Interactive Investor

interactive investor is an online investment service in the United Kingdom, founded in 1995. It provides financial information, as well as investment tools. It is the UK's biggest flat-fee investment platform, with £36 billion of assets under administration[1], over 300,000 customers and more than one million users. The group is based in Manchester, with offices in London and Leeds.[2]

interactive investor
Interactive Investor Services Limited
Private
IndustryFinancial Services
FoundedAugust 1995 (1995-08)
HeadquartersManchester, England, UK
ProductsExecution-only online trading in UK and international shares, funds, investment trusts and ETFs, ISAs, Junior ISAs, SIPPs, spread betting, CFD and Forex
ServicesMarket analysis, tools, community and discussions, virtual and ready-made portfolios, research accounts
Number of employees
500+
SubsidiariesMoneywise, Money Observer
Websitewww.ii.co.uk

History

Interactive Investor International was founded in 1994 by Sherry Coutu and funded by angel investors Richard Caruso and John Cooper, and the venture capital company, Arts Alliance.

In 1995, Coutu hired Tomas Carruthers from ESI to bring trading capability and equities to supplement the company's fund-management information. Initially launched to provide front-end research to the investment community, it also provided a platform for investors to communicate through discussion boards. The name was changed to Interactive Investor following the company's withdrawal from the South African and Asian markets.

The company has grown to be the UK's second-largest retail investment platform, with more than 300,000 customers and more than 7.4 million unique users per annum.

It floated on the stock market in 2000[3] and was valued at £242 million. At the height of the dotcom boom it was valued at £684 million before it was bought by Australian financial services group AMP a year later.[4] The investment platform briefly rebranded itself as Ample in 2002.

The current interactive investor is a private limited company incorporated in 2003 and majority owned by funds advised by J.C. Flowers & Co, a leading private equity firm. ii first provided a dealing service in 2010, when it joined forces with Halifax Share Dealing, and went on to set up its own dealing function and customer service centre, based in Glasgow, in 2011.

ii is 100% equity funded with no external debt and with corporate net assets of more than £100million.

Services and products

Through the company's direct-to-customer investing and trading service, investors can manage and trade shares, funds, investment trusts and bonds via trading accounts, ISAs and SIPPs. The platform also offers CFDs and spread betting accounts, as well as comprehensive (Level 2) market data.

These services are supported by portfolio-tracking tools, investment filters, the Super 60[5] and ACE 30[6] lists of rated investments and a selection of ready-made investment options, as well as impartial, specialist news and research from its editorial team and personal finance magazines, Moneywise and Money Observer. In July 2020 the owners announced that the August 2020 editions of Moneywise and Money Observer would be the last and that the magazines would cease publication.

On 8 January 2020, ii introduced free regular investing[7] and became the first of the big investment platforms to scrap its fee for the service.

Acquisitions

ii bought personal finance magazine Moneywise from Reader's Digest in 2004. This was followed by the acquisition of investment magazine Money Observer from Guardian Media Group in 2008. The broker joined forces with Motley Fool Share Dealing in 2015, replacing Halifax Share Dealing as the brand's service provider.

In October 2016, ii acquired the European business of TD Direct Investing (branded as TD Waterhouse) from its Canadian parent Toronto-Dominion Bank. With 300,000 UK customers, TD Direct was at the time larger than ii. The acquisition was completed in June 2017 and was financed by J.C. Flowers & Co, which became the majority shareholder in the group.

In October 2018, ii announced a deal to buy Alliance Trust Savings, which was completed in July 2019 and brought together the two largest flat-fee online investment platforms..

In February 2020, ii announced its intention to acquire The Share Centre, an independent retail stockbroker.[8] The acquisition was completed in July 2020[9].

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gollark: I didn't check because it didn't seem particularly worth learning about boring things like zoning laws.
gollark: I did wonder about this. It seems like the ideal, optimal, entirely flawless way to live would be to attain a giant warehouse of some kind and stick computers and a bed in one corner.
gollark: Some online friends did vaguely express interest in running our IRC network over ham radio instead of boring IP networks. That might be neat.
gollark: It's on my list of things to eternally never get round to doing.

References

  1. "Interactive Investor buyout 'strengthens voice' for flat fees". Financial Times.
  2. "About ii - Company History & Ownership - interactive investor". www.ii.co.uk. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  3. Collinson, Patrick (2000-02-18). "Interactive hits the market with a bang". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  4. Goodley, Simon (2001-07-02). "AMP eyes Interactive Investor". ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  5. "ii launches Super 60". www.ii.co.uk. Retrieved 2020-07-13.
  6. "ii launches UK's first rated list of ethical funds". www.ii.co.uk. Retrieved 2020-07-13.
  7. "Interactive Investor scraps regular investing fee". Financial Times.
  8. "interactive investor agrees terms to acquire The Share Centre". www.ii.co.uk. Retrieved 2020-06-05.
  9. "Interactive Investor completes acquisition of The Share Centre". Your Money. 2020-07-06. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
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