Amundi MSCI All Country World UCITS ETF (Acc)
Amundi MSCI All Country World UCITS ETF (Acc): what it costs, where it's based, how it tracks MSCI ACWI, and how it sits next to the other MSCI ACWI funds Europeans hold. The facts, from its own reports, and no verdict.
The facts
- Fee (TER)
- 0.45%
- Domicile
- 🇱🇺 Luxembourg
- Structure
- Synthetic (swap)
- Income
- Accumulating
- Size
- €2.5bn
- Launched
- Sep 2011
- Securities lending
- No
- ISIN
- LU1829220216
- Provider
- Amundi
- Primary ticker
- LYY0
- Synthetic (swap-based)
The priciest here: synthetic and Luxembourg-domiciled, the former Lyxor fund.
How far it drifts from the index
- Return 1y
- 25.9%
- Return 3y
- 65.3%
- Return 5y
- 71.9%
Over the period trackingdifferences.com measures, it trailed its index by about 0.18% a year, all in. That gap is the fee plus the cost of tracking, made real.
Returns are total return in euros to 30 June 2026, from justETF, so every fund is measured to the same date. “Vs index” is the average yearly tracking difference against its own index, from trackingdifferences.com (the standard European source); negative means it beat its index.
What the fee costs over time
Held at €100,000 for thirty years, this fund's fee costs roughly €50k more than the cheapest MSCI ACWI fund on this shortlist, on fee alone. Put your own pot and horizon in and see it as months of your life:
The other MSCI ACWI funds
Same index, so nearly the same holdings. What separates them is fee, domicile and structure, which is the tracking difference above, fund by fund.
| Fund | Fee | Domicile | Vs index |
|---|---|---|---|
| iShares MSCI ACWI UCITS ETF (Acc)SSAC · iShares | 0.20% | 🇮🇪 Ireland | +0.15% |
| SPDR MSCI ACWI UCITS ETF (Acc)SPYY · SPDR (State Street) | 0.12% | 🇮🇪 Ireland | +0.11% |
Which line do I buy?
The same share class lists on several exchanges in several currencies. The tickers below are one and the same fund: buying the euro line or the dollar line changes nothing about what you earn. Pick whichever your broker offers cheapest.
- LYY0 · Xetra · EUR
- ACWI · Borsa Italiana · EUR
- CWEB · Euronext Paris · EUR
Where to buy it
Which broker holds this cheapest for your monthly buy is the broker guide's half, with the yearly cost priced.
Know a figure here that's wrong or out of date? Point me to the line and a source. Every correction gets checked before the yearly refresh. That's how this page stays right.
Report a correctionCommon questions
- Is Amundi MSCI All Country World accumulating or distributing?
- Accumulating. Amundi MSCI All Country World reinvests its dividends inside the fund, untouched, so in most places there's nothing to declare each year and nothing to reinvest by hand.
- Where is Amundi MSCI All Country World domiciled, and does it matter?
- Luxembourg. Domicile changes how much US dividend tax the fund pays inside itself before the return reaches you; Irish funds get the 15% treaty rate, which is why most of the funds Europeans hold are Irish. Your own country's tax on the fund is a separate question, and that's the atlas's job. The whole mechanism, layer by layer, is in the withholding guide.
- Is Amundi MSCI All Country World's fee good?
- At 0.45% it isn't the cheapest MSCI ACWI fund here (the lowest is 0.12%), but fee is only step one. What a fund actually keeps after US dividend tax and lending is the tracking difference above, where a slightly pricier fund sometimes comes out ahead.
- Which Amundi MSCI All Country World ticker do I actually buy?
- Whichever line your broker offers cheapest. LYY0, ACWI, CWEB are the same share class on different exchanges and currencies: the holdings are identical, and buying the euro line or the dollar line changes nothing about what you earn.
Checked July 2026
The structural facts (fee, domicile, structure, size) are each fund’s own, from its factsheet or KID, checked and cited. The returns come from justETF, a reputable ETF data service, so every fund is measured to the same date on the same basis: the only honest way to compare them. The tracking difference (how each fund actually did against its own index) comes from trackingdifferences.com, the standard European source. I don’t compute any of it myself, and there are still no affiliate links.
No affiliate links. No paywall. Nothing on this page is for sale, and no broker pays me to rank one fund above another. The neutrality is the whole point.
Structural facts from the funds’ own reports, returns via justETF, tracking via trackingdifferences.com. Not a recommendation, and I’m not a licensed adviser. Past returns are not a guide to future ones. Which fund suits you depends on your broker, your account and your country’s tax. Not advice.
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