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Interest-rate risk & bond funds
1. Interest-rate risk & bond funds
2. Closed-end bond fund
3. Bear bond market strategy
4. Management risks
 
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Closed-end bond fund

Unlike open-end funds, closed-end bond funds raise money only once by offering a fixed number of shares at an initial public offering (IPO). Then the shares trade on an exchange at a discount or premium to their net asset value.

Closed-end funds have other important differences that make them especially volatile when interest rates change. For instance, unlike open-end mutual funds, closed-end bond funds may be highly leveraged to increase potential yield.

One leveraging technique that closed-end bond funds frequently use is selling issues of very short-term preferred securities and then reinvesting the proceeds from the sale in long-term bonds. This strategy can result in high yields for holders of common shares of the fund when the spread, or difference, between the interest the fund is paying out and the interest it is earning is wide. But when interest rates are rising, the fund may have to pay out as much or even more interest than it is able to earn on its long-term bond investments.

Furthermore, closed-end funds tend to be most popular when interest rates are flat or falling, and investors flock to them in search of higher yields. But when interest rates are rising, the funds may be less attractive to investors, since they can find competitive yields in less volatile investment vehicles. So the price that investors are willing to pay for closed-end funds may fall.

Consequently, most experts warn that while closed-end bond funds may significantly outperform open-end funds when interest rates are flat or falling, they can fall dramatically in value when interest rates are rising.



 

         
   
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