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CEF Weekly Review: Real Estate Drives Equity CEFsJoe Eqcome • Sun, Apr 29, 2012
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CEF Weekly Review: Real Estate Drives Equity CEFsJoe Eqcome • Sun, Apr 29, 2012
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CEF Weekly Review: Back To The StartJoe Eqcome • Sun, Dec 25, 2011
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Business Wire (Fri, 12:55PM)
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Business Wire (Feb 28, 2013)
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Business Wire (Dec 19, 2012)
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Business Wire (Dec 11, 2012)
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Business Wire (Nov 19, 2012)
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Business Wire (Oct 26, 2012)
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Business Wire (Aug 16, 2012)
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at Fox Business (Aug 15, 2012)
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at Fox Business (Aug 15, 2012)
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at Fox Business (Aug 15, 2012)
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Business Wire (May 17, 2012)
GUT vs. ETF Alternatives
Company Description
Currently, there's no company description for GUT.
- All
- | Earnings
- | Dividends
- | M&A
- | On the move
- Wednesday, October 10, 2012, 12:41 PM Not limited to mortgage REITs, panic grips another favorite of income investors, closed-end investment funds - notably those trading far above NAV for seemingly no other reason than their fat yield. The payouts on many of these are sustained by digging into capital rather than by earning a return on it. PGP -7.5%, PHK -7.8%, PHT -5.5%. 8 Comments [Financials]
- Monday, October 8, 2012, 3:25 PM Blinded by fat yields, investors continue to bid closed-end funds far higher than their NAVs. 66% of taxable and 73% of muni-bond funds trade above NAV now, compared to just 30% a year ago, with often the funds with the highest distributions having the highest premiums. "We believe that an excessive premium for the fund is not likely to be sustainable," says Gabelli of one of its funds. Are investors listening? 35 Comments [Financials]
- Sunday, February 21, 2010, 3:47 PM High yields aren't always a good thing: Mario Gabelli, whose high-yielding closed-end fund Gabelli Utility Trust (GUT) recently traded at a 60% premium to net asset value, even though 90% of the yield is now simply a return of investors' capital: "I personally think the premium is unsustainable. It's off the wall." Comment!