5 things to note before opting for a closed-end fund

Aug 23, 2017
 

The sales spiel of closed-end funds give the illusion that they are in the bargain bin.

No matter which fund or fund house, the rhetoric is consistent: Fund managers can do a better job simply because the closed-end structure allows them to work with a stable pool of capital. Huge inflows would lead to the issue of cash deployment, a problem if valuations are steep. Sudden outflows may result in the manager disposing off stocks he would rather hold. As a result, a fund manager in an open-end fund is sometimes forced to buy or sell securities at inopportune times.

In a closed-end fund, since the investment horizon of the investor and fund manager are in sync, the fund manager will not have to contend with such a situation.

Sounds like a sweet deal, right? In theory that argument is solid, but the reality does not bear this out.

In fact, the CIO of a leading AMC at a Morningstar Investment Conference noted that in terms of performance, closed-end funds have not done better than open-end funds. He went on to point out that since open-end funds are the more visible part of the business and under constant scrutiny, they are probably managed by more experienced managers. His verdict: “I don't think it is right to say that the fund managers of closed-end funds have any advantage in managing those funds.”

The very argument proposed by proponents of closed-end funds works against it.

When stocks are available at great bargains, there are no inflows which will allow the fund managers to pick them up, unless they sell some of their existing holdings.

The dimension of timing.

Because the launch and the closure of such funds are all pre-fixed, investors must be a bit more careful about that aspect. In other words, there is a significant element of timing in these products which can have a huge impact on overall returns.

A fund that collects money and invests when the market is on a roll will not be in a good place if redemption takes place a few years later during a market downturn. Conversely, a fund getting redeemed in today’s market should be a winner. But a look at the returns reveals that they are not particularly better than their open-ended counterparts.

The behavioral tendencies can be curbed by systematically investing.

Closed-end funds operate on the reasoning that the structure ties up the investor so that he does not flee in panic should the market take a turn for the worse. After all it is no surprise that investors redeem when the market drops and flock to funds when the market is on an upturn.

To counter such behavioural tendencies, we don’t recommend closed-end funds but that investors invest systematically via a SIP in a reputed open-end fund.

Investing systematically over market cycles is the way to approach equity investing.

Funds have histories, as do fund managers.

Closed-end funds by design can only accept money during the launch period and that too at one go. So while investors in an open-end fund would check the fund’s mandate, the fund manager’s ability to stick to the mandate and performance track record before opting for a SIP, they do not have that leeway with a closed-end fund.

When opting for a closed-end fund, the investor only has the pedigree of the fund house and its track record with other schemes to fall back on. This is a far cry from an optimal situation.

That is not to suggest that investors buy funds simply because the performance numbers are good. While the predictive power of past performance is limited, it can be remarkably informative when used in the right context.

The issue of liquidity.

Investors do not get the chance to exit during the tenure of the fund, which is a minimum of three years. Should they desperately need the money, they can sell on the stock exchange where the fund is listed. But this is not a viable exit route since the selling price is most often lower than its net asset value, or NAV. Ditto if the fund manager changes and they want out.

Of course, you may even be given the option to continue. Last year, an AMC's funds of 2013 were maturing. Investors were given the option to stay with an extension till December 2018, or opt out.

In a closed-end fund, investors cannot pull out their money as and when they choose to. As a result, the AMC finds it more beneficial to pay distributors a high upfront commission for attracting investments since they are fairly certain of how much they will garner as expense ratio over the next few years. The collateral damage could be mis-selling. A distributor chasing those high commissions could push this product. The investor has to be responsible enough not to fall for the sales pitch blindly.

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