CISI IAD Study Guide 2026
Everything you need to pass the CISI IAD exam in one place: the exam format, every topic to study, real practice questions with explanations, flashcards, and full-length practice tests. Free, no sign-up needed.
📋 CISI IAD Exam Format at a Glance
📚 CISI IAD Topics to Study (27)
✍️ Sample CISI IAD Questions & Answers
1. What is the maximum compensation limit per person per firm under the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) for investment claims?
The FSCS provides compensation of up to £85,000 per eligible person per firm for investment claims (where a firm has failed and is unable to pay claims against it). This is separate from the deposit protection limit (also £85,000). The FSCS is funded by levies on authorised firms and acts as the compensation scheme of last resort when firms become insolvent.
2. In a period of quantitative easing (QE) by the Bank of England, what is the expected effect on gilt prices?
During QE, the Bank of England purchases gilts from the secondary market, increasing demand and pushing prices upward. This in turn reduces gilt yields, lowering borrowing costs across the economy. The mechanism works through asset price channels to stimulate economic activity.
3. What is 'quantitative easing' (QE) and how does it affect financial markets?
QE involves the central bank (e.g., Bank of England) creating money electronically to buy assets — primarily government bonds. This pushes up bond prices (depressing yields) and encourages investors to move into higher-risk assets, supporting equity and property prices.
4. What is the purpose of the EU's Markets Abuse Regulation (MAR)?
MAR (effective 2016) prohibits insider dealing (trading on inside information), market manipulation (creating artificial prices or volumes), and the improper disclosure of inside information. It applies to all financial instruments admitted to EU trading venues and their related OTC derivatives.
5. What is the purpose of 'rebalancing' a client's investment portfolio?
Rebalancing involves buying and selling assets to restore the portfolio to its target asset allocation after market movements cause drift. For example, if equities outperform and grow from 60% to 70% of the portfolio, rebalancing sells some equities and buys other assets to return to 60%. This maintains the client's intended risk level, enforces a disciplined 'sell high, buy low' approach, and prevents concentration risk. Common approaches include calendar-based (e.g., quarterly) or threshold-based (e.g., when any asset class drifts more than 5%).
6. What is the relationship between bond prices and interest rates?
Bond prices and interest rates have an inverse relationship: when rates rise, existing bond prices fall because newer bonds offer higher yields.