlement. Risk relating to unsettled transactions is considered to be small due to the short settlement period involved and the high credit quality of the brokers used. The Board monitors the quality of service provided by the brokers used to further mitigate this risk.

All assets of the Company which are traded on a recognised exchange are held by JP Morgan Chase ("JPM"), the Company's custodian. The Board monitors the Company's risk by reviewing the custodian's internal controls reports as described in the Corporate Governance section on page 3 1.

The cash held by the Company is held by JPM and Lloyds TSB. The Board monitors the Company's risk by reviewing regularly the internal control reports of these banks. Should the credit quality or the fi nancial position of either bank deteriorate signifi cantly the Investment Manager will seek to move the cash holdings to another bank.

There were no signifi cant concentrations of credit risk to counterparties at 31 December 2012 or 31 December 2011. No individual investment exceeded 6.9 per cent . of the net assets attributable to the Company's shareholders at 31 December 2012 (2011: 9.4 per cent .).

22. Liquidity risk

The Company's fi nancial instruments include investments in unquoted companies which are not traded in an organised public market as well as AIM-traded equity investments both of which generally may be illiquid. As a result, the Company may not be able to liquidate quickly some of its investments in these instruments at an amount close to their fair value in order to meet its liquidity requirements, or to respond to specifi c events such as deterioration in the creditworthiness of any particular issuer.

The Company's liquidity risk is managed on an ongoing basis by the Investment Manager in accordance with policies and procedures as described in the Report of the Directors on page 22. The Company's overall liquidity risks are monitored on a quarterly basis by the Board.

The Company maintains suffi cient investments in cash and readily realisable securities to pay accounts payable and accrued expenses.

At 31 December 2012 these investments were valued at £ 5,72 8,000 (2011: £10,662,000).

23. Related parties

Related party transactions include Management, Secretarial, Accounting and Performance fees payable to the Manager, ISIS EP LLP, as disclosed in notes 3 and 4, and fees paid to the Directors as disclosed in note 4. In addition, the Manager operates a Co-Investment Scheme, detailed in the Report of the Directors on page s 25 and 26, whereby employees of the Manager are entitled to participate in certain unquoted investments alongside the Company.

Notice is hereby given that the twelfth Annual General Meeting of Baronsmead VCT 3 plc will be held at Plaisterers' Hall, One London Wall, London EC2Y 5JU on Wednesday, 10 April 2013 at 10:30 a.m. for the purposes of considering and, if thought fi t, passing the following resolutions, Resolutions 1 to 9 being proposed as ordinary resolutions and Resolutions 10 to 1 2 being proposed as special resolutions:

    1. THAT the Report and Accounts for the year to 31 December 2012 be received.
    1. THAT a fi nal dividend of 4.5 p per ordinary share be declared.
    1. THAT the Directors' Remuneration Report for the year to 31 December 2012 be approved.
    1. THAT Ian Orrock be re-elected as a Director of the Company.
    1. THAT Andrew Karney be re-elected as a Director of the Company.
    1. THAT Gillian Nott be re-elected as a Director of the Company.
    1. THAT KPMG Audit Plc be re-appointed as independent auditor .
    1. THAT the Directors of the Company be authorised to determine the remuneration of the auditor .
    1. THAT, in substitution for all subsisting authorities to the exten t unused, the Directors of the Company be and are hereby generally and unconditionally authorised, in accordance with section 551 of the Companies Act 2006, to exercise all the powers of the Company to allot shares in the Company and to grant rights to subscribe for or to convert any security into shares in the Company ("Rights") up to an aggregate nominal amount of £ 3,340,135 during the period commencing on the passing of this resolution and expiring on the fi fth anniversary of the date of the passing of this resolution (unless previously revoked, varied, renewed or extended by the Company in general meeting), but so that this authority shall allow the Company to make before the expiry of this authority offers or agreements which would or might require shares to be allotted or Rights to be granted after such expiry and the Directors of the Company shall be authorised to allot shares or grant Rights pursuant to any such offers or agreements as if the authority conferred by this resolution had not expired.
    1. THAT, subject to the passing of Resolution 9 set out in the notice of this meeting and in substitution for all existing authorities to the extent unused, the Directors of the Company be and are hereby empowered, pursuant to sections 570 and 573 of the Companies Act 2006 (the "Act") to allot equity securities (as defi ned in section 560 of the Act) including the grant of rights to subscribe for or to convert any security into shares of the Company, for cash pursuant to the authority conferred by Resolution 9 set out in the notice of this meeting, and to sell equity securities held by the Company as treasury shares for cash, as if section 561(1) of the Act did not apply to any such allotment and sales of equity securities, provided that this power shall be limited to:
  • (a) the allotment of equity securities up to an aggregate nominal amount representing 30 per cent. of the issued share capital of the Company (excluding treasury shares) as at the date of the passing of this resolution pursuant to one or more offers for subscription;
  • (b) the allotment of equity securities up to an aggregate nominal amount representing 10 per cent. of the issued share capital of the Company (excluding treasury shares) from time to time which may be issued at a discount to NAV pursuant to any dividend reinvestment scheme operated by the Company; and
  • (c) the allotment of equity securities (otherwise than pursuant to sub-paragraphs (a) and (b) above) up to an aggregate nominal amount representing 10 per cent. of the issued share capital of the Company (excluding treasury shares) from time to time which may be at a discount to NAV; and

in each case where such proceeds of issue may be used to purchase shares in the Company and the power conferred by this resolution shall expire on the date falling 15 months after the date of the passing of this resolution (unless previously revoked, varied, renewed or extended by the Company in general meeting) or, if earlier, at the conclusion of the Annual General Meeting of the Company to be held in 201 4, except that the Company may, before such expiry, make offers or agreements which would or might require equity securities to be allotted after such expiry and the Directors of the Company shall be authorised to allot equity securities pursuant to any such offers or agreements as if the power conferred by this resolution had not expired.

  • 1 1. THAT, in substitution for the Company's existing authority to make market purchases, the Company be and hereby is empowered to make market purchases within the meaning of section 693(4) of the Companies Act 2006 (the "Act") of ordinary shares of 10p each in the capital of the Company ("Ordinary Shares") on such terms and in such manner as the Directors of the Company shall from time to time determine, provided that:
  • (a) the aggregate number of Ordinary Shares which may be purchased shall not exceed 14.99 per cent. of the Company's Ordinary Shares in issue at the date of the Annual General Meeting, excluding any Ordinary Shares held in treasury (equivalent to 10,013,725 Ordinary Shares at 15 February 2013, the date of this Notice of Annual General Meeting);
  • (b) the minimum price which may be paid for an Ordinary Share is the nominal value thereof of 10 pence;
  • (c) the maximum price (exclusive of expenses) which may be paid for an Ordinary Share is an amount equal to the higher of (i) an amount equal to 105 per cent. of the average of the middle market quotation for an Ordinary Share taken from the London Stock Exchange daily offi cial list for the fi ve business days immediately preceding the day on which such Ordinary Share is to be purchased; and (ii) the amount stipulated by Article 5(1) of the Buyback and Stabilisation Regulation 2003;
  • (d) the authority conferred by this resolution shall expire on the date falling 15 months after the date of the passing of this resolution or, if earlier, the conclusion of the Annual General Meeting to be held in 201 4, unless such authority is renewed prior to such time; and
  • (e) the Company may make a contract to purchase Ordinary Shares under the authority conferred by this resolution prior to the expiry of such authority which will or may be executed wholly or partly after the expiration of such authority and may make a purchase of such Ordinary Shares pursuant to such contract as if the authority conferred by this resolution had not expired.
  • 1 2. THAT a general meeting (other than an annual general meeting) may be called on not less than 14 clear days' notice, provided that this authority shall expire at the conclusion of the next annual general meeting of the Company.

By Order of the Board

ISIS EP LLP Registered Offi ce: Secretary 100 Wood Street

15 February 2013 London EC2V 7AN

    1. No Director has a service contract with the Company.
    1. To be entitled to attend and vote at the meeting (and for the purposes of the determination by the Company of the number of votes they may cast), members must be registered in the Register of Members of the Company at 6:00 pm on 8 April 201 3 (or in the event of any adjournment, 48 hours before the time of the adjourned meeting). Changes to the Register of Members of the Company after the relevant deadline shall be disregarded in determining the rights of any person to attend and vote at the meeting.
    1. A member entitled to attend and vote at the meeting is entitled to appoint a proxy or proxies to attend, speak and vote on his or her behalf. A proxy need not also be a member, but must attend the meeting to represent you. Details of how to appoint the Chairman of the meeting or another person as your proxy using the proxy form are set out in the notes to the proxy form. If you wish your proxy to speak on your behalf at the meeting you will need to appoint your own choice of proxy (not the Chairman) and give your instructions directly to them.
    1. To appoint more than one proxy, an additional proxy form(s) may be obtained by contacting the Company's registrars, Computershare Investor Services PLC, helpline on 0870 889 3250 or you may photocopy the proxy form. Please indicate in the box next to the proxy holder's name, the number of shares in relation to which they are authorised to act as your proxy. Please also indicate by ticking the box provided, if the proxy instruction is one of multiple instructions being given. All forms must be signed and should be returned together in the same envelope.
    1. A reply paid form of proxy is enclosed with Shareholders' copies of this document. To be valid, it should be lodged with the Company's registrars, Computershare Investor Services PLC, The Pavilions, Bridgwater Road, Bristol BS99 6ZZ so as to be received not later than 10:30 am on 8 April 2013 or, 48 hours before the time appointed for any adjourned meeting or, in the case of a poll taken subsequent to the date of the meeting or adjourned meeting, so as to be received no later than 24 hours before the time appointed for taking the poll.
    1. Any corporation which is a member can appoint one or more corporate representatives who may exercise on its behalf all of its powers as a member provided that, if it is appointing more than one corporate representative, it does not do so in relation to the same shares. It is therefore no longer necessary to nominate a designated corporate representative.
    1. Any person receiving a copy of this Notice as a person nominated by a member to enjoy information rights under section 146 of the Companies Act 2006 (a "Nominated Person") should note that the provisions in Notes 3 and 4 above concerning the appointment of a proxy or proxies to attend the meeting in place of a member, do not apply to a Nominated Person as only Shareholders have the right to appoint a proxy. However, a Nominated Person may have a right under an agreement between the Nominated Person and the member by whom he or she was nominated to be appointed, or to have someone else appointed, as a proxy for the meeting. If a Nominated Person has no such proxy appointment right or does not wish to exercise it, he/she may have a right under such an agreement to give instructions to the member as to the exercise of voting rights at the meeting.
    1. Nominated persons should also remember that their main point of contact in terms of their investment in the Company remains the member who nominated the Nominated Person to enjoy information rights (or, perhaps the custodian or broker who administers the investment on their behalf). Nominated Persons should continue to contact that member, custodian or broker (and not the Company) regarding any changes or queries relating to the Nominated Person's personal details and interest in the Company (including any administrative matter). The only exception to this is where the Company expressly requests a response from a Nominated Person.
    1. Appointment of a proxy will not preclude a member from subsequently attending and voting at the meeting should the member subsequently decide to do so. A member can only appoint a proxy using the procedures set out in these notes and the notes to the proxy form. The termination of the authority of a person to act as a proxy must be notifi ed to the Company in writing. Amended instructions must be received by Computershare Investor Services PLC by the deadline for receipt of proxies.

Should a member wish to appoint a proxy electronically, such proxy appointment must be registered electronically at www.eproxyappointment.com, so as to be received not later than 10:30 amon 8 April 2013 or 48 hours before the time appointed for any adjourned meeting or, in the case of a poll taken subsequent to the date of the meeting or adjourned meeting, so as to be received no later than 24 hours before the time appointed to take the poll. To vote electronically, you will be asked to provide the Control Number, Shareholder Reference Number (SRN) and PIN, details of which are contained in the personalised proxy form enclosed. This is the only acceptable means by which proxy instructions may be submitted electronically.

  1. CREST members who wish to appoint a proxy or proxies by utilising the CREST electronic proxy appointment service may do so for the meeting and any adjournment(s) thereof by utilising the procedures described in the CREST manual, which is available to download from the Euroclear website (www.euroclear.com/CREST). 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.

    1. In order for a proxy appointment 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 specifi cations and must contain the information required for such instructions, as described in the CREST manual. The message must be transmitted so as to be received by the Issuer's agent (3 RA50) by the latest time for receipt of proxy appointments specifi ed in note 5 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 Issuer's agent is able to retrieve the message by enquiry to CREST in the manner prescribed by CREST.
    1. CREST members and, where applicable, their CREST sponsors or voting service provider(s) 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 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.
    1. The Company may treat as invalid a CREST Proxy Instruction in the circumstances set out in Regulation 35(5) of the Uncertifi cated Securities Regulations 2001.
  2. 1 4. As at 15 February 201 3, being the latest practicable date prior to the printing of this notice, the Company's issued share capital consists of 75,731,919Ordinary Shares of which 8,929,214are held in Treasury. The total number of voting rights in the Company is 66,802,705 .
  3. 1 5. A copy of th is Notice of Annual General Meeting and the information required by Section 311A Companies Act 2006 is included on the Company's website, www.baronsmeadvct3.co.uk.
    1. Section 319A of the Companies Act 2006 requires the Directors to answer any question raised at the Annual General Meeting which, relates to the business of the meeting, although no answer need be given (a) if to do so would interfere unduly with the preparation of the meeting or involve disclosure of confi dential information; (b) if the answer has already been given on the Company's website; or (c) if it is undesirable in the best interests of the Company or the good order of the meeting. Members satisfying the thresholds in section 527 of the Companies Act 2006 can require the Company to publish a statement on its website setting out any matter relating to (a) the audit of the Company's accounts (including the auditor's report and the conduct of the audit) that are to be laid before the Annual General Meeting; or (b) any circumstances connected with an auditor of the Company ceasing to hold offi ce since the last Annual General Meeting, that the members propose to raise at the meeting. The Company cannot require the members requesting the publication to pay its expenses. Any statement required to be placed on the website must also be sent to the Company's auditors no later than the time it makes the statement available on its website. The business which may be dealt with at the meeting includes any statement that the Company has been required to publish on its website. By attending the meeting, members and their proxies and representatives are understood by the Company to have agreed to receive any communications relating to the Company's shares made at the meeting.
    1. Under sections 338 and 338A of the Companies Act 2006, members meeting the threshold requirements in those sections have the right to require the Company:
  4. (i) to give, to members of the Company entitled to receive notice of the meeting, notice of a resolution which may properly be moved and is intended to be moved at the meeting ; and/or
  5. (ii) to include in the business to be dealt with at the meeting any matter (other than a proposed resolution) which may be properly included in the business.

A resolution may properly be moved or a matter may properly be included in the business unless:

  • (a) (in the case of a resolution only) it would, if passed, be ineffective (whether by reason of inconsistency with any enactment or the Company's constitution or otherwise);
  • (b) it is defamatory of any person; or
  • (c) it is frivolous or vexatious.

Such a request may be in hard copy form or in electronic form, and must identify the resolution of which notice is to be given or the matter to be included in the business, must be authorised by the person or persons making it, must be received by the Company not later than 26 February 201 3, being the date six clear weeks before the meeting.

  1. Any electronic address provided either in this Notice or in any related documents (including the proxy form) may not be used to communicate with the Company for any purposes other than those expressly stated.

Dividend History Since Launch

* Includes proposed fi nal dividend of 4.5p .

Cash Returned to Shareholders

Year subscribed Subscription
price
p
Income tax
reclaim
p
Net
cash
invested
p
Cumulative
dividends
paid‡
p
Net annual
yield*
%
Gross
equivalent
yield†
%
2001 (January) 100.0 20.0 80.0 70.8 7.4 9.9
2005 (March) – C share 100.0 40.0 60.0 39.1 8.3 11.1
2010 (March) 103.1 30.9 72.2 22.5 11.2 15.0

The table below shows the cash returned to shareholders dependent on their subscription cost, including their income tax reclaimed on subscription.

The total return could be higher for those shareholders who were able to defer a capital gain on subscription and the net sum invested may be less.

‡ Includes proposed fi nal dividend of 4.5p .

* Net annual yield represents the cumulative dividends paid expressed as a percentage of the net cash invested.

† The gross equivalent yield if the dividends had been subject to the higher rate of tax on dividends (currently 32.5 per cent.). The gross equivalent yield based on additional rate of tax on dividends (42.5 per cent. in the tax year 2011/12 and 2012/13 and 37.5 per cent. from the 2013/14 tax year), has not been included. For those shareholders who earn over £150,000 per tax year and who would otherwise pay this additional rate of tax on dividends, the gross equivalent yield will be higher than the fi gures stated above .

Dividends paid to C shareholders post conversion have been adjusted by the conversion ratio (0.85642528).

Performance Record Since Launch

Ordinary share
Year ended
31 December
Total net
assets
£m
Net asset
value
p
Share
price
(mid)
P
Net asset
value
total return*
p
Total
expense
ratio
%
2001 31.1 93.85 88.00 101.21 2.9
2002 32.1 94.85 85.50 105.35 3.3
2003 33.0 97.15 90.00 112.65 3.1
2004 35.1 106.38 92.50 125.64 3.5
2005 56.2 117.31 100.50 144.77 3.5
2006 66.5 130.77 116.50 169.27 3.4
2007 65.2 120.44 111.50 170.56 3.4
2008 55.1 102.72 90.50 149.56 3.0
2009 52.9 97.50 86.25 159.89 3.1
2010 64.6 106.60 94.25 180.19 3.0
2011 60.1 100.16 91.25 189.74 3.0
2012 74.6 111.62 105.38 217.38 3.0†

* Source: ISIS EP LLP and AIC.

† 31 December 2012 fi gure is based on the new AIC guidelines for the calculation of ongoing charges.

Ordinary share
Year ended
31 December
Revenue
dividend
p
Capital
dividend
p
Total annual
dividend
p
Cumulative
dividends
p
Average
total annual
dividend
p
2001 2.30 2.30 2.30 2.30
2002 2.80 2.80 5.10 2.55
2003 2.20 2.00 4.20 9.30 3.10
2004 1.20 3.30 4.50 13.80 3.45
2005 2.00 3.50 5.50 19.30 3.86
2006 1.75 4.75 6.50 25.80 4.30
2007 2.30 5.20 7.50 33.30 4.76
2008 2.40 5.10 7.50 40.80 5.10
2009 1.20 6.30 7.50 48.30 5.37
2010 2.00 5.50 7.50 55.80 5.58
2011 1.65 5.85 7.50 63.30 5.75
2012* 0.50 7.00 7.50 70.80 5.90

Dividends Paid Since Launch

* Includes proposed fi nal dividend of 4.5p .

Breakdown of Shareholdings

The shareholdings of ordinary shares as at 31 December 2012 (excluding shares held in Treasury) are analysed as follows:

Ordinary shares
Size of shareholding Number of
shareholders
Percentage
of total
number of
shareholders
Number
of shares
Percentage
of shares
1 – 2,000 321 8.67 393,392 0.52
2,001 – 5,000 926 24.99 3,359,415 4.44
5,001 – 10,000 884 23.86 6,675,543 8.81
10,001 – 25,000 929 25.07 15,324,640 20.23
25,001 – 50,000 410 11.07 14,621,266 19.31
50,001 – 100,000 163 4.40 11,530,966 15.23
100,001 – 1,500,000 72 1.94 23,826,697 31.46
Total 3,705 100.00 75,731,919 100.00

Full Investment Portfolio

31 December 31 December % of Equity
2012 2011 held by % of Equity
Book cost Valuation Valuation % of net Baronsmead held by all
Company Sector £'000 £'000 £'000 assets VCT 3 plc funds#
Unquoted
Nexus Vehicle Holdings Limited Business Services 2,368 4,768 5,658 6.4 12.3 56.0
CableCom Networking Holdings Limited TMT* 1,381 4,328 3,707 5.8 10.6 48.0
Independent Living Services Limited Healthcare & Education 1,599 3,322 1,293 4.5 15.6 65.7
Crew Clothing Holdings Limited Consumer Markets 1,344 3,020 2,676 4.1 6.1 25.5
Kafevend Holdings Limited Consumer Markets 1,252 2,956 1,991 4.0 15.8 66.5
CSC (World) Limited TMT* 1,606 2,410 1,940 3.2 8.8 40.0
Valldata Group Limited Business Services 1,616 1,754 1,694 2.4 8.8 39.8
Fisher Outdoor Leisure Holdings Limited Consumer Markets 1,423 1,656 1,777 2.2 10.5 44.0
Inspired Thinking Group Limited Business Services 796 1,571 1,368 2.1 5.0 22.5
Independent Community Care
Management Limited
Healthcare & Education 1,346 1,491 1,346 2.0 10.9 55.0
Impetus Holdings Limited Business Services 1,057 1,057 1.4 7.8 39.3
Arcas Investments Limited Business Services 1,000 1,000 1,000 1.3 9.6 48.6
Consumer Investment Partners Limited† Consumer Markets 1,000 1,000 1.3 9.6 48.6
HealthTech Innovation Partners Limited Healthcare & Education 1,000 1,000 1,000 1.3 9.6 48.6
Quest Venture Partners Limited Business Services 1,000 1,000 1,000 1.3 9.6 48.6
Riccal Investments Limited^ Business Services 1,000 1,000 1.3 9.6 48.6
Pho Holdings Limited Consumer Markets 987 987 1.3 5.5 28.0
MLS Limited TMT* 93 956 1,043 1.3 5.3 22.5
Happy Days Consultancy Limited Healthcare & Education 833 833 1.1 8.4 42.5
Playforce Holdings Limited Business Services 1,033 512 512 0.7 9.7 44.0
Surgi C Limited Healthcare & Education 1,102 350 650 0.5 13.3 57.5
Kidsunlimited Group Limited Business Services 113 113 113 0.2 N/A N/A
Carnell Contractors Limited Business Services 941 0 0 0.0 ## ##
Empire World Trade Limited Business Services 1,297 0 321 0.0
Music Festivals plc Loan note Consumer Markets 400 0 400 0.0 N/A N/A
Xention Discovery Limited Healthcare & Education 893 0 0 0.0 0.4 3.0
Total unquoted 28,480 37,084 49.7

All funds managed by the same investment manager, ISIS EP LLP, including Baronsmead VCT 3.

* Technology, Media & Telecommunications ("TMT").

Following a restructuring and partial redemption the funds no longer hold equity in Carnell Contractors Limited.

‡ Following a restructuring, the effective ownership percentage is dependent on fi nal exit proceeds.

† Formerly named Ingleby (1887) Limited.

^ Formerly named Ingleby (1885) Limited.

Full Investment Portfolio

31 December 31 December % of Equity
2012 2011 held by % of Equity
Book cost Valuation Valuation % of net Baronsmead held by all
Company Sector £'000 £'000 £'000 assets VCT 3 plc funds#
AIM
IDOX plc TMT* 920 5,184 2,661 6.9 2.8 7.5
Netcall plc TMT* 869 1,337 842 1.8 4.1 20.5
Murgitroyd Group plc Business Services 319 1,173 791 1.6 3.0 6.0
Jelf Group plc Financial Services 761 1,024 877 1.4 1.4 5.6
Escher Group Holdings plc TMT* 614 885 564 1.2 1.9 9.7
Driver Group plc Business Services 563 786 259 1.0 4.1 19.4
Dods (Group) plc TMT* 1,219 649 105 0.9 4.2 20.1
Accumuli plc TMT* 465 636 473 0.9 4.3 23.6
FFastFill plc TMT* 314 612 448 0.8 0.9 5.9
Tasty plc Consumer Markets 469 595 547 0.8 2.5 17.1
TLA Worldwide plc Business Services 620 589 620 0.8 3.5 17.7
Vianet Group plc Business Services 646 508 388 0.7 1.9 9.7
Anpario plc Healthcare & Education 275 506 315 0.7 2.0 14.7
Tangent Communications plc Business Services 483 495 175 0.7 2.0 10.3
Sinclair IS Pharma plc Healthcare & Education 524 490 399 0.6 0.4 2.2
Hangar8 plc Business Services 388 456 31 0.6 2.5 11.3
PROACTIS Holdings plc TMT* 619 426 341 0.6 5.4 26.3
Inspired Energy plc Business Services 300 405 217 0.5 2.4 11.8
EG Solutions plc TMT* 375 379 256 0.5 3.1 14.2
Sanderson Group plc TMT* 387 379 201 0.5 1.8 6.9
Electric Word plc TMT* 696 366 312 0.5 5.2 28.2
Synectics plc Business Services 296 352 261 0.5 0.6 2.1
GB Group plc TMT* 150 341 176 0.4 0.3 1.7
Plastics Capital plc Business Services 473 317 321 0.4 1.7 9.8
Paragon Entertainment Limited Consumer Markets 200 300 425 0.4 3.1 17.3
Brady plc TMT* 176 292 217 0.4 0.4 2.1
InterQuest Group plc Business Services 310 265 298 0.4 1.7 6.8
Begbies Traynor Group plc Financial Services 231 203 156 0.3 0.6 2.5
Ubisense Group plc TMT* 130 165 137 0.2 0.3 1.6
Cohort plc Business Services 179 144 119 0.2 0.3 1.4
Zattikka plc TMT* 316 136 0.2 1.4 7.1
Tristel plc Healthcare & Education 217 114 145 0.2 1.0 5.4
Aimshell Acquisitions plc Business Services 400 96 77 0.1 3.1 12.3
STM Group plc Financial Services 162 84 52 0.1 0.6 4.0
Active Risk Group plc TMT* 159 54 125 0.1 1.1 5.6
Bglobal plc Business Services 176 50 67 0.1 0.4 2.5
Green Compliance plc Business Services 882 29 450 0.0 4.0 19.8
Zoo Digital Group plc TMT* 584 11 8 0.0 0.2 0.6
Total AIM 16,867 20,833 28.0
Listed
Vectura Group plc Healthcare & Education 771 1,343 900 1.8 0.5 1.3
Chime Communications plc TMT* 369 396 293 0.5 0.2 0.8
Marwyn Management Partners plc Financial Services 525 36 81 0.1 0.3 1.6
Marwyn Value Investors Limited Financial Services 64 33 44 0.0 1.3 6.0
Total listed 1,729 1,808 2.4
Listed interest bearing securities
UK T-Bill 21/01/13 2,000 2,000 2.7
BlackRock ICS plc – Institutional Sterling
Liquidity Fund
490 490 1,590 0.6
Total listed interest bearing securities 2,490 2,490 3.3
Collective investment vehicle
Wood Street Microcap Investment Fund 3,525 4,525 2,826 6.1
Total collective investment vehicle 3,525 4,525 6.1
Total investments 53,091 66,740 89.5
Net current assets 7,822 10.5
Net assets 74,562 100.0

All funds managed by the same investment manager, ISIS EP LLP, including Baronsmead VCT 3.

* Technology, Media & Telecommunications ("TMT").

Shareholder Information and Contact Details

Shareholder Account Queries

The Registrar for Baronsmead VCT 3 is Computershare Investor Services PLC ("Computershare"). The Registrar will deal with all of your queries with regard to your shareholder account, such as:

  • Change of address
  • Latest share price
  • Your current share holding balance
  • Your payment history, including any outstanding payments
  • Your payment options (cheque, direct payment to your bank/building society account, reinvestment)
  • Paper or electronic communications
  • Request replacement cheques or share certifi cates (for which there may be additional administrative and other charges)

You can contact Computershare with your queries in several ways:

Telephone: 0870 889 3250
( calls charged at geographical
and national rates)
This is an automated self-service system
It is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
You should have your Shareholder Reference Number ("SRN") to hand,
which is available on your share certifi cate and dividend tax voucher
and which you should always keep confi dential for security reasons
Press '0' if you wish to speak to someone
The Contact Centre in Bristol is available on UK business days between
8.30am – 5.00pm Monday to Friday
On-line: Investor Centre
www.investorcentre.co.uk
Computershare's secure website, Investor Centre, allows you to manage
your own shareholding online
You will need to register to use this service on the Investor Centre web site
You should have your ("SRN") to hand, which is available on your share
certifi cate and dividend tax voucher and which you should always keep
confi dential for security reasons
Email: [email protected]
Post: Computershare Investor Services PLC
The Pavilions
Bridgwater Road
Bristol BS99 6ZZ

The Baronsmead VCT 3 website is www.baronsmeadvct3.co.uk

The Investment Manager for Baronsmead VCT 3 plc is ISIS EP LLP who can be contacted as follows:

Email: [email protected] Telephone: 020 7506 5717 Facsimile: 020 7506 5718

Shareholder Information and Contact Details

Share Price

The Company's ordinary shares are listed on the London Stock Exchange. The mid-price of the Company's shares is given daily in the Financial Times in the Investment Companies section of the London Share Service. Share price information can also be obtained from the link on the Company's website and many fi nancial websites.

Trading Shares

The Company's shares can be bought and sold in the same way as any other quoted company on the London Stock Exchange via a stockbroker. As buying and selling existing shares in VCTs is complex, Shareholders should seek to trade shares on a "best execution" basis if appropriate.

The marketmakers in the shares of Baronsmead VCT 3 plc are:

Panmure Gordon & Co 020 7886 2500
Singer Capital Markets Limited 020 3205 7500
Winterfl ood Securities Limited 020 3400 0251

Financial Calendar

1 0 April 2013 Twelfth Annual General Meeting
August 2013 Announcement of interim results and posting of half-yearly report
February 2014 Announcement of fi nal results for year to 31 December 2013

Additional Information

The information provided in this report has been produced in order for shareholders to be informed of the activities of the Company during the period it covers. ISIS EP LLP does not give investment advice and the naming of companies in this report is not a recommendation to deal in them.

Baronsmead VCT 3 plc is managed by ISIS EP LLP which is authorised and regulated by the FSA. Past performance is not necessarily a guide to future performance. Stock markets and currency movements may cause the value of investments and the income from them to fall as well as rise and investors may not get back the amount they originally invested. Where investments are made in unquoted securities and smaller companies, their potential volatility may increase the risk to the value of, and the income from, the investment.

Secondary market in the shares of Baronsmead VCT 3 plc

The existing shares of the Company are listed on the London Stock Exchange and can be bought and sold using a stockbroker in the same way as shares of any other listed company.

Qualifying investors* who invest in the existing shares of the Company can benefi t from:

  • Tax free dividends
  • Realised gains not subject to capital gains tax (although any realised losses are not allowable)
  • No minimum holding period
  • No need to include VCT dividends in annual tax returns

The UK tax treatment of VCTs is on a fi rst in fi rst out basis and therefore tax advice should be obtained before shareholders dispose of their shares and also if they deferred a capital gain in respect of new shares acquired prior to 6 April 2004.

* UK income tax payers, aged 18 or over, who acquire no more than £200,000 worth of VCT shares in a tax year.

Corporate Information

Directors

Anthony Townsend (Chairman)‡ Andrew Karney† Gillian Nott OBE* Ian Orrock

Secretary

ISIS EP LLP

Registered Offi ce

100 Wood Street London EC2V 7AN

Investment Manager

ISIS EP LLP 100 Wood Street London EC2V 7AN 020 7506 5717

FPPE LLP (liquid assets only) 100 Wood Street London EC2V 7AN

Registered Number

04115341

Registrars and Transfer Offi ce

Computershare Investor Services PLC The Pavilions Bridgwater Road Bristol BS99 6ZZ Tel: 0870 889 32 50

Auditors

KPMG Audit Plc Saltire Court 20 Castle Terrace Edinburgh EH1 2EG

Solicitors

Norton Rose LLP 3 More London Riverside London SE1 2AQ

VCT Status Adviser

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP 1 Embankment Place London WC2N 6RH

Website

www.baronsmeadvct3.co.uk

‡ Chairman of the Nomination Committee and Chairman of the Management Engagement and Remuneration Committee

† Senior Independent Director

* Chairman of the Audit and Risk Committee

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