What’s a collective investment scheme?

Learn what's a collective investment scheme

A collective investment scheme is a fancy legal name for any investment fund that involves multiple people pooling their money together and investing in assets.

In the UK, this could include mutual funds, investment trusts or an open-ended investment company.

Collective investment schemes benefit from economies of scale. A larger pool of money invested has the potential to provide greater returns. It can also mean that transactions and other pieces of bureaucracy incur lower costs.

More terms

Profit and Loss Statement (P&L)

A statement that summarises firm's expenses, costs, and revenues incurred during a time period. AKA income statement.
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Retail Prices Index (RPI)

An index published each month by the Office for National Statistics, which measures the level of retail prices in the UK. Cash flows on all index-linked gilts are linked to the RPI.
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Net Asset Value (NAV)

The value of a company's assets relative to the number of shares it has.
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Income statement

A summary of a company's income and expenses over a set period of time.
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Accrued interest

The interest earned on a gilt since the last dividend date. When buying a gilt, the buyer pays the accrued interest at the time of a transaction to the seller in addition to the clean price of the gilt
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Bed & ISA

Understand what Bed and ISA is and how it works
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Stock Exchange

A physical/digital place where stockbrokers and traders can buy and sell securities.
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NYSE

The world's largest stock exchange. Wall St HQ.
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Yield

Income from an investment as a percentage of its current price.
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