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Self-investment meaning

What does Self-investment mean?
Self-investment describes a pension scheme using its assets in, or for the benefit of, its sponsoring employer or the employer’s group—for example, buying employer shares, making a loan, giving a guarantee, or holding property the employer occupies or uses. It is a descriptive term in pensions practice; legislation refers to employer-related investment. Across England & Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, the Occupational Pension Schemes (Investment) Regulations 2005 (and the Northern Ireland equivalent) generally cap employer-related investments at 5% of the scheme’s assets. Loans to, or security in favour of, the employer are largely prohibited, and arrangements intended to circumvent the rules are also caught. Irish law (the Pensions Act 1990 and the Occupational Pension Schemes (Investment) Regulations 2006) adopts broadly the same 5% limit and prohibitions. The term is commonly used by trustees, employers and advisers when assessing investment strategy, conflicts and any proposed transactions with the employer. Breach can require unwinding and restitution; the Pensions Regulator (UK) and the Pensions Authority (Ireland) may take enforcement action, including civil penalties. Not to be confused with self‑invested personal pensions (SIPPs), which concern member‑directed investment and do not relate to employer-related investment restrictions.
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View the related Checklists about Self-investment

CHECKLISTS
Archived UCITS timeline: EU and UK legislative and regulatory milestones 2009–2026 (PRIIPs KIDs/KIIDs, AIFMD II, cross-border distribution, sustainability, DORA, ESAP, FCA/HMT updates)

ARCHIVED: This Practice Note is archived and is no longer maintained. UCITS is the acronym for undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities. The expression derives from Directive (EC) 85/611 concerning the coordination of laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating to undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities (the Original UCITS Directive), which was adopted in 1985. The purpose of the Original UCITS Directive was to establish a single market for open-ended retail investment funds that offered enhanced protection for investors. The UCITS framework has been updated on several occasions, with the Management Company Directive 2001/107/EU adopted in 2002 and the Product Directive 2001/108/EU implemented in 2005 (together referred to as UCITS III); followed by implementation in 2011 of Directive 2009/65/EC (the UCITS Directive, also called UCITS IV), which repealed and replaced the Original UCITS Directive; and Directive 2014/91/EU (UCITS V), which was transposed into national law on 18 March 2016...

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CHECKLISTS
UK FCA COBS 9.4 Suitability Reports: Applicability, Exceptions, Content, Timing and Record‑Keeping Checklist

The suitability obligation All authorised firms are subject to a suitability obligation, which requires them to take reasonable steps to ensure that any personal recommendations, or decisions to trade, are suitable for their clients. The suitability obligation applies to: firms providing investment advisory services, and firms providing discretionary portfolio management services Firms providing non‑advised investment services will instead be subject to the appropriateness obligation (see Practice Note: Appropriateness). Firms must gather the information ‘necessary’ about their clients in respect of their: knowledge and experience in the investment field relevant to the type of investment or service, financial situation, and investment objectives For more information on the suitability obligation, see Practice Note Suitability. When does the obligation to provide a suitability report apply? In certain circumstances, firms are required to provide suitability reports to their clients under COBS 9.4...

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CHECKLISTS
FSMA 2000 RAO exclusions for investment, insurance, credit and home finance: practitioner checklist with MiFID II, IDD and MCD overrides (UK)

Regulated activities and exclusions Section 19 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (FSMA 2000) bars any individual or entity from undertaking, or holding themselves out as undertaking, a regulated activity in the UK unless they are authorised or exempt under FSMA 2000 (the General Prohibition). Usefully, most activities specified in the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001, SI 2001/544 (RAO) are carved out by exclusions. Where you conduct a given activity in a manner that fits an exclusion, you will not contravene the General Prohibition. For additional detail on the General Prohibition, see Practice Notes The general prohibition and implications of its breach and Carrying on unauthorised business and breaching the general prohibition. Most RAO regulated activities are subject to exclusions that can be used where applicable. Exclusions fall into two groupings: exclusions tailored to a specific regulated activity; and exclusions that, in defined situations, span several regulated activities...

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View the related Flowcharts about Self-investment

FLOWCHARTS
Archived flowchart: JCT Design and Build 2011 Alternative A stage payments - interim payment process prior to practical completion

This Checklist is intended for situations where: a leasehold property is being purchased and the tenant (or a predecessor in title) entered into an agreement for lease prior to completion of the lease; or a reversionary interest is being bought and the reversioner (or a predecessor in title) entered into an agreement for lease before completion of an existing occupational lease, or an agreement for lease remains in place pending completion of a lease. In each case, the agreement for lease predates completion of the relevant lease. You should confirm whether any outstanding or continuing obligations in the agreement for lease (eg to rectify defects or undertake works) will bind the purchaser. Any surviving obligations that bind successors in title could adversely affect the property’s investment value. Note that this Checklist is not comprehensive and, depending on the nature of the transaction, other issues may arise from the agreement for lease and require consideration. This Checklist also does not address limitation periods...

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FLOWCHARTS
UK National Security and Investment Act 2021: Transaction Scope and Notification Decision Flowchart

The National Security and Investment Act 2021 A deal may fall within the ambit of the National Security and Investment Act 2021 (NSI Act 2021) and might require notification to the UK Government if it gives rise to potential national security issues. See further: The National Security and Investment Act 2021. This flowchart sets out a decision pathway to assess whether a transaction is captured by the NSI Act 2021. View or print a full-size PDF version...

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FLOWCHARTS
CSOP qualifying shares—UK flowchart and statutory tests for income tax relief under ITEPA 2003

This flow diagram outlines the steps for submitting a compensation event claim seeking extra time to finish the works and/or extra payment under the NEC3 Engineering and Construction Contract...

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NEWS
EU competition law round-up, 18 September 2025: Magellan Partners joint control cleared; Banca CF+/Banca Sistema notified; German biomass/biogas State aid budget +€7.9bn; upcoming dates

Mergers The Commission has authorised Gala Investment SAS and ICG plc to take joint control of Magellan Partners (M.12095) following a phase I investigation—see further, Midday Express The Commission has received an official notification for Banca CF+/Banca Sistema (M.12102) under the simplified merger procedure NOTE—For all current merger investigations before the Commission, see further, EU mergers—ongoing cases tracker State aid Applying EU State aid rules, the Commission has approved an amendment to a German renewable energy scheme first approved in December 2022, increasing the budget for the biomass and biogas support scheme by €7.9bn—see further, Midday Express NOTE—For all active State aid decisions and ongoing formal State aid investigations, see further, EU State aid decisions—ongoing cases tracker Upcoming dates For the full timetable of forthcoming EU competition developments, see further, EU Competition calendar...

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NEWS
SFO to deploy covert tactics and publish guidance to revive corporate self-reporting and enforce ECCTA 'failure to prevent fraud' from September 2025, amid DPA lull and cross-border collaboration

Nick Ephgrave Nick Ephgrave acknowledged it was no secret that the SFO has witnessed a slight drop-off in the number of companies approaching the specialist anti-corruption body with suspected fraud and bribery within their organisation. To address this, the SFO intends to invest further in covert intelligence-gathering so it can better understand what is happening in corporate settings and, in turn, either pursue targets or encourage them to come forward, he told Law360 and reporters from other news outlets. Ephgrave said he wants to be more in control of the referrals received by an agency that largely depends on businesses volunteering information, with the aim of invigorating and provoking self-reporting by companies. He added that he is really seeking to drive up the number of corporates the SFO deals with, whether through self-reporting supported by revised corporate guidance, via intelligence from whistleblowers, or by relying on good old-fashioned covert policing techniques such as surveillance, the deployment of undercover officers, and the use of informants...

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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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View the related Practice Notes about Self-investment

PRACTICE NOTES
UK money market funds: regime essentials, authorisation, UCITS/AIFM interactions, investment and liquidity rules, CNAV/LVNAV/VNAV, and post‑Brexit reform proposals including TMPR and the Overseas Funds Regime

This Practice Note examines core aspects of the UK framework for money market funds (MMFs) that stems from Regulation (EU) 2017/1131 (the EU MMF Regulation). It also looks at suggested changes to the framework, with the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), HM Treasury and the Bank of England (BoE) working jointly to bolster its resilience and align it with post‑Brexit regulatory objectives. For background on the EU MMF Regulation, see Practice Note: EU MMF Regulation—essentials. What is an MMF? Money market funds (MMFs) are investment funds that invest in short‑term debt instruments and so play a significant role in the short‑term financing of the economy. In particular, MMFs are open‑ended, liquid investment funds that invest in fixed income through short‑term debt, for example money market instruments issued by banks, governments or companies (including treasury bills, commercial paper and certificates of deposit) which pay interest. They therefore form an important connection between demand for, and the supply of, short‑term debt. Further information on the eligible assets of an MMF is...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Global merger control: threshold updates, procedural reforms and enforcement highlights—March 2026

Over the course of the past month, annual adjustments have been made to merger control thresholds in Canada, Italy and the Philippines, while Montenegro has revamped its regime, introducing swifter timetables and more adaptable filing provisions. Canada—thresholds remain the same in 2026 On 2 March 2026, the Canadian Competition Bureau (CCB) confirmed, after its yearly review, that Canadian merger notification thresholds will stay exactly as they are for 2026. The thresholds remain (in brief): size of transaction test: the target must be, or control, an operating business in Canada with more than CDN$93m (approximately €58.9m/US$66.6m) in Canadian assets (book value) or gross revenue produced by those assets from sales in, from or into Canada (ie domestic plus export sales), and size of parties test: all parties and their affiliates (in aggregate) must together hold over CDN$400m (approximately €253.4m/US$286.3m) in Canadian assets or gross revenues derived from sales in, from or into Canada (ie domestic sales, exports and imports) (this threshold is unchanged and...

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PRACTICE NOTES
European Commission Article 14(1) EUMR investigation into KKR's alleged incorrect, incomplete or misleading information in the NetCo merger review (M.12099)

CASE HUB See more, timeline, commentary and connected cases. Case facts European Commission merger inquiry under Article 14(1) EUMR into inaccurate or misleading information supplied by KKR during the Commission’s 2024 review of KKR’s acquisition of NetCo. Latest developments On 24 July 2025, the Commission opened its investigation. Parties KKR & Co. Inc (KKR): Headquartered in the US, KKR is a global investment firm providing alternative asset management alongside capital markets and insurance services. NetCo: Based in Italy, NetCo is a newly established company that comprises FiberCop—presently jointly controlled by KKR and TIM—as well as TIM’s primary and backbone fixed-line network...

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View the related Precedents about Self-investment

PRECEDENTS
External DPO appointment terms—pro‑client amendments, warranties and Schedule for company‑to‑individual consultancy agreement under UK GDPR

Delete clause 3.6 of Precedent: Consultancy agreement—company and individual—pro-client and replace it with the following clauses 3.6 and 3.7: 3.6 How you organise your work is for you alone to determine, and you shall perform your duties as data protection officer (DPO) (as described in the Schedule) in an independent and self-directed manner at all times. You will not be given (and the Company [ and its Group Companies ] will not attempt to give you) any directions or instructions whatsoever concerning the performance or exercise of those duties. 3.7 Subject to clause 3.6, you shall give proper consideration to the reasonable requests of the [ Board OR Chief Executive ] from time to time and, where reasonably practicable, as appropriate, properly work and co-operate with any employee, worker, agent or other consultant of the Company [ or any Group Company ] in the provision and delivery of the Services. Insert the subsequent provisions in Precedent: Consultancy agreement—company and individual—pro-client as new clauses 3.14 and 3.15...

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PRECEDENTS
IPF standard form NDA and exclusivity agreement for Scottish property transactions: overview, adoption and guidance notes

The Investment Property Forum (IPF) produced this precedent because they recognise it is very common for the parties to a prospective property deal to enter into a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) so they can review certain marketing material and/or commence due diligence...

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PRECEDENTS
Precedent deed poll: convertible redeemable loan note instrument for corporate investors (unsecured/subordinated), with conversion, redemption and noteholder provisions - England and Wales law

£ [ insert number ] [ insert rate ]% convertible [ subordinated ] redeemable loan notes 20[ insert year ] [ insert name of issuer ] Dated [ insert day and month ] 20[ insert year ] Parties [ Insert name of issuing company ], incorporated in England and Wales under number [ insert company number ], whose registered office is at [ insert address ] (the Issuer) Background The Issuer has determined to create up to a maximum nominal amount of £[ insert number ] [ insert rate ]% convertible [ subordinated ] redeemable loan notes, to be constituted as set out in this document...

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Q&As
AEOI registration under 2025 ITC Amendments: specified non‑reporting trusts—trust corporations, trustee‑documented, and lay‑trustee private company shares

Amendments to the International Tax Compliance Regulations 2015 (2015 regs), SI 2015/878, introduced by the International Tax Compliance (Amendment) Regulations 2025, SI 2025/740, have brought in a compulsory Automatic Exchange of Information (AEOI) registration obligation for certain trusts treated as ‘specified non-reporting financial institutions’. Under the 2015 regs, SI 2015/878, reg 24(1), a specified non-reporting financial institution is ‘a non-reporting financial institution which is a trust within the meaning of Section VIII(B)(1)(e) of the CRS or paragraph II(D) of Annex II to the FATCA agreement’. Set out below is a concise overview of the components of that definition. Financial institution (IEIM400610) The FATCA and CRS frameworks recognise four common categories of Financial Institution: custodial institution depository institution investment entity specified insurance company Where a private trust satisfies any Financial Institution definition, it will most commonly be treated as an Investment Entity...

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Q&As
Representative of an Overseas Business: Is a Holding Company a Genuine Commercial Enterprise for Entry Clearance?

Practice Note: Applying under the Representative of an Overseas Business category Please see Practice Note: Applying under the Representative of an Overseas Business category, which sets out the eligibility criteria and process (including application form and fee details) for submitting an initial application or seeking an extension under the UK immigration route for Representatives of an Overseas Business. The note explains the eligibility criteria for Sole Representatives of an Overseas Business...

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Q&As
Landlord waste penalty notice—serviced units: guidance & appeal

What is the waste duty of care? Under section 34(1) of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 (EPA 1990), businesses are required to handle controlled waste safely and dispose of it lawfully. This obligation is called the waste duty of care. Controlled waste covers household, industrial and commercial waste, and anything of that kind. In brief, the duty means waste holders must: ensure their waste goes to a suitably permitted facility ensure anyone managing their waste complies with permit conditions prevent the escape of waste transfer waste only to a registered carrier or authorised permit holder provide a written description of the waste when it is transferred Failure to meet these duties is an offence under EPA 1990, s 34(6), and is punishable: on summary conviction, by a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum on conviction on indictment, by a fine Who does the waste duty of care apply to?...

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