THE CARDIFF PROPERTY PLC

ANNUAL REPORT AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 SEPTEMBER 2020

www.cardiff-property.com

Stock code: CDFF

The group, including Campmoss, specialises in property investment and development in the Thames Valley. The total portfolio including the jointly controlled Campmoss investment and development portfolio, valued in excess of £35m, is primarily located to the west of London, close to Heathrow Airport and in Surrey and Berkshire.

OUR MISSION

The group seeks to enhance shareholder value by developing its property portfolio and through stragetic acquisitions.

CONTENTS

01

Financial Highlights

27

Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income

02

Locations

28

Consolidated Balance Sheet

03

Chairman's Statement

29

Consolidated Cash Flow Statement

05

Strategic Report

30

Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity

10

Directors and Advisers

31

Notes to the Financial Statements

11

Report of the Directors

49

Company Balance Sheet

13

Corporate Governance

50

Company Statement of Changes in Equity

16

Remuneration Report

51

Notes to the Financial Statements

20

Statement of Directors' Responsibilities

55

Notice of Annual General Meeting

21

Independent Auditor's Report

59

Financial Calendar

27

Consolidated Income Statement

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

01

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

"During the financial year under review the UK property market suffered a difficult and unprecedented trading period.

Political and economic uncertainties surrounding the UK's final exit from the European Union together with current and ongoing concerns regarding the effects of Covid-19 undermined the confidence of occupiers and investors. The Thames Valley property market our key business area, reflected these concerns.

Inevitably letting and development activity in the retail and office market has been challenging, placing rental levels and lease negotiations under pressure. Working from home, internet procurement and the requirement for flexible office space is determining strategy and future trends will depend on the speed of the UK economic recovery.

Sales of new homes in the Thames Valley, despite government initiatives, declined in the third quarter of the year leading to lower asking prices. Increased activity is being reported over the last few weeks with pricing in certain locations returning to previous levels. The demand for residential lettings has remained high with rents remaining similar to last year."

  1. Richard Wollenberg Chairman

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

2020

2019

Net Assets

£'000

29,099

28,343

Net Assets Per Share

£

24.36

22.85

Profit Before Tax

£'000

1,959

1,653

Earnings Per Share - Basic and diluted

pence

148.2

123.1

Dividend Per Share

pence

17.6

17.1

Gearing

%

Nil

Nil

www.cardiff-property.com

02

LOCATIONS

The Group specialises in property investment and development in the Thames Valley.

J21

M1

M25

M40

J4

J2

Burnham

J1

J16

J1

Maidenhead

Slough

Reading

Windsor

J15

J1

Central London

M4

Egham

J13

Heathrow

J10

J1

Wokingham

Bracknell

J12

10

il s

m e

J4

Woking

J11

Basingstoke

M3

3

2

J10

0

M25J10

m

0

i

m

l

il

e

e

s

s

4

Guildford

l

0

Farnham

s

m

i

e

BRACKNELL

1-10 Market Street*

12 retail units on ground and first floors totalling 7,900 sq. ft. Let primarily to local businesses and franchisees on medium term leases producing £164,000 p.a.

Alston House, 25 Market Street*

Site completed in 2019 achieving 10 retail units on ground and first floor totalling 12,350 sq. ft. (1,148 sq. m) and 12 two- bedroom apartments on the second and third floors.

Gowring House Apartments*

Conversion of 30 one and two-bedroom apartments over the five upper floors with lift access. 25 apartments sold, four let and one available for sale. Gowring House is conveniently located for Bracknell railway station with direct connections to London Waterloo and Reading and within walking distance of the new town centre, including the Lexicon and Peel Shopping Centre.

Gowring House Commercial*

3 ground floor retail units let on medium term leases producing £84,000 p.a.

Westview*

Adjacent to Gowring House, eight retail units on ground and first floors totalling 10,500 sq. ft. fully let producing £211,000 p.a.

BURNHAM

The Priory*

26,000 sq. ft. headquarters office building. 9,000 sq. ft. used as a business centre and three floors of adjacent offices. Part of the business centre is available. Producing total gross income of £520,000 p.a.

CARDIFF

Cowbridge Road

14,500 sq. ft. let to The Royal Mail as a mail sorting centre at £40,000 p.a.

EGHAM

Heritage Court

Four retail units let on medium term leases producing £78,000 p.a.

Runnymede Road

Residential property adjacent to The White House. Conversion of loft and rear extension and works completed in 2019. A memorandum for sale has been issued (subject to contract).

Station Road

Company Head Office totalling 1,450 sq. ft.

The White House

Five ground floor retail units with one floor of offices above totalling 12,000 sq. ft. Tenants include Shaw Trust and Riven Associates, producing £206,000 p.a.

GUILDFORD

Tangley Place, Worplesdon*

2.5 acres, land in green belt.

MAIDENHEAD

Clivemont House*

Following revised planning permission for 80 one and two- bedroom apartments, exchange of contracts took place during the year with completion in October 2020.

Highway House*

Building demolished. Planning approval for a new 48,000 sq. ft. gross B1 office scheme. Agents appointed to seek a pre-letting. Land let on short term lease for car parking at a rental of £45,000 p.a.

Maidenhead Enterprise Centre

Six business units totalling 14,000 sq. ft. let to local businesses on medium term leases producing £141,000 p.a.

SLOUGH

Datchet Meadows*

Development of 37 apartments. All sold on long leases producing ground rents of £21,500 p.a.

READING

Tilehurst

At Tilehurst, Reading, our planning application for a revised scheme of 6 residential units was refused. Whilst this is being taken to Appeal further discussions for the future of the site are in progress.

WINDSOR

Windsor Business Centre

Four business units totalling 9,500 sq. ft. let on short term leases producing rental of £182,000 p.a. Tenants include Joyce Meyer Ministries and USB Flash Drive. Planning approval for a new office scheme totalling 20,000 sq. ft. recently granted.

WOKING

Britannia Wharf*

At Britannia Wharf, Woking, following the grant of planning permission for a private residential scheme totalling 52 apartments, Campmoss entered into a Joint Venture Agreement with a well-known Surrey based developer to undertake the development of the scheme.

*Owned by Campmoss our Joint Venture partner

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

03

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT

DEAR SHAREHOLDER,

During the financial year under review the UK property market suffered a difficult and unprecedented trading period.

Political and economic uncertainties surrounding the UK's final exit from the European Union together with current and ongoing concerns regarding the effects of Covid-19 undermined the confidence of occupiers and investors. The Thames Valley property market our key business area, reflected these concerns.

Inevitably letting and development activity in the retail and office market has been challenging, placing rental levels and lease negotiations under pressure. Working from home, internet procurement and the requirement for flexible office space is determining strategy and future trends will depend on the speed of the UK economic recovery.

Sales of new homes in the Thames Valley, despite government initiatives, declined in the third quarter of the year leading to lower asking prices. Increased activity is being reported over the last few weeks with pricing in certain locations returning to previous levels. The demand for residential lettings has remained high with rents remaining similar to last year.

FINANCIAL

For the year to 30 September 2020, the Group profit before tax was £1.96m (2019: £1.65m). This figure includes a fair value decrease of £0.148m (2019: £0.022m increase) for the Group and a profit of £1.36m (2019: £0.90m) in respect of our post tax profit and pre-dividend share of Campmoss Property Company Limited, our 47.62% owned Joint Venture. During the year, the Company received a dividend of £0.64m (2019: £0.5m) from its investment in Campmoss Property.

Revenue for the year which represented gross rental income, excluding Campmoss, totalled £0.65m (2019: £0.65m).

The profit after tax attributable to shareholders for the financial year was £1.81m (2019: £1.54m) and the earnings per share was 148.2p (2019: 123.1p).

At the year-end, the Company's commercial portfolio was valued by Kempton Carr Croft. The residential property at 14 Runnymede Road was based on a memorandum for sale. The total portfolio was valued at £5.81m (2019: £5.96m). This value excludes the Company's freehold office property, which was also valued by Kempton Carr Croft and is included in the balance sheet at valuation under property, plant and equipment..

Property when completed and held for re-sale is held as stock at the lower of cost or net realisable value. At the year-end this relates to commercial property at The Windsor Business Centre.

The Group's total property portfolio, including the jointly controlled Campmoss investment and development portfolio, was valued at £35.7m (2019: £30m). The increase in the

property value attributable to Campmoss is as a result of the increase in fair value of Clivemont House, Maidenhead, which was sold post the year end and construction costs during the year at Britannia Wharf, Woking, offset by the fair value decrease of approximately 5% of the remaining property

in the Group. Residential property at Alston House and Gowring House, Bracknell and the residential development at Britannia Wharf, Woking are held as stock in Campmoss. The Company's share of the net assets of Campmoss was £16.3m (2019: £15.6m).

The Group's net assets as at the year-end were £29.10m (2019: £28.34m) equivalent to £24.36 per share (2019: £22.85) an increase of 6.6% over the year (2019: 4.9%). The Group, including Campmoss, has adequate financial facilities and resources to complete works in progress and the current development programme. Cash balances are held on short term deposit. At the year-end, the Company had nil gearing (2019: nil). During the year the Company purchased and cancelled 45,694 (2019: 12,567) ordinary shares at a total cost of £773,143 (2019: £220,062).

The Company may hold in treasury any of its own shares purchased. This gives the Company the ability to reissue treasury shares and provides greater flexibility in the management of its capital base. At the year end the Company held nil (2019 : nil) shares in treasury. Any shares purchased by the Company not held in treasury will be cancelled and the number of shares in issue reduced accordingly. The Company intends to continue its policy of purchasing its own shares, whether to be held in treasury or to be cancelled, and a resolution renewing the Directors' authority will be placed before the forthcoming Annual General Meeting on 14 January 2021. This authority will only be exercised in circumstances where the Directors regard such purchases to be in the best interests of shareholders as a whole and is subject to the waiver under Rule 9 of the Takeover Code being approved by shareholders as set out in the document accompanying this report. Full details of the Rule 9 Waiver are also available on the Company's website www.cardiff-property.com

Current IFRS accounting recommends that deferred tax is chargeable on the difference between, the cost of properties, including applicable indexation and quoted investments and their current market value. However, IFRS accounting does not require the same treatment in respect of the Group's unquoted investment in Campmoss Property, our 47.62% owned Joint Venture, which represents a substantial part

of the Company's net assets. Whilst provision is made in Campmoss accounts for deferred tax, should the shares held in Campmoss be disposed of, for indicative purposes, based on the value in the Company's balance sheet at the year-end this would result in a tax liability of £3.10m (2019 : £2.65m) equivalent to £2.60 (2019: £2.14) per share calculated using a tax rate of 19% (2019: 17%). This information is provided to shareholders as an additional non-statutory disclosure.

www.cardiff-property.com

04

CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT CONTINUED

DIVIDEND

The Directors recommend a final dividend of 12.8p per share (2019: 12.5p) making a total dividend for the year of 17.6p

(2019: 17.1p). an increase of 2.9%. The final dividend will be paid on 29 January 2021 to shareholders on the register at 15 January 2021.

THE PROPERTY PORTFOLIO

The Group's investment and development activities continue to be primarily located in the Thames Valley to the West of London, close to Heathrow Airport and in Surrey and Berkshire. Further details are set out in the strategic report on pages 5 to 6.

Despite the difficult circumstances experienced by the UK property market the Group's portfolio continues to be primarily let with a number of new leases being completed during the current quarter.

The majority of rents due for the last two quarters to September this year have been received which reflects our policy of early liaising with tenants and assisting where sensible with a deferment of rent, primarily agreeing to monthly payments in arrears rather than quarterly in advance. Inevitably government measures to help small businesses has assisted tenants to meet their lease commitments.,

At the time of writing this report, new lettings have been completed where units have become available.

During the year we secured planning for our property in Windsor and plans are being updated for our property in Cardiff. Campmoss, our Joint Venture Company, successfully let a number of retail units at Alston House, Bracknell with the majority of the new apartments on the 2nd and 3rd floors let on Assured Tenancy Agreements. Following the planning permissions granted at Britannia Wharf, Woking and Clivemont House, Maidenhead a Joint Venture to develop the residential project at Britannia Wharf, Woking was entered into with

the site at Clivemont House, Maidenhead sold to a National House Builder. The contract for sale of Clivemont House was exchanged prior to the year end and completed post the year end with the proceeds of sale being recognised in October 2020.

QUOTED INVESTMENTS

The Company retains a small portfolio of quoted retail bonds and equity investments the former providing an attractive medium-term income stream. The value of the portfolio has marginally decreased over the year but remains in excess of original cost. The equity investments include Aquila Services Group plc and Galileo Resources plc both of which I remain as a Non-Executive Director.

RELATIONSHIP AGREEMENT

The Company has entered into a written and legally binding relationship agreement with myself, its controlling shareholder, to address the requirements of LR9.2.2AD of the Listing Rules.

MANAGEMENT AND TEAM

The unprecedented circumstances surrounding the property market and the Group's continued success indicates the strength and professionalism of our small management team. In the current environment, day to day management of the Group's portfolio places immense pressure on the team and I wish to take this opportunity of thanking them and our Joint Venture partner for their support and achievements over the year.

OUTLOOK

Continuing government measures to mitigate the physical and economic consequences of Covid-19 will impact the property market. It is encouraging to read that potential vaccines may become available next year and predicting the next few months will be extremely difficult. It will be essential for investors and businesses to retain confidence for the future.

The anticipated further government support for the residential market will be important to the Group and with interest rates having moved even lower yields available in the commercial property market remain attractive.

Activity in both the residential and commercial market has seen an increase over the last few weeks and I look forward to reporting to you further at the half year.

  1. Richard Wollenberg Chairman
    23 November 2020

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

05

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

STRATEGIC REPORT

REVIEW OF OUR BUSINESS

The Group specialises in property investment and development in the Thames Valley. The portfolio under management, including the total value of properties owned by our 47.62% Joint Venture, Campmoss Property Company Limited (and its subsidiaries), is valued at the year-end in excess of £28.5m. The Group's methodology is to acquire sites which, generally, have difficult planning considerations and use its expertise to add value by achieving planning and developing out the sites. The Group's business model is to grow by managing its existing freehold property portfolio and rapid response to opportunities as they arise and is focused on the long term.

PROPERTY PORTFOLIO UNDER MANAGEMENT

The total property portfolio represents investment and development properties. The figures below include 100% of the assets of our jointly controlled Joint Venture Campmoss:

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Cardiff Group

Investment properties

5,857

5,995

Own use freehold property

228

281

Development properties

(inventory)

688

674

6,773

6,950

Campmoss Group

Investment properties

18,691

15,534

Development properties

(inventory)

10,258

7,556

28,949

23,090

Total

35,722

30,040

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY PORTFOLIO

The Windsor Business Centre, Windsor, comprises four business units all let on short term leases. Planning Permission has recently been granted for a new office scheme totalling, 20,000 sq. ft. gross. The new scheme can incorporate a number of units and a marketing programme to seek a pre-letting is currently being prepared. The existing units are available for sale.

The White House, Egham, includes five ground floor retail units with air-conditioned offices on the upper floor. The retail units are all let on medium or short-term leases and discussions are currently in hand to grant a new lease for one of the Units. It is likely that the new rentals will show a marginal increase over that currently received. Part of the upper floor offices remain available and asking rents have been marginally reduced to encourage a new occupier.

The Maidenhead Enterprise Centre, Maidenhead, comprises six individual business units. Individual units include industrial use on the ground floor with offices above. All units are let on a mixture of short and medium-term leases. New tenants are being sought in respect of two leases that expire next year.

Cowbridge Road, Cardiff, comprises a commercial property on two floors currently let to Royal Mail for use as a mail and sorting centre. The tenant is holding over and a new medium- term lease is under discussion. A further planning application is being prepared and discussions with a local housing association are in hand.

At Heritage Court, Egham, which adjoins the Company's offices, the building comprises four retail units all of which are let on short-term leases. One tenant is currently holding over, and discussions are in hand to grant a new lease.

At Tilehurst, Reading, our planning application for a revised scheme of 6 residential units was refused. Whilst this is being taken to Appeal further discussions for the future of the site are in progress.

CAMPMOSS PROPERTY COMPANY LIMITED & SUBSIDIARIES During the year, the Campmoss Group, including its wholly owned subsidiaries, Campmoss Property Developments Limited and Campmoss Property (Tangley Place) Limited continued to actively manage its portfolio.

The Campmoss portfolio includes a range of office, retail and residential tenancies in Burnham, Bracknell, Maidenhead and Woking which require active management in today's challenging market.

Results for the Campmoss Group are summarised below:

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Revenue

1,226

1,107

Cost of sales

(1,341)

(1,268)

Other income

184

250

Admin expenses

(138)

(148)

Surplus on fair value movement

of investment properties

3,043

1,837

Net interest

74

122

Profit before tax

3,048

1,900

Tax

(188)

(2)

Profit after tax

2,860

1,898

Total comprehensive income for

the year

2,860

1,898

Dividends

(1,350)

(1,050)

Net assets

34,278

32,768

www.cardiff-property.com

06

STRATEGIC REPORT CONTINUED

ANALYSIS OF GROUP PROPERTY PORTFOLIO

By Capital Value (%)

By Capital Value (%)

By Rental Income (%)

(including development properties)

(excluding development properties)

(excluding development properties)

6

25

8

12

32

32

43

39

42

17

7

37

  • Office n Residential n Retail n Industrial

CAMPMOSS PORTFOLIO

At Britannia Wharf, Woking, following the grant of planning permission for a private residential scheme totalling 52 apartments, Campmoss entered into a Joint Venture agreement with a well-known Surrey based developer to undertake the development of the scheme. Completion is anticipated towards the autumn of next year and local agents have been appointed to market the apartments for sale.

The anticipated further government incentives especially for first time buyers will be an important factor for the sales programme.

At Clivemont House, Maidenhead, as reported last year planning permission was granted for 80 apartments. Following several approaches from both National and locally based developers the site has been sold. The sale took place

in October 2020 at a figure in excess of last year's book value with the property being revalued at the year end. The proceeds received in October have been placed on short term deposit.

At Market Street, Bracknell, four adjacent buildings known as, 1-10 Market Street, Alston House, Westview and Gowring House comprise a total of 33 retail units on ground and first floor, with residential on the upper floors at Gowring House and Alston House. 30 retail units are let on medium term leases, primarily to small local business users. At the year- end Campmoss held 5 apartments at Gowring House and 12 apartments at Alston House the majority of which are let on assured shorthold tenancy agreements.

At The Priory, Stomp Road, Burnham, the 26,000 sq. ft. existing office building comprises 17,000 sq. ft. of office premises on three floors and an adjoining Grade II Listed Office Building of 9,000 sq. ft. which is used as Business Centre. Part of the offices and the Business Centre have been let on short-term leases pending the outcome of a detailed planning application for the re-development of part of the site for a care home.

At Highway House, Norreys Drive, Maidenhead, planning was previously granted for a 48,000 sq. ft. gross new office scheme. A revised and updated office scheme to accord with changing market positions is currently being prepared. The cleared site is let to an adjacent office user as a car park.

Taking into account difficult market conditions in the Thames Valley property market and on external advice where available the portfolio was valued at the year-end by the Directors of Campmoss and assessed at a current market value of £28.9m (2019: £23.1m). This figure includes work in progress and completed property held for re-sale which is valued at the lower of costs or net realisable value.

Total revenue for Campmoss for the year amounted to £1.2m (2019: £1.1m) representing gross rental income. During the year Campmoss paid a dividend of £1.35m (2019: £1.05m) to its shareholders.

At the year-end Campmoss retained substantial cash balances which will fully fund the existing development programme. Cash balances are held on short-term deposits and gearing was nil (2019: nil).

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

07

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

STRATEGIC REPORT CONTINUED

Dividend per share

Net assets per share

Profit before tax

Earnings per share

pence

pence

£'000

pence

2020

17.60

24.36

1,959

148.2

2019

17.10

22.85

1,653

123.1

2018

16.60

21.78

1,114

80.6

2017

15.50

21.26

3,359

253.7

2016

14.00

18.76

2,673

195.3

PRINCIPAL RISKS AND UNCERTAINTIES

The principal risks currently faced by the Group and its Joint Venture investment relate to:

  • average unexpired tenancies;
  • changes in planning legislation;
  • value of property portfolio;
  • development risk;
  • changes in interest rates;
  • Brexit;
  • government policies and taxation; and
  • the economic impact of COVID-19.

The Group mitigates these risks by managing its property portfolio taking regard of market rent and the terms of individual leases.

The Directors monitor available sources of information regarding the value of property and level of rental yields. They are also aware of potential changes in government policy and the implication of planning legislation and take action to reduce the risk to the Group where possible. External valuations

of property held by Cardiff are commissioned annually. The Directors of Campmoss, the Joint Venture, carry out internal valuations of the Campmoss portfolio.

Development risk is mitigated by the use of experienced teams or development partners with robust development agreements.

The Directors have regular meetings with funding providers to discuss availability of business finance should it be required.

Cash is deposited in fixed and variable interest rate accounts with such rates monitored to determine the appropriate length of time and level of funds to invest.

KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS

The key performance indicators used by the Directors for monitoring the performance of the business are shown in the graphs above and the consolidated five-year summary.

The effectiveness of the Group's strategy is reflected in its performance over recent years. In the three years to

30 September 2019 net assets per share increased 21.8% from £18.76p per share to £22.85p per share, with a further increase of 6.6% to £24.36 at 30 September 2020. The Group benefits from substantial cash deposits and ongoing profitability. The dividend increased from 14.00p per share to 17.10p per share over the period from September 2016 to September 2019 and, for the current year, has been increased by 2.9% to 17.60p per share.

www.cardiff-property.com

08

STRATEGIC REPORT CONTINUED

CONSOLIDATED FIVE YEAR SUMMARY

2020

2019

2018

2017

2016

Income statement items

Revenue being gross rental income

£'000

650

647

650

552

580

Profit before taxation

£'000

1,959

1,653

1,114

3,359

2,673

Dividends paid and proposed in respect of

the year (1)

£'000

211

212

208

196

178

Dividend cover (2)

times

10.8

7.8

5.4

17.1

15.0

Dividend per share (3)

pence

17.6

17.1

16.6

15.5

14.0

Earnings per share (4)

pence

148.2

123.1

80.6

253.7

195.3

Balance sheet items

Total assets

£'000

29,780

29,096

28,043

27,649

24,537

Total liabilities

£'000

(681)

(753)

(753)

(789)

(698)

Net assets

£'000

29,099

28,343

27,290

26,860

23,839

Number of shares in issue at

30 September

'000

1,195

1,240

1,253

1,264

1,271

Net assets per share attributable to

shareholders (5)

£

24.36

22.85

21.78

21.26

18.76

Gearing

per cent

nil

nil

nil

nil

nil

  1. Dividends paid and proposed in respect of the year represent the interim paid and the final declared in any one financial year.
  2. Dividend cover is calculated as profit before taxation divided by dividends paid and proposed in respect of the year.
  3. Dividend per share is the interim dividend paid and final dividend proposed for the year ended 30 September.
  4. Earnings per share is calculated as profit after taxation divided by the weighted average number of shares, note 11.
  5. Net assets per share attributable to shareholders is calculated as net assets divided by number of shares in issue at 30 September.

Revenue, being gross rents receivable, amounted to £650,000 (2019: £647,000).

Sales of investment properties are treated as disposals of non-current assets with only the gain or loss on sale based on the difference between the proceeds and the balance sheet valuation being reflected in the income statement. Sales made by Campmoss are not included in the Group's revenue in accordance with IFRS.

Your Board has again obtained independent valuations of the property portfolio (excluding those held by Campmoss which are based on Directors' valuations). These external valuations result in a decrease in the value of the Group's commercial portfolio of £145,000 (2019: £60,000 increase) and a decrease in the residential portfolio of £3,000 (2019: £38,000 decrease). Movements on the valuation of investment properties are taken to the Income Statement in accordance with IFRS.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

09

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

STRATEGIC REPORT CONTINUED

STATEMENT ON S172 OF THE COMPANIES ACT 2006

Section 172(1) of The Companies Act 2006 requires Directors of a Company to act in the way they consider, acting in good faith, would be most likely to promote the success of the Company for the benefit of its members as a whole taking into account:

  1. the likely consequences of any decision in the long term,
  2. the interests of the company's employees,
  3. the need to foster the company's business relationships with suppliers, customers and others,
  4. the impact of the company's operations on the community and the environment,
  5. the desirability of the company maintaining a reputation for high standards of business conduct, and
  6. the need to act fairly as between members of the company.

The Group is fortunate to have a loyal and long standing shareholder base, and shareholders views are taken into account and discussed at Board meetings. As the Board are shareholders they consider any decisions made align with shareholders' best interests. The Company adopts a long term investment and development strategy as set out in the Viability Statement on page 15.

The Company has 6 employees including three directors. Employees' views are regularly sought as the team has a very close working relationship.

The Group selects suppliers based on their standards of business conduct and whose ethics in terms of environment and community align with the Group.

Any matters that are considered necessary are voted on at the Company's AGM to ensure fairness between shareholders.

CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY

In carrying out the Group's acquisition, development and management of commercial and residential property, we aim to conduct our business with honesty, integrity and openness, respecting human rights and the interests of our shareholders and employees. We aim to provide timely, regular and reliable information on the business to all our shareholders and conduct our operations to the highest standards.

We strive to create a safe and healthy working environment for the wellbeing of our staff and create a trusting and respectful environment, where all members of staff are encouraged to feel responsible for the reputation and performance of the Company. We continue to establish a diverse and dynamic workforce with team players who have the experience and knowledge of the business operations and markets in which we operate. Through maintaining good communications, members of staff are encouraged to realise the objectives of the Company and their own potential.

The Group's policy is to minimise the risk of any adverse effect on the environment associated with its development activities with a thoughtful consideration of such key areas as energy use, pollution, transport, land use, ecology, renewable resources, health and wellbeing. The Group also aims to ensure that its contractors meet their legislative and regulatory requirements and that codes of best practice are met and exceeded. The Group is committed to maintaining high environmental standards in all its operations and minimising the impact of its activities on the surrounding environment. The nature of the work that we are involved in means that the Group has an opportunity, not only to minimise the negative impact on the environment but also to enhance and improve the environment in which we all live and work.

  1. Richard Wollenberg Chairman
    23 November 2020

www.cardiff-property.com

10

DIRECTORS AND ADVISERS

DIRECTORS

  1. Richard Wollenberg Chairman and Chief Executive

Karen L Chandler FCA

Finance Director

Nigel D Jamieson BSc, FCSI

Independent Non-Executive Director

SECRETARY

Karen L Chandler FCA

HEAD OFFICE

56 Station Road, Egham, TW20 9LF Telephone: 01784 437444

Fax: 01784 439157

E-mail:webmaster@cardiff-property.com

Web: www.cardiff-property.com

REGISTERED OFFICE

56 Station Road, Egham, Surrey, TW20 9LF

REGISTERED NUMBER

00022705

AUDITOR

Crowe U.K. LLP

Chartered Accountants

55 Ludgate Hill, London, EC4M 7JW

STOCKBROKERS AND FINANCIAL ADVISERS

Shore Capital

Cassini House, 57-58 St. James's Street, London, SW1A 1LD

BANKERS HSBC Bank Plc

2nd Floor, 62-76 Park Street, London, SE1 9DZ

SOLICITORS

Blake Morgan LLP

One Central Square, Cardiff, CF10 1FS

Charsley Harrison LLP

Windsor House, Victoria Street, Windsor, SL4 1EN

REGISTRAR AND TRANSFER OFFICE

Neville Registrars Limited

Neville House, Steelpark Road, Halesowen, B62 8HD Telephone: 0121 585 1131

J RICHARD WOLLENBERG (AGED 72)

Chairman and chief Executive

Was appointed a Director of the Company in 1980, became chief Executive in 1981 and chairman in 1989. J Richard Wollenberg has over 35 years' experience in property investment and development and has been actively involved in a number of corporate acquisitions, flotations, mergers and capital reorganisations of public and private companies. He is an Executive Director of Campmoss Property Company Limited and its subsidiaries. He is also a Non-Executive Director of Aquila Services Group plc, which is quoted on the London Stock Exchange and a Non-Executive Director of Galileo Resources plc, is quoted on AIM.

KAREN L CHANDLER (AGED 48)

Finance Director

Was appointed a Director of the Company on 21 January 2016. She is a chartered accountant having qualified with KPMG and has previously served as CFO of AIM quoted Zenergy Power plc (now Cloudcall Group plc) and of a number of private companies including GLID Wind Farms Limited and Advetec Holdings Limited.

NIGEL D JAMIESON BSC, FCSI (AGED 70)

Independent Non-Executive Director

Was appointed to the Board as a Non-Executive Director in 1991 and is chairman of the Company's Audit and Remuneration Committees. He has over 35 years' experience of the UK property market both as a general practice surveyor and as an investment analyst. He is an Executive Director of several independent property investment companies active in the London area and acts as an independent consultant to private clients on a range of property related matters.

NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF WHOLLY OWNED SUBSIDIARY FIRST CHOICE ESTATES PLC

DEREK M JOSEPH BCOM, FCIS (AGED 70)

Derek is Chair of Aquila Services Group plc, quoted on the main market of the London Stock Exchange and specialising in urban regeneration and affordable housing. The Group trades through its three major subsidiaries, Altair Consultancy

  • Advisory Services Ltd and Aquila Treasury and Financial Solutions Ltd which is a treasury advisory company registered in the United Kingdom with the Financial Conduct Authority. The Aquila Group is currently undertaking assignments in
    20 countries around the world and works for governments, city authorities, pan-national organisations, housing NGOs, trade bodies, as well as commercial organisations and banks involved in property investment.

A non-executive director of Assetcore Limited a second stage Fintech company specialising in security management and an investment advisor to two major endowed charities.

Previously an Executive Director of Tribal Treasury Services Ltd and managing Director of HACAS Group PLC (now part of the Tribal Group), the largest independent quoted housing regeneration consultancy advising housing associations, local authorities and government departments on social housing, care and asset management. Derek's specialism was financial planning, structures, Joint Ventures and funding particularly for estate regeneration.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

11

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS

The Directors submit their annual report and the audited financial statements for the year ended 30 September 2020.

RESULTS

The results of the Group for the year are set out in the audited financial statements on pages 27 to 48.

DIVIDENDS

The Directors recommend a final dividend for the year of 12.8p per share (2019: 12.5p) payable on 29 January 2021. The total dividend paid and proposed in respect of the year, including the interim dividend of 4.8p (2019: 4.6p) per share, amounts to 17.6p per share (2019: 17.1p).

PRINCIPAL ACTIVITY

The principal activity of the Group during the year continued to be property investment and development. Certain information that fulfils these requirements and those of the UK Listing Authority Disclosure Rules and Transparency Rules which requires a management report can be found in the Chairman's Statement and Strategic Report on pages 3 to 9. A description of corporate social responsibility activities is included in the Strategic Report on page 9.

There are no persons with whom the Company has contractual or other arrangements which are essential to the business of the Company other than those included in the related party disclosures in note 25 on page 46.

BUSINESS REVIEW

See Strategic Report on pages 5 to 9.

LIKELY FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS

The Group expects to continue to generate rental income from its investment property portfolio. The Joint Venture is expected to continue with the development at Britannia Wharf which is due to complete during the next year. The Group expects to develop Windsor Business Centre now planning has been granted and will continue to try to secure planning at Colliers Way, Tilehurst.

FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT RISK

The Group's financial assets and liabilities are comprised predominantly of equity instruments in a Joint Venture, equity instruments in listed entities, term deposits and cash. The equity instruments represent long term positions taken by the Group and are held for both capital growth and income. The term and cash deposits which are held in financial institutions with an acceptable risk rating and have access terms which allow the Directors to pursue the Group's business objectives and service dividend policy. The risk profile and maturity of the Group's financial assets and liabilities is set out in note 26. The Group has not entered into and hedging arrangements.

DIRECTORS

The current Directors of the Company and the Non-Executive Director of a wholly owned subsidiary are listed on page 10. All served throughout the financial year.

In accordance with the Company's articles of association, J Richard Wollenberg will retire by rotation at the Annual General Meeting.

DIRECTORS' INTERESTS

Directors' and their immediate families' interests in the ordinary shares of the Company were as follows:

At

At

30 September

1 October

2020

2019

Beneficial

Beneficial

K L Chandler

100

100

N D Jamieson

1,500

1,500

J R Wollenberg

561,298

561,298

There were no changes in the Directors' shareholdings as stated above between 1 October 2020 and 23 November 2020.

At 30 September 2020 J Richard Wollenberg held 25,000 (2019: 25,000) ordinary shares of £1 each in Campmoss Property Company Limited, a Joint Venture, representing 2.38% (2019: 2.38%) of the issued share capital of that Company. No other Director has any interest in the share capital of any other Group Company.

DIRECTORS' OPTIONS

No Director held options at 30 September 2020 (2019: nil).

SUBSTANTIAL SHAREHOLDINGS

Other than J. Richard Wollenberg referred to above who holds 46.99%, the Company has not been notified of any holdings of 3% or more in the share capital of the Company at 23 November 2020.

ALLOTMENT OF SHARES

As special business at the Annual General Meeting, a resolution will be proposed to renew the power of your Directors to allot equity securities, pursuant to section 551 of the Companies Act 2006, such power being limited to one- third of the issued share capital of the Company. This authority may be renewed for five years but, in common with modern corporate governance practice, it is your Directors' intention that the resolution be limited to one year and that its renewal be proposed at each Annual General Meeting.

PRE-EMPTION RIGHTS

As special business at the Annual General Meeting a resolution will be proposed to renew for a further year the power of your Directors to allot equity securities for cash without first offering such securities to existing shareholders. The aggregate nominal amount of equity securities which may be allotted in this way shall not exceed £11,945, representing 5% of the present issued ordinary share capital of the Company.

www.cardiff-property.com

12

REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS CONTINUED

PURCHASE OF OWN SHARES

At the Annual General Meeting held on 16 January 2020, authority was renewed empowering your Directors to make market purchases of up to 185,907 of the Company's own ordinary shares of 20p each. Under that authority, your Directors made market purchases of 45,694 shares (nominal value £9,138.80) representing 3.7% of the issued share capital at 16 January 2020. These shares were purchased for an aggregate value of £773,143 (including stamp duty and charges) and cancelled. The number of shares in issue following these transactions was 1,194,511.

The existing authority for the Company to purchase its own shares expires at the conclusion of the Annual General Meeting to be held on 14 January 2021. The Directors wish to renew the authority and consent is therefore sought to approve resolution 8 set out in the Notice of Meeting on page 55 authorising the Directors to purchase up to 179,057 ordinary shares of 20p each (representing 14.99% of the present issued share capital), at a minimum price of 20p and a maximum price equal to 105% of the average of the middle market quotations for the ordinary shares of the Company as derived from the Daily Official List of The London Stock Exchange for the ten business days before the relevant purchase is made. The authority will expire at the conclusion of the Annual General Meeting in 2022 and it is your Directors' intention that a resolution for its renewal will be proposed at each succeeding Annual General Meeting.

The authority will only be exercised when the Directors are satisfied that it is in the interests of the Company so to do. The Company may hold in treasury any of its own shares purchased under this authority. This would give the Company the ability to reissue treasury shares and provides greater flexibility in the management of its capital base. Any shares purchased by the Company not held in treasury will be cancelled and the number of shares in issue reduced accordingly.

DONATIONS

The Company made no political donations during this year or last.

AUDITOR

Crowe U.K. LLP were appointed in 2019 and in accordance with Section 485 of the Companies Act 2006, a resolution proposing that Crowe U.K. LLP be re-appointed will be put at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting.

PROVISION OF INFORMATION TO AUDITOR

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

GREENHOUSE GAS DISCLOSURES

The Cardiff Property plc has minimal greenhouse gas emissions to report from its operations and does not have responsibility for any other emissions producing sources under the 2018 Energy and Carbon Reporting Regulations, (including those within our underlying investment portfolio).

STREAMLINED ENERGY & CARBON REPORTING

The Group has not disclosed energy and carbon usage as it qualifies as a low energy user, using less than 40MWh per annum.

DIRECTORS AND OFFICER'S INDEMNITY INSURANCE

The Directors of the Company are covered by Directors and Officers Indemnity Insurance to the amount of £500,000 in each loss per policy period, with a sub-limit of £250,000 in respect of defence costs for pollution.

DISCLOSURE AND TRANSPARENCY RULES

Details of the Company's share capital are given in note 20 respectively. The Company has no share options.

There are no restrictions on transfer or limitations on the holding of the ordinary shares. None of the shares carry any special rights with regard to the control of the Company. There are no known arrangements under which the financial rights are held by a person other than the holder and no known agreements or restrictions on share transfers and voting rights.

As far as the Company is aware there are no persons with significant direct or indirect holdings other than the Director as noted above.

The provisions covering the appointment and replacement of Directors are contained in the Company's articles, any changes to which require shareholder approval.

There are no significant agreements to which the Company is party that take effect, alter or terminate upon a change of control following a takeover bid and no agreements for compensation for loss of office or employment that become effective as a result of such a bid.

RELATIONSHIP AGREEMENT

The Company has entered into a written and legally binding relationship agreement with the Board due to J R Wollenberg being a controlling shareholder, to address the requirements of LR9.2.2AD of the Listing Rules.

  1. Richard Wollenberg Chairman
    23 November 2020

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

13

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

The Board is committed to maintaining appropriate standards of corporate governance. The statement below, together with the report on Directors' remuneration on pages 16 to 19, explains how the Company has applied the principles set out in The UK Corporate Governance Code 2018 ("the Code") and contains the information required by section 7 of the UK Listing Authority's Disclosure Rules and Transparency Rules.

The Board have conducted an internal performance evaluation of the Board, its Committees, and the individual Directors, led by Independent Non-Executive Director Nigel D Jamieson supported by J Richard Wollenberg and Karen L Chandler. Given the size of the Company the Board has concluded that an independent facilitation of the performance evaluation was not necessary, but this will be kept under review. The Board has assessed the skills and knowledge of the Board and will continue to keep this under review.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

The Board currently consists of two Executive Directors and one Independent Non-Executive Director. It meets regularly with senior staff throughout the year to discuss key issues and to monitor the overall performance of the Group. The Board has a formal schedule of matters reserved requiring Board approval. This includes publication of annual report and interim results, payment of dividends, purchasing of property, appointment of auditors, appointment of Directors, donations, property valuations, acquisition or disposal of investments and other material decisions. The Board met three times during the year. The Board views the Non-Executive Director as independent of the Board, notwithstanding his tenure being more than nine years. This is due to the range and depth of his external commitments and his ongoing experience in

the property sector and his proven ability to challenge the Executive Directors at Board Meetings.

AUDIT COMMITTEE

The Audit Committee, which is chaired by the independent Non-Executive Director, Nigel Jamieson, comprises Nigel Jamieson and Richard Wollenberg, one of whom has recent relevant financial experience

The remit of the Audit Committee is to provide oversight of the Group finance and associated risk management procedures. The Audit Committee meets at least twice a year to consider the Group's financial affairs and the identified risks which may impact on the Group and to evaluate the adequacy of the safeguards which have been put in place to mitigate those risks. In addition, the Audit Committee meets periodically with the external auditors. The Audit Committee has previously concluded that due to the size of the Group an internal audit function is not required. This remains the view of the Audit Committee, but this decision will continue be reviewed at least annually.

Evaluation of external auditor and consideration of key findings

Crowe U.K. LLP were appointed as auditors with effect from 1 May 2019.

Normally, the Audit Committee meets with the auditor at least twice during the year. Due to COVID-19, there has only been one formal Audit Committee meeting with the auditor's present during the year with other meetings taking place telephonically. However, the Committee is satisfied that there has been effective engagement with the auditors.

At the Audit Committee meeting the auditors presented their audit findings and took questions from the Members on the scope of their work and their findings including those raised on internal procedures and controls. In keeping with best practice, the Audit Committee also met with the audit engagement partner without the Finance Director present. The Committee were satisfied with the effectiveness of the audit.

The Audit Committee also considers auditor independence and, in doing so has a policy of not using the auditor for non-audit services. In advance of each audit, the Committee obtains confirmation from the external Auditor that they are independent and of the level of non-audit fees earned by them and their affiliates. No non-audit services were provided during the financial year ended 30 September 2020.

As part of the decision to recommend to the Board the reappointment of the external auditor, the Committee considers the tenure of the auditor in addition to the results of its review of the effectiveness of the external auditor and considers whether there should be a full tender process. There are no contractual obligations restricting the Committee's choice of external auditor.

Financial reporting

After discussion with both management and the external auditor, the Audit Committee determined that the key risk of misstatement of the Group's financial statements related to property valuations in the context of current market conditions. This includes the property held by the Group's Joint Venture.

This issue was discussed with management during the year and with the auditor at the time the Committee reviewed and agreed the auditor's Group audit plan as well as at the conclusion of the audit of the financial statements.

Property valuation

As further explained in note 2 to the financial statements, our approach to valuing properties is to obtain an external independent valuation of the properties held by the Parent Company each year. The Directors of the Joint Venture value its properties each year considering yields on similar properties in the area, vacant space and covenant strength. They also consider external valuations and take external advice where necessary.

www.cardiff-property.com

14

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED

The Audit Committee is satisfied that the carrying value of properties is appropriate based on the use of an external independent valuer for The Cardiff Property portfolio and the experience and knowledge of the Directors in valuing the properties of the Joint Venture.

The Audit Committee discusses the results of the valuations with the Directors who provide information on assumptions used and provide appropriate explanation and evidence where possible for such assumptions.

REMUNERATION COMMITTEE

The Remuneration Committee consists of all Board Members and is chaired by Nigel Jamieson. It meets when required to consider all aspects of Directors' and staff remuneration, share options and service contracts. The Remuneration Committee met once during the year.

COMPLIANCE STATEMENT

The Company has, other than where stated below, complied fully with the provisions set out in section 1 of the Code, during the year:

  • the Chairman is also the Chief Executive;
  • a Nominations Committee has not been established;
  • the Audit Committee includes one Non-Executive Director (the Code recommends that the Audit Committee should comprise at least three, or in the case of smaller companies, two Non-Executive Directors); and
  • the Remuneration Committee also consists of all Board Members (the Code recommends that the Remuneration Committee should comprise solely of Non-Executive Directors).

The Directors consider this structure to be a practical solution bearing in mind the Company's size and needs. However, it is intended to review this issue as the Group develops.

The Code requires that the Directors review the effectiveness of all internal controls, not only internal financial controls. This extends the requirement in respect of internal financial controls to cover all controls including financial, operational, compliance and risk management. The Company has procedures established which enable it to comply with the requirements of the Code in relation to internal controls.

INTERNAL CONTROL

The Directors confirm that they have reviewed the effectiveness of the Group's system of internal control for identifying, evaluating and managing the significant risks faced by the Group and they acknowledge their responsibility for that system. Such a system is designed to manage risk and can, however, only provide reasonable but not absolute assurance against material misstatement or loss.

The size of the Group and the small number of employees necessarily involves the Executive Directors closely in the day- to-day running of the Group's affairs. This has the advantage of the Executive Directors becoming closely involved with all transactions and risk assessments. Conversely, the Board is aware that its size also means that the division of functions to provide normal internal control criteria is problematic. The Board believes, however, that its close involvement with the day-to-day management of the Group eliminates, as far as possible, the risks inherent in its small size.

Key features of the system of internal control include:

  • strategic planning - the Board considers the Group's position in respect of its marketplace and likely trends in that marketplace which will necessitate a change or adjustment to that position.
  • investment appraisal and monitoring - all capital projects, contracts, business and property holdings and acquisitions are reviewed in detail and approved by the chairman or, if of a significant size, by the whole Board; and
  • financial monitoring - cash flow and capital expenditure are closely monitored, and key financial information is reviewed by the Board on a regular basis.

The Board considers that there is an ongoing process for identifying, evaluating and managing the significant risks facing the Group that has been in place during the year, which is regularly reviewed and accords with the UK Corporate Governance Code (2018).

INTERNAL FINANCIAL CONTROL

Financial controls have been established so as to provide safeguards against unauthorised use or disposition of the assets, to maintain proper accounting records and to provide reliable financial information for internal use.

Key financial controls include:

  • the maintenance of proper records;
  • a schedule of matters reserved for the approval of the Board;
  • evaluation, approval procedures and risk assessment for acquisitions and disposals and for major capital expenditure;
  • regular reporting and monitoring of development projects; and
  • close involvement of the chief Executive in the day-to-day operational matters of the Group.

The Directors consider the size of the Group and the close involvement of Executive Directors in the day-to-day operations makes the maintenance of an internal audit function unnecessary. The Directors will continue to monitor this situation.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

15

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED

RELATIONS WITH SHAREHOLDERS

Presentations are given to investors by the Chairman when requested, normally following the publication of the half year and full year results, when interim and annual reports are delivered to all shareholders. The results of meetings with investors, media and analysts are discussed with Board Members to assist them in understanding the views of investors and others. All Directors attend the Annual General Meeting at which they have the opportunity to meet with shareholders. Due to Covid-19 restrictions shareholders will not be invited to attend the 2021 Annual General Meeting in person however shareholders will be able to vote electronically and can contact the Directors as required.

GOING CONCERN

After making enquiries the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the Company and the Group have adequate resources to continue in operational existence for at least 12 months from the date of this report despite the significant uncertainties due to Covid-19. For this reason, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the financial statements.

VIABILITY STATEMENT

In accordance with the 2018 revision of the Code, the Directors have assessed the prospect of the Company over a longer period than the 12 months required by the 'Going Concern' provision. The Board conducted this review for a period of five years, which was selected for the following reasons:

  • the Group's strategic review covers a five-year period;
  • for a major scheme five years is a reasonable approximation of the maximum time taken
  • from obtaining planning permission to letting the property; and
  • most leases contain a five-year rent review pattern and therefore five years allows for the
  • forecasts to include the reversion arising from those reviews; and
  • the average unexpired lease term is close to five years and there is a low void rate.

The five-year strategic review considers the Group's cash flows, dividend cover and other key financial ratios over the period. These metrics are subject to sensitivity analysis, which involves flexing a number of the main assumptions underlying the forecast both individually and in unison. Where appropriate, this analysis is carried out to evaluate the potential impact of the Group's principal risks actually occurring. The five-year review also makes certain assumptions about the normal level of capital recycling likely to occur and considers whether additional financing facilities will be required.

In its assessment of the viability of the Group, the Directors have considered each of the Group's principal risks and uncertainties detailed on page 7 and in note 3, and in particular the impact of a significant fall in the UK property market on the value of the Group's investment property portfolio. The Directors have also considered the Group's income and expenditure projections as well as potential impacts from Brexit and the Covid pandemic. The Group is in the enviable position of having significant cash balances at 30 September 2020, the Cardiff Group had cash balances of £3.8m and a further £1.7m term deposits (generally with maturity dates of 90-180 days), in addition the Company has investments of £0.9m of which £0.8m are readily marketable. The Group has an operating cost base including tax and dividends of under £1m per annum so even with no income for a number of years the Group would remain solvent.

The Cardiff Group receives a management fee from Campmoss of around £0.5m per annum, there is no reason to assume this income would not be received as the Campmoss Group had cash balances at 30 September 2020, of £2.4m and a further £4.6m term deposits (generally with maturity dates of 90-180 days) and in addition Campmoss received a further cash receipt of £6.95m in October 2020 from property sales. Campmoss have a capital commitment of £6.1m to complete its development programme over the next 18 months and including the Cardiff management fee an annual operating cost base excluding development of under £1.5m, so Campmoss similarly has a strong balance sheet.

The Directors confirm that their assessment of the principal risks facing the Group was robust and comfort is taken from the average unexpired tenancies. Based upon the robust assessment of the principal risks facing the Group as detailed on page 7 and in note 3, and their stress-testing based assessment of the Group's prospects as described above, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the Group will be able to continue in operation and meet its liabilities as they fall due over the five-year period of their assessment.

Registered office:

By order of the Board

56 Station Road

Egham

Surrey

TW20 9LF

K Chandler FCA

Secretary

23 November 2020

www.cardiff-property.com

16

REMUNERATION REPORT

ANNUAL STATEMENT

Composition of the Remuneration Committee (not subject to audit)

Nigel D Jamieson

Independent Non-Executive Director,

Chairman of the Committee

Karen L Chandler

Executive Director

J Richard Wollenberg

Executive Director

Remuneration policy is a matter for the Board as a whole. The Remuneration Committee works within the agreed policy to set individual Remuneration levels, although the Executive Directors do not participate in decisions regarding their own Remuneration. The Members of the Remuneration Committee have access to professional advice at the Company's expense, if necessary, in order to carry out their duties. No such advice was sought during the year. All Members served throughout the year. In setting Directors' Remuneration, the Committee has regard to other employees of the Company.

Compliance (not subject to audit)

In setting the Company's Remuneration policy for Directors, the Remuneration Committee has given full consideration to the best practice provisions annexed to The Financial Conduct Authority Listing Rules and the report has been prepared

in accordance with the Directors' Remuneration Report Regulations 2019.

POLICY REPORT

Remuneration policies (not subject to audit)

The Remuneration policy was in effect from 1 October 2019 and prior and it is intended that these policies will be continued for the next year and subsequent years.

The Remuneration policy is designed to attract, retain and motivate Executive Directors and senior management of a high calibre with a view to encouraging commitment to the development of the Group and for long term enhancement of shareholder value. Remuneration packages take into account individual performance and the remuneration for similar jobs in other comparable companies where such companies can be identified. This would also be taken into account on appointment of any new Directors. The Committee believes that share ownership by Executive Directors and senior staff strengthens the link between their personal interests and those of shareholders.

There are currently no plans to employ additional Directors, but prior to appointing a new Director, various components that could be included in the remuneration package and the maximum level of variable remuneration would be reviewed and agreed by the Remuneration Committee.

Payments for loss of office would be determined by the Remuneration Committee taking into account contractual obligations as relevant.

Employees were not consulted in determining the directors' remuneration policy. Remuneration comparison measurements are used comparing remuneration to similar sized listed organisations and published comparison data available.

The main components of Executive Directors' remuneration are:

  • basic salary - reviewed annually;
  • annual performance bonus - members of staff (excluding Directors) are eligible to participate in the Company's discretionary bonus scheme. J Richard Wollenberg is eligible to receive a sum equal to 2.5 times the percentage increase in net asset value per share based upon current salary up to a maximum of 50% of that salary. The increase in net assets per share was 6.6% (2019: 4.9%). Karen Chandler is eligible to receive a bonus as determined by the Remuneration Committee, any such bonus not to exceed a maximum of 50% of her salary;
  • taxable benefits - provision of health care for J Richard Wollenberg;
  • pension benefits - the Company has a workplace pension scheme which all employees meeting qualifying conditions are invited to join. J Richard Wollenberg is entitled to pension contributions at the rate of 20% (2019: 20%) of salary and bonuses, which for the year to 30 September 2020 he elected to take as salary; and
  • share options - grants under the Company's approved share option scheme (approved by shareholders in general meeting) are set so that the aggregate option exercise price for each recipient may not be greater than 4 times annual salary and such grants are phased. Grants under the unapproved share option scheme (approved by shareholders in general meeting) are made by the Remuneration Committee upon the achievement of specified performance criteria.

The criteria applicable to both schemes were chosen as being those most likely to provide enhanced shareholder value from the performance of Executives. They are:

  • on grant of an option, an increase in the average of the previous three years' earnings per share of at least 3% more than the corresponding increase in the Retail Price Index over the same period; and
  • on exercise of an option, an increase in the average of the previous three years' net asset value per share of at least 3% more than the corresponding increase in the FTSE Real Estate Index over the same period.

No options have been granted in the current or previous financial year and all previous options have lapsed.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

17

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED

250

200

150

100

50

-

16/10/2015

16/12/2015

16/02/2016

16/04/2016

16/06/2016

16/08/2016

16/10/2016

16/12/2016

16/02/2017

16/04/2017

16/06/2017

16/08/2017

16/10/2017

16/12/2017

16/02/2018

16/04/2018

16/06/2018

16/08/2018

16/10/2018

16/12/2018

16/02/2019

16/04/2019

16/06/2019

16/08/2019

16/10/2019

16/12/2019

16/02/2020

16/04/2020

16/06/2020

16/08/2020

16/10/2020

CDFF

Total Return

FTSE SMALL CAP

Total Return

FTSE REAL ESTATE

Total Return

Source: Datastream

The remuneration Committee considers the components of remuneration supports the short and long-term strategic objectives, with basic salary being fixed with an annual review, a performance bonus for the Executive Directors that are capped at a maximum of 50% of salary and the case of the Chairman is linked to the increase in net assets which aligns his bonus to the strategic objectives of increasing shareholder value and the Finance Directors bonus being linked to her performance as assessed by the Remuneration Committee.

Remuneration policy for employees is consistent with Directors, with a base salary and an annual bonus determined for the results for the year end September and paid in December each year, with pay rise being implemented from 1 January. There are only three employees other than the Directors.

It is intended that these policies will be continued for the next year and subsequent years.

IMPLEMENTATION REPORT (NOT SUBJECT TO AUDIT)

A graph showing the Company's total shareholder return relative to the FTSE Real Estate and FTSE Small Cap Indices is reproduced above. Total shareholder return is calculated to show the theoretical growth in the value of a shareholding over a specified period, assuming that dividends are reinvested to purchase additional shares. Company performance graphs are contained in the Strategic Report on page 7.

MAXIMUM, MINIMUM AND EXPECTED DIRECTOR REMUNERATION (£'000)

Nigel D Jamieson

Karen L Chandler

J Richard Wollenberg

0

100

200

300

£'000

Maximum remuneration

Expected remuneration

Minimum remuneration

www.cardiff-property.com

18

REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED

The remuneration paid to all employees, dividends paid and purchase of own shares were as follows:

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

% change

Total employee costs

382

372

2.7

Dividends

213

210

1.4

Purchase of own shares

773

220

251.4

DIRECTORS' REMUNERATION (SUBJECT TO AUDIT)

The total remuneration (including pension contributions) paid to the Chief Executive Officer was £190,000 (2019: £182,000) representing a 4.4% increase in the year. J Richard Wollenberg's basic salary has remained the same. The maximum potential remuneration of J Richard Wollenberg assuming the maximum bonus of 50% was received would be £238,000.

The emoluments of the Directors were as follows:

Total

Salary

Bonus

Benefits

Pension

2020

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

As Executives

J R Wollenberg

141

23

26

-

190

K L Chandler

60

3

-

2

65

201

26

26

2

255

As Non-Executive

N D Jamieson

12

-

-

-

12

213

26

26

2

267

Total

Salary

Bonus

Benefits

Pension

2019

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

As Executives

J R Wollenberg

141

17

22

2

182

K L Chandler

57

3

-

2

62

198

20

22

4

244

As Non-Executive

N D Jamieson

12

-

-

-

12

210

20

22

4

256

Percentage change 2019 to 2020

Salary

Bonus

Benefits

Pension

Total

%

%

%

%

%

As Executives

J R Wollenberg

-

35.3

18.2

(100.0)

4.4

K L Chandler

5.3

-

n/a

-

4.8

1.5

30.0

18.2

(50.0)

4.5

As Non-Executive

N D Jamieson

-

n/a

n/a

n/a

-

1.4

30.0

18.2

(50.0)

4.3

The above table includes bonuses, which are based on the results for the year to 30 September 2020 and are payable in December 2020, see page 16 for details of bonus calculation. Bonuses of £17,000 for J R Wollenberg and £3,000 for K L Chandler in respect of the year to 30 September 2019 were paid in December 2019. J R Wollenberg's salary includes £23,515 of pension contribution entitlement which was elected to be taken as salary.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

19

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED

Bonus as

Bonus

Maximum

percentage

awarded

bonus

of maximum

2020

£'000

£'000

%

Executive Directors

J R Wollenberg

23

71

32.4

K L Chandler

3

30

10.0

26

101

25.7

Bonus as

Bonus

Maximum

percentage

awarded

bonus

of maximum

2019

£'000

£'000

%

Executive Directors

J R Wollenberg

17

71

23.9

K L Chandler

3

29

10.3

20

100

20.0

The information above is in respect of the Company. In addition, J Richard Wollenberg is entitled to consultancy fees of £60,000 in respect of Campmoss Property Company Limited (2019: £60,000), see note 25. Benefits relates to the provision of health care and life assurance to J Richard Wollenberg.

The Directors are considered to be the only key management personnel of the Group.

Director's remuneration for the year to 30 September 2021 is expected to remain at similar levels, with the only significant variable being J R Wollenberg's bonus which is calculated with reference to the change in net assets.

DIRECTORS INTEREST IN SHARES (NOT SUBJECT TO AUDIT) See page 11 of the Directors' Report for details of Directors interest in shares.

SERVICE CONTRACTS (NOT SUBJECT TO AUDIT)

J Richard Wollenberg has a service contract for a three-year rolling term. In the opinion of the Committee the notice period is necessary in order to secure J Richard Wollenberg's services at the current terms of his employment.

K Chandler has a service contract which can be terminated by either party upon giving three months' notice in writing.

The contracts are available for inspection at the Company's registered office.

REMUNERATION OF NON-EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR (NOT SUBJECT TO AUDIT)

The remuneration of the Non-Executive Director is determined by the Board based upon comparable market levels. The Non- Executive Director is not eligible for any other benefits. His services can be terminated by either party upon giving three months' notice in writing.

VOTING RESULTS FROM PREVIOUS AGM (NOT SUBJECT TO AUDIT) At the AGM held on 16 January 2020, 100% of votes cast were for the remuneration report including remuneration policy with 0% votes against. Whilst shareholder views have not specifically been sought the votes from the AGM are indicative of shareholder support.

EXTERNAL APPOINTMENTS (NOT SUBJECT TO AUDIT) Executive Directors are allowed to accept external appointments with the consent of the Board, as long as these are not likely to lead to conflicts of interest. Executive Directors are allowed to retain the fees paid.

The remuneration report was approved by the Board on 23 November 2020 and signed on its behalf by:

Nigel D Jamieson BSc, FCSI

Chairman of the Remuneration Committee

www.cardiff-property.com

20

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 Group and Parent Company financial statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations.

Company law requires the Directors to prepare Group and Parent Company financial statements for each financial year. Under that law they are required to prepare the Group financial statements in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the European Union (IFRSs as adopted by the EU) and applicable law and have elected to prepare the Parent Company financial statements in accordance with UK accounting standards, including FRS 101 Reduced Disclosure Framework.

Under Company law the Directors must not approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Group and Parent Company and of their profit or loss for that period. In preparing each of the Group and Parent Company financial statements, the Directors are required to:

  • select suitable accounting policies and then apply them consistently;
  • make judgements and estimates that are reasonable, relevant, reliable and prudent;
  • for the Group financial statements, state whether they have been prepared in accordance with IFRSs as adopted by the EU;
  • for the Parent Company financial statements, state whether applicable UK accounting standards have been followed, subject to any material departures disclosed and explained in the Parent Company financial statements;
  • assess the Group and Parent Company's ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern; and
  • use the going concern basis of accounting unless they either intend to liquidate the Group or the Parent Company or to cease operations or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

The Directors are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the Parent Company's transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the Parent Company and enable them to ensure that its financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are responsible for such internal control as they determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and have general responsibility for taking such steps as are reasonably open to them to safeguard the assets of the Group and to prevent and detect fraud and other irregularities.

Under applicable law and regulations, the Directors are also responsible for preparing a Strategic Report, Directors' Report, Directors' Remuneration Report and Corporate Governance Statement that complies with that law and those regulations.

The Directors are responsible for the maintenance and integrity of the corporate and financial information included on the Company's website. Legislation in the UK governing the preparation and dissemination of financial statements may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

RESPONSIBILITY STATEMENT OF THE DIRECTORS IN RESPECT OF THE ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT

We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:

  • the financial statements, prepared in accordance with the applicable set of accounting standards, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit or loss of the Company and the undertakings included in the consolidation taken as a whole; and
  • the strategic report includes a fair review of the development and performance of the business and the position of the issuer and the undertakings included in the consolidation taken as a whole, together with a description of the principal risks and uncertainties that they face.

We consider the annual report and accounts, taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and understandable and provides the information necessary for shareholders to assess the Group's position and performance, business model and strategy.

  1. Richard Wollenberg 23 November 2020

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

21

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT

OPINION

We have audited the financial statements of The Cardiff Property Plc (the "Company") and its subsidiaries (the "Group") for the year ended 30 September 2020 which comprise the Consolidated Income statement, the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income and Expenses, the Consolidated Balance Sheet, the Consolidated Cash Flow Statement, the Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity, the Company Balance Sheet, the Company Statement of Changes in Equity and notes to the financial statements, including a summary of significant accounting policies.

The financial reporting framework that has been applied in the preparation Group financial statements is applicable law and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) as adopted by the European Union. The financial reporting framework that has been applied in the preparation of the parent company financial statements is applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards, including FRS101 'Reduced Disclosure Framework' (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

In our opinion, the financial statements:

  • give a true and fair view of the state of the Group's and of the Parent Company's affairs as at 30 September 2020 and of the Group's profit for the year then ended;
  • the Group financial statements have been properly prepared in accordance with IFRSs as adopted by the European Union;
  • the Parent Company financial statements 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 and, as regards the group financial statements, Article 4 of the IAS Regulation.

BASIS FOR OPINION

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the Auditor's responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report. We are independent of the Group in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC's Ethical Standard as applied to listed public interest entities, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

www.cardiff-property.com

CONCLUSIONS RELATING TO PRINCIPAL RISKS, GOING CONCERN AND VIABILITY STATEMENT

We have nothing to report in respect of the following information in the annual report, in relation to which the ISAs (UK) require us to report to you whether we have anything material to add or draw attention to:

  • the disclosures in the annual report set out on page 7 that describe the principal risks and explain how they are being managed or mitigated;
  • the directors' confirmation set out on page 7 in the annual report that they have carried out a robust assessment of the principal risks facing the group, including those that would threaten its business model, future performance, solvency or liquidity;
  • the directors' statement set out on page 15 in the financial statements about whether the directors considered it appropriate to adopt the going concern basis of accounting in preparing the financial statements and the directors' identification of any material uncertainties to the group and the parent company's ability to continue to do so over a period of at least twelve months from the date of approval of the financial statements;
  • whether the directors' statement relating to going concern required under the Listing Rules in accordance with Listing Rule 9.8.6R(3) is materially inconsistent with our knowledge obtained in the audit; or
  • the directors' explanation set out on page 15 in the annual report as to how they have assessed the prospects of the Group, over what period they have done so and why they consider that period to be appropriate, and their statement as to whether they have a reasonable expectation that the Group will be able to continue in operation and meet its liabilities as they fall due over the period of their assessment, including any related disclosures drawing attention to any necessary qualifications or assumptions.

OVERVIEW OF OUR AUDIT APPROACH

Materiality

In planning and performing our audit we applied the concept of materiality. An item is considered material if it could reasonably be expected to change the economic decisions of a user of the financial statements. We used the concept of materiality to both focus our testing and to evaluate the impact of misstatements identified.

Given the nature of the Group's activities we consider that the most appropriate benchmark is gross assets. As a key component of the Group's gross assets is property which is held at fair value and which can have a wide spread of values from using reasonable alternative inputs, we have based financial statement materiality on 1% of total assets.

Based on our professional judgement, we determined overall materiality for the Group financial statements ("financial statement materiality") as a whole to be £300,000 (2019: £280,000); and the overall materiality for the Parent Company is £140,000 (2019: £135,000).

22

INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT CONTINUED

We are required to consider whether there are one or more particular classes of transactions or account balance, for which misstatements of lesser amounts than materiality could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of the financial statements. In the Group and Company financial statements, for transactions and balances that are not property or investment related we have determined specific materiality to be £38,000 (2019: £55,000), based on 5% of profit before tax and fair value movements on properties and investments.

We use a different level of materiality ('performance materiality') to determine the extent of our testing for the audit of the financial statements. Performance materiality is set based on the audit materiality as adjusted for the judgements made as to the entity risk and our evaluation of the specific risk of each audit area having regard to the internal control environment. On the basis of our risk assessment of the Group's overall control environment, our judgement was that Group performance materiality was 75% of our planning materiality, namely £225,000 (2019: £210,000). Parent company performance materiality was set at £100,000 (2019: £100,000). Where considered appropriate performance materiality may be reduced to a lower level, such as, for related party transactions and directors' remuneration.

We agreed with the Audit Committee to report to it all identified errors in excess of £9,000 (2019: £14,000). Errors below that threshold would also be reported to it if, in our opinion as auditor, disclosure was required on qualitative grounds.

Overview of the scope of our audit

We audit the Parent Company and its subsidiary companies. Our audit approach was developed by obtaining an understanding of the Group's activities, the key functions undertaken on behalf of the Board by management and the overall control environment. Based on this understanding we assessed those aspects of the Group and subsidiary companies transactions and balances which were most likely to give rise to a material misstatement and were most susceptible to irregularities including fraud or error. Specifically, we identified what we considered to be key audit matters and planned our audit approach accordingly.

Extent to which the audit is capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud

We design our procedures so as to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence that the financial statements are not materially misstated due to non-compliance with laws and regulations or due to fraud or error.

We are not responsible for preventing non-compliance and cannot be expected to detect non-compliance with all laws and regulations - this responsibility lies with management with the oversight of the Directors and the Audit Committee.

Based on our understanding of the Group and industry, discussions with management and the Audit Committee we identified financial reporting standards and Companies Act 2006 as having a direct effect on the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.

Other laws and regulations where non-compliance may have a material effect on the Group's operations include but are not limited to the FCA Listing Rules, the DTR Rules, the principles of the UK Corporate Governance Code and IFRS.

As part of our discussion of how and where the Group's financial statements may be materially misstated due to fraud, we did not rebut the presumption within auditing standards that there is a significant risk of material misstatement in revenue through fraud.

Our audit procedures included:

  • enquiry of management about the Group's policies, procedures and related controls regarding compliance with laws and regulations and if there are any known instances of non-compliance;
  • examining supporting documents for all material balances, transactions and disclosures;
  • review of the Board of directors and the Audit Committee minutes;
  • enquiry of management about litigations and claims and inspection of relevant correspondence;
  • evaluation of the selection and application of accounting policies related to subjective measurements and complex transactions, in particular carrying value in joint venture and investment properties which are included in the Key Audit Matters;
  • analytical procedures to identify any unusual or unexpected relationships;
  • testing the appropriateness of journal entries recorded in the general ledger and other adjustments made in the preparation of the financial statements; and
  • review of accounting estimates for biases including carrying value in joint venture and investment properties which is included in the Key Audit Matters.

Owing to the inherent limitations of an audit, there is an unavoidable risk that some material misstatements of the financial statements may not be detected, even though the audit is properly planned and performed in accordance with the ISAs (UK).

The potential effects of inherent limitations are particularly significant in the case of misstatement resulting from fraud because fraud may involve sophisticated and carefully organised schemes designed to conceal it, including deliberate failure to record transactions, collusion or intentional misrepresentations being made to us.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

23

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT CONTINUED

KEY AUDIT MATTERS

Key audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgement, were of most significance in our audit of the financial statements of the current period and include the most significant assessed risks of material misstatement (whether or not due to fraud) that we identified. These matters included those which had the greatest effect on: the overall audit strategy, the allocation of resources in the audit; and directing the efforts of the engagement team.

This is not a complete list of all risks identified by our audit.

Key audit matter

How the scope of our audit addressed the key audit matter

Revenue and other income

Rental income

recognition

We re-performed the rental reconciliations prepared by the Group's finance director

Revenue for the Group consists

and selected a sample of tenancy agreements per property to validate the inputs into

primarily of rental income. Rental

that reconciliation.

income is based on tenancy

We also performed comparative analytical procedures based on our knowledge

agreements where there is a standard

of the tenancy and forming an expectation of rental income for each property and

process in place for recording revenue.

investigated any large or unusual variances.

Due to the number of tenancies on

Where tenancy incentives were given on the granting of a new lease we reviewed the

different terms, coupled with the

rent free period to agree it is accounted for in accordance with accounting standards.

practice occasionally offering tenant

We reviewed the accounting treatment and journal posted in regard to deferred

incentives on the grant of a new lease

rental income recorded on the Group's balance sheet by agreeing to supporting

there an increased inherent risk of

documentation.

error.

Fee income

The Group also earns management

We reviewed the terms of the services being provided by the Group. We agreed the

fees from the provision of services to

fee income earned to the underlying documentation and whether the recognition

its Joint Venture partner.

policy was appropriate.

We have no adverse findings to report from our testing of rental and other income.

Carrying value in Joint Venture

We obtained an analysis of the net assets of the Joint Venture investment and

The carrying value of the Joint Venture

evaluated those components which required the greatest element of judgement

is derived from a portfolio of net assets

when estimating their carrying value. As this was limited to investment properties and

the key component of which are

development stock we obtained the joint venture directors valuation of those assets.

investment properties which are carried

For the investment properties we considered the experience of the directors to

at values estimated by the directors

prepare such valuations. In addition we:

of the Joint Venture. The valuation of

• Reviewed their valuation report and compared the rents being earned and lease

investment properties requires the

exercise of significant judgement by

term to those used in the valuation.

the directors as they are not subject to

• Compared the assumptions used by the Joint Venture directors to the levels of

an independent third party valuation.

rents actually achieved and where possible, publically available benchmark data.

Due to the level of judgement required

• Engaged a property valuation expert to assist with the assessment of key

there is an inherent risk that the key

assumptions included in the valuation reports in accordance with ISA (UK) 620.

underlying asset values may be subject

• Compared the yields applied to market data accessed during the course of the

to material estimation bias which

impacts on the Group's carrying value

audit. We considered whether the yield was appropriate having regard to the

of its Joint Venture interest.

nature of the property and the underlying leases.

• We spoke directly with Joint Venture directors who valued the properties to

confirm the basis on which they had prepared the valuation and how they had

arrived at their key inputs, including specific property yields. We also considered

whether the valuer was suitably qualified and independent.

• Considered the adequacy of disclosures around the sensitivity of the carrying

value of the investment in joint venture to changes in reasonable alternative

assumptions.

For development stock we discussed with the Joint Venture directors how they have

assessed the carrying value and where this was supported by planning applications

and development plans we reviewed those documents. We also carried out market

research on sale prices and estimated future costs to be incurred through to

completion to ensure stock is being carried at lower of cost and net realisable value.

We have no adverse findings to report arising from our planned procedures.

www.cardiff-property.com

24

INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT CONTINUED

Key audit matter

How the scope of our audit addressed the key audit matter

Carrying value of investment

We evaluated the capability, suitability and competence of the Group's external valuer,

properties

giving specific focus to their qualification and independence.

The valuation of investment property

We gained an understanding of the nature of the assets in the portfolio and ensured

requires significant judgement and

classification and designation are appropriate and in line with our expectations.

estimates by management and the

We reviewed the stated accounting policy and ensuring it is appropriate to the

external valuer where applicable.

The valuation of the Group's property

designation and has been applied consistently.

We reviewed management's assessment of the carrying value of the investment

portfolio is inherently subjective to,

among other factors, the individual

properties which was derived from valuation reports prepared by management

nature of each property, its location and

appointed external valuer.

the expected future rentals, yield data

We carried out procedures, on a sample basis, to satisfy ourselves of the accuracy of

and comparable market transactions.

the property information supplied to the valuer by management.

As a consequence, there is an inherent

We compared the output from the management appointed external valuers to the

risk that the carrying value could be

levels of rents actually achieved and where possible, publically available benchmark

subject to material estimation bias.

data.

We engaged a property valuation expert to assist with the assessment of key

assumptions included in the valuation reports in accordance with ISA (UK) 620 and to

further challenge management's external valuer.

We spoke directly with the management appointed valuer to confirm the basis on

which they had prepared the valuation and how they had arrived at their key inputs,

and specifically the property specific yields. We also considered whether the valuer

was suitably qualified and independent.

We noted the management appointed external valuer reported on the basis of a

material valuation uncertainty and consequently that less certainty and a higher

degree of caution should be attached to the valuations as at 30 September 2020. We

challenged the use of this with the management appointed valuer and also discussed

this clause with management. We obtained sufficient appropriate audit evidence to

demonstrate that management's assessment of the suitability of the inclusion of the

valuation in the consolidated statement of financial position and disclosures made in

the financial statements are appropriate.

We concluded that the assumptions used in the valuations were supportable in light of

available and comparable market evidence.

We considered the adequacy of disclosures around the sensitivity of the carrying

value to changes in reasonable alternative assumptions and the disclosures around the

conflict of interest with the management's expert.

We have no adverse findings arising from our planned procedures.

These matters were addressed in the context of our audit of the financial statements as a whole, and in forming our opinion thereon, and we do not provide a separate opinion on these matters.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

25

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT CONTINUED

OTHER INFORMATION

The other information comprises the information included in the annual report other than the financial statements and our auditor's report thereon. The directors are responsible for the other information. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.

In connection with our audit of the financial statements, our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the audit or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies

or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether there is a material misstatement in the financial statements or a material misstatement of the other information. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of the other information, we are required to report that fact.

We have nothing to report in this regard.

In this context, we also have nothing to report in regard to our responsibility to specifically address the following items in the other information and to report as uncorrected material misstatements of the other information where we conclude that those items meet the following conditions:

  • Fair, balanced and understandable set out on page 20
    - the statement given by the directors that they consider the annual report and financial statements taken as a whole is fair, balanced and understandable and provides the information necessary for shareholders to assess the Group's performance, business model and strategy, is materially inconsistent with our knowledge obtained in the audit; or
  • Audit committee reporting set out on page 13 - the section describing the work of the Audit Committee does not appropriately address matters communicated by us to the Audit Committee; or
  • Directors' statement of compliance with the UK Corporate Governance Code set out on page 13 - the parts of the directors' statement required under the Listing Rules relating to the Company's compliance with the UK Corporate Governance Code containing provisions specified for review by the auditor in accordance with Listing Rule 9.8.10R(2) do not properly disclose a departure from a relevant provision of the UK Corporate Governance Code.

OPINIONS 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.

In our opinion based on the work undertaken in the course of our audit

  • the information given in the strategic report and the directors' report for the financial year for which the financial statements are prepared is consistent with the financial statements and those reports have been prepared in accordance with applicable legal requirements;
  • the information about internal control and risk management systems in relation to financial reporting processes and about share capital structures, given in compliance with rules 7.2.5 and 7.2.6 in the Disclosure Rules and Transparency Rules sourcebook made by the Financial Conduct Authority (the FCA Rules), is consistent with the financial statements and has been prepared in accordance with applicable legal requirements; and
  • information about the company's corporate governance code and practices and about its administrative, management and supervisory bodies and their committees complies with rules 7.2.2, 7.2.3 and 7.2.7 of the FCA Rules.

MATTERS ON WHICH WE ARE REQUIRED TO REPORT BY EXCEPTION

In the light of the knowledge and understanding of the Group and the Parent Company and its environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in:

  • the strategic report or the directors' report; or
  • the information about internal control and risk management systems in relation to financial reporting processes and about share capital structures, given in compliance with rules 7.2.5 and 7.2.6 of the FCA Rules.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

  • adequate accounting records have not been kept by the Parent Company, or returns adequate for our audit have not been received from branches not visited by us; or
  • the Parent Company financial statements and the part of the directors' remuneration report to be audited are not in agreement with the accounting records and returns; or
  • certain disclosures of directors' remuneration specified by law are not made; or
  • we have not received all the information and explanations we require for our audit; or
  • a corporate governance statement has not been prepared by the Parent Company.

www.cardiff-property.com

26

INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT CONTINUED

RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE DIRECTORS FOR THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

As explained more fully in the directors' responsibilities statement set out on page 20, the directors are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the directors determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the financial statements, the directors are responsible for assessing the Company's ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the directors either intend to liquidate the Company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

AUDITOR'S RESPONSIBILITIES FOR THE AUDIT OF THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor's report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when

it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.

A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements is located on the Financial Reporting Council's website at: www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities. This description forms part of our auditor's report.

OTHER MATTERS WHICH WE ARE REQUIRED TO ADDRESS

We were appointed by the Board on 1 May 2019 to audit the financial statements for the year ending 30 September 2019. Our total uninterrupted period of engagement is just over two years, covering the years ending 30 September 2019 and 30 September 2020.

The non-audit services prohibited by the FRC's Ethical Standard were not provided to the Group or the Parent Company and we remain independent of the Company in conducting our audit.

Our audit opinion is consistent with the additional report to the Audit Committee.

USE OF OUR REPORT

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.

Stacy Eden

Senior Statutory Auditor

For and on behalf of

Crowe U.K. LLP Statutory Auditor 55 Ludgate Hill London

EC4M 7JW

23 November 2020

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020 Stock code: CDFF

CONSOLIDATED INCOME STATEMENT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 SEPTEMBER 2020

27

2020 2019

Notes £'000 £'000

Revenue

4

650

647

Cost of sales

(115)

(70)

Gross profit

535

577

Administrative expenses

(497)

(488)

Other operating income

5

579

577

Operating profit before fair value movement on investment properties

6

617

666

Fair value movement on investment properties

13

(148)

22

Operating profit

469

688

Financial income

7

54

61

Profit on sale of investment

74

-

Share of profit of Joint Venture

15

1,362

904

Profit before taxation

4-9

1,959

1,653

Taxation

10

(148)

(117)

Profit for the financial year attributable to equity holders

1,811

1,536

Earnings per share on profit for the financial year - pence

Basic and diluted

11

148.2

123.1

Dividends

Final 2019 paid 12.5p (2018: 12.2p)

155

153

Interim 2020 paid 4.8p (2019: 4.6p)

58

57

213

210

Final 2020 proposed 12.8p (2019: 12.5p)

153

155

These results relate entirely to continuing operations. There were no acquisitions or disposals in either year.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE

INCOME AND EXPENSE

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 SEPTEMBER 2020

2020

2019

Notes

£'000

£'000

Profit for the financial year

1,811

1,536

Items that cannot be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss

Net change in fair value of other properties

14

(55)

(10)

Net change in fair value of investments at fair value through comprehensive income

15

(14)

(43)

Total comprehensive income and expense for the year attributable to the equity

holders of the Parent Company

1,742

1,483

www.cardiff-property.com

28

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET

AT 30 SEPTEMBER 2020

2020

2020

2019

2019

Notes

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

Non-current assets

Freehold investment properties

13

5,857

5,995

Property, plant, and equipment

14

228

284

Investment in Joint Venture

15

16,323

15,604

Other financial assets

15

925

843

23,333

22,726

Current assets

Inventory and work in progress

16

688

674

Trade and other receivables

17

238

139

Term deposits

1,748

3,084

Cash and cash equivalents

3,773

2,473

6,447

6,370

Total assets

29,780

29,096

Current liabilities

Trade and other payables

18

(529)

(528)

Corporation tax

(50)

(131)

(579)

(659)

Non-current liabilities

Deferred tax liability

19

(102)

(94)

Total liabilities

(681)

(753)

Net assets

29,099

28,343

Equity

Called up share capital

20

239

248

Share premium account

5,076

5,076

Other reserves

21

2,475

2,535

Investment property fair value reserve

22

3,139

1,814

Retained earnings

18,170

18,670

Total equity

29,099

28,343

Net assets per share

12

£24.36

£22.85

These financial statements were approved by the Board of Directors on 23 November 2020 and authorised for issue on its behalf by:

  1. Richard Wollenberg Director
    Company number: 00022705

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

29

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOW STATEMENT

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 SEPTEMBER 2020

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Cash flows from operating activities

Profit for the year

1,811

1,536

Adjustments for:

Depreciation

3

5

Financial income

(54)

(61)

Profit on sale of investments

(74)

-

Share of profit of Joint Venture

(1,362)

(904)

Fair value movement on investment properties

148

(22)

Taxation

148

117

Cash flows from operations before changes in working capital

620

671

Acquisition of inventory and work in progress

(14)

(2)

(Increase)/decrease in trade and other receivables

(98)

4

Increase/(decrease) in trade and other payables

1

30

Cash generated from operations

509

703

Tax paid

(228)

(147)

Net cash flows from operating activities

281

556

Cash flows from investing activities

Interest received

61

62

Dividend from Joint Venture

643

500

Acquisition of investment property, and plant and equipment

(13)

(49)

Acquisition of investments

(100)

-

Proceeds from sale of investments

78

-

Decrease/(increase) in term deposits

1,336

(2,884)

Net cash flows from investing activities

2,005

(2,371)

Cash flows from financing activities

Purchase of own shares

(773)

(220)

Dividends paid

(213)

(210)

Net cash flows (used in)/from financing activities

(986)

(430)

Net increase/(decrease) in cash and cash equivalents

1,300

(2,245)

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year

2,473

4,718

Cash and cash equivalents at end of year

3,773

2,473

www.cardiff-property.com

30

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 SEPTEMBER 2020

Investment

Share

property

Share

premium

Other

fair value

Retained

Total

capital

account

reserves

reserve*

earnings

equity

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

At 30 September 2018 and

1 October 2018

251

5,076

2,585

827

18,551

27,290

Profit for the year

-

-

-

-

1,536

1,536

Other comprehensive income -

Revaluation of investments

-

-

(43)

-

-

(43)

Net change in fair value of own use

freehold property

-

-

(10)

-

-

(10)

Transactions with equity holders

Dividends

-

-

-

-

(210)

(210)

Purchase of own shares

(3)

-

3

-

(220)

(220)

Total transactions with equity holders

(3)

-

3

-

(430)

(430)

Fair value movements on investment

properties - Cardiff

-

-

-

22

(22)

-

Fair value movements on investment

properties - Campmoss

-

-

-

965

(965)

-

At 30 September 2019 and

1 October 2019

248

5,076

2,535

1,814

18,670

28,343

Profit for the year

-

-

-

-

1,811

1,811

Other comprehensive income -

Revaluation of investments

-

-

(14)

-

-

(14)

Net change in fair value of own use

freehold property

-

-

(55)

-

-

(55)

Transactions with equity holders

Dividends

-

-

-

-

(213)

(213)

Purchase of own shares

(9)

-

9

-

(773)

(773)

Total transactions with equity holders

(9)

-

9

-

(986)

(986)

Fair value movements on investment

properties - Cardiff

-

-

-

(148)

148

-

Fair value movements on investment

properties - Campmoss

-

-

-

1,473

(1,473)

-

At 30 September 2020

239

5,076

2,475

3,139

18,170

29,099

* Includes fair value movements on investment properties held by Campmoss, our Joint Venture, which are presented in investment property fair value reserve to demonstrate these are unrealised.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

31

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

1 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL REPORTING STANDARDS

The consolidated results for the year ended 30 September 2020 and 2019 are prepared by the Group under applicable International Financial Reporting Standards adopted by the EU ("adopted IFRS") and those parts of the Companies Act 2006 applicable to companies reporting under IFRS and have been incorporated into the principal accounting policies as set out in note 2.

The Company has elected to prepare its Parent Company financial statements in accordance with FRS 101 (Reduced Disclosure Framework) and these are presented on pages 49 to 54.

2 ACCOUNTING POLICIES

Basis of preparation

The following principal accounting policies have been applied in dealing with items which are considered material in relation to the Group's financial statements. The financial statements have been prepared on the historical cost basis except that the following assets and liabilities are stated at their fair value: financial instruments classified as fair value through other comprehensive income; investment properties; and own use freehold property. These accounting policies have been applied consistently across the Group for the purposes of these consolidated financial statements.

Going concern

The financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis, which assumes that the Group will continue to meet its liabilities as they fall due. The Group's activities, together with the factors likely to affect its future development, performance and position are set out in the Chairman's Statement and Strategic Report on pages 3 to 9. The financial position of the Group, its property portfolio under management, asset base, liquidity and key performance indicators are described on pages 5 to 7.

In addition, note 20 includes the Group's objectives, policies and processes for managing its capital and note 26, its financial risk management objectives and details of its exposures to credit risk, liquidity risk, market risk, currency risk and interest rate risk.

The Group has sufficient financial resources to enable it to continue to trade and to complete the current maintenance and development programme. The Group is ungeared, and the cash flow forecasts do not assume any debt being required. As a consequence, the Directors believe that the Group is well placed to manage its business risks successfully despite the current economic uncertainty linked to Brexit and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and the impact on the Group's tenants.

The Group is in the enviable position of having significant cash balances at 30 September 2020, the Cardiff Group had cash balances of £3.8m and a further £1.7m term deposits (generally with maturity dates of 90-180 days), in addition the Company has investments of £0.9m of which £0.8m are readily marketable. The Group has an operating cost base including tax and dividends of under £1m per annum so even with no income for a number of years the Group would remain solvent.

The Cardiff Group receives a management fee from Campmoss of around £0.5m per annum, there is no reason to assume this income would not be received as the Campmoss Group had cash balances at 30 September 2020, of £2.4m and a further £4.6m term deposits (generally with maturity dates of 90-180 days) and in addition Campmoss received a further cash receipt of £6.95m in October 2020 from property sales. Campmoss have a capital commitment of £6.1m to complete its development programme over the next 18 months and including the Cardiff management fee an annual operating cost base excluding development of under £1.5m, so Campmoss similarly has a strong balance sheet.

After making enquiries, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the Company and the Group have adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future. Accordingly, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the annual report and financial statements.

www.cardiff-property.com

32

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

2 ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

Basis of consolidation

The Group's financial statements consolidate those of the Company and its subsidiaries and equity account for the interest in the Joint Venture. Subsidiary companies are those entities under the control of the Company, where control means the power to direct relevant activities of the entity so as to obtain benefit from these activities. The results of subsidiary undertakings acquired or disposed of in the year are included in the consolidated income statement from the date control is obtained or up to the date when control is lost. Intra-Group transactions are eliminated on consolidation.

Joint Ventures are those in whose activities the Group has joint control, established by contractual agreement and requiring unanimous consent for strategic financial and operating decisions. The Group's investment in the Joint Venture is accounted for using the equity method, hence the Group's share of the gains and losses of the Joint Venture is included in the consolidated income statement and its interest in the net assets is included in investments in the consolidated balance sheet.

Use of estimates and judgements

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with IFRSs requires management to make judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the application of accounting policies and the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income and expense. Actual results may differ from these estimates. These estimates are discussed in further detail in note 3.

Investment properties

Investment properties are properties which are held either to earn rental income or for capital appreciation or both. Investment properties are initially recognised at cost, including related transaction costs and annually revalued at fair value, with any change therein recognised in the income statement, and transferred to the investment property fair value reserve in the balance sheet. An external, independent valuer, having an appropriate recognised professional qualification and recent experience in the location and category of property being valued, values the Company portfolio each year. The Directors of the Joint Venture value its portfolio each year having regard to past valuations performed by external independent valuers. All valuations take into account yields on similar properties in the area, vacant space and covenant strength.

Design, construction and management expenses together with interest incurred in respect of investment properties in the course of initial development are capitalised until the building is effectively completed and available for letting. Thereafter they are charged to the income statement. Whilst under development such properties are classified either as inventory if development has commenced with a view to sale and are recorded at cost or retained within investment properties and revalued at the year end and surpluses or deficits are recognised in the income statement.

Proceeds from the sale of investment properties are not included in revenue, but in profit or loss on sale of investment property. The profit or loss on disposal is calculated with reference to the carrying amount in the balance sheet. Purchases and sales of investment properties are accounted for on completion.

Property, plant and equipment and depreciation

Property is stated at fair value using valuations prepared on the same basis as investment properties described above. Any surplus arising on the fair value is recognised in other comprehensive income except to the extent that it reverses a previous fair value deficit on the same asset recognised in profit and loss. Any deficit on fair value is recognised in profit and loss except to the extent that it reverses a previous fair value surplus on the same asset. Plant and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment losses.

Provision is made for depreciation so as to write off their cost on a straight-line basis over their expected useful lives as follows:

Land

Not depreciated

Freehold property

50 years

Motor vehicles

4 years

• Fixtures, fittings and equipment

4 years

In accordance with IAS 16.35 the fair value of the freehold property is presented by eliminating accumulated depreciation and adjusting the gross book value of the asset to equal revalued amount.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

33

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

2 ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

Impairment

The carrying amounts of the Group's assets, are reviewed at each balance sheet date to determine whether there is any indication of impairment. If any such indication exists, the asset's recoverable amount is estimated and an impairment loss recognised where the recoverable amount is less than the carrying value of the asset. Any impairment losses are recognised in the income statement.

Inventory and work in progress

Inventory, being properties under development intended for ultimate resale and properties held for sale, are stated at the lower of cost, including attributable overheads, and net realisable value.

Revenue

Revenue consists of rental income, earned under operating leases granted, from properties held for investment purposes, together with the proceeds from the sale of properties held in inventory. Sales of such property are recognised on the date of unconditional exchange of contracts or, if conditional, on the date that the conditions have been satisfied. Rental income is recognised in the Income Statement on a straight-line basis over the total lease period. Payments due on early terminations of lease agreements are recognised in the Income Statement within revenue. Lease incentives are recognised as an integral part of the net consideration for the use of the property and amortised on a straight-line basis over the term of the lease.

Other income

Oher income consists of management fees charged to Campmoss Group for services provided during the year and other items which are not revenue and are recognised in the period in which the income relates.

Financial assets

Investments in equity securities are classified as assets recognised at fair value through comprehensive income (FVOCI) and are stated at fair value with any resultant gain or loss being recognised in other comprehensive income. When these investments are derecognised the cumulative gain or loss previously recognised in other comprehensive income is transferred from other reserves to retained earnings.

Term deposits where the call date is greater than 90 days from the date of deposit are shown separately on the balance sheet and are included in investing activities in the cash flow.

Trade and other receivables

Trade and other receivables are valued using the expected credit loss model using the simplified approach.

Cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash balances and call deposits, that are repayable on demand and form an integral part of the Group's cash management, are included as a component of cash and cash equivalents for the purpose only of the statement of cash flows.

Equity

Equity comprises issued share capital, share premium, other reserves, investment property fair value reserve and retained earnings.

Dividends

Interim dividends are recorded in the financial statements when they are paid. Final dividends are recognised as a liability in the period in which they are approved by the Company's shareholders.

www.cardiff-property.com

34

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

2 ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

Taxation

Tax on the profit or loss for the year comprises current and deferred tax. Tax is recognised in the Income Statement except to the extent that it relates to items recognised directly in equity, in which case it is recognised in equity.

Current tax is expected tax payable on the taxable income for the year, using tax rates enacted or substantively enacted at the balance sheet date and any adjustment to tax payable in respect of previous years.

Deferred tax is provided on temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amounts used for taxation purposes. The following temporary differences are not provided for: the initial recognition of assets or liabilities that affect neither accounting nor taxable profit other than in a business combination; and differences relating to investments in subsidiaries to the extent that they will probably not reverse in the foreseeable future. The amount of deferred tax provided is based on the expected manner of realisation or settlement of the carrying amount of assets and liabilities, using tax rates enacted or substantively enacted at the balance sheet date.

A deferred tax asset is recognised only to the extent that it is probable that future taxable profits will be available against which the asset can be utilised.

IFRS

The Group has adopted IFRS 16 - Leases for the year ended 30 September 2020. IFRS 16 removes the distinction between operating and financial leases, which for lessees will result in almost all operating leases being brought on balance sheet. The accounting for lessors, which is applicable to the Group, did not significantly change and the impact of the consolidated results was immaterial. As a lessor the main impact was additional qualitative disclosures about the Group's leasing arrangements.

A number of new standards and amendments to standards and interpretations have been issued but are not yet effective for the current accounting period. None are expected to have a material impact on the consolidated financial statements of the Group.

3 ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES AND JUDGEMENTS The key accounting judgements are:

  1. fair value of the investment properties;
    An external valuer is used to value the investment properties held by Cardiff see note 13 for further details.
  2. classifying properties as investment properties or inventory;
    Properties are held as investment properties if they are held for capital appreciation and rental income and properties are held as inventory where they are being actively marketed for sale and the Group no longer intend to hold once a suitable sale can be negotiated. However there have been experiences in the past where an offer received for an investment property has been accepted and the property sold and similarly properties have been moved to inventory but a suitable offer has not been received so the property has continued to be held.
  3. management's assessment that inventories have not been impaired;
    Management asses the carrying value of inventories with reference to similar property valuations based on location, size and usage and their experience and also seek views from local estate agents.
  4. classification of Campmoss as a Joint Venture;
    Campmoss is jointly controlled by the Campmoss Board comprising of J R Wollenberg and E R Goodwin each of whom represents the interests of 50% of the shareholders. Decisions are made jointly, and Board approval is needed for all key decisions.
  5. carrying value of the Joint Venture; and
    The investment properties in Campmoss form a substantial part of Campmoss' net assets and hence the carrying value of the Group's share of the Joint Venture. The properties are not independently valued but are valued by the Directors and by their nature valuations are subjective.
  6. recoverability of debtors.
    Particularly in light of COVID-19 there has been an increase in the judgement required in assessing the recoverability of debtors due to the impact of the pandemic on lessees businesses, although the collection of over 90% of rents for rent quarters to June and September gives significant comfort.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

35

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

3 ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES AND JUDGEMENTS (CONTINUED)

Estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the estimates are revised and in any future periods affected.

The key areas of judgement in which estimates have been used and the assumptions applied are:

  1. valuation of investment properties while supported by third party valuations include estimates. All investment property owned by Cardiff has an independent third-party valuation performed annually. The properties owned by the Campmoss Group, are valued by the Campmoss Directors having due regard to independent third-party information and valuations as available; and
  2. the deferred taxation provision uses these investment property valuations to calculate the gain or loss and hence deferred taxation liability. This liability is estimated based on the taxation rates expected to be in place in the future which may differ from the actual taxation rates at the time of sale.

4 SEGMENTAL ANALYSIS

The Group manages its operations in two segments, being property and other investment and property development. Property and other investment relates to the results for The Cardiff Property Company Limited where properties are held as investment property with Property Development relating to the results of First Choice Estates Plc and Thames Valley Retirement Homes Limited. The results of these segments are regularly reviewed by the Board as a basis for the allocation of resources, in conjunction with individual site investment appraisals, and to assess their performance. Information regarding the results and net operating assets for each reportable segment are set out below:

Property

and other

Property

Total

investment

Development

Eliminations

2020

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

Rental income (wholly in the UK)

468

182

-

650

Property sales

-

-

-

-

Profit before taxation

1,686

273

-

1,959

Net operating assets

Assets

26,974

4,718

(1,912)

29,780

Liabilities

(2,329)

(264)

1,912

(681)

Net assets

24,645

4,454

-

29,099

Property

and other

Property

Total

investment

Development

Eliminations

2019

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

Revenue (wholly in the UK)

463

184

-

647

Profit before taxation

1,462

191

-

1,653

Net operating assets

Assets

26,600

4,486

(1,900)

29,096

Liabilities

(2,498)

(245)

1,900

(753)

Net assets

24,102

4,241

-

28,343

"Eliminations" relate to inter segment transactions and balances which cannot be specifically allocated but are eliminated on consolidation.

www.cardiff-property.com

36

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

5 OTHER OPERATING INCOME

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Management fees receivable

531

531

Other income

8

-

Insurance claim

8

-

Dividends received

32

46

Other operating income

579

577

6 OPERATING PROFIT BEFORE FAIR VALUE MOVEMENTS ON INVESTMENT PROPERTIES

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Included are the following expenses:

Auditor's remuneration:

Fees payable to the Company's auditor for the audit of the annual accounts

25

24

Audit of subsidiary undertakings pursuant to legislation

3

3

Depreciation of plant and equipment

3

5

7 FINANCIAL INCOME

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Bank and other interest receivable

54

61

8 EMPLOYEES

The average number of persons employed by the Group and the Company (including Executive Directors) during the year was:

Number of employees

2020

2019

Management

3

3

Administration

3

3

6

6

The aggregate payroll costs of these persons were as follows:

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Wages and salaries

335

325

Social security costs

40

38

Pension costs

7

9

382

372

Pension costs represent amounts paid by the Group to the workplace pension.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

37

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

9 DIRECTORS EMOLUMENTS

The emoluments of the Directors were as follows:

Total

Salary

Bonus

Benefits

Pension

2020

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

As Executives

J R Wollenberg

141

23

26

-

190

K L Chandler

60

3

-

2

65

201

26

26

2

255

As Non-Executive

N D Jamieson

12

-

-

-

12

213

26

26

2

267

Total

Salary

Bonus

Benefits

Pension

2019

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

As Executives

J R Wollenberg

141

17

22

2

182

K L Chandler

57

3

-

2

62

198

20

22

4

244

As Non-Executive

N D Jamieson

12

-

-

-

12

210

20

22

4

256

The above table includes bonuses, which are based on the results for the year to 30 September 2020 and are payable in December 2020, see page 16 for details of bonus calculation. Bonuses of £17,000 for J R Wollenberg and £3,000 for K L Chandler in respect of the year to 30 September 2019 were paid in December 2019. J R Wollenberg's salary includes £23,515 of pension contribution entitlement which was elected to be taken as salary.

The information above is in respect of the Company. In addition, J Richard Wollenberg is entitled to consultancy fees of £60,000 from Campmoss Property Company Limited (2019: £60,000), see note 25.

Details of the Company's policy on Directors' remuneration are contained within the remuneration report on pages 16 to 19. Benefits relates to the provision of health care and life assurance for J Richard Wollenberg.

The Directors are considered to be the only key management personnel of the Group.

www.cardiff-property.com

38

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

10 TAXATION

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Current tax

UK corporation tax on the result for the year

140

131

Deferred tax

Origination and reversal of timing differences

8

(14)

Taxation (all recognised in the profit and loss account)

148

117

Reconciliation of effective tax rate:

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Tax reconciliation

Profit before taxation

1,959

1,653

Profit before taxation multiplied by standard rate of corporation tax in the UK of 19% (2019: 19%)

372

314

Effects of:

Joint Venture

(258)

(172)

Other timing differences

6

(21)

Non-taxable (surplus)/deficit on fair value

28

(4)

Total tax expense

148

117

The current corporation tax rate is 19%.

11 EARNINGS PER SHARE

Earnings per share has been calculated in accordance with IAS 33 - Earnings Per Share using the profit after tax for the financial year of £1,811,000 (2019: £1,536,000) and the weighted average number of shares as follows:

Weighted average

number of shares

2020

2019

Basic and diluted basis

1,221,929

1,247,277

12 NET ASSETS PER SHARE

2020

2019

£ per

£ per

share

share

Based on shares in issue at 30 September 2020 of 1,194,511 (2019: 1,240,205)

24.36

22.85

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

39

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

13 FREEHOLD INVESTMENT PROPERTIES

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Group

At beginning of year

5,995

5,927

Additions

10

46

Fair value movement in the year

(148)

22

At end of year

5,857

5,995

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Company

At beginning of year

5,955

5,906

Additions

6

27

Fair value movement in the year

(148)

22

At end of year

5,813

5,955

The fair value of commercial investment property was determined by external, independent property valuers, having appropriate recognised professional qualifications and recent experience in the location and category of the property being valued. The independent valuers provide the fair value of the Group's investment property portfolio every year.

The Company's freehold commercial investment properties total value: £5,351,000 (2019: £5,491,000) have been valued by

Kempton Carr Croft ('KCC'). The fair value of the Group's residential property total value: £462,000 (2019: £465,000) has been valued based on memorandum of sale (subject to contract), as at 30 September 2020. KCC have included a material valuation uncertainty clause in their valuation report. This clause highlights that less certainty, and consequently a higher degree of caution, should be attached to the valuation as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. On the next page we have reviewed ranges of unobservable inputs, considered to be the net rental income and yield, and their impact on the fair value of the Group's property portfolio.

All valuations of the Company's freehold commercial investment properties have been prepared in accordance with the RICS Valuation - Professional Standards (the "Red Book") and the International Valuation Standards on the basis of Market Value. Whilst KCC has a potential conflict of interest, due to additional fee earning services provided, appropriate safeguards are in place with any other services performed by a different team with information barriers in place to mitigate for this.

All of the commercial investment properties have been categorised as a Level 3 fair value in both years, based on the inputs to the valuation technique used. The residential property has been categorised as a Level 2 fair value in both years.

  • Level 1: quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.
  • Level 2: inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly (i.e., as prices) or indirectly (i.e., derived from prices).
  • Level 3: inputs for the asset or liability that are not based on observable market data (unobservable inputs).

Valuation technique and significant unobservable inputs

The valuation technique used in measuring the fair value of investment property is a discounted cash flow using the following significant inputs: net rental income and yield.

www.cardiff-property.com

40

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

13 FREEHOLD INVESTMENT PROPERTIES (CONTINUED) Fair value using unobservable inputs (Level 3)

2020

2019

£000

£000

Opening fair value

5,491

5,430

Additions

5

1

Gains and losses recognised in income statement (Fair value movement on investment properties)

(145)

60

Closing fair value

5,351

5,491

Quantitative information about fair value measurements using unobservable inputs (Level 3)

The fair value referred to above of £5,351,000 (2019: £5,491,000) is based on the unobservable inputs of net rental income and yield.

The net rental income ranged between £29,000 (2019: £29,000) and £234,000 (2019: £254,000), and the initial yield ranged

between 7.5% and 10.0% (2019: 7.5% and 10.0%).

A decrease in net rental income or estimated future rent will result in a decrease in the fair value, whereas a decrease in the discount rate (yield) will result in an increase in fair value. There are interrelationships between these rates as they are partially determined by market rate conditions. A +1% change in yield would reduce the portfolio value by £530,000 (2019: £553,000), while a -1% change in yield would increase the portfolio value by £662,000 (2019: £692,000). A +/- 10% change in rent would increase/(decrease) the value of the portfolio by £535,000 (2019: £554,000).

The historical cost of the commercial investment properties was:

£'000

Group and Company

At 30 September 2020

3,716

At 30 September 2019

3,711

The cumulative amount of interest capitalised at 30 September 2020 was £90,000 (2019: £90,000).

Valuation technique and significant observable inputs

The valuation technique used in measuring the fair value of residential investment property is comparable property prices from the experience of local estate agents.

Fair value using observable inputs (Level 2)

2020

2019

£000

£000

Opening fair value

465

476

Additions

-

27

Fair value movement on investment properties recognised in income statement

(3)

(38)

Closing fair value

462

465

Quantitative information about fair value measurements using observable inputs (Level 2)

The fair value referred to above of £462,000 (2019: £465,000) is based on the observable inputs of comparable property prices in Egham and is based on memorandum of sale (subject to contract) based on an accepted offer for 14 Runnymede Road.

The historical cost of the residential investment properties was:

£'000

Group and Company

At 30 September 2020

202

At 30 September 2019

202

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

41

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

13. FREEHOLD INVESTMENT PROPERTIES (CONTINUED) Amounts recognised in the profit and loss account

2020

2019

£000

£000

Rental income from investment properties

468

463

Direct operating expenses (including repairs and maintenance) arising from investment property

that generated rental income during the period

(10)

(3)

Direct operating expenses (including repairs and maintenance) arising from investment property

that did not generate rental income during the period.

-

-

There are no contractual obligations to purchase, construct or develop investment property or for repairs, maintenance, or enhancements other than normal Landlord obligations.

There have been no transfers to/from investment properties.

14 PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT

Own use

Fixtures,

freehold

fittings and

Motor

property

equipment

vehicles

Total

Company and Group

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

Cost or valuation

At 30 September 2018

290

25

23

338

Additions

1

-

-

1

Disposals

-

-

(7)

(7)

Fair value movement

(10)

-

-

(10)

At 30 September 2019

281

25

16

322

Additions

2

-

-

2

Disposals

-

(3)

-

(3)

Fair value movement

(55)

-

-

(55)

At 30 September 2020

228

22

16

266

Depreciation

At 30 September 2018

-

25

15

40

Disposals

-

-

(6)

(6)

Charge for year

-

-

4

4

At 30 September 2019

-

25

13

38

Disposals

-

(3)

-

(3)

Charge for year

-

-

3

3

At 30 September 2020

-

22

16

38

Net book value

At 30 September 2020

228

-

-

228

At 30 September 2019

281

-

3

284

  1. Own use freehold property was valued by Kempton Carr Croft at market value as at 30 September 2020. The valuation technique used in measuring the fair value of own use freehold property is fair value using unobservable inputs (level 3). The historic cost of the property is £209,000 (2019: £207,000). In accordance with IAS 16.35 the fair value of the freehold property is presented by eliminating accumulated depreciation and adjusting the gross book value of the asset to equal revalued amount.

www.cardiff-property.com

42

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

15 INVESTMENTS

Shares in

joint

Unlisted

Listed

venture

investments

investments

Total

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

At 30 September 2018

15,200

8

878

16,086

Net change in investments at fair value through other

comprehensive income

-

-

(43)

(43)

Share of profit of Joint Venture

904

-

-

904

Dividend paid by Joint Venture

(500)

-

-

(500)

At 30 September 2019

15,604

8

835

16,447

Net change in investments at fair value through other

comprehensive income

-

-

(14)

(14)

Acquired during the year

-

-

100

100

Disposed during the year

-

(4)

-

(4)

Share of profit of Joint Venture

1,362

-

-

1,362

Dividend paid by Joint Venture

(643)

-

-

(643)

At 30 September 2020

16,323

4

921

17,248

Listed investments

These include minority stakes in The Renewables Infrastructure Group Limited, A2D Funding plc, Places for People, Bruntwood and Aquila Services Group Plc listed on The London Stock Exchange, ImmuPharma Plc and Galileo Resources plc, listed on AIM, and are designated as investments at fair value through other comprehensive income. Fair value has been assessed using Level 1 observable inputs being quoted share prices.

Joint Venture

The Group owns 47.62% (2019: 47.62%) and J R Wollenberg owns 2.38% (2019: 2.38%) of the total issued ordinary share capital of £1,050,000 of Campmoss Property Company Limited. Campmoss Property Company Limited was incorporated in England and Wales and has its registered office at 56 Station Road, Egham, Surrey, TW20 9LF.

E R Goodwin owns directly 0.05% and is a connected party to 47.57% of the total issued ordinary share capital of £1,050,000 of Campmoss Property Company Limited.

The Campmoss Board comprises J R Wollenberg and E R Goodwin who jointly control Campmoss by virtue of the respective shareholdings and Joint Venture Agreement governing the way in which the Campmoss entities are controlled. The Board has therefore determined that it has joint control of Campmoss.

The Group's share of the results of Campmoss Property Company Limited and its subsidiary undertakings for the year ended 30 September 2020 has been incorporated in the consolidated financial statements. The following figures have been derived from the financial statements of Campmoss Property Company Limited and those of its subsidiary undertakings for the year ended 30 September 2020.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

43

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

15 INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)

The Joint Ventures consolidated results were:

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Revenue

1,226

1,106

Cost of sales

(1,341)

(1,267)

Administrative expenses

(138)

(148)

Other operating income

184

250

Fair value movement on investment properties)

3,043

1,837

Interest receivable

75

122

Interest payable

(1)

-

Taxation on ordinary activities

(188)

(2)

Profit after tax

2,860

1,898

Other comprehensive income

-

-

Total comprehensive income

2,860

1,898

Group's share of results of Joint Venture (47.62%)

1,362

904

The consolidated net assets of Campmoss Property Company Limited and its subsidiary undertakings was:

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Non-current assets

Investment properties

18,691

15,533

Current assets

Inventory and work in progress

10,258

7,558

Trade and other receivables

276

252

Term deposits

4,573

8,774

Cash and cash equivalents

2,423

1,988

Total current assets

17,530

18,572

Total assets

36,221

34,105

Current liabilities

Trade and other payables

(1,220)

(628)

Non-current liabilities

Deferred taxation

(723)

(709)

Total liabilities

(1,943)

(1,337)

Net assets

34,278

32,768

Group's share of results of Joint Venture (47.62%)

16,323

15,604

Investment properties are included at fair value based on Directors' valuations as at 30 September 2020.

The fair value referred to above of £18,691,000 (2019: £15,533,000) is based on the unobservable inputs of net rental income and yield.

The net rental income ranged between £45,000 (2019: £45,000) and £448,000 (2019: £422,000), and the initial yield ranged

between 8.9% and 11.0% (2019: 9.0% and 10.0%).

A decrease in net rental income or estimated future rent will result in a decrease in the fair value, whereas a decrease in the discount rate (yield) will result in an increase in fair value. There are interrelationships between these rates as they are partially determined by market rate conditions. A +1% change in yield would reduce the portfolio value by £1,038,000 (2019: £1,204,000), while a -1% change in yield would increase the portfolio value by £1,262,000 (2019: £1,491,000). A +/- 10% change in rent would increase/(decrease) the value of the portfolio by £1,172,000 (2019: £1,251,000).

www.cardiff-property.com

44

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

16 INVENTORY AND WORK IN PROGRESS

2020

2019

£000

£000

Opening costs

674

672

Additions

14

2

688

674

This comprises development properties held for sale at The Windsor Business Centre.

17 TRADE AND OTHER RECEIVABLES

2020

2019

£000

£000

Trade receivables

175

64

Other receivables

33

25

Prepayments and accrued income

30

50

238

139

Trade and other receivables are valued using the expected credit loss model using the simplified approach following the formula: Probability of Default (PD) x Loss given Default (LGD) x Exposure at Default (EAD).

18 TRADE AND OTHER PAYABLES

2020

2019

£000

£000

Rents invoiced in advance

129

124

Trade creditors

22

14

Other taxes and social security

56

64

Other creditors

247

255

Accruals

75

71

529

528

19 DEFERRED TAXATION

2020

2019

£000

£000

At beginning of year

(94)

(108)

(Debit)/credit for the year in the income statement

(8)

14

At end of year

(102)

(94)

Provision has been made for deferred taxation as follows:

2020

2019

£000

£000

Difference between accumulated depreciation and amortisation and capital allowances

(57)

(51)

Other temporary differences

(45)

(43)

Deferred tax liability

(102)

(94)

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

45

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

20 SHARE CAPITAL

2020

2019

£000

£000

Authorised

4,500,000 (2019: 4,500,000) ordinary shares of 20 pence each

900

900

Allotted, called up and fully paid

At 30 September 2019 1,240,205 (30 September 2018: 1,252,772) ordinary shares of 20 pence each

248

251

Cancelled during the year 45,694 (2019: 12,567) ordinary shares of 20 pence each

(9)

(3)

At 30 September 2020 -1,194,511 (30 September 2019: 1,240,205) ordinary shares of 20 pence each

239

248

The total number of ordinary shares under option is nil (2019: nil).

Capital management

The Board's objectives when managing capital are to maintain a balance between providing shareholders with an adequate return by means of a progressive dividend policy whilst ensuring the security of the Group supported by a sound capital structure. In order to maintain what the Directors consider is the optimal capital structure, the Group may adjust its dividend policy, issue new shares or return capital to shareholders.

21 OTHER RESERVES

Equity

Own use

Capital

investments

property

redemption

Capital

Merger

at FVOCI

reserve

reserve

reserve

reserve

Total

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

At 1 October 2018

99

84

503

30

1,869

2,585

Purchase of own shares

-

-

3

-

-

3

Fair value of other properties

-

(10)

-

-

-

(10)

Net change in fair value

(43)

-

-

-

-

(43)

At 30 September 2019 and 1 October 2019

56

74

506

30

1,869

2,535

Purchase of own shares

-

-

9

-

-

9

Fair value of other properties

-

(55)

-

-

-

(55)

Net change in fair value

(14)

-

-

-

-

(14)

At 30 September 2020

42

19

515

30

1,869

2,475

Equity investments at fair value through other comprehensive income reserve relates to the change in fair value of the Group's listed investments portfolio. The capital redemption reserve arises from the transfer from share capital of the nominal value of shares purchased for cancellation. The capital and merger reserves arise from the acquisition of subsidiaries.

22 INVESTMENT PROPERTY FAIR VALUE RESERVE

2020

2019

£000

£000

At beginning of year

1,814

827

Transfer from retained earnings on fair value movement in the year - Cardiff

(148)

22

Transfer from retained earnings on fair value movement in the year - Campmoss

1,473

965

At end of year

3,139

1,814

The investment property fair value reserve represents surpluses and deficits arising on fair value movements of the Group's properties, including our share of Campmoss Property Company Limited, our 47.62% Joint Venture. This reserve comprises unrealised profits and losses and is not available for distribution until realised through sale.

www.cardiff-property.com

46

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

23 COMMITMENTS

Expenditure on development and investment properties

There were nil commitments under contract at 30 September 2020 (2019: nil).

24 OPERATING LEASES

Operating leases granted

The Group owns commercial property which it leases out for rental income under operating leases. Rental income earned during the year was £650,000 (2019: £647,000) and direct operating expenses arising on the properties during the year were £23,000 (2019:£16,000). The properties are expected to generate rental yield between 7.5% and 10% depending on the type of property. Most lease contracts include market rate review clauses in the event that the lessee exercises their option to renew. The lessee does not have an option to purchase the property at the end of the lease. The future aggregate minimum rentals receivable under non-cancellable operating leases are as follows:

2020

2019

£000

£000

Within one year

511

600

Years two to five

963

1,328

More than five years

244

302

Total

1,718

2,230

Operating leases taken

Neither the Group nor the Company had any material commitments under non-cancellable operating leases at 30 September 2020 (2019: nil).

25 RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

During the year the Company entered into the following transactions with related parties:

Balance owed by/(to)

related party at

Value

30 September

2020

2019

2020

2019

Party

Nature of transaction

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

Campmoss Property

Management fees received by the

Company Limited

Company

531

531

99

8

Consultancy fees received by J R

Wollenberg (Director)

60

60

60

15

D M Joseph

Director's salary paid

3

3

-

-

Campmoss Property Company Limited is a Company in which J Richard Wollenberg is a Director and both he and the Company are shareholders.

Derek Joseph is a Non-Executive Director of First Choice Estates plc, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company.

Details relating to the shareholdings and remuneration of key management personnel are set out in the Directors' Report on page 11 and note 9 on page 37.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

47

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

26 FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

The Group has exposure to credit risk, liquidity risk and market risk. This note presents information about the Group's exposure to these risks, along with the Group's objectives, processes and policies for managing the risks.

Credit risk

Credit risk is the risk of financial loss for the Group if a client or counterparty to a financial instrument fails to meet its contractual obligations, and arises principally from the Group's receivables from clients, amounts due from the Joint Venture and monies on deposit with financial institutions.

The Group has a credit policy in place and credit risk is monitored by the Board on an ongoing basis. Credit evaluations are carried out on all new clients before credit is granted above certain thresholds. There is a spread of risks among a number of clients with no significant concentration of risk with any one client. The Group establishes an allowance for impairment in respect of trade receivables where there is any doubt over recoverability.

The Group has significant monies on deposit at the year end, largely in short term treasury deposits. The Group's policy is to maximise interest income on these cash deposits whilst credit risk is mitigated through placing cash with leading international highly-rated financial institutions.

The carrying amount of financial assets represents the maximum exposure to credit risk as follows:

2020

2019

£000

£000

Cash and cash equivalents

3,773

2,473

Term deposits

1,748

3,084

Trade and other receivables

208

64

Listed investments

921

834

6,650

6,455

At 30 September 2020, the Group had £5,521,000 (2019: £5,557,000) deposited with banks and financial institutions of which:

£3,773,000 (2019: £2,473,000) is available for withdrawal in less than 30 days; £nil (2019: £nil) is available for withdrawal in

30-60 days; £nil (2019: £nil) is available for withdrawal in 60-90 days; £1,747,000 (2019: £2,417,000) is available for withdrawal in

90-180 days and £1,000 (2019: £667,000) is available for withdrawal in over 180 days. As shown in the table above, the amounts available for withdrawal in over 90 days are classed as financial assets.

All financial assets are sterling denominated.

The ageing of trade receivables and other receivables along with the associated provision at the year-end was:

2020

2019

Gross

Provision

Gross

Provision

£000

£000

£000

£000

Not past due

227

(21)

91

(2)

Past due 31-90 days

27

(25)

3

(3)

254

(46)

94

(5)

The movement in the provision during the year was as follows:

At beginning of year

5

-

Amounts written back

(5)

-

Provided in year

46

5

At end of year

46

5

www.cardiff-property.com

48

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED

26 FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS (CONTINUED)

Liquidity risk

Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group will not be able to meet its financial obligations as they fall due. The Group's approach to managing liquidity is to ensure, by preparing and regularly reviewing cash flow forecasts, that as far as possible, there will always be adequate liquidity to meet its liabilities as they fall due, without incurring unacceptable losses or risking damage to the Group's reputation.

In respect of cash deposits, the carrying value approximates to fair value because of the short maturity of the deposits. Interest rates are floating and based on LIBOR. There is also no difference between the fair value of other financial assets and financial liabilities and their carrying value in the balance sheet.

The Group's financial liabilities comprise trade creditors and other creditors amounting to £454,000 (2019: £457,000) and are all repayable within one year and are non-interest bearing.

Banking facilities

The Company does not have loan or overdraft facilities. Sufficient cash resources are available to the Group to complete the current maintenance and development programme. The Board will keep this position under review.

Market risk

Market risk is the risk that changes in market prices such as currency rates, interest rates and stock market prices will affect the Group's results. This applies to the Group's listed investment portfolio which are a mix of AIM listed securities and retail bonds. The Group's objective is to manage and control market risk within suitable parameters.

Currency risk

All of the Group's transactions are denominated in sterling. Accordingly, the Group has no direct exposure to exchange rate fluctuations. Furthermore, the Group does not trade in derivatives.

Interest rate risk

The Group does not undertake any hedging activity in this area. The main element of interest rate risk involves sterling deposits which are placed on a fixed rate deposit.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

49

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

COMPANY BALANCE SHEET

AT 30 SEPTEMBER 2020

2020

2020

2019

2019

Notes

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

Fixed assets

Tangible assets:

Investment properties

13

5,813

5,955

Property, plant and equipment

14

228

284

6,041

6,239

Investments

29

4,205

4,119

10,246

10,358

Current assets

Debtors

30

172

121

Term deposits

1,748

2,418

Cash at bank and in hand

1,820

1,458

3,740

3,997

Current liabilities

Trade and other payables

31

(2,227)

(2,307)

Corporation tax

-

(97)

Net current assets

1,513

1,593

Total assets less current liabilities

11,759

11,951

Deferred tax liability

32

(102)

(94)

Net assets

11,657

11,857

Capital and reserves

Called up share capital

20

239

248

Share premium account

5,076

5,076

Investment property fair value reserve

33

1,898

2,046

Other reserves

34

2,426

2,486

Retained earnings

2,018

2,001

Shareholders' funds - equity

11,657

11,857

Profit for the financial year of the Company was £855,000 (2019: £986,000). In accordance with the provisions of Section 408 of the Companies Act 2006 the Company has not published a separate profit and loss account.

These financial statements were approved by the Board of Directors on 23 November 2020 and authorised for issue on its behalf by:

  1. Richard Wollenberg Director
    Company number: 00022705

www.cardiff-property.com

50

COMPANY STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN EQUITY

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 30 SEPTEMBER 2020

Investment

Share

property

Share

premium

fair value

Other

Retained

Total

capital

account

reserve

reserves

earnings

equity

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

At 1 October 2018

251

5,076

2,024

2,536

1,467

11,354

Profit for the year

-

-

-

-

986

986

Other comprehensive income -

Revaluation of investments

-

-

-

(43

-

(43)

Fair value of other property

-

-

-

(10)

-

(10)

Transactions with equity holders

Dividends

(210)

(210)

Purchase of own shares

-

-

-

-

(220)

(220)

Total transactions with equity holders

(3)

-

-

3

(430)

(430)

Fair value movement of investment

properties

-

-

22

-

(22)

-

At 30 September 2019 and

1 October 2019

248

5,076

2,046

2,486

2,001

11,857

Profit for the year

-

-

-

-

855

855

Other comprehensive income -

Revaluation of investments

-

-

-

(14)

-

(14)

Fair value of other property

-

-

-

(55)

-

(55)

Transactions with equity holders

Dividends

-

-

-

-

(213)

(213)

Purchase of own shares

(9)

-

-

9

(773)

(773)

Total transactions with equity holders

(9)

-

-

9

(986)

(986)

Fair value movement of investment

properties

-

-

(148)

-

148

-

At 30 September 2020

239

5,076

1,898

2,426

2,018

11,657

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

51

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

27 ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The Cardiff Property plc (the "Company") is a Company incorporated and domiciled in the UK.

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Financial Reporting Standard 101 Reduced Disclosure Framework (FRS 101) and in accordance with applicable accounting standards.

In preparing these financial statements, the Company applies the recognition, measurement and disclosure requirements of International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the EU ("Adopted IFRSs"), but makes amendments where necessary in order to comply with Companies Act 2006 and has set out below where advantage of the FRS 101 disclosure exemptions has been taken.

In these financial statements, the Company has applied the exemptions available under FRS 101 in respect of the following disclosures:

  • A Cash Flow Statement and related notes;
  • Disclosures in respect of capital management;
  • The effects of new but not yet effective IFRSs; and
  • Disclosures in respect of the compensation of Key Management Personnel.

As the consolidated financial statements of The Cardiff Property plc include the equivalent disclosures, the Company has also taken the exemptions under FRS 101 available in respect of the following:

  • Certain disclosures required by IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement and the disclosures required by IFRS 7 Financial Instrument Disclosures.

The Company proposes to continue to adopt the reduced disclosure framework of FRS 101 in its next financial statements.

The accounting policies set out below have, unless otherwise stated, been applied consistently to all periods presented in these financial statements.

Use of estimates and judgements

Judgements made by the Directors, in the application of these accounting policies that have significant effect on the financial statements and estimates with a significant risk of material adjustment in the next year are discussed in note 3 where applicable to the Group and Company. Additionally, the assessment of investments in shares in Group Undertakings and share in Joint Venture are judgement made by the Directors of the Company.

Measurement convention

The financial statements have been prepared under the historical cost accounting rules and in accordance with applicable accounting standards and with the Companies Act 2006. The financial statements are prepared on the historical cost basis except that investment properties and certain financial instruments are stated at their fair value.

Going concern

The Company remains profitable and cash generative and has a strong balance sheet. Accordingly, the Directors consider it appropriate to continue to prepare the financial statements on a going concern basis. Whilst a significant uncertainty the impact of COVID-19 has not changed the Directors view of going concern as the Company has significant cash balances and a modest cost base.

Investment properties

Investment properties are properties which are held either to earn rental income or for capital appreciation or for both. Investment properties are stated at fair value.

In applying the fair value model in IAS 40 Investment Property:

  1. investment properties are held at fair value. Any gains or losses arising from changes in the fair value are recognised in profit or loss in the period that they arise; and
  2. ino depreciation is provided in respect of investment properties applying the fair value model.

Any gain or loss arising from a change in fair value is recognised in profit or loss. Rental income from investment property is accounted for as described in the revenue accounting policy in note 2.

Independent professional valuations for the Company's investment properties are obtained by the Directors annually. The most recent such valuations were obtained as at 30 September 2020.

www.cardiff-property.com

52

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

27 ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

Property, plant and equipment

Property, plant and equipment - other, comprises property, motor vehicles and fixtures, fittings and equipment.

Property is stated at valuation. An independent professional valuation for the Company's freehold property is obtained by the Directors annually. The most recent valuation was at 30 September 2020. Surpluses or deficits arising are recognised in other comprehensive income.

Motor vehicles, plant and equipment are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation.

Provision is made for depreciation so as to write off their cost on a straight-line basis over their expected useful life as follows:

Freehold property

50 years

Motor vehicles

4 years

• Fixtures, fittings and equipment

4 years

In accordance with IAS 16.35 the fair value of the freehold property is presented by eliminating accumulated depreciation and adjusting the gross book value of the asset to equal revalued amount.

Investments

Listed investments are stated at fair value. See note 15.

Investments in Subsidiary Undertakings and Joint Ventures are stated at cost less any impairment.

Cash at bank and in hand

Cash comprises cash in hand and deposits repayable in line with notice periods determined by the Company.

Dividends

Dividends unpaid at the balance sheet date are only recognised as a liability to the extent that they are appropriately declared and authorised and are no longer at the discretion of the Company. Unpaid dividends that do not meet these criteria are disclosed in the Directors' Report.

28 ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Auditor's remuneration:

Fees payable to the Company's auditor for the audit of the annual accounts

25

24

Depreciation of plant and equipment

3

4

Details of employee numbers and costs in respect of the Company, which are the same as the Group are given in note 8.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

53

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

29 INVESTMENTS

Shares in

Shares in

Joint

Group

Venture

Listed

undertakings

undertaking

investments

Total

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

At beginning of year

2,739

545

835

4,119

Acquisitions

-

-

100

100

Revaluation of investments

-

-

(14)

(14)

At end of year

2,739

545

921

4,205

Group undertakings

The Company's investments in Group undertakings, all of which are incorporated in England and Wales, are as follows:

Issued share

capital held

Type of shares held

Activity

First Choice Estates plc

100%

Ordinary shares of £1 each

Property development

Thames Valley Retirement Homes Limited

100%

Ordinary shares of £1 each

Property development

Village Residential plc

100%

Ordinary shares of 10p each

Dormant

Cardiff Property (Construction) Limited

100%

Ordinary shares of £1 each

Dormant

Wadharma Holdings Limited

100%

Ordinary shares of £1 each

Dormant

Land Bureau Limited

100%

Ordinary shares of £1 each

Dormant

Campmoss Property Company Limited

47.62%

Ordinary shares of £1 each

Property investment

Campmoss Property Developments Limited

47.62%

Ordinary shares of £1 each

Property development

Campmoss Property (Tangley Pace) Limited

47.62%

Ordinary shares of £1 each

Property investment

All of the above undertakings have been included within the consolidated financial statements. All of the above undertakings registered office is 56 Station Road, Egham, Surrey, TW20 9LF. The dormant companies accounts are unaudited.

Further information on listed investments and our Joint Venture, Campmoss Property Company Limited, is included in note 15.

30 DEBTORS

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Trade debtors

37

40

Amounts owed by subsidiary undertakings

-

25

Amounts owed by Joint Venture undertaking

99

8

Other debtors

10

3

Prepayments and accrued income

26

45

172

121

www.cardiff-property.com

54

NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)

31 CREDITORS

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Rents received in advance

102

97

Trade creditors

22

14

Amounts owed to subsidiary undertakings

1,837

1,914

Other taxes and social security

47

56

Other creditors

154

163

Accruals and deferred income

65

63

2,227

2,307

32 DEFERRED TAX LIABILITY

2020

2019

Deferred taxation

£'000

£'000

At beginning of year

(94)

(108)

(Charge)/credit for the year in the profit and loss account

(8)

14

At end of year

(102)

(94)

Provision has been made for deferred taxation as follows:

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

Difference between accumulated depreciation and amortisation and capital allowances

(57)

(51)

Other temporary differences

(45)

(43)

Deferred tax liability

(102)

(94)

33 INVESTMENT PROPERTY FAIR VALUE RESERVE

2020

2019

£'000

£'000

At beginning of year

2,046

2,024

Fair value movement in year

(148)

22

At end of year

1,898

2,046

34 OTHER RESERVES

Capital

Fair value

redemption

Merger

reserve

reserve

reserve

Total

£'000

£'000

£'000

£'000

At 1 October 2018

164

503

1,869

2,536

Fair value movement on property held for own use

(10)

-

-

(10)

Revaluation of investments

(43)

-

-

(43)

Purchase of own shares

-

3

-

3

At 30 September 2019 and 1 October 2019

111

506

1,869

2,486

Fair value movement on property held for own use

(55)

-

-

(55)

Revaluation of investments

(14)

-

-

(14)

Purchase of own shares

-

9

-

9

At 30 September 2020

42

515

1,869

2,426

The own use The capital redemption reserve arises from the transfer from share capital of the nominal value of shares purchased for cancellation from the purchase of own shares and the merger reserves arise from the acquisition of subsidiaries.

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

55

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING

IMPORTANT NOTICE RE COVID-19

In light of the Government's directive limiting gatherings, it is necessary for the Company to restrict physical participation at the Annual General Meeting in line with current guidance and legislation.The Annual General Meeting will be kept as concise and efficient as possible.The Annual General Meeting will be a closed meeting whereby Shareholders will not be permitted to attend (other than a minimum number of persons who are required to attend ensure the meeting is quorate and can conduct the business of the meeting).The Company has determined that the Resolutions to be proposed at the Annual General Meeting shall be voted on through a poll rather than on a show

of hands.The Company believes that this is the best and fairest way to ensure that the votes of all Shareholders can be taken into account, whilst also preventing the Company and Shareholders breaching applicable regulations. Accordingly, the Company encourages all Shareholders to vote electronically or to submit a Form of Proxy, rather than attend the meeting in person.

NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING

Notice is hereby given that the Annual General Meeting of The Cardiff Property Public Limited Company will be held at

56 Station Road, Egham, Surrey TW20 9LF on Thursday 14 January 2021 at 12 noon, for the following purposes:

Ordinary business

  1. To receive the reports of the Directors and auditor and the financial statements for the year ended 30 September 2020.
  2. To approve the remuneration report for the year ended 30 September 2020 including the remuneration policy.
  3. To declare a dividend to be paid on 29 January 2021.
  4. To re-elect as a Director, J Richard Wollenberg who retires by rotation.
  5. To re-appoint Crowe U.K. LLP as auditor of the Company and to authorise the Directors to determine its remuneration.

Special business

To consider and, if thought fit, to pass resolution 6 as an ordinary resolution and resolutions 7 and 8 as special resolutions.

6. That the Directors be generally and unconditionally authorised pursuant to section 551 of the Companies Act 2006 to exercise all the powers of the Company to allot, grant options over or otherwise deal with or dispose of the unissued share capital of the Company provided that the authority hereby given:

  1. shall be limited to unissued shares in the share capital of the Company having an aggregate nominal value of £79,634; and
  2. shall expire at the end of the next Annual General Meeting of the Company unless previously renewed or varied save that the Directors may, notwithstanding such expiry, allot, grant options over or otherwise deal with or dispose of any shares under this authority in pursuance of an offer or agreement so to do made by the Company before the expiry of this authority.

Special resolutions

7. Subject to the passing of the preceding ordinary resolution the Directors be and they are hereby empowered pursuant to section 570 and section 573 of the Companies Act 2006 to allot equity securities (as defined in section 560 of that Act) for cash pursuant to the authority conferred in that behalf by the preceding ordinary resolution, as if section 561(1) of that Act did not apply to any such allotment, provided that this power shall be limited:

  1. to the allotment of equity securities in connection with a rights issue in favour of ordinary shareholders where the equity securities respectively attributable to the interests of all ordinary shareholders are proportionate (as nearly as may be) to the respective numbers of ordinary shares held by them subject only to such exclusions or other arrangements as the Directors may deem necessary or expedient to deal with fractional entitlements; and
  2. to the allotment (otherwise than pursuant to subparagraph (a) above) of equity securities up to an aggregate nominal amount of £11,945 representing 5% of the present issued share capital of the Company;

and shall expire on the date of the next Annual General Meeting of the Company or 15 months from the passing of this resolution, whichever is the earlier, save that the Company may before such expiry make an offer or agreement which would or might require equity securities to be allotted after such expiry and the Board may allot equity securities in pursuance of such an offer or agreement as if the power conferred hereby had not expired.

www.cardiff-property.com

56

NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING (CONTINUED)

8. Pursuant to article 12(2) of the Company's articles of association that the Company be and is hereby unconditionally and generally authorised to make market purchases (as defined in section 693(4) of the Companies Act 2006) of ordinary shares of 20 pence each in the capital of the Company, provided that:

  1. the maximum number of ordinary shares hereby authorised to be acquired is 179,057 representing 14.99% of the present issued share capital of the Company;
  2. the minimum price which may be paid for such shares is 20 pence per share which amount shall be exclusive of expenses;
  3. the maximum price which may be paid for such shares is, in respect of a share contracted to be purchased on any day, an amount (exclusive of expenses) equal to 105% of the average of the middle market quotations for an ordinary share of the Company taken from the Daily Official List of The London Stock Exchange on the ten business days immediately preceding the day on which the share is contracted to be purchased;
  4. the authority hereby conferred shall expire at the conclusion of the next Annual General Meeting or fifteen months from the passing of this resolution, whichever is the earlier; and
  5. the Company may make a contract to purchase its own shares under the authority hereby conferred prior to the expiry of such authority which will or may be executed wholly or partly after the expiry of such authority and may make a purchase of its own shares in pursuance of any such contract.

Registered office:

By order of the Board

56 Station Road

K Chandler FCA

Egham

Secretary

Surrey

23 November 2020

TW20 9LF

THE CARDIFF PROPERTY plc

57

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 September 2020

Stock code: CDFF

NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING (CONTINUED)

The following notes represent the standard AGM Notice notes but, please note, In accordance with the Government's legislation and related restrictions in response to COVID-19, and to minimise public health risks, the 2020 General Meeting will be held as a closed meeting whereby Shareholders will not be permitted to attend (other than a minimum number of persons who are required to attend ensure the meeting is quorate and can conduct the business of the meeting). As such, the Company encourages all shareholders to appoint the Chairman of the Annual General Meeting to act as their proxy as any other named person will not be permitted to attend the meeting.

NOTES

  1. A member entitled to attend and vote at the above meeting is entitled to appoint a proxy to exercise all or any of their rights to attend, speak and vote on his/her behalf at the meeting. A proxy need not be a member of the company. Shareholders or their appointed representative(s) (other than the Chairman of the Meeting) will not be permitted to attend the AGM.
  2. You may appoint more than one proxy provided each proxy is appointed to exercise rights attached to different shares. You may not appoint more than one proxy to exercise rights attached to any one share. To appoint more than one proxy you may photocopy the form of proxy. Please indicate the proxy holder's name and the number of shares in relation to which they are authorised to act as your proxy (which, in aggregate, should not exceed the number of shares held by you). Please also indicate 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. Shareholders are encouraged to appoint the Chairman of the Meeting only as their Proxy.
  3. A form of proxy accompanies this notice. Forms of proxy, to be valid, must be delivered to Neville Registrars Limited at Neville House, Steelpark Road, Halesowen B62 8HD in accordance with the instructions printed thereon, not less than 48 hours before the time appointed for the holding of the meeting. As an alternative to returning a hard copy Form of Proxy, you may submit your proxy electronically at www.sharegateway.co.uk by using the Personal Proxy Registration Code as shown on the Form of Proxy. Shareholders can use this service to vote or appoint a proxy online. The same voting deadline of at least 48 hours before the time appointed for holding the meeting or adjourned meeting (as the case may be) applies. If you need help with voting online, please contact our Registrars, Neville Registrars Limited +(0) 121 585 1131 or via email at info@nevilleregistrars.co.uk.
  4. CREST members who wish to appoint a proxy or proxies by utilising the CREST electronic proxy appointment service may do so by utilising the procedures described in the CREST Manual. CREST Personal Members or other CREST sponsored members, and those CREST members who have appointed a voting service provider(s), should refer to their CREST sponsor or voting service provider(s), who will be able to take the appropriate action on their behalf. In order for a proxy appointment made by means of CREST to be valid, the appropriate CREST message must be transmitted so as to be received by
    the Company's agent, Neville Registrars (whose CREST ID is 7RA11) by the specified latest time(s) for receipt of proxy appointments. For this purpose, the time of receipt will be taken to be the time (as determined by the timestamp applied to the message by the CREST Applications Host) from which the Company's agent is able to retrieve the message by enquiry to CREST in the manner prescribed. The Company may treat as invalid a CREST Proxy Instruction in the circumstances set out in Regulation 35(5)(A) of the Uncertificated Securities Regulations 2001.
  5. If you are not a member of the company but you have been nominated under section 146 of the Companies Act 2006 (the 'Act') by a member of the company to enjoy information rights, you do not have the rights of members in relation to the appointment of proxies set out in notes 1, 2 and 3. The rights described in those notes can only be exercised by members of the company.
  6. A vote withheld is not a vote in law, which means that the vote will not be counted in the calculation of votes for or against the resolution. If you either select the "Withheld" option or if no voting indication is given, your proxy will vote or abstain from voting at his or her discretion. Your proxy will vote (or abstain from voting) as he or she thinks fit in relation to any other matter which is put before the meeting.
  7. Information regarding the meeting, including the information required by section 311A of the Act, is available from www. cardiff-property.com.
  8. As provided by Regulation 41 of the Uncertificated Securities Regulations 2001, only those members registered in the register of members of the company 48 hours before the time set for the meeting shall be entitled to vote at the meeting in respect of the number of shares registered in their name at that time. Changes to entries on the relevant register of securities after that time shall be disregarded in determining the rights of any person to vote at the meeting.
  9. As at 18:00 hours on 23 November 2020, the company's issued share capital comprised 1,194,511 ordinary shares of 20 pence each. Each ordinary share carries the right to one vote at a general meeting of the company and, therefore, the total number of voting rights in the company at 18:00 hours on 23 November 2020 is 1,194,511.

www.cardiff-property.com

58

NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING (CONTINUED)

  1. Under section 319A of the Act, the company must answer any question you ask relating to the business being dealt with at the meeting unless (a) answering the question would interfere unduly with the preparation for the meeting or involve the disclosure of confidential information; (b) the answer has already been given on a website in the form of an answer to a question; or (c) it is undesirable in the interests of the company or the good order of the meeting that the question be answered.
  2. If you are a person who has been nominated under section 146 of the Act to enjoy information rights (a 'Nominated Person'), you may have a right under an agreement between you and the member of the company who has nominated you to have information rights (a 'Relevant Member') to be appointed or to have someone else appointed as a proxy for the meeting. If you either do not have such a right or if you have such a right but do not wish to exercise it, you may have a right under an agreement between you and the Relevant Member to give instructions to the Relevant Member as to the exercise of voting rights. Your main point of contact in terms of your investment in the company remains the Relevant Member (or, perhaps, your custodian or broker) and you should continue to contact them (and not the company) regarding any changes or queries relating to your personal details and your interest in the company (including any administrative matters). The only exception to this is where the company expressly requests a response from you.
  3. Members satisfying the thresholds in section 338 of the Act may require the company to give, to members of the company entitled to receive notice of the Annual General Meeting, notice of a resolution which those members intend to move (and which may properly be moved) at the Annual General Meeting. A resolution may properly be moved at the Annual General Meeting unless (i) it would, if passed, be ineffective (whether by reason of any inconsistency with any enactment or the company's constitution or otherwise); (ii) it is defamatory of any person; or (iii) it is frivolous or vexatious. The business which may be dealt with at the Annual General Meeting includes a resolution circulated pursuant to this right. A request made pursuant to this right may be in hard copy or electronic form, must identify the resolution of which notice is to be given, must be authenticated by the person(s) making it and must be received by the company not later than 6 weeks before the date of the Annual General Meeting.
  4. Members satisfying the thresholds in section 338A of the Act may request the company to include in the business to be dealt with at the Annual General Meeting any matter (other than a proposed resolution) which may properly be included in the business at the Annual General Meeting. A matter may properly be included in the business at the Annual General Meeting unless (i) it is defamatory of any person or (ii) it is frivolous or vexatious. A request made pursuant to this right may be in hard copy or electronic form, must identify the matter to be included in the business, must be accompanied by a statement setting out the grounds for the request, must be authenticated by the person(s) making it and must be received by the company not later than 6 weeks before the date of the Annual General Meeting.
  5. Members satisfying the thresholds in section 527 of the Act can require the company to publish a statement on its website setting out any matter relating to (i) 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 (ii) any circumstances connected with an auditor of the company ceasing to hold office since the last Annual General Meeting, which the members propose to raise at the meeting. The company cannot require the members requesting the publication to pay its expenses. Any statement placed on the website must also be sent to the company's auditor no later than the time it makes its statement available on the website. The business which may be dealt with at the Annual General Meeting includes any statement that the company has been required to publish on its website pursuant to this right.
  6. Copies of the Directors' service contracts will be available for inspection at the registered office of the company during usual business hours from the date of this notice until the date of the Annual General Meeting, and also during and at least fifteen minutes before the beginning of the Annual General Meeting.
  7. The company may hold in treasury any of its own shares purchased under the authority conferred by resolution 8 above. This would give the company the ability to reissue treasury shares and provides greater flexibility in the management of its capital base. Any shares purchased by the company not held in treasury will be cancelled and the number of shares in issue reduced accordingly.

59

FINANCIAL CALENDAR

24 November 2020

Results announced for the year ended 30 September 2020

14 January 2021

Annual General Meeting/General Meeting

14 January 2021

Ex-dividend date for the final dividend

15 January 2021

Record date for the final dividend

29 January 2021

Final dividend to be paid

May 2021

Interim results for 2021 to be announced

July 2021

Interim dividend for 2021 to be paid

30 September 2021

Year end

www.cardiff-property.com

The Cardiff Property plc 56 Station Road, Egham Surrey TW20 9LF

Tel: 01784 437444

Fax: 01784 439157

www.cardiff-property.com

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The Cardiff Property plc published this content on 24 November 2020 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 24 November 2020 13:34:01 UTC