dbo:abstract
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- This is a list of institutional investors in the United Kingdom. Institutional investors manage other people's money by buying shares in companies, corporate bonds, gilts (i.e. government debt), commodities, foreign currencies, or combinations of each, or derivatives of them (i.e. options to buy, or futures). The main kinds of UK institutional investors are,
* pension funds (where beneficiaries are saving for retirement)
* insurance companies (where policyholders are insuring against risk, most importantly life insurance: effectively also a pension)
* mutual funds (including investment companies, investment trusts, or unit trusts, where people are saving surplus wealth for any purpose)
* sovereign wealth funds (government funds, often for saving wealth generated by natural resources) Sovereign wealth funds are a recent addition, and grew following the Asian financial crisis from 1997, becoming important investors in the London Stock Exchange. Fund managers (usually known as investment advisers in the US), who typically belong to the same organisations as those running large mutual funds, play a critical role because normally the "primary" institutional investors delegate investment choices and corporate governance decisions to the fund manager. UK banks do not traditionally play an important role as institutional investors, as they do for instance in Germany. The represents the interests of the NAPF, ABI, IMA, AITC and the . (en)
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rdfs:comment
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- This is a list of institutional investors in the United Kingdom. Institutional investors manage other people's money by buying shares in companies, corporate bonds, gilts (i.e. government debt), commodities, foreign currencies, or combinations of each, or derivatives of them (i.e. options to buy, or futures). The main kinds of UK institutional investors are, The represents the interests of the NAPF, ABI, IMA, AITC and the . (en)
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