Recent Quarterly Report
Home
Closed-end Funds


  Fund Facts
   - Objective
   - General Information
   - Printable Factsheet - PDF
     (Holdings, Allocation & Statistics)
   - Prices & Performance
   - Risk Reward Spectrum
   - Dividend & Tax Info
   - Manager Information
   - Recent Press & News

  Documents
   - Recent Quarterly Report
   - Recent Annual Report - PDF
   - Historical Quarterly Reports
   - Compliance Tax Documents
   - Ownership Report
     (Requires Acrobat Reader)
   - Proxy Voting Records
   - Back to Factsheet Home
 

The Gabelli Global Deal Fund
One Corporate Center
Rye, New York 10580-1422


Information as of Sep 30, 2009
unless otherwise noted.
The Gabelli Global Deal Fund - Recent Quarterly Report

To Our Shareholders,

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act requires a Fund's principal executive and financial officers to certify the entire contents of the semi-annual and annual shareholder reports in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-CSR. This certification would cover the portfolio manager's commentary and subjective opinions if they are attached to or a part of the financial statements. Many of these comments and opinions would be difficult or impossible to certify. Because we do not want our portfolio managers to eliminate their opinions and/or restrict their commentary to historical facts, we have separated their commentary from the financial statements and investment portfolio.
 

Manager Commentary (PDF)
As of Sep 30, 2009
Financials/Holdings (PDF)
As of Jun 30, 2009
 
Merger arbitrage is a highly specialized investment approach generally designed to profit from the successful completion of proposed mergers, takeovers, tender offers and leveraged buyouts. Broadly speaking, an investor purchases the stock of a company in the process of being acquired by another company in anticipation of capturing the spread between the current market price and the acquisition price. A "stub" refers to a small stake in a target company division or subsidiary that is not purchased by an acquirer in a merger, takeover or leveraged buyout. The arbitrageur may buy the stub, and if the acquiring company is successful in boosting the target company?s appeal, the shares will benefit from a boost in price and the arbitrageur will profit. A spin-off occurs when an independent company is created from an existing part of another company through a distribution of new shares. An arbitrageur may benefit from the share price differential in the same manner as in traditional merger arbitrage if, upon completion of the spin-off, the separate securities trade for more in the aggregate than the former single security. Finally, when a company makes the decision to liquidate, or sell all of its assets, it is often worth more in liquidation than as an ongoing entity. An arbitrageur benefits when the company is able to distribute more than the price at which the stock is trading at the time the arbitrageur acquires its position. In order to minimize market exposure and volatility of such merger arbitrage strategies, the Fund may utilize hedging strategies, such as short selling and the use of options and futures. The Fund may hold a significant portion of its assets in liquid money market securities, which may include affiliated or unaffiliated money market mutual funds.