E
- The process by which the
national currencies of the European Union are being replaced by
the Euro.
- A life insurance and savings policy
which pays a specified amount of money at the end of an agreed
term or on the death of the life assured. Often linked to a mortgage.
- The ordinary shares of a company.
- An agreement by which most
EU countries maintain the exchange rates between their currencies
within certain limits.
- The currency adopted by some European countries
in place of their national currencies, intended to replace the
national currencies in 2002.
F
- Also known as Defined Benefit Scheme.
This is the traditional form of company or occupational pension
where your pension at retirement is calculated as a proportion
of your salary in the last few years of work, with the proportion
depending upon how many years you have been in your company scheme.
- Influencing an economy through taxation.
- A mortgage product where your monthly
payments do not change over a certain agreed period.
- A mortgage product where you can vary
the amount you pay each month, reduce the term by making extra
or increased payments and take breaks from your monthly payments.
- A pension product where you can
vary the amount you pay each month and take breaks from your monthly
payments.
- The popular name for the Financial
Times Stock Exchange 100, the main UK share index which represents
the prices of the top 100 shares in public limited companies.
- The Financial Services Authority, the main regulatory
body of the financial services industry.
-
Extra payments you can make into an individual plan, which runs
alongside your company pension scheme, to top up your pension fund.
The plan is independent of your employer's main pension scheme.
- General term for an investment vehicle which pools
the money of investors and invests it according to a defined set
of investment objectives.
- A professional who takes decisions on what
to buy and sell on behalf of a fund's investors.
- The underlying economic factors such as
industry output, wages, cost of materials and fluctuations in currency
which affect a market, country or sector.
-
This is an occupational pension scheme that is not designed to
be approved. This type of scheme saves up assets to pay members benefits,
unlike an unfunded scheme. Most FURBS are top-up pension schemes.
- A contract to buy or sell a fixed amount of currencies,
shares or commodities at a fixed rate in the future at a fixed
price.
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