Financial Jargon Buster - I
- IFA
- Independent Financial
Adviser.
- IHT
- Inheritance Tax.
- Illustration
- An estimation of the returns you might
get from an investment, based on standard growth rates and taking charges into
account. The actual returns you get may be higher or lower than this.
- Immediate Annuity
- An annuity under which payments
commence straight away, in contrast to a deferred annuity, under which the
payments do not commence until later (possibly many years later).
- IMRO
- The Investment Management Regulatory
Organisation which regulates the management of our unit trusts.
- Income Draw-Down
- An option available to members of small
self-administered pension schemes, personal pension schemes and recently
extended to occupational scheme members with money purchase benefits or AVC's.
An annuity does not have to be purchased at retirement and can be delayed up to
age 75. In the meantime the individual can 'draw down' income from his pension
investment. This can be a high-risk approach to pension provision and is
subject to PSO regulation.
- Income Policy
- A Life Insurance contract that provides
income on a monthly or other periodic basis, as opposed to a policy which pays
proceeds in a lump sum.
- Income Protection Insurance
- Income Protection Insurance (also known
as Permanent Health Insurance or PHI) provides a monthly income during periods
of long-term illness or disability.
- Income tax
- This is tax you pay on the income you
earn each year above a certain amount. As well as your salary, income tax is
also charged on interest and dividends you receive. The amount of tax you pay
depends on the amount of money you earn and on your allowances.
- Indemnity
-
- Payment to reimburse a specific quantifiable monetary loss or expense incurred
- (Of commission) Paid in full at commencement of a contract on the assumption that this will remain in force for at least a certain minimum period. If the contract is terminated within this period part of the commission may be required to be refunded.
- Independent Financial Adviser
- A broker or other intermediary
authorised to sell or advise on the policies offered by any insurance company,
as well as other financial service providers.
- Independent Foundation
- A private foundation that is no longer
controlled by the original donor or donor's family.
- Index
- A means of continually measuring the
movement of a particular set of statistics over periods of time. Most unit
trust fund managers measure their fund's performance against that of an
appropriate 'benchmark' index with the aim of at least matching its progress
or, better still, beating it.
- Index linked
- Insurance where the level of cover
increases in line with an index of prices or earnings.
- Index tracking
- An index tracking fund aims to follow a
particular index as closely as possible. It does not aim to beat it. It invests
only in the companies that make up that index. Index tracking removes the need
to employ fund managers, which means charges tend to be lower.
- Indexation
- A method by which benefits are
increased at periodic intervals by a factor derived from an index of prices or
earnings.
- Individual Savings Account
- A means of saving which gives exemption
from tax on benefits. Savings can be through cash, stocks and shares or
insurance but must be arranged through one or more 'ISA manager(s)'. There are
limits to the amounts which can be contributed.
- Industrial Insurance
- Whole of life and endowment insurance
with relatively low value (under £1000 sum assured). Historically, the
premiums were collected by an insurance company agent at the policyholder's
home. However, these may now be paid by monthly bank transfer. The legislation
governing this type of insurance is less formal than for 'ordinary branch' and
if an insurance company transacts both types of business it is required to keep
them segregated.
- Inflation
- The amount in percentage terms by which
prices rise or fall year on year. In the UK, the primary measure of this is the
Retail Price Index (RPI); the underlying rate of inflation is the
RPI with mortgage repayment figures stripped out.
- In Force Business
- Life or Health Insurance that is
current and for which premiums are being paid or for which premiums have been
fully paid.
- Inheritance Tax
- This tax is payable at the time of
death, on any items (money or otherwise) where ownership changes on death or
within 7 years before. There is no inheritance tax on the first portion of the
deceased person's estate and transfers between husband and wife are exempt.
There are other exemptions and the rules governing these can be complex.
- In-kind Contribution
- Support in the form of goods or
services rather than a cash contribution.
- Inland Revenue
- The Inland Revenue is the government
department responsible for the assessment and collection of direct taxation on
income, capital gains, stamp duties, corporation tax and inheritance tax.
- Inland Revenue Limits
- Limitations on benefits and
contributions applied to an approved occupational pension scheme in return for
tax relief.
- Instant access
- Accounts where you don't lose interest
even though you withdraw money without giving the bank notice. The One account
gives you instant access to your funds. All you have to do is write a cheque,
arrange a transfer or use your Switch or VISA cards.
- Insurable Interest
- A principle of insurance that states
that someone may only take out insurance if they stand to suffer a financial
loss from an event covered by a policy.
- Insurance
- An agreement under which individuals,
businesses, and other organisations, in exchange for payment of a sum of money
(a premium), are guaranteed indemnity for losses resulting from certain events
or conditions specified in a contract (policy).
- Insurance Premium Tax
- UK tax imposed on most non-life
insurance premiums.
- Insured
- A person or organisation covered by an
insurance policy.
- Insurer
- The party to the insurance contract who
promises to pay losses or benefits, usually an insurance company.
- Intermediary
- A person or organisation that offers
advice and arranges policies for clients. Under UK regulations, intermediaries
must be either (1) "Tied", whereby they represent only one company in the case
of life business or a limited number of companies for general business, or (2)
"Independent", whereby there is no limit on the number of companies with which
they can deal.
- Interest only method
- One of two ways used to pay off your
mortgage, the other being the Repayment method. Your monthly payments are
solely used to pay off the interest you owe on your borrowings. This means,
you'll have to make provision to pay off the amount you actually borrowed at
the end of your mortgage term, for example using an ISA, a pension or an
endowment.
- Internal Revenue Code
- The laws governing taxation in the
United States, administered by the Internal Revenue Service.
- Internal Revenue Service
- (IRS) The federal agency in the United
States with responsibility for regulating public charities and foundations, as
part of its authority under the Internal Revenue Code.
- Intestate
- Dying without having made a Will. If a
UK resident dies intestate there are rules as to the distribution of the
estate, which have to be followed whether or not they coincide with what the
deceased person would have wished.
- Investment Income
- The portion of a company's or an
individual's income which is derived from its investments, including interest
and dividends on stocks and bonds.
- Investment Management Regulatory Organisation (IMRO)
- A regulatory body which governs the way
investors money is handled and invested.
- Investment Trust
- Unlike a unit trust, which is
'open-ended', an investment trust is effectively a company which, for a
management fee, invests the pooled money of small investors in securities for
stated investment objectives. An investment trust is 'closed-end' in that it
has a fixed number of shares that are traded like stock, often on many
different exchanges. Visit the Flemings website for more details.
- IOB
- Insurance Ombudsman Bureau See:
Ombudsman.
- Irrevocable Trust
- A trust arrangement that cannot be
revoked by the creator.
- ISA
- Stands for Individual Savings
Accounts which the Government introduced on 6th April 1999. ISAs replaced
PEPs and TESSAs - no further investments are allowed into the latter, though
you can retain existing investments within them tax-free. ISAs offer similar
tax-free benefits to PEPs but you can hold a wider range of
investments.
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