Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc

Half Year Report

For the six months ended 31 March 2024

Performance Summary

NAV per share total return*

Share price total return*

Benchmark total return

5.7%

4.4%

5.3%

Some of the financial measures are classified as Alternative Performance Measures ("APMs"), as defined by the European Securities and Markets Authority and are indicated with an asterisk (*). Definitions of these performance measures, and other terms used in this report, are given on pages 20 and 21 together with supporting calculations where appropriate.

Investment objective

The principal investment objective of Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc (the "Company") is to achieve capital growth through investment primarily in equities of companies located in the continent of Asia (excluding the Middle East and Japan), together with the Far Eastern countries bordering the Pacific Ocean. It aims to achieve growth in excess of the MSCI All Countries Asia excluding Japan Index (with net income reinvested) in sterling terms (Benchmark index) over the longer term.

Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc

Wuli Pavilion, Kaohsiung, Taiwan

Share price discount to

Net revenue return

Ongoing charges ratio*

NAV per share*

after taxation

0.87%

12.8%

£4.88m

(30 September 2023: 0.86%)

(30 September 2023: 11.5%)

(Year ended 30 September 2023: £18.99m)

Gearing*

Share price

Revenue return per share*

3.1%

496.0p

3.19p

(30 September 2023: 2.1%)

(30 September 2023: 486.5p)

(Year ended 30 September 2023: 12.06p)

Interim Management Report

Financial

Other Information

Chairman's Statement

4

Statement of Comprehensive Income

14

Alternative Performance Measures ("APMs")

Investment Manager's Review

5

Statement of Changes in Equity

15

and Definitions of Financial Terms

20

Investment Portfolio

9

Statement of Financial Position

16

Shareholder Information

22

Interim Management Statement

11

Notes to the Financial Statements

17

Information about the Company

23

Introduction Interim Management Report

Financial

Other Information

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Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc

1

Heading

continued

Busan Harbor Bridge, Busan, South Korea

2

Interim

Management

Report

Interim Management Report

Chairman's Statement

Investment Manager's Review

Investment Portfolio

Interim Management Statement

Jewel Changi Airport Waterfall, Singapore

3

Chairman's Statement

Performance

Over the six months ended 31 March 2024, the Company's NAV per share produced a total return of 5.7%, slightly ahead of the 5.3% total return from the Benchmark. The share price produced a total return of 4.4% over the period.

Performance over the period was helped by strong stock selection in Taiwan and the ASEAN markets of the Philippines and Indonesia. The Company also benefited from the significant underweight to China. However, this was somewhat offset by negative stock selection within China.

Further analysis of performance may be found in the Investment Manager's Review.

Discount management

The Company continued to be active in buying back its shares during the period and a total of 3,582,000 shares were purchased for cancellation over that time at a cost of £17,312,000. Since the end of the period, the Company has bought back an additional 1,375,000 shares as the Board remains active in implementing its buy-back policy. The Company's shares traded at an average discount of 11.4% during the period.

The Board continues to monitor the Company's discount levels and regularly reviews the Company's share buy-back policy.

Gearing

The Company was 2.1% geared at the start of the period and as at 31 March 2024 this had increased to 3.1%. The Board continues to keep gearing under consideration and the Manager has access to a £75 million revolving credit facility, and an overdraft facility, which will be used when the Investment Manager believes that the use of borrowing will be accretive to returns.

Board succession

The Board continues to review its composition and effectiveness as well as planning for succession. As stated in the Annual Report, Keith Craig, stepped down from the Board at the conclusion of the Annual General Meeting in January 2024 and was subsequently succeeded as Chairman of the Nomination Committee by

Vivien Gould.

Outlook

Prospects for Asian markets remain challenging, with newsflow from China dominating the region. The Chinese economy continues to disappoint many investors, consumer confidence is still extremely weak, the property market is yet to find a floor and geopolitical tensions weigh heavily on sentiment.

However, expectations for the Chinese economy are now reflected in stock prices and any positive news could bring opportunity for our Portfolio Managers. Valuations across the region are trading at long-term averages and in the broader context of the potential for the easing of global interest rates and a weaker dollar, the outlook is again better positioned for our Portfolio Managers to find opportunities to capitalise on the current conditions.

James Williams

Chairman

20 May 2024

4

Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc

Investment Manager's Review

Abbas Barkhordar

Richard Sennitt

We remain overweight in IT, which was the best performing sector in 2023 on the back of normalising inventories, as well as the impact of AI on industry growth rates.

Introduction

Interim Management Report

Financial

As can be seen from the chart, Asian markets showed a positive return over the six months to end March 2024, finishing up 5.3% in Sterling terms. Although positive, this performance significantly lagged global equity markets, which were up strongly over the period driven by continuing disinflationary trends across major global economies, and the resultant increased confidence that developed market central banks would be moving into an interest rate-cutting cycle in 2024.

Performance of the MSCI AC Asia ex Japan Index - six months to 31 March 2024

Rebased to 100 115

110

105

100

95

Sep 23

Oct 23

Nov 23

Dec 23

Jan 24

Feb 24

Mar 24

MSCI AC Asia ex Japan NDR USD

MSCI AC Asia ex Japan NDR GBP

Source: Thomson Datastream as at 31 March 2024, with net dividends reinvested ("NDR").

Mirroring global performance, the strongest sector in Asia over the period, by far, was information technology ("IT"), where stocks benefited from the improving cycle, as well as the longer-term

benefits to demand of the impact of Artificial Intelligence ("AI"). The excess inventory, which surged after economies opened-uppost-Covid, has been a major overhang on IT stocks (and other goods exporters) throughout much of the last two years, as companies have had to slash prices and production to reduce inventory levels. The prospect of potentially improving end-demand as interest rates come down, alongside the hope that destocking is finally coming to an end, proved a potent catalyst for IT stocks, with anything remotely AI-related seeing additional gains. This particularly helped Taiwan and Korea, the two Asian markets most exposed to the sector. Towards the end of the period, Korea was also supported by investor optimism that a program of corporate governance reforms proposed by the government may help boost valuations, particularly of those companies which have historically had questionable capital allocation.

India was the only other major country which outperformed the Benchmark over the period. It has been a beneficiary of domestic investor flows into the stock market, a trend which has particularly benefited the small and mid-cap segments of the market. While these inflows reflect, in part, the confidence around the growth outlook for the economy over the medium-term, some areas of the market have started to look quite stretched, with share prices reflecting very optimistic assumptions.

The major laggard in the region was China. It has been a miserable year for Chinese stocks, as the ongoing slow recovery from Covid, lack of significant fiscal stimulus, rock-bottom consumer confidence, and international investor concerns around geopolitical and domestic regulatory risks all combined to see the market sell off once again. An announcement in December 2023 of tighter restrictions on video games led to big falls in several index heavyweights in that sector. Though the government appeared to backtrack quite quickly following the negative market reaction, it was another reminder of the unpredictable policy environment of the last few years in China. On a more positive note, there was some relief around geopolitical tensions, with the meeting of presidents Xi and Biden at the November 2023 APEC summit in California. Despite the handshakes, however, there is little sign of any easing of

US policies towards China and, with a presidential election looming in the US later in the year, there is little reason to expect much on this front in the short-term.

Other Information

Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc

5

Investment Manager's Review

continued

MSCI market returns - six months to 31 March 2024

Taiwan

India

Korea

Philippines

MSCI AC Asia ex JP

Malaysia

Singapore

Indonesia

Thailand

China

Hong Kong

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

Returns in GBP

Returns in local currency

Source: Factset, total return with net dividends reinvested.

Performance and portfolio activity

The Company generated a positive return over the period, with a NAV total return of 5.7%, against a return in the Benchmark of 5.3%.

Stock selection was meaningfully positive in Taiwan, the Philippines, Indonesia and Hong Kong. In Taiwan, our IT exposure drove this positive selection, with 'fabless' chip design company MediaTek and leading-edge foundry Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company ("TSMC") the key contributors, both being viewed as beneficiaries of both the advent of AI and the more general bottoming-out of the semiconductor inventory cycle mentioned above. In the Philippines, our holding in global port operator International Container Terminal Services Inc ("ICTSI") performed very well, partly on recovering global trade expectations. Bank Mandiri in Indonesia also performed strongly, thanks to the positive macro backdrop combined with continued strong operational performance of the bank.

Our significant underweight allocation to China was a major positive contributor to relative performance. This was to some extent offset by negative stock selection in that market, though the overall effect on relative performance was still significantly positive. One driver of the negative selection in China was our holding in WuXi Biologics, a Chinese healthcare services company that specialises in the outsourced research, development and manufacturing of biological drugs, which suffered from concerns over the impact of proposed legislation in the US which may impose restrictions on its ability to work with US entities. Stock selection was also negative in India - as explained above, much of the outperformance of that market was driven by the small and mid-cap segments, where the Company has limited exposure as we see more value in the larger-cap names in sectors such as financials and IT services.

Our overweight to Hong Kong was a significant detractor from relative performance, though offset to some extent by positive stock selection with power tools manufacturer Techtronic Industries, luxury goods brand Prada and semiconductor fabrication equipment producer ASMPT all outperforming the market. However, exposure to financials such as insurer AIA and Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing were significant headwinds to performance.

From a sectoral perspective, stock selection in and overweight to IT, our underweight to consumer staples and stock selection in real estate (thanks to Indian developer Oberoi Realty) all added value, although stock selection in financials was a drag, due to our holdings in Hong Kong and India.

Top three contributors and top three detractors at a regional level, six months to 31 March 2024 (%)

China

1.3

Taiwan

1.2

Philippines

0.5

Korea

-0.3

Hong Kong

-0.5

India

-1.3

-1.5

-1.0

-0.5

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

Total contribution

Source: Factset PA3. Top contributors and detractors are shown excluding gearing.

The geographic exposure in the Company's portfolio continues to be mainly spread between Taiwan, India, China, Hong Kong, Korea and Singapore. China remains a substantial underweight but is, in part, offset by the overweight to the Hong Kong market which, in general, looks more attractive from a valuation and governance perspective. Elsewhere, we continue to be overweight Singapore, with positions in banks DBS and Oversea-ChineseBanking Corp, and Singapore Telecommunications, as well as overweights to some of the smaller markets such as Thailand (where we added a position in Bumrungrad Hospital), the Philippines and Indonesia - where we added to Bank of the Philippine Islands and Bank Negara, respectively. We are underweight India and Korea. In Korea, we reduced our holding in battery name Samsung SDI as competition in the sector intensified, exited cosmetics producer LG H&H, which has seen a disappointing recovery in sales to Chinese customers post-pandemic and added to memory producer SK Hynix, and car manufacturer Kia. In India, we took some profits from IT services company Mphasis and added to conglomerate Reliance Industries.

Financials and IT remain the Company's two largest sector exposures and overweights, with the IT exposure predominantly coming through positions in Taiwan, Korea and India. Over the period, we reduced some holdings in financials, selling names such as insurers Ping An Insurance and Prudential, as well as trimming Bank Mandiri. In IT, we added Taiwanese names ASE Technology and foundry United Microelectronics.

Outlook and policy

Most of 2023 and the start of this year have been disappointing for Asian markets relative to global equities, with the region lagging developed markets. Much of this performance gap was driven by a divergence in valuation multiples through the year, with China and Hong Kong in particular seeing significant de-rating. The Chinese economy's sluggish recovery from zero-Covid restrictions has disappointed many investors, with consumer confidence still extremely weak and the property market yet to find a floor. The Hong Kong market has also suffered not only from the deepening negative consensus views on China, with many stocks there held by foreign investors as proxies for mainland growth, but also the high

6

Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc

level of interest rates, which are in effect set by the Federal Reserve due to Hong Kong's currency board system being fully backed by US dollar assets. These interest rates have been wholly inappropriate for Hong Kong at this stage of the cycle given the downdraft to growth coming from the Chinese mainland.

Geopolitics has been another concern overhanging the region, with tensions around US-China relations, Taiwan, Ukraine and most recently the Middle East all contributing to investor caution. Positively, despite having the potential to escalate cross-strait tensions, the recent Taiwanese election passed off uneventfully with a result which was broadly in line with expectations. Indonesia also saw a relatively positive outcome with the Presidential race won by the continuity candidate Prabowo, who had been endorsed by incumbent Jokowi, without the need for a runoff which we believe would have resulted in increased uncertainty during this year. Indian elections are still to come in Asia, and then, of course, we have the US elections later in the year. We believe there remains the potential for heightened market volatility around these events particularly as the US elections approach, where rhetoric on China is likely to heat up once again after a more restrained period recently. This can already be seen by a number of bills and policies that are aimed at restricting Chinese growth and influence.

Nevertheless, we believe there are some reasons to be a little more optimistic on the outlook for the Chinese market this year. Most obviously, consensus expectations are now very low, compared to the post-reopening euphoria seen in the market at the start of 2023, and this is reflected in lower valuations than a year ago. There is clearly therefore scope for better market performance, should growth surprise on the upside. Although sentiment around the property market remains very poor, activity in that industry is already subdued, and consumer confidence is again at extremely depressed levels. That is not to say that there cannot be further deterioration, of course, but a large degree of pessimism has already been priced in at this point. Given our underweight to China, we continue to look for higher-quality stocks that have sold off to levels which look attractive on a long-term view. However, the reality is that it has been hard for us to find new names and many concerns remain when it comes to investing in the Chinese market - poor capital allocation, structurally lower nominal growth, unpredictable regulatory and policy shifts, high debt levels - and we remain significantly underweight the market.

We retain our preference for Hong Kong, where valuations are generally lower and shareholder returns more of a focus for management teams. Our holdings here, in aggregate, also have relatively low exposure to the domestic Hong Kong economy, with several being companies which are more globally or regionally facing. From a local Hong Kong perspective, although visitor numbers have picked up significantly since the borders re-opened, the currency board has meant that interest rates have followed the path of US rates which has depressed activity. If US rates do start to ease, the corollary for Hong Kong is expected to be that monetary conditions are likely to also improve which should be positive for the market.

India remains a bright spot in the region in terms of growth and optimism among investors, but this has increasingly been reflected in share prices, with the market now looking outright expensive on most metrics. In the South-East Asian region, we are most exposed to Singapore, which is benefiting from its increasing status as

a regional wealth management hub, as well as the growth of its ASEAN neighbours. We have also increased direct exposure to some of the smaller ASEAN markets, such as Thailand and the Philippines.

As noted above, the last 18 months or so have been tough for many Asian exporters, with excess inventories piling up in a variety of sectors whether in bicycles, textiles, power tools or semiconductors, to name a few. Of course, the demand outlook for Asian exports in 2024 remains uncertain, but the supply-side response of manufacturers, which is more under their control (i.e. cutting capital expenditure and production), has led to encouraging progress on destocking across many areas. Should expectations of a US "soft landing" come to pass, that would likely be positive for Asian goods exports, which historically has been supportive of Asian markets.

Market weights - Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc vs. MSCI AC Asia ex Japan Index

Taiwan

20.1

15.3

20.5

India

18.2

18.1

20.6

China

16.4

19.1

29.2

Hong Kong

12.0

13.0

4.9

Korea

11.6

11.7

14.9

Singapore

8.1

8.7

3.6

Thailand

3.2

2.0

1.8

Vietnam

3.0

3.2

-

Indonesia

2.8

2.8

2.2

Australia

2.6

3.4

-

Philippines

2.3

1.8

0.7

Malaysia

-

-

1.6

Other*

2.8

3.0

-

Net cash**

(3.1)

(2.1)

-

Total

100.0

100.0

100.0

Source: Schroders, MSCI, 31 March 2024.

* UK, Italy and other net liabilities.

** Cash less borrowings used for investment purposes.

We remain overweight in IT, which was the best performing sector in 2023 as valuations moved higher on the back of normalising inventories, as well as the impact of AI on industry growth rates. Despite this, we view our holdings as still trading at relatively attractive valuations given the long-term growth outlook for the sector.

We also remain overweight to financials - a diverse sector spanning not only banks, but also insurers and exchange companies. The banks we own are generally well-capitalised with strong deposit franchises. Many of our holdings are in more mature markets, such as Singapore, which in general trade at attractive valuations and decent dividend yields, but also have exposure to their faster growing hinterland. Direct exposure to faster growing markets, where credit penetration is relatively low, includes Indonesia and India. We are also slightly overweight real estate and health care. The latter includes hospitals in markets such as India and Thailand

Introduction

Interim Management Report

Financial

Other Information

Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc

7

Investment Manager's Review

continued

where medical provision and penetration remains low by regional standards.

Korea has recently benefited from an expectation that we might see an improvement in shareholder returns, similar to that which has been seen in Japan over the last few years. Korea has always looked cheap versus the region, and this in part has been due to perceived poor corporate governance and low shareholder returns. The government's 'Corporate value up' programme is meant to improve that, and companies that could benefit from that have performed better. We have limited exposure to this area, but have increased exposure through a holding in automaker Kia.

Turning to the wider region, earnings growth has faced ongoing pressures in recent periods, as has been seen in earnings revisions trends, particularly in some of the more cyclical areas (areas where earnings follow the cycles of the economy) such as amongst the energy and resource names. This year, if consensus earnings are anything to go by, we believe earnings growth should recover which should be a positive, albeit we would caution that there is risk to these earnings numbers.

Overall, aggregate valuations for the region are now trading at around long-term averages. However, this masks a large variation across individual markets where Singapore, China and Hong Kong,

amongst others, look relatively cheap versus history, and India relatively expensive. Historically, easing global interest rates and a weaker US dollar have been positive for Asia given the knock-on impact to domestic monetary conditions. Therefore, if rates do start to fall later this year, and it should be said that recent expectations have seen the timings for cuts shift further out, we believe it could be a potential catalyst for the markets given where starting valuations are.

So, in conclusion, although uncertainties remain around China's outlook, the region's inexpensive aggregate valuations, alongside potentially easing global interest rates, a weaker US dollar and a potentially recovering goods export cycle does set up a more constructive backdrop for Asian markets in 2024, barring a global hard landing, or a more extreme geopolitical risk event.

Schroder Investment Management Limited

20 May 2024

Past performance is not a guide to future performance and may not be repeated. The value of investments and the income from them may go down as well as up and investors may not get back the amounts originally invested. This information is not an offer, solicitation or recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument or to adopt any investment strategy.

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Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc

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Schroder AsiaPacific Fund plc published this content on 21 May 2024 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 21 May 2024 12:43:06 UTC.