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Schiehallion Fund Annual Financial Report

8th Apr 2026 07:00

RNS Number : 5336Z
Schiehallion Fund Limited (The)
08 April 2026
 

RNS Announcement

The Schiehallion Fund Limited

Regulated Information Classification: Annual Financial and Audit Reports

Legal Entity Identifier: 213800NQOLJA1JCWXQ56

Results for the year to 31 January 2026

For further information please contact:

Alex Blake, Baillie Gifford & Co

Tel: 0131 275 2000

Jonathan Atkins, Four Communications

Tel: 0203 920 0555 or 07872 495396

8 April 2026

The following text is extracted from the Annual Report and Financial Statements of the Company for the year ended 31 January 2026 which was approved by the Board on 7 April 2026. All page numbers below refer to the Annual Report and Financial Statements which will be made available on the Company's website.Chairperson's statement

The Schiehallion Fund Limited (the 'Company' or 'Schiehallion') seeks to generate capital growth for investors through long-term minority investments in later stage private businesses that the Company considers to have transformational growth potential and to have the potential to become publicly traded.

Investment performance

During the financial year to 31 January 2026, the Company's ordinary share net asset value ('NAV') returned 32.6% and share price returned 64.8%. The share price discount to NAV moved from a discount of 19.2% to a premium of 0.4% at the year-end. Further commentary on performance is included in the Investment Manager's report on page 9.

Over the period from 27 March 2019 (launch date) to 31 January 2026, the Company's ordinary share NAV returned 77.9% and share price returned 78.0%.

Capital allocation

Over the year to 31 January 2026, the Company bought back 11.7 million shares at a cost of approximately US$13.2 million. These buybacks all took place in the first 10 months of the financial year, with the discount narrowing materially at the end of the period.

Should the premium move to a widening discount, the Board intends to continue to allocate capital towards share repurchases. In considering whether to repurchase shares, the Board will take into account any supply and demand imbalance in the Company's shares, the discount at which the Company's shares trade, working capital requirements and the pipeline of investment opportunities.

Any share repurchases will be funded from the sale of listed investments or from selected secondary trades from the Company's private company investments.

The Company will be seeking authority to renew the buyback authority for the ordinary shares at the forthcoming Annual General Meeting ('AGM'). This authority will expire at the conclusion of the AGM in 2027.

Shareholders may recall that, at the AGM in 2024, authority was granted to allot or sell from treasury up to 102,882,390 ordinary shares. This authority expires at the AGM to be held in 2029. Further issues of ordinary shares will only be made if the Directors determine such issues to be in the best interests of shareholders and the Company as a whole.

Listing migration and tax residency

In December 2025, the Company's shares migrated from the Specialist Fund Segment and were admitted to the Closed-ended Investment Funds ('CEIF') Category of the Official List of the FCA and to trading on the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange. This is expected to broaden the appeal and accessibility of the shares to a wider range of investors. The migration is expected to improve the Company's ability to market the shares to retail investors (where appropriate) and improve the liquidity in the shares as a result of having access to a larger pool of capital.

With effect from 1 February 2026 the Company has become tax resident in the UK and has UK investment trust status for UK tax purposes. The Company's election into the United Kingdom investment trust regime is expected to benefit the Company by aligning the Company's location more closely to its place of listing as well as to take advantage of the double taxation agreements in the UK thereby preventing future tax leakage on some of the Company's holdings. In addition, this election will also make the Company more attractive to investors who may otherwise be tax sensitive to investing in a vehicle that is tax resident outside the United Kingdom.

Costs and charges

The ongoing charges for the ordinary shares as at 31 January 2026 were 0.96% (2025 - 0.92%). The Company has a tiered management fee, which means that the benefits of scale are shared with investors. In addition, no management fee is charged on cash. The Investment Manager absorbs the majority of the valuation costs and legal costs associated with making private company investments.

Earnings and dividend

The Company's priority is to generate capital growth over the long-term. The Company therefore has no dividend target and will not seek to provide shareholders with a particular level of distribution. This year the net revenue return per ordinary share was negative 1.35 cents (year to 31 January 2025, negative 0.39 cents). The Board is recommending that no final dividend be paid.

Board

Members of the Board come from a broad variety of backgrounds, and the Board can draw on a very extensive pool of knowledge and experience. Directors' biographies can be found on pages 55 and 56. All the Directors are subject to annual re‑election at the AGM in May.

The Board continues to place significant emphasis on robust succession planning and the ongoing refreshment of its composition. As part of this succession planning, the Directors reviewed the skills and experience of the Board; considered recent and anticipated developments in the commercial and regulatory landscape; and appointed Fletcher Jones and Trust Associates to commence the search for two new Directors.

Annual General Meeting

The AGM will be held at 12.00pm GMT on Thursday 14 May 2026 at the offices of Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer LLP, Exchange House, Primrose Street, London EC2A 2EG. Shareholders are reminded that they are able to submit proxy voting forms before the applicable deadline on Tuesday 12 May 2026 and also to direct any questions for the Board or Investment Manager in advance by email to [email protected] or call Alter Domus (Guernsey) Limited on +44 (0) 1481 742 250.

The Board is seeking approval for amendments to the Company's Articles of Incorporation. Resolution 12 of the Notice of Annual General Meeting, which will be proposed as a special resolution, seeks shareholder approval for the adoption of new Articles of Incorporation (the 'New Articles'). As permitted by The Companies (Guernsey) Law, 2008, the Board is proposing to amend article 116(1) of the existing Articles of Incorporation so as to increase the aggregate annual limit on directors' fees from £430,000 per annum to £473,000 per annum to allow for an interim increase in the number of Directors to ensure a smooth transition is conducted. No other changes are being proposed.

Information on the resolutions can be found on pages 61 and 62. The Directors consider that all resolutions to be put to shareholders are in their and the Company's best interests as a whole and recommend that shareholders vote in their favour.

Investment outlook

There is a prospect of some potentially generational IPOs later in 2026, including a few companies held in the portfolio. If this transpires, it would be an important marker for some of the most sought‑after private growth companies transitioning into public markets and would also offer further liquidity for the Company to continue pursuing an attractive opportunities set across the private growth landscape.

 

Dr Linda Yueh CBEChairperson7 April 2026

 

For a definition of terms see Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance Measures on pages 122 and 123.

Past performance is not a guide to future performance.

Investment Manager's review

Reflections

Schiehallion takes its name from the mountain in Perthshire, Scotland, chosen by scientists in 1774 for a Royal Society experiment that used the mountain's gravitational pull to help estimate the mean density (and therefore mass) of the Earth - an early attempt to "weigh the world". This remains an apt starting point for a portfolio seeking to hold the best private growth companies globally. We spend our time trying to take the measure of businesses that are still, by definition, not fully observable through the daily verdicts of public markets. The task is less about precision in any single moment than about building conviction over time - testing assumptions, triangulating evidence, and distinguishing enduring progress from passing noise.

If the 2026 reporting year had a defining feature for Schiehallion, it was that several of those signals aligned at once. The Company delivered a strong year in NAV terms (+32.6% for the year ended 31 January 2026) alongside an even stronger showing in the share price (+64.8% for the period). The final quarter of 2025 was particularly strong (NAV +9%; share price +23%), and this positive sentiment continued into January 2026. Consequently, by the end of the reporting year the discount to NAV in Schiehallion had been completely eliminated, with the Company trading at a slight premium of 0.4%. This was the first time this has occurred since October 2022.

These developments coincided with an important corporate milestone: the Company completed a change in listing segment on the London Stock Exchange in December 2025, moving away from the Specialist Fund Segment - reserved for professional investors and where it had traded since inception - and now being available to a wider set of shareholders. This marks an important inflection point in Schiehallion's evolution that broadens the potential shareholder base and reflects the Company's continuing maturation.

Schiehallion was established to give shareholders access to the subset of private companies that have outgrown venture capital as their natural backers yet still retain the potential to become large standalone public businesses over time. Many of the world's most innovative businesses continue to stay private for longer. A decade ago, the typical company reached the stock market in under seven years. Now that figure is closer to eleven. The result has been the emergence of private 'mega-caps' - the likes of SpaceX, ByteDance or Anthropic - companies valued in the hundreds of billions of dollars and which would rank among some of the largest public companies in their respective geographies were they to be listed.

The portfolio increasingly exhibits the natural characteristics of this evolution, providing access to a set of genuine private champions driving an emerging asymmetric return profile within the Company. We remain greatly enthused by the broader opportunity set on offer within private growth markets and are excited about providing shareholders with continued access to tomorrow's champions today.

Performance

Schiehallion's NAV progress through the financial year was driven predominantly by valuation uplifts in several of the Company's largest private holdings, alongside a more mixed experience among listed positions as public market sentiment oscillated. The three largest contributors to absolute NAV performance were Italian digital product company Bending Spoons, space infrastructure giant SpaceX, as well as the Chinese social media company ByteDance. The three largest detractors to absolute NAV performance were Indian digital media and content platform Dailyhunt (Ver Se Innovation), the sustainable chemicals business Solugen, and corporate spend management platform Brex.

Among the contributors, Bending Spoons continued to execute its acquisition-led strategy and ended the year with momentum, including announced agreements to acquire the digital internet media and content brand, AOL, as well as the shared experience marketplace, Eventbrite. The company also completed its latest funding round during the fourth quarter to support ongoing investment and future acquisitions.

SpaceX's contribution was driven most directly by secondary market signals. It was reported in December that the company would be commencing a secondary share sale that would potentially value it at US$800 billion. This ultimately resulted in a notable valuation uplift, making it the second largest holding within the portfolio (behind Bending Spoons). The company continues to exhibit arguably one of the strongest competitive advantages that we have ever seen. After the reporting period SpaceX also announced the acquisition of artificial intelligence company, xAI, potentially further strengthening the advantage around the core infrastructure it has already built in its launch and Starlink satellite businesses.

ByteDance similarly finished the year strongly, supported by a reported share auction valuation and evolving clarity around the future structure of TikTok in the US. It continues to serve as a reminder of the fertile growth opportunities on offer in a geography like China.

The detractors reflected a mix of company-specific execution challenges and the market's repricing of relevant public comparables. Dailyhunt (Ver Se Innovation) faced operational pressures in 2025, with operating revenue reported to have declined and a sharper focus on cost control and reducing burn as it tried to stabilise the business. These developments led to valuation reductions during the year.

Solugen also experienced operational headwinds during the year as it continues to work towards scaling its Bioforge facilities. Brex suffered its most material impact earlier in the year following a valuation markdown, attributed to a sharp decline in peer group valuations alongside slowing top-line growth. Shortly before the end of the reporting period it was also announced that Brex is set to be acquired by Capital One, with the transaction expected to close in the middle of 2026.

Portfolio

The fundamental health of the portfolio remains robust. Weighted average revenue growth stood at 54% for the overall portfolio at 31 December 2025 - more than two and a half times that of the Nasdaq 100 public market index - with the top ten holdings growing faster still (66%). Furthermore, 62% of the portfolio is invested in companies that were profitable on a net income basis at 31 December 2025, while only 17% of the portfolio is exposed to holdings with a cash runway of less than two years, thereby giving us confidence about the overall financial resilience across the portfolio.

By the end of the year the portfolio comprised 53 holdings, six of which are listed (11.9% of net assets). The geographic breakdown also continues to showcase the truly global nature of our opportunity set. While 54.3% of the portfolio is invested in US businesses, there are also notable allocations to Europe (20.6%), China (11.2%) and the UK (9.4%). The three largest sector exposures within the Company are Information Technology (42.3%), Industrials (21.8%) and Financials (11.9%). The ten largest companies in the portfolio comprised 58.9% of total net assets, with such concentration expected given the asymmetric return profile that we would expect to continue seeing over time.

Activity

During the year we continued to balance three capital deployment options, namely bringing new investments into the portfolio, supporting existing investments, as well as conducting share buybacks at points where we believed the prevailing discount offered an attractive deployment opportunity. Overall, the pace of deployment remained steady over the course of the year, with eight new investments entering the portfolio (compared to six in the previous reporting year). This also meant that Schiehallion reached full deployment for the first time in its history, having sold all treasury bills by the midpoint of the year. We also made seven follow-on investments in existing holdings, further supporting these names on their growth journeys. There were three complete sales of listed names, coupled with one complete sale via a secondary transaction - evidence of the continued strong competition for capital within the Company. We also utilised secondary markets to trim two positions during the period.

In 2025 we saw the public markets begin to re-engage, in a selective way, with the kind of scaled private businesses that Schiehallion targets. Within the portfolio there were two IPOs during the year, namely the US neobank, Chime Financial (in June 2025), as well as the AI-powered cardiac imaging company, HeartFlow (in August 2025). While Chime Financial has had a bumpy ride since its listing so far with the share price coming under some pressure, HeartFlow has been more resilient and proved to be a positive contributor to absolute NAV performance during the reporting year.

Separately, one of the most striking features of today's private markets is the speed with which disruption can compound once a technology shift finds genuine product and market fit. Our own investment in the AI model developer, Anthropic, during 2025 sits squarely in this context: advanced AI is changing how companies build and defend their advantage, speeding up product development, and driving greater investment in computing infrastructure and specialist talent across the economy. This is merely one example of how private growth companies are at the forefront of some of the most disruptive change we are currently seeing around us.

This is also evident among our other new investments during the period. These included: UK fintech Revolut, which is exhibiting an impressive pace of product iteration while rapidly scaling; Anduril, the US autonomous defence systems maker, which is disrupting an industry that has remained largely unchanged for decades; and Rippling, a US workforce management company exhibiting impressive growth driven by an innovative modular platform spanning HR, IT and finance. Other new US investments included Avanci (a patent licensing platform), Clear Street (a cloud-based financial infrastructure company), and Cellares (a biopharmaceutical company automating and scaling cell therapy manufacturing).

We also made one new investment in China, namely in the lifestyle content community and consumer decision-making platform, Inspire (more widely known as RedNote). This business has built high-end brand equity with affluent users and is well placed to benefit from long-term Chinese consumption trends and developments in AI.

Having reached full deployment during the period - and with competition for capital remaining strong - we also made four complete sales to help fund the aforementioned new investments. These moves comprised three listed sales, namely the online accommodation platform, Airbnb, the technology-driven health insurance provider, Oscar Health, as well as the corrective eyewear retailer, Warby Parker. We also sold online learning platform, Masterclass, via a secondary transaction.

Finally, additional portfolio activity during the year consisted of periodic listed reductions in financial technology companies Wise and Affirm, as well as precision medicine company, Tempus AI. This was coupled with reductions through secondary transactions in SpaceX (once during the reporting period and once thereafter) as well as data security and management company, Cohesity. These reductions were made for portfolio management reasons, and it is worth noting that the likes of SpaceX (second largest), Wise and Affirm (both within the top ten) remain as significant holdings within the portfolio.

Looking Forward

Despite continued geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainty around the globe, we enter the coming year with three reasons for significant optimism. Firstly, the portfolio's fundamentals remain strong: delivering high growth, improving profitability, and having robust cash runways across the private cohort, allowing these companies to continue capitalising on their respective opportunities. Secondly, we are seeing an increasing maturity in the portfolio's largest holdings, several of which now sit among the world's most significant private companies, and continue to generate external datapoints that help validate intrinsic value. By 31 January 2026 Schiehallion held investments in six of the ten largest private growth companies in the world (by publicly available estimates). The Company therefore continues to offer an exceptionally compelling pathway for shareholders to benefit from the incredible amount of growth and innovation occurring within private markets. Finally, we cast our eyes towards our broader opportunity set, which makes us excited about pursuing new investments within the portfolio in the coming year. While the bar for entry remains high - particularly given the level of full deployment - we retain multiple avenues to create capacity over time, including the disciplined recycling of capital as liquidity events arise across the portfolio (such as IPOs or secondary transactions) and through ongoing portfolio management, ensuring we can act when truly exceptional opportunities present themselves.

Peter SinglehurstRobert Natzler7 April 2026

For a definition of terms see Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance Measures on pages 122 and 123.

Past performance is not a guide to future performance.

Environmental, social and governance ('ESG') considerations

Baillie Gifford's integrated approach towards the consideration of Environmental, Social and Governance ('ESG') factors when pursuing investments in high growth private companies is articulated below:

ESG in our philosophy

The Schiehallion Fund invests in companies with a minimum time horizon of five years. Using a genuine long-term approach to investment means looking beyond the narrow scope of traditional financial analysis to consider a range of factors that may affect the ability of the fund's holdings to thrive over the long term. In this regard good governance is crucial towards enabling companies to deliver on their potential. Over our investment horizon, we also believe that scalability and profitability depend not only on a company's ability to serve customers well and execute on its business model, but also on its ability to do this without jeopardising its social licence to operate. As such, we do not separate consideration of a company's role in the broader investment ecosystem from our investment work, under ESG or any other rubric. These considerations are core to long-term investing. It is the long-term nature of the growth ambition within our investment philosophy that leads us to pay special attention to the external effects of a company's operations, both positive and negative. Over periods of five years or longer these can have a profound impact on a company's relationship with customers, regulators and staff, ultimately serving as either a significant contributor or detractor to the growth of a business. Our approach is not about being a moral conscience for our clients. Instead, it is a vital part of practising the philosophy that we believe will grow the value of their capital over the long term.

ESG in our process

The consideration of material ESG factors - those that are likely to affect the financial condition or operating performance of portfolio companies - is well-suited to Baillie Gifford's approach to investing in private markets due to its long-term investment horizon and emphasis on active ownership. Baillie Gifford's Private Companies Team focuses its research into potential investments through a proprietary 10-Question research framework. These questions aim to address issues such as the scale of the opportunity, the competitive edge and potential returns, while others focus specifically on ESG-related elements.

For example, Question Four of the framework ("How will the leadership and cultural attributes help this business achieve its long-term business vision?") considers company leadership, the broader stakeholders within the workplace and whether the company cultivates an effective organisational mindset capable of delivering the mission. Question Five then focuses on external stakeholders ("Do the company's customers like them?"). This question is geared towards broader ecosystem impact and considers, among other aspects, whether the company is listening and responding well to the developing needs of a growing and changing customer base. Question Six of the framework specifically explores any material environmental and social factors in greater depth ("How do environmental and social factors create opportunities and risks?").

Beyond the research framework we also consider how we can assist specific companies, with the focus often being on governance. While we do not take active board seats, we occasionally take observer seats and frequently provide encouragement, input and introductions as companies look to evolve a stronger governance structure that is better suited for public markets.

The Private Companies Team is also supported by a wider network within and outside of Baillie Gifford. As far as ESG topics are concerned specifically, we benefit from the research and expertise of Baillie Gifford's broader team of ESG professionals, academic networks and impact and climate-focused investment teams.

ESG engagement

The Company has given discretionary voting powers to Baillie Gifford. For public holdings within the Company, the Investment Manager votes against resolutions they consider may damage shareholders' rights or economic interests.

The Company believes that it is in the shareholders' interests to consider environmental, social and governance ('ESG') factors when selecting and retaining investments and has asked the Investment Manager to take these issues into account. The Investment Manager does not exclude companies from their investment universe purely on the grounds of ESG factors but adopts a positive engagement approach whereby matters are discussed with management with the aim of improving the relevant policies and management systems and enabling the Investment Manager to consider how ESG factors could impact long-term investment returns. The Investment Manager considers governance factors across the portfolio as part of the investment case and addresses environmental and social factors in terms of material risks and opportunities. The Investment Manager's Statement of Compliance with the UK Stewardship Code can be found on the Investment Manager's website: bailliegifford.com. The Investment Manager's policy has been reviewed and endorsed by the Board. The Investment Manager, Baillie Gifford & Co, are signatories to the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment.

By engaging with both the private and public companies within the Company's portfolio, the Investment Manager seeks to build constructive relationships with these companies to better inform investment activities and, where necessary, effect changes within holdings, ultimately with the goal of achieving better returns for shareholders. As owners of these companies at an earlier point in their overall growth journey - i.e. while they are still private - the Investment Manager is able to gain deeper and longer-term insight due to the length of these relationships. The potential continuation of these relationships through the Initial Public Offering ('IPO') and into public markets is a key reason why these companies choose Schiehallion as a partner.

Engagement topics

Due to the private nature of the majority of companies within the portfolio, we are unable to disclose the exact nature of our discussions with specific management teams. That said, there are common themes that we engage companies on, and these are pursued in line with our approach to adding value to portfolio holdings, namely around governance, capital structuring and providing network support.

• Governance

Where the Investment Manager can add value is on board composition and, more specifically, board transition. Companies within the portfolio are often transitioning from an investor-led board to an independent board as they grow. The Investment Manager supports companies to build a board of directors that is useful in the long term, including by introducing prospective independent director candidates and supporting board evolution (for example, through board observer roles, where appropriate). Owing to Baillie Gifford's decades-long experience investing in and engaging with public companies, the Investment Manager has access to a network of potential board members that can be introduced to relevant companies and can engage our internal Governance team to advise on good board composition more broadly. During the year, this included specific board-building introductions for selected portfolio holdings. At a practical level, Baillie Gifford continues to convene forums that help companies prepare for the governance demands of life in public markets, sharing learnings from across our global network and supporting the transition from investor-led to independent boards. Events in 2025 comprised CFO-focused gatherings in Scotland and Palo Alto, California, as well as Baillie Gifford's Private Companies AGM event in New York.

• Capital Structuring

The Investment Manager has continued to discuss capital structures with investee companies that have been exploring a range of different options in this regard. The Company's long‑term horizon enables the Investment Manager to offer well-aligned advice with the intention of limiting unintended and potentially destructive consequences that can arise from complicated capital structures. Across the year, engagement topics included share class structures (including dual-class considerations), non-dilutive and debt-related financing options (including venture debt and public bond considerations), and transaction structures such as SPACs/PIPEs, where relevant. When negotiating terms, the Investment Manager seeks clean terms that are well aligned with the long-term interests of shareholders.

• The IPO Process

The Investment Manager often engages with portfolio companies that are thinking about the IPO process. From a practical perspective Baillie Gifford is well placed to advise on aspects such as where to list, the range of reporting that is necessary, and employee stock options, for example. More generally advice also pertains to what kind of public company these private companies eventually want to be. During the year, this support also included acting as a sounding board on listing strategy and implementation considerations (including share class structures), and helping companies prepare for the requirements of public market investor engagement by sharing insights on public markets "storytelling" and investor relations readiness.

One year summary

The following information illustrates how The Schiehallion Fund Limited performed over the year ended 31 January 2026.

 

Ordinary shares

31 January

2026

31 January

2025

 

% change

Shareholders' funds

US$1,795.91m

US$1,369.96m

Net asset value*

177.28¢

133.69¢

32.6% *

Share price*

178.00¢

108.00¢

64.8% *

Premium/(discount)*

0.4%

(19.2%)

Number of shares in issue

1,013,033,907

1,024,738,907

Market capitalisation

US$1,803.20m

US$1,106.72m

Ongoing charges*

0.96%

0.92%

Year ended

31 January

2026

Year ended

31 January

2025

Revenue loss per share

(1.35¢)

(0.39¢)

Period's high and low

Year ended 31 January 2026

Year ended 31 January 2025

Ordinary shares

High

Low

High

Low

Net asset value per ordinary share

177.28¢

125.08¢

133.89¢

112.90¢

Share price

180.00¢

83.00¢

120.00¢

 57.00¢

Premium/(discount)

0.4%

(35.1%)

(7.3%)

(52.4%)

For a definition of terms see Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance Measures on pages 122 and 123.

* Key performance indicator.

† Alternative Performance Measure, see Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance Measures on pages 122 and 123.

Source: Baillie Gifford/LSEG. See disclaimer on page 120.

Review of investments

A review of the Company's ten largest investments as at 31 January 2026.

Bending Spoons

Bending Spoons is an Italian owner and operator of leading digital products around the globe. It is an acquisitive business that has built a world class team and a set of tools to integrate acquired businesses into their infrastructure, improve product features and optimise pricing. The revenue from their existing stable of products in turn provides capital for further acquisitions.

Geography

Italy

Valuation at 31 January 2026

US$261,386,000

% of net assets

14.6%

Valuation at 31 January 2025

US$111,244,000

% of net assets

8.1%

Net purchases/(sales) in the year

US$9,965,000

SpaceX

SpaceX is a space transportation and satellite communications company. It designs, manufactures, and launches advanced reusable rockets and spacecraft, while also operating a satellite constellation for global internet connectivity, known as Starlink. By embracing innovation and vertical integration, it has opened a series of cost and capability improvements which are transforming the space industry.

Geography

United States

Valuation at 31 January 2026

US$243,490,000

% of net assets

13.6%

Valuation at 31 January 2025

US$128,811,000

% of net assets

9.4%

Net purchases/(sales) in the year

(US$24,999,000)

ByteDance

ByteDance is a leading technology company offering online social media and entertainment services - primarily in China - with a growing international presence. Its flagship products include Toutiao, a newsfeed, and Douyin, a short-form video platform known as TikTok outside China. ByteDance excels in customising content for users through advanced artificial intelligence. This approach allows ByteDance to drive user engagement and advertising revenue.

Geography

China

Valuation at 31 January 2026

US$139,178,000

% of net assets

7.7%

Valuation at 31 January 2025

US$85,177,000

% of net assets

6.2%

Net purchases/(sales) in the year

-

Databricks

Databricks - a data and AI company - helps organisations unlock the power of their own data through the use of analytics and artificial intelligence. Every business today generates vast amounts of information, including customer records, transactions, website activity or even sensor data from machines. The challenge is making sense of it all. Databricks provides a single platform where companies can bring this information together, organise it, and use it to make better decisions.

Geography

United States

Valuation at 31 January 2026

US$80,168,000

% of net assets

4.5%

Valuation at 31 January 2025

US$39,029,000

% of net assets

2.8%

Net purchases/(sales) in the year

-

Wayve

Wayve is a UK-based autonomous driving technology company founded in 2017. It takes a novel approach to self-driving, using affordable cameras and AI rather than expensive sensors and detailed maps. By relying on end-to-end deep learning, its cars can learn the rules of the road directly from experience, rather than from hand-coded instructions.

Geography

United Kingdom

Valuation at 31 January 2026

US$72,762,000

% of net assets

4.1%

Valuation at 31 January 2025

US$36,275,000

% of net assets

2.6%

Net purchases/(sales) in the year

-

WiseP

Wise is an international money transfer business. Wise tackles the problem of high fees and low transparency faced by consumers sending money internationally. Its approach of matching flows in countries at the prevailing exchange rate enables Wise to significantly reduce costs while offering consumers a better exchange rate.

Geography

United Kingdom

Valuation at 31 January 2026

US$63,730,000

% of net assets

3.5%

Valuation at 31 January 2025

US$83,229,000

% of net assets

6.1%

Net purchases/(sales) in the year

(US$13,571,000)

Stripe

Stripe is a technology company that helps businesses handle money online. It lets companies accept payments from customers, manage recurring subscriptions, issue payment cards, prevent fraud, connect to bank accounts, calculate taxes, and more - all through easy-to-use software tools.

Geography

United States

Valuation at 31 January 2026

US$51,874,000

% of net assets

2.9%

Valuation at 31 January 2025

US$39,796,000

% of net assets

2.9%

Net purchases/(sales) in the year

-

AffirmP

Affirm is a financial technology company offering flexible payment solutions for larger ticket purchases. Operating primarily in the United States, Affirm provides a "Buy Now, Pay Later" (BNPL) service that allows customers to split a payment into manageable instalments. This service is seamlessly integrated at the point of sale, making it easy for consumers to choose a payment plan that suits their budget.

Geography

United States

Valuation at 31 January 2026

US$49,857,000

% of net assets

2.8%

Valuation at 31 January 2025

US$79,224,000

% of net assets

5.9%

Net purchases/(sales) in the year

(US$35,047,000)

Tekever

Tekever is a Portuguese start-up aspiring to be Europe's leading aerial intelligence company, transforming maritime surveillance and critical infrastructure monitoring whilst proving indispensable in modern defence operations. It utilises a software-first and machine-centric approach to their product and service design, and offers a high degree of flexibility for customers.

Geography

Portugal

Valuation at 31 January 2026

US$46,245,000

% of net assets

2.6%

Valuation at 31 January 2025

US$20,790,000

% of net assets

1.5%

Net purchases/(sales) in the year

US$1,671,000

Anthropic

Anthropic is an AI company that builds enterprise-focused frontier models and products, best known for its Claude assistant and the Claude Code tool. Claude is used by organisations to support knowledge work and software development, including tackling longer, multi-step tasks and helping coordinate work across tools and documents. Anthropic has reported growing enterprise adoption, and Claude Code has gained attention as a practical coding-focused offering used to assist with real-world development workflows.

Geography

United States

Valuation at 31 January 2026

US$45,957,000

% of net assets

2.6%

Valuation at 31 January 2025

-

% of net assets

-

Net purchases/(sales) in the year

US$25,000,000

P Denotes listed investments previously held in the portfolio as a private company investment.

Baillie Gifford's approach to valuing private companies

We hold our private company investments at 'fair value', i.e. the price that would be paid in an open‑market transaction. Valuations are adjusted both during regular valuation cycles and on an ad hoc basis in response to 'trigger events'. Our valuation process ensures that private companies are valued in both a fair and timely manner.

The valuation process is overseen by a valuations group at Baillie Gifford, which takes advice from an independent third party (S&P Global). The valuations group is independent from the investment team with all voting members being from different operational areas of the firm, and the portfolio managers only receive final valuation notifications once they have been applied.

We revalue the private holdings on a three-month rolling cycle, with one-third of the holdings reassessed each month. During stable market conditions, and assuming all else is equal, each investment would be valued four times in a twelve‑month period. For Schiehallion and our investment trusts, the prices are also reviewed twice per year by the respective boards and are subject to the scrutiny of external auditors in the annual audit process.

Beyond the regular cycle, the valuations team also monitors the portfolio for certain 'trigger events'. These may include changes in fundamentals, a takeover approach, an intention to carry out an Initial Public Offering ('IPO'), company news which is identified by the valuation team or by the portfolio managers, or meaningful changes to the valuation of comparable public companies. Any ad hoc change to the fair valuation of any holding is implemented swiftly and reflected in the next published net asset value ('NAV'). There is no delay.

The valuations team also monitors relevant market benchmarks on a weekly basis and updates valuations in a manner consistent with our external valuer's (S&P Global) most recent valuation report where appropriate.

The data below quantifies the revaluations carried out during the twelve months to 31 January 2026, however it does not reflect the ongoing monitoring of the private investment portfolio which has not resulted in a change in valuation.

The Schiehallion Fund Limited*

Instruments valued

492

Instruments held

90

Percentage of portfolio revalued up to 4 times

34.4%

Percentage of portfolio revalued 5 or more times

65.6%

* Data reflecting year to 31 January 2026.

List of investments

As at 31 January 2026

 

Name

 

Business

 

Country

2026

Total value

US$'000

2026

% of net

assets

2025

Total value

US$'000

2025

% of net

assets

Bending Spoons

Mobile application software operator

Italy

261,386

14.6

111,244

8.1

Space Exploration Technologies

Designs, manufactures and launches rockets, spacecraft and satellites

United States

243,490

13.6

128,811

9.4

ByteDance

Social media company

China

139,178

7.7

85,177

6.2

Databricks

Data software solutions

United States

80,168

4.5

39,029

2.8

Wayve

AI based software for self-driving cars

United Kingdom

72,762

4.1

36,275

2.6

WiseP

Online provider of cross-border money transfer services

United Kingdom

63,730

3.5

83,229

6.1

Stripe

Online payment platform

United States

51,874

2.9

39,796

2.9

AffirmP

Fintech providing lending and consumer credit services

United States

49,857

2.8

79,224

5.9

Tekever

Surveillance-as-a-service technology

Portugal

46,245

2.6

20,790

1.5

Anthropic

AI safety and research

United States

45,957

2.6

-

-

Vinted

Online marketplace

Lithuania

37,110

2.1

23,430

1.7

HeartFlowP

Medical technology company

United States

33,619

1.9

15,925

1.2

Chi Forest Technology

Non-alcoholic beverages

China

33,139

1.8

21,973

1.6

Tempus AIP

Offers molecular diagnostics tests for cancer and aggregates clinical oncology records

United States

32,637

1.8

46,435

3.4

Revolut

Neobank and fintech company that offers a wide range of financial services

United Kingdom

31,915

1.8

-

-

Anduril Industries

Software and hardware based defence systems

United States

30,199

1.7

-

-

Clear Street Group

Financial technology company

United States

30,000

1.7

-

-

PsiQuantum

Silicon photonic quantum computing

United States

27,827

1.5

23,536

1.7

Epic Games

Gaming platform

United States

27,404

1.5

27,018

2.0

Faire Wholesale

Online wholesale marketplace

United States

26,864

1.5

27,997

2.0

Flix

European long-distance bus and train provider

Germany

24,140

1.3

24,114

1.8

Inspire

Social networking and e-commerce platform

China

24,000

1.3

-

-

Bolttech

Global insurance platform services

Singapore

23,941

1.3

20,000

1.5

Nuro

Delivery business, using self-driving purpose-built electric vehicles

United States

23,568

1.3

14,870

1.1

Rappi

Provider of an on-demand delivery platform designed to connect consumers with local stores

United States

20,745

1.2

23,190

1.7

Kepler Computing

Semiconductor company

United States

20,043

1.1

20,221

1.5

Avanci

Application software

United States

20,000

1.1

-

-

Zetwerk Manufacturing

Fabricated metal products

India

19,320

1.1

19,488

1.4

Brex

Corporate credit cards for startups

United States

19,075

1.1

28,014

2.1

Rippling (People Center)

US software company

United States

18,304

1.0

-

-

Chime FinancialP

Digital banking platform

United States

17,246

1.0

24,987

1.9

Superhuman Platform (Grammarly)

Online platform for checking grammar, spelling and improving written communication

United States

16,705

0.9

25,435

1.9

Solugen

Solugen exists to scale synthetic biology and bring green chemicals to the world

United States

15,651

0.9

30,301

2.2

OddityP

Online direct-to-customer skincare and cosmetics

United States

15,270

0.9

22,180

1.6

Cellares

Biotech company providing robust and reproducible cell therapy

United States

15,000

0.8

-

-

Merlin Labs

Autonomous flight technology

United States

14,654

0.8

13,483

1.0

Tanium

Provides security and systems management solutions

United States

14,274

0.8

15,698

1.2

Runway AI

Artificial Intelligence based applications developer

United States

13,494

0.8

10,000

0.7

Dailyhunt(Ver Se Innovation)

Telephone voice, data, text messaging, and roaming services

India

10,257

0.6

34,314

2.5

Tenstorrent

Processor architecture and software solutions

United States

9,619

0.5

10,000

0.7

Workrise Technologies

Online platform connecting contractors with work

United States

9,527

0.5

14,467

1.1

Pet Circle (Millell)

Pet food and accessories

Australia

9,445

0.5

12,945

1.0

Away (JRSK)

Manufactures luggage

United States

9,059

0.5

8,411

0.6

Honor Technology

Provider of home-care services

United States

8,376

0.5

7,877

0.5

Loft

Online property platform

Brazil

8,010

0.4

9,763

0.6

Cohesity Global

Storage provider

United States

7,752

0.4

11,302

0.8

Bottle Planet

Producer of alcoholic beverages

China

7,695

0.4

8,756

0.6

Carbon

Manufactures and develops 3D printers

United States

4,453

0.2

6,701

0.5

Illumina CVR

Gene sequencing equipment and consumables

United States

75

<0.1

407

<0.1

Indigo Agriculture

Agricultural technology company

United States

15

<0.1

100

<0.1

Blockstream

Financial software developer

Canada

-

-

339

<0.1

McMakler

Digital real estate broker

Germany

-

-

2,079

0.2

Northvolt

Battery developer and manufacturer

Sweden

-

-

600

<0.1

Total investments

 

 

 1,785,074

99.4

 

 

Cash

 13,001

0.7

Other current assets and liabilities

(2,167)

(0.1)

Net current assets

 

 

 10,834

0.6

 

 

Total net assets

 

 

 1,795,908

100.0

 

 

 

Listed

investments

%

Private

company

investments

%

Net current

assets

%

Net

assets

%

31 January 2026

11.9

87.5

0.6

100.0

31 January 2025

21.3

72.9

5.8

100.0

P Denotes listed investments previously held in the portfolio as a private company investment.

 

Allocation of net assets

Name

2026

Total value

US$'000

2026

% of net

assets

2025

Total value

US$'000

2025

% of net

assets

Listed investments

212,434

11.9

290,843

21.3

Private company investments

1,572,640

87.5

 999,607

72.9

US Treasury Bills

-

-

 77,334

5.6

Cash and cash equivalents

13,001

0.7

 6,118

0.5

Net current assets less capital gains tax provision

(2,167)

(0.1)

(3,945)

(0.3)

Total net assets

1,795,908

100.0

 1,369,957

100.0

 

Company metrics

Capital

deployed *

Number

of private

company

acquisitions

Number of

IPOs/listings

Gross

Internal

Rate of

Return

(IRR) *

Gross

Multiple on

Invested

Capital

(MOIC) *

Since launch

US$1,376m

63

11

10.6%

1.5

* Alternative Performance Measure, see Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance Measures on pages 122 and 123.

Portfolio executive summary

Performance

1 year

%

3 years

%

5 years

%

Since inception

% *

Share price

64.8%

93.5%

(1.1%)

78.0%

NAV

32.6%

48.5%

20.6%

77.9%

* Inception date: 27 March 2019.

All figures are stated on a total return basis† for periods to 31 January 2026.

† Alternative Performance Measure - see Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance Measures on pages 122 and 123.

Source: Baillie Gifford/LSEG. See disclaimer on page 120.

Key contributors to and detractors from Company performance - year to 31 January 2026

Contributors†

Contribution to

absolute performance

(%) *

Absolute return

(%) #

Bending Spoons

11.7

125.8

Space Exploration Technologies

9.5

127.6

ByteDance

4.4

63.4

Databricks

2.8

105.4

Tekever

2.6

112.7

Detractors

Contribution to

absolute performance

(%) *

Absolute return

(%) #

Dailyhunt (Ver Se Innovation)

(2.1)

(70.1)

Solugen

(1.3)

(48.4)

Brex

(0.9)

(31.9)

Superhuman Platform (Grammarly)

(0.8)

(34.3)

Chime FinancialP

(0.7)

(31.0)

* Alternative Performance Measure - see Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance Measures on pages 122 and 123.

# Absolute performance (in US$ terms) has been calculated on a total return basis (including reinvestment of any dividends paid by portfolio holdings) over the period 1 February 2025 to 31 January 2026.

† The contributors to and detractors from Company performance are listed in descending order.

Source: Revolution.

P Denotes listed investment previously held in the portfolio as a private company investment.

Distribution of net assets

Geographical as at 31 January 2026

Geographical

% at

31 January

2026

% at

31 January

2025

Number of

investments

at 31 January

2026

United States

54.3

56.8

34

Italy

14.6

8.1

1

China

11.2

8.4

4

United Kingdom

9.4

8.7

3

Portugal

2.6

1.5

1

Lithuania

2.1

1.7

1

India

1.7

3.9

2

Germany

1.3

2.0

2

Singapore

1.3

1.5

1

Australia

0.5

1.0

1

Brazil

0.4

0.6

1

Canada

-

<0.1

1

Sweden

-

<0.1

1

Net current assets

0.6

5.8

Sectoral as at 31 January 2026

Sectoral

% at

31 January

2026

% at

31 January

2025

Number of

 investments

at 31 January

2026

Information technology

42.3

30.6

20

Industrials

21.8

15.9

7

Financials

11.9

17.0

6

Communication services

8.3

8.8

2

Healthcare

5.0

5.1

5

Consumer discretionary

4.6

8.6

5

Consumer staples

3.1

3.8

4

Materials

2.0

3.6

2

Real estate

0.4

0.8

2

Net current assets

0.6

5.8

 

Principal and emerging risks

As explained on pages 68 and 69, there is a process for identifying, evaluating and managing the risks, including emerging risks, faced by the Company on a regular basis. The Directors have carried out a robust assessment of the principal and emerging risks facing the Company, including those that would threaten its business model, future performance, solvency or liquidity. A description of these risks and how they are being managed or mitigated is set out in the table below.

Investment and strategic risk

Liquidity of investments

 

What is the risk?

The Company's investments are predominantly in private investee companies or companies which have recently completed an IPO. Such investments may not be liquid or may have restrictions on sale or transfer of shares. This may limit the Company's ability to realise investments at short notice or at all.

How is it managed?

By diversification of the portfolio, in accordance with the Company's investment limits and risk diversification policies.

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: Moderate

Stable: The Company has not seen any significant impact on underlying liquidity of investments, however, there are signs that the IPO market is opening up.

Market, economic, political and environmental risks

 

 

What is the risk?

From time to time a large proportion of the total value of the Company's portfolio could be concentrated in a limited number of investee companies, which could be adversely affected by an unexpected change in their markets, by governmental intervention or by a reputational issue. This could have a material impact on the overall value of the Company's portfolio and consequential adverse effects on the Company's share price.

How is it managed?

The Board assesses this risk by considering, at each meeting, metrics which have contributed to performance as well as discussion with the portfolio managers on specific conditions which the underlying investee companies face. This risk is also managed by the Company's investment diversification policy.

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: High

Increasing: This risk is considered to be increasing as governments and consumers around the world continue to assess the impact of heightened geopolitical tensions and conflicts as well as challenging macroeconomic conditions.

 

Valuationrisk

 

What is the risk?

The Company invests in late stage private businesses which are valued in accordance with International Private Equity and Venture Capital Valuation ('IPEV') Guidelines using appropriate valuation methods. Such methods include an element of judgement which may lead to a material mis-statement of the valuation and consequently of the Company's net asset value.

How is it managed?

The Investment Manager has a robust valuation methodology, which is applied consistently. The Investment Manager's valuation process revalues each of the private company investments every 3 months and additional valuations are carried out in response to trigger events to ensure the investments are carried at fair value. The valuation process is overseen by the Private Companies Valuations Group at Baillie Gifford which is independent from the portfolio managers and which takes advice from an independent third party (S&P Global). The valuations are subject to review and challenge by the Board every 6 months and are subject to scrutiny annually by the external Auditor.

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: Moderate

Stable: This risk is seen as stable. In periods of market volatility the Private Company Valuations Group will perform trigger analyses and, if appropriate, revalue the affected investments, as described in the report on page 27.

Investment strategy risk

 

What is the risk?

Pursuing an investment strategy to fulfil the Company's objective which the market perceives to be unattractive or inappropriate, or ineffective implementation of the Company's investment strategy, may lead to reduced returns for shareholders and, as a result, decreased demand for the Company's shares. This may lead to the Company's shares trading at a widening discount to their net asset value.

How is it managed?

The Board regularly reviews and monitors the Company's investment policy and strategy, the investment portfolio and its performance, the level of discount/premium to net asset value at which the shares trade and movements in the share register. A strategy meeting is also held annually. In addition, the Investment Manager keeps in close contact with key shareholders and provides regular feedback to the Board.

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: Moderate

Stable: This risk is considered to be stable as there are signs that the market's appetite for growth stocks, typically held by the Company, is recovering. The listing migration in December lead to the shares being accessible to a wider pool of investors and consequently demand for the Company's shares increased.

Discountrisk

What is the risk?

The discount/premium at which the Company's shares trade relative to its net asset value can change. Such an imbalance can diminish the attractiveness of the Company's shares to existing investors and lead to a lack of liquidity in the Company's share trading.

How is it managed?

The Board monitors the level of discount/premium at each Board meeting. The Company has authorities in place to buy back or issue shares, when deemed to be in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders.

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: Moderate

Decreasing: The discount narrowed over the year to 31 January 2026. The Directors continue to buy back shares when it is deemed to be in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders.

Climate and governance risk

What is the risk?

Perceived problems on environmental, social and governance ('ESG') matters in an investee company could lead to that company's shares being less attractive to investors, adversely affecting its share price, in addition to potential valuation issues arising from any direct impact of the failure to address the ESG weakness on the operations or management of the investee company (for example in the event of an industrial accident or spillage). Repeated failure by the Investment Manager to identify ESG weaknesses in investee companies could lead to the Company's own shares being less attractive to investors, adversely affecting its own share price. In addition, the valuation of investments could be impacted by climate change due to climate-related operational challenges, changes in end demand or failure to identify a pathway to Net Zero.

How is it managed?

This is mitigated by the Investment Manager's ESG stewardship and engagement policies, which are integrated into the investment process, as well as the extensive upfront and ongoing due diligence which the Investment Manager undertakes on each investee company. This includes the risk inherent in climate change (see page 70).

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: Low

Stable: The Investment Manager continues to employ strong ESG stewardship and engagement policies. Active engagement with portfolio companies and increased focus on climate and governance strategy implementation lead to a decrease in the rating to low.

External risks

Political and associated economic risk

What is the risk?

Global political changes resulting in policy changes in areas in which the Company invests or may invest may have practical consequences for the Company and impact financial performance.

 

How is it managed?

Political developments and other social trends are closely monitored by the Board and are regularly discussed at Board meetings.

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: High

Increasing: This risk is increasing as governments and consumers around the world continue to assess the impact of ongoing conflicts and global economic and political tensions.

Legal and regulatoryrisk

What is the risk?

Changes to the regulatory environment could negatively impact the Company. Failure to comply with applicable legal, regulatory and tax requirements could lead to suspension of the Company's Stock Exchange listing, financial penalties, a qualified Audit Report or the Company being subject to tax on capital gains.

How is it managed?

To mitigate this risk, Baillie Gifford's Business Risk, Internal Audit and Compliance Departments provide regular reports to the Audit Committee on Baillie Gifford's monitoring programmes. The Administrator provides regular compliance reports to the Audit Committee to confirm the relevant Guernsey submissions are made to protect the legal and tax status of the Company. Major regulatory change could impose disproportionate compliance burdens on the Company. In such circumstances representation is made to ensure that the special circumstances of investment companies are recognised. Shareholder documents and announcements, including the Company's published Interim and Annual Report and Financial Statements, are subject to stringent review processes and procedures are in place to ensure adherence to the Transparency Rules and the Market Abuse Regulations with reference to inside information.

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: Low

Stable: All control procedures are deemed to be working effectively. There have been no material regulatory changes that have occurred during the year.

Operational risks

Performance and reliance on third party service providers

 

What is the risk?

In common with most other investment companies the Company has no direct employees and relies entirely for its operations on third party service providers. Failure of the Investment Manager's systems or those of another service provider, such as the Custodian and Depositary, could lead to an inability to accurately report or lead to a misappropriation of assets.

 

How is it managed?

The Audit Committee receives six monthly reports from the Investment Manager's Business Risk Department on their monitoring programme of internal controls. The Audit Committee also receives ISAE 3402 or equivalent reports on the Investment Manager and other service providers. These reports are reviewed by Baillie Gifford's Business Risk Department and a summary of the key points is reported to the Audit Committee and any concerns are investigated.

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: Low

Stable: All control procedures are deemed to be working effectively. Portfolio management and all regulatory and administrative tasks have continued uninterrupted during the year.

Cybersecuritythreats

 

What is the risk?

Errors, fraud or control failures by the Company's key service providers or loss of data through increasing cyber threats or business continuity interruptions could damage the Company's reputation or investors' interests or result in losses.

 

How is it managed?

The Audit Committee receives confirmation that key service providers have appropriate cyber/IT policies to ensure that controls are in place including business continuity and disaster recovery arrangements.

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: High

Increasing: This risk is seen as increasing due to recent indications that the continuation of geopolitical tensions could lead to more cyber attacks. Emerging technologies, including AI, could potentially increase information security risks. In addition, service providers operate a hybrid approach of remote and office working, thereby increasing the potential of a cyber security threat.

Key professionals

 

What is the risk?

Loss of key professionals, particularly in relation to the Investment Manager could impact the Company's ability to implement its investment strategy.

How is it managed?

The Board reviews the Investment Manager's performance annually as well as the resources of the Investment Manager for attracting and retaining talent.

Rating and change

Current assessment of risk

Risk Level: Low

Stable: All procedures are satisfactory.

Emergingrisks

As explained on pages 68 to 69 the Board has regular discussions on principal risks and uncertainties, including any risks which are not an immediate threat but could arise in the longer term. Emerging risks are considered under the categories noted above rather than included as discrete risks.

↑ Increasing Risk ↓ Decreasing Risk ─ Stable Risk

Relations with Stakeholders

Although the Company is domiciled in Guernsey, the Board has considered the guidance set out in the AIC Code in relation to section 172 of the Companies Act 2006 in the UK. Section 172 of the Companies Act requires that the Directors of a Company must act in the way they consider, in good faith, would be most likely to promote the success of the Company for the benefit of its stakeholders as a whole and in doing so have regard (amongst other matters and to the extent applicable) to:

a. the likely consequences of any decision in the long term;

b. the interests of the Company's employees;

c. the need to foster the Company's business relationships with suppliers, customers and others;

d. the impact of the Company's operations on the community and the environment;

e. the desirability of the Company maintaining a reputation for high standards of business conduct; and

f. the need to act fairly between stakeholders of the Company.

In this context and having regard to Schiehallion being an externally managed investment company with no employees, the Board considers that the Company's key stakeholders are its existing and potential new shareholders, its externally-appointed Investment Manager, Baillie Gifford & Co Limited, and other service providers (Administrator, Corporate Broker, Registrar, Auditor, Custodian and Depositary), as well as wider society and the environment.

The Board considers that the Company's key stakeholders are aligned, in terms of wishing to see the Company deliver sustainable long-term growth, in line with the Company's stated objective and strategy, and meet the highest standards of legal, regulatory, and commercial conduct, with the differences between stakeholders being merely a matter of emphasis on those elements.

The Board's methods for assessing the Company's progress in the context of its stakeholders' interests are set out below.

Stakeholder

Why we engage

How we engage and what we do

Shareholders

Shareholders are, collectively, the Company's owners: providing them with a return for their investment in accordance with the Company's investment policy and objective is the reason for its existence.

The Board places great importance on communication with shareholders. The Annual General Meeting provides an opportunity for the Board and Investment Manager to present to shareholders on the Company's performance, future plans and prospects. It also allows shareholders the opportunity to meet with the Board and Investment Manager and raise questions and concerns. The Chairperson and Senior Independent Director are available to meet with shareholders as appropriate and met with major shareholders during the year. The Investment Manager meets regularly with shareholders and their representatives, reporting their views back to the Board. Directors also attend certain shareholder presentations, in order to gauge shareholder sentiment first hand. Shareholders may also communicate with members of the Board at any time by writing to them at the Company's registered office or to the Company's broker. These communication opportunities help inform the Board when considering how best to promote the success of the Company for the benefit of all shareholders over the long term.

 

Stakeholder

Why we engage

How we engage and what we do

Baillie Gifford, Investment Manager and Alter Domus, Administratorand Secretaries

The Company's Board has delegated the management of the Company's portfolio to Baillie Gifford and the administration of the Company's operations including fulfilment of regulatory and taxation reporting requirements to Alter Domus. Baillie Gifford and Alter Domus are therefore responsible for the substantial activities of the Company and have the most immediate influence on its conduct towards the other stakeholders, subject to the oversight and strategic direction provided by the Board.

The Board seeks to engage with its Investment Manager, Administrator and other service providers in a collaborative and collegiate manner, encouraging open and constructive discussion and debate, while also ensuring that appropriate and regular challenge is brought and evaluation conducted. This approach aims to enhance service levels and strengthen relationships with the Company's providers, with a view to ensuring the interests of the Company's shareholders are best served by keeping cost levels proportionate and competitive, and by maintaining the highest standards of business conduct.

Portfolio companies

As all of the Company's operations are conducted by third party professional providers, it is the companies held in its investment portfolio which have the primary real-world impact in terms of social and environmental change, both positively and negatively, as well as generating, through their commercial success, the investment growth sought by the Company's shareholders. The investee companies have an interest in understanding their shareholders' investment rationale in order to assure themselves that long-term business strategies will be supported.

The Board is cognisant of the need to consider the impact of the Company's investment strategy and policy on wider society and the environment. The Board considers that its oversight of environmental, social and governance ('ESG') matters is an important part of its responsibility to all stakeholders. The Board's review of the Investment Manager includes an assessment of their ESG approach and its application in making investment decisions. The Board reviews Governance Engagement reports, which document the Investment Manager's interactions with investee companies on ESG matters (see pages 29 to 31). The portfolio managers regularly report to the Board on discussions with portfolio companies on operational and strategic matters.

Broker

The Company's brokers provide an interface between the Company's Board and its institutional shareholders.

The Company's brokers regularly attend Board meetings, and provide reports to those meetings, in order to keep the Board apprised of shareholder and wider market sentiment regarding the Company. They also arrange opportunities for shareholders to meet the Chairperson outside the normal general meeting cycle.

Registrar

The Company's registrars provide an interface with those shareholders who hold the Company's shares directly.

The Investment Manager liaises with the registrars to ensure the frequency and accuracy of communications to shareholders is appropriate, and monitor shareholder correspondence to ensure that the level of service provided by the registrar is acceptable. The Investment Manager's risk function reviews the registrar's internal controls report and reports on the outcome of this review to the Board.

Auditor

The Company's Auditor has a responsibility to provide an opinion on whether the Company's Financial Statements present a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the Company and its profit or loss for the period, and as a whole are free from material misstatement, as set out in more detail in the Auditor's report to the Members on page 79.

The Company's Auditor meets with the Audit Chair and the Audit Committee, in the absence of the Investment Manager where deemed necessary, and the Investment Manager, Company Secretary and Administrator undertake to provide all information requested by the Auditor in connection with the Company's annual audit promptly and to ensure that it is complete and accurate in all respects.

Depositaryand Custodian

The Depositary is responsible for the safekeeping of the Company's financial instruments, as set out in more detail on page 59.

The Depositary provides the Audit Committee with a report on its monitoring activities. The Investment Manager's Business Risk team reviews the relevant Bank of New York Mellon internal controls report and reports any relevant matters to the Audit Committee. The Board and Investment Manager seeks to engage with the Depositary and Custodian in a collaborative and collegiate manner, encouraging open and constructive discussion and debate, while also ensuring that appropriate and regular challenge is brought and evaluation conducted. This approach aims to enhance service levels and strengthen relationships, with a view to ensuring the interests of the Company's shareholders are best served by keeping cost levels proportionate and competitive, and by maintaining the highest standards of business conduct.

AIC/industry peers

The Association of Investment Companies ('AIC') and the Company's investment trust industry peers have an interest in the Company's conduct and performance, as adverse market sentiment towards one investment trust can affect attitudes towards the wider industry.

The Company is a member of the AIC, and the Directors and or the Investment Manager and Secretaries (as appropriate) participate in technical reviews, requests for feedback on proposed legislation or regulatory developments, corporate governance discussions and/or training.

Investment platforms

Investment platforms provide an interface with shareholders who invest in the Company indirectly.

The Investment Manager liaises with the various investment platforms on strategies for improving communications with the Company's shareholders who hold their shares via these platforms. An annual timetable of key dates is published on the Company's website, for the ease of reference of such shareholders.

Wider society and the environment

No entity, corporate or otherwise, can exist without having an influence on the society in which it operates or utilising the planet's resources. Through its third-party relationships, as noted above, the Company seeks to be a positive influence and, in circumstances where that is not possible, to mitigate its negative impacts insofar as is possible.

The primary real-world impact of the Company's operations are through the companies held in its investment portfolio - please refer to 'Portfolio companies' section above.

The Board and Investment Manager's interactions with the various stakeholders as noted above form the principal forms of direct engagement with wider society and in respect of the environment (commercial, financial, and in terms of planetary health and resources).

Regulatory bodies

Engagement with regulatory bodies is important to ensure effective compliance with law and regulation. Failure to maintain good relations with regulatory bodies, or comply with relevant law and regulation, could lead to penalties and damage the Company's reputation. Regulatory risk can be mitigated by making representations to regulators regarding the specific circumstances of investment companies.

The Investment Manager engages regularly with the Financial Reporting Council ('FRC') and where required the Guernsey Financial Services Commission ('GFSC') and reports to the Board.

The Board recognises the importance of keeping the interests of the Company's shareholders, and of acting fairly towards them, firmly front of mind in its key decision making and the Investment Manager is at all times available to the Board to ensure that suitable consideration is given to the range of factors to which the Directors should have regard.

In addition to ensuring that the Company's stated investment objective was being pursued, key decisions and actions during the year which have required the Directors to have regard to applicable section 172 factors include:

• In a commitment to uphold the highest standards of corporate governance and enhance board performance, the Board undertook a Board evaluation during the year. This was aimed at providing an objective assessment of the Board's effectiveness and identifying areas for improvement. By addressing the identified areas for improvement, the Board aims to further enhance its governance practices and better serve the interests of shareholders. The Board is committed to maintaining transparency, accountability, and excellence in governance. More information on the evaluation process can be found on page 68;

• The Board also performed an annual evaluation of all service providers and reviewed their remuneration. This process supports value for money, cost control and high standards of service delivery, while promoting accountability and transparency in the Company's governance arrangements. By doing so, the Board seeks to protect and enhance long-term shareholder value;

• The Company bought back 11,705,000 of its own shares into treasury at a discount to net asset value, for subsequent reissue. The Company's buy-back strategy takes into account a broad range of factors, carefully considering and balancing the positives (in particular, providing shareholders with additional liquidity for their shares on terms that enhance net asset value for remaining shareholders) and any negatives (in particular, the impact on portfolio composition and diversification), as well as having regard to shareholder feedback regarding discount management. The discount narrowed from 19.2% at 31 January 2025 to a premium of 0.4% at the period end; and

• The Board has kept the Company's trading segment and tax domicile under regular review to ensure they support the delivery of long-term shareholder value. During the year, the Board took the decision to migrate the Company's shares to the Closed-ended Investment Funds Category of the Main Market, which is expected to broaden investor appeal and improve share liquidity. With effect from 1 February 2026, the Company became UK tax resident and obtained UK investment trust status, aligning the Company more closely with the location of its place of listing as well as to take advantage of the double taxation agreements in the UK thereby preventing future tax leakage on some of the Company's holdings. In addition, this election will also make the Company more attractive to investors who may otherwise be tax sensitive to investing in a vehicle that is tax resident outside the United Kingdom.

 

Responsibility Statement of the Directors in Respect of the Annual Report and Financial Statements

We confirm to the best of our knowledge:

• the Financial Statements, prepared in accordance with the applicable set of accounting standards, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit or loss of the Company; and

• the Strategic report includes a fair review of the development and performance of the business and the position of the issuer, together with a description of the principal risks and uncertainties they face.

We consider the Annual Report and Financial Statements, taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and understandable and provides the information necessary for shareholders to assess the Company's position and performance, business model and strategy.

 

On behalf of the BoardDr Linda Yueh CBE7 April 2026

Statement of comprehensive income

For the year ended 31 January

Notes

 2026

Revenue

US$'000

2026

Capital

US$'000

2026

Total

US$'000

 2025

Revenue

US$'000

2025

Capital

US$'000

2025

Total

US$'000

Gains on investments

7

 -

 452,482

 452,482

-

158,543

158,543

Currency gains

 -

 117

 117

-

15

15

Income

2

 1,716

 -

 1,716

7,509

-

7,509

Investment management fee

3

(12,712)

 -

(12,712)

(9,562)

-

(9,562)

Other administrative expenses

4

(2,794)

 -

(2,794)

(1,956)

-

(1,956)

Operating profit/(loss) before taxation

 

(13,790)

 452,599

 438,809

(4,009)

158,558

154,549

Tax on ordinary activities

 -

 317

 317

-

517

517

Profit/(loss) and total comprehensive income/(loss) for the year attributable to ordinary shareholders

 

(13,790)

 452,916

 439,126

(4,009)

159,075

155,066

Earnings/(loss) per

ordinary share

 

(1.35¢)

44.49¢

43.14¢

(0.39¢)

15.49¢

15.10¢

 

The total column of this statement represents the Statement of Comprehensive Income of the Company. The supplementary revenue and capital columns are prepared under guidance published by the Association of Investment Companies.

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

The accompanying notes below are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

Statement of financial position

As at 31 January

Notes

2026

US$'000

2026

US$'000

2025

US$'000

2025

US$'000

Non-current assets

 

 

 

 

 

Investments held at fair value through profit or loss

7

 1,785,074

1,290,450

Current assets

 

 

 

 

 

US Treasury Bills

-

77,334

Cash and cash equivalents

 13,001

6,118

Debtors

 1,922

1,427

 14,923

84,879

Current liabilities

 

 

 

 

 

Amounts falling due within one year

(4,089)

(5,055)

Net current assets

 

 

 10,834

 

79,824

Non-current liabilities

 

 

 

 

 

Amounts falling due after more than one year:

Provision for tax liability

-

(317)

Net assets

 

 

 1,795,908

 

1,369,957

Capital and reserves

 

 

 

 

 

Share capital 

8

 1,209,208

1,209,208

Capital reserve 

610,191

170,450

Capital redemption reserve

 7,296

7,296

Revenue reserve 

(30,787)

(16,997)

Ordinary shareholders' funds 

 

 

 1,795,908

 

1,369,957

Net asset value per ordinary share

177.28¢

 133.69¢

Number of ordinary shares in issue

8

1,013,033,907

1,024,738,907

The Financial Statements of The Schiehallion Fund Limited (Company registration number 65915) were approved and authorised for issue by the Board of Directors and were signed on 7 April 2026.

 

Dr Linda Yueh CBEChairperson

The accompanying notes below are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

Statement of changes in equity

For the year ended 31 January 2026

Notes

Share

capital

US$'000

Capital

reserve

US$'000

Capital

redemption

reserve

US$'000

Revenue

reserve

US$'000

Shareholders'

funds

US$'000

Shareholders' funds at 1 February 2025

 1,209,208

 170,450

 7,296

(16,997)

 1,369,957

Ordinary shares bought back

 -

(13,175)

 -

 -

(13,175)

Total comprehensive income/(loss)

 -

 452,916

 -

(13,790)

 439,126

Shareholders' funds at 31 January 2026

 

 1,209,208

 610,191

 7,296

(30,787)

 1,795,908

For the year ended 31 January 2025

Notes

Share

capital

US$'000

Capital

reserve

US$'000

Capital

redemption

reserve

US$'000

Revenue

reserve

US$'000

Shareholders'

funds

US$'000

Shareholders' funds at 1 February 2024

1,213,903

15,621

2,601

(12,988)

1,219,137

Ordinary shares bought back

(4,695)

(4,246)

4,695

-

(4,246)

Total comprehensive income/(loss)

-

159,075

-

(4,009)

155,066

Shareholders' funds at 31 January 2025

 

1,209,208

170,450

7,296

(16,997)

1,369,957

 

The accompanying notes below are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

Statement of cash flows

For the year ended 31 January

Notes

2026

US$'000

2026

US$'000

2025

US$'000

2025

US$'000

Cash flows from operating activities

 

 

 

 

 

Operating profit before taxation

 438,809

154,549

US Treasury Bills interest

2

(824)

(6,705)

Net gains on investments

(452,482)

(158,543)

Currency gains

(117)

(15)

Changes in debtors and creditors

(1,353)

910

Net cash used in operating activities*

 

 

(15,967)

 

(9,804)

Cash flows from investing activities

 

 

 

 

 

Acquisitions of US Treasury Bills 

 -

(151,064)

Disposals of US Treasury Bills

 78,159

247,928

Acquisitions of investments

7

(194,966)

(121,914)

Disposals of investments

7

 152,824

33,788

Net cash used in investing activities

 

 

 36,017

 

8,738

Cash flows from financing activities

 

 

 

 

 

Ordinary shares bought back

(13,284)

(4,137)

Net cash outflow from financing activities

 

 

(13,284)

 

(4,137)

Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents

 

 6,766

 

(5,203)

 

Effect of exchange rate fluctuations on cash and cash equivalents

 117

15

Cash and cash equivalents at 1 February

 6,118

11,306

Cash and cash equivalents at 31 January

 

 

 13,001

 

6,118

* Cash from operations includes interest received of US$367,000 (2025 - US$412,000).

 

2026

US$'000

2025

US$'000

Cash and cash equivalents comprise the following:

Cash at bank

 13,001

6,118

 

The accompanying notes below are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

Notes to the Financial Statements

1. Principal accounting policies

The Financial Statements for the year ended 31 January 2026 have been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards ('IFRS') as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board ('IASB').

2. Income

2026

US$'000

2025

US$'000

US Treasury Bill interest

 824

6,705

Overseas interest

 525

392

Deposit interest

 367

412

 

Total income

 1,716

7,509

3. Investment management fee

2026

US$'000

2025

US$'000

Investment Management fee

 12,712

9,562

Details of the Investment Management Agreement are set out on pages 58 and 59. Under the terms of the Investment Management Agreement and with effect from the date the Company's ordinary shares were admitted to trading on the London Stock Exchange, the Investment Manager is entitled to an annual fee (exclusive of VAT, which shall be added where applicable) of: 0.9% on the net asset value excluding cash or cash equivalent assets up to and including US$650 million; 0.8% on the net asset value excluding cash or cash equivalent assets exceeding US$650 million up to and including US$1.3 billion; and 0.7% on the net asset value excluding cash or cash equivalent assets exceeding US$1.3 billion. Management fees are calculated and payable quarterly. For the purpose of calculating the investment management fee, cash equivalents include US Treasury Bills.

4. Other administrative expenses

2026

US$'000

2025

US$'000

General administrative expenses 

1,485

944

Administrator's fee

119

112

Auditor's remuneration for audit and non-audit services*

504

260

Directors' fees

446

395

Depositary and custody fees

115

144

Registrar fees

52

39

Marketing

73

62

 

 

2,794

1,956

* In the year to 31 January 2026, non-audit fees of US$66,000 (31 January 2025 - nil) were paid to the Auditor, KPMG Advisory Limited, in respect of non-audit services (included within 'Other administrative expenses' above). The non-audit fees incurred in the year to 31 January 2026 of US$66,000 were related to the engagement of KPMG to provide a Financial Position and Prospects Procedures ("FPPP") report in connection with the proposed admission of the Company's Ordinary Shares to listing on the closed-ended investment funds category of the Official List of the Financial Conduct Authority and the transfer of the admission to trading of the Ordinary Shares from the Specialist Fund Segment to the listed segment of the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange. There were no non-audit fees incurred in the year to 31 January 2025.

† The Company is part of a marketing programme which includes all the investment trusts managed by the Investment Manager. The marketing strategy has an ongoing objective to stimulate demand for the Company's shares. The cost of this marketing strategy is borne in partnership by the Company and the Investment Manager. The Investment Manager matches the Company's marketing contribution and provides the resource to manage and run the programme.

5. Earnings per share

Year ended31 January 2026

Year ended31 January 2025

Ordinary shares

US$'000

¢

US$'000

¢

Revenue return on ordinary activities after taxation

(13,790)

(1.35)

(4,009)

(0.39)

Capital return on ordinary activities after taxation

452,916

44.49

159,075

15.49

 

Profit and total comprehensive income for the year

439,126

43.14

155,066

15.10

 

Weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue

1,018,052,112

1,027,245,710

6. Ordinary dividends

There were no dividends paid or proposed in respect of the year to 31 January 2026 (2025 - nil).

7. Financial instruments

Fair value hierarchy

The fair value hierarchy used to analyse the fair values of financial assets is described below. The levels are determined by the lowest (that is the least reliable or least independently observable) level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement for the individual investment in its entirety as follows:

Level 1 - using unadjusted quoted prices for identical instruments in an active market;

Level 2 - using inputs, other than quoted prices included within Level 1, that are directly or indirectly observable (based on market data); and

Level 3 - using inputs that are unobservable (for which market data is unavailable).

The valuation techniques used by the Company are explained in the accounting policies on pages 90 and 91. Transfers between levels of the fair value hierarchy take place when the criteria for recognition in another level are met, such as the listing of an investment.

As at 31 January 2026

Level 1

US$'000

Level 2

US$'000

Level 3

US$'000

Total

US$'000

Listed equities 

212,434

-

-

212,434

Private company ordinary shares/warrants 

-

-

481,655

481,655

Private company preference shares*

-

-

1,065,201

1,065,201

Private company convertible promissory notes 

-

-

25,784

25,784

 

Total financial asset investments 

212,434

-

1,572,640

1,785,074

 

As at 31 January 2025

Level 1

US$'000

Level 2

US$'000

Level 3

US$'000

Total

US$'000

Listed equities

290,843

-

-

290,843

Private company ordinary shares/warrants

-

-

280,083

280,083

Private company preference shares*

-

-

 712,041

712,041

Private company convertible promissory notes

-

-

7,483

 7,483

 

Total financial asset investments

290,843

-

 999,607

1,290,450

* The investments in preference shares are not classified as equity holdings as they include liquidation preference rights that determine the repayment (or multiple thereof) of the original investment in the event of a liquidation event such as a take-over.

During the year ended 31 January 2026, the investments in Chime Financial and HeartFlow with a book cost of US$40,000,000 and US$17,100,000 and a fair value (IPO price) of US$16,968,000 and US$21,430,000 respectively were transferred from Level 3 to Level 1 on becoming listed. During the year ended 31 January 2025, the investment in Tempus AI with a book cost of US$18,468,000 and a fair value (IPO price) of US$32,858,000 was transferred from Level 3 to Level 1 on becoming listed.

Investments in securities are financial assets held at fair value through profit or loss. In accordance with IFRS 13, the table above provides an analysis of these investments based on the fair value hierarchy described above, which reflects the reliability and significance of the information used to measure their fair value.

Listed

securities

US$000

Private

company

securities

US$000

Total

US$000

Cost of investments at 1 February 2025

134,094

935,572

1,069,666

Investment holding gains and losses at 1 February 2025

156,749

64,035

220,784

 

Fair value of investments at 1 February 2025

290,843

999,607

1,290,450

 

Movements in the period:

 

 

 

Purchases at cost

-

194,966

194,966

Sales - proceeds 

(120,684)

(32,140)

(152,824)

- profit on disposal

55,728

15,603

71,331

Changes in categorisation at cost

57,100

(57,100)

-

Changes in investment holding gains and losses

(70,553)

451,704

381,151

 

Fair value of investments at 31 January 2026

212,434

1,572,640

1,785,074

Cost of investments at 31 January 2026

126,238

1,056,901

1,183,139

Investment holding gains and losses at 31 January 2026

86,196

515,739

601,935

 

Fair value of investments at 31 January 2026*

212,434

1,572,640

1,785,074

* Includes holdings in preference shares, promissory notes, ordinary shares and warrants.

† The purchases and sales figures above include transaction costs of US$167,000 (2025 - nil).

8. Ordinary share capital

2026

Number

2026

US$'000

2025

Number

2025

US$'000

Allotted, called up and fully paid ordinary shares of US$1 each 

1,013,033,907

1,197,038

1,024,738,907

1,208,743

Treasury shares of US$1 each

12,170,000

12,170

465,000

465

 

 

1,025,203,907

1,209,208

1,025,203,907

1,209,208

By way of a special resolution passed on 10 May 2024 the Directors of the Company were granted a general authority to issue or sell from treasury, ordinary or C shares, without regard to pre-emption rights up to 102,882,390 shares. This authority will expire immediately prior to the 2029 Annual General Meeting (or, if earlier, five years from the date of the passing of the resolution). During the year to 31 January 2026 no shares were issued (2025 - nil). In the period from 1 February 2026 to 6 April 2026 1,250,000 shares were issued.

By way of a special resolution passed on 22 May 2025 the Directors of the Company have general authority to make market purchases of up to 153,037,243 ordinary shares, being 14.99% of the ordinary shares in issue as at 22 May 2025, being the date the resolution passed. This will expire at the conclusion of the Annual General Meeting to be held on 14 May 2026. 11,705,000 ordinary shares were bought back during the year ended 31 January 2026 at a cost of US$13,175,000 (31 January 2025 - 5,160,000 ordinary shares at a cost of US$4,246,000) hence the remaining authority is 145,142,243 ordinary shares. At 31 January 2026 the Company held 12,170,000 shares in treasury (2025 - 465,000). In the period from 1 February 2026 to 6 April 2026 no ordinary shares were bought back to treasury. The total cost of shares bought back is charged to the capital reserve. The nominal value of the shares that were bought back and cancelled were transferred from the share capital to the capital redemption reserve.

During the year to 31 January 2026 the Company issued one Class B special voting share. The Company's B Share, which was issued to a Guernsey purpose trust, whose trustee is Carey Olsen Client Services (Guernsey) Limited, to implement the revised voting structure required for the Company's proposed admission to listing on the CEIF category of the Official List of the FCA currently carries no voting rights at general meetings of the Company. However, in the event the level of ownership of Ordinary Shares by US residents (excluding any Ordinary Shares held in treasury) exceeds 35% on any date determined by the Directors (based on an analysis of share ownership information available to the Company), the B Share will carry voting rights in relation to `Director Resolutions' (as such term is defined in the Articles of Incorporation). In this event, the B Share will automatically carry such voting rights to dilute the voting power of the Ordinary Shareholders with respect to Director Resolutions to the extent necessary to reduce the percentage of votes exercisable by US residents in relation to the Director Resolutions to not more than 35%.

Holders of ordinary shares have the right to receive income and capital from assets attributable to such share class. Ordinary shareholders have the right to receive notice of general meetings of the Company and have the right to attend and vote at all general meetings.

9. Transactions with related parties and the Investment Manager and Administrator

Each of the Directors is entitled to receive a fee from the Company at such rate as may be determined in accordance with the Articles of Incorporation. Directors' fees for the year are detailed in the Directors' remuneration report on pages 74 to 76.

All of the Directors will also be entitled to be paid all reasonable expenses properly incurred by them in connection with the performance of their duties. These expenses will include those associated with attending general Board or committee meetings and legal fees. The Board may determine that additional remuneration may be paid, from time to time, to any one or more Directors in the event such Director or Directors are requested by the Board to perform extra or special services on behalf of the Company.

No Director has a contract of service with the Company.

Details of the investment management agreement are set out in note 3. The management fee payable to the Investment Manager by the Company for the year ended 31 January 2026, as disclosed in note 3, was US$12,712,000 (2025 - US$9,562,000) of which US$3,611,000 was outstanding at 31 January 2026 (2025 - US$2,743,000), as disclosed in note 9.

The fee payable to the Administrator, for the year to 31 January 2026 as disclosed in note 4, was US$119,000 (2025 - US$112,000) of which US$10,000 was outstanding at 31 January 2026 (2025 - US$9,000) as disclosed in note 9.

The financial information set out above does not constitute the Company's statutory accounts for the year ended 31 January 2026 or the year ended 31 January 2025 but is derived from those accounts.

The Annual Report and Financial Statements is available on the Company website schiehallionfund.com‡. The audited Annual Report and Financial Statements will be posted to shareholders during April 2026 (including the Notice of AGM and voting instructions). A copy of the annual financial report will be submitted shortly to the National Storage Mechanism ('NSM') and will be available for inspection at the NSM, which is situated at https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism.

Neither the contents of the Company website nor the contents of any website accessible from hyperlinks on the Company website (or any other website) is incorporated into, or forms part of, this announcement.

 

 

 

Glossary of terms and Alternative Performance Measures ('APM')

An alternative performance measure is a financial measure of historical or future financial performance, financial position, or cash flows, other than a financial measure defined or specified in the applicable financial reporting framework.

Total net assets

Total value of all assets held less current liabilities, other than liabilities in the form of borrowings.

Net asset value

Also described as shareholders' funds, net asset value ('NAV') is the value of total assets less liabilities (including borrowings). The NAV per share is calculated by dividing this amount by the number of ordinary shares or C shares, as applicable, in issue.

Net current assets

Net current assets comprise current assets less current liabilities excluding borrowings.

Premium/(discount) (APM)

As stock markets and share prices vary, the Company's share price is rarely the same as its NAV. When the share price is lower than the NAV per share it is said to be trading at a discount. The size of the discount is calculated by subtracting NAV per share from the share price and is usually expressed as a percentage of the NAV per share. If the share price is higher than the NAV per share, this situation is called a premium.

Ordinary shares

2026

2025

Closing NAV per share

(a)

177.28¢

133.69¢

Closing share price

(b)

178.00¢

108.00¢

Premium/(discount) ((b - a) ÷ (a) expressed as a percentage)

 

0.4%

(19.2%)

Total Return

The total return is the return to shareholders after reinvesting the net dividend on the date that the share price goes ex-dividend. The Company does not pay a dividend, therefore, the one year total returns for the share price and NAV per share are the same as the percentage movements in the share price and NAV per share as detailed on page 14.

Capital deployed (APM)

Capital deployed reflects cumulative amounts invested since inception of the Company.

Internal rate of return (IRR) (APM)

The IRR indicates the annualised rate of return for the Company's investment portfolio.

Gross multiple on invested capital (MOIC) (APM)

The MOIC expresses, as a multiple, how much return the Company has made on investment realisations and income, relative to its book cost.

Ongoing charges (APM)

The total recurring expenses (excluding the Company's costs of dealing in investments and borrowing costs) incurred by the Company as a percentage of the average net asset value.

Ordinary shares

2026

US$'000

2025

US$'000

Investment management fee

12,712

9,562

Other administrative expenses

2,794

1,956

Less: Non-recurring expenses*

(1,219)

-

Total recurring expenses

(a)

14,287

11,518

Average net asset value

(b)

1,495,174

1,248,889

Ongoing Charges ((a) ÷ (b) expressed as a percentage)

 

0.96%

0.92%

* Non-recurring expenses in the year to 31 January 2026 amounted to US$1,219,000. These were the total costs incurred during the reporting period in connection with the trading segment migration and tax residency move to the UK.

Leverage (APM)

For the purposes of the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Regulations, leverage is any method which increases the Company's exposure, including the borrowing of cash and the use of derivatives. It is expressed as a ratio between the Company's exposure and its net asset value and can be calculated on a gross and a commitment method. Under the gross method, exposure represents the sum of the Company's positions after the deduction of US dollar cash balances, without taking into account any hedging and netting arrangements. Under the commitment method, exposure is calculated without the deduction of sterling cash balances and after certain hedging and netting positions are offset against each other.

Average revenue growth rate (APM)

Calculated by taking an average of each investee company's last twelve months revenue growth (as a percentage).

Average movement in company valuation/share price (APM)

Calculated by taking an average of all valuation movements (as a percentage) by portfolio company and by line of portfolio company share class.

Contribution (APM)

Contribution to absolute performance (in US$ terms) is used to illustrate how an individual stock has contributed to the overall return. It is calculated by taking the average portfolio company weight for the period multiplied by the absolute return. This is calculated on a daily basis and compounded to provide the overall contribution of a portfolio company to the performance of the full portfolio. The absolute return of a portfolio company is determined by calculating the share price movements in that holding whilst taking into account any purchase or sale transactions that have occurred in the period. The absolute return is in US$ terms and therefore takes into account the foreign exchange movement between the portfolio company's local currency and US dollar.

Weighted average revenue growth (APM)

The average revenue growth rate of the portfolio's underlying companies, weighted by each holding's proportion of the portfolio.

Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation ('SFDR')

The EU Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation ('SFDR') does not have a direct impact in the UK due to Brexit, however, it applies to third-country products marketed in the EU. As Schiehallion is marketed in the EU by the AIFM, Baillie Gifford & Co Limited, via the National Private Placement Regime ('NPPR') the following disclosures have been provided to comply with the high-level requirements of SFDR.

The AIFM has adopted Baillie Gifford & Co's Stewardship Principles and Guidelines as its policy on integration of sustainability risks in investment decisions.

More detail on the Investment Manager's approach to sustainability can be found in the Stewardship Principles and Guidelines document, available publicly on the Baillie Gifford website bailliegifford.com.

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Related Shares:

The Schiehalli.
FTSE 100 Latest
Value10,600.53
Change-2.95