Closed-End Fund

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

An investment company that issues a fixed number of shares through an IPO, which then trade on exchanges at market prices that can differ from NAV. Does not continuously issue or redeem shares, and may use leverage to enhance returns.

Example

A closed-end municipal bond fund has a NAV of $10.00 per share but trades on the NYSE at $9.50, representing a 5% discount to NAV. Investors buy shares from other investors, not from the fund itself.

Common Confusion

Closed-end funds have fixed shares and trade at market price (can be premium/discount to NAV); mutual funds continuously create/redeem shares at NAV. ETFs also trade on exchanges but use creation/redemption to keep price close to NAV.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying the key structural difference between closed-end funds and mutual funds (fixed vs. continuous share issuance)
  • Calculating premium or discount to NAV based on market price and net asset value
  • Understanding that closed-end fund shares trade on secondary markets between investors
  • Recognizing that closed-end funds can trade at significant premiums or discounts to NAV
  • Identifying that closed-end funds commonly use leverage to enhance distribution rates

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Robert, a 55-year-old investor seeking income, is considering a closed-end municipal bond fund currently trading at $9.20 per share with a NAV of $10.00. The fund pays monthly distributions and has a current distribution rate of 6.5%. Robert asks why the fund trades below its NAV. Which explanation is most accurate?

Question 2

What is the primary structural difference between closed-end funds and open-end mutual funds?

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Question 3

A closed-end equity fund has a net asset value (NAV) of $25.00 per share and is currently trading on the NYSE at $27.50 per share. What is the fund's premium or discount to NAV?

Question 4

All of the following are characteristics of closed-end funds EXCEPT

Question 5

A new closed-end real estate fund completes its IPO at $20 per share, raising $500 million. Six months later, the fund's NAV is $21.50 per share, but it trades on the NYSE at $19.00 per share. Which of the following statements are accurate?

1. The fund is trading at a discount to NAV
2. New investors can purchase shares directly from the fund at $20 per share
3. The fund may use leverage to invest in additional real estate securities
4. The market price reflects investor supply and demand, not just the underlying asset values

💡 Memory Aid

Closed-End Fund = "CLOSED nightclub" with fixed capacity. After the IPO (opening night), NO new people allowed in, so existing tickets trade between people at whatever price they'll pay (premium/discount). Mutual funds = open door, unlimited entry at exact cover charge (NAV).

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:

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