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Why investment trusts are a good alternative for income

 

Closed-ended investment trusts offer “something different” to advisers searching for income for their clients, according to Annabel Brodie-Smith.

Ms Brodie-Smith, director of communications at the Association of Investment Companies, said investment companies had a “great record” on dividend increases, as 21 trusts had increased their dividend for more than 20 years and four had boosted it for the past 50 years.

She added: “This is something clients find very reassuring. With investors staying invested for longer due to pension freedoms, advisers need to consider investment companies as being useful for different investment needs.”

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Ms Brodie-Smith also spoke about the “clear problem” with holding illiquid assets in open-ended funds which offered daily dealing.

She said: “We are concerned about this, and the Bank of England has said there is a systemic risk because of this problem.

“We have suggested a solution of a reliable redemption — where the terms of the fund reflect the time spent to sell the assets, effectively a notice period.

“In the meantime, if advisers want to avoid this there are closed-ended property companies whose shares trade daily.”

Tackling the fact closed-ended funds had significantly fewer assets than their open-ended equivalents, Ms Brodie-Smith said the AIC was focussed on “quality not quantity”.

imogen.tew@ft.com

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