• £225m of investment capital committed to 20 companies last year. 
  • £129m to eight new investments, plus £96m growth capital in 12 follow-on investments 
  • Investment income at £19.3m. Up 80% yoy. Exceeded operational expenses of £16.1m for first time during 2023/24 financial year. 
  • Loss before tax was £14.6m (2023: £20.2m) predominantly due to realised and unrealised losses on investments. Unrealised losses for the year equates to c2% of y/e portfolio value
  • The Bank has committed  c.£640m since inception and has 35 companies in its growing portfolio
  • More than £400m of capital committed alongside the Bank’s investments last year (compared with £238m previous year)
  • Total amount of  investment “crowded-in” alongside Bank since 2020 exceeds £1bn at 31 March 2024.
  • Delivering impact through investments since start-up with 
    • 649 affordable homes built
    • supported 1,850 jobs through our investee businesses
    • benefitted 24 out of 32 Scottish Local Authority Areas from our investment 

iGii
Jean-Christophe Granier, Chief Executive Officer at iGii (Left) and Al Denholm, Chief Executive Officer at the Bank (Right). Earlier this year, the Bank invested £4m in nanomaterial producer, iGii to accelerate customer projects, increase its manufacturing capacity, and deepen its research and development to explore further applications of its patented Gii™ material. 

 

The Bank has now published its  third full year accounts.

Scotland’s development bank, The Scottish National Investment Bank (“the Bank”), made “clear and demonstrable achievement and progress” in its third full financial year, according to its chairman Willie Watt.

The Bank was established to drive growth in the Scottish economy by addressing three “grand challenges" facing society: the climate emergency; community inequalities; and the requirement to enhance productivity through greater commercial innovation. All investments made must deliver against these three missions.

The Bank’s latest annual report, covering the period 1 April 2023 to 31 March 2024, reveals its income of £19.3m was up more than 80% on the previous year at £10.7m, and exceeded its operating costs of £16.1m for the first time.

The Bank committed £224.6m in capital over the 2023/24 financial year and enabled a further £400m in additional  investment alongside the Bank.

Willie Watt, the Bank’s chairman, said: “The Bank was established to be an impact investor, to drive growth in our economy, provide financial returns on public capital and deliver social impact. These are long-term goals and we are operating in a challenging macroeconomic environment, which makes our progress all the more significant.

“The Bank’s income exceeded operational expenses for the first time. This is significant but we are conscious that in our early years this remains sensitive to the mix of investments, continued deployment, and availability of capital to invest.

“This acceleration towards profitability has been progressive, with our income growing significantly year-on-year.  A key factor in this was the clarity provided by Scottish ministers at the time of our founding, with a bold commitment to capitalise the Bank with £2 billion over 10 years. 

“The Bank was conceived as a perpetual institution that would redeploy investment returns for the people of Scotland and we need to make this structure a reality.”

In addition to increasing its income, the Bank’s committed investments rose, bringing the total amount of capital the Bank has deployed since inception in November 2020 to around £640m. 

The latest set of accounts reflect chief executive Al Denholm’s first full year in the role. He said: “While prudently managing our risks, we have been able to increase our commitments to investee companies as they scale and grow, and we have invested in some exciting new projects, which we believe will deliver significant impact to Scotland’s economy. 

“Some highlights over the past year include £100m investment with UKIB in to Ardersier port, £6m for cancer therapeutics specialist Cumulus Oncology and a follow-on investment of £20m in to Thriving Investment’s mid-market rental home fund.

“As set out in our Business Plan, we have less capital to invest in the current financial year than we did for the period covered in these results. This will require us to be more focused, prioritising the opportunities that can maximise progress towards our missions and that are likely to attract additional capital from other investors, while ensuring an appropriate return.”

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