Please see below a list of terms and definitions which investors may find useful. If you have found any terms in our material that are not listed below and/or that you do not understand, please contact us.
Absolute return
Absolute return investing aims to produce a profit over time regardless of what the market does. Even when markets are falling, an absolute return fund can still make money, although this is never guaranteed.
Accumulation share/unit
Funds are divided into portions called shares or units. In accumulation shares/units, the income earned by the fund is paid back periodically into the fund and reflected by an increase in the value of each share/unit. An investor will still have to account to tax authorities for any such income reinvested.
Active management
Where the fund manager uses their expertise to pick investments to achieve the fund’s objectives.
Advanced/developed markets
Countries with relatively high levels of personal income and established economies
Annual management charge
An ongoing fee paid to the management company for managing the fund, usually charged as a percentage of the investment.
Asset allocation
Dividing the money invested in the fund across different investments (‘assets’), e.g. in different types of investments, various geographic areas or by industry sectors such as oil and gas or financial companies.
Bear market
A prolonged period of falling prices, usually measured as a fall in asset prices of greater than 20%.
Benchmark
An index of investments used for performance comparison purposes
Bond
A loan, usually to a company or government, that pays interest.
Bottom-up
An investment approach that focuses on analysing individual shares rather than stock markets or sectors.
Bull market
A prolonged period of rising prices, usually measured as a rise in asset prices of greater than 20%.
Capital growth
An increase in the value invested over time.
Capital markets
Markets that raise money from those who want to invest and make those funds available to businesses or governments.
Cash equivalents
Non-cash assets that can be quickly sold and easily converted to cash
Collective investment vehicles
Are investments in which investors pool money with that of other investors and are managed by fund managers who select the assets such as shares, bonds, property shares, cash instruments or physical property
Contracts for difference
Contracts for difference (CFDs) are a type of financial derivative that allow traders to take a view on the price movement of various markets and various securities without owning the underlying asset. Instead of buying and selling the actual asset, investors enter into an agreement to exchange the difference in price of the asset from when the position is opened to when it is closed.
Currency exposure
The potential for a fund that invests overseas to lose or gain money purely because of changes in the currency exchange rate.
Difficult Markets
Difficult markets could refer to a number of different circumstances when the ACD has a high conviction that markets are expensive or when higher volatility is anticipated. This could include (but is not limited to) markets resulting from or anticipating, extreme events (for example, the 2008 global financial crisis).
Dilution levy/dilution adjustment
An amount you pay to cover the dealing costs incurred by the fund when it buys or sells investments as a result of you buying or selling shares/units in the fund. It is normally only charged when the costs could materially impact the other investors and is used to protect investors and fund performance.
Derivatives
Investments whose value is linked to another investment, or to the performance of a stock, a group of stocks, a stock exchange or to some other variable factor, such as interest rates.
Diversification
Holding a variety of investments that typically perform differently from one another.
Economic Sectors
A sector that represents an area of the economy in which businesses have the same or similar activities, products or services
Emerging markets
Countries that are progressing toward becoming advanced, usually shown by some development in financial markets, the existence of some form of stock exchange and a regulatory body.
Equities
Company stock/shares.
Entry/Initial/Preliminary Charge
An up-front fee paid to the management company when you buy shares/units.
Fixed income
An investment where the borrower/issuer (i.e. who the investment is paid to) is obliged to make payments of a fixed amount on a fixed schedule. Bonds are an example of this type of investment.
Frontier markets
Countries that are more established than the least developed countries but still less established than emerging markets.
Futures
A future is a contract to buy or sell a stock at a pre-determined price on a specific date.
Growth
The increase in value of investments.
Growth Stock/style
Stocks that experience growth in earnings and revenue, they usually pay little or no income.
Hedging
Using investments as a way to counter or reduce risk. For example taking the opposite position in a related investment with the expectation that a fall in one will be offset by a rise in the other.
Income
Money paid out by an investment, such as interest from a bond or a dividend from a share.
Income share/unit
Funds are divided into portions called ‘shares’ or ‘units.’ In income shares/units, the income earned by the fund is paid out to investors.
Inflation
An increase in the price of goods and services over time. The government provides calculations that look at baskets of goods and services, and produces indices such as the UK’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Retail Price Index (RPI), which measure the aggregate changes in price of these baskets each month from which the annual rate of change can be derived.
Liquidity
The degree to which an asset can be quickly bought or sold on a market without affecting its price. For example: A Fund that holds investment which can be turned to cash in less than a week may be said to be highly liquid. A Fund that holds a high cash balance may be said to have a good degree of liquidity.
Market Capitalisation
The value of a company calculated by multiplying the number of shares by the latest share price.
Money market instruments
Investments usually issued by banks or governments that are a short term loan to the issuer by the buyer. The buyer receives interest and the return of the original amount at the end of a certain period.
Near cash
Non-cash assets that can be quickly sold and easily converted to cash
Net of fees
After all fees have been deducted.
Operating Charge/Ongoing Charges Figure (OCF)
A measure of what it costs to invest in a fund. It includes the fee paid to the management company and other operating costs.
Options
An options contract gives the right but not the obligation to buy or sell the assets at a specific price on a specific date, known as the expiry date.
Passive management
The fund manager aims to track the performance of a stock exchange index or another investment.
Peer Group
Groups of investments with similar styles or strategies. Used for performance comparison purposes.
Platform
An online service that allows you to buy and sell shares and funds and see your investments in one place.
Relative return
The profit or loss on an investment compared to how other investments have performed.
Return
The money made or lost on an investment.
Rolling period
A period of, say, three or five years, starting on any day three or five years ago.
Share
An equal portion representing part ownership of a company which can also apply to a fund. Sometimes called a ‘stock’.
Share class
A type of share representing part ownership of the fund that is different to other share classes for some reason, such as it pays out income rather than paying it back into the fund for reinvestment purposes, or is denominated in a different currency
Stock lending
Process whereby a fund manager lends a portfolio of investments to other parties who pay a fee for borrowing the assets.
Top-down
An investment approach that looks at the big picture first, e.g. the economy, then at the detail, like how individual shares are performing.
Transferable Securities
Investments that can be readily exchanged between two parties.
Unit
An equal portion representing part ownership of a unit trust fund (note: ‘Share’ has a similar meaning but for funds structured as corporate entities such as an open-ended investment company).
Value Stock/style
Stocks that are undervalued.
Volatility
The amount and frequency that an investment fluctuates in value.
Yield
The income from an investment, usually stated as a percentage of the value of the investment.