Going Concern
The nature of the Company’s business dictates that the outstanding Currency Securities may be redeemed
at any time by Authorised Participants and in certain circumstances by individual holders and also, in certain
circumstances, may be compulsorily redeemed by the Company. As the redemption of Currency Securities
will always coincide with the closing of an equal amount of Currency Transactions, liquidity risk is mitigated
through this process which is considered to minimize exposure to liquidity risk. All other expenses of the
Company are met by ManJer. The directors closely monitor the financial position and performance of
ManJer, its assets under management, and therefore its related revenue streams, in respect of fulfilling the
obligations under the services agreement. The net reported position on balance sheet, including in instances
where a deficit is reported, is not considered to impact the going concern position of the Company as this
position results solely due to the unrealised gains or losses on Currency Transactions and Currency
Securities due to the accounting measurement basis applied in accordance with IFRS. As Currency
Transactions are held to support Currency Securities, any deficit or surplus reported on unrealised positions
would be reversed on a subsequent redemption of the Currency Securities and the related cancellation of
Currency Transactions. A reported deficit is not considered indicative of any issues relating to solvency of
the Company and the directors are satisfied that any obligations arising in respect of the Currency Securities
can be managed in accordance with the terms of the applicable Prospectus. The directors consider the
operations of the Company to be ongoing, with a reasonable expectation that the Company has adequate
resources to continue in operational existence until 30 April 2024, and accordingly these financial statements
have been prepared on the going concern basis.
Corporate Social Responsibility
Sustainability and corporate responsibility are embedded throughout the business of the WisdomTree group
as we believe this benefits shareholders and employees of the WisdomTree group, investors in
WisdomTree’s products as well as wider society.
Environmental, Social and Governance (“ESG”) investing is guided at the WisdomTree Inc, group level by an
ESG Steering Committee, which includes senior leaders from across the WisdomTree Inc, group business,
and which included several sub-committees focused on particular ESG considerations, such as improving
data and transparency into the ESG attributes of WisdomTree’s products. Particular ESG considerations
relevant to the Company’s products are overseen by the directors, leveraging the work undertaken by the
ESG Steering Committee. More information on WisdomTree’s corporate social responsibility strategy can be
found on the WisdomTree website (https://www.wisdomtree.eu/en-gb/wisdomtree-corporate-responsibility).
The Board acknowledges that climate change and its impact on the global economy is of increasing interest
and focus for stakeholders and that, where relevant, stakeholders will seek information from companies
regarding how climate change is expected to impact the operations of the business and how climate change
risk has been considered in the context of reported results.
In acknowledging the above, the Board has considered the Company’s exposure to climate change and
determined that due to the nature of the Company and its operations there are no directly observed impacts
of climate change on the business. As a result, the Board concluded that there is no basis on which to
provide extended information of analysis relating to climate change, including as part of the basis of
accounting or individual accounting policies adopted by the Company.
In the above determination, the Board has concluded specifically that climate change, including physical and
transition risks, does not have a material impact on the recognition and separate measurement
considerations of the assets and liabilities in these financial statements as at 31 December 2022.
This conclusion is based on the fact that assets are reported at fair value under IFRS, are short dated, and
as set out in note 12 are categorised as level 2 due to the use of observable, verifiable inputs, including use
of third party information sources within the agreed pricing formulae (set out in the Prospectus). The
liabilities are valued utilising listed market prices at the period end. These observable inputs and market
prices will reflect wider market sentiment, which inherently includes market perspectives relating to the
impact of climate change.
The Board recognises that government and societal responses to climate change risks are still developing
and the future impact cannot be predicted. Future valuations of assets and liabilities may therefore differ as
the market responds to these changing impacts or assesses the impact of current requirements differently.