Unicorn UK Smaller Companies B Inc
Category UK Small-Cap Equity
This fund can be held in an Investment ISA, SIPP and Investment Account
Last buy/sell price
654.54p
1.038p (+0.16%)
Fund Code
UCSCI
3178506
GB0031785065
Prices updated as at 12 Dec 2025
Prices in GBX
Investment objective
The Unicorn UK Smaller Companies Fund aims to achieve long term capital growth by investing primarily in UK companies included within the UK Numis Smaller Companies plus AIM Index. For this purpose, UK companies are defined as those which are incorporated or domiciled in the UK, or have a significant part of their operations in the UK. The Index covers the bottom tenth by value of the main UK equity market plus AIM stocks that meet the same size limit. The Fund invests for the long term and there is no guarantee that any particular return will be achieved, over any period, and investors should note that their capital is always at risk. The investment approach is to identify individual companies for investment and therefore the portfolio may not be representative of the index.
Important documents: Please ensure that you have read the Key Information Document/Technical Guide
, SDR Consumer facing disclosure, Pre-sale Illustrations document & Doing Business with Fidelity document (incorporating the Fidelity Client Terms) and the fund information documents. These can be found within the Charges & documents section.
- Key stats
- Growth
- Performance
- Charges & documents
- Dividends
- Portfolio
- Risk & rating
- Management
Growth chart of 1,000
Please note that past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns. The Growth of 1,000 chart shows growth of the asset based on an initial investment of 1,000 over a set period, using the actual daily returns for the asset over that period. It is plotted in the base currency of the fund (for example GBP, Euros or Dollars) which is the same as the price currency at top of this page. If the price currency is anything other than pound sterling the performance return may increase/decrease because of currency fluctuations.