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www-stat.wharton.upenn.edu/~steele/Courses/956/Resource/CEF/MalkielXu.pdfUnlike a regular (open-end) mutual fund, which sells new shares at net asset value (in some cases plus a sales charge) and also redeems shares at the net asset value (in some cases minus a redemption fee), a closed-end fund issues a fixed number of shares that then trade in the stock market just like an ordinary stock. Holders of shares who wish to liquidate must sell their shares to other investors. The shares are typically issued at net asset value (NAV) plus a fee to defray underwriting costs. Thus, the fund begins life selling at a premium. But typically, within months, the stock of the fund persistently sells at a discount to NAV.This persistent discount appears to violate the law of one price and constitutes the closed-end fund puzzle.
Hello, @hank …
At the moment, my fund managers have me -6% in short positions. Cash and bonds.
57: bonds
39: stocks
"other:" 3
Net 4% in cash.
Crash,...Surely I DO! RPSIX is that bond fund-of-funds with a smattering of stocks which I own. I don't own PRSIX. Maybe you just typo-d? Thanks for the explanation, @hank.
But if average investors were hoping to be able to walk into an office, they may just have to keep on hoping.Newly hired crew will work remotely until the new office opens in early 2022. Consistent with the existing virtual PAS service model, advisors in the Dallas office will engage with clients via phone, email, and videoconference.
The Dallas office will be Vanguard's 5th U.S. location. The firm was founded in Valley Forge, PA, in 1975 and has additional offices in Scottsdale, AZ (1994); Charlotte, NC (1997); and Washington, DC (2007).
Hi @Crash, Good question. As we’ve discussed before, funds that short stocks need to carry large cash balances. RPIEX may not short stocks (to any large degree anyway), but it does short bonds. That’s how it intends to make money during a period of rising interest rates (which everybody plus the alley cat assumes is going to happen). As with TMSRX, TRP is offering a fund here that might “buck the trend” should both equities and bonds tank.RPIEX. Overall performance this year is good. But still, the dividends are paltry. 51% in "cash?" They can't mean actual "cash" or MM? Could they???
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