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
- Fund conducts IPO to raise capital
- Fixed number of shares issued
- Proceeds used to build portfolio
- 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
| Feature | Closed-End Fund | Open-End Fund (Mutual Fund) |
|---|---|---|
| Share Issuance | Fixed (IPO only) | Continuous |
| Redemption at NAV | No | Yes |
| Trading | On exchanges | With fund company |
| Pricing | Market price (supply/demand) | NAV |
| Premium/Discount | Common | Not applicable |
| Leverage | Often used | Rarely 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
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Equity CEFs | Invest in stocks |
| Bond CEFs | Invest in bonds (often municipal) |
| Specialty CEFs | Focus on specific sectors or strategies |
| Global/International | Non-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
- Buy at a Discount — Potential to buy $1 of assets for less than $1
- Higher Yields — Leverage can enhance income
- Professional Management — Active portfolio management
- Specific Strategies — Access to specialized investments
Risks of Closed-End Funds
- Discount Risk — Discount may widen, causing losses
- Leverage Risk — Magnifies losses in down markets
- Interest Rate Risk — Affects leveraged funds significantly
- Liquidity Risk — Some CEFs have limited trading volume
- 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
| Feature | Closed-End Fund | ETF | Mutual Fund |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shares | Fixed | Variable (creation/redemption) | Variable |
| Trading | Exchange | Exchange | Fund company |
| Pricing | Market price | Market price (close to NAV) | NAV |
| Premium/Discount | Common | Rare (arbitrage) | None |
| Leverage | Common | Rare | Rare |
| Redemption | No (trade on exchange) | Yes (through APs) | Yes |
A closed-end fund has a NAV of $15 per share and is trading at $13.50 per share. This fund is trading at:
What is a key risk associated with closed-end funds that use leverage?
Why might buying a closed-end fund at its IPO NOT be recommended?
3.1 Variable Annuities Overview
Chapter 3: Variable Contracts