IHTM34141 - Qualifying investments: open ended investment companies (OEIC)
Investors in open ended investment companies (OEICs) will own
shares in the company, but they do not have any rights to the
underlying investments. They can be accepted as qualifying
investments for loss on sale of shares relief.
OEICs were introduced to the UK in 1997. They are authorised
unit trusts in corporate form. While the unit trust was – and
to some extent remains – the traditional (non-insured) UK
retail vehicle for pooled investment in shares and securities, it
has not proved popular with non-UK investors. Internationally, the
corporate structure is far better understood than the trust
structure. The OEIC, very much the UK counterpart to the Luxembourg
SICAV, was therefore intended to be a corporate investment product.
Further, the structure of an OEIC can prove more flexible and
cost-efficient than unit trusts. In consequence many unit trusts
have been converted into OEICs in recent years.
As OEICs are companies, their situs (
IHTM27000) and the situs of investments
in them follow the normal rules for companies and shares.
