Tag Archives: closed-end-funds

Healthcare And Biotechnology Closed-End Funds

Summary Tekla offers four closed end funds in the biotechnology/healthcare sector. Two long-established funds are focused on capital growth. Two newer funds add current income to their investment objectives. Healthcare and Biotechnology seem to have caught their stride after a rough third quarter. There are a lot of ways to invest in these sectors. One of the least appreciated is closed-end funds, and the best of these, in my opinion, come from Tekla. Tekla sponsors four funds. Two are well established funds that are regularly found at or near the top of the pack for equity CEFs. Two are new, one a little more than a year old and the other a little more than a quarter. The stalwarts are Tekla Healthcare Investors (NYSE: HQH ) and Tekla Lifesciences Investors (NYSE: HQL ). The new-comers are Tekla Healthcare Opportunities (NYSE: THQ ) and Tekla World Healthcare (NYSE: THW ). Some descriptive details for these funds are in the table. The two older funds operate much the same. They are unleveraged and have managed distribution policies for their quarterly distributions. The younger funds are structured differently from the older funds, but are similar to each other. For one thing, they use leverage to achieve their investment goals. Precisely what the extent of that leverage may eventually be is unclear. THQ is reporting 9.6% leverage at present, and THW is too new to have reported. THQ and THW also have managed distribution policies, but theirs are structured differently from HQH and HQL. They pay distributions monthly. Investment Goals HQH invests in the healthcare industry (including biotechnology, medical devices, and pharmaceuticals). The fund’s objective is to provide long-term capital appreciation through investments in companies in the healthcare industry believed to have significant potential for above-average long-term growth. Selection emphasizes the smaller, emerging companies with a maximum of 40% of the Fund’s assets in restricted securities of both public and private companies. HQL primarily invests in the life sciences (including biotechnology, pharmaceutical, diagnostics, managed healthcare, medical equipment, hospitals, healthcare information technology and services, devices and supplies), agriculture and environmental management industries. The Fund’s objectives and selection criteria are the same as HQH except for a change in wording from healthcare to the life sciences industry. Note that biotechnology heads the lists for each. To a large extent these are primarily biotech funds. One particularly interesting point is that the funds can and do invest in private companies. This can open opportunities not generally available to most investors, and certainly not readily accessible by investing in open-end mutual funds or ETFs. The difference between HQH and HQL is that HQL’s mandate is expanded to include agricultural and environmental biotechnologies. THQ and THW invest primarily in the healthcare industry. The funds’ objectives are to seek current income and long-term capital appreciation through investment companies engaged in the healthcare industry, including equity securities, debt securities and pooled investment vehicles. Notice that HQH and HQL make no mention of current income in their goal statements and THQ and THW do. Notice also, that THQ and THW include debt securities in their investment strategies. THW differs from THQ in being targeted more as an international fund. It expects to invest at least 40% in companies organized or located outside the United States. Both expect to invest in debt securities and pooled investment vehicles in addition to equity. So there are marked differences between HQH and HQL on one hand, and THQ and THW on the other. HQH/HQL are more closely focused on biotech; THQ/THW invest more broadly in the healthcare sector. The first set does provide excellent income, but that is not its purpose, which affects how the fund is managed. Finally the new funds expand their investment programs to include debt securities such as convertible and non-convertible bonds and preferred shares. Distribution Policies All four have managed distribution policies, but the terms of the policies are different. HQH and HQL have as their distribution policy the intention to make quarterly distributions at a rate of 2% of the fund’s net assets. To the extent possible, they will to do so using net realized capital gains. If those gains fall short of the target this could result in return of capital to shareholders. Capital gains in excess of distributions will be returned to shareholders as a special distribution with the December distribution. The default for HQH’s and HQL’s distributions is that they are taken in stock. Investors do have the option to request cash distributions. This policy reflects the funds’ emphases on capital appreciation rather than current income, and is unusual for CEFs. Both HQH and HQL began making quarterly distributions in 2000 (previous to that they were made annually). Both suspended distributions for three quarters in 2009-10 making no payment between June 2009 and June 2010. Otherwise, the funds have met their 2% of NAV payout objective without return of capital for all but two of the 60 quarterly payments they have made. Distributions for Q1 and Q2 of 2009, the quarters prior to the suspension of distributions did include return of capital. THQ and THW have current income as an investment objective. Their managed distribution policies are more similar to that of other managed-distribution CEFs. Although I have not seen it explicitly stated in the materials I’ve viewed, I assume that it means the funds expect to maintain consistent monthly payments independent of fluctuations in NAV and income, which is the most typical pattern of managed distributions. This can mean distributions that include return of capital and periodic occurrences of negative undistributed net investment income. THQ has paid $0.1125/share monthly since inception. THW has paid $0.1167/share for its three distributions. Current Status The two older funds are currently priced at premiums near 5%. The new funds have double-digit discounts as seen in this table. The distribution percentages shown in the table are based on recent payouts. According the funds’ policies the next distribution for HQH and HQL will be 2% of NAV on the record date. Z-Scores give us an indication of where the discount/premium stands in relation to the past. Positive Z-Scores mean the discount has shrunk or the premium has grown over the period. The absolute value represents the number of standard deviations the current value is relative to the average for the period. Large Z-scores (say, over 2 or under -2) can often suggest mean reversion is imminent. These values tell us that for HQH and HQL the premiums stand well above their means for 3, 6 and 12 months. As recently as the end of September, HQH had a -8.85% discount and HQL’s was -6.2%. Both funds have seen volatile pricing relative to NAV recently and have seen their discount/premium fluctuate widely. This is seen in HQH’s chart (from cefconnect.com ). (click to enlarge) During the third quarter meltdown for healthcare and biotechnology there was near-panic selling of the fund causing the discount to fall below -8%. With signs of recovery in October, the premium has been restored. These are the sorts of movements that some CEF investors look for and hope to take advantage of when they do occur. Portfolios HQH and HQL have very similar portfolios. HQL nominally adds exposure to agricultural and environmental biotechnology to HQH’s pure play in healthcare but this not obvious without getting deep into the fund’s holdings. At the top it looks very much like HQH. HQH holds 96% in equity; for HQL it’s 92%. The remainder is primarily in debt instruments. THQ holds 18.5% of its portfolio in debt instruments. THW’s portfolio remains a black box at this time, as there have been no reports as yet by the fund. Top holdings are available for HQH, HQL and THL but not for THW. (click to enlarge) Note how similar HQH and HQL’s lists are. The clear emphasis here is on biotechnology. THQ has positions extending beyond biotechnology to include more traditional healthcare companies such as Johnson & Johnson and Pfizer which is consistent with its more explicit emphasis on income. Other Healthcare CEFs My focus here has been on the Tekla offerings with the intention of clarifying how the new funds differ from the established funds. Before closing, I would be remiss to not mention two other healthcare CEFs; BlackRock Health Sciences (NYSE: BME ) and Gabelli Health & Wellness (NYSE: GRX ). BRE is more similar to HQH and HQL in that it is unleveraged and entirely domestic, but its focus is less on biotechnology than those funds. GRX carries 20.5% effective leverage and has a more diverse portfolio that includes food companies such as Kraft Foods and Kikkomann Corp as well as heathcare holdings. It is 84% domestic and 15% Developed Europe and Japan. BME, like the older Tekla funds shows extensive movement in its premium/discount. It now stands at a 7% premium, up from its 52 week average but well below its 52 week high of 16.2%. GRX, by contrast, tends toward a persistent discount which is now -13.2%, near its 52 week low of -14.8%. BME recently has tended to perform comparably to the Tekla funds; GRX has consistently lagged. Over a longer time frame the Tekla funds have turned in much stronger performances than either BRE or GRX, likely a reflection of their emphasis on biotechnology over traditional healthcare companies. This is illustrated by this chart tracking total return for the past two and five years. (click to enlarge) Summary The two sets of Tekla funds, HQH and HQL on one hand, and THQ and THW on the other, have different objectives and approaches to healthcare and biotechnology investing strategies. HQH and HQL are primarily focused on generating capital appreciation. The younger funds are more in the traditional CEF mold of emphasizing current income as well as capital appreciation. Despite the lack of formal emphasis on income, the distribution policies of HQH and HQL are, in my view, primarily attractive to an investor interested in current income. Their distribution yields are attractive and growing with NAV growth. For a shareholder invested for capital appreciation, the distributions can raise tax issues, so the funds are probably best held in a tax-advantaged account in such cases. In a taxable account, it would seem to make more sense to use ETFs to provide exposure to biotechnology to satisfy a capital growth objective. ETFs can effectively provide that capital appreciation with much lower taxable distributions. The premiums for HQH and HQL argue against entry into these funds at this time. A patient investor would probably choose to wait for some reduction in the premiums, if not outright reversion to discount status. Those premiums are now approaching all-time highs for HQL and are at rarely seen levels for HQH. An income investor seeking exposure to healthcare with a biotech focus may find THQ more appealing than either HQH or HQL at this time. There is, of course, only a scant record for the fund. Tekla has shown itself to be a strong manager of biotech equity portfolios but has little record in expanding that to include debt and credit. The discount of -11.6%, about as deeply discounted as the fund has been in its short life, looks to provide an attractive entry. As for THW, the fund is too young and information too scanty to appeal to me at this time. I suspect it will evolve to be as similar to THQ as HQL is to HQH.

Closed-End Funds Are A Pocket Of Value In An Expensive Market

The third-quarter market correction came like a kick to the teeth. But if you blinked, you might have missed it. From August 17 to August 25 – a span of a little less than a week – the S&P 500 dropped a quick 11%. But by the middle of October, the market had already recovered more than half of the late-summer swoon. In certain sectors – like energy – the August sell-off created the sort of pricing that makes value investors like me salivate. I scooped up additional shares of Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE: EPD ), Energy Transfer Equity (NYSE: ETE ) and Teekay Corp. (NYSE: TK ), among others, in my Dividend Growth portfolio. Pricing is still very favorable in this sector, and I expect more gains to come. But in the broader market, the correction – while violent and jarring – was not deep enough to really give us the bargains I had hoped for. U.S. stocks are still very pricey, trading at a cyclically-adjusted price/earnings ratio of 25 , implying extremely lackluster returns going forward. So, mainstream stocks are a bad bet at today’s prices. But there are bargains to be found for those willing to look. One corner of the market that is dirt-cheap is closed-end bond funds (“CEFs”). This is a niche market that is mostly ignored by institutional investors, and even seems a little anachronistic in the age of index-tracking ETFs. But their quirkiness is precisely what makes them appealing. Unlike mutual funds, which are priced daily at NAV, or ETF shares, which rarely deviate too far from their NAV, CEFs are often priced at wild discounts and premiums to the values of their respective portfolios. When a CEF is priced at premium to its book value, you generally don’t want to own it. Why would you pay $1.10 for a dollar’s worth of assets? An enterprising investor could look at the fund’s holdings and replicate them by buying the same bonds on the open market, without paying management fees. But when a CEF trades at a discount… that’s where it gets interesting. In several high-quality CEFs, we can essentially pick up dollars for 90 cents or less. Fund Ticker Yield Current Prem./Disc. to NAV 52-Week High Prem./Disc. to NAV 52-Week Low Prem./Disc. to NAV Cohen & Steers Select Preferred & Income Fund Inc. PSF 8.72% (11.12%) (2.04%) (11.12%) Cohen & Steers REIT & Preferred Income Fund RNP 8.38% (16.66%) (9.50%) (17.83%) Eaton Vance Limited Duration Income Fund EVV 9.52% (14.70%) (8.70%) (16.03%) Cohen & Steers Limited Duration Preferred & Income Fund LDP 8.32% (10.18%) (5.86%) (11.83%) Source: CEFConnect.com In the Dividend Growth portfolio, I currently own shares of the Cohen & Steers Select Preferred and Income Fund , the Cohen & Steers REIT & Preferred Fund , the Eaton Vance Limited Duration Income Fund and the Cohen & Steers Limited Duration Preferred & Income Fund . All are trading at discounts to book value of 10-17% – some of the deepest discounts since the 2008 meltdown – and all pay very competitive dividends of 8-10%. Between the dividends and a closing of the discounts to more “normal” levels, I expect to see total returns of 15-20% over the next 12-18 months. In an overpriced market, that’s not too shabby. Disclosures: Currently long EPD, ETE, TK, PSF, EVV, RNP, LDP. This article first appeared on Sizemore Insights as Closed-End Funds Are a Pocket of Value in an Expensive Market . Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and should not be considered specific investment advice or as a solicitation to buy or sell any securities. Sizemore Capital personnel and clients will often have an interest in the securities mentioned. There is risk in any investment in traded securities, and all Sizemore Capital investment strategies have the possibility of loss. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Original Post

Closed End Funds: Is There An Opportunity?

Summary Closed End Funds have traded for years, yet tend to be misunderstood. There are both advantages and disadvantages to investing in CEFs. At the present time, there are a number of compelling CEF trading at deep discounts. Closed End Funds (CEFs) have been around for decades, but despite their lengthy existence they tend to be misunderstood and consequently are under-appreciated investment vehicles. In contrast to open end mutual funds, which have the freedom to issue unlimited shares at the fund’s Net Asset Value or NAV, CEFs issue a fixed number of shares. In order to provide liquidity to current and future investors, CEFs list their stock on an exchange (e.g. NYSE). CEF shares transact at a market price, which very often differs from its NAV price. The price of a CEF may be above (premium) or below (discount) its NAV. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the merits and issues associated with CEF investments and to focus the reader’s attention on the current opportunity in the space. There are a few advantages to investing in CEFs, the largest being the opportunity to buy a fund at a discount to its NAV; as the discount narrows over time, the added return can be substantial. Another advantage of CEFs is that management has dedicated capital with which to invest; there is never a concern that cash will be needed to meet unexpected redemptions in times of stress. It is well documented that redemptions from panic stricken investors at market lows have hurt open end fund returns. In contrast, investing in closed end funds requires careful monitoring of discounts as they vary constantly. Another less appealing attribute is the higher expense ratios CEF tend to charge, while in addition an investor’s trading costs should also be evaluated. Trading costs can be significant if the float or average daily volume is low. Lastly, since most CEFs employ leverage, the amount and costs associated with borrowing needs to be carefully considered. At Lynx, we have been opportunistically investing in CEFs for several years. We think it is prudent in some cases to substitute closed end funds for open ended funds and vice-versa based on the attractiveness of the discounts. During the volatile months of August and September the average discount on taxable fixed income CEFs was approximately 11.5%, compared to an average discount of 4.5% over the last 20 years. The chart below provides data from the Closed End Fund Association. Based on the data, CEFs in various categories are trading at their deepest discounts. A few examples of opportunities today follow, but we caution readers to discuss the associated risks with their financial advisors prior to investment. The first example is a CEF of preferred stocks, the John Hancock Premium Dividend Fund (NYSE: PDT ). Unlike most preferred stock funds, the John Hancock team’s specialty is utility companies. As of October 11, 2015, the fund had a distribution yield 8.2%, was 33.5% levered and traded at an 11.3% discount (PDT Premium/Discount chart). Another example is the Blackrock Corp High Yield Fund (NYSE: HYT ). This fund is actively managed by the Blackrock team and invests in high yield bonds and bank loans. As of October 11, 2015, HYT was trading at a 13.7% discount (HYT Premium/Discount chart) and had a distribution yield of 8.2%, with 30% leverage. (click to enlarge) *Data: Lipper, A Thomson Reuters Company; Chart: Lynx Investment Advisory PDT Discount/Premium Over 5 Years (click to enlarge) HYT Premium/Discount Over 5 Years (click to enlarge) * Charts: CEFConnect.com In summary, CEFs have their merits and limitations. At times, CEFs can be bought for deep discounts that ultimately can boost investor returns. In our opinion, the current environment is offering many closed end funds at record discounts. Therefore, in our opinion, many CEFs offer a compelling opportunity in the current market environment.