Unit Investment Trust (UIT)
Unit Investment Trust (UIT)
An investment company that purchases a fixed portfolio of securities and holds them unchanged until termination. Registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 with a defined termination date, redeemable units (not shares), no active management after creation, and no board of directors.
A UIT purchases a fixed portfolio of 30 dividend-paying stocks worth $50 million with a 5-year termination date. Unlike a mutual fund, the UIT trustee cannot replace underperforming stocks or add new holdings. After 5 years, the UIT liquidates and distributes proceeds to unitholders. All income is passed through to unitholders for tax purposes.
Students confuse UITs with mutual funds or closed-end funds. Key differences: UITs have FIXED portfolios with NO management after creation, defined termination dates, and pass-through income treatment. Mutual funds actively manage and can change holdings; closed-end funds have active management but fixed capitalization.
How This Is Tested
- Identifying UITs based on fixed portfolio and no active management characteristics
- Distinguishing between UITs (trust structure, no board) and mutual funds or closed-end funds (corporate structure, board of directors)
- Understanding that UITs pass through all dividend and interest income to unitholders
- Recognizing that UITs have defined termination dates when the portfolio liquidates
- Determining the structural difference between redeemable units (UITs) and continuously issued shares (mutual funds)
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Portfolio management after creation | None permitted | UITs hold a fixed portfolio with no buying/selling after initial creation |
| Income treatment | Passed through to unitholders | UITs operate as pass-through entities; income flows to unitholders who pay tax on their share |
| Termination date | Mandatory at maturity | UITs must liquidate portfolio and distribute proceeds at termination |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
Margaret, a 62-year-old retiree, wants a diversified portfolio of investment-grade bonds that will mature in 10 years when she plans a major purchase. She prefers a passive approach with predictable income and no ongoing management decisions. Her adviser recommends a Unit Investment Trust (UIT) holding 40 municipal bonds with a 10-year termination date. Which characteristic of UITs makes this recommendation suitable for Margaret?
B is correct. UITs purchase a fixed portfolio of securities at inception and hold them unchanged until the termination date, when the portfolio liquidates and proceeds are distributed to unitholders. This "buy and hold" structure aligns perfectly with Margaret's 10-year time horizon and preference for a passive approach with no ongoing management decisions.
A is incorrect because UITs do NOT actively manage or trade the portfolio after creation. There is no portfolio manager making buy/sell decisions - this is a defining characteristic that distinguishes UITs from mutual funds. C is incorrect because UITs are redeemable securities (like mutual funds), not exchange-traded like closed-end funds. Unitholders redeem at NAV, typically through the sponsor or trustee. D is incorrect because UITs must distribute ALL dividend and interest income to unitholders - they cannot reinvest income to compound returns like some mutual funds can.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of the fixed portfolio characteristic that makes UITs suitable for investors wanting a passive, buy-and-hold strategy with a defined time horizon. This feature distinguishes UITs from actively managed mutual funds and is critical for suitability analysis.
What is the primary management characteristic that distinguishes Unit Investment Trusts (UITs) from mutual funds and closed-end funds?
B is correct. The defining characteristic of UITs is that the portfolio is assembled at inception and held UNCHANGED until termination. There is no portfolio manager making ongoing buy/sell decisions, no rebalancing, and no replacing underperforming securities. This passive, fixed structure contrasts sharply with mutual funds and closed-end funds, which have active portfolio managers who continuously adjust holdings.
A is incorrect because UITs do NOT have a board of directors. UITs use a trust structure (not a corporate structure), with a trustee overseeing administrative functions but making no investment decisions. Mutual funds and closed-end funds have boards of directors. C is incorrect because continuous share issuance/redemption describes open-end mutual funds, not UITs. UITs have redeemable units but do not continuously create new units like mutual funds. D is incorrect because UITs are redeemable at NAV through the sponsor, not traded on exchanges. Exchange trading describes closed-end funds and ETFs.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests the structural differences between investment company types. Understanding that UITs have NO active management after creation is fundamental to explaining their lower costs, tax efficiency, and suitability for passive investors compared to actively managed mutual funds.
Master Investment Vehicles Concepts
CertFuel's spaced repetition system helps you retain key terms like Unit Investment Trust (UIT) and 500+ other exam concepts. Start practicing for free.
Access Free BetaA Unit Investment Trust (UIT) holds a portfolio of dividend-paying stocks and corporate bonds. During the year, the UIT receives $500,000 in dividend income and $300,000 in bond interest. What must the UIT do with this income?
B is correct. UITs pass through all dividend and interest income to unitholders. As a pass-through entity with a fixed portfolio structure, the UIT cannot reinvest income to purchase additional securities. This pass-through treatment is a structural characteristic that distinguishes UITs from mutual funds, which may offer dividend reinvestment options.
A is incorrect because UITs cannot reinvest income. The fixed portfolio structure means no new securities can be purchased after creation. All income flows through to unitholders. C is incorrect because while UITs do have small operating expenses (trustee fees, custody fees), the pass-through structure requires income to flow to unitholders. Fees are typically deducted separately from unit value. D is incorrect because UITs cannot rebalance or change the portfolio composition. The "fixed portfolio" characteristic means no buying or selling of securities occurs after initial creation, regardless of performance.
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of UIT pass-through income treatment. This structural feature affects tax planning (investors receive taxable income annually) and suitability (good for income-focused investors, less suitable for those wanting accumulation/compounding). It is a key difference from mutual funds with dividend reinvestment programs.
All of the following are characteristics of Unit Investment Trusts (UITs) EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). UITs do NOT employ portfolio managers or engage in active trading. The portfolio is fixed at creation and held unchanged until termination. This is the fundamental characteristic that defines UITs and distinguishes them from mutual funds and closed-end funds, which have active portfolio management.
A is accurate: All UITs have a specified termination date (commonly 15 months to 30+ years depending on the underlying securities), at which point the portfolio is liquidated and proceeds distributed to unitholders. This differs from mutual funds and closed-end funds, which have perpetual existence. B is accurate: UITs issue redeemable units that investors can redeem at NAV, similar to mutual fund shares. This provides liquidity even though the UIT has a fixed portfolio. D is accurate: UITs use a trust structure (not a corporation), with a trustee handling administrative duties but making no investment decisions. Mutual funds and closed-end funds are organized as corporations with boards of directors.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to distinguish UITs from other investment companies. The absence of active management is the defining feature that explains UITs' lower costs, tax efficiency (less portfolio turnover), and suitability for passive investors. Understanding this structural difference is essential for accurate suitability recommendations.
An investor is comparing a Unit Investment Trust (UIT) holding 50 large-cap dividend stocks with a similar large-cap dividend mutual fund. Which of the following statements accurately describe the UIT?
1. The UIT will have lower ongoing fees because there is no active portfolio management
2. The UIT portfolio will remain unchanged unless a security defaults or is involved in a merger
3. The UIT must distribute all dividend income to investors and cannot reinvest it
4. The UIT can extend its termination date indefinitely if performance is strong
B is correct. Statements 1, 2, and 3 are accurate characteristics of UITs.
Statement 1 is TRUE: UITs typically have lower ongoing fees than actively managed mutual funds because there is no portfolio manager making investment decisions after the initial creation. While UITs have trustee fees and small operating expenses, the absence of active management (no advisory fees) significantly reduces costs compared to actively managed mutual funds.
Statement 2 is TRUE: The UIT portfolio is fixed at creation and remains unchanged. The only exceptions are involuntary changes like security defaults, tender offers, mergers, or called bonds. The trustee cannot voluntarily sell underperforming holdings or add new securities based on market conditions or opportunities.
Statement 3 is TRUE: UITs pass through all dividend and interest income to unitholders. As pass-through entities with fixed portfolios, UITs cannot reinvest income to purchase additional securities. This structural characteristic differs from mutual funds, which may offer dividend reinvestment programs (DRIPs).
Statement 4 is FALSE: UITs have a mandatory termination date established at creation. The UIT cannot extend this date, regardless of performance. At termination, the portfolio must be liquidated and all proceeds distributed to unitholders. This differs from mutual funds and closed-end funds, which have perpetual existence.
The Series 65 exam tests comprehensive understanding of UIT characteristics: passive management (lower fees), fixed portfolio (minimal turnover), mandatory income distribution (tax implications), and defined termination (time horizon matching). Understanding all four elements demonstrates mastery of UIT structure essential for comparing investment company types and making suitability recommendations.
💡 Memory Aid
Think of UITs as a "SET IT and FORGET IT" investment: Portfolio is SET at creation (fixed, no changes), then FORGET IT (no management, no trading). Three key rules: Fixed portfolio (no changes), Income passed through (to unitholders), Termination date (mandatory end). Unlike mutual funds that actively manage, UITs are "hands-off" until they self-destruct at maturity.
Related Concepts
This term is part of this cluster:
More in Fund Structures
Mutual Fund
An open-end investment company that pools money from many investors to purchase ...
Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF)
A pooled investment security that trades on an exchange like a stock throughout ...
Closed-End Fund
An investment company that issues a fixed number of shares through an IPO, which...
Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: