Formerly | Falkland Island Holdings (1997–2016) FOSSILDRIVE PLC (1997) |
---|---|
Company type | Public limited company |
AIM: FIH | |
Industry | Conglomerate holding Company |
Founded | 1997 |
Headquarters | Bishops Stortford, England |
Area served | UK and Falkland Islands |
Key people |
|
Revenue | £38.56 Million (2015) |
£3.93 Million (2015) | |
£3.14 Million (2015) | |
Total assets | £57.67 Million (2015) |
Total equity | £36.69 Million (2015) |
Number of employees | 357 (2015) |
Subsidiaries | |
Website | www |
FIH Group plc (stylized as FIH group) or FIH (formerly Falkland Islands Holdings) is a British conglomerate which operates in the Falkland Islands through the Falkland Islands Company. Its other main businesses are the Portsmouth Harbour Ferry Company, which operates the Gosport Ferry in the south of England, and a London-based art storage and transport company called Momart.
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In 1997, Anglo United, which had an unsustainable amount of debt, underwent a capital reconstruction and distributed shares in Falkland Islands Holdings plc to its shareholders. Anglo United shareholders received 1 share in FIH for every 300 shares of AU. [1]
in January 1998 FIH was first listed on the London Stock Exchange, with £2m of debt the issue price of 100p. The company was capitalised at £6 million. In January 2003 FIH share listing moved to the AIM market.
In February 2004 Falkland Gold and Minerals Limited (FGML) was established with financing to carry out an aero magnetic survey of the Falklands to exploit its exploration licence covering the whole of the Island. In June 2004 Falkland Oil and Gas Limited (FOGL) was established with financing to carry out a 2D seismic survey over its 33,000 km2 offshore licence to the South and East of the Falklands. In October 2004 FOGL raised £12m and its shares were admitted to AIM, capitalising the company at £32m. In December 2004 FGML raised £10m and shares admitted to AIM, FOGL was granted an exploration licence over a further 50,000 km2 to the South and East of the islands and FIH acquired Portsmouth Harbour Ferry Company for £7.5m. [2]
In June 2005 FOGL raised £10 million through an institutional placing. FIH subscribes £2m increasing its share holding to 18.3%. In February 2006, FIH sold 1.8m shares in (FOGL), realising £2.4m and reducing its holding back to 16.3%. In December 2006, FOGL raised an £8m convertible loan to fund its ongoing exploration programme.
In January 2007 FIH sold 100% of its holding in FGML for 6p per share to RAB Capital and in October 2007 FOGL announced a farm-in deal with BHP Billiton to fund drilling programme in South Atlantic.
In March 2008 FIH acquired 100% of Momart, a UK market leader in the handling and storage of fine art and antiquities, for £10.27m. [3]
In November 2009 FIH sold 3 million shares in FOGL after the placing earlier in the month generating proceeds of £3.6 million and a profit of £3.0 million at a price of 119 pence per share. This reduced FIH's holding to 12.0 million shares (8.2%).
In January 2012 FIH participated in the placing of new shares by FOGL by subscribing for 2 million new shares at a cost of £0.86 million (43 pence per share). FIH's holding in FOGL shares was increased to 14 million shares (4.4%).
In July 2012, FIH raised £10.0 million gross from a share issue at 320p per share. £8.0 million was subscribed by Blackfish Capital and £2.0 million was raised from an Open Offer to the existing shareholders. The proceeds from the share issue were used to develop the group's assets in the Falkland Islands in anticipation of the economic growth that the board believed would follow. In July 2012, FIH sold 1.2 million shares in FOGL for £1.01 million (86 pence per share), generating a profit of £0.77 million and reducing its holding to 12.8 million shares (4.0%). [4]
In March 2015 FIH sold 7.825 million shares in FOGL for £1.6 million (29 pence per share), generating a profit of £0.7 million and reducing its holding to 5.0 million shares (0.9%).
In May 2015, the last 5 million shares in Falkland Oil & Gas ("FOGL") were sold for £1.4 million, generating a profit of £0.4 million for the Group.With the sale of these 5 million shares, FIH completed the realisation of its investment in FOGL. Over the last 10 years since FOGL's flotation, FIH has generated over £8 million in cash proceeds and £5 million in profits from its highly successful investment in FOGL [5]
In January 2016 the company had a capital reorganisation involving a share consolidation (1,000 to 1) and split (1 to 1,000) decreasing the number of shareholders from 2,139 to 510. [6]
September 2016 the group changed its name to FIH Group plc to more properly reflect the balance of the group's activities which are now predominantly in Europe and the UK. Despite this change of name, the group's Falklands business, the Falklands Islands Company ("FIC"), remains a core part of the Group.
In February 2017 Staunton Holdings made a takeover offer of £3 per share with a total value of £37.3 Million. [7] In March, Dolphin fund owned by billionaire Eduardo Elsztain requested information about the company in order to make its own takeover bid. [8] In response Staunton reduced the requirement of 90% of the share capital to be purchased from the offer to 50%. [9] The announcement of a potential takeover by an Argentinian group gained press coverage due to the highly political nature of the islands. [10] [11] [12] In April, Staunton Holdings' offer failed to gain enough shares, resulting in a withdrawal of the takeover and sale of Blackfish's (a Staunton affiliated company) 20% shareholding in the company.
In November 2021 the Board announced that John Foster would step down from his position as CEO after 17 years and be succeeded by Stuart Munro.
FIH shares have traded on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) in London since 13 January 2003. In July 2010, FIH's market value was around £36m. It made a pretax profit of £5.669m in the year ended 31 March 2010 on revenue of £29.224m. £3.3m came from the sale of shares in Falkland Oil and Gas in November 2009. [13] [14]
Company | Sector | Ownership % | Acquisition Date | Price paid |
---|---|---|---|---|
Falkland Islands Company | Diversified | 100% | 1997 (From foundation) | N/A |
Falkland Islands Trading Company Ltd
| Shipping | 100% | 1997 (From foundation) | N/A |
Portsmouth Harbour Ferry Company Ltd
| Passenger transport | 100% | December 2004 | £7.5 Million |
Momart International PLC
| Art storage and transportation | 100% | 5 March 2008 | £10.27 Million [15] |
South Atlantic Construction Company Limited (SAtCO) | Construction | 50% | June 2012 (co-founder) | £50,000 |
Company | Sector | Ownership % (Peak) | Date of Acquisition | Date of disposal |
---|---|---|---|---|
Falkland Gold and Minerals Limited | Metal Exploration | 14.4% | February 2004 | January 2007 [16] |
Falkland Oil and Gas | Oil and Gas Exploration | 18.3% | October 2004 | May 2015 |
Momart is a British company specialising in the storage, transportation, and installation of works of art. A major proportion of their business is maintaining often delicate artworks in a secure, climate-controlled environment. The company maintains specialist warehouse facilities adapted for this task. Momart's clients include the Royal Academy of Arts, the Victoria and Albert Museum, the National Gallery, Tate Modern, Tate Britain and Buckingham Palace. The company received considerable media attention in 2004 when a fire spread to one of their warehouses from an adjacent unit, destroying the works in it, including works by Young British Artists such as Tracey Emin and Damien Hirst, including Emin's 1995 piece Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963–1995. On 5 March 2008 Momart was taken over by Falkland Islands Holdings for £10.3 million, of which £4.6 million was in cash, £2.5 million was in shares and £3.2 million was deferred consideration.
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