Page 122 - Profile's Unit Trusts & Collective Investments - March 2026
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Chapter 7                                        Understanding asset allocation


                   Preference and other shares
                   When people talk about buying shares, they usually mean the ordinary shares of listed
                   companies.  Ordinary  shares,  known  as  common  stock  in  the  US,  are  the  most  popular
                   equities because their rights are simple and clear-cut. But they are not the only kinds of
          shares. Preference shares, for example, usually entitle the holder to a prior claim on dividends (ie,
          before payment is made on ordinary shares), but often don’t have any voting rights. Many preference
          shares effectively pay a fixed rate of interest subject to the profitability of the company.
          Subject  to  shareholder  approval,  companies  can  create  different  classes  of  shares  with  different
          dividend rights and different voting rights. Non-voting ordinary shares (called N-shares) were popular
          on  the  JSE  in  the  1980s  because  they  allowed  controlling  shareholders  to  raise  capital  without
          the  risk  of  losing  control  of  the  company. They  have  the  same  ownership  and  dividend  rights  as
          ordinary shares.
           Minimum lump sum investments range from R1 000 to R100 000 (with R5 000 and R10 000 the
         most common). Debit order minimums range from R300 to R1 000 a month.

         Equity funds
           Equity-based schemes dominate the CIS industry in SA, with more than three-quarters of funds
         on offer being pure equity schemes or having a significant equity component (like multi-asset funds).
           Equity investments give investors part ownership in listed companies on the JSE (and sometimes,
         to a very limited extent, to unlisted companies). Equity-based investments are the most volatile
         asset class: the value of investments rises and falls according to the prevailing market conditions.
         Historical analysis, however, indicates that returns on equity investments have been superior to any
         other class of investment over the long term.
           Equity-based  investments  reward  investors  in  two  ways:  they  offer  capital  gains  as  the  share
         price increases, and they offer dividends, which is the portion of profits that a company chooses to
         pay to shareholders.
         Underlying investments of equity-based schemes
           The bulk of equity investments held in South African collective investment schemes are ordinary
         shares  listed  on  the  JSE  and  some  overseas  stock  exchanges.  Ordinary  shares  represent
         ownership in a limited liability company, entitling shareholders to dividends paid by the company.
         Usually, each ordinary share carries a single vote. Shareholders appoint company directors at an
                                    annual general meeting, and the directors of large companies act
                                    (or are meant to act) in the interests of shareholders.
                                      Shares are such popular securities around the world because
                                    they give investors a simple method of participating in the wealth-
                                    generating  potential  of  big  businesses.  Shareholders  are  part-
                                    owners of a business, no matter how small their stake, and they
                                    ultimately share in the profits of the business.
                                      Growing companies offer profit potential unequalled in other
                                    areas  of  investment.  There  are  many  examples  of  shares  that
                                    have  grown  tenfold  in  a  decade,  and  many  listed  companies
                                    can sustain growth rates of 30% per annum or more under the
                                    right  economic  conditions.  It  is  these  outstanding  returns  that
                                    maintain investor interest in equities.
                                      Unfortunately, businesses are complex, and predicting which
                                    companies will make big profits and keep growing is notoriously
                                    difficult.  When  it  comes  to  equity  markets,  there  is  also  the
                                    very  real  risk  of  investing  in  a  business  which  goes  bankrupt,
                                    leaving shareholders with nothing. It is this high risk/high return
                                    character of equity markets which makes them so volatile and
                                    unpredictable.


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