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Bank of America Corporation, through its subsidiary Banc of America Preferred Funding Corporation, reported an internal restructuring event involving Nuveen Missouri Quality Municipal Income Fund preferred shares. On March 25, 2026, the fund redeemed 170 MuniFund Term Preferred Shares, Series A that were beneficially owned by Banc of America Preferred Funding Corporation. The redemption was carried out by the fund at the liquidation preference plus accumulated but unpaid dividends, and the position in these shares is shown as 0 shares following the transaction. Bank of America’s interest was indirect, arising from its ownership of Banc of America Preferred Funding Corporation, and the reporting persons include standard disclaimers about group status and beneficial ownership.
Bank of America Corporation and its affiliate Banc of America Preferred Funding Corp have fully exited their position in Nuveen Missouri Quality Municipal Income Fund’s Munifund Preferred Shares. The amendment reports that 170 MFP Shares (CUSIP 67060Q504) held by the affiliate were redeemed by the fund on March 25, 2026.
Following this redemption at a price equal to the liquidation preference plus accumulated but unpaid dividends, the reporting entities now beneficially own 0 MFP Shares, representing 0.0% of the class. As of that date, they ceased to be beneficial owners of more than five percent of these securities, and related ownership and exhibit schedules have been updated.
NUVEEN MISSOURI QUALITY MUNICIPAL INCOME FUND executive Joseph Castro, who serves as EVP and Chief Risk & Compliance, filed an initial Form 3 as a reporting person. The filing lists no buy, sell, acquisition, or disposition transactions, indicating only his status as an insider at the fund.
Nuveen’s municipal funds provide supplemental information on a proposed merger into Nuveen Municipal High Income Opportunity Fund (NMZ). The disclosure addresses a proxy advisory firm’s question about how losing state tax exemption affects shareholders in Nuveen New Jersey (NXJ), Pennsylvania (NQP), and Missouri state funds.
The analysis uses industry convention by “grossing up” fund earnings yields by each state’s maximum tax rate (10.75% for NXJ, 3.07% for NQP, 4.80% for Missouri). As of July 31, 2025, NMZ’s post‑merger common earnings yield is 6.17%, versus state fund yields between 3.30% and 3.54%, and state tax adjusted equivalent rates between 3.49% and 3.70%. The table shows shareholders would see higher earnings and state tax adjusted equivalent rates after the merger despite losing state tax exemption.
Nuveen is asking common and preferred shareholders of Nuveen New Jersey Quality Municipal Income Fund (NXJ), Nuveen Pennsylvania Quality Municipal Income Fund (NQP), a Nuveen Missouri municipal fund, and Nuveen Municipal High Income Opportunity Fund (NMZ) to approve a merger of the three state funds into NMZ, with shareholders receiving newly issued NMZ common and preferred shares.
As of July 31, 2025, the combined fund would have common assets of 2,120,784,666 and managed assets of 3,368,142,306. Post-merger, NMZ’s common earnings yield is shown at 6.17%, compared with pre-merger yields of about 3.30–3.54% for the target funds, and total expense ratios are projected to fall to 3.51% for the combined fund.
The materials highlight potential secondary-market benefits such as bid/ask spread improvements and higher average daily trading volume, plus discount narrowing based on three-year averages. They also note trade-offs: preferred shareholders will lose existing “state tax gross-up” features, and the combined portfolio will reflect NMZ’s lower-rated municipal credit profile, albeit with combined leverage of about 42.04% and preferred share coverage of 334.24% as of July 31, 2025.
Nuveen is asking shareholders to approve a merger of Nuveen New Jersey Quality Municipal Income Fund (NXJ), Nuveen Pennsylvania Quality Municipal Income Fund (NQP) and Nuveen Missouri Quality Municipal Income Fund into Nuveen Municipal High Income Opportunity Fund (NMZ). The target funds would merge into a wholly owned subsidiary of NMZ in exchange for newly issued NMZ common shares.
As of July 31, 2025, the combined fund would have about $3.37 billion in managed assets6.17%, versus 3.30%–3.54% for NXJ and NQP, and the taxable equivalent rate at 10.42%. Total expense ratios are expected to decline, with savings of up to 1.42 percentage points for the Missouri fund and smaller reductions for the others.
The material highlights narrower historical discounts to NAV, tighter bid/ask spreads and higher trading volumes for NMZ compared with the target funds. For preferred shareholders, a key change is the loss of state tax gross-up provisions, offset by a larger, nationally diversified portfolio, leverage ratio of about 42.04% and combined preferred share coverage of 334.24% as of July 31, 2025.
Nuveen’s New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Missouri state municipal funds propose merging into Nuveen Municipal High Income Opportunity Fund. Shareholders of each Target Fund (NXJ, NQP, NOM) are being asked to approve an Agreement and Plan of Merger and elect Board members at meetings scheduled for January 16, 2026 in Chicago.
If approved and closing conditions are met, each Target Fund will merge into a subsidiary of the Acquiring Fund, and common and preferred shares will convert into newly issued Acquiring Fund shares. The combined fund will shift from state-specific, mainly investment grade portfolios to a nationally diversified strategy that can invest heavily in lower-rated municipal bonds, which may increase income but also credit risk. State tax-exempt treatment for New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Missouri income would be lost, and preferred shareholders will no longer receive state tax-related gross-up features, although their new preferred shares are designed to have substantially similar structural terms. The adviser plans a six‑month fee waiver to help transition the portfolio, and boards cite potential benefits such as higher net earnings, improved trading liquidity and, for Missouri, lower operating expenses.
Nuveen New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Missouri municipal funds plan to merge into Nuveen Municipal High Income Opportunity Fund. Common and preferred shareholders are being asked to approve Agreements and Plans of Merger so each state-specific closed-end fund would be combined with a Nuveen subsidiary and ultimately folded into the national Acquiring Fund.
Target Fund shareholders would exchange their common and preferred shares for newly issued Acquiring Fund shares, with preferred holders receiving a one-for-one replacement series that has substantially similar terms but no state-specific tax make‑up feature. After the mergers, income would generally be exempt from regular federal income tax but no longer exempt from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, or Missouri income taxes, and the combined portfolio could hold a higher proportion of lower-rated municipal bonds.
Boards cite potential benefits such as larger scale, operating efficiencies, and similar overall expense ratios, while noting that approval requires specific voting thresholds and that large institutional preferred holders could determine outcomes. The adviser will temporarily waive part of its fee for six months to help transition the combined portfolio to the Acquiring Fund’s mandate.