What is Net Asset Value (NAV)?
Net Asset Value (NAV) represents the per‑unit value of an investment fund (such as a mutual fund, exchange‑traded fund (ETF), or closed‑end fund) calculated by subtracting total liabilities from total assets and dividing the result by the number of outstanding units or shares.
NAV is a fundamental measure used to determine the fair value of a fund and is typically updated daily based on market closing prices.
Definition
Net Asset Value (NAV) is the value per share of a fund, calculated as total assets minus total liabilities, divided by the number of outstanding shares.
Key takeaways
Valuation metric: NAV indicates the fair value of a fund’s shares.
Calculated daily: Most mutual funds publish NAV at market close.
Reflects portfolio performance: Changes in underlying asset values directly affect NAV.
Not the same as market price: ETFs and closed-end funds may trade at a premium or discount to NAV.
Used for pricing transactions: Purchases and redemptions in open-end funds use NAV as the transaction price.
How NAV is calculated
NAV = (Total Assets – Total Liabilities) / Number of Outstanding Shares
Components:
Assets: Securities, cash, accrued income, receivables.
Liabilities: Fees, expenses, payables, borrowing.
Example: If a fund has $100 million in assets, $5 million in liabilities, and 10 million shares outstanding: NAV = (100M – 5M) / 10M = $9.50 per share
Why NAV matters
For investors:
Pricing: Determines how much they pay or receive when buying or redeeming shares.
Performance tracking: NAV changes show whether a fund gained or lost value.
Transparency: Daily NAV reporting reduces information asymmetry.
For fund managers:
Accounting accuracy: Proper NAV calculation ensures regulatory compliance.
Operational decisions: Cash flows, distributions, and rebalancing depend on NAV.
NAV in different types of funds
1. Mutual Funds
Transactions occur at NAV at the end of trading day.
NAV reflects the exact value of underlying assets.
2. Exchange‑Traded Funds (ETFs)
Traded on exchanges at market prices.
Market price may differ from NAV due to supply/demand.
Authorized participants help keep price close to NAV via arbitrage.
3. Closed‑End Funds
Shares trade at market price only.
Premiums or discounts to NAV are common.
4. Hedge Funds
NAV often used internally or periodically for investor subscriptions and redemptions.
NAV vs. market price
Feature NAV Market Price Basis Accounting valuation Exchange trading dynamics Update frequency Daily (funds) Second‑by‑second Used for Mutual fund transactions Buying/selling ETF or closed-end fund shares Premium/discount Not applicable Common in ETFs and closed‑end funds
Factors affecting NAV
Market price changes of portfolio assets
Dividend or interest income
Capital gains or losses
Fund fees and expenses
Large inflows or outflows
Strategic considerations for investors
Compare NAV trends over time to gauge performance.
Monitor expense ratios , which reduce NAV.
For ETFs, check premium/discount levels relative to NAV.
Understand how rebalancing affects NAV volatility.
Mutual funds
ETFs
Premiums and discounts
Fund expenses
Portfolio valuation
Market price vs. intrinsic value
Sources
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
1. Is a higher NAV always better?
No. NAV simply reflects per‑share value. A high or low NAV doesn’t indicate fund quality or performance.
2. How often is NAV calculated?
3. Can ETFs trade away from NAV?
Yes. ETFs may trade at a premium or discount depending on market demand , liquidity, and arbitrage activity.
4. Does NAV include fees?
Yes. Expenses and fees reduce NAV.
5. Does buying a fund at a lower NAV mean it’s cheaper?
Not necessarily. NAV does not indicate whether the fund’s holdings are undervalued.