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Investment Association meaning

What does Investment Association mean?
In practice, “investment Association” describes the UK trade body for investment (asset) managers whose guidance and ivis research are routinely relied on in corporate governance, ECM, M&A and executive remuneration work. It is not defined in legislation or case law; the term is used descriptively across corporate and securities law contexts. The IA was created in 2015 following the merger of the Investment Management Association with the Investment Affairs Division of the association of british insurers. The IA articulates institutional investors’ expectations of listed companies and publishes widely cited materials, including the Principles of Remuneration, share capital management and voting guidelines, and stewardship priorities. It operates the Institutional Voting Information Service (IVIS), which issues colour‑coded reports on UK‑listed companies ahead of AGMs/EGMs to inform investor voting and engagement. Practically, boards, company secretaries and advisers consider IA and IVIS positions when preparing remuneration policies and reports, setting LTIP/bonus structures, seeking authorities to allot shares and disapply pre‑emption rights, and managing AGM voting risk. While primarily UK‑focused, usage is consistent across England & Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. In Ireland, IA materials are frequently referenced where Irish companies are London‑listed or engage with UK institutional investors. Also known as the IA.
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View the related Checklists about Investment Association

CHECKLISTS
UK central securities depositories—regulatory timeline 2024–2026: assimilated CSDR, BoE/FCA fees and supervision, MoU, Digital Securities Sandbox changes, and the T+1 settlement transition

This timeline outlines key developments in the UK regulation of central securities depositories, including under Assimilated Regulation (EU) 909/2014 (the UK Central Securities Depositories Regulation), from 2024 onwards. For earlier milestones, see Central Securities Depositories Regulation (CSDR)—timeline (Archived). 2026 26 January 2026 — IA: The Investment Association presents a roadmap for the move to T+1; IA: T+1 Settlement: Navigating the UK, EU and Swiss Transition [PDF]. UK Accelerated Settlement Taskforce Quarterly Review — Q4 2025: FCA welcomes the Accelerated Settlement Taskforce’s 2025 update on T+1 progress. The T+1 Accelerated Settlement Taskforce has issued its Q4 2025 progress review, detailing advances towards adoption of a trade-date-plus-one (T+1) settlement cycle, with 11 October 2027 as the current target. In tandem, the Investment Association (IA) released T+1 Settlement: Navigating the UK, EU and Swiss Transition, which sets out a proposed roadmap for shifting the UK and EU securities markets from trade-date-plus-two (T+2) to T+1. See: Progress report and roadmap published for transition to T+1 settlement cycle...

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CHECKLISTS
On-market share buybacks by UK premium listed companies: step-by-step legal and regulatory checklist (pre-29 July 2024 regime)

STOP PRESS: A major, wide-ranging overhaul of the UK listing framework took effect on 29 July 2024, abolishing the premium and standard listing segments and introducing a unified category for equity shares of commercial companies. That commercial companies category is strongly disclosure-led and sits alongside other listing categories, including the shell companies, secondary listing and closed ended investment fund categories. A new UK Listing Rules sourcebook commenced to deliver these reforms, and the previous Listing Rules sourcebook was withdrawn at the same time. For more detail, see Practice Note: Reform of the UK listing regime—fundamentals for guidance. This Checklist represents the listing regime as it existed before 29 July 2024. A limited company may acquire its own shares if certain conditions set out in the Companies Act 2006 (CA 2006) are satisfied under that statute. This is commonly referred to as a share buyback or a purchase of own shares. In addition to the provisions of the CA 2006, further rules and guidelines are relevant to a listed company...

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CHECKLISTS
Audit committee composition: UK corporate governance and DTR requirements with investor guidance for quoted and investment companies

This Checklist outlines the requirements of the UK Corporate Governance Code and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules concerning the composition of audit committees in quoted companies, alongside best practice set out by leading representative bodies for institutional investors. It further reflects guidance issued by the Quoted Companies Alliance for small and mid-size quoted entities, and by the Association of Investment Companies for investment companies. The summary draws on the UK Corporate Governance Code (UKCG Code) to set expectations for committee make-up and expertise. Quoted companies (other than investment companies) The audit committee must consist of at least three independent non-executive directors, or two for smaller companies (ie those outside the FTSE 350). The chair of the board should not sit on the committee. The board should assure itself that at least one committee member has recent and relevant financial experience. As a whole, the audit committee should possess competence relevant to the sector in which the company operates... ...

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NEWS
UK and EU environmental law weekly update: emissions trading, energy and nuclear, ESG reporting, UK REACH, waste and producer responsibility, biodiversity, marine, water and litigation—26 February 2026

In this issue: Air emissions and climate change Energy for environmental lawyers Environmental disputes and proceedings Environmental permits and consents Environmental taxes, reliefs and incentives ESG and sustainability Hazardous substances and chemicals Marine Nature, biodiversity and habitat conservation Waste Waste producer responsibility regimes Water, flooding and drainage Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Air emissions and climate change DESNZ releases quarterly waste data reporting template for the UK ETS. The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) has issued a template for quarterly waste data submissions under the UK Emissions Trading Scheme (UK ETS). It is designed for waste operators to use when sending quarterly data reports to their regulator during the voluntary monitoring, reporting and verification (MRV) period. See: LNB News 19/02/2026 50. AFME responds to European Commission consultation on climate resilience legislative framework. The Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME) has provided...

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NEWS
Pension Schemes Bill: APPT urges stricter safeguards on defined benefit surplus extraction—statutory funding adequacy test, actuarial certification, TPR oversight and buy-out funding threshold over low-dependency basis.

According to the APPT, at the very least there should be a statutory funding assessment and ultimate decision-making authority for managers of retirement savings schemes, as a minimum requirement. The association set out its view in response to a consultation on the Pension Schemes Bill, a landmark law for the industry, formally during the consultation process. On 1 September 2025 the Bill was sent to the parliamentary Public Bill Committee (PBC), which examines the small print of particular legislation. A fiercely debated element proposes that employers with comfortably funded defined benefit pensions could more readily ‘extract’ surplus assets that have accumulated beyond the amounts required to meet members’ benefits. The government believes such steps could help to stimulate economic growth...

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NEWS
UK finance trade bodies urge Chancellor to curb FCA plan to publicly identify investigation targets, warning of competitiveness, valuation and market stability risks; FCA defends transparency and deterrence aims

An open letter dated 26 April 2024 bears signatures from a spectrum of bodies, among them UK Finance and the Association of British Insurers. It presses the Chancellor of the Exchequer to confront the FCA’s plans, which, the signatories contend, would undermine the UK’s competitiveness. The regulator outlined proposals in February 2024 that, it claimed, would strengthen the deterrent impact of enforcement and permit it to name publicly the targets of its inquiries. The coalition, which also features TheCityUK and the Personal Investment Management & Financial Advice Association, argued the plans are out of step with other markets and supervisors. They warned this would render the UK an ‘international outlier’ on enforcement. ‘As drafted, the proposals are likely to harm the competitiveness of the UK’s financial services industry by deterring investors, and to produce poorer outcomes for customers,’ the letter states. Signatories ask the Chancellor to address the FCA’s proposals to avoid undermining competitiveness and worsening outcomes for customers...

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View the related Practice Notes about Investment Association

PRACTICE NOTES
Share-based remuneration for UK non-executive directors: independence, employees’ share scheme status, Listing/AIM, UK MAR, pre-emption, financial assistance, FSMA, disclosure and practical structuring options

Meaning of ‘non-executive director’ The broad definition of ‘director’ is not closed. Under the Companies Act 2006 (CA 2006), a director is any person who occupies the office of director, whatever title they hold. Accordingly, this covers both executive and non-executive directors (NEDs). Executive directors are typically authorised, either by the company’s constitution or by authority delegated from the board, to manage the company’s day-to-day affairs, and they usually have a full-time service contract. NEDs generally: have no executive powers play a pivotal role in the company’s corporate governance are not employees of the company There are a number of challenges around granting shares to NEDs. This Practice Note considers the issues to assess when offering shares or share-based remuneration to NEDs, including: the potential impact on the NED’s independence the share dealing provisions of Assimilated Regulation (EU) 596/2014 for the UK, and the Market Abuse Regulation (Regulation (EU) 596/2014) previously and for the EU ...

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PRACTICE NOTES
LMA REF multi-property investment facility agreement: commentary on structure, conditions precedent, repayment and prepayment, hedging, valuations, bank accounts, property undertakings, financial covenants, cure rider and events of default

Real estate finance (REF) transactions REF deals fall into two categories: investment finance and development finance. The difference depends on whether the property is bought as an investment that already produces income, or acquired with the intention that it will be developed. Investment finance transactions are encountered more frequently than development finance transactions. For a general introduction to investment facilities in real estate finance, see the following Practice Notes: Introduction to real estate finance—the lending structure Real estate finance—investment facilities—key features The Loan Market Association (LMA) has issued a recommended form of facility agreement for real estate finance investment transactions, accompanied by a user guide. Both are available to LMA members—see the Single Currency Term Facility Agreement for Real Estate Finance Multi-property Investment Transactions (LMA REF Investment Facility Agreement) and the related user guide on the LMA website. Real estate finance transactions can differ markedly, and the LMA acknowledges in its user guide that producing a genuine ‘standard form’ document for...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Connected persons, associates and control in pensions: Insolvency Act 1986 definitions and practical applications (moral hazard, employer-related investments, notifiable events, TUPE, DC governance, LLPs)

Use of terms ‘connected’ and ‘associate’ in pensions Although initially coined within the insolvency/bankruptcy regime set out in the Insolvency Act 1986 and underlying regulations, the notions of ‘association’ and ‘connection’—together with the allied idea of ‘control’—have, over time, been adopted and applied across various parts of the UK’s pensions legislation framework for practical purposes in appropriate cases. Examples include: Moral hazard powers — the terms are employed in the moral hazard provisions of the Pensions Act 2004, in practice to assess the degree of distance or proximity of entities from sponsoring employers of occupational pension schemes, and whether such entities might be susceptible to the Pensions Regulator’s moral hazard powers, for example the issue of financial support directions and contribution notices — for further information, see Practice Notes: Contribution notices and Financial support directions Employer-related investments — the terms are used in the employer-related investment framework in relation to the capacity of trustees of occupational pension schemes to enter into dealings with the schemes’...

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View the related Precedents about Investment Association

PRECEDENTS
Articles of association for private company limited by shares (England and Wales): preferred shares, cumulative dividend, investor consent, multi-investor, leaver, drag-along and tag-along provisions (Companies Act 2006)

Articles of Association for [ insert name of company ] Limited (Incorporated in England and Wales under registration number [ insert number ]) (Adopted by a Special Resolution passed on [ insert date ] 20[ insert year ]) 1 Model Articles 1.1 The Model Articles apply to the Company except to the extent that these Articles alter, disapply or conflict with them; subject to any such amendments, exclusions or inconsistencies, the Model Articles shall, together with these Articles, comprise the Company’s articles of association, replacing any other articles or regulations contained in any statute, statutory instrument or other subordinate legislation. 1.2 The whole of Model Articles 11(2) (quorum for directors’ meetings), 12 (chairing of directors’ meetings), 13 (casting vote), 14(1)-(5) (conflicts of interest), 21 (all shares to be fully paid up), 26(5) (share transfers), 30(5)-(7) (procedure for declaring dividends), 39 (chairing general meetings), 42 (voting: general), 44(2) (poll votes), 50 (no right to inspect accounts and other records), 51 (provision for employees on...

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PRECEDENTS
Board minutes template: newco equity investment and acquisition completion—approval of investment agreement, adoption of new articles, shareholder resolutions, share allotments and post-completion filings (Companies Act 2006)

Company number: [ insert ] [ insert company name ] Limited Minutes for a meeting of the board of directors (the Meeting) of [ insert full name of company ] (the Company) Convened at [ insert place of meeting ] on [ insert day, month and year of meeting ] at [ insert time of meeting ] [ am OR pm ] Present: [ Insert names of directors attending in person ] [ [ Insert names of any directors participating by telephone as permitted by the Company’s articles of association ] (by telephone) ] [ [ Insert names of any directors joining by other means permitted by the Company’s articles of association ] (by [ insert other means ]) ] In attendance: [ [ Insert name of anyone present who does not count towards the quorum for the Meeting (eg the company secretary, any legal advisers) ] ] Apologies: [...

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PRECEDENTS
UK PE/VC investor board control: precedent clauses for shareholders’/investment agreements and articles (Investor Director, Chair, Investor Consent, conflicts authorisation)

subscription and shareholders’ agreement/investment agreement Insert new definitions: A Ordinary Shares; Board; Chair (per clause reference); Investor Consent/Investor Direction (written consent by the Lead Investor or holders of at least [75]% in nominal value of A Ordinary Shares); Investor Director; [Lead Investor]. Add a clause granting Investors the right at any time to appoint and remove non-executive Investor Director[s] and a non-executive Chair by written notice (first appointments effective on Completion), appoint alternates, disapply retirement by rotation, and secure fees of £[amount] p.a. plus VAT and expenses. Establish post‑Completion [remuneration and audit] committee[s] with casting vote rights. articles of association Add definitions for A and B Ordinary Shares, Preference Shares, Investor, Investor Group, Investor Associate, Investor Director, Investor Consent/Direction, Investor Director Interest, Group Company Interest, Co‑Investment Scheme, Confidential Information, FSMA, Fund, Lead Investor, Recognised Investment Exchange, Quotation and Sale. New articles set Board size; permit alternates; regulate meetings, quorum and remote participation; enable authorisation of conflicts and Investor Director/Group Company interests with disclosure and, if directed, A...

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