Morning, everyone. Thank you for joining. I know it's a big day today out there in the press, what's going on in the U.S. at the moment, but thanks for joining. Really appreciate it. A couple of things first. Chris is here as well, just for you guys in the audience here. But when it comes to Q&A, Chris will obviously be helping with those questions to answer as well. And I want to say to Grant and his finance team, well done for getting the accounts out on time. It's not early. We're definitely improving there, so please take a big tick on that because I'm sleeping better at night on the back of the fact that the accounts are coming out on time. This, you all know, the introduction of us, myself, and Grant. You know what we do.
Proud today that we've got, as I said earlier, the accounts out on time and the fact that we deliver what we said we'll do so far. And being quite positive about the business and the outlook of the markets, etc. Just to go through some of the highlights here, and I'll sort of elaborate a bit more on that as well. With the revenue and the profitability compared to last year, you can see that our diversification story and how we've built the business into more of a resilient way, especially by building that securities business, which is thanks to Chris a lot there. And allowing to, even when the market's moving up and down, we can take advantage of all those market movements by having those securities businesses. The underlying operating profit you can see is up from comparable to the same time last year.
We've improved the revenue line as well. The net cash is slightly up there. Grant will obviously explain a bit more on that later on down the line. The revenue per head, you can see the figures here from 81-227 on the basis from first half last year to this year. But the most important thing is that we were mentioning we were looking at the stats, that the voyages are obviously longer, which means the revenue is slightly up, but the number of fixes is slightly down. That's a lot to world trade, etc. So just making sure you realize that where it becomes a negative on one aspect as far as deals being done, it becomes a positive on the side of the fact that the revenue slightly goes up on the longer voyages.
And obviously, with the Red Sea being a key indicator on that as well and what's going on in the world today, these are all positive aspects for shipping as it is. Now, this is a key factor as well, the forward order book. Another point that Grant was mentioning, what's dropping into the second half of the year, which is obviously very positive. And I can safely say that forward order books increase again where we are today comparable to the end of August. So that's good news. And once again, obviously, we've been saying our progressive dividend, we maintain that. That is just one thing we're saying as well. So Grant, if you can move across, that'd be great.
Now, just sort of obviously highlighting the fact that the management team in place now since four years in January since I've took the chair, we had a strategy there, and it was very key that we were going to focus on shipbroking and any business that complemented shipbroking. We didn't want to see it. The pieces I didn't understand, I didn't want to do. I think by staying on this business and reducing the debt and concentrating on businesses, you can see that those new businesses we've acquired, plus additional talent and desk we've brought in, have enhanced the revenue compared to where we were four years ago. Obviously, since, as you can see, shipping is in the press a lot, and the whether could have been dire, but it's been tough to come off this year.
The container market went back up again on the back of the Red Sea. We were always being so diversified in all the markets and all the segments. We're taking advantage of those sectors, which is obviously creating our revenue line and protecting our resilience within the business. That's one key factor I want to emphasize to everyone here that we've made the business more resilient by covering all those markets. Now, even entering things like into the container chartering space, that desk has gone from literally nothing in the last three or four years to really outperforming. And then obviously, as I said, we've increased in the scale. One more office opens up in the last 12 months in Korea.
We're building those offices up, and I think you see we have a few more focuses on in the headcount going forward, which we will do, in addition to potentially any M&A deals which we discuss as well. But be careful, we'll Be sure that we won't be going into those M&A deals. We're totally sure it complements the business. There are quite a few things coming across our desk that we just push to one side because there's a massive overlap, or we don't see how we can enhance the bottom line of the business, and don't worry about Grant here. He definitely protects me on that and making sure we don't do that, and obviously, the dividend's obviously a key factor here. We're obviously promoting that from where we were three or four years ago. All right, thank you. Grant, you take over there.
Thanks, James. So if we start with the income statement, revenue at GBP 76 million was 1% ahead of the previous period. Investment advisory performed well. That was up 19% to GBP 14.8 million, driven by strong performance from our sale and purchase desk. Risk advisory, our securities business, continued its growth trajectory up 16% to GBP 11.5 million, and that was really driven by our dry FFA desk, forward freight agreements, and natural gas desks. Offsetting this, chartering was 5% lower, primarily due to lower performance in tankers, although the acquisitions that we made in FY 2022 continued to perform well. Operating costs were up just 1%, and we can see the operational leverage coming through with underlying operating profit before acquisition-related items up 5% to GBP 7.9 million.
With a lower level of exceptional items in this period, statutory profit before tax at GBP 3.6 million is 1.7 million, or 89% above the same period last year. Underlying earnings per share at 14.55 pence is 2.88 pence lower than the prior period, and that's because of a higher tax charge in these six months compared to last year. And in line with our progressive dividend policy, as James mentioned, interim dividend 4.50 pence, up from 4 pence last year. As we saw in the FY 2024 full year results, the strategy of diversifying across shipbroking and securities is building a more diversified business, which is delivering sustainable revenue and profits. For the first half, the revenue mix has remained well balanced, and geographically, we can see that we've broadly maintained the mix that we saw last year.
On this particular slide, we can see the benefits of that has grown by 1% to GBP 76 million from last year, but with a very different mix. We saw weaker chartering performance, as I said, primarily driven by tankers, where we've seen, as James already mentioned, an increasing average commission but lower fixture numbers. And that resulted in a 5% decrease in those revenues overall. But that was offset by an improved performance in investment advisory. Sale and purchase revenues grew by 25%, and that was driven by increased activity across all areas, secondhand and new builds, while corporate finance remained subdued in the first half, although there are a number of mandates that we expect to complete in the second half. Risk advisory continues to grow, up 16% from the prior period, and now contributing 15% of overall group revenues at GBP 11.5 million.
That's double the revenues that the securities business achieved in the first half of 2022. Since the strategy was implemented to focus on ship broking and securities in FY 2022, revenues have increased from GBP 47.4 million- GBP 76 million this half, and that's an increase of 60% since the strategy was introduced. As I've said, operating costs remain well controlled, up just 1% from the prior period. Overall staff costs are up 2% as we continue to invest in headcount. Travel and entertaining is lower in this period, whilst professional fees are up GBP 0.3 million, and that's as we expected as we work with our advisors to establish our organized trading facilities in Europe and the UK, which will complement our securities business going forward.
Moving on to liquidity, the group has maintained a positive cash position, slightly up on the previous year, with overall borrowings reduced by GBP 3.2 million from the previous period. Finally, on KPIs, as I said, revenue up 1% to GBP 76 million. Revenue per head continues to be strong, GBP 181,000, but in U.S. dollars, that's $227,000 and it was $228,000 last year, so broadly unchanged. Operating profit before acquisition-related items, GBP 7.9 million, up 5% from the previous period. And we've improved operating profit margin slightly. It's 10.5% against 10.1% in the first six months of last year. As James has mentioned, the forward order book remains strong. At the end of August, it was $80.9 million, up 20% from a year earlier. This goes out to 2039 and is broadly split 50/50 between S&P and chartering.
Importantly, $28 million of that forward order book is going to land in the second half of this year. Positive cash maintained, borrowings reduced, and interim dividend of GBP 4.50. I will now pass back to James.
Thanks, Grant. Now, obviously, the market rates going forward, we're for sure, Braemar's still very bullish about the outlook going forward next, and I'd say that next five years. It just feels like the results going in the geopolitical situation, plus, as you can see on the newbuilding order book, you can see where it was and where it is today. Yards are still filled to probably late 2027. And the mix, I believe, the mix from 2008, the super cycle then, compared to where it is now, it's more diverse. It seems more equilibrium between the various different fleets. So we're not seeing one necessarily one fleet overbuilding, so we can feel that the rates will sustain. And we know the fact in the long-term time charter book and the futures market, which obviously we involve in all those markets, is very positive going forward.
So now, we're going to get some ups and downs, but that creates volatility within the markets, which we have other markets which we can lean back onto. So as I say, as I keep saying in the first message, was that being diversified allows us to be far more resilient in what we're trying to achieve. But as far as the new building order book is in our favor, we will start to see some removal from that fleet as it starts moving from it was what you would call we used to talk about 15 years of age. That was what we used to say some 10 years ago, but it feels it's moved to more 20. But as you can see, the fleet is aging and aging nearer that 20-year mark. So you'll have to start seeing some.
And within the Western Hemisphere, it's really more age-restrictive in the Western Hemisphere compared to the East, but even that, we see a case of moving away. So we will start to see some recycling within the market in the next couple of years, which, by the way, we have a very strong recycling department as well. So we're on top of that sector as well. Now, if we go into Braemar Index, you can see where we were and the situation when obviously, sadly, when Ukraine was invaded by Russia, so markets took off everywhere, but we've come back, but still above where we average were in the last three or four years. So we still believe the outlook is very strong from where we are and what we're seeing and where our analysts are looking at the market. So yes, if you can move forward, please, Grant.
Now, look, from us, I think from where we're sitting here, I think you can say we're pleased with the results, where we are, and we feel confident for the whole year. It's a good revenue, and as I said before, the way the business is structured now, we create net resilience, and the diversification story is definitely working for us, and we will continue to build that. We have that platform to build on all those various desks across the globe to increase the profitabilities. I mentioned that the average commissions are up for setting by weaker fixed numbers, but I said earlier the fact that those are longer voyages, so revenue is higher per voyage as opposed to, but fixed numbers are down because they're less short voyages, maintaining that cash position. We've obviously been emphasizing our progressive dividend, which we will maintain, so it's up from 4.5%.
It's up 13%. I've discussed about the outlook of shipping. We feel confident about that and positive on that business. We feel we're well. Braemar's a great brand within the shipping industry, and on top of that, we've definitely put ourselves on the front foot as far as our desks across the globe and being involved in all those markets. And I can assure you that those desks talk to each other all day long to enhance more deals in the back of that information, so it's critical, and on top of that, the fact is that the business is becoming more compliant. I can say that. We're not quite regulated shipbroking, but we have regulated sides of our business.
So, for a public company being held in that side of having that regulation and compliant and being a public, as I said, being a public company, it's important, and that's why we're seeing consolidation. Because the smaller shops are finding it more difficult to maintain or use as far as adding extra costs into their own business is becoming expensive. So, you're seeing a shift from smaller shops into the bigger shops. That's why we feel that, as I said earlier, it's about Grant's. So, we're being very careful what we pick. We're not going to suddenly come out there and start doing deals. We're very careful. But what we have proven is the fact that deals we have done have been massively enhancing to our bottom line and our revenue stream from where we were in the last four years. Strong forward order book. Grant mentioned that.
As I said, we're up again in the last month, so that's a positive thing. Obviously, it's nice to come out as a business: a shipbroking business, where you come out on day one of a new financial year, knowing you've got a large amount of money coming into the book. That doesn't happen in many businesses there. So that gives us a lot of confidence we can start the year with a lot of money coming in. As I said, all the deals we've done have been complementary and enhancing. So we've talked about that. And I think, as you said in our paper today, we're obviously in line with where our numbers are. So as far as that, we're feeling quite confident. All right? But thank you very much.
Obviously, there'll be some questions, I'm sure, and Chris will be in for those questions as well. So please shoot ahead.
Robin Byde from Zeus Capital. Thanks, guys. Three, please. Just on fleet age, can you talk a bit about the implication of energy transition and how you see that playing out? Secondly, just on the forward order book, you said, I think, 50/50 chartering and S&P. Can you just give us a bit more color by segments? I mean, how tankers heavy is that, for example? Apologies. Number three, revenue per head. Again, can you give a bit more color on the split by division? So who's doing better? Who's doing not so well? Thank you.
Shall I start the first one with the question about the alternative fuels? That's a question that if you talk to the average shipowner who's probably run his business on the back of older ships and looking basically for return on his ships, he won't necessarily be bought into the fact that he wants to go down the alternative fuel because there's a serious impact of cost, and at the moment, we're not necessarily seeing the day-to-day chartering, for example, paying that additional cost for a ship that's running on methanol or LNG, for example, so now, unless the market swings where LNG becomes cheaper than low sulfur fuel, for example, it's only going to be a case of the chartering will take the best ship in the best position for whatever it takes, so that hasn't totally gone into it.
But obviously, with the EUA situation, that's starting to lean, and they're starting to put pressure on these shipowners to sort of take in or be ordering that next generation ship. But we're not seeing any singular, and I must say that, we're seeing any dual fuel ships being ordered. We're not seeing a singular, like a singular LNG fuel ship or a singular methanol ship. So that hasn't quite moved across yet. But of course, the pressure on is still out there. And you're seeing in container space more, yes, because the movement of goods, for example, like maybe Amazon or IKEA or Nike, are saying they want their ships, their goods move net zero. And that creates it. But we're not seeing it necessarily on the main day-to-day chartering, where they're insisting on they're moving freight at the best cheapest price, and that's how it's moved across.
I think I'll just add a little bit to that in what James is saying, that you're definitely seeing a shift, as he said, in the container market, that some of the big operators like Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd are already committing on LNG, methanol, and ammonia fueled carriers, whether they're in service now or new build orders that they're placing. Certainly, some of the larger owners in tankers are making those commitments as well on dual fuel ships. I think it's all kind of adding up to the same fact that we have right now, is that because they're not making those commitments and because we have this slow delivery time, that you're seeing an already existing fleet age even further, and that transition hasn't happened yet. It's just creating a pinch point at some point in the future.
So just to come back on that, do you think Maersk ordering the fleet of methanol container ships, is that a pull through from their customers?
Correct. That's what I'm saying. That's what we want. That's the difference we're seeing, like in that the container space is ahead of the curve as far as the tanker space, for example, the dry bulk space, because the customers aren't insisting on it. They're looking for the cheapest freight. That's a fact. There's no point doing that. And so if someone's going to have a disadvantage, for example, on the vessels, as seen, there's been $20 million extra on having a dual fuel, but Exxon company won't pay more. Where is it coming through? Apart from this LNG stuff becoming more of a competitive fuel, which then you're hedging on the back of where LNG is as a price factor for bunkers as opposed to as HSFO with a scrubber or low sulfur fuel on your own. Does that make sense?
Good. So I'll take the point on the forward order book. So if you think about the forward order book split, if you look in the appendices on slide 20, you'll see a split between chartering and S&P. So we don't disclose it specifically by chartering desk. But broadly, if you look at how chartering splits down from a revenue percentage, you could broadly apply that to the forward order book, and you get a very similar split by desk. In terms of revenue per head, obviously, it moves around. And if you think our chartering division is by far the largest, about 250 people in a chartering division, about 50 in S&P. So S&P is fewer, but bigger ticket items. So you'll see that revenue per head is stronger in S&P in this period and slightly weaker in chartering.
The securities business, the revenue per head has continued to grow as that business becomes more and more successful. So I'd say securities and S&P are broadly similar. Chartering a little bit lower, as we've seen some jump off in some of the rates in this period, but they all mix around. So it runs up, runs down, but that's the benefits of the diversification within the business.
So is the average for securities per head higher than the group average?
Yes.
For example.
Yes.
As per plot?
Yes. Exactly.
Good morning. Caroline Gulliver from Equity Development. You've got a very helpful slide here on the growth opportunities on, I think it's page 21. And you've talked about being very selective in potential M&A opportunities. And I just wondered if you could talk a bit more about financial criteria or what specifically you're looking at with regards to acquisition opportunities?
I think I'll start on that one. First of all, I'm obviously looking to Grant to take over some of that question, but for me, it's about making sure that we don't see an overlap. When we at Braemar take a lot of that experience, for example, from when we did the Braemar ACM merger. Now, there was a lot of overlap, which created a lot of problems. And on top of that, there was, I would say, different culture. And let's not be too harsh. There was different culture in Braemar and ACM. ACM was a very aggressive shop. And I'm not saying Braemar wasn't either in that respect, but still, there was too much overlap, which created a lot of wastage.
So we take that lesson out of that, and we say, "Right, we need to look at M&A deals that potentially enhance with not so much overlap." So that makes it slightly easier to sort of segment out. We're not going to go buy a business that can waste half of it down the road. We're going to buy a business where we can save costs on, obviously, offices because we might be in the same geolocation, etc., and making sure we can support with the backups with what we're doing, backup staff, support staff, and making sure that the business, the revenue makers coming in are complementing our present revenue makers. Those are the key things for us. I think I've made it very clear, and I believe, and I'm pretty sure the clients will say the same thing, that the business is consolidating more and more.
So because of the many reasons I've talked about, compliance, other aspects as well, and the clients actually wanting now to be able to have a company that can service on every sector. They don't want one over here or one over there. There's boutique shop days from the 1990s. It's moved on a lot then. So what we're saying is that the business we targeted, for example, whether that be in Madrid or the U.S. or building our securities business, they were targeted M&A deals, which we obviously self-funded with our own debt and financing. And they have enhanced. So now we can sit and say, "You know what? We've done those ourselves. We've proven that's added to the bottom line and to our revenue." And I can safely say those businesses enhanced their own earnings.
I mean, the stats probably enhanced by 30% on the back of having larger group information and able to break into new markets they couldn't do because they didn't have the information. So out of that, we take that. And that's why the next, if we ever come to another market to do deals, big M&A deals, we'll be focusing on deals that definitely complement business. That's it.
Yeah. I mean, I'll just add a couple of bits to that. So you can see here, you look at these pie charts, there's lots of opportunities there. So first of all, does it start to fill in one of those gaps? Those changes, is it complementary? Is there limited overlap? Are we confident that one plus one is going to equal three? And importantly, given the platform that we've built within the business from an infrastructure standpoint, can we bring that business on board, make it more efficient, improve the margin? And of course, that will drive operational leverage in the business going forward.
I think I'll just add to that that for what we've done so far, once we've established a footprint in something, whether it's a product or a geography, we see the natural effect of the business growing once it's there. A good example of that is obviously in the states with the Southport acquisition, that essentially we were buying a tanker operation in North America, but we're moving that product now that we're shortly opening an office in Connecticut. We've already got a presence on the West Coast now. It has just sort of, once the footprint's there, it's very easy to expand it. The same thing with, obviously, securities in that we initially started with Dry FFA desk, Gold desk, moving into natural gas. We've got interest in moving to other products here.
Within Europe, part of that seems going to move to Madrid when we get the OTF license now that we have the office in Madrid. Likewise with Korea. Korea was opened as an extension of our S&P and new build business, but at the same time, we've got a container team in there now. So it's complementing things once you have that footprint. It's not easy, but it's easier.
Thank you. Very comprehensive. Just one follow-up question. Well, not follow-up, but just a different question. Working capital has moved around quite a bit over the last couple of years. Do you have an outlook for the second half on working capital?
Probably. I think it has moved around a bit. From a working capital perspective, you see that through the cycle is that you build up surplus working capital, pay bonuses at the interim, build it up, pay bonuses in the second half of the year. So it has moved around a little bit, but I think it will be more normalized going forward.
Damian Brewer, Canaccord. Two questions, please. First of all, could you expand a bit more on what your customers are telling you about why they're ordering so far ahead and effectively what is expanding the forward order book? What's driving them to commit earlier for longer? I could put it that way.
First answer is really they have no choice when it comes to the date the ship will deliver because the yard capacity was cut by 20% after 2008 crash, 2009 crash. The fact is it's about ability to build a ship, and that's where, yes, you're given berth space and there's nothing earlier. You can't really get around that. They believe in the markets. Obviously, there's still one big driving factor on the newbuild sector is the fact that the yards are looking for the highest return on what ship to build. For example, like a large container ship, like a 24,000 TEU or LNG carriers at high probability, the LNG market is probably but they're ordering for forward because of what's coming on stream down the line.
That's where their belief in the forward market is huge, not necessarily the prop market, as you may know. The LNG market is quite weak. The forward projection and what's holding the second-hand prices and the new building prices up is about the belief. What's going to come? The Mozambique projects, all these various big LNG projects. I guess that's the main reason for where the deliveries are.
Thank you.
Does that make sense?
Yep. Absolutely. And then second question. The RCF is now, I think, extended through to November 27. You're generating cash now. The one-off items potentially start to reduce over the next two years quite considerably, so that cash generation could accelerate sharply. You've lifted the dividend. How broadly, without going into any particular metrics, do you think about the way you're going to allocate the cash you're going to generate in future? Because you've got dividend, investment in people, expansion, maybe enhancing M&A. There's lots of opportunities there. Where's the board? How do you think about that as you balance all that out?
We're a bit few sometimes, to be honest. I'm obviously very much about the growth of the business. I think it's important to grow the business, and there's opportunities and there's timing factors. I think, as far as I'm concerned, we've maintained that we're talking about a progressive dividend, which is we understand what progressive means, but for us, it's about filling those spaces in that growth chart, and that's a key factor, and I think we've proved that that's important for us. Yeah, growth is happening, but.
Yeah. I think the way we look at it is we want to continue to improve the RCF.
Yes. Well, what that gives us.
The buying power, if we want to increase our debt profile to make acquisitions, as we should see it in terms of.
We sort of run a 50% maximum EBITDA in terms of the overall net to be paid bonuses, and that's been improving over time. But there is headroom there for us to go and do it. So it's really initially, let's reduce the RCF as we go forward and give ourselves the firepower then to make investments in people or M&A whilst maintaining that progressive dividend policy as well.
I mean, just to add to that, I think we put a graph up here. Look where the business was four years ago, where the debt was. I'm not going to try to sort of be negative on the past. I think it's all on my chairman. Don't look back, but you had to deal with what the cards you had laid. And for me, at the time, was like, "I don't like debt personally. I don't like debt in the business. Let's just get rid of debt and sell those businesses with non-core, reduce the debt, put yourself in a better position, and grow the business." And I think we've proved that. The strategy has been correct from what we've done there. And it's also important to, I believe, to run a business you understand.
To be involved in business we don't necessarily understand, it's just made no sense personally to me.
Thank you.
Morning. James Fletcher from Berenberg. Just on S&P, can you give a bit more color on the second-hand market? You had a nice graph on the new build. I was just wondering the relative buoyancy of the second-hand market.
Yeah. I mean, anytime it goes a little bit quiet is where markets either come off and people are believing that the prices are going to come lower. There's also an entrance point. But because there's so many different sectors and the rates are of different markets are moving different times, it could be one month we're focusing on tankers, next month we're focusing on dry cargo or containers or LPG. So the reality is we're still doing our numbers on the second-hand. Of course, we are, but it can move around. But the good thing is I think you can see from the businesses the fact that probably over the last 12 months, there's been a lot of focus on the newbuilding because there was a real demand at the yards. So the brokers will obviously concentrate on what.
Sometimes for them, it's concentrating on the forward order book deals as opposed to the second-handers. The second-handers aren't there so much. But the reality is they just honestly, the guys are buying. Sometimes the brokers are selling deals, ships on the back of what they're seeing on the spot market or on the futures market. They actually can see that. The owner will come in and say, "Buy that MR2 tanker," for example, because I can see the forward curve moving on futures in that company. And the spot desk is saying it's going up. On the time charter, it's going up. So they all interlink on one floor, and they need that information to make sure it correlates because it does self-feed itself on deals. So as I say, it's all timing aspects.
Brilliant. Thank you.
Morning. Andy Murphy at Edison. Just a question. Just wondering about all the sort of geopolitical issues that were mentioned in the statement. If the world was to normalize back to a world where there aren't any sort of diversions and wars and that sort of thing.
I knew that I'd see that.
Yeah. Okay. I'll cancel that question then. I was wondering what impact on revenues and profits a normalized market would look like.
I think if you go back to the fleet summary. So if your question is correct, if we start to go back and Trump resolves the world and everything goes back to a bit of a situation of normality because he claims he can do that, then this aging fleet will then start moving straight away. It was just that the old fleets would have to go to the beach, as we would call it, and be recycled. Then you'll see the fleets start becoming an equilibrium which will maintain that level. So I think the reasons why these older ships are sailing around the world today is because the market's so strong, and that's because they're making so much profit on these older units.
But once those profits come if we set example, then the rates were to come down, we'd see the fleet start to diminish. Then we start to see it go back up again because we have a shrinkage of fleet and where the world trade is. The world trade pattern, for example, has changed hugely in the last 30 years. I mean, we used to see oil going into the US Gulf, and now see oil coming out of the US Gulf. So it's the pattern going into China or going from Brazil. I mean, all these trade patterns have changed so hugely. It's just allowed that the freight rates have become picking up. And of course, at the same time, the asset values on new buildings are more. So it's obviously going to create the higher return. They need a higher return to run these ships.
So I don't think we're going to see normality slowly either. Not in my lifetime, but I understand the question you're asking for, but that's probably the answer I can think of.
Thank you.
Hi. Rob Sanders. Just your people business, what's the first half been like in terms of recruitment, attrition, and especially rainmakers?
I can answer both. It's obviously a competitive business. I'm going to be sure of that. It's been more competitive in the last five, 10 years. It's shifted from more in the arena as far as the focus. We're obviously going to, as you say, it's a people's business. There's going to be a turnover of staff. It's a low percentage compared to the size of the business, very low. At the same time, look, what I can say is that how I view it is there's a shelf life in certain people. They'll either move on. Also, I want to emphasize the fact that we are a public company, very exceptionally compliant in how we run a business. That doesn't always necessarily run well with everyone in the business around the globe.
But at the same time, if someone wants to leave the company, for whatever reason it was, it's quite interesting how we fill that space because of that personality. So it's an evolving business, and we feel that we're able to attract because of the brand. And yeah, I think there's no one bigger than the company, including myself.
Yeah, I'll add. I mean, we've lost some people go to owners, and so in many ways, you keep getting the revenue and then move to an owner. Some do go to competing houses.
Trading houses or companies.
Yes. But importantly, what we're talking about is building that scale within the business. So as we continue to grow, you can withstand any attrition that you get across the business. And that's an important part of our growth strategy to continue on that.
It's quite interesting just to add to that point, on our Wet Freight desk , which is undoubtedly one of the strongest desks, is the strongest desk in the world. We're probably up 45% of the market share. Most of the head traders that are out there are all ex- our desk. So we lose one, and we get business back because of who they are. So it's just one example of that. So we can be a training ground sometimes, undoubtedly. I was a training ground at Clarkson. But you do see that people move on. But the most important thing is the headcount's up, and we're growing our business, and we obviously move into new sectors.