For the month, 23% of all closed-end funds (CEFs) posted net-asset-value (NAV)-based returns in the black, with only 21% of equity CEFs and 24% of fixed income CEFs chalking up returns in the plus column.
Lipper’s mixed-assets CEFs (-0.71%) macro-group for the first month in three mitigated losses better than or outpaced its two equity-based brethren: domestic equity CEFs (-2.16%) and world equity CEFs (-2.48%). For the first month since August 2020, the Convertible Securities CEFs classification (+0.07%, April’s laggard) moved to the top of the equity leaderboard, followed by Income & Preferred Stock CEFs (-0.97%) and Sector Equity CEFs (-1.17%).
The world income CEFs macro-group – for the first month in five – mitigated losses better than or outpaced the other two macro-groups in the fixed income universe, posting a 0.19% loss on average, followed by domestic taxable bond CEFs (-0.46%) and municipal debt CEFs (-1.11%). Investors pushed Loan Participation CEFs (-0.08%) to the top of the domestic taxable fixed income leaderboard for the first month in three, followed by General Bond CEFs (-0.21%) and High Yield CEFs (-0.32%).
Year to date, both equity and fixed-income CEFs posted plus-side returns on a NAV basis, rising 1.06% and 2.92%, respectively.
The median discount of all CEFs widened 94 bps to 11.56% for May – wider than the 12-month moving average median discount (8.86%). Equity CEFs’ median discount widened 92 bps to 12.55%, while fixed income CEFs’ median discount widened 72 bps to 11.01%.
In this report, we highlight May 2023 CEF performance trends, premiums and discounts, and corporate actions and events.
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