Investment Trusts

What is a Investment Trust?

Investment Trusts are "closed-ended" companies. This means that they issue a fixed number of shares at their launch, and then do not subsequently buy shares back or issue new shares, except in very rare cases.

Investment Trust shares trade on a stock exchange, like an ordinary equity share of a public company. Unless you buy in on the launch, any shares you purchase in an Investment Trust will be usually be bought over an exchange, at the prevailing market price.

So you are trading with other investors at a market price. Unlike with OEICs and Unit Trusts, you will pay commission to buy and sell Investment Trust shares, just as you would the shares of any publicly traded equity.

An Investment Trust´s market price should broadly reflect the value (NAV or Net Asset Value or simply put the value of the holdings divided by the number of the shares), but is ultimately based on the forces of supply and demand prevailing in the market for the trust's shares. Many Investment Trusts trade at discounts (% below NAV) to the value of their underlying assets, while some trade at a premium (% above NAV); Investment Trusts trade at different market prices throughout the day.

From the asset manager´s perspective, Investment Trusts are attractive because they give the management company the ability to earn management fees on a stable pool of capital until the trust is wound up.

The format also lends itself to investments in less liquid markets and securities, since the manager will not be forced to trade because of inflows or outflows of cash.

As with all investments although they may provide good growth potential you may get back less than invested.

SUMMARY

  • > Investment Trusts are "closed-ended"
  • > Investment Trust shares trade on a stock exchange
  • > Shares are traded at market price
  • > A commission is paid to buy and sell Investment Trusts
  • > There is no gearing limit in Investment Trusts

Investment Trusts and Gearing

Investment Trusts have also traditionally been different from OEICs and Unit Trusts because of their ability to borrow money, or "gear" their portfolios. Unit Trusts and OEICs, on the other hand, have been restricted to borrowing no more than 10% of their assets. This is changing for most OEICs (but not Unit Trusts), as the EU's UCITS (Undertakings for Collective Investments in Transferable Securities) regulatory structure now permits funds to use financial derivatives for investment purposes. Although this doesn't alter the actual borrowing limit, it effectively gives OEICs that elect to use the UCITS structure - and most do - the ability to heavily gear their portfolios by using derivatives.

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