Understanding return of capital | Closed-end funds (2024)

Many closed-end funds have established a distribution program designed to help facilitate smooth regular distributions to investors seeking diversified sources of cash flow. The sources of these distributions may include interest income, dividends, realized capital gains and potentially, return of capital — an important and often misunderstood component.

Nuveen’s managed distribution program seeks to convert the expected long-term total return potential of a fund’s investment portfolio into attractive, tax-efficient quarterly or monthly distributions. If a fund’s actual realized gains and net investment income in any given period falls short of the established distribution level for the period, the fund’s distribution may include a return of capital. A closed-end fund may also distribute return of capital in an attempt to maintain a more stable level of distribution or to support the fund’s share price on the secondary market.

1. The fund’s capital: not just your original investment

A fund’s capital — its net asset value (NAV) — starts with shareholders’ initial investment in common shares. The value changes as the fund’s investment portfolio appreciates, depreciates, or generates and distributes income from dividends and interest. The components of the fund’s total return on NAV are its income and any gains, both realized and unrealized, after expenses.*

Regulations require a fund to distribute most of its investment income and realized gains each year.

If the fund distributes only its net investment income and realized gains, and has unrealized appreciation as well, the fund’s NAV — its capital — at the end of the year will be higher.

For most fixed incomestrategies, net investment income* makes up the majority of the fund’s total return, and the fund’s NAV is not typically affected much by unrealized appreciation over time.

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2. Return of capital is a choice

The fund’s first choice: whether to pay a distribution amount that is greater than the required minimum of just net investment income and realized gains. In order to maintain a more stable and consistent level of regular distribution, to trade more competitively in the market, or to meet a stated goal of converting as much of the fund’s total return into regular cash flow as possible, the fund may wish to pay a higher regular distribution amount than regulations require.

If the fund has a goal of converting total return into regular cash flow and it
has unrealized appreciation, the fund has a second choice: whether to realize some or all of its appreciation, selling appreciated portfolio securities to raise cash to support its distribution amount. Selling appreciated securities creates at least two consequences: realized gains will be taxed in the current tax year at either long-term or short-term rates, the fund gives up future appreciation potential for the securities sold.

To avoid realizing taxable gains, instead a fund can pay the additional distribution amount from its capital. The fund’s capital consists of two sources:

  1. Shareholders’ initial investment, plus
  2. The value of the unrealized appreciation, over its lifetime, if any.

For tax purposes, both sources are considered return of capital (“RoC”).

What happens when a distribution includes RoC?

If the RoC amount exceeds the fund’s unrealized appreciation, some or all of the RoC will represent part of the shareholders’ initial investment capital. If a fund continues to pay out part of this initial capital, its assets — and earning power — will diminish over time.

In order to make each distribution payment the fund will be required to have cash available in an amount equal to its distribution payment. This cash can come from a variety of sources, including selling a depreciated security.

RoC typically is not taxed in the current year. Instead, it reduces a shareholder’s cost basis in the fund. When the shareholder sells his or her fund shares, any gains will consider the selling price relative to the reduced cost basis. This means that RoC may defersome of the shareholder’s tax liability.

When a closed-end fund trades at a discount to its NAV, distributions
including RoC can potentially provide an increase in overall return on investment. To the extent a fund continues to trade at comparable discount to NAV, RoC would allow shareholders to capture, via an increase in the overall value of their investment, a portion of the differential between the market price of the fund’s common shares and the fund’s underlying net asset value.

So, a fund’s choice to return capital can be an attractive tax-management decision, or it can diminish future earnings power, or sometimes both.

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3. How to evaluate a fund’s RoC

When a fund returns capital, investors want to discern which situation exists: a good tax choice, diminished original invested principal, or some of both.

The key is to compare a fund’s distribution rate on NAV with itstotal return on NAV over various time periods.

If a fund’s total return on NAV exceeds its distribution rate on NAV, any RoC is likely to defer some tax liability into the future.

* Net investment income: dividends and interest received from securities held by the fund, less any applicable expenses. Realized gain: the amount resulting from selling a security at a profit (at a price higher than the original purchase price). Unrealized gain: the difference between a security’s current valuation and its purchase price. If the security is sold at its current valuation, the gain then becomes a realized gain. Note that funds may also have realized and unrealized losses.

Important information on risk

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Closed-end fund shares are subject to investment risk, including the possible loss of the entire principal amount that you invest, and there is no assurance that an investment will provide positive performance over any period of time. Common shares frequently trade at a discount to their NAV. At any point in time, your common shares may be worth less than you paid, or the net asset value, even after considering the reinvestment of fund distributions. Certain products and services may not be available to all entities or persons. There is no guarantee that the Fund's investment objectives will be achieved.

Closed-end fund historical distribution sources have included net investment income, realized gains, and return of capital. You should not draw any conclusions about a fund’s past or future investment performance from its current distribution rate.

Distributions may be subject to federal and/or state and local taxes, as well as the federal alternative minimum tax, and may be re-characterized as ordinary income. Capital gains, if any, are subject to capital gains tax.

Nuveen does not provide legal or tax advice. Please consult with your personal legal or tax advisor regarding your personal circ*mstances.

Understanding return of capital | Closed-end funds (2024)
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