Investing in UK Stocks: Guide by Country
The FTSE 100 trades at a significant discount to US markets on most valuation metrics and offers higher dividend yields (~3.5% vs ~1.4% for the S&P 500). It is heavily weighted toward energy, mining, financials, and consumer staples — useful diversification away from US tech concentration. Brokers, FX costs, and regulation vary significantly by your home country — select yours below.
Benchmark: FTSE 100
Best UCITS ETF: ISF (iShares Core FTSE 100 UCITS ETF)
Primary currency: GBP
Choose your home country
Indian investors
INR → GBP
Converting INR to USD through IBKR costs ~0.1% vs 0.5–1% through Indian bank wire. On ₹8.3 lakh ($10,000), IBKR saves ₹3,500–7,500 vs a standard bank conversion.
UK investors
GBP → GBP
Converting GBP to USD via HL costs 1% each way. IBKR charges 0.1%. On a £10,000 investment: HL charges ~£100, IBKR ~£10.
Australian investors
AUD → GBP
CommSec International charges 0.6% FX each way. IBKR charges 0.1%. On A$15,000 ($10,000 equivalent), CommSec costs ~A$90, IBKR costs ~A$15.
Singaporean investors
SGD → GBP
Tiger Brokers and moomoo offer competitive FX rates for SGD→USD conversions (0.2–0.3%). IBKR remains cheapest at 0.1%. On S$13,500 ($10,000), difference is S$13–27.
UAE-based investors
AED → GBP
AED/USD is pegged at 3.67 — there is effectively no currency risk when UAE-based investors buy USD-denominated assets. FX conversion costs are minimal (the peg eliminates rate fluctuation, only the spread matters).
Key risk
GBP currency risk; UK dividend withholding (none for most — UK doesn't withhold on dividends)