iShares Over 15 Years Corporate Bond Index L Acc
| Shares Class | Inc. |
|---|---|
| Yield | 2.32 |
| Total Expense Ratio | 0.00 |
Fund Performance
Cumulative Performance
Discrete Performance
| Shares Class | Inc. |
|---|---|
| Yield | 2.32 |
| Total Expense Ratio | 0.00 |
Cumulative Performance
Discrete Performance
| Fund Size | 300,657,812.60 | Launch Date | 24/09/2018 | Standard Initial Charge (%) | 0.00 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Currency | GBX | ISA Eligible | No | Annual Management Charge (%) | 0.20 |
| Sector | IMA UK Equity Income | Min Investment (£) | 1,000,000.00 | Total Expense Ratio (%) | 0.00 |
| ISIN | GB00BFBFX541 | Min Topup (£) | 100.00 | Ongoing Charge (%) | 0.2300 (on 24/07/2020) |
The Fund aims to provide a return on your investment (generated through an increase in the value of the assets held by the Fund and/or income received from those assets) by tracking closely the performance of the Markit iBoxx GBP Non-Gilts Over 15 Years Index, the Fund’s benchmark index. The Fund is passively managed and the investment adviser has discretion to select the Fund’s investments and in doing so may take into consideration the Benchmark Index. The Fund invests in fixed income securities (such as bonds) that make up the benchmark index and, at the time of purchase, comply with the credit rating requirements of the benchmark index. The Fund will hold fixed income securities that are corporate bonds and will also hold non-corporate bonds. The benchmark index measures the performance of fixed income securities denominated in Sterling issued by governments, government agencies, companies and supranationals (e.g. the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development) but excludes gilts (i.e. bonds) issued by the UK government. These may include fixed income securities which pay income according to a fixed rate of interest and will be investment grade (i.e. meet a specified level of credit worthiness) at the time of inclusion in the benchmark index. They will have a time to maturity (i.e. the time they become due for repayment) of at least 15 years.
Matthew Jackson
Please remember that past performance is not a guide of future returns. The value of investments and the income from them can go down as well as up as a result of currency exchange and market fluctuations and investors may not get back the amount originally invested.