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

Venture Capital

A type of financing that investors provide to startups, who sometimes announce getting said financing in TechCrunch, to big fanfare.
Read more

Bull market

We explain what a 'bull market' means
Read more

Bond

Learn what a bond is
Read more

NASDAQ

A US stock exchange specialising in the shares of technology companies.
Read more

Synthetic ETFs

An ETF that that reproduces the return of an index through the use of swaps.
Read more

Earnings per share

We look at what earnings per share mean and how to calculate it
Read more

Income statement

A summary of a company's income and expenses over a set period of time.
Read more

Maturity value

What's the maturity value of a bond?
Read more

Account balance

The amount of money a user has stored in a financial repository.
Read more

You’re just minutes away from commission-free investing

When you invest, your capital is at risk