Nuveen has continued to see significant growth in its assets under management, driven by the strength of its closed-end funds, according to David Lamb, managing director in Nuveen's closed-end funds group.
CEFs offer investors some major advantages and make more sense than ever in portfolios today, he said in an interview with ThinkAdvisor, during which he also noted his company is seeing growing interest in environmental, social and governance investing. Misconceptions around CEFs, however, remain among at least some investors, he conceded.
Nuveen had more than $1 trillion in total assets under management as of June 30, up from $973 billion a year earlier, the company said Monday. Of that, closed-end funds comprised about $60.9 billion as of June 28, up from about $55.3 billion, it said.
The firm has been offering CEFs since 1987, Lamb pointed out, noting that was four years after he joined Nuveen. The company started fielding them because they presented an "opportunity to package" municipal bond funds "in a different structure," he recalled, adding the ability to "leverage" CEFs is a "powerful way to add incremental income" to shareholders. "If you're a long-term investor looking for regular cash flow," many CEFs pay investors on a monthly basis, he noted.
A closed-end fund "also gives you a permanent capital base," he said, adding they allow investment managers to "take a longer-term view" of an investment. They're especially attractive now as investors look for "alternative sources of income," he noted, giving as an example "retirees that are looking for incremental income to meet their needs."
As "rates grind lower," meanwhile, "demand for closed-end funds is pretty strong" in 2019 amid the "resurgence" seen in initial public offerings, he said. There's been a "pretty strong rebound" for CEFs since the market volatility seen in December 2018, when several of Nuveen's funds were selling at discounts of 15% or so, he noted.
The company last month said it successfully completed an IPO for the Nuveen Municipal Credit Opportunities Fund. The "primary investment objective" of that new CEF is to "provide a high level of current income exempt from regular U.S. federal income tax," and there's a "secondary objective" of achieving total return, it said at the time. The fund initially attracted $705 million in its common share offering, and the company's looking to achieve its objectives by "investing primarily in high yielding, low-to medium quality municipal securities," it said. If underwriters exercised their option to buy additional shares, the fund could have raised a total of $810 million in all. But Nuveen didn't provide an update on whether the underwriters exercised that option.