Leveraging Collective Investment Schemes for Growth

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Leveraging Collective Investment Schemes for Growth
Leveraging Collective Investment Schemes for Growth

Jean-Claude Nshimiyimana

Africa-Press – Rwanda. For investors and other people looking to grow their wealth, the real challenge lies not in accumulating capital but knowing where and how to invest it wisely. This is where Rwanda’s Collective Investment Schemes (CIS) provide a structure for pooling funds, spreading risk, and generating returns for investors.

Rwanda’s capital market offers opportunities for businesses seeking capital and individuals seeking to build wealth. Catalytic to this prospect are the CIS, often known as funds, a structured approach to pooling funds from multiple investors for collective investment, in accordance with the CIS Act of 2021.

The Capital Market Authority (CMA) serving as the chief regulator for CIS, licenses, regulates, and oversees Collective Investment Schemes and their service providers, intervening when necessary to protect investors. The CMA recognises several types of CIS, including a unit trust, investment company, partnership, and contractual schemes, all of which operate on the principle of pooling money from many investors to invest in a diversified portfolio of securities or other assets.

For businesses, particularly public companies and issuers of securities, CIS can be a powerful mechanism for capital raising. Businesses can raise funds by offering various securities, including shares, debt securities, derivatives, and asset-backed securities, to the public through CIS. This process requires the submission and prior approval of a prospectus by the CMA.

Securities issued through CIS can be listed on Rwanda Stock Exchange (RSE), which increases visibility, liquidity, and investor trust. Beyond this listing benefit, offers can be made to specific categories of investors, such as accredited, sophisticated, or qualified institutional investors.

CIS provide individual and institutional investors with opportunities to build wealth through a variety of benefits. These include diversification, which spreads investments across multiple asset classes; professional management by licensed managers who oversee portfolios on behalf of investors; and access to a wide range of instruments such as bonds, Asset-Backed Securities (ABS), Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), and Islamic securities.

In practice, ABS allow investors to earn income from pools of underlying assets, while REITs provide exposure to real estate markets without the need for direct ownership. Islamic securities, once legalised, will further expand opportunities by offering investment options structured in accordance with Sharia principles. To support these activities, the Central Securities Depository (CSD) increases efficiency in the market by streamlining trading and record-keeping, thereby advancing smooth transactions and secure safekeeping of securities.

Exemption from income tax

Rwanda’s 2022 Income Tax Act, as amended to date, incorporates several tax incentives and benefits for businesses and individuals who invest in CIS. The incentives are part of a broader government strategy to promote and facilitate various types of investment through tax reductions and exemptions.

A primary advantage for investors in CIS is the exemption from income tax on income generated from savings within these schemes. This means that profits or gains from CIS investments are not subject to the standard 28% income tax rate.

The Income Tax Act also provides exemption from capital gain tax for any capital gain realised from the sale or transfer of shares or units of CIS, removing a potential tax burden that might otherwise deter investors from participating in or liquidating their investments within the CIS.

While not exclusively for CIS, the broader capital market environment, which CIS leverages by listing securities on platforms such as RSE, offers additional tax advantages.

For instance, a newly listed company on the capital market can benefit from a reduced corporate income tax rate for a period of five years starting from its listing date. This reduced rate of 20% applies if the company sells at least 40% of its shares to the public, representing a significant reduction from the general corporate income tax rate of 28% (Article 2 of Income Tax Act, 2023).

Likewise, to stimulate investment in listed securities, the withholding tax on dividends and interest derived from securities listed on the capital market is set at a preferential rate of 5%, provided the beneficiary is a resident taxpayer of Rwanda or the East African Community. Moreover, licensed CIS registered as investors may qualify for a 3% corporate income tax rate, provided they meet specified operational and governance requirements.

The 2011 Capital Market Business Act, as amended to date, and the 2024 Capital Market Corporate Governance Code, work together to ensure transparency, market integrity, and investor protection by prohibiting unfair practices like insider trading and market manipulation. They also require that all market participants, including brokers, dealers, investment advisors, and fund administrators, are licensed and meet strict financial and corporate governance standards.

This makes CIS a timely alleyway permitting businesses to secure financing while allowing individuals to diversify their portfolios and build wealth. CIS effectively addresses the core challenge of investing wisely and responsibly. Businesses and individuals should now explore and take full advantage of the opportunities that CIS presents, starting with some of the CIS already licensed by the CMA, including Iterambere Fund and Aguka Fund, among others.

Source: The New Times

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