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Compare · NHF vs VRIG

NHF vs VRIG

Side-by-side comparison of NexPoint Strategic Opportunities Fund (NHF) and Invesco Variable Rate Investment Grade ETF (VRIG): market cap, price performance, sector, and recent activity on the wire.

Summary

  • Both NHF and VRIG operate in n/a (n/a), so they compete in similar markets.
  • NHF carries a market cap of $542.3M.
MetricNHFVRIG
Company
NexPoint Strategic Opportunities Fund
Invesco Variable Rate Investment Grade ETF
Price
$14.65-0.54%
$25.02+0.00%
Market cap
$542.3M
-
1M return
-
-0.04%
1Y return
-
+0.24%
Sector
n/a
n/a
Industry
n/a
n/a
Exchange
NYSE
NASDAQ
IPO
n/a
n/a
News (4w)
0
0
Recent ratings
0
0
NHF

NexPoint Strategic Opportunities Fund

NexPoint Strategic Opportunities Fund is a closed ended balanced mutual fund launched by Highland Capital Management, L.P. It is managed by Nexpoint Advisors, L.P. The fund invests in the fixed income markets of the United States. It invests in companies across broadly diversified sectors to construct its portfolio. The fund typically invests in senior loans, secured and unsecured floating and fixed rate loans, bonds, debt obligations of stressed, distressed, and bankrupt issuers, mortgage-backed securities, asset-backed securities, and collateralized debt obligations with a primary focus on below investment grade debt and equity securities. It employs a quantitative analysis to create its portfolio. The fund benchmarks the performance of its portfolio against the Dow Jones Credit Suisse Hedge Fund and the HFRX Global Hedge Fund. It was formerly known as NexPoint Credit Strategies Fund. NexPoint Strategic Opportunities Fund was formed on June 1, 2006 and is domiciled in the United States.

VRIG

Invesco Variable Rate Investment Grade ETF

The investment seeks to generate current income while maintaining low portfolio duration as a primary objective and capital appreciation as a secondary objective. The fund invests at least 80% of its net assets (plus any borrowings for investment purposes) in a portfolio of investment-grade, variable rate or floating rate debt securities. At least 80% of its net assets (plus any borrowings for investment purposes) will be invested in Variable Rate Instruments that are, at the time of purchase, investment grade (or in affiliated ETFs that invest primarily in any or all of the foregoing securities).