CG41561 - Open-ended investment companies (OEICs): introduction
OEICs are a form of retail investment fund constituted as
companies under a special corporate code. Like other companies,
OEICs issue shares and have a Board of Directors. However, unlike
Companies Act companies, the share capital of an OEIC can
continually vary. The number of shares in issue will go up and down
according to whether there is a net inflow or outflow of
investment. OEICs are regulated by the Financial Services
Authority. They might in many ways be considered the corporate
equivalent of an authorised unit trust and the close correspondence
between OEICs and authorised unit trusts (AUTs) is made clear by
Statutory Instrument number 964 of 2006 (SI2006/964). This refers
to authorised investment funds (AIFs), which include both OEICs and
AUTs, and includes measures to ensure that the tax treatment both
of the AIFs themselves and of the investors in them is consistent
regardless of whether the chosen in-vestment vehicle is an OEIC or
an AUT. See CTM48000+ for a general description of AIFs.
See CG41300+ and CG57680+ for instructions on unit trusts and
unit holders.
