RNS Number : 0627A
Hill & Smith PLC
10 April 2026
 

Hill & Smith PLC (the 'Company')

2025 Annual Report and Notice of 2026 Annual General Meeting ('AGM')

 

 

Further to the Company's announcement of its final results on 11 March 2026, in accordance with the UK Listing Rules, copies of the following documents ('Shareholder Documents') have been submitted to the National Storage Mechanism and will shortly be available for inspection at: https://data.fca.org.uk/#/nsm/nationalstoragemechanism.

 

·      The Hill & Smith PLC 2025 Annual Report & Accounts

·      The Notice of the Company's 2026 Annual General Meeting ('AGM Notice'); and

·      The Form of Proxy

 

Hard copy versions of the above documents have been posted to those shareholders who have elected to receive them in paper form.

 

The Annual Report and AGM Notice will also shortly be available via the Company's website at: https://hsgroup.com/investors/reports-and-presentations/ and from the Company's registered office at Hill & Smith PLC, Westhaven House, Arleston Way, Shirley, Solihull B90 4LH.

 

Compliance with Disclosure and Transparency Rule 6.3.5 ('DTR 6.3.5') - Extracts from the 2025 Annual Report & Accounts

 

The information below, headed as Appendix A, B and C, and which is extracted in unedited form from the 2025 Annual Report, is included solely for the purpose of complying with DTR 6.3.5 and the requirements it imposes on how to make public Annual Financial Reports. It should be read in conjunction with the Company's Preliminary Announcement issued on 11 March 2026 (available at www.hsgroup.com). Together these constitute the material required by DTR 6.3.5 to be communicated to the media in unedited full text through a Regulatory Information Service. This material is not a substitute for reading the full 2025 Annual Report. All page numbers and cross-references in the extracted information below refer to page numbers in the 2025 Annual Report.

 

Appendix A - Principal Risks and Uncertainties

 

Risk

Description and potential impact

Mitigation

Reduction in US infrastructure spending Category: Economic & market conditions

Risk appetite: Receptive

Risk movement: No change

Our growth is supported by multi-year planned government spending to upgrade US infrastructure, support technology change, and private investment from US manufacturers and producers to onshore vital components. Changes to these plans could have a detrimental impact on Group revenues.

We remain confident that infrastructure investment will continue to form part of national spending plans under the US federal government administration. Confidence also remains in private investment in electricity transmission and distribution infrastructure.

 

•      Cross-party support for core infrastructure investment plans.

•      Our portfolio covers diverse products, markets and territories.

•      Market and product development initiatives.

•      Strategic planning process overseen by the Executive Committee and Board to anticipate and mitigate potential downside risks.

Change in global economic outlook and geopolitical environment

Category: Economic &

market conditions

Risk appetite: Balanced

Risk movement: Increase

Material adverse changes in the political and economic environments in the end-user markets in which we operate have the potential to put at risk our ability to execute our strategy. Global events could negatively impact our supply chains and the Group's production capacity, leading to an inability to meet customer requirements.

Geopolitical tensions have heightened with the recent conflict in the Middle East and tariffs under the US federal government. We continue to monitor the risk in terms of the impact on our supply chains, energy costs, and end markets.

•      The Group has a diverse portfolio of operating companies with exposure to a range of infrastructure and built environment end markets.

•      Current and future financial performance is continuously monitored, facilitating rapid response to changes in market conditions.

•      In line with our entrepreneurial model, our decisions are made close to our markets and our businesses are agile and responsive to changes in their external competitive landscape.

•      Group procurement standards, including robust due diligence of supply chain partners and the requirement for dual sourcing where available.

Increase in competitive

pressure

Category: Economic &

market conditions

Risk appetite: Balanced

Risk movement: No

change

Increased volatility, uncertainty, and slowdown in our markets could result in increased competition, leading to a loss of customers and/or pricing pressure and consequently a loss of sales and reduced profits. New entrants to our markets could impact our market share and margins.

•      The Group holds leading positions in niche infrastructure markets with high barriers to entry.

•      In line with our entrepreneurial model, our decisions are made close to our markets and our businesses are agile and responsive to changes in their competitive landscape.

•      Our operating companies strive to provide superior products and high service levels to customers, while aiming to ensure there is no dependency on any one customer.

Product failure

Category: Operational

Risk appetite: Averse

Risk movement: No

change

The Group operates in infrastructure markets where it is critical that its products meet customer and legislative requirements and where the consequences of product failure are potentially significant.

Product failure arising from component defects or warranty issues may require remediation including the replacement of defective components or complete products, resulting in direct financial costs to the Group and/or wider reputational risk.

 

•      Products tested, approved and accredited by regulatory bodies.

•      Quality control protocols fully implemented and continuously monitored.

•      Contractual controls in place to minimise economic impacts.

•      Product liability insurance cover maintained globally.

•      Litigation supported/managed by external legal specialists.

Climate change

Category: ESG

Risk appetite: Balanced

Risk movement: No

change

Failure to adapt to and manage the threats and opportunities from climate change could have significant reputational, financial and operational impacts on the Group. Chronic changes in climate and extreme weather events may disrupt our operations and supply chains.

Transitioning to a low-carbon economy may present technological challenges and the high energy demand of some of our operations could incur carbon taxes. Climate change transition costs could also inflate the price of the goods we purchase.

•      Decarbonisation Committee to oversee and govern our carbon reduction plans and initiatives.

•      TCFD analysis to understand the risks and opportunities arising from climate change, including climate scenario modelling to evaluate the threat from extreme weather.

•      Carbon emissions reduction plan established to set out how we will achieve net zero (for scopes 1 and 2) by 2040, reducing our exposure to transition risks.

•      Insurance cover, continuity planning and extreme weather protocols in place to mitigate our exposure from physical risks.

•      See Our Approach to Sustainability (including our TCFD report) for further details, pages 37 to 59.

IT systems failure &

cyber

Category: Operational

Risk appetite: Averse

Risk movement: Increase

The Group relies on the information technology systems used in the daily operations of its operating companies. A failure of those systems or cyber attack could have a significant operational impact on the Group, impacting customer service, revenue and margins.

During the year the global cyber threat has continued to evolve, with the proliferation of advanced cyber intrusion tools lowering the barrier for entry to criminals and states alike. The UK's National Cyber Security Centre ('NCSC') has warned that ransomware remains one of the most pervasive cyber threats to UK organisations.

Given this, while there has been continued enhancement of the Group's IT security controls during 2025, the Board considers the risk to be heightened.

 

•      The Board maintains a watching brief on IT and cyber risk and has overseen significant investment across the Group to enhance IT security controls.

•      Wholesale network security improvements completed during 2025.

•      IT controls manual in place, mandating a robust set of information security controls covering basic cyber hygiene, system back-up procedures, hardware/software protection, tabletop exercises, and monthly security training for all employees.

•      Ongoing programme of IT controls compliance reviews completed by Internal Audit.

Portfolio management

Category: Strategic

Risk appetite: Receptive

Risk movement: No change

The Group's growth strategies include the acquisition of businesses to complement or supplement its existing activities. Failure to execute an effective acquisition due diligence and integration programme could have a significant impact on the Group's ability to generate sustainable profitable growth for shareholders.

•      All potential acquisitions are robustly evaluated to ensure they fit within our purpose and core strategic goals.

•      Due diligence protocols deployed in relation to assessment of target businesses, including financial, commercial, environmental and legal.

•      Contractual protections and assurances sought from sellers to mitigate identified risks.

•      Board approval required for Group acquisitions, in line with its Schedule of Matters Reserved.

•      Post-acquisition integration plans established for all acquisitions, with regular performance monitoring and reporting to the Board.

Failure to take advantage

of product development

and innovation

Category: Strategic

Risk appetite: Receptive

Risk movement: No

change

The Group operates in core infrastructure markets where continuous innovation is integral to the Group's product offering, and where a failure to innovate could result in product obsolescence, the entry of new competitors and/or loss of market share. The development of new products and technologies carries risk including the failure to develop a commercially viable offering within an acceptable timeframe.

•      Entrepreneurial culture and autonomous structure to encourage innovation and enable agile response to a changing competitive landscape.

•      Our acquisitions strategy brings innovative products and technologies to our portfolio.

•      Board monitoring of emerging risks alongside external specialist support, where both the risks identified and the potential opportunities arising are considered.

•      Active Intellectual Property management within individual operating companies overseen by Group.

Failure to attract, retain and develop an appropriately diverse, skilled and experienced workforce

Category: Operational

Risk appetite: Balanced

Risk movement: No change

Talented employees are fundamental to the success of the Group. We aim to employ the best people for the job, and we know we can only do this by considering talented people from the whole community. Failure to attract, develop and retain high-quality individuals may impact our ability to deliver against our strategic goals.

•      Training and development programme for high-potential talent.

•      Board-level review of succession planning for senior leaders.

•      Bespoke coaching and mentoring for identified MD successors to support development.

•      Training and development programme for supervisors and line managers.

•      Continued use of internships, apprenticeships and other vocational courses for specialist and technical roles.

•      Annual engagement survey results inform operating company and Group-level action plans to improve engagement.

 

Prevention of harm or

injury to people

Category: ESG

Risk appetite: Averse

Risk movement: No change

The Group is committed to ensuring the health, safety and wellbeing of all employees and third parties. The Group operates multiple manufacturing facilities, where a failure in the Group's health and safety procedures could lead to injury or to the death of employees or third parties.

Our LTIR reduced by 9% to 0.3, but the 2025 target of 0.275 was not achieved.

·      Launch of 'I Own Safety' cultural change programme in 2026 to train every employee on recognising safe and unsafe behaviours.

•      Culture of zero tolerance promoted by the Board with clear targets and improvement metrics.

•      Regional health and safety organisational structure to allow Group health and safety resource to be closer to the individual operating companies.

•      Groupwide incident management system.

·      Monitoring and review of LTI rates with all LTI incidents investigated and findings presented to the Executive Committee.

•      Regular health and safety site audits.

·      Health and safety forums to monitor performance and share best practice.

•      External health and safety accreditations and relationships maintained with regulatory bodies.

 

Violation of applicable laws and regulations

Category: ESG

Risk appetite: Averse

Risk movement: No change

The Group's operations must comply with a range of national and international laws and regulations including those related to modern slavery, anti-bribery and corruption, human rights, employment, GDPR, trade/export compliance and competition/anti-trust.

A failure to comply with applicable laws and regulations could result in civil or criminal liabilities and/or individual or corporate fines and could also result in debarment from government-related contracts, restrictions on ability to trade or rejection by financial counterparties as well as reputational damage.

•     Group Code of Business Conduct sets out required approach for all staff.

•     Mandatory training for employees including Modern Slavery, Anti-Bribery and Corruption, and Competition Law compliance.

•     Programme of audits undertaken on a cyclical basis to review operating companies' compliance with regulatory requirements.

•     Software solutions implemented globally to ensure compliance with trade and export legislation.

•     Externally hosted whistleblowing hotline available to all employees to allow them to raise concerns in confidence or anonymously, if preferred.

•     Toolkits issued to all UK operating companies to aid compliance with GDPR.

 


Appendix B - Responsibility Statement of the Directors pursuant to Disclosure and Transparency Rule 4

 

The following statement is extracted from page 135 of the 2025 Annual Report and is repeated here for the purposes of compliance with DTR 6.3.5. This statement relates solely to the 2025 Annual Report and is not connected to the extracted information set out in this announcement or the Preliminary Announcement.

 

We confirm that, to the best of our knowledge:

•      the financial statements, prepared in accordance with the applicable set of accounting standards, give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and profit or loss of the Company and the undertakings included in the consolidation taken as a whole; and

•      the Strategic Report includes a fair review of the development and performance of the business and the position of the issuer and the undertakings included in the consolidation taken as a whole, together with a description of the principal risks and uncertainties that they face. We consider the Annual Report and Accounts, taken as a whole, is fair, balanced and understandable and provides the information necessary for shareholders to assess the Group's position and performance, business model and strategy.

 

Appendix C - Related Party Transactions

The key management personnel are considered to be the Board of Directors of Hill & Smith PLC and the

members of the Executive Board who are not also Directors of Hill & Smith PLC. The Board of Directors' remuneration can be seen in the Directors' Remuneration Report on pages 102 to 129. The combined remuneration of key management personnel can be seen in note 6 to the financial statements on page 170 of the 2025 Annual Report and Accounts.

 

Karen Atterbury

Company Secretary

Hill & Smith PLC

Tel: 44 (0) 121 704 7430

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