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Interim Report to 30 September 2025

25th Nov 2025 07:00

RNS Number : 8094I
Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Ltd
25 November 2025
 

25 November 2025

 

LEI: 213800T8RBBWZQ7FTF84

 

Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Limited

 

Interim report for the six months ended 30 September 2025

 

Strong operating performance underpins another set of solid results

 

Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Limited (the Company), the operationally focused, specialist Digital Infrastructure investor, managed by Cordiant Capital Inc (the Investment Manager), is pleased to announce its unaudited interim results for the six months to 30 September 2025.

 

Highlights:

 

-

Robust portfolio EBITDA growth for the six-month period, increasing 6.5% over the prior equivalent period to £81.6 million and revenue increasing 7.0% to £168.8 million, on a pro forma[1], constant currency basis, driven by contributions from contract wins and new orders, disciplined cost control, impact of inflation-linked revenues, and the addition of Datacenter United (DCU) to the portfolio in February 2025.

 

-

NAV per share increased to 140.0p at 30 September 2025 (31 March 2025: 129.6p or 127.4p ex-dividend), largely driven by portfolio EBITDA growth, strong free cash flow generation, appreciation of the Polish zloty and Czech koruna, and a small (3bps) reduction in the weighted average discount rate. Based on the 20 November 2025 closing share price, there was a discount of 31.4% to the NAV as of 30 September 2025.

 

-

Total return for the six-month period of 10.0% of opening ex-dividend NAV (5.6% excluding foreign exchange movements), ahead of the 9% annual target.

 

-

Share price total return over the period, assuming dividends reinvested, of 14.7%.

 

-

This strong financial performance has been delivered alongside significant operational progress, including:

advancing accretive growth capex projects such as Prague Gateway and the Žižkov data centre expansion;

new contract wins and product development;

raising new financing facilities for DCU; and

completion in September of Speed Fibre's acquisition of BT Ireland's wholesale and enterprise business to create the leading Irish alternative wholesale fibre network provider.

 

-

Across the portfolio, initiatives in AI-ready infrastructure and 5G broadcast trials continued, reinforcing the Company's strategy to capture emerging opportunities in digital connectivity.

 

-

1.3 million additional shares acquired by the Company's directors and the Investment Manager's team since 31 March 2025, including 0.9 million shares acquired by Steven Marshall, Chairman of Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Management, the Investment Manager's digital investment arm. Total ownership of insiders is now at 2.2%.

 

-

Management fees for the six-months ended 30 September 2025, calculated on market capitalisation, represented 0.67% of NAV on an annualised basis.

 

Outlook

The Company and its portfolio companies are well placed to benefit from the structural tailwinds driving demand for Digital Infrastructure, evidenced by robust revenue and EBITDA growth and strong operational progress during the period. The underlying strengths of the Company and its portfolio, the growth in the sector and the attractiveness of the Company's core markets together lead the Board to look forward to the remaining financial year with confidence.

 

Commenting, Shonaid Jemmett-Page,Chairman of Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Limited, said:

"I am pleased to report another period of positive performance by the Company for the six months ended 30 September 2025, driven by the continued progress of our portfolio companies, which delivered strong cash flows and robust earnings growth. We maintained our focus on disciplined investment across the existing portfolio, ensuring efficient capex deployment, and we continue to pursue highly accretive bolt-on acquisitions. The Board remains disappointed with the persistent share price discount to NAV, which we continue to attribute primarily to broader macroeconomic factors that are reflected across the financial markets, rather than being specific to the Company. The Board believes the valuation gap remains unwarranted considering the Company's ongoing performance and strong prospects. The Company is well placed to continue its proven capital allocation strategy in support of shareholder returns through its Buy, Build & Grow model."

 

Interim Report and results webcast for analysts

 

The 2025 Interim Report will be available to download at cordiantdigitaltrust.com/investors/results-centre/ from 25 November 2025.

 

The Company will be hosting an analyst meeting at 10.00am GMT at the offices of Investec, 30 Gresham Street, London, EC2V 7QN. For those wishing to attend, please contact Ali AlQahtani at Celicourt via [email protected].

 

For further information, please visit www.cordiantdigitaltrust.com or contact:

 

Cordiant Capital, Inc.

+44 (0) 20 3814 5939

Investment Manager

[email protected]

Stephen Foss, Managing Director

 

Aztec Financial Services (Guernsey) Limited

 

+44 (0) 1481 74 9700

Company Secretary and Administrator

[email protected]

Chris Copperwaite/Laura Dunning

 

Investec Bank plc

 

+44 (0) 20 7597 4000

Joint Corporate Broker

Tom Skinner (Corporate Broking)

Lucy Lewis (Corporate Finance)

 

Deutsche Numis

 

+44 (0) 20 7260 1000

Joint Corporate Broker

Hugh Jonathan/George Shiel

 

 

Celicourt

 

+44 (0)20 7770 6424

PR Advisor

[email protected]

Philip Dennis/Ali AlQahtani/Charles Denley-Myerson

 

Notes to editors:

 

About the Company

Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Limited (the Company) primarily invests in the core infrastructure of the digital economy: data centres; fibre-optic networks; telecommunications and broadcast towers - in Europe and North America. Further details about the Company can be found on its website at www.cordiantdigitaltrust.com.

 

The Company is a sector-focused specialist owner and operator of Digital Infrastructure, listed on the London Stock Exchange under the ticker CORD. In total, the Company has successfully raised £795 million in equity, along with a €375 million debt package, comprising a €200 million Eurobond and €175 million of capex and revolving facilities, deploying capital into six acquisitions: CRA, Hudson, Emitel, Speed Fibre, Belgian Tower Company and Datacentre United, which together offer stable, often index-linked income and the opportunity for growth, in line with the Company's Buy, Build & Grow model.

 

About the Investment Manager

Cordiant Capital Inc (the Investment Manager) is a specialist global infrastructure and real assets manager with a sector-led approach to providing growth capital solutions to promising mid-sized companies in Europe, North America and selected global markets. Since its relaunch in 2016, the Investment Manager, a partner-owned and partner-run firm, has developed a track record of exceeding mandated investment targets for its clients.

 

The Investment Manager focuses on the next generation of infrastructure and real assets (digital infrastructure, energy transition infrastructure and the agriculture value chain); sectors characterised by growth tailwinds and technological dynamism. It also applies a strong sustainability and ESG overlay to its investment activities.

 

With a mix of managed funds offering both value-add and core strategies in equity and direct lending, the Investment Manager's sector investment teams (combining experienced industry executives with traditional private capital investors) work with investee companies to develop innovative, tailored financing solutions backed by a comprehensive understanding of the sector and demonstrated operating capabilities. In this way, it aims to provide value to investors seeking to complement existing infrastructure equity and infrastructure debt allocations.

 

The Investment Manager's Digital Infrastructure team, Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Management, was co-founded by Steven Marshall, formerly President at American Towers Corporation (NYSE: AMT), who chairs all the major portfolio companies. The team consists of 20 professionals, who bring considerable hands‑on investing and operating expertise to its investment approach. This investment strategy can be summarised as acquiring and expanding cash-flowing Digital Infrastructure platforms across Europe and in North America.

 

Chairman's statement

I am pleased to present the Interim Report for Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Limited (the Company) for the six months to 30 September 2025.

 

Introduction

The Company delivered another strong set of financial results for the six months ended 30 September 2025, achieving a total return for the period of 10.0% on the ex-dividend opening NAV, or 5.6% when excluding the impact of FX. On an annualised basis, both figures are well ahead of the 9% annual target. NAV per share increased to 140.0p at 30 September 2025 (31 March 2025: 129.6p, or 127.4p ex-dividend).

 

This strong financial performance has been delivered alongside significant operational progress, including: advancing accretive growth capex opportunities; new contracts; product development; and raising new financing facilities for the Company's newest digital infrastructure platform, DCU. The Company also oversaw completion in September of Speed Fibre's acquisition of BT Ireland's wholesale and enterprise business.

 

Portfolio performance

On a constant currency, pro forma basis, aggregate portfolio company EBITDA in the period increased by 6.5% to £81.6 million, driven by: contract wins, disciplined cost control, inflation‑linked price escalators, and the addition of DCU to the portfolio in February 2025. Revenue increased by 7.0% to £168.8 million, on the same basis1.

 

The robust performance of our portfolio has continued to be a key driver of the Company's results, with portfolio companies tracking to budget year-to-date. For further information about each of our portfolio companies see below.

 

Investment strategy and capital allocation

The Investment Manager has a Core Plus strategy that aims to generate a stable and reliable annual dividend, while also continuing to invest in the asset base of the Company's portfolio companies to drive higher revenues and increase NAV. The Company is implementing this approach through its Buy, Build & Grow model.

 

Since its IPO in 2021, the Company has sought out high‑quality, cash-generating mid-market assets that we viewed as attractive investment opportunities. Our disciplined approach has resulted in a strongly performing portfolio acquired for an EV/EBITDA multiple of approximately 10.3x, which is predominantly supported by blue‑chip customers and capable of generating strong cash flows, often through long-term, index‑linked contracts.

 

The Board and Investment Manager have continued to consider the different views of shareholders on capital allocation and during the period maintained a balanced approach to allocating the Company's available capital. In addition to pursuing a progressive dividend policy, we have prioritised the Company's resources and those of its portfolio companies to continue focusing on bolt‑on acquisitions and growth capex with above‑target IRRs.

 

The Company was pleased to be recognised at this year's Investment Week Awards, winning Infrastructure Investment Company of the Year. The award highlights the strength of our investment strategy and the quality of the portfolio, focused on essential digital infrastructure supporting data growth, connectivity and cloud adoption.

 

The portfolio delivered strong operational progress, advancing strategic initiatives across all platforms. CRA commenced construction of its flagship 26MW Prague Gateway data centre, positioning the business as a future leader in AI‑ready infrastructure. It also completed the 1.3MW expansion of the Žižkov data centre site and entered the third phase of 5G broadcast trials, reinforcing CRA's role in next‑generation connectivity.

 

Speed Fibre strengthened its position in Ireland with the BT Ireland acquisition, adding 3,400km of fibre and approximately 400 enterprise customers. Integration is progressing well, with synergies expected to enhance operational efficiency.

 

Emitel continued to execute its growth strategy, securing an order for the first batch of towers under its long-term build‑to‑suit agreement with Orange Poland and completing integration of EM Cast, a recently acquired business from TDF providing mobile network hosting and radio transmission services.

 

DCU secured €120 million in senior financing to support expansion and returned capital to the Company through loan repayments. Importantly, the syndication of a 10.1% stake in DCU marked the first time the Company has syndicated an investment to another investor2, supporting portfolio diversification and strengthening capital flexibility.

 

Across the portfolio, initiatives in AI-ready infrastructure and 5G broadcast trials continued, reinforcing the Company's strategy to capture emerging opportunities in digital connectivity.

 

Following transactions in the period, the consolidated net gearing of the group, as of 30 September 2025 was 40.9%, with no debt maturities before June 2029.

 

Share price performance

Although there has been a narrowing of the gap, the Board remains disappointed with the continuing discount to NAV considering the Company's strong financial performance and operational progress. We continue to view the causes of this as being predominately macroeconomic factors, which are being felt across the market, rather than being specific to the Company. Based on the 20 November 2025 closing share price, there was a discount of 31.4% to the NAV as of 30 September 2025.

 

The Board and the Investment Manager have remained focused on optimising portfolio performance, while engaging with shareholders on the drivers of value within the portfolio and continuing to explore actions to reduce the discount. My Board colleagues and I met with several shareholders on a bilateral basis during the period to listen to their views, discuss capital market challenges facing the Company and the sector, and to explain our approach to these challenges.

 

The Board and the Investment Manager continued constructive engagement with the UK Government and the FCA on the cost disclosure regime and are encouraged by the progress achieved so far. We look forward to the outcome of the FCA's consultations and remain hopeful that further steps will help remove remaining barriers for investors and support greater appeal across the sector.

 

Dividend

The Company's dividend policy continues to be based on the underlying principles that the dividend must be covered by free cash flow generated by the portfolio and be sustainable in future periods. The Company monitors dividend cover using an AFFO metric calculated over a 12-month period. AFFO is calculated as normalised EBITDA less net finance costs, tax paid and maintenance capital expenditure.

 

In June 2025, the Board approved an increase in the targeted annual dividend to 4.35p with the payment of the second interim dividend of 2.25p per share in July 2025 resulting in an annual dividend for the last financial year of 4.35p. In November 2025, the Board declared a first interim dividend of 2.175p (50% of the 4.35p target for the full year) to shareholders on the register as at the record date of 5 December 2025, to be paid on 22 December 2025.

 

For the 12 months to 30 September 2025, the 4.35p dividend was approximately 4.8x covered by EBITDA and 1.7x by AFFO.

 

Principal risks and uncertainties

There have been several high-profile cyber attacks in recent months, and it appears that the incidence and severity of such attacks is increasing. The operational and financial consequences of such events can be significant. Accordingly, we have recognised the relevance of these dangers and have updated our principal risks to reflect them. Further details of the Company's risks are set out below.

 

Sustainability

The Board and the Investment Manager remain committed to responsible and sustainable management practices, aligned with industry standards, to support the growth and expansion of portfolio companies. This commitment is reflected in the portfolio's strong ESG performance. Highlights during the period include Speed Fibre achieving a perfect GRESB rating and CRA developing one of the most advanced data centres in Central Europe, expected to be entirely powered by renewable electricity and incorporating cutting-edge energy‑efficiency technologies, underscoring leadership in sustainable digital infrastructure.

 

Together, these activities underpin the Company's commitment to responsible growth and long-term value creation through sustainable investment practices. Further details on the Company's sustainability framework and climate‑related disclosures are set out below, and in the Responsible Investment Report 2025, available at www.cordiantdigitaltrust.com.

 

Governance

The Board receives regular updates on Company and portfolio performance from the Investment Manager and the Company's other advisors. We provide active and objective oversight of those activities, and periodically seek to meet local management of portfolio companies to gain direct insight into various initiatives that are being progressed. In November 2025, I met with shareholders and analysts at an investor relations event, where senior executives from portfolio companies provided operational updates on their businesses and strategic priorities.

 

During the six-month period, the Investment Manager again demonstrated the benefits to shareholders of its extensive, senior-level experience in: managing and operating world‑class Digital Infrastructure businesses; arranging debt facilities in‑house without using an investment bank to raise growth financing for DCU; and overseeing completion of the strategic BT Ireland acquisition. These outcomes were achieved at a relatively low level of management fee, based on market capitalisation and not NAV, unlike most of the Company's peers.

 

Outlook

The year has continued to be marked by considerable global uncertainty. Nevertheless, the Company and its portfolio remain well positioned to benefit from sustained demand for digital infrastructure. The underlying strengths of our business model, the resilience of our portfolio companies and the structural growth in the sector, combined with the attractiveness of our core markets, give the Board confidence as we look ahead to the remainder of the financial year.

 

1. Figures are based on the first six months of each portfolio company's financial year. Emitel, Speed Fibre, and DCU have calendar year ends. Excludes the BT Ireland unit (acquired in September 2025) but includes DCU (acquired in February 2025), pro‑rated for the Company's 37.4% stake. Excluding DCU, EBITDA and revenue growth were 4.8% and 4% respectively. BTC figures are excluded to remove the impact of discontinued broadcast operations following an expected contract expiry earlier this year.

2. The stake was syndicated to a Western European institutional investor via a fund-of-one managed by the Investment Manager.

 

Investment Manager's report

 

Introduction

The Company delivered strong results in the six months to 30 September 2025, supported by robust operating performance and FX tailwinds. NAV per share increased by 12.7p (£97.0 million) from ex-dividend opening NAV to 140.0p (£1.07 billion), reflecting a total return of 10.0%.

 

NAV growth was driven by successful implementation of the Company's Buy, Build & Grow model: the purchase of good-quality platforms at attractive prices and making subsequent bolt-on acquisitions; building new assets at construction cost from which new revenues can be earned; and growing existing revenues using the operational and financing expertise of the Investment Manager.

 

During the period, the portfolio benefited from the appreciation of the Czech koruna and Polish zloty against Sterling. Excluding the impact of FX, the total return for the period was 5.6%.

 

Capital allocation

The Investment Manager and Board continue to engage with shareholders to discuss the issue of capital allocation and the discount on the Company's share price to NAV. We have continued with a multi‑pronged strategy that recognises the current limits on the availability of capital and seeks to provide a balanced approach.

 

The Company paid one dividend during the period: the second interim dividend relating to the year ended 31 March 2025, of 2.25p per share or £17.2 million, paid on 30 July 2025. This brought the total dividend for the year ended 31 March 2025 to 4.35p per share, in line with the Company's progressive dividend policy and representing an increase of 3.6% compared to the previous year. For the year ending 31 March 2026, the targeted annual dividend remains at 4.35p and a first interim dividend of 2.175p per share has been declared, being half of the targeted annual dividend. This level of dividend remains well covered (1.7x) by AFFO.

 

A range of bolt-on acquisition opportunities are being pursued by portfolio companies with support from the Investment Manager, to expand and complement existing asset bases and service offerings. These transactions are typically highly IRR-accretive due to the potential for significant operational and financial synergies.

 

In addition, the Company, leveraging the operational expertise of the Investment Manager, is supporting investments in growth‑oriented capital expenditure projects at the portfolio level. Examples include expanding data centre capacity, constructing new mobile towers, and enhancing the coverage, quality and capability of digital TV and radio broadcast networks.

 

At 30 September 2025, the portfolio was valued using a DCF methodology at a valuation equivalent to 10.9x LTM EBITDA1. Recent transactions involving mobile tower assets and data centres in other markets have occurred at multiples around or exceeding 20x EBITDA. While broadcast infrastructure assets typically attract lower valuation multiples, the Company's broadcast assets are delivering growth rates comparable to mobile tower businesses and benefit from favourable escalation rates and a broader customer base.

 

The Investment Manager considers that there is no easy answer to resolve the Company's share price discount to NAV, but that continued strong operational performance, value‑creating capital expenditure, maintaining acquisition price discipline, investor engagement and significant alignment of interests should all be recognised when macroeconomic issues affecting equity markets, and especially the investment company sector, abate.

 

Since 31 March 2025, the Directors and the Investment Manager's team have made further purchases of the Company's shares, acquiring in total 1.3 million more shares to bring the combined total to 16.6 million shares. This includes Steven Marshall, Executive Chairman of Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Management, who acquired a further 0.9 million shares, bringing his total personal holding to 13.8 million shares. At the date of this report, the Directors, the Investment Manager and its team owned 2.2% of the ordinary issued share capital of the Company.

 

The Investment Manager's fee continues to be based on market capitalisation as opposed to NAV, ensuring even closer alignment between the Investment Manager and the Company's shareholders.

 

A share buyback programme was initiated in February 2023, with £20 million approved by the Board, and 7.8 million shares have been acquired to date at an average price of 75.0p, crystallising a NAV gain of 0.4p per share. The buyback programme is not subject to a set cut-off date.

 

Activity during the period

The portfolio continued to deliver strong operational progress during the period, with significant milestones achieved across data centre development, integration of bolt-on acquisitions and tower growth. The portfolio companies made notable strides in next-generation technologies, including AI-ready infrastructure and 5G broadcast trials, positioning the Company to capture emerging opportunities in digital connectivity and cloud services. These developments reinforce the Investment Manager's confidence in the portfolio's ability to generate sustainable growth and attractive returns.

 

In July 2025, CRA commenced groundworks for its flagship 26MW Prague Gateway data centre, marking a major milestone in its strategy to become a leading AI-ready infrastructure provider in Central Europe. The project has attracted attention at the EU level, with the Czech government nominating Prague Gateway as a potential European AI Gigafactory site. CRA has also launched GPU‑as‑a‑service from its existing facilities, reinforcing its focus on next‑generation technologies. During the period, CRA completed the 1.3MW data centre expansion at its Žižkov tower site, and is now ready for full commercial deployment. In October, CRA entered the third phase of its 5G broadcast trials in Prague, testing handset compatibility and network performance in the 700 MHz band, positioning the company for future hybrid terrestrial-mobile distribution models.

 

Emitel continued to execute its growth strategy, securing an order for the first batch of towers under its long-term build‑to‑suit agreement with Orange Poland. This programme is expected to expand Emitel's nationwide tower portfolio from 772 sites to well over 1,000 in the coming years. The company also completed the integration of EM Cast, enhancing its capabilities in mobile network hosting and radio emissions. Operational progress included migration of MUX8 to DVB-T2/HEVC, scheduled for completion in early 2026, enabling higher‑resolution broadcasting.

 

On 1 September 2025, Speed Fibre completed the acquisition of BT Ireland's assets, adding a 3,400km fibre network and approximately 400 enterprise and government customers. Integration is progressing well, with synergies expected to strengthen Speed Fibre's position as a leading provider of wholesale and B2B connectivity in Ireland. The company remains focused on operational efficiency and cost optimisation to enhance margins and deliver scalable connectivity solutions.

 

Following its acquisition in February 2025, DCU secured a €120 million senior financing package in September, providing resources for expansion and refinancing part of the acquisition debt. DCU used part of the proceeds to return €15 million to the Company by way of repayment of shareholder loans, and a 10.1% stake in DCU was syndicated to a Western European institutional investor via a fund-of-one managed by the Investment Manager. Proceeds of these transactions supported a reduction in net debt for the group.

 

Hudson delivered a promising six-month sales performance, supported by new customer wins and expanded commitments from existing clients. Cross-connect revenue more than doubled year-on-year, and capacity utilisation on the sixth floor increased by 22%. Construction of two new data halls, adding 2MW of power capacity, is underway and expected to complete in the first half of 2026. These halls can support high-density workloads of up to 40kW per rack, reflecting growing demand for AI and other compute-intensive applications. Nearly 20% of the new capacity has been presold, supporting Hudson's path to profitability.

 

Financial highlights

During the six months ended 30 September 2025, the Company recorded a net profit of £97.0 million, representing a 10.0% return on the opening ex-dividend NAV (30 September 2024 profit: £49.0 million). This equates to 12.7p per share (30 September 2024: 6.4p per share). At 30 September 2025, NAV stood at £1.07 billion, or 140.0p per share, compared to £992.5 million, or 129.6p per share, at 31 March 2025. The opening ex-dividend NAV for the period was £975.3 million, or 127.4p per share.

 

Application of IFRS

The Company only holds Hudson directly. Emitel, CRA, Speed Fibre, DCU and BTC are all held through its wholly‑owned subsidiary, Cordiant Digital Holdings UK Limited (CDH UK). The borrower of the Company's fund-level facilities is also CDH UK. Consequently, under the application of IFRS 10 and the classification of the Company as an investment entity, the Company's investment in CDH UK is recorded as a single investment that encompasses underlying exposure to Emitel, CRA, Speed Fibre, DCU, BTC and the holding company debt facilities. The underlying elements of the overall value movement attributable to foreign exchange movements and value movement and income from each portfolio company are identified in Table 3. The Company's profit and NAV under this approach are the same as shown in the unaudited condensed IFRS Statement of Financial Position and the Statement of Comprehensive Income.

 

Table 1 shows the reconciliation of Table 3 to the IFRS Statement of Comprehensive Income. Table 2 shows the underlying components of the IFRS Statement of Financial Position.

 

Table 1: Reconciliation of Statement of Comprehensive Income to Table 3

£m

Accrued income

Total unrealised value movement

Net foreign exchange movement

Intercompany balances

Fund expenses

Interest expense

IFRS P&L

Movement in fair value of investments

16.7

53.0

50.1

(18.9)

(0.6)

(10.6)

89.7

Management fee income

0.7

-

-

-

-

-

0.7

Dividend income

-

-

-

18.9

-

-

18.9

Interest income

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Other expenses

-

-

-

-

(4.4)

-

(4.4)

Investment acquisition costs

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Foreign exchange movements on working capital

-

-

(8.0)

-

-

-

(8.0)

Finance income

0.2

-

-

-

-

-

0.2

Finance expense

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

 

17.6

53.0

42.1

-

(5.0)

(10.6)

97.0

 

Please refer to the Annual Report for the Company for the year ended 31 March 2025 for the equivalent table for the prior financial year.

 

 

 

 

Table 2: Underlying components of Statement of Financial Position

 

£m

Emitel

CRA

Speed Fibre

DCU

Hudson

BTC

Total fair

value of

investments

Investments

607.4

484.9

111.5

52.9

42.6

6.8

1,306.1

Receivables

-

-

-

-

-

-

 -

Cash

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Payables

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Loans and borrowings

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

 

607.4

484.9

111.5

52.9

42.6

6.8

1,306.1

 

£m

Cash

Inter-companybalances

Other assets and liabilities

Holding company debt

IFRS total

Investments

14.3

162.0

4.7

(268.2)

1,219.0

Receivables

-

1.2

9.2

-

10.5

Cash

7.2

-

-

-

7.2

Payables

-

-

(1.1)

-

(1.1)

Loans and borrowings

-

(163.3)

-

-

(163.3)

 

21.5

-

12.9

(268.2)

1,072.3

 

Please refer to the Annual Report for the Company for the year ended 31 March 2025 for the equivalent table for the previous reporting date.

 

Financial performance in the period

This section, including valuation, foreign exchange, costs and gearing, refers to the figures in Table 2 and Table 3 on the non‑IFRS basis.

 

Table 3: NAV bridge for the period to 30 September 2025

 

£m

Opening NAV as at 1 April 2025

992.5

Dividend paid July 2025

(17.2)

Opening ex-dividend NAV

975.3

Accrued income

17.6

Value movement

53.0

FX movement

42.1

Fund expenses

(5.0)

Interest expenses

(10.6)

Closing NAV as at 30 September 2025

1,072.3

 

Valuation

The Investment Manager prepares semi-annual valuations according to the IPEV Guidelines and IFRS 13. These valuations are reviewed and challenged by the Board. The Board also employs an expert valuations group at a Big 4 accounting firm to carry out independent valuations of the portfolio companies at each valuation date.

 

The Investment Manager and Board are aware of the scepticism that some private asset valuations elicit and so take great care to maintain a rigorous process, using market information from reputable third-party sources wherever possible. DCF is the primary methodology of valuation, as noted in the Company's IPO prospectus. The BT Ireland unit, now part of Speed Fibre, is valued at the price of the recent investment, as the transaction closed only a month before the balance sheet date. The Investment Manager is confident that the quality of earnings included in the DCF models, and the actual cash generation of the assets, demonstrate the qualities of the portfolio, notwithstanding volatility in the market‑observable inputs used every six months to construct the WACC used for each valuation as a discount rate.

 

Table 4 shows the movement in the Company's average WACC over time, weighted for the investments held at each reporting date. Between 31 March 2025 and 30 September 2025, the average WACC reduced marginally by 3bps.

 

Table 4: Weighted average discount rates over time

 

31 Mar 2022

8.05%

30 Sep 2022

8.52%

31 Mar 2023

9.60%

30 Sep 2023

9.78%

31 Mar 2024

9.60%

30 Sep 2024

9.50%

31 Mar 2025

9.32%

30 Sep 2025

9.29%

 

Table 5 shows the breakdown of the WACC at 30 September 2025 and at 31 March 2025.

 

Table 5: Weighted average cost of capital at 30 September 2025

Range low point

Range high point

Weighted average mid-point

Cost of equity

10.5%

12.7%

11.2%

Cost of debt

5.0%

7.5%

6.6%

WACC

8.3%

10.8%

9.3%

 

Weighted average cost of capital at 31 March 2025

 

Range low point

Range high point

Weighted average mid-point

Cost of equity

10.3%

12.9%

11.1%

Cost of debt

5.0%

7.6%

6.6%

WACC

8.3%

11.1%

9.3%

 

The largest unrealised value movements in the period before the impact of FX were observed on Emitel (+£21 million) and CRA (+£25 million). In the period, Emitel also made cash distributions of £24.8 million, while CRA returned £2.1 million in cash to the Company. The return for the period was primarily driven by successful execution of business plans by both platforms being reflected in the roll‑forward of the DCF model, with both companies performing in line with their budgets for the year. CRA's value increase benefited slightly from a small decrease in its WACC and Emitel's WACC remained unchanged. Even though CRA has made good progress on the development of the 26MW Prague Gateway data centre, a conservative position has been maintained and the future potential cash flows from this project are not yet included in the DCF valuation model. The Investment Manager will keep this position under review as the project advances.

 

Speed Fibre saw a modest increase in equity value before the impact of FX of £4.6 million largely due to the roll forward of the DCF model. The BT Ireland acquisition has been recognised at cost in the valuation.

 

DCU, the newest Digital Infrastructure platform to the portfolio, recorded a £0.4 million increase following several strategic developments plus accrued shareholder loan interest of £0.4m.

 

Hudson recognised an uplift in valuation of £1.4 million, driven by the roll forward of the DCF model but offset by a higher WACC. The Investment Manager is optimistic about the long‑term prospects of Hudson, supporting the company with capital injections to build new data halls. The carrying value at the year end was £42.6 million, 3% of the total value of underlying investments.

 

Table 6: Bridge table breakdown of unrealised value movement

Unrealised value movement £m

 

Emitel

21.0

CRA

25.0

Speed Fibre

4.6

DCU

0.4

Hudson

1.4

BTC

0.5

Total unrealised value movement

 

53.0

 

Foreign exchange

The Company recognised a foreign exchange gain in the year of £42.1 million. This aggregate number comprises a gain of £30.8 million on Czech koruna, a gain of £14.1 million on Polish zloty, and combined net losses of £2.8 million on US dollars and Euros. FX gains on Euro‑denominated investments were offset by appreciation in the value of the Company's Euro‑denominated holding company debt. While the Investment Manager typically hedges cash distributions from the portfolio companies through forward contracts, no balance sheet hedging has been undertaken to date. The cost of doing so using forward contracts, which are considered to be the lowest cost approach, continues to be disproportionate to the benefit, such that the aggregate cost of hedging would over several years consume the gain being protected. The Investment Manager and Board have kept the Company's hedging strategy under regular review given the volatility in foreign exchange rates and movement in forward points in the Company's respective currency pairs. The Company is a long‑term investor in the portfolio and currently does not seek to manage balance sheet foreign exchange exposure from reporting period to reporting period.

 

Table 7: Bridge table breakdown of unrealised foreign exchange movement

Unrealised foreign exchange movement £m

 

Emitel

14.1

CRA

30.8

Speed Fibre

4.8

DCU

4.0

Hudson

(1.3)

BTC

0.3

Other FX including debt and working capital

(10.6)

Total unrealised FX movement

 

42.1

 

Costs

In the six-month period, the Company and its intermediate holding subsidiaries incurred £5.0 million of operating costs, including investment management fees of £3.4 million (30 September 2024: £2.9 million). These have increased from the prior comparable period as management fees are calculated on the basis of the Company's market capitalisation, which has increased since 31 March 2025 as the share price has risen. On an annualised basis, management fees represent 0.67% of the average of opening and closing NAV. Other costs of £1.5 million relate to administrative and other running costs and directors' fees. The ongoing costs ratio, calculated in accordance with the guidelines published by the AIC, is 0.96% per annum (30 September 2024: 1.0%).

 

In addition, there were £10.6 million of costs relating to the Company's holding company debt facilities. As at period end, £268.2 million of the holding company debt facilities were drawn. The costs included interest, commitment fees, agency fees and amortised transaction costs.

 

Gearing and liquidity

The Investment Manager takes a prudent approach to the use of gearing and has the expertise internally to arrange debt facilities, and so does not typically use third-party intermediaries for this purpose, providing meaningful cost savings to the Company and its portfolio companies.

 

At 30 September 2025, there were five sets of debt facilities in the Company's group at: Emitel, CRA, Speed Fibre, DCU and facilities at Cordiant Digital Holdings UK Limited, a wholly‑owned subsidiary of the Company.

 

Consolidated gearing across the group, as measured by net debt as a percentage of gross asset value, was 40.9% (31 March 2025: 40.3%). As measured by net debt to LTM EBITDA (including Company-level costs), consolidated group net leverage is 4.8x2 (31 March 2025: 4.5x). Net leverage has increased from 31 March 2025 partly due to recent appreciation of the currencies in which the group's debt is denominated. Both Emitel and CRA have individual net leverage ratios of less than 2.9x, lower than other digital infrastructure platforms that might be viewed as comparators of either business.

 

70% of drawn debt is currently on a fixed-interest basis, with the remainder floating, none of which is inflation-linked. The weighted average margin across all facilities is 3.0%, which the Investment Manager considers to represent good value. There are no debt maturities in the group before June 2029. The group has benefited by having no exposure to Sterling‑denominated debt which has been significantly more expensive than Euro‑denominated debt, the latter representing 56.4% of all debt outstanding in the group. Euro-denominated debt also provides a currency hedge for the Company's Euro‑denominated investments.

 

Total gross debt at the Company, subsidiary and platform level was equivalent to £826.9 million, an increase of £72.4 million since 31 March 2025 reflecting depreciation of Sterling3; drawdowns of senior facilities at the portfolio company level to finance growth investments; and drawdowns under the holding company facilities to finance the BT Ireland acquisition, offset by a €19 million repayment of the RCF from proceeds of the syndication of DCU. Since the period end, a further €14 million has been repaid by the Company utilising the net proceeds of the DCU refinancing.

 

Aggregate cash balances at the Company, subsidiary and platform level were equivalent to £84.0 million. Including undrawn debt facilities, total liquidity across the group was equivalent to £234.7 million.

 

Dividend coverage

The Company's progressive dividend policy is ahead of the schedule laid out in the IPO prospectus. The dividend remains well covered by AFFO, which seeks to track whether the portfolio generates sufficient earnings less fund‑level costs, finance costs, tax and maintenance capex to cover the dividend. AFFO remains stable at 1.7x. The dividend is covered 4.8x by aggregate portfolio company EBITDA. Table 8 shows the calculation of AFFO for the 12 months to 30 September 2025.

 

Table 8: Calculation of adjusted funds from operations (AFFO)

 

Twelve months to30 September 20251£m

Twelve months to

 31 March 20251

£m

Portfolio company revenues

343.2

324.1

Portfolio company normalised EBITDA

160.9

153.9

Dividend coverage, EBITDA basis

4.8x

4.6x

Net Company-specific costs

(10.9)

(10.2)

Net finance costs

(46.6)

(40.3)

Net taxation, other

(27.6)

(27.9)

Free cash flow before all capital expenditure

75.7

75.4

Maintenance capital expenditure2

(17.7)

(17.1)

Adjusted funds from operations

58.0

58.3

Dividend at 4.35p per share

(33.3)

(33.3)

Dividend cover

1.7x

1.7x

 

1. At average FX rates for the period. Figures exclude financials of the recently acquired business of BT Ireland and include those of DCU in 2025.

2. Aggregate growth capex of £38.0 million was invested in the 12 months to 30 September 2025 across the portfolio and £29.0 million in the 12 months to 31 March 2025.

 

Investee company performance

Aggregate portfolio company EBITDA for the period increased 6.5% over the prior equivalent period, on a pro forma, constant currency basis, to £81.6 million, driven by contributions from contract wins, cost control, the beneficial effects of inflation and other price escalators on revenue, and the addition of DCU to the portfolio in February 2025. Aggregate portfolio company revenue increased 7.0% to £168.8 million, on the same basis.4

 

Within the last twelve months to 30 September 2025, across the portfolio companies, £38.0 million was invested in growth capital expenditure on key strategic initiatives highlighted in this report and £17.7 million was invested in maintenance capital expenditure including investment in IT and enterprise resource planning systems and infrastructure modernisation.

 

The portfolio is well diversified across asset classes, comprising 1,442 communications towers, 23 data centres, and 15,180 kilometres of fibre optic networks. Backbone fibre remains the largest revenue contributor, representing 34% of total pro forma revenue, followed by digital TV infrastructure at 30%. Data centres, cloud services, and mobile towers collectively account for approximately 25%, while digital radio infrastructure, including both DAB+ and FM transmission, contributes 11%. Poland continues to be the portfolio's largest geographic exposure, generating 37% of revenue and benefiting from its position as the fastest-growing major European economy, evident from the appreciation of the Polish zloty.

 

The Investment Manager's team

Leveraging the significant strength of the Investment Manager's existing Digital Infrastructure team reflects the continued commitment to supporting platform companies in achieving their growth ambitions, along with being able to source and deliver investment opportunities that are in line with target returns. Unlike many of its peers in this market, the Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Management team possesses deep, senior‑level experience of managing and operating world-class Digital Infrastructure businesses. This is combined with private equity executives having decades of experience advising and investing in the sector, making for a unique marriage of capabilities.

 

Environmental, social and governance highlights

During the first half of 2025, the Investment Manager remained actively engaged with portfolio companies on matters such as climate risk management, energy efficiency, sustainability, data quality and corporate governance. No material ESG incidents were identified during the period.

 

ESG considerations have been incorporated into the engagement strategy for the Company's newest investment, DCU, through an environmental and social action plan, guiding the company in addressing material sustainability priorities. For the broader portfolio, progress has been evident in energy efficiency improvements and continued high-quality availability of sustainability data. Notable achievements include Speed Fibre's perfect GRESB score of 100/100, Emitel obtaining the ISO 50001 certification for its energy management system, and CRA beginning construction of the Prague Gateway data centre, a 26MW facility designed to operate on 100% renewable electricity and incorporating cutting-edge energy‑efficient technologies.

 

In the months ahead, the Investment Manager will continue to build on these initiatives, supporting portfolio companies as they advance their net zero transition pathways. These efforts contribute to the Company's commitment to responsible investment and resilient value creation.

 

Market

Demand for Digital Infrastructure remains exceptionally strong, fuelled by structural drivers such as cloud adoption, 5G rollout, and the accelerating integration of AI into enterprise workflows. Generative AI is now in large‑scale deployment, creating unprecedented requirements for compute, storage, and connectivity. According to Bain & Company, AI workloads are expected to represent nearly half of all computational demand by 2030, with global data centre capacity projected to grow at a 13-20% annual rate over the next five years.

 

This shift is not limited to hyperscalers. Enterprises across sectors are scaling inference workloads, which require distributed, low-latency infrastructure. Edge computing and colocation facilities-such as those operated by the Company's portfolio - are increasingly critical for enabling real-time AI applications in sectors like telecom, media, and industrial IoT.

 

The Company's assets, spanning mobile towers, broadcast networks, edge data centres and fibre optic networks, are strategically positioned to benefit from these trends. They provide essential connectivity and capacity for AI-enabled services while maintaining resilience against macroeconomic pressures, including tariff-related cost volatility.

 

Outlook

The Investment Manager remains highly confident in the quality of the portfolio and the strength of its underlying cash flows. The assets have been acquired at what is considered an attractive entry point, balancing value with significant growth potential. Robust internally generated cash flows, combined with available debt facilities, provide the Company with the flexibility to sustain dividend payments, fund essential maintenance, and pursue platform expansion opportunities.

 

Delivering the targeted 9% shareholder return, through a combination of income and capital appreciation, continues to be a central focus. To achieve this, the Investment Manager has built a deep pool of Digital Infrastructure specialists with the expertise required to optimise performance and unlock value from Core Plus assets.

 

With strong results since inception and continued positive momentum through the period to 30 September 2025, the Company is well positioned to meet its objectives for the year ending 31 March 2026. The Investment Manager approaches the remainder of the year, and the future beyond, with confidence, supported by a resilient portfolio and clear growth pathways.

 

1. The multiple at 30 September 2025, if using the same FX rates as for the 31 March 2025 reporting period, would be 10.5x. LTM EBITDA includes annualised EBITDA of DCU (added February 2025) and the newly acquired BT Ireland business (added September 2025).

2. Net leverage at 30 September 2025 if using the same FX rates for the 31 March 2025 reporting period would be 4.4x. LTM EBITDA includes annualised EBITDA of DCU (added February 2025) and the newly acquired BT Ireland business (added September 2025).

3. Depreciation of Sterling contributed an increase of approximately £21 million in total gross debt.

4. Figures are based on the first six months of each portfolio company's financial year. Emitel, Speed Fibre, and DCU have calendar year ends. Includes DCU (acquired in February 2025), pro rated for the Company's 37.4% stake. Excluding DCU, EBITDA and revenue growth were 4.8% and 4% respectively. BTC figures are excluded to remove the impact of discontinued broadcast operations following an expected contract expiry earlier this year.

 

Emitel multi-asset platform Poland (acquired November 2022)

 

Emitel

£m

Original cost

353.0

Value at 1 April 2025

581.4

Interest accrued on shareholder loan in the period

0.1

Repayment by Emitel of shareholder loan principal and accrued interest in the period

(9.1)

Unrealised value gain in the period

21.0

Unrealised foreign exchange gain in the period

14.1

Value at 30 September 2025

607.4

Total distributions paid by Emitel to the Company in the period, comprising £9.1m of shareholder loan interest and principal repayments and £15.7m in dividends.

24.8

 

Financial performance

Emitel had a very good start to the year. For the six months to 30 June 2025 of its financial year to 31 December 2025, revenue increased by 8.8% to PLN 347.5 million (£69.2 million at average FX rates for the period) and EBITDA increased by 8.1% to PLN 235.9 million (£47.0 million at average FX rates for the period). This performance reflected good organic growth across its main segments.

 

Overall revenue growth was supported by inflation-linked price increases as 2024 inflation of 3.6% passed through to 2025 revenues; approximately 88% of Emitel's revenues have full or partial inflation-linked contracts.

 

Telecoms infrastructure revenue grew 11.6% year to date 30 June 2025 against the prior year and was driven by the impacts of continued growth in build‑to‑suit provision for MNOs and recent bolt-on acquisitions.

 

The aggregate amount of debt drawn at 30 September 2025 was PLN 1,396 million (£286 million). Emitel is 2.6x leveraged, as measured by net debt divided by LTM EBITDA at 30 September 2025, which is viewed as conservative compared with other tower businesses. Emitel's debt facilities do not mature until September 2030.

 

Of the interest payable on the third-party bank debt at 30 September 2025, 88.9% was fixed rate and 11.1% floating rate.

 

Emitel continues to be strongly cash generative and in the period returned cash of PLN 125.4 million (£24.8 million) to the Company.

 

Cash balances decreased to PLN 189 million (£39 million) over the period, due to cash returns to the Company, growth capex, and timing variations in collection of receivables. Emitel also had PLN 150.5 million (£ 30.8 million) of undrawn debt facilities available.

 

Operations

Emitel's contracted orderbook remains strong at more than PLN 2.5 billion (more than £512 million), with contracts extending out as far as 2044. The weighted average contract length in TV broadcasting is five years, two years in radio broadcasting and 11 years in telecom infrastructure services.

 

The company received an order for the first batch of mobile towers to be delivered under the new build-to-suit agreement signed with Orange Poland in April 2025, under which Emitel will construct hundreds of new telecommunications towers over the next few years. Orange Poland has committed to pay a recurring fee under a long-term contract for each site built based on industry-standard terms. Emitel can sell the remaining space on each tower to other operators to increase the profitability of each site. Emitel is now expected to grow its nationwide tower portfolio to well over 1,000 sites from the 772 sites it had at 30 September 2025.

 

Emitel has experienced recent success in the IoT space, winning multiple projects, including a tender to deliver smart water meters in southern Poland.

 

Emitel continues to progress the migration of MUX8 to the DVB-T2/HEVC broadcasting standard, scheduled to complete in early 2026, which will enable it to deliver more channels and at higher resolution (HD/UHD).

 

The operational integration of EM Cast, a recently acquired infrastructure business providing mobile network operator hosting services and analogue and digital radio emissions, has completed and investments, as assumed in the business case, are ongoing to upgrade the assets.

 

In July 2025, Emitel, in cooperation with Telewizja Puls, began a test broadcast in Warsaw using 5G broadcast technology. Emitel is part of the broader European initiative, the 5G Broadcast Strategic Task Force (5BSTF), which has outlined a roadmap for 5G broadcast across multiple European markets, aiming for commercial readiness by around 2027. The technology makes it possible to broadcast content directly on mobile devices, which means a new distribution channel for broadcasters, potentially a broader reach in the future, and an opportunity to make energy savings through reduced reliance on individual IP streaming.

 

Emitel is also actively exploring bolt-on acquisition opportunities in the data centre sector to expand its Digital Infrastructure footprint and enhance its service offering, with discussions with potential targets ongoing.

 

Outlook

The growth in demand for modern Digital Infrastructure in Poland, the sixth-largest EU economy, is being fuelled by rapid economic expansion driven by strong household consumption, increased government spending, and significant contributions from EU funds. In the second quarter of 2025, Poland's economy grew by 3.4% year-on-year, according to preliminary data. Economists expect growth for the full year 2025 to be around 3.3%. World Bank commentary has suggested that Poland could surpass the UK in income per capita this decade.

 

CRA multi-asset platform Czech Republic (acquired April 2021)

 

CRA

£m

Original cost

305.9

Value at 1 April 2025

429.0

Unrealised value gain in the period

25.0

Unrealised foreign exchange gain in the period

30.8

Value at 30 September 2025

484.9

 

Financial performance

CRA met its financial budget for the six months to 30 September 2025 and has made excellent progress across a range of operational initiatives. Due to anticipated seasonal fluctuations in growth and the timing of new contracts, revenue for the period decreased slightly by 1.3% compared to the prior comparable period, totalling CZK 1.4 billion (£48.5 million at average FX rates for the period). EBITDA also slightly decreased by 1.2%1 to CZK 0.7 billion (£24.2 million at average FX rates for the period).

 

Digital TV and radio broadcasting delivered combined revenue growth of 2.4%, supported by inflation-linked pricing and customer growth. Over the summer, CRA strengthened the content offering of the DTT platform with the launch of LooLoo Kids TV.

 

CRA also saw continued demand for its existing data centre capacity year-on-year, as measured in racks occupied (+17% ) and power (+4%). This partly reflected the completion of DC Cukrák, together with robust demand dynamics from new and existing customers.

 

Cash balances decreased to CZK 92 million (£3.3 million) at 30 September 2025 from CZK 537 million at 31 March 2025. Strong cash generation in the period was offset by the Cloud4com earnout consideration, long-term incentive plan payments to senior management for meeting business plan targets, as well as data centre capex.

 

At 30 September 2025, third-party debt outstanding totalled CZK 4.1 billion (£147.3 million). During the period, CRA utilised CZK 200 million of its RCF for working capital purposes. As measured as a multiple of EBITDA, CRA's net debt is under 2.9x LTM 30 September 2025 EBITDA. 50% of the floating-rate interest payable under the term loan is hedged at an average all‑in rate of c.5.6% until August 2030.

 

CRA continues to pursue a monetisation programme to unlock value from its real estate portfolio; and is currently in active discussions with a number of parties for the sale of specific sites no longer required for operations.

 

Operations

The entire capacity of CRA's commercial DAB+ radio network, which was expanded earlier in the year to cover 83.4% of the Czech population, was fully utilised in the period, up from 73% capacity utilisation as reported in the annual results. The project exceeded budget expectations on both revenue and cost efficiency, with an expected IRR of approximately 17%, reinforcing the Company's commitment to high-return growth initiatives. CRA expects to deliver further transmitters for Czech Radio in the near future.

 

CRA was also pleased to win a tender by the public broadcaster to provide cloud services for the online distribution of Czech Radio's content, demonstrating its deep ongoing relationship with the customer and CRA's strong reputation in this area.

 

CRA continues to focus on growing its data centre and cloud business. The 1.3MW expansion of a data centre at one of CRA's broadcast towers in the Prague Žižkov district was completed in the period and the newly added capacity is ready for commercialisation.

 

Development of the new 26MW state‑of‑the‑art data centre Prague Gateway continues. Groundworks for the site commenced in July 2025, and are expected to complete by early 2026. Prague Gateway was recently nominated by the Czech government as a potential European AI Gigafactory, an EU‑level initiative to establish five large-scale AI infrastructure centres on the continent. Support from the Czech government signals a vote of confidence in CRA's capability to be a leader in the digital future of the Czech Republic. CRA has already started providing GPU‑as‑a‑service, underscoring the company's focus on AI and next-generation technologies, with the offering being provided through its own data centres.

 

In October 2025, CRA launched the third phase of its 5G broadcast trials in Prague, focused on testing handset compatibility and network performance in the 700 MHz band. This development aligns with broader European 5G broadcast initiatives, positioning CRA alongside peers such as Emitel in preparing for next-generation hybrid terrestrial‑mobile distribution models and potential new revenue opportunities as commercial rollout approaches later this decade.

 

There is no update on the complex dispute relating to the valuation of a purported former shareholding in a predecessor entity to CRA since the publication of the Company's last trading update released on 18 September 2025.

 

Outlook

Parliamentary elections were held in October 2025 in the Czech Republic, with ANO emerging as the largest party and attempting to form a coalition government. ANO has publicly reaffirmed the Czech Republic's membership of both the EU and NATO.

 

The government has indicated its continued support for DTT as an important platform for public television distribution, while also recognising the growing role of OTT services, an area in which CRA is actively investing. It likewise supports the continued use of FM and DAB+ as main distribution technologies for public radio broadcasting.

 

1. EBITDA growth for the seven months to 31 October 2025 was 1.3%

 

Speed Fibre fibre infrastructure platform Ireland (acquired October 2023)

 

Speed Fibre

£m

Original cost*

55.02

Value at 1 April 2025

87.3

Further investment by the Company in the period for the BT Ireland acquisition

14.7

Unrealised value gain in the period

4.6

Unrealised foreign exchange gain in the period

4.8

Value at 30 September 2025

111.5

 

2. Net of €4.0 million (£3.4 million) of accrued deferred consideration that was no longer required to be paid, and reported net of £25.5 million vendor loan note.

 

Financial performance in the period

In the first half of its financial year ending 31 December 2025, Speed Fibre's revenues increased by 2.1% to €44.3 million (£37.3 million at average FX rates for the period) and EBITDA increased by 1.7% to €12.5 million (£10.5 million at average FX rates for the period).

 

The increase in EBITDA was driven by higher revenues from fibre and wireless sales including one-off installation fees and effective cost control during the period. Speed Fibre continues to operate in a soft trading environment for fibre-optic services in Ireland.

 

At 30 September 2025, Speed Fibre had €14.5 million of cash (£12.7 million) and gross debt of €124.2 million (£108.4 million) comprising a term loan of €100 million and drawn RCF of €24.2 million, both due for repayment in June 2029.

 

The interest on Speed Fibre's term loan is 85% fixed and the interest on the RCF is all floating rate.

 

Operations

During the 2025 year, Speed Fibre continued to add capacity and connect new customers. The company continues its efforts to manage and reduce costs and optimise network efficiency and service delivery.

 

In 2025, Speed Fibre deployed €8.4 million (£7.1 million) of growth capex to further build out its fibre network and connect new customers.

 

On 1 September 2025, the Company completed the acquisition of the arm of BT Ireland which provides wholesale fibre and B2B connectivity to c.400 customers in the telecoms, enterprise and government sectors in Ireland across a 3,400km network of owned and operated fibre. This acquisition enhances Speed Fibre's ability to deliver advanced connectivity solutions through the integration of complementary capabilities and domestic customer base. The transaction was funded by a mixture of Speed Fibre's own financial resources and a drawdown on the Company's holding company credit facilities. Integration work has progressed smoothly to date, and the company is working to realise significant synergies from the combination of the two businesses.

 

Outlook

Despite the soft trading environment for fibre services, demand for digital infrastructure in Ireland continues to accelerate generally, driven by the expansion of data-intensive sectors such as financial services, pharmaceuticals, and technology. Sustained growth is expected across fixed broadband, cloud computing, enterprise connectivity, AI workloads, and mobile data usage - all contributing to rising data centre capacity requirements and greater power demand. As these trends reshape Ireland's digital landscape, Speed Fibre is well positioned to meet the growing need for high‑capacity fibre networks that enable scalable, low-latency connectivity across the country.

 

DCU data centre business Belgium (acquired February 2025)

 

DCU

£m

Original cost

76.9

Value at 1 April 2025

77.6

Interest accrued on shareholder loan in the period

0.4

Syndication of a 10.1% stake in DCU to another investor

(17.2)

Repayment of shareholder loans from a senior bank refinancing

(12.4)

Unrealised value gain in the period

0.4

Unrealised foreign exchange gain in the year

4.0

Value at 30 September 2025

52.9

 

Financial performance

Revenue for the newly combined data centre group for the six months ended 30 September 2025 was €20.6 million (£17.7 million at average FX rates for the period), while EBITDA reached €6.6 million (£5.7 million at average FX rates for the period).

 

In July 2025, the Company successfully syndicated part of its stake in DCU to a Western European institutional investor via a fund managed by the Investment Manager, generating €20 million, which was used to partially prepay the fund's RCF. Following this transaction, the Company's economic interest in DCU stands at 37.4%, while governance and voting rights remain unchanged. Cordiant continues to manage the collective 47.5% economic (50% voting) interest in DCU.

 

In September 2025, DCU secured a five‑year senior financing package of €120 million, maturing in September 2030. The structure includes: €50 million drawn term loan (refinancing €10 million of existing senior debt and repaying €40 million of shareholder loans); €50 million undrawn capex facility for expansion; and €20 million revolving credit and ancillary facilities for working capital. The facilities carry an opening margin of 2.25% over Euribor. Following the repayment of shareholder loans, the Company received an additional €15 million cash distribution.

 

At 30 September 2025, DCU held cash balances of €4.8 million (£4.2 million), with net debt to LTM EBITDA at 3.7x.

 

Operations

As of 30 September 2025, DCU had a contracted colocation order book of approximately €93.5 million3 (£82 million) across its top 30 customers. This includes Proximus, which anchors the portfolio with an inflation‑linked, 10-year contract and two five-year extension options. Other customers include blue-chip corporates and government bodies such as Pfizer, Telenet, Atos, and the European Commission.

 

The management team has been strengthened during the year and a growing commercial pipeline supports continued momentum into the second half.

 

Following the new financing, DCU is well capitalised to execute on its strategic ambitions - focused on organic growth initiatives to increase available IT capacity in the portfolio which could comprise expansion via brownfield or greenfield opportunities, and/or PUE reduction at current facilities.

 

Outlook

Belgium is emerging as a key European market for edge and colocation services, supported by rising IT outsourcing demand from enterprises and growing data needs from critical institutions such as the EU and NATO. DCU's sales pipeline remains robust, and the company is actively evaluating multiple opportunities to expand its data centre portfolio through both organic development and strategic acquisitions.

 

3. This excludes the extension options for Proximus and only accounts for the initial 10-year period.

 

Hudson interconnect data centre New York (acquired January 2022)

 

Hudson

£m

Original cost

55.8

Value at 1 April 2025

36.2

Further investment by the Company in the period

6.3

Unrealised value gain in the period

1.4

Unrealised foreign exchange loss in the period

(1.3)

Value at 30 September 2025

42.6

 

Financial performance

During the period, Hudson saw revenue increase by 5.5% to $12.0 million (£8.9 million at average FX rates for the period). EBITDA loss reduced by 14.2% to $(1.9)million (loss of £(1.4)million at average FX rates for the period). The reduced loss was a result of new business wins, cost control and operational improvements implemented by the interim CEO and the team at Hudson.

 

At 30 September 2025, the business had cash of $6.5 million (£4.9 million) and was supported by a capital injection of $8.5 million (£6.3 million) from the Company to help ongoing expansion.

 

The business continued to receive orders from both existing customers expanding their footprint in the data centre and new customers. Key contract wins included expansion from existing IT providers such as NYI and the entrance of new customers such as HEG/Velia, a 50kW customer. Cross-connect revenue has more than doubled year on year.

 

Capacity utilisation of the sixth floor has increased by 22% to 653kW of power. In total, space utilisation remains at 64% of the fifth and sixth floors. The fifth floor remains fully occupied by the anchor tenant, Digital Realty Trust.

 

Operations

Construction of two new data halls to increase power capacity by 2MW continues and the new space is expected to be available in the first half of 2026. A subset of these two data halls will have the capability to service high-density power requirements of up to 40kW per rack. This is being driven by the customer demand that the team has generated during the past year. The Company expects to earn a high rate of return on this new investment.

 

Nearly 20% of the IT capacity has already been presold, helping Hudson to achieve its best six months of new sales since its acquisition in 2022. Additional temporary capacity is being made available to service customers while the data hall expansion is ongoing.

 

Outlook

Completion of the new data halls and full commercialisation is expected to support Hudson's path to profitability. Management continues to explore various strategic initiatives to optimise the value of the asset. 

 

BTC colocation services Belgium (acquired January 2024)

 

BTC

£m

Original cost

5.2

Value at 1 April 2025

6.0

Unrealised value gain in the period

0.5

Unrealised foreign exchange gain in the period

0.3

Value at 30 September 2025

6.8

 

BTC operates 15 communication towers in Belgium and is at the forefront of 5G broadcast innovation. In November, BTC, in collaboration with Media Broadcast and Rohde & Schwarz, managed the technical setup for a major showcase event in Brussels hosted by Broadcast Networks Europe. Leading operators such as TDF, Rai Way, BP, CRA, and Emitel attended. The live demonstration featured content broadcast via a BTC antenna from the Finance Tower in central Brussels. This initiative underscores BTC's role in advancing next-generation broadcast services and safeguarding the future of UHF spectrum.

 

5G broadcast expands the scope of broadcast networks by enabling new services - greater reach for advertisers, improved TV experiences on the move, and critical applications such as emergency alerts and navigation services. It also offers a spectrum-efficient, low-emission alternative to conventional streaming, using up to ten times less energy and leveraging existing infrastructure for cost-effective deployment.

BTC remains strongly cash generative, with €1.7 million (£1.4 million) in cash at 30 September 2025 and a dividend of €0.6 million (£0.5 million) paid during the period.

 

Risk management

 

Principal risks and uncertainties

 

1. The capital markets may remain effectively closed to the Company for a significant period. As a consequence, the Company may be unable to raise new capital and it may therefore be unable to progress investment opportunities.

 

How we mitigate risk

The Company has acquired a portfolio of cash‑generating assets with significant organic growth prospects, which together are capable of providing returns meeting the investment objective without further acquisitions. The Investment Manager also continues to consider potential alternative sources of capital, including debt and coinvestment.

 

How the risk is changing

Many investment trust companies listed on the London Stock Exchange, including the Company, continue to trade at a substantial discount to NAV. The gradual improvement noted in the 2025 Annual Report has continued, but it remains impossible to predict whether or when market conditions may improve sufficiently for new equity issuance to be undertaken.

 

Movement in the period - Level

 

2. There is a risk that, even when the capital markets are open, insufficient numbers of investors are prepared to invest new capital, or that investors are unwilling to invest sufficient new capital, to enable the Company to achieve its investment objectives.

 

How we mitigate risk

The Company has established a track record of successful investments, which together are capable of providing returns meeting the investment objective without further acquisitions. The Investment Manager has deep sector knowledge and investment expertise and is well-known and respected in the market.

 

How the risk is changing

The continuing poor conditions and discounts to NAV in the equity market for investment trusts may indicate a lack of available capital for investment or lack of appetite for investment in the investment trust sector. The narrowing of the discount over the last 18 months may indicate an increase in capital becoming available, but it is impossible to predict whether that apparent trend may continue.

 

Movement in the period - Level

 

3. The Company may lose investment opportunities if it does not match investment prices, structures and terms offered by competing bidders. Conversely, the Company may experience decreased rates of return and increased risk of loss if it matches investment prices, structures and terms offered by competitors.

 

How we mitigate risk

The Investment Manager operates a prudent and disciplined investment strategy, participating in transaction processes only where it can be competitive without compromising its investment objectives.

 

How the risk is changing

The Investment Manager has been able to identify and pursue bilateral opportunities rather than auction processes, where competition for those assets has been a less significant factor. However, there can be no guarantee that suitable further bilateral opportunities will arise. In addition, current equity market conditions and the consequent limitations on the Company's ability to access capital markets may mean that it continues to be unable to pursue certain investment opportunities.

 

Movement in the period - Level

 

4. There can be no guarantee or assurance the Company will achieve its investment objectives, which are indicative targets only. Investments may fail to deliver the projected earnings, cash flows and/or capital growth expected at the time of acquisition, and valuations may be affected by foreign exchange fluctuations. The actual rate of return may be materially lower than the targeted rate of return.

 

How we mitigate risk

The Investment Manager performs a rigorous due diligence process with internal specialists and expert professional advisors in fields relevant to the proposed investment before any investment is made. The Investment Manager also carries out a regular review of the investment environment and benchmarks target and actual returns against the industry and competitors.

 

How the risk is changing

The results of our investments to date continue to be materially in line with our projections at the time of their acquisition and the target return for the Company, and their aggregate fair value has increased, contributing to NAV total return of 62.4% since the Company's IPO in 2021. This demonstrates the Investment Manager's ability to manage the investments to deliver returns and growth.

 

Movement in the period - Level

 

5. Actual results of portfolio investments may vary from the projections, which may have a material adverse effect on NAV.

 

How we mitigate risk

The Investment Manager provides the Board with at least quarterly updates of portfolio investment performance and detail around any material variation from budget and forecast returns.

 

How the risk is changing

The results of our investments to date continue to be materially in line with our projections at the time of their acquisition and with their budgets for the current year. This demonstrates the quality of the Investment Manager's projections and its ability to manage the investments to deliver the expected results.

 

Movement in the period - Level

 

6. The Company invests in unlisted Digital Infrastructure assets, and such investments are illiquid. There is a risk that it may be difficult for the Company to sell the Digital Infrastructure assets and the price achieved on any realisation may be at a discount to the prevailing valuation of the relevant Digital Infrastructure asset.

 

How we mitigate risk

The Investment Manager has considerable experience across relevant digital infrastructure sectors, and senior members of the team have had leadership roles in over $80 billion of relevant transactions. The Company seeks a diversified range of investments so that exposure to temporary poor conditions in any one market is limited.

 

How the risk is changing

The Company is still in its relative infancy and, as a vehicle with permanent capital, is not likely to be seeking a full divestment of any asset for some time. The Company's prudent leverage position, as regards both the quantum and terms of its debt, mean that the risk of a forced divestment is very low. Exposure to divestment risk is limited in the short to medium term.

 

Movement in the period - Level

 

7. The Company may invest in Digital Infrastructure assets which are in construction or construction‑ready or otherwise require significant future capital expenditure. Digital Infrastructure assets which have significant capital expenditure requirements may be exposed to cost overruns, construction delay, failure to meet technical requirements or construction defects.

 

How we mitigate risk

The Investment Manager has significant experience of managing construction risks arising from Digital Infrastructure assets and will also engage third parties where appropriate to oversee such construction.

 

How the risk is changing

In pursuance of the Company's Buy, Build & Grow model, it will undertake significant capital construction projects. This risk has been low to date, and remains low, but will increase as capital investment increases. In particular, the Prague Gateway project being undertaken by CRA, and on a smaller scale the data halls being constructed by Hudson, will involve some construction risk.

 

Movement in the period - Higher

 

8. The Company operates in markets in Europe and North America which are affected by global events. Supply chain disruption may be caused by conflicts (e.g. in Ukraine), political change (e.g. the rise of political populism), trade barriers, climate change and public health crises.

 

How we mitigate risk

The Company has acquired a geographically diverse portfolio of assets in various segments of the Digital Infrastructure market, and will continue to seek further diversification, reducing the impact of specific events on the Company as a whole.

 

How the risk is changing

Policy uncertainty, as measured by the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty index, has decreased significantly since its peak in April, but remains high. Financial market volatility has remained generally lower than in recent years.

 

Movement in the period - Lower

 

9. The Company and its investee companies, in common with most businesses, face a diverse array of cyber threats, including ransomware, phishing and supply chain attacks. Cyber incidents can have severe financial and reputational consequences.

 

How we mitigate risk

The Investment Manager and each portfolio company has an IT function whose remit specifically includes cybersecurity. The nature of the portfolio companies' business is such that there is significant in-house experience and expertise in the field of cybersecurity, and cybersecurity is a standing agenda item for the board of each portfolio company.

 

How the risk is changing

The incidence of cyber attacks appears to be on the increase, with several high-profile cases of cyber incidents in the news recently causing major companies significant disruption and cost.

 

Movement in the period - New

 

Statement of Directors' responsibilities

The Directors are responsible for preparing this Interim Report in accordance with the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the UK's Financial Conduct Authority.

 

In preparing the unaudited condensed set of interim financial statements included within the Interim Report, the Directors are required to:

 

- prepare and present the condensed set of interim financial statements in accordance with IAS 34 Interim Financial Reporting issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and the DTRs;

- ensure the condensed set of interim financial statements has adequate disclosures;

- select and apply appropriate accounting policies; and

- make accounting estimates that are reasonable in the circumstances.

 

The Directors are responsible for designing, implementing and maintaining such internal controls as they determine are necessary to enable the preparation of the condensed set of interim financial statements that is free from material misstatement whether due to fraud or error.

 

On behalf of the Board

Shonaid Jemmett-Page

Chairman

25 November 2025

 

Condensed Statement of Financial Position

As at 30 September 2025 (unaudited)

 

Note

As at30 September 2025£'000

As at31 March 2025£'000

Non-current assets

Investments at fair value through profit or loss

6

1,219,025

1,124,695

 

 

1,219,025

1,124,695

Current assets

 

 

 

Receivables

8

10,494

10,795

Cash and cash equivalents

7,153

6,137

 

 

17,647 

 16,932 

Current liabilities

 

 

 

Loans and borrowings

9

(163,254)

(147,591)

Accrued expenses and other creditors

(1,081)

(1,517)

 

 

(164,335)

(149,108)

Net current liabilities

 

(146,688)

(132,176)

Net assets

 

1,072,337

992,519

 

 

 

 

Equity

 

 

 

Share capital

10

774,214

774,214

Retained earnings - Revenue

15,212

(162)

Retained earnings - Capital

282,911

218,467

Total equity

 

1,072,337

992,519

Number of shares in issue

 

 

 

Ordinary shares

10

765,715,477

765,715,477

 

 

765,715,477

765,715,477

Net asset value per ordinary share (pence)

13

140.04

129.62

 

The unaudited condensed interim financial statements were approved and authorised for issue by the Board on 24 November 2025 and signed on their behalf by:

 

Shonaid Jemmett-Page Sian Hill

Chairman Director

 

The accompanying notes form an integral part of these unaudited condensed interim financial statements.

 

Condensed Statement of Comprehensive Income

For the six months ended 30 September 2025 (unaudited)

 

For the six months ended

30 September 2025

For the six months ended

30 September 2024

Note

Revenue

£'000

Capital

£'000

Total

£'000

Revenue

£'000

Capital

£'000

Total

£'000

Movement in fair value of investments held at fair value through profit or loss

6

-

89,722

89,722

-

54,155

54,155

Management fee income

666

-

666

-

-

-

Dividend income

18,867

-

18,867

-

-

-

19,533

89,722

109,255

-

54,155

54,155

Operating expenses

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Investment acquisition costs

-

-

-

-

(1,327)

(1,327)

Other expenses

4

(4,396)

-

(4,396)

(3,951)

-

(3,951)

(4,396)

-

(4,396)

(3,951)

(1,327)

(5,278)

Operating profit

 

 

15,137

89,722

104,859

 

(3,951)

52,828

48,877

Foreign exchange movements on working capital

-

(8,049)

(8,049)

-

2,886

2,886

Finance income

237

-

237

1,077

-

1,077

Finance expense

-

-

-

(3,826)

-

(3,826)

Profit for the period before tax

 

 

15,374

81,673

97,047

 

(6,700)

55,714

49,014

Tax charge

5

-

-

-

-

-

-

Profit for the period after tax

 

 

15,374

81,673

97,047

 

(6,700)

55,714

49,014

Total comprehensive income for the period

 

 

15,374

81,673

97,047

 

(6,700)

55,714

49,014

 

 

Weighted average number of shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Basic - Ordinary Shares

13

765,715,477

765,715,477

765,715,477

766,009,708

766,009,708

766,009,708

Diluted - Ordinary Shares

13

 

765,715,477

765,715,477

765,715,477

766,009,708

766,009,708

766,009,708

 

 

 

Earnings per share

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Basic - earnings (pence) from continuing operations

13

2.01

10.67

12.67

(0.87)

7.27

6.40

Diluted - earnings (pence) from continuing operations

13

2.01

10.67

12.67

(0.87)

7.27

6.40

 

 

 

The accompanying notes form an integral part of these unaudited condensed interim financial statements.

 

Condensed Statement of Changes in Equity

For the six months ended 30 September 2025 (unaudited)

 

Note

Share capital£'000

Retained earnings-Revenue£'000

Retained earnings-Capital£'000

Total equity£'000

Opening net assets attributable to shareholders at 1 April 2024

774,656

(14,538)

160,542

920,660

Shares repurchased in the period

10

(442)

-

-

(442)

Dividends paid during the period

14

-

-

(16,858)

(16,858)

Profit and total comprehensive income for the period

-

(6,700)

55,714

49,014

Closing net assets attributable to shareholders at 30 September 2024

 

 

774,214

(21,238)

199,398

952,374

 

Note

Share capital£'000

Retained earnings-Revenue£'000

Retained earnings-Capital£'000

Total equity£'000

Opening net assets attributable to shareholders at I October 2024

774,214

(21,238)

199,398

952,374

Shares repurchased in the period

10

-

-

-

-

Dividends paid during the period

14

-

-

(16,081)

(16,081)

Profit and total comprehensive income for the period

-

21,076

35,150

56,226

Closing net assets attributable to shareholders at 31 March 2025

 

 

774,214

(162)

218,467

992,519

 

Note

Share capital£'000

Retained earnings-Revenue£'000

Retained earnings-Capital£'000

Total equity£'000

Opening net assets attributable to shareholders at 1 April 2025

774,214

(162)

218,467

992,519

Shares repurchased in the period

10

-

-

-

-

Dividends paid in the period

14

-

-

(17,229)

(17,229)

Profit and total comprehensive income for the period

-

15,374

81,673

97,047

Closing net assets attributable to shareholders as at 30 September 2025

 

 

774,214

15,212

282,911

1,072,337

 

The accompanying notes form an integral part of these unaudited condensed interim financial statements.

 

Condensed Statement of Cash Flows

For the six months ended 30 September 2025 (unaudited)

 

Note

For the sixmonths ended

30 September 2025

£'000

For the sixmonths ended

30 September 2024

£'000

Operating activities

 

 

 

Operating profit for the period

104,859 

 48,877 

Adjustments to operating activities

Net gain on investments at fair value through profit or loss

6

(89,722)

(54,155)

Dividend income

(18,867)

-

Reclassification of investment to investment management fees receivable

1,674

-

Decrease in receivables

301

8,281

(Decrease)/Increase in payables

(436)

(2,016)

Net cash flows used in operating activities

 

(2,191)

987

Cash flows used in investing activities

 

 

 

Investment additions

6

(6,281)

(27,733)

Finance income 

243

502

Dividend income

18,867

-

Net cash flows used in investing activities

 

12,829

(27,231)

Cash flows (used in)/generated from financing activities

 

 

 

Shares repurchased

10

-

(442)

Loan drawn down

9

7,628

155,554

Loan repaid

9

-

(155,554)

Finance costs paid

-

(3,425)

Bank interest received

5

11

79

Dividends paid

14

(17,229)

(16,858)

Net cash flows (used in)/generated from financing activities

 

(9,589)

(20,646)

(Decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents during the period

1,049

(46,890)

Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the period

6,137

60,085

Exchange translation movement

(33)

389

Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the period

 

7,153

13,584

 

The accompanying notes form an integral part of these unaudited condensed interim financial statements.

 

Notes to the interim financial statements

 

1. General information

 

Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Limited (the Company; LSE ticker: CORD) was incorporated and registered in Guernsey on 4 January 2021 with registered number 68630 as a non-cellular company limited by shares and is governed in accordance with the provisions of the Companies (Guernsey) Law 2008. The registered office address is East Wing, Trafalgar Court, Les Banques, St Peter Port, Guernsey GY1 3PP. The Company's ordinary shares were admitted to trading on the Specialist Fund Segment of the London Stock Exchange on 16 February 2021 and its C Shares on 10 June 2021. On 20 January 2022, all C Shares were converted to ordinary shares. A second issuance of ordinary shares took place on 25 January 2022. Note 10 gives more information on share capital.

 

2. Material accounting policies

 

The material accounting policies applied in the preparation of these financial statements are set out below. These policies have been consistently applied to all the years presented, unless otherwise stated.

 

Basis of preparation

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with IFRS as issued by the IASB, the Statement of Recommended Practice issued by the Association of Investment Companies (the AIC SORP) and the Companies (Guernsey) Law 2008.

 

The financial statements have been prepared on an historical cost basis as modified for the measurement of certain financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss. They are presented in pounds sterling, which is the currency of the primary economic environment in which the Company operates, and are rounded to the nearest thousand, unless otherwise stated.

 

The material accounting policies are set out below.

 

Going concern

The financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis. As at 30 September 2025, the Company had net current liabilities of £146.7 million. The Directors have assessed the Company's financial position, including its access to group support and funding arrangements, and have a reasonable expectation that the Company has adequate resources to meet its liabilities as they fall due for at least the next 12 months.

 

While the ongoing conflicts and political changes in different parts of the world during the period have created some supply chain disruption and market volatility, this did not have a material direct effect on the results of the business. The Directors are satisfied that the resulting macroeconomic environment is not likely to significantly restrict business activity.

 

The Directors have reviewed different scenarios and stress testing of the cash flow forecasts prepared by the Investment Manager to understand the resilience of the Company's cash flows to adverse scenarios.

 

The Directors and Investment Manager are actively monitoring these risks and their potential effect on the Company and its underlying investments. In particular, they have considered the following specific key potential impacts:

 

-

increased volatility in the fair value of investments;

-

disruptions to business activities of the underlying investments; and

-

recoverability of income and principal and allowance for expected credit losses.

 

In considering the key potential impacts above on the Company and its underlying investments, the Investment Manager has assessed these with reference to the mitigation measures in place. Based on this assessment, the Directors do not consider that the effects of the above risks have created a material uncertainty over the assessment of the Company as a going concern.

 

As further detailed in note 6 to the financial statements, the Board uses a third-party valuation provider to perform a reasonableness assessment of the Investment Manager's valuation of the underlying investments. Additionally, the Investment Manager and Directors have considered the cash flow forecast to determine the term over which the Company can remain viable given its current resources. On the basis of this review and, after careful consideration and making due enquiries, the Directors have a reasonable expectation that the Company has adequate resources to continue in operational existence for at least the period from 25 November 2025 to 23 November 2026, being the period of assessment considered by the Directors. Accordingly, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the financial statements.

 

Accounting for subsidiaries

The Directors have concluded that the Company has all the elements of control as prescribed by IFRS 10 'Consolidated Financial Statements' in relation to all its subsidiaries and that the Company satisfies the three essential criteria to be regarded as an Investment Entity as defined in IFRS 10. The three essential criteria are that the entity must:

 

-

obtain funds from one or more investors for the purpose of providing these investors with professional investment management services;

-

commit to its investors that its business purpose is to invest its funds solely for returns from capital appreciation, investment income or both; and

-

measure and evaluate the performance of substantially all of its investments on a fair value basis.

 

In satisfying the second essential criterion, the notion of an investment time frame is critical and an Investment Entity should have an exit strategy for the realisation of its investments. The Board has approved a divestment strategy under which the Investment Manager will, within two years from acquisition of an investment and at least annually thereafter, undertake a review of the current condition and future prospects of the investment. If the Investment Manager concludes that:

 

-

the future prospects for an investment are insufficiently strong to meet the Company's rate of return targets; or

-

the value that could be realised by an immediate disposal would outweigh the value of retaining the investment; or

-

it would be more advantageous to realise capital for investment elsewhere than to continue to hold the investment

then the Investment Manager will take appropriate steps to dispose of the investment

 

Also as set out in IFRS 10, further consideration should be given to the typical characteristics of an Investment Entity, which are that:

 

-

it should have more than one investment, to diversify the risk portfolio and maximise returns;

-

it should have multiple investors, who pool their funds to maximise investment opportunities;

-

it should have investors that are not related parties of the entity; and

-

it should have ownership interests in the form of equity or similar interests.

 

The Directors are of the opinion that the Company meets the essential criteria and typical characteristics of an Investment Entity. Therefore, subsidiaries are not consolidated but are measured at fair value through profit or loss, in accordance with IFRS 9 'Financial Instruments'. Fair value is measured in accordance with IFRS 13 'Fair Value Measurement'.

 

Financial instruments

Financial instruments

In accordance with IFRS 9, financial assets and financial liabilities are recognised in the Statement of Financial Position when the Company becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the instrument.

 

Financial assets

The classification of financial assets at initial recognition depends on the purpose for which the financial asset was acquired and its characteristics. All purchases of financial assets are recorded at the date on which the Company became party to the contractual requirements of the financial asset.

 

The Company's financial assets principally comprise investments held at fair value through profit or loss, cash and cash equivalents, and trade receivables.

 

Financial assets are recognised at the date of purchase or the date on which the Company became party to the contractual requirements of the asset. Financial assets are initially recognised at cost, being the fair value of consideration given. Transaction costs of financial assets at fair value through profit or loss are recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income when incurred.

 

A financial asset is derecognised (in whole or in part) either:

-

when the Company has transferred substantially all the risks and rewards of ownership; or

-

when it has neither transferred nor retained substantially all the risks and rewards and when it no longer has control over the assets or a portion of the asset; or

-

when the contractual right to receive cash flow has expired.

 

Investments held at fair value through profit or loss

Investments are measured at fair value through profit or loss. Gains or losses resulting from the movement in fair value are recognised in the Statement of Comprehensive Income at each interim and annual valuation point, 30 September and 31 March respectively.

 

The loans provided to subsidiaries are held at fair value through profit or loss as they form part of a managed portfolio of assets whose performance is evaluated on a fair value basis. The fair values of these loans are not currently considered to be materially different from their principal amount plus accrued interest. Any gain or loss on the loan investment is recognised in profit or loss.

 

Fair value is defined as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. Fair value is calculated on an unlevered, discounted cash flow basis in accordance with IFRS 13.

 

When available, the Company measures fair value using the quoted price in an active market. A market is regarded as 'active' if transactions for the asset or liability take place with sufficient frequency and volume to provide pricing information on an ongoing basis. If there is no quoted price in an active market, then the Company uses valuation techniques that maximise the use of relevant observable inputs and minimise the use of unobservable inputs. The chosen valuation technique incorporates all of the factors that market participants would take into account when pricing a transaction.

 

Valuation process

The Investment Manager is responsible for proposing the valuation of the assets held by the Company, and the Directors are responsible for reviewing the Company's valuation policy and approving the valuations at 31 March and 30 September each year.

 

The Investment Manager derives the key assumptions of the valuations of the assets proposed to the Board and performs sensitivity analysis on them.

 

Cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash on hand and demand deposits and other short-term highly liquid investments with an original maturity of three months or less that are readily convertible to a known amount of cash and are subject to an insignificant risk of changes in value.

 

Cash collateral

Cash collateral is classified as a financial asset at amortised cost. It is measured at amortised cost. Cash collateral is recorded based on agreements entered into with an entity without notable history of default causing expected credit loss to be immaterial and therefore not recorded.

 

Financial liabilities

Financial liabilities are classified according to the substance of the contractual agreements entered into and are recorded on the date on which the Company becomes party to the contractual requirements of the financial liability.

 

The Company's financial liabilities measured at amortised cost include trade and other payables, intercompany loans and other short-term monetary liabilities which are initially recognised at fair value and subsequently measured at amortised cost using the effective interest rate method. A financial liability is derecognised, in whole or in part, when the Company has extinguished its contractual obligations, or it expires or is cancelled. Any gain or loss on derecognition is taken to the Statement of Comprehensive Income.

 

Equity

Financial instruments issued by the Company are treated as equity if the holder has only a residual interest in the assets of the Company after the deduction of all liabilities. The Company's ordinary shares and Subscription Shares are classified as equity.

 

Share issue costs directly attributable to the issue of ordinary shares are shown in equity as a deduction from share capital. When shares recognised as equity are repurchased, the amount of the consideration paid, which includes directly attributable costs, is recognised as a deduction from equity.

 

Dividends

Dividends payable are recognised as distributions in the financial statements when the Company's obligation to make payment has been established.

 

Revenue recognition

Dividend income is recognised when the Company's entitlement to receive payment is established. Other income is accounted for on an accruals basis using the effective interest rate method.

 

Expenses

Expenses are recognised on an accruals basis in the Statement of Comprehensive Income in the period in which they are incurred.

 

Taxation

The Company has met the conditions in section 1158 Corporation Tax Act 2010 and the Investment Trust (Approved Company) (Tax) Regulations 2011 for each period to date, and it is the intention of the Directors to conduct the affairs of the Company so that it continues to satisfy those conditions and continues to be approved by HMRC as an investment trust.

 

In respect of each accounting period for which the Company is approved by HMRC as an investment trust, the Company will be exempt from UK corporation tax on its chargeable gains and its capital profits from creditor loan relationships. The Company will, however, be subject to UK corporation tax on its income (currently at a rate of 25%).

 

In principle, the Company will be liable to UK corporation tax on its dividend income. However, there are broad-ranging exemptions from this charge which would be expected to be applicable in respect of most of the dividends the Company may receive.

 

A company that is an approved investment trust in respect of an accounting period is able to take advantage of modified UK tax treatment in respect of its 'qualifying interest income' for an accounting period. It is expected that the Company will have material amounts of qualifying interest income and that it may, therefore, decide to designate some or all of the dividends paid in respect of a given accounting period as interest distributions.

 

To the extent that the Company receives income from, or realises amounts on the disposal of, investments in foreign countries it may be subject to foreign withholding or other taxation in those jurisdictions. To the extent it relates to income, this foreign tax may, to the extent not relievable under a double tax treaty, be able to be treated as an expense for UK corporation tax purposes, or it may be treated as a credit against UK corporation tax up to certain limits and subject to certain conditions.

 

Current tax is the expected tax payable on the taxable income for the period, using tax rates that have been enacted or substantively enacted at the reporting date. Deferred tax is the tax expected to be payable or recoverable on temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities in the financial statements and the corresponding tax bases used in the computation of taxable profit. Deferred tax liabilities are generally recognised for all taxable temporary differences and deferred tax assets are recognised to the extent that it is probable that taxable profits will be available against which deductible temporary differences can be utilised.

 

Deferred tax is calculated at the tax rates that are expected to apply in the period when the liability is settled or the asset is realised. Deferred tax is charged or credited to the Statement of Comprehensive Income except when it relates to items charged or credited directly to equity, in which case the deferred tax is also dealt with directly in equity.

 

Deferred tax assets and liabilities are offset when: there is a legally enforceable right to set off tax assets against tax liabilities; they relate to income taxes levied by the same taxation authority; and the Company intends to settle its current tax assets and liabilities on a net basis. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are not discounted.

 

Foreign currencies

The functional currency of the Company is the pound sterling, reflecting the primary economic environment in which it operates. The Company has chosen pounds sterling as its presentation currency for financial reporting purposes.

 

Foreign currency transactions during the period, including purchases and sales of investments, income and expenses are translated into pounds sterling at the rate of exchange prevailing on the date of the transaction.

 

Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in currencies other than pounds sterling are retranslated at the rate of exchange ruling at the reporting date. Non-monetary items that are measured in terms of historical cost in a currency other than pounds sterling are translated using the exchange rates at the dates of the initial transactions and are not subsequently retranslated.

 

Non-monetary items measured at fair value in a currency other than pounds sterling are translated using the exchange rates at the date as at which the fair value was determined. Foreign currency gains and losses on financial instruments classified as at fair value through profit or loss are included in profit or loss in the Statement of Comprehensive Income as part of the change in fair value of investments.

 

Foreign currency gains and losses on other financial instruments are included in profit or loss in the Statement of Comprehensive Income as a finance income or expense.

 

Segmental reporting

The chief operating decision maker, who is responsible for allocating resources and assessing performance of the operating segments, has been identified as the Board as a whole. The key measure of performance used by the Directors to assess the Company's performance and to allocate resources is the Company's NAV, as calculated under IFRS as issued by the IASB, and therefore no reconciliation is required between the measure of profit or loss used by the Board and that contained in the Annual Report.

 

For management purposes, the Company is organised into one main operating segment, which invests in Digital Infrastructure assets.

 

Due to the Company's nature, it has no customers.

 

New standards, amendments and interpretations issued and effective for the financial period beginning 1 April 2025

The Board has considered new standards and amendments that are mandatorily effective for financial periods starting from 1 January 2025, which includes the Company's current financial period starting 1 April 2025, and these have not had a significant impact on the financial statements.

 

New standards, amendments and interpretations issued but not yet effective

The following standards, amendments and interpretations have been issued but are not yet effective. These are not mandatory for the reporting period ended 30 September 2025 and have not been adopted early by the Company. None of these is expected to have a material impact on the Company's financial statements in the current or future reporting periods or on foreseeable future transactions.

 

-

Lack of Exchangeability - Amendments to IAS 21 The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates, effective from 1 January 2025;

-

Annual Improvements to IFRS Accounting Standards, effective from 1 January 2026:

Amendments to: (i) IFRS 1 First-time Adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards (ii) IFRS 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures and its accompanying Guidance on Implementing IFRS 7 (iii) IFRS 9 Financial Instruments (iv) IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements (v) IAS 7 Statement of Cash flows; and

-

IFRS 18 Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements, effective from 1 January 2027.

 

IFRS 18 will impact the presentation and disclosure of income and expense items in the Financial Statements but there is not expected to be any impact on the financial position or performance figures.

 

3. Significant accounting judgements, estimates and assumptions

 

The preparation of the financial statements requires management to make judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the application of accounting policies and the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income, and expenses.

 

Estimates and judgements are continually evaluated and are based on historical experience and other factors, including expectations of future events that are believed to be reasonable under the circumstances. The key estimates made by the Company are disclosed in note 6.

 

The resulting accounting estimates will, by definition, seldom equal the related actual results. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognised in the period in which the estimate is revised and in any future periods affected.

 

Judgements

In the process of applying the Company's accounting policies, management has made the following judgements, which have the most significant effect on the amounts recognised in the financial statements:

 

Assessment as an Investment Entity

In the judgement of the Directors, the Company qualifies as an Investment Entity under IFRS 10 and therefore its subsidiary entities have not been consolidated in the preparation of the financial statements. Further details of the impact of this accounting policy are included in note 7.

 

Assumptions and estimation uncertainties

Information about assumptions and estimation uncertainties that have a significant risk of resulting in a material adjustment to the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities within the period ended 30 September 2025 is included in note 6 and relates to the determination of fair value of investments with significant unobservable inputs.

 

Climate change

In preparing the financial statements, the Directors have considered the impact of climate change, particularly in the context of the climate change risks identified in the ESG report section of the Strategic report.

 

In preparing the financial statements, the Directors have considered the medium- and longer‑term cash flow impacts of climate change on a number of key estimates within the financial statements, including:

-

the estimates of future cash flows used in assessments of the fair value of investments; and

-

the estimates of future profitability used in the assessment of distributable income.

 

These considerations did not have a material impact on the financial reporting judgements and estimates in the current period. This reflects the conclusion that climate change is not expected to have a significant impact on the Company's short- or medium-term cash flows including those considered in the going concern and viability assessments.

 

4. Other expenses

 

Other expenses in the Statement of Comprehensive Income comprises:

 

 For the six months ended30 September 2025£'000

For the six months ended30 September 2024£'000

Management fees

3,445

2,969

Legal and professional fees

262

427

Directors' fees

118

93

Fees payable to the statutory auditor

109

97

Other expenses

462

365

 

4,396

3,951

 

5. Finance income

 

Finance income in the Statement of Comprehensive Income comprises:

 

For the six months ended30 September 2025£'000

For the six months ended30 September 2024£'000

Bank interest received

11

79

Interest on fixed term deposits

226

855

Other income

-

143

 

237

1,077

 

6. Investments at fair value through profit or loss

 

As at 30 September 2025

Loans£'000

Equity£'000

Total£'000

Opening balance

12,635

1,112,060

1,124,695

Additions

6,281

-

6,281

Reclassification of investment to investment management fees receivable

-

(1,673)

(1,673)

Net (losses)/gains on investments

(409)

90,131

89,722

 

18,507

1,200,518

1,219,025

 

As at 31 March 2025

Loans£'000

Equity£'000

Total£'000

Opening balance

9,444

996,493

1,005,937

Additions

3,442

26,186

29,628

Reclassification of investment to investment management fees receivable

-

-

-

Net (losses)/gains on investments

(251)

89,381

89,130

 

12,635

1,112,060

1,124,695

 

As at 30 September 2025, the equity value of Company's investment in its subsidiary Cordiant Digital Holdings UK Limited (CDH UK) was £1,176.2 million (31 March 2025: £1,088.5 million). CDH UK is the holding company for all of the Company's investments with the exception of Hudson Interexchange (Hudson), which is held directly.

 

On 28 February 2025, the Company's indirect subsidiary Cordiant Digital Holdings Six Limited (CDH6) completed the acquisition of a 47.5% economic (50% voting) interest in DCU Invest NV. Concurrently, DCU Invest NV acquired the entire share capital of Datacenter United Brussels NV, the data centre business of Proximus Group, for a total consideration of £60.1 million (€72.3 million). CDH6 also provided a shareholder loan of €30 million to DCU Invest NV, which was partially exchanged for 500,735 Class A shares valued at €1.5 million. During the six months ended 30 September 2025, Cordiant Co Invest SMA 1 SCSp, a fund-of-one managed by the Investment Manager and investing funds on behalf of a Western European institutional investor, subscribed for €14 million of shares in CDH6, acquiring an effective 21.2% interest in CDH6 while also acquiring €6 million of the shareholder loan previously payable to Cordiant Digital Holdings Five Limited (CDH5). As a result, CDH5's ownership of CDH6 reduced to 78.8% and the Company's effective economic interest in DCU decreased to 37.4% (being 78.8% of 47.5%), while CDH6's equity stake in DCU remained unchanged. As at 30 September 2025, the fair value of the Company's indirect investment in DCU, including the shareholder loan, was £52.9 million (31 March 2025: £77.6 million).

 

As at 30 September 2025, the equity investment in CDIL Data Centre USA LLC, the legal entity operating as Hudson, was valued at £24.1 million (31 March 2025: £23.6 million) and the loan investment in Hudson at £18.5 million (31 March 2025: £12.6 million). Investment additions of £6.3 million during the period ended 30 September 2025 relate to further loans made to Hudson. The total investment in Hudson was valued at £42.6 million (31 March 2025: £36.2 million).

 

The fair value of the Company's equity investment in CRA held through its indirect subsidiary Cordiant Digital Holdings Two Limited (CDH Two) as at 30 September 2025 was £484.9 million (31 March 2025: £429.0 million).

 

The Emitel loan investment was fully repaid in the period ended 30 September 2025 including principal and interest (31 March 2025: £9.6 million). The Company's equity investment in Emitel was valued at £606.8 million (31 March 2025: £571.8 million), resulting in a total indirect investment at fair value of £607.4 million as at 30 September 2025 (31 March 2025: £581.4 million).

 

The Company, through CDH UK, holds an investment in Belgian Tower Company (BTC), formerly Norkring N.V., at a cost of £5.4 million. The fair value of the Company's indirect investment in BTC as at 30 September 2025 was £6.8 million (31 March 2025: £5.9 million).

 

Fair value measurements

IFRS 13 requires disclosure of fair value measurement by level. The level of fair value hierarchy within the financial assets or financial liabilities is determined on the basis of the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement. Financial assets and financial liabilities are classified in their entirety into only one of the following three levels:

 

-

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 assets or liabilities, either directly (i.e. as prices) or indirectly (i.e. derived from prices); and

-

Level 3 - inputs for assets or liabilities that are not based on observable market data (unobservable inputs).

 

The determination of what constitutes 'observable' requires significant judgement by the Company. The Directors consider observable data to be market data that is readily available, regularly distributed or updated, reliable and verifiable, not proprietary, and provided by independent sources that are actively involved in the relevant market.

 

The Company's investments have been classified within Level 3 as the investments are not traded and contain unobservable inputs. The valuations have been carried out by the Investment Manager. In order to obtain assurance in respect of the valuations carried out by the Investment Manager, the Company has engaged a third-party valuations expert to carry out an independent assessment of the unobservable inputs and of the forecast cash flows of the Company's investments.

 

During the period ended 30 September 2025, there were no transfers of investments at fair value through profit or loss from or to Level 3 (31 March 2025: nil).

 

The Company's investments in CRA, Hudson, Speed Fibre, Emitel, DCU and BTC have been valued using a DCF methodology. This involves forecasting the entity's future cash flows, taking into account the terms of existing contracts, expected rates of contract renewal and targeted new contracts, and the economic and geopolitical environment. These cash flows are discounted at the entity's estimated weighted average cost of capital (WACC). This method also requires estimating a terminal value, being the value of the investment at the end of the period for which cash flows can be forecast with reasonable accuracy, which is March 2030 for CRA, December 2030 for Emitel, December 2031 for Speed Fibre, December 2035 for DCU, March 2037 for Hudson and March 2032 for BTC. The terminal value is calculated using an assumed terminal growth rate (TGR) into perpetuity based on anticipated industry trends and long-term inflation rates. For Speed Fibre, the existing business has been valued using the DCF methodology as described above, while ECL, now part of Speed Fibre, has been valued at cost as part of the overall Speed Fibre valuation.

 

Both the Investment Manager and the third-party valuation expert use a combination of other valuation techniques to verify the reasonableness of the DCF valuations, as recommended in the International Private Equity and Venture Capital (IPEV) Valuation Guidelines:

 

-

earnings multiple: applying a multiple, derived largely from comparable listed entities in the market, to the forecast EBITDA of the entity to calculate an enterprise value, and then deducting the fair value of any debt in the entity;

-

DCF with multiple: calculating a DCF valuation of the cash flows of the entity to the end of the period for which cash flows can be forecast with reasonable accuracy, and then applying a multiple to EBITDA at the end of that period to estimate a terminal value; and

-

dividend yield: forecasting the entity's capacity to pay dividends in the future and applying an equity yield to that forecast dividend, based on comparable listed entities in the market.

 

The DCF valuations derived by the Investment Manager and those derived by the third-party valuation expert were not materially different from each other, and the other valuation techniques used provided assurance that the DCF valuations are reasonable.

 

7. Unconsolidated subsidiaries

 

The following table shows the subsidiaries of the Company. As the Company qualifies as an Investment Entity as referred to in note 3, these subsidiaries have not been consolidated in the preparation of the financial statements:

 

Investment

Place of business

Ownership interestat 30 September 2025

Ownership interest

at 31 March 2025

Held directly

 

 

 

Cordiant Digital Holdings UK Limited

United Kingdom

100%

100%

CDIL Data Centre USA LLC

USA

100%

100%

Held indirectly

 

 

 

Cordiant Digital Holdings One Limited

United Kingdom

100%

100%

Cordiant Digital Holdings Two Limited

United Kingdom

100%

100%

Cordiant Digital Holdings Three Limited

United Kingdom

100%

100%

Cordiant Digital Holdings Four Limited

United Kingdom

100%

100%

Cordiant Digital Holdings Five Limited

United Kingdom

100%

100%

Cordiant Digital Holdings Six Limited

United Kingdom

78.8%

100%

Cordiant Digital Holdings Ireland

Ireland

100%

100%

Communications Investments Holdings s.r.o.

Czech Republic

100%

100%

České Radiokomunikace a.s. (Czechia)

Czech Republic

100%

100%

Czech Digital Group, a.s

Czech Republic

100%

100%

CRA PRAGUE GATEWAY DC a.s.

Czech Republic

100%

100%

CRA Services s.r.o.

Czech Republic

100%

100%

Cloud4com s.r.o.

Czech Republic

100%

100%

Datové centrum Lužice s.r.o.

Czech Republic

100%

100%

Emitel S.A.

Poland

100%

100%

RTTS sp. z o. o.

Poland

100%

100%

Allford Investments sp. z o. o.

Poland

100%

100%

EM Properties sp. z o. o.

Poland

100%

100%

EM Projects sp. z o. o.

Poland

100%

100%

Hubb Investments sp. z o. o.

Poland

100%

100%

Magnet Networks Limited

Ireland

100%

100%

Belgian Tower Company N.V

Belgium

100%

100%

Speed Fibre DAC

Ireland

100%

100%

Speed Fibre 2 Holdings Limited

Ireland

100%

100%

Speed Fibre Intermediate Holdings Limited

Ireland

100%

100%

Speed Fibre Borrower Limited

Ireland

100%

100%

Speed Fibre Financing Limited

Ireland

100%

100%

Airspeed Networks Limited

Isle of Man

100%

100%

Speed Fibre Group Limited

Ireland

100%

100%

Airspeed Communications Limited

Ireland

100%

100%

E-Nasc Éireann Teoranta

Ireland

100%

100%

Enet Telecommunications Networks Limited

Ireland

100%

100%

Enet Communications Limited1

Ireland

100%

0%

DataCenter United

Belgium

37.4%

47.5%

Antwerp DataCenter BV

Belgium

37.4%

47.5%

Antwerp DC BV

Belgium

37.4%

47.5%

DATAZONE BV

Belgium

37.4%

47.5%

DC Star NV

Belgium

37.4%

47.5%

Digiscape BV

Belgium

37.4%

47.5%

Brussels DC NV

Belgium

37.4%

47.5%

DCU Invest NV

Belgium

37.4%

47.5%

 

1. Previously named BT Communications Ireland Limited, which was renamed following acquisition.

 

The amounts invested in the Company's unconsolidated subsidiaries during the period and their carrying value at 30 September 2025 are as outlined in note 6.

 

There are certain restrictions on the ability of the Company's unconsolidated subsidiaries to transfer funds to the Company in the form of cash dividends or repayment of loans. In accordance with the documentation relating to various third party loans to those subsidiaries, such cash movements may be subject to limitations on amounts and timing, and satisfaction of certain covenants. The Directors do not consider that these restrictions are likely to have a significant effect on the ability of the Company's subsidiaries to transfer funds to the Company.

 

During the year, the Investment Manager received immaterial fees from Emitel, CRA and CDH UK for advisory services rendered.

 

Subsidiaries held in the Czech Republic, Ireland, Belgium and Poland are cash generative, and do not need the financial support of the Company. The subsidiary based in the US will receive the financial support of the Company for a period of at least 12 months from the publication of this report.

 

8. Trade and other receivables

 

As at 30 September 2025£'000

As at 31 March 2025£'000

Cash collateral

8,428

8,755

Management fee income

1,083

-

Other debtors

760

1,891

Amounts receivable from related parties

162

68

Prepayments

61

81

 

10,494

10,795

 

Cash collateral relates to one security deposit held in money market accounts. An amount of USD 11.3 million (£8.4 million) relates to collateral for a letter of credit relating to the lease of the building occupied by Hudson, and during the period ended 30 September 2025, the cash collateral generated interest at a rate of 4.05% per annum (31 March 2025: 4.8% per annum).

 

9. Loan and borrowings

 

As at 30 September 2025£'000

As at 31 March 2025£'000

Opening balance

147,591

157,629

Drawdown of principal during the period

7,628

155,554

Capitalised interest

-

4,701

Repayment of principal during the period

-

(166,399)

Realised exchange gain

-

(2,075)

Unrealised exchange (loss)/gain

8,034

(1,819)

 

163,254

147,591

 

On 29 July 2024, the Company fully settled its €191.8 million loan and related interest previously owed to CDH Two through €1.8 million of its own cash reserves and a new intercompany loan of €190.0 million with CDH UK. CDH UK financed this loan by accessing its financing facility of up to €375.0 million, arranged with an international syndicate of banks and infrastructure debt funds.

 

The intercompany liability to CDH UK is interest‑free, repayable on demand, and subject to specified repayment dates. It was initially recognised at €190.0 million. During the period ended 30 September 2025, an additional and separate loan of €9 million was issued and drawn down. As at 30 September 2025, the total outstanding balance of these loans was €186.1 million (£163.2 million) (31 March 2025: €177.1 million (£147.6 million)), with no interest accrued or payable.

 

10. Share capital

 

Subject to any special rights, restrictions, or prohibitions regarding voting for the time being attached to any shares, holders of ordinary shares have the right to receive notice of and to attend, speak and vote at general meetings of the Company and each holder being present in person or by proxy shall upon a show of hands have one vote and upon a poll shall have one vote in respect of each ordinary share that they hold.

 

Holders of ordinary shares are entitled to receive and participate in any dividends or distributions of the Company in relation to assets of the Company that are available for dividend or distribution. On a winding-up of the Company, the surplus assets of the Company available for distribution to the holders of ordinary shares (after payment of all other debts and liabilities of the Company attributable to the ordinary shares) shall be divided amongst the holders of ordinary shares pro rata according to their respective holdings of ordinary shares.

 

Ordinary shares

30 September 2025

Number of shares

£'000

31 March 2025

Number of shares

£'000

Issued and fully paid

773,559,707

780,100

773,559,707

780,100

Shares held in treasury

(7,844,230)

(5,886)

(7,269,230)

(5,444)

Outstanding shares at period/year end

765,715,477

774,214

766,290,477

774,656

 

Holders of ordinary shares are entitled to all dividends paid by the Company on the ordinary shares and, on a winding up, provided the Company has satisfied all of its liabilities, ordinary shareholders are entitled to all of the surplus assets of the Company attributable to the ordinary shares.

 

Subscription shares carry no right to any dividends paid by the Company and have no voting rights.

 

No subscription shares have been exercised between 31 March 2025 and the date of this report, the last date they can be exercised is 28 February 2026.

 

Treasury shares

30 September 2025

Number of shares

31 March 2025

Number of shares

Opening balance 

7,844,230

7,269,230

Shares repurchased during the period/year

-

575,000

Closing balance at period/year end

7,844,230

7,844,230

 

The Company has not undertaken any market buybacks during the period ended 30 September 2025.

 

Subscription shareholders have no right to any dividends paid by the Company and have no voting rights.

 

11. Audit fees

Other operating expenses include fees payable to the Company's auditor, which amounted to £109,000 for period ended 30 September 2025 in respect of the audit of the statutory financial statements for the year ending 31 March 2026 (30 September 2024: £97,000). No fees were incurred for other audit-related or non-audit services in either period/year. At 30 September 2025, there were no audit fees from the year ended 31 March 2025 remaining unpaid.

 

12. Management and performance fees

 

Under the Investment Management Agreement, the Investment Manager is entitled to receive an annual management fee and a performance fee, plus any applicable VAT, in addition to the reimbursement of reasonable expenses incurred by it in the performance of its duties.

 

Management fee

The Investment Manager receives from the Company an annual management fee, based on the average market capitalisation of the Company, calculated using the closing market capitalisation for each LSE trading day for the relevant month, and paid monthly in arrears. The management fee has been payable since 30 April 2021, being the date on which more than 75% of the IPO proceeds were deployed in investment activities.

 

The annual management fee is calculated on the following basis:

―  1.00% of the average market capitalisation up to £500 million;

―  0.90% of the average market capitalisation between £500 million and £1 billion; and

―  0.80% of the average market capitalisation in excess of £1 billion.

 

Under the previous arrangement, the Investment Manager was required to apply an amount equal to 10% of the annual management fee to purchase or subscribe for ordinary shares in the Company, either through new issuance or market purchases, depending on the trading price relative to NAV. Following the amendment and restatement of the Investment Management Agreement on 18 August 2025, this requirement has been removed. The Investment Manager is no longer required to reinvest any portion of the management fee into shares. However, it must maintain at all times the same number of shares as it would have been required to hold if the previous reinvestment requirement had remained in place.

 

For the period ended 30 September 2025, the Investment Manager has charged management fees of £3.4 million (30 September 2024: £2.9 million) to the Company, with £0.7 million (31 March 2025: £0.5 million) owed at period/year end.

 

Performance fee

The Investment Manager may in addition receive a performance fee on each performance fee calculation date, dependent on the performance of the Company's NAV and share price. The first performance fee calculation date was 31 March 2024 and subsequent calculation dates are on 31 March each year thereafter. The fee is equal to 12.5% of the excess return over the target of 9% for the NAV return or share price return, whichever is the lower, multiplied by the time-weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue (excluding any ordinary shares held in treasury) during the relevant period.

 

Any performance fee is to be satisfied as follows:

-

as to 50% in cash; and

-

as to the remaining 50% of the performance fee, subject to certain exceptions and the relevant regulatory and tax requirements:

a)

if the average trading price, calculated over the 20 trading days immediately preceding the performance fee calculation date, is equal to or higher than the last reported NAV per ordinary share (as adjusted to reflect any dividends reflected in the average trading price) the Company will issue to the Investment Manager such number of new ordinary shares (credited as fully paid) as is equal to the performance fee investment amount divided by the average trading price (rounded down to the nearest whole number of ordinary shares);

b)

if the average trading price is lower than the last reported NAV per ordinary share (as adjusted to reflect any dividends reflected in the average trading price) then the Company shall (on behalf of, and as agent for, the Investment Manager) apply the performance fee investment amount in making market purchases of ordinary shares, provided any such ordinary shares are purchased at prices below the last reported NAV per ordinary share..

 

Any ordinary shares subscribed or purchased by the Investment Manager pursuant to the above arrangements will, subject to usual exceptions, be subject to a lock-up of 36 months from the date of subscription or purchase.

 

For the period ended 30 September 2025, no performance fee is due to the Investment Manager (31 March 2025: £nil) and no amount has been accrued as the share price performance hurdle has not been met.

 

13. Earnings per share and net asset value per share

 

 

For the six-months ended 30 September 2025

 

Basic

Diluted

Allocated profit attributable to this share class - £'000

97,047

97,047

Weighted average number of shares in issue

765,715,477

765,715,477

Earnings per share from continuing operations in the period (pence)

12.67

12.67

 

 

For the six-months ended 30 September 2024

 

Basic

Diluted

Allocated profit attributable to this share class - £'000

49,014

49,014

Weighted average number of shares in issue

766,009,708

766,009,708

Earnings per share from continuing operations in the year (pence)

6.40

6.40

As at 30 September 2025, there were 6,434,884 (31 March 2025: 6,434,884) Subscription Shares in issue. During the period ended 30 September 2025, nil (30 September 2024: nil) Subscription Shares were exercised.

 

As at30 September 2025

As at31 March 2025

Weighted average number of shares used in basic earnings per share

765,715,477

765,862,189 

Weighted average number of shares used in diluted earnings per share

765,715,477

765,862,189 

Net asset value - £'000

1,072,337

992,519 

Number of ordinary shares issued

765,715,477

765,715,477 

Net asset value per share (pence)

140.04

129.62 

 

14. Dividends declared and paid with respect to the year/period

 

Dividends paid during the period ended 30 September 2025

Dividend per ordinary share pence

Total dividend£'000

Second interim dividend in respect of the period ended 31 March 2025

2.25

17,229

 

 

 

Dividends paid during the period ended 30 September 2024

Dividend per ordinary share pence

Total dividend£'000

Second interim dividend in respect of the period ended 31 March 2024

2.20

16,858

 

On 24 November 2025, the Board approved the first interim dividend of 2.175 pence per share with respect to the six months ended 30 September 2025. The record date for this dividend is 5 December 2025 and the payment date is 22 December 2025.

 

15. Related party transactions

 

Directors

The Company has four non-executive Directors, each of whom is considered to be independent. Directors' fees for the period ended 30 September 2025 amounted to £117,500 (30 September 2024: £92,500), of which £nil (31 March 2025: £nil) was outstanding at the period/year end.

 

The shares held by the Directors at 30 September 2025 are shown in the table below:

Ordinary shares held at30 September 2025

Ordinary shares held at31 March 2025

Shonaid Jemmett-Page

108,651

88,719

Sian Hill

92,711

77,500

Marten Pieters

140,625

103,125

Simon Pitcher

90,000

63,125

 

Investment Manager

The Investment Manager charged management fees of £3.4 million (30 September 2024: £2.9 million) to the Company during the period, with £0.7 million (31 March 2025: £0.5 million) outstanding at period end.

 

Investment

The Company has provided additional funding of £6.3 million (USD 8.5 million) as a loan to its subsidiary, CDIL Data Centre USA LLC during the period ended 30 September 2025. The balance of the loan investment at 30 September 2025 was £18.5 million (31 March 2025: £12.6 million).

 

Company subsidiaries

At 31 March 2025, the CDH UK loan principal was £147.6 million with no interest accrued or due. During the period, an additional and separate loan of €9 million (£7.6 million) was made. As at 30 September 2025, the total outstanding balance of these loans was £163.2 million (31 March 2025: £146.7 million), with no interest accrued or payable.

 

During the period ended 30 September 2025, the Company charged management fees amounting to £0.7 million (30 September 2024: £nil) for services provided to CRA, Emitel, Speed Fibre and BTC.

 

16. Ultimate controlling party

 

In the opinion of the Board, on the basis of the shareholdings advised to them, the Company has no ultimate controlling party.

 

17. Subsequent events

 

Apart from dividend declaration, as disclosed in Note 14, there were no other significant events following the reporting period ending 30 September 2025.

 

Glossary of capitalised defined terms

 

Administrator means Aztec Financial Services (Guernsey) Limited

 

AFFO means adjusted funds from operations

 

AIC means the Association of Investment Companies

 

AIC Code means the AIC Code of Corporate Governance

 

AIC SORP means the AIC Statement of Recommended Practice

 

Board means the board of Directors of the Company

 

Belgian Tower Company or BTC means Belgian Tower Company NV, formerly Norkring België NV.

 

BTCIL means BT Communications Ireland Limited now Enet Communications Limited or ECL

 

CIH means Communications Investments Holdings s.r.o.

 

Company means Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Limited

 

Company's Annual Report 2025 means the Company's annual report for the year ended 31 March 2025

 

Companies Law means the Companies (Guernsey) Law 2008 (as amended)

 

Company's Prospectus means the prospectus issued by the Company on 29 January 2021 in relation to its IPO

 

Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Management or CDIM means the Investment Manager's Digital Infrastructure team.

 

CRA means České Radiokomunikace s.a.

 

C Shares means C shares of no par value each in the capital of the Company issued pursuant to the Company's placing programme as an alternative to the issue of ordinary shares

 

DAB+ means digital audio broadcasting plus, an advanced digital radio standard that provides higher audio quality and more efficient spectrum use compared to traditional FM broadcasting

 

DCF means discounted cash flow

 

Datacentre United or DCU means DC Invest NV.

 

DCU Brussels means DCU Brussels NV.

 

Digital Infrastructure means the physical infrastructure resources that are necessary to enable the storage and transmission of data by telecommunications operators, corporations, governments and individuals. These predominantly consist of mobile telecommunications/broadcast towers, data centres, fibre optic networks, in-building systems and, as appropriate, the land under such infrastructure. Digital Infrastructure assets do not include switching and routing equipment, servers and other storage devices or radio transmission equipment or software

 

Directors means the directors of the Company

 

DTRs means the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules issued by the FCA

 

DTT means digital terrestrial television

 

DVB-T2 means Digital Video Broadcasting - Second Generation Terrestrial

 

EBITDA means earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation

 

ECL means Enet Communications Limited, formerly BTCIL

 

EEA means the European Economic Area

 

Emitel means Emitel S.A.

 

ESG means environmental, social and governance

 

EV means enterprise value

 

FCA means the UK Financial Conduct Authority

 

FX means foreign exchange.

 

GPU means graphics processing unit, a specialised processor designed to accelerate graphics rendering and parallel computing tasks, widely used in artificial intelligence and high‑performance computing

 

GFSC means the Guernsey Financial Services Commission

 

HEVC means high efficiency video coding

 

Hudson means Hudson Interxchange (previously operating under the name DataGryd Datacenters a trading name of CDIL Data Centre USA LLC)

 

IAS means international accounting standards as issued by the Board of the International Accounting Standards Committee

 

IASB means International Accounting Standards Board

 

IFRS means the International Financial Reporting Standards, being the principles-based accounting standards, interpretations and the framework by that name issued by the International Accounting Standards Board

 

Interim Report means the Company's half yearly report and unaudited condensed interim financial statements for the six-month period ended 30 September 2025

 

Investment Entity means an entity whose business purpose is to make investments for capital appreciation, investment income, or both.

 

Investment Manager means Cordiant Capital Inc.

 

IoT means the Internet of Things

 

IPEV Valuation Guidelines means the International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation Guidelines

 

IPO means the initial public offering of shares by a company to the public

 

Listing Rules means the listing rules published by the FCA.

 

LSE means the London Stock Exchange

 

MUX means multiplex, a system that combines multiple digital TV or radio channels into a single signal for transmission over one frequency

 

NAV or net asset value means the value of the assets of the Company less its liabilities as calculated in accordance with the Company's valuation policy and expressed in pounds sterling

 

PUE means power usage effectiveness, an industry metric for measuring the energy efficiency of a data centre, calculated as the ratio of total facility energy to IT equipment energy

 

RCF means revolving credit facility

 

Speed Fibre means Speed Fibre Designated Activity Company

 

Subscription Shares means redeemable subscription shares of no par value each in the Company, issued on the basis of one Subscription Share for every eight ordinary shares subscribed for in the IPO

 

TCFD means Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures

 

UK or United Kingdom means the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

 

US or United States means the United States of America, its territories and possessions, any state of the United States and the District of Columbia

 

USD means United States dollars.

 

WACC means weighted average cost of capital.

 

Directors and general information

 

Directors (all appointed 26 January 2021)

 

Shonaid Jemmett-Page Chairman

Sian Hill Audit Committee Chairman and Senior Independent Director

Marten Pieters

Simon Pitcher

 

All independent and of the registered office below.

 

Website www.cordiantdigitaltrust.com

ISIN (ordinary shares) GG00BMC7TM77

Ticker (ordinary shares) CORD

SEDOL (ordinary shares) BMC7TM7

Registered Company Number 68630

 

Registered office

East Wing

Trafalgar Court

Les Banques

St Peter Port

Guernsey

GY1 3PP

Legal advisors to the Company

Gowling WLG (UK) LLP

4 More London Riverside

London

SE1 2AU

Investment manager

Cordiant Capital Inc.

28th Floor

Bank of Nova Scotia Tower

1002 Sherbrooke Street West

Montreal

QC H3A 3L6

Carey Olsen (Guernsey) LLP

Carey House

Les Banques

St Peter Port

Guernsey

GY1 4BZ

Company secretary and administrator

Aztec Financial Services (Guernsey) Limited

East Wing

Trafalgar Court

Les Banques

Guernsey

GY1 3PP

Registrar

Computershare Investor Services (Guernsey) Limited

1st Floor Tudor House

Le Bordage

St Peter Port

Guernsey

GY1 1DB

Auditor

BDO Limited

PO Box 180

Place du Pre

Rue du Pre

St Peter Port

Guernsey

GY1 3LL

Brokers

Investec Bank plc

30 Gresham Street

London

EC2V 7QP

Principal banker and custodian

The Royal Bank of Scotland International Limited

Royal Bank Place

1 Glategny Esplanade

St Peter Port

Guernsey

GY1 4BQ

Deutsche Numis

45 Gresham Street

London

EC2V 7BF

Receiving agent

Computershare Investor Services PLC

The Pavilions

Bridgwater Road

Bristol

BS99 6AH

 

Cautionary Statement

This document may include statements that are, or may be deemed to be, 'forward-looking statements'. These forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of forward‑looking terms or expressions, including 'believes', 'estimates', 'anticipates', 'expects', 'intends', 'may', 'plans', 'projects', 'will', 'explore' or 'should' or, in each case, their negative or other variations or comparable terminology or by discussions of strategy, plans, objectives, goals, future events or intentions. These forward-looking statements include all matters that are not historical facts. They may appear in a number of places throughout this document and may include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the intentions, beliefs or current expectations of the Company, the Directors and/or the Investment Manager concerning, amongst other things, the investment objectives and investment policy, financing strategies, investment performance, results of operations, financial condition, liquidity, prospects and distribution policy of the Company and the markets in which it invests.

 

By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties because they relate to future events and depend on circumstances that may or may not occur in the future. Forward‑looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. The Company's actual investment performance, results of operations, financial condition, liquidity, distribution policy and the development of its financing strategies may differ materially from the impression created by, or described in or suggested by, the forward-looking statements contained in this document. Further, this document may include target figures for future financial periods.

 

Any such figures are targets only and are not forecasts. Nothing in this document should be construed as a profit forecast or a profit estimate. In addition, even if actual investment performance, results of operations, financial condition, liquidity, distribution policy and the development of its financing strategies, are consistent with any forward-looking statements contained in this document, those results or developments may not be indicative of results or developments in subsequent periods. A number of factors could cause results and developments of the Company to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward‑looking statements including, without limitation, general economic and business conditions, industry trends, inflation and interest rates, the availability and cost of energy, competition, changes in law or regulation, changes in taxation regimes, the availability and cost of capital, currency fluctuations, changes in its business strategy, political and economic uncertainty. Any forward-looking statements herein speak only at the date of this document.

 

As a result, you are cautioned not to place any reliance on any such forward-looking statements and neither the Company nor any other person accepts responsibility for the accuracy of such statements. Subject to their legal and regulatory obligations, the Company, the Directors and the Investment Manager expressly disclaim any obligations to update or revise any forward‑looking statement contained herein to reflect any change in expectations with regard thereto or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any statement is based.


[1] Figures are based on the first six months of each portfolio company's financial year. Emitel, Speed Fibre, and DCU have calendar year ends. Excludes the BT Ireland unit (acquired in September 2025) but includes DCU (added February 2025), pro‑rated for the Company's 37.4% stake. Excluding DCU, EBITDA and revenue growth were 4.8% and 4% respectively. Belgian Tower Company (BTC) figures are excluded to remove the impact of discontinued broadcast operations following an expected contract expiry earlier this year.

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