Making Sense of Offshore Funds
This month Ivan Doherty of IFG Asia cuts through the jargon with an A-Z (or B-U anyway) of
offshore funds.
In my previous articles, I have covered the
Financial Planning Process, basic concepts
and products and latterly lower risk investments bearing
in mind the markets this year. This month I'd like to actually explain the jargon
that is often used in the trade
press in order to give investors a better understanding
of "What it all means."
The confusion caused by the use of investment jargon is
often compounded by expatriates' polyglot origins and
the use of different terms in our home markets.
This short glossary covers many of the terms you are
likely to encounter in the investment press or when
discussing financial planning with your adviser.
Back-end load
Also called redemption fee or exit fee, this is a
charge levied for cashing in your investment. This
often reduces to zero over a number of years.
Basis Point
One percent of one percent i.e. 100 basis points make
up 1%.
Bid/offer spread
This is the difference between the price at which a
fund's units or shares are offered for sale to
investors (offer price) and the price at which the
fund management company will buy a fund's units or
shares from investors (bid price).
Closed-end funds
These are funds where the number of shares in issue
does not vary. Variations in demand for the fund are
reflected in the price of the shares which, after the
initial offer period, can only be bought or sold if a
buyer or seller is available.
Front load
Also called initial charge, sales charge or bid/offer
spread, this is the fee you pay to get into a fund. In
most cases the front load is a percentage of your
initial investment. A portion of this fee is usually
paid as commission to your financial adviser or to the
sales agent involved in the transaction.
Index Tracker
A fund designed to match or 'track' the performance of
a particular stock market index.
Initial Unit
A type of unit allocated in the early months/years of
a life insurance savings plan differentiated from
accumulation units by higher charges and early
encashment penalties.
Insurance Bond
A single premium life insurance policy, enabling
convenient access to offshore funds - not to be
confused with government bonds or corporate debt.
More expensive than investing directly in funds but
offering some tax benefits.
Management fee
This is the annual fee charged by the fund management
company for managing a fund. It can range from 50 basis
points or less for a money market or bond fund to 150
basis points for an equity fund.
Mutual Fund
International term for an open ended collective
investment similar to a unit trust.
Mirror Fund
A fund run by a life insurance company enabling an
investor to access another company's fund through
their life insurance policies. Normally includes an
extra layer of charges.
Net Asset Value
The sum of a fund's assets less its liabilities.
'NAV' often approximates to the 'bid' price of a unit.
No-Load Fund
A fund which doesn't impose a sales charge or
redemption fee.
Open-ended fund
These are funds where units or shares can be bought
and sold daily and where the number of units or shares
in issue can therefore vary daily. Sicav, OEICs, unit
trusts and mutual funds are examples of open-ended
funds.
Sicav
Stands for Société d'investissement à
capitale
variable. Sicav are structured as companies and are a
common fund structure in Luxembourg.
Switching fee
This is the fee charged to move your investment from
one fund to another. If you are investing in an
umbrella fund and anticipate moving among sub-funds,
it is important to check if there is a switching fee.
Most savings plans have a number of free switches each
year.
UCITS
This is an acronym formed from Undertakings for
Collective Investment in Transferable Securities.
This was a term coined by the EU when drafting a
pan-European investment fund directive. The UCITS
Directive lays out certain minimum requirements for
funds, prohibiting investment in certain types of
riskier assets and setting out maximum levels of
investment in the paper of one issuer for example.
Unit Trust
Your money is invested with thousands of others in one
pooled fund. Presiding over the fund is a manager or
managers responsible for achieving the fund's stated
investment objective. The fund is divided into 'units'.
The value of each unit is an equal share of the fund
value or 'Net Asset Value'.
Your financial adviser should have all this information,
and more, at his fingertips. Remember the golden rule
and if in doubt, take a second opinion.
As this is last article before Christmas, my I take
this opportunity of wishing all GH readers a very
Happy Christmas and New Year and hope that 2002 will
bring a greater peace to the world.
Ivan Doherty
ipd@ifg-asia.com
Ivan Dohety MLIA (dip) is Chief Operating Officer of IFG Asia.
Part of The IFG Group PLC and registered with the Ministry
of Finance in Japan to give investment advice.
12/2001
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