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CAF: Double Trouble For Morgan Stanley's China CEF
September 29, 2009
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Morgan Stanley’s China A-Share closed-end fund (NYSEArca: CAF) gets a lot of attention. But that doesn’t mean investors should buy it. CAF popped onto my radar screen recently because Tom Lydon at ETF Trends highlighted the fund in this article. It gets called out in the Wall Street Journal from time to time as well, and we regularly receive questions from advisers who are interested in the product. It’s the one closed-end-fund that even people who hate closed-end funds like. And it’s easy to see why.
But CAF has an exemption, thanks to a special agreement between Morgan Stanley and the government of The marketing pitch is obvious: Invest in the real But CAF comes with two problems that most investors (and most media articles) ignore. First, like many closed-end funds, it’s plagued by premiums and discounts. As of yesterday, CAF was trading almost 5 percent over its net asset value. Investors should think twice before buying anything trading at a premium; it’s like giving money away. And CAF comes with double trouble. In addition to the premium on the fund itself, the domestic Chinese market trades at a premium to what you might call “fair market value.” There are about 35 companies that list shares on both the domestic Chinese markets and the But for the past few years, the domestic Chinese shares have traded at a sharp premium to the Hang Seng Indexes publishes an index that tracks the premium or discount of these dual-listed companies. It’s ranged as high as 80 percent in the past. Currently, it’s only 13 percent: the domestic shares are valued 13 percent above Hong Kong-listed shares on average. Maybe that will go higher or lower; who knows. But one thing’s for certain: Investors who buy into CAF are paying not just the 5 percent premium for the fund, but the 13 percent premium on the domestic Chinese markets. In other words, they’re “overpaying” by 19 percent (or, to be precise, 18.65 percent, since 1.13 * 1.05 = 1.1865). That’s fine, as long as investors know what they’re doing. But that 19 percent premium could collapse or even reverse, turning into a discount. The risk is that you buy today when it’s overvalued, and then sell out when it’s undervalued. In other words, you’re making a bet on the structure of the market, not on the market itself. You’re betting that Just for kicks, you’re paying Morgan Stanley 1.75 percent for the privilege. There have been stretches when CAF has outperformed funds like GXC (my favored Chinese equity ETF), mostly when the China A-Share premium is on the rise. In January of this year, for instance, CAF outperformed GXC by more than 25 percent. Maybe that will happen again. Maybe Chinese animal spirits will stir and domestic investors will bid shares back up to an 80 percent premium. For my money, I’d rather buy a fund that trades at fair value and invests in a truly open capital market. Over the past year, that’s been a better bet, as GXC has outperformed CAF by more than 20 percent.
The Chinese A-Shares market will be more intriguing if and when Van Eck launches its proposed But even an ETF would not get around the problem of the inflated domestic Chinese markets, which represent a bigger risk to investors. In the end, the idea of investing in domestic
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