For this strategy, closed-end funds work best, because the fund manager can fully deploy assets and not worry about redemptions. And investors don't have to worry about sales charges, though they might pay a small premium to the fund's net asset value.
Here's a look at some of the choices:- Index covered call closed-end funds Funds sell covered calls not against stocks but against the S&P 500 index. The result is good income with downside risk matching overall market risk. The S&P 500 Covered Call Fund (BEP Quote) is the largest player.
- Stock covered call closed-end funds These funds sell calls against individual securities owned in the portfolio. These securities can cover the market or target specific sectors, and some blend in international stocks. The portfolio percentage put into play with covered calls may vary as well. These pay somewhat more than index covered call funds. The biggest players include Madison Claymore Covered Call Fund (MCN Quote), First Trust Fiduciary Asset Management Covered Call Fund (FFA Quote) and the ING Global Equity and Premium Opportunity Fund (IGD Quote), which adds an international flavor.
- Open-ended funds As ordinary mutual funds, in the face of competition, seek higher returns, covered call writing is coming back into vogue. Last summer's launch of the (VEPAX Quote)Van Kampen Equity Premium Income Fund (VEPAX) may be one of the purer plays in this space, but the 5.75% upfront load gives me pause.
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