Legal & General is one of the UK’s leading providers of passive funds
This fund gives investors access to the largest technology companies in the world
It’s a simple and low-cost way to track the performance of the FTSE World Technology Index
This fund does not currently feature on our Wealth Shortlist of funds chosen by our analysts for their long-term performance potential
How it fits in a portfolio
The Legal & General Global Technology Index Trust invests in technology companies from all around the world, with a focus towards the US.
An index tracker fund is one of the simplest ways to invest, and this fund could be a low-cost way to gain exposure to the rapidly growing technology sector. Given its bias towards the US, it could also help diversify an investment portfolio that’s focused on other regions like Asia and Europe. Funds that invest in specific or specialist sectors carry more risk so a fund like this should only form a small part of a well-diversified investment portfolio.
Manager
Legal & General has managed index tracker funds for over 30 years and is one of the largest providers of index funds in the UK. That means it’s got the resources and expertise to track indices as closely as possible, and the scale to keep charges to a minimum.
Each index fund at Legal & General has a primary and secondary manager, though in practice the team as a whole helps to manage each fund. Alongside the wider team, Chris Tydeman is the primary manager of this fund. Tydeman joined the index team in 2011 having previously worked as a performance analyst. The secondary manager for this fund is Lawrence Chir. Prior to joining Legal & General in 2019, Chir worked as a fund manager at BlackRock for a decade.
Process
The fund aims to track the performance of the FTSE World Technology Index. It does this by investing in every company in the index and in the same proportion. This is known as full replication and helps the fund closely match the performance of the benchmark.
While there are currently 254 companies in the index, it’s concentrated with its top ten companies making up around 71% of the fund. Nvidia, Apple and Microsoft are the largest at 16.4%, 13.4% and 13.1% respectively.
86% of the fund is invested in the US, with the rest spread across Japan, Europe and some higher risk emerging markets like Taiwan and Korea. This is determined by the underlying index the fund is tracking.
In any index tracker fund, factors like withholding taxes, dealing commissions and spreads, and the cost of running the fund all drag on performance. The team try to keep the fund’s turnover, the frequency at which shares are bought and sold, as low as possible to reduce some of these costs.
Legal & General cross trades shares internally across all its own funds when there’s an index rebalance. Trading efficiently like this helps to minimise costs and reduce the tracking difference between the fund and the index.
Culture
Legal & General has developed its passive fund range over the last three decades. The company manages around £510bn in tracker funds, allowing it to offer a wide range of index-tracking options.
Legal & General has built a team of experienced passive fund specialists and is innovative too. If an index doesn’t exist for a sector the team would like to track, they’ll often work with index providers to create one so they can track it.
The team managing this fund works closely with various risk departments across the business. We believe this provides support and adds challenge where appropriate.
Employees are also encouraged to participate in Legal & General’s sharesave scheme which should encourage them to be more engaged with the growth of the company. In addition, a portion of fund managers’ bonuses are invested into the funds they manage. By doing this, their interests are further aligned with the investors in the fund.
ESG Integration
Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM) is predominantly a passive investor, but we are impressed with the extent to which they’ve woven Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) into its culture. Being a mostly passive fund house hasn’t stopped them being innovative when it comes to ESG. In May 2019, the firm launched its ‘Future World’ range of funds, which invest more in companies that score well on a range of ESG criteria, though the Global Technology Index fund isn’t part of that range.
In 2019, LGIM established its Global Research and Engagement Platform, which brings together representatives from the investment and stewardship teams, in order to unify their engagement efforts. Engagement is conducted in line with the firm’s comprehensive engagement policy. A detailed description of the firm’s engagement and voting activity (including case studies) is available in its annual Active Ownership report.
LGIM’s Stewardship team is responsible for exercising voting rights globally, both for LGIM’s active and index funds. Voting decisions are publicly available through a tool which allows a user to search for any company to find out how LGIM voted, and a detailed rationale is provided for votes against management and abstentions.
Legal & General Global Technology Index is a passive fund designed to track an index that doesn’t specifically integrate ESG analysis or exclude companies in certain industries.
Cost
The fund has an annual ongoing fund charge of 0.33%, but a discount of 0.13% is available for HL investors, which reduces the charge to 0.20%. Our platform charge of up to 0.45% per annum also applies except in the Junior ISA, where no platform charge applies.
Performance
The technology sector has delivered significant returns over the last 10 years, and the fund has gained 749.14%* during this time. As expected from an index tracker fund, it’s fallen behind the benchmark over the long term because of the costs involved in running the fund. However, the tools used by the managers have helped to keep performance tight to the index.
The share prices of technology companies have rallied in recent years. In the last five years, the fund and its benchmark, the FTSE World Technology Index, have risen by 158.41 % and 163.43% respectively. But remember, past performance isn’t a guide to future returns.
More recently over the past 12 months, the fund returned 26.05% versus 26.73% for the index. Semiconductor companies were the biggest contributors to the fund’s performance. Companies like Nvidia and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) have benefited from the strong demand for chips used to power Artificial Intelligence (AI), which has boosted their profits and share prices.
Despite strong overall gains, the tech sector had plenty of ups and downs during the year. News of a low-cost AI model from Chinese company DeepSeek led to a big selloff in tech companies, although markets quickly recovered when the impact proved less significant than feared. Additional volatility came from uncertainty around Trump’s tariffs and investors taking profits after big AI-driven rallies.
Note that while the technology sector has performed well in recent years, this won’t be the case every year as different sectors will come in and out of favour. That’s why we believe it’s important for long-term investors to maintain diversified portfolios across different sectors and styles of investing.
The FTSE World Technology Index is priced when the market closes whereas the fund is priced earlier in the day. The movement in share prices in this period in between can artificially increase the tracking difference between the fund and the index.
Given Legal & General’s size, experience and expertise running index tracker funds, we expect the fund to continue to track the index closely in the future, though there are no guarantees.
Annual performance growth
Nov 20 – Nov 21 | Nov 21 – Nov 22 | Nov 22 – Nov 23 | Nov 23 – Nov 24 | Nov 24 – Nov 25 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Legal & General Global Technology Index Trust | 39.97% | -23.97% | 40.70% | 36.91% | 26.05% |
FTSE World Technology | 39.04% | -19.30% | 34.07% | 38.18% | 26.73% |


