A Liquidity-Based Theory of Closed-End Funds
50 Pages Posted: 24 Mar 2005
There are 2 versions of this paper
A Liquidity-Based Theory of Closed-End Funds
A Liquidity-Based Theory of Closed-End Funds
Date Written: 2006
Abstract
This paper develops a rational, liquidity-based model of closed-end funds (CEFs) that provides an economic motivation for the existence of this organizational form: They offer a means for investors to buy illiquid securities, without facing the potential costs associated with direct trading and without the externalities imposed by an open-end fund structure. Our theory predicts the patterns observed in CEF IPO behavior and the observed behavior of the CEF discount, which results from a tradeoff between the liquidity benefits of investing in the CEF and the fees charged by the fund's managers. In particular, the model explains why IPOs occur in waves in certain sectors at a time, why funds are issued at a premium to net asset value (NAV), and why they later usually trade at a discount. We also conduct an empirical investigation, which, overall, provides more support for a liquidity-based model than for an alternative sentiment-based explanation.
Keywords: theory of closed-end funds
JEL Classification: G14
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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