Closed-End Funds

Closed-End Funds (CEFs) are investment companies that raise capital through an initial public offering and then trade on stock exchanges. Unlike open-end mutual funds, they do not continuously issue or redeem shares.

What is a Closed-End Fund?

A closed-end fund is an investment company that:

  • Raises capital through an IPO (one-time offering)
  • Issues a fixed number of shares
  • Trades on stock exchanges (NYSE, NASDAQ)
  • Does not redeem shares at NAV
  • May trade at a premium or discount to NAV

How Closed-End Funds Work

Initial Offering

  1. Fund conducts IPO to raise capital
  2. Fixed number of shares issued
  3. Proceeds used to build portfolio
  4. No new shares created after IPO

Secondary Market Trading

  • Shares trade on exchanges like stocks
  • Price determined by supply and demand
  • Can trade above (premium) or below (discount) NAV

Premium and Discount to NAV

Unlike open-end funds where shares are bought/sold at NAV, closed-end funds trade at market prices that may differ from NAV.

Trading at a Premium

  • Market Price > NAV
  • High demand or investor optimism
  • Example: NAV = $10, Market Price = $11 (10% premium)

Trading at a Discount

  • Market Price < NAV
  • Low demand or investor pessimism
  • Example: NAV = $10, Market Price = $9 (10% discount)

Key Insight: Most closed-end funds trade at discounts to NAV, sometimes significant (10-15% or more).

Closed-End Fund vs. Open-End Fund

FeatureClosed-End FundOpen-End Fund (Mutual Fund)
Share IssuanceFixed (IPO only)Continuous
Redemption at NAVNoYes
TradingOn exchangesWith fund company
PricingMarket price (supply/demand)NAV
Premium/DiscountCommonNot applicable
LeverageOften usedRarely used

Use of Leverage

Many closed-end funds use leverage to enhance returns:

  • Borrow money or issue preferred shares
  • Use borrowed funds to buy more securities
  • Can magnify both gains AND losses
  • Common in bond funds seeking higher yields

Leverage Example

A fund with $100 million in assets borrows $50 million:

  • Total portfolio: $150 million
  • If portfolio gains 10%: Fund gains 15% (before interest costs)
  • If portfolio loses 10%: Fund loses 15% (plus interest costs)

Warning: Leverage increases risk. Rising interest rates increase borrowing costs and can hurt leveraged funds.

Types of Closed-End Funds

TypeDescription
Equity CEFsInvest in stocks
Bond CEFsInvest in bonds (often municipal)
Specialty CEFsFocus on specific sectors or strategies
Global/InternationalNon-U.S. investments

Municipal Bond CEFs

Popular with income investors seeking tax-exempt income:

  • Hold municipal bonds
  • Often use leverage to enhance yield
  • Distributions typically tax-exempt
  • May trade at discount, providing additional yield

Advantages of Closed-End Funds

  1. Buy at a Discount — Potential to buy $1 of assets for less than $1
  2. Higher Yields — Leverage can enhance income
  3. Professional Management — Active portfolio management
  4. Specific Strategies — Access to specialized investments

Risks of Closed-End Funds

  1. Discount Risk — Discount may widen, causing losses
  2. Leverage Risk — Magnifies losses in down markets
  3. Interest Rate Risk — Affects leveraged funds significantly
  4. Liquidity Risk — Some CEFs have limited trading volume
  5. IPO Risk — Buying at IPO means paying full NAV plus sales charges

IPO Considerations

Exam Tip: Buying closed-end funds at IPO is generally not recommended because:

  • Investor pays NAV plus underwriting costs (often 5-7%)
  • Most CEFs eventually trade at discounts
  • Better to buy in secondary market at discount

Comparison: CEF vs. ETF vs. Mutual Fund

FeatureClosed-End FundETFMutual Fund
SharesFixedVariable (creation/redemption)Variable
TradingExchangeExchangeFund company
PricingMarket priceMarket price (close to NAV)NAV
Premium/DiscountCommonRare (arbitrage)None
LeverageCommonRareRare
RedemptionNo (trade on exchange)Yes (through APs)Yes
Test Your Knowledge

A closed-end fund has a NAV of $15 per share and is trading at $13.50 per share. This fund is trading at:

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

What is a key risk associated with closed-end funds that use leverage?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Why might buying a closed-end fund at its IPO NOT be recommended?

A
B
C
D