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Closed-End Fund

Fund structure with a fixed share base that trades on an exchange, often at a premium or discount to net asset value.

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A closed-end fund is a fund structure with a fixed share base that trades on an exchange, often at a premium or discount to net asset value.

It matters because the market price of a closed-end fund can diverge from the value of its underlying portfolio, which creates risks and opportunities that do not look like ordinary mutual fund pricing.

How It Works

A closed-end fund generally:

  • raises capital through an initial offering
  • keeps a fixed or relatively stable share count
  • trades on an exchange like a stock
  • may trade above or below net asset value

Why It Matters

The structure changes how investors think about liquidity, discounts, premiums, leverage, and portfolio access. It also helps explain why closed-end funds sit between mutual funds and exchange-traded securities in practice.

  • Open-End Fund: Contrasting structure that issues and redeems shares directly.
  • Exchange-Traded Fund: Another exchange-traded pooled vehicle, but with a different creation-redemption mechanism.
  • Net Asset Value: Important benchmark for interpreting premiums and discounts.
Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026