PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS FUND | ||||
A: PUDAX | B: PUDBX | C: PUDCX | Q: PUDQX | Z: PUDZX |
The Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission have not approved or disapproved these securities or passed
upon the adequacy of this Prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
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Shareholder Fees (fees paid directly from your investment) | |||||
Class A | Class B | Class C | Class Q | Class Z | |
Maximum sales charge (load) imposed on purchases (as a percentage of offering price) | 5.50% | None | None | None | None |
Maximum deferred sales charge (load) (as a percentage of the lower of original purchase price or net asset value at redemption) | 1.00% | 5.00% | 1.00% | None | None |
Maximum sales charge (load) imposed on reinvested dividends and other distributions | None | None | None | None | None |
Redemption fee | None | None | None | None | None |
Exchange fee | None | None | None | None | None |
Maximum account fee (accounts under $10,000) | $15 | $15 | $15 | None | None* |
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If Shares Are Redeemed | If Shares Are Not Redeemed | |||||||
Share Class | 1 Year | 3 Years | 5 Years | 10 Years | 1 Year | 3 Years | 5 Years | 10 Years |
Class A | $674 | $1,116 | $1,582 | $2,868 | $674 | $1,116 | $1,582 | $2,868 |
Class B | $723 | $1,309 | $2,216 | $3,933 | $223 | $1,009 | $2,116 | $3,933 |
Class C | $304 | $843 | $1,506 | $3,283 | $204 | $843 | $1,506 | $3,283 |
Class Q | $87 | $395 | $726 | $1,663 | $87 | $395 | $726 | $1,663 |
Class Z | $96 | $423 | $774 | $1,763 | $96 | $423 | $774 | $1,763 |
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Best Quarter: | Worst Quarter: | ||
6.74% | 2nd Quarter 2014 | -6.81% | 2nd Quarter 2013 |
Class Z Shares % | ||||
Return Before Taxes | 6.03% | 1.36% | N/A | 1.16% ( 12-30-10) |
Return After Taxes on Distributions | 5.53% | 0.65% | N/A | 0.50% (12-30-10) |
Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares | 3.54% | 0.92% | N/A | 0.77% (12-30-10) |
Index % (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes) | ||||
Customized Blend Index | 6.69% | 0.45% | N/A | - |
Bloomberg Barclays US TIPS Index | 4.68% | 0.89% | N/A | - |
Lipper Average % (reflects no deduction for sales charges or taxes) | ||||
Lipper Flexible Portfolio Funds Average* | 7.00% | 5.68% | N/A | - |
Lipper Customized Average* | 10.48% | 0.34% | N/A | - |
Investment Manager | Subadviser | Portfolio Managers | Title | Service Date |
PGIM Investments LLC | Quantitative Management Associates LLC | Ted Lockwood, MBA, MS | Managing Director | December 2010 |
Edward F. Keon, Jr., MBA | Managing Director and Portfolio Manager | December 2010 |
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Investment Manager | Subadviser | Portfolio Managers | Title | Service Date |
Edward L. Campbell, MBA, CFA | Managing Director and Portfolio Manager | December 2010 | ||
Joel M. Kallman, MBA, CFA | Vice President and Portfolio Manager | December 2010 | ||
Rory Cummings, MBA, CFA | Vice President and Portfolio Manager | April 2015 | ||
Yesim Tokat-Acikel, PhD* | Portfolio Manager | April 2018 | ||
Marco Aiolfi, PhD* | Portfolio Manager | April 2018 | ||
PGIM Fixed Income | Robert Tipp, CFA | Managing Director, Chief Investment Strategist and Head of Global Bonds | December 2010 | |
Craig Dewling | Managing Director | December 2010 | ||
Erik Schiller, CFA | Managing Director | January 2016 | ||
Gary Wu, CFA | Principal | January 2016 | ||
CoreCommodity Management LLC | Adam De Chiara** | Co-President and Portfolio Manager | October 2011 |
Class A** | Class C** | Class Q*** | Class Z** | |
Minimum initial investment* | $2,500 | $2,500 |
Institutions: $5 million
Group Retirement Plans: None |
Institutions: $5 million
Group Retirement Plans: None |
Minimum subsequent investment* | $100 | $100 | None | None |
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Underlying Prudential Funds | ||
Asset Class | Name of Underlying Prudential Fund | Investment Objective and Investment Strategies of Underlying Prudential Fund |
Natural Resources | Prudential Jennison Natural Resources Fund, Inc. (2) | The Fund seeks long-term growth of capital. The Fund normally invests at least 80% of investable assets in equity and equity-related securities of natural resource companies and in asset-based securities. Natural resource companies are US and non-US companies that own, explore, mine, process or otherwise develop, or provide goods and services with respect to, natural resources. Asset-based securities are securities, the values of which are related to the market value of a natural resource. The Fund is non-diversified. |
MLPs | Prudential Jennison MLP Fund (2) | The Fund seeks to provide total return through a combination of current income and capital appreciation. The Fund normally invests at least 80% of its investable assets in master limited partnerships (MLPs) and MLP related investments (together, MLP investments). |
Fixed Income | Prudential Absolute Return Bond Fund (3) | The Fund seeks positive returns over the long term, regardless of market conditions. The Fund has a flexible investment strategy and will invest in a variety of securities and instruments. The Fund will also use a variety of investment techniques in pursuing its investment objective, which may include managing duration, credit quality, yield curve positioning and currency exposure, as well as sector and security selection. Under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest at least 80% of its investable assets (net assets plus borrowings for investment purposes, if any) in debt securities and/or investments that provide exposure to bonds. |
Prudential Floating Rate Income Fund (3) | The primary investment objective of the Fund is to maximize current income. Capital appreciation is a secondary investment objective, but only when consistent with the Fund's primary investment objective of seeking to maximize current income. Under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest at least 80% of its investable assets (net assets plus borrowings for investment purposes, if any) in floating rate loans and other floating rate debt securities. Floating rate loans are debt obligations that have interest rates which adjust or “float” periodically (normally on a monthly or quarterly basis) based on a generally recognized base rate such as the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) or the prime rate offered by one or more major US banks. | |
Prudential Short-Term Corporate Bond Fund, Inc. (3) | The Fund seeks high current income consistent with the preservation of principal. The Fund invests, under normal circumstances, at least 80% of its investable assets in bonds of corporations with varying maturities. For purposes of this policy, bonds include all fixed-income securities, other than preferred stock, and corporations include all private issuers. The effective duration of the Fund's portfolio will generally be less than three years. The Fund will buy and sell securities to take advantage of investment opportunities based on the subadviser's fundamental credit research, as well as analysis of market conditions, interest rates and general economic factors. | |
Prudential Short Duration High Yield Income Fund (3) | The Fund seeks to provide a high level of current income. The Fund will seek to achieve its investment objective by investing primarily in a diversified portfolio of high yield fixed-income instruments that are rated below investment grade by a nationally recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO) or, if unrated, are considered by the investment subadviser to be of comparable quality. Under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest at least 80% of its investable assets in a diversified portfolio of high yield fixed-income instruments that are below investment grade with varying maturities and other investments (including derivatives) with similar economic characteristics. |
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Principal & Non-Principal Strategies: Investment Limits |
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Cayman Subsidiary: Up to 25% of total assets
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Principal & Non-Principal Strategies: Investment Limits |
■
Illiquid Securities: Up to 15% of net assets
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Expected Distribution Schedule* | |
Dividends | Quarterly |
Short-Term Capital Gains | Annually |
Long-Term Capital Gains | Annually |
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Share Class | Eligibility |
Class A** | Individual investors |
Class B* | Individual investors |
Class C** | Individual investors |
Class Q*** | Certain group retirement plans, institutional investors and certain other investors |
Class Z** | Certain group retirement plans, institutional investors and certain other investors |
■ | Class A shares purchased in amounts of less than $1 million require you to pay a sales charge at the time of purchase, but the operating expenses of Class A shares are lower than the operating expenses of Class C shares. Investors who purchase $1 million or more of Class A shares and sell these shares within 12 months of purchase are also subject to a contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) of 1.00%. The CDSC is waived for certain retirement and/or benefit plans. |
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■ | Class C shares do not require you to pay a sales charge at the time of purchase, but do require you to pay a contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) if you sell your shares within 12 months of purchase. The operating expenses of Class C shares are higher than the operating expenses of Class A shares. |
■ | The amount of your investment and any previous or planned future investments, which may qualify you for reduced sales charges for Class A shares under Rights of Accumulation or a Letter of Intent. |
■ | The length of time you expect to hold the shares and the impact of varying distribution fees. Over time, these fees will increase the cost of your investment and may cost you more than paying other types of sales charges. For this reason, Class C shares are generally appropriate only for investors who plan to hold their shares for no more than 3 years. |
■ | The different sales charges that apply to each share class—Class A's front-end sales charge (and, in certain instances, CDSC) vs. Class C's CDSC. |
■ | Class C shares purchased in single amounts greater than $1 million are generally less advantageous than purchasing Class A shares. Purchase orders for Class C shares above this amount generally will not be accepted. |
■ | Because Class Z and Class Q shares have lower operating expenses than Class A or Class C shares, as applicable, you should consider whether you are eligible to purchase such share classes. |
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Class A | Class C | Class Z | Class R | |
Existing Investors
(Group Retirement Plans,
IRAs, and all other investors) |
No Change | No Change | No Change | No Change |
New Group Retirement Plans |
Closed to group retirement plans wishing to add the share classes as new additions to plan
menus on or about
June 1, 2018, subject to certain exceptions below |
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New IRAs | No Change | No Change | No Change |
Closed to all new investors on or about
June 1, 2018, subject to certain exceptions below |
All Other New Investors | No Change | No Change | No Change |
■ | Eligible group retirement plans who are exercising their one-time 90-day repurchase privilege in the Fund will be permitted to purchase such share classes. |
■ | Plan participants in a group retirement plan that offers Class A, Class C, Class R or Class Z shares of the Fund, as applicable, as of the Effective Date will be permitted to purchase such share classes of the Fund, even if the plan participant did not own shares of that class of the Fund as of the Effective Date. |
■ | Certain new group retirement plans will be permitted to offer such share classes of the Fund after the Effective Date, provided that the plan has or is actively negotiating a contractual agreement with the Fund’s distributor or service provider to offer such share classes of the Fund prior to or on the Effective Date. |
■ | New group retirement plans that combine with, replace or are otherwise affiliated with a current plan that invests in such share classes prior to or on the Effective Date will be permitted to purchase such share classes. |
Amount of Purchase |
Sales Charge as a % of
Offering Price* |
Sales Charge as a % of
Amount Invested* |
Dealer Reallowance*** |
Less than $25,000 | 5.50% | 5.82% | 5.00% |
$25,000 to $49,999 | 5.00% | 5.26% | 4.50% |
$50,000 to $99,999 | 4.50% | 4.71% | 4.00% |
$100,000 to $249,999 | 3.75% | 3.90% | 3.25% |
$250,000 to $499,999 | 2.75% | 2.83% | 2.50% |
$500,000 to $999,999 | 2.00% | 2.04% | 1.75% |
$1 million to $4,999,999** | None | None | 1.00% |
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Amount of Purchase |
Sales Charge as a % of
Offering Price* |
Sales Charge as a % of
Amount Invested* |
Dealer Reallowance*** |
$5 million to $9,999,999** | None | None | 0.50% |
$10 million and over** | None | None | 0.25% |
■ | Use your Rights of Accumulation , which allow you or an eligible group of related investors to combine (1) the current value of Class A, Class B and Class C Prudential mutual fund shares you or the group already own, (2) the value of money market shares (other than Direct Purchase money market shares) you or an eligible group of related investors have received for shares of other Prudential mutual funds in an exchange transaction, and (3) the value of the shares you or an eligible group of related investors are purchasing; or |
■ | Sign a Letter of Intent , stating in writing that you or an eligible group of related investors will purchase a certain amount of shares in the Fund and other Prudential mutual funds within 13 months. |
■ | Purchases made prior to the effective date of the Letter of Intent will be applied toward the satisfaction of the Letter of Intent to determine the level of sales charge that will be paid pursuant to the Letter of Intent, but will not result in any reduction in the amount of any previously paid sales charge. |
■ | All accounts held in your name (alone or with other account holders) and taxpayer identification number (“TIN”); |
■ | Accounts held in your spouse's name (alone or with other account holders) and TIN (see definition of spouse below); |
■ | Accounts for your children or your spouse's children, including children for whom you and/or your spouse are legal guardian(s) (e.g., UGMAs and UTMAs); |
■ | Accounts in the name and TINs of your parents; |
■ | Trusts with you, your spouse, your children, your spouse's children and/or your parents as the beneficiaries; |
■ | With limited exclusions, accounts with the same address (exclusions include, but are not limited to, addresses for brokerage firms and other intermediaries and Post Office boxes); and |
■ | Accounts held in the name of a company controlled by you (a person, entity or group that holds 25% or more of the outstanding voting securities of a company will be deemed to control the company, and a partnership will be deemed to be controlled by each of its general partners), including employee benefit plans of the company where the accounts are held in the plan's TIN. |
■ | The person to whom you are legally married. We also consider your spouse to include the following: |
■ | An individual of the same gender with whom you have been joined in a civil union, or legal contract similar to marriage; |
■ | A domestic partner, who is an individual (including one of the same gender) with whom you have shared a primary residence for at least six months, in a relationship as a couple where you, your domestic partner or both provide for the personal or financial welfare of the other without a fee, to whom you are not related by blood; or |
■ | An individual with whom you have a common law marriage, which is a marriage in a state where such marriages are recognized between a man and a woman arising from the fact that the two live together and hold themselves out as being married. |
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■ | Mutual fund “wrap” or asset allocation programs, where the sponsor places fund trades, links its clients' accounts to a master account in the sponsor's name and charges its clients a management, consulting or other fee for its services; or |
■ | Mutual fund “supermarket” programs, where the sponsor links its clients' accounts to a master account in the sponsor's name and the sponsor charges a fee for its services. |
■ | Certain directors, officers, current employees (including their spouses, children and parents) and former employees (including their spouses, children and parents) of Prudential and its affiliates, the Prudential mutual funds, and the investment subadvisers of the Prudential mutual funds; former employees must have an existing investment in the Fund; |
■ | Persons who have retired directly from active service with Prudential or one of its subsidiaries; |
■ | Registered representatives and employees of broker-dealers (including their spouses, children and parents) that offer Class A shares; |
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■ | Investors in IRAs, provided that: (a) the purchase is made either from a directed rollover to such IRA or with the proceeds of a tax-free rollover of assets from a Benefit Plan for which Prudential Retirement (the institutional Benefit Plan recordkeeping entity of Prudential) provides administrative or recordkeeping services, in each case provided that such purchase is made within 60 days of receipt of the Benefit Plan distribution, and (b) the IRA is established through Prudential Retirement as part of its “Rollover IRA” program (regardless of whether or not the purchase consists of proceeds of a tax-free rollover of assets from a Benefit Plan described above); and |
■ | Clients of financial intermediaries, who (i) offer Class A shares through a no-load network or platform, (ii) charge clients an ongoing fee for advisory, investment, consulting or similar services, or (iii) offer self-directed brokerage accounts or other similar types of accounts that may or may not charge transaction fees to customers. |
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■ | Mutual fund “wrap” or asset allocation programs where the sponsor places fund trades, links its clients' accounts to a master account in the sponsor's name and charges its clients a management, consulting or other fee for its services; or |
■ | Mutual fund “supermarket” programs where the sponsor links its clients' accounts to a master account in the sponsor's name and the sponsor charges a fee for its services. |
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■ | Certain participants in the MEDLEY Program (group variable annuity contracts) sponsored by Prudential for whom Class Z shares of the Prudential mutual funds are an available option; |
■ | Current and former Directors/Trustees of mutual funds managed by PGIM Investments or any other affiliate of Prudential; |
■ | Current and former employees (including their spouses, children and parents) of Prudential and its affiliates; former employees must have an existing investment in the Fund; |
■ | Prudential (including any program or account sponsored by Prudential or an affiliate that includes the Fund as an available option); |
■ | Prudential funds, including Prudential funds-of-funds; |
■ | Qualified state tuition programs (529 plans); and |
■ | Investors working with fee-based consultants for investment selection and allocations. |
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■ | You are selling more than $100,000 of shares; |
■ | You want the redemption proceeds made payable to someone that is not in the Transfer Agent’s records; |
■ | You want the redemption proceeds sent to an address that is not in the Transfer Agent’s records; |
■ | You are a business or a trust; or |
■ | You are redeeming due to the death of the shareholder or on behalf of the shareholder. |
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■ | Amounts representing shares you purchased with reinvested dividends and distributions, |
■ | Amounts representing the increase in NAV above the total amount of payments for shares made during the past 12 months for Class A shares (in certain cases), six years for Class B shares, and 12 months for Class C shares, and |
■ | Amounts representing the cost of shares held beyond the CDSC period (12 months for Class A shares (in certain cases), six years for Class B shares, and 12 months for Class C shares). |
■ | After a shareholder is deceased or permanently disabled (or, in the case of a trust account, after the death or permanent disability of the grantor). This waiver applies to individual shareholders, as well as shares held in joint tenancy, provided the shares were purchased before the death or permanent disability; |
■ | To provide for certain distributions—made without IRS penalty—from a qualified or tax-deferred retirement plan, benefit plan, IRA or Section 403(b) custodial account; and |
■ | To withdraw excess contributions from a qualified or tax-deferred retirement plan, IRA or Section 403(b) custodial account. |
■ | After a shareholder is deceased or permanently disabled (or, in the case of a trust account, after the death or permanent disability of the grantor). This waiver applies to individual shareholders, as well as shares held in joint tenancy, provided the shares were purchased before the death or permanent disability; |
■ | To provide for certain distributions—made without IRS penalty—from a qualified or tax-deferred retirement plan, benefit plan, IRA or Section 403(b) custodial account; |
■ | To withdraw excess contributions from a qualified or tax-deferred retirement plan, IRA or Section 403(b) custodial account; and |
■ | On certain redemptions effected through a Systematic Withdrawal Plan. |
■ | After a shareholder is deceased or permanently disabled (or, in the case of a trust account, after the death or permanent disability of the grantor). This waiver applies to individual shareholders, as well as shares held in joint tenancy, provided the shares were purchased before the death or permanent disability; |
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■ | To provide for certain distributions—made without IRS penalty—from a qualified or tax-deferred retirement plan, benefit plan, IRA or Section 403(b) custodial account; and |
■ | To withdraw excess contributions from a qualified or tax-deferred retirement plan, IRA or Section 403(b) custodial account. |
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Class A Shares | ||||||
Year Ended October 31, |
Eight Months
Ended October 31, 2015 (g) |
Year Ended February 28, | ||||
2017 | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | ||
Per Share Operating Performance (b) : | ||||||
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period | $9.36 | $9.36 | $10.15 | $10.64 | $10.51 | $10.29 |
Income (loss) from investment operations: | ||||||
Net investment income (loss) | .12 | .07 | .05 | .11 | .10 | .05 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments | .12 | .04 | (.75) | .12 | .11 | .26 |
Total from investment operations | .24 | .11 | (.70) | .23 | .21 | .31 |
Less Dividends and Distributions: | ||||||
Dividends from net investment income | (.12) | (.08) | (.06) | (.13) | (.08) | (.09) |
Tax return of capital distributions | (.04) | – | – (d) | – | – | – |
Distributions from net realized gains | – (d) | (.03) | (.03) | (.59) | – | – |
Total dividends and distributions | (.16) | (.11) | (.09) | (.72) | (.08) | (.09) |
Net Asset Value, end of period | $9.44 | $9.36 | $9.36 | $10.15 | $10.64 | $10.51 |
Total Return (a) : | 2.60% | 1.17% | (6.89)% | 2.15% | 2.01% | 2.99% |
Ratios/Supplemental Data: | ||||||
Net assets, end of period (000) | $6,702 | $8,260 | $9,875 | $11,396 | $12,094 | $15,148 |
Average net assets (000) | $7,589 | $9,456 | $11,060 | $12,020 | $13,203 | $13,700 |
Ratios to average net assets (c) : | ||||||
Expenses after waivers and/or expense reimbursement | .66% | .65% | .49% (e) | .47% | .81% | 1.28% |
Expenses before waivers and/or expense reimbursement | 1.28% | 1.29% | 1.33% (e) | 1.37% | 1.43% | 1.46% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.33% | .80% | .82% (e) | 1.00% | .93% | .45% |
Portfolio turnover rate | 96% | 99% | 48% (f) | 67% | 114% | 45% |
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Class B Shares | ||||||
Year Ended October 31, |
Eight Months
Ended October 31, 2015 (g) |
Year Ended February 28, | ||||
2017 | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | ||
Per Share Operating Performance (b) : | ||||||
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period | $9.32 | $9.34 | $10.14 | $10.62 | $10.49 | $10.29 |
Income (loss) from investment operations: | ||||||
Net investment income (loss) | .05 | – (d) | – (d) | .02 | .02 | (.03) |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments | .12 | .04 | (.76) | .15 | .11 | .25 |
Total from investment operations | .17 | .04 | (.76) | .17 | .13 | .22 |
Less Dividends and Distributions: | ||||||
Dividends from net investment income | (.07) | (.03) | (.01) | (.06) | – (d) | (.02) |
Tax return of capital distributions | (.02) | – | – (d) | – | – | – |
Distributions from net realized gains | – (d) | (.03) | (.03) | (.59) | – | – |
Total dividends and distributions | (.09) | (.06) | (.04) | (.65) | – (d) | (.02) |
Net Asset Value, end of period | $9.40 | $9.32 | $9.34 | $10.14 | $10.62 | $10.49 |
Total Return (a) : | 1.85% | .44% | (7.45)% | 1.48% | 1.25% | 2.16% |
Ratios/Supplemental Data: | ||||||
Net assets, end of period (000) | $500 | $783 | $1,175 | $1,440 | $1,517 | $1,490 |
Average net assets (000) | $598 | $945 | $1,296 | $1,548 | $1,421 | $1,376 |
Ratios to average net assets (c) : | ||||||
Expenses after waivers and/or expense reimbursement | 1.41% | 1.40% | 1.24% (e) | 1.22% | 1.56% | 2.03% |
Expenses before waivers and/or expense reimbursement | 1.97% | 1.99% | 2.03% (e) | 2.07% | 2.13% | 2.16% |
Net investment income (loss) | .59% | .04% | .05% (e) | .23% | .22% | (.30)% |
Portfolio turnover rate | 96% | 99% | 48% (f) | 67% | 114% | 45% |
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Class C Shares | ||||||
Year Ended October 31, |
Eight Months
Ended October 31, 2015 (g) |
Year Ended February 28, | ||||
2017 | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | ||
Per Share Operating Performance (b) : | ||||||
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period | $9.32 | $9.34 | $10.13 | $10.62 | $10.48 | $10.28 |
Income (loss) from investment operations: | ||||||
Net investment income (loss) | .05 | – (d) | – (d) | .01 | .02 | (.03) |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments | .11 | .04 | (.75) | .15 | .12 | .25 |
Total from investment operations | .16 | .04 | (.75) | .16 | .14 | .22 |
Less Dividends and Distributions: | ||||||
Dividends from net investment income | (.07) | (.03) | (.01) | (.06) | – (d) | (.02) |
Tax return of capital distributions | (.02) | – | – (d) | – | – | – |
Distributions from net realized gains | – (d) | (.03) | (.03) | (.59) | – | – |
Total dividends and distributions | (.09) | (.06) | (.04) | (.65) | – (d) | (.02) |
Net Asset Value, end of period | $9.39 | $9.32 | $9.34 | $10.13 | $10.62 | $10.48 |
Total Return (a) : | 1.74% | .44% | (7.36)% | 1.38% | 1.35% | 2.17% |
Ratios/Supplemental Data: | ||||||
Net assets, end of period (000) | $2,607 | $3,072 | $3,817 | $4,663 | $3,726 | $4,451 |
Average net assets (000) | $2,932 | $3,291 | $4,291 | $4,320 | $4,116 | $4,110 |
Ratios to average net assets (c) : | ||||||
Expenses after waivers and/or expense reimbursement | 1.41% | 1.40% | 1.24% (e) | 1.22% | 1.56% | 2.03% |
Expenses before waivers and/or expense reimbursement | 1.98% | 1.99% | 2.03% (e) | 2.07% | 2.13% | 2.16% |
Net investment income (loss) | .56% | .02% | .07% (e) | .14% | .17% | (.27)% |
Portfolio turnover rate | 96% | 99% | 48% (f) | 67% | 114% | 45% |
64 | Prudential Real Assets Fund |
Class Q Shares | ||||
Year Ended October 31, |
Eight Months
Ended October 31, 2015 (g) |
January 23,
2015 (d) through February 28, 2015 |
||
2017 | 2016 | |||
Per Share Operating Performance (b) : | ||||
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period | $9.37 | $9.36 | $10.16 | $10.15 |
Income (loss) from investment operations: | ||||
Net investment income (loss) | .15 | .10 | .08 | (.04) |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments | .11 | .05 | (.77) | .05 |
Total from investment operations | .26 | .15 | (.69) | .01 |
Less Dividends and Distributions: | ||||
Dividends from net investment income | (.15) | (.11) | (.07) | – |
Tax return of capital distributions | (.04) | – | (.01) | – |
Distributions from net realized gains | –(h) | (.03) | (.03) | – |
Total dividends and distributions | (.19) | (.14) | (.11) | – |
Net Asset Value, end of period | $9.44 | $9.37 | $9.36 | $10.16 |
Total Return (a) : | 2.83% | 1.58% | (6.78)% | .10% |
Ratios/Supplemental Data: | ||||
Net assets, end of period (000) | $69,957 | $65,833 | $53,463 | $10 |
Average net assets (000) | $71,614 | $60,978 | $29,985 | $10 |
Ratios to average net assets (c) : | ||||
Expenses after waivers and/or expense reimbursement | .32% | .32% | .15% (e) | .15% (e) |
Expenses before waivers and/or expense reimbursement | .89% | .91% | .94% (e) | 1.06% (e) |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.58% | 1.08% | 1.33% (e) | (3.50)% (e) |
Portfolio turnover rate | 96% | 99% | 48% (f) | 67% (f) |
Visit our website at www.pgiminvestments.com | 65 |
Class Z Shares | ||||||
Year Ended October 31, |
Eight Months
Ended October 31, 2015 (d) |
Year Ended February 28, | ||||
2017 | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | ||
Per Share Operating Performance (b) : | ||||||
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period | $9.38 | $9.37 | $10.17 | $10.65 | $10.52 | $10.30 |
Income (loss) from investment operations: | ||||||
Net investment income (loss) | .15 | .09 | .07 | .11 | .11 | .07 |
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments | .10 | .05 | (.76) | .16 | .12 | .26 |
Total from investment operations | .25 | .14 | (.69) | .27 | .23 | .33 |
Less Dividends and Distributions: | ||||||
Dividends from net investment income | (.14) | (.10) | (.06) | (.16) | (.10) | (.11) |
Tax return of capital distributions | (.04) | – | (.02) | – | – | – |
Distributions from net realized gains | – (g) | (.03) | (.03) | (.59) | – | – |
Total dividends and distributions | (.18) | (.13) | (.11) | (.75) | (.10) | (.11) |
Net asset value, end of period | $9.45 | $9.38 | $9.37 | $10.17 | $10.65 | $10.52 |
Total Return (a) : | 2.74% | 1.50% | (6.83)% | 2.51% | 2.27% | 3.22% |
Ratios/Supplemental Data: | ||||||
Net assets, end of period (000) | $84,752 | $94,614 | $88,784 | $99,800 | $68,174 | $58,273 |
Average net assets (000) | $94,426 | $91,393 | $94,841 | $83,675 | $60,758 | $50,717 |
Ratios to average net assets (c) : | ||||||
Expenses after waivers and/or expense reimbursement | .41% | .40% | .24% (e) | .22% | .56% | 1.03% |
Expenses before waivers and/or expense reimbursement | .98% | .99% | 1.03% (e) | 1.07% | 1.13% | 1.16% |
Net investment income (loss) | 1.57% | .99% | 1.06% (e) | 1.07% | 1.08% | .72% |
Portfolio turnover rate | 96% | 99% | 48% (f) | 67% | 114% | 45% |
66 | Prudential Real Assets Fund |
Visit our website at www.pgiminvestments.com | 67 |
■ | Employer-sponsored retirement, deferred compensation and employee benefit plans (including health savings accounts) and trusts used to fund those plans, provided that the shares are not held in a commission-based brokerage account and shares are held for the benefit of the plan |
■ | Shares purchased by or through a 529 Plan, if applicable |
■ | Shares purchased through a Merrill Lynch affiliated investment advisory program |
■ | Shares purchased by third party investment advisors on behalf of their advisory clients through Merrill Lynch’s platform |
■ | Shares of funds purchased through the Merrill Edge Self-Directed platform |
■ | Shares purchased through reinvestment of capital gains distributions and dividend reinvestment when purchasing shares of the same fund (but not any other fund within the fund family) |
■ | Shares exchanged from Class C ( i.e. level-load) shares of the same fund in the month of or following the 10-year anniversary of the purchase date |
■ | Employees and registered representatives of Merrill Lynch or its affiliates and their family members |
■ | Directors or Trustees of the Fund, and employees of the Fund’s investment adviser or any of its affiliates, as described in this prospectus |
■ | Shares purchased from the proceeds of redemptions within the same fund family, provided (1) the repurchase occurs within 90 days following the redemption, (2) the redemption and purchase occur in the same account, and (3) redeemed shares were subject to a front-end or deferred sales load (known as Rights of Reinstatement) |
■ | Death or disability of the shareholder |
■ | Shares sold as part of a systematic withdrawal plan as described in this prospectus |
■ | Return of excess contributions from an IRA Account |
■ | Shares sold as part of a required minimum distribution for IRA and retirement accounts due to the shareholder reaching age 70 1 ⁄ 2 |
■ | Shares sold to pay Merrill Lynch fees but only if the transaction is initiated by Merrill Lynch |
■ | Shares acquired through a Right of Reinstatement |
■ | Shares held in retirement brokerage accounts, that are exchanged for a lower cost share class due to transfer to certain fee based accounts or platforms (applicable to Class A and C shares only) |
■ | Breakpoints as described in this prospectus |
■ | Rights of Accumulation (ROA) which entitle shareholders to breakpoint discounts will be automatically calculated based on the aggregated holding of fund family assets held by accounts within the purchaser’s household at Merrill Lynch. Eligible fund family assets not held at Merrill Lynch may be included in the ROA calculation only if the shareholder notifies his or her financial advisor about such assets |
■ | Letters of Intent (LOI) which allow for breakpoint discounts based on anticipated purchases within a fund family, through Merrill Lynch, over a 13-month period of time (if applicable) |
■
E-DELIVERY
To receive your mutual fund documents on-line, go to www.pgiminvestments.com/edelivery and enroll. Instead of receiving printed documents by mail, you will receive notification via email when new materials are available. You can cancel your enrollment or change your email address at any time by visiting the website address above. |
Prudential Real Assets Fund | |||||
Share Class | A | B | C | Q | Z |
NASDAQ | PUDAX | PUDBX | PUDCX | PUDQX | PUDZX |
CUSIP | 74440K819 | 74440K793 | 74440K785 | 74440K744 | 74440K777 |
MF207STAT | The Fund's Investment Company Act File No. 811-09805 |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS FUND | ||||||||
A: PUDAX | B: PUDBX | C: PUDCX | Q: PUDQX | Z: PUDZX |
Term | Definition |
ADR | American Depositary Receipt |
ADS | American Depositary Share |
Board | Fund’s Board of Directors or Trustees |
Board Member | A trustee or director of the Fund’s Board |
CEA | Commodity Exchange Act, as amended |
CFTC | US Commodity Futures Trading Commission |
Code | Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended |
CMO | Collateralized Mortgage Obligation |
ETF | Exchange-Traded Fund |
EDR | European Depositary Receipt |
Fannie Mae | Federal National Mortgage Association |
FDIC | Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation |
Fitch | Fitch Ratings, Inc. |
Freddie Mac | Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation |
GDR | Global Depositary Receipt |
Ginnie Mae | Government National Mortgage Association |
IPO | Initial Public Offering |
IRS | Internal Revenue Service |
1933 Act | Securities Act of 1933, as amended |
1934 Act | Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended |
1940 Act | Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended |
1940 Act Laws, Interpretations and Exemptions | Exemptive order, SEC release, no-action letter or similar relief or interpretations, collectively |
LIBOR | London Interbank Offered Rate |
Manager or PGIM Investments | PGIM Investments LLC |
Moody’s | Moody’s Investor Services, Inc. |
NASDAQ | National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations System |
NAV | Net Asset Value |
NRSRO | Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organization |
NYSE | New York Stock Exchange |
OTC | Over the Counter |
Prudential | Prudential Financial, Inc. |
PMFS | Prudential Mutual Fund Services LLC |
Term | Definition |
REIT | Real Estate Investment Trust |
RIC | Regulated Investment Company, as the term is used in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended |
S&P | S&P Global Ratings |
SEC | US Securities & Exchange Commission |
World Bank | International Bank for Reconstruction and Development |
■ | Canada |
■ | United States |
■ | Austria |
■ | Belgium |
■ | Denmark |
■ | Finland |
■ | France |
■ | Germany |
■ | Ireland |
■ | Israel |
■ | Italy |
■ | Netherlands |
■ | Norway |
■ | Portugal |
■ | Spain |
■ | Sweden |
■ | Switzerland |
■ | United Kingdom |
■ | Australia |
■ | Hong Kong |
■ | Japan |
■ | New Zealand |
■ | Singapore |
■ | Brazil |
■ | Chile |
■ | Colombia |
■ | Mexico |
■ | Peru |
■ | Czech Republic |
■ | Egypt |
■ | Greece |
■ | Hungary |
■ | Poland |
■ | Qatar |
■ | Russia |
■ | South Africa |
■ | Turkey |
■ | United Arab Emirates |
■ | China |
■ | India |
■ | Indonesia |
■ | Korea |
■ | Malaysia |
■ | Pakistan |
■ | Philippines |
■ | Taiwan |
■ | Thailand |
■ | Argentina |
■ | Bahrain |
■ | Bangladesh |
■ | Burkina Faso |
■ | Benin |
■ | Croatia |
■ | Estonia |
■ | Guinea-Bissau |
■ | Ivory Coast |
■ | Jordan |
■ | Kenya |
■ | Kuwait |
■ | Lebanon |
■ | Lithuania |
■ | Kazakhstan |
■ | Mauritius |
■ | Mali |
■ | Morocco |
■ | Niger |
■ | Nigeria |
■ | Oman |
■ | Romania |
■ | Serbia |
■ | Senegal |
■ | Slovenia |
■ | Sri Lanka |
■ | Togo |
■ | Tunisia |
■ | Vietnam |
■ | Junk bonds are issued by less creditworthy issuers. These securities are vulnerable to adverse changes in the issuer's economic condition and to general economic conditions. Issuers of junk bonds may be unable to meet their interest or principal payment obligations because of an economic downturn, specific issuer developments or the unavailability of additional financing. |
■ | The issuers of junk bonds may have a larger amount of outstanding debt relative to their assets than issuers of investment grade bonds. If the issuer experiences financial stress, it may be unable to meet its debt obligations. |
■ | Junk bonds are frequently ranked junior to claims by other creditors. If the issuer cannot meet its obligations, the senior obligations are generally paid off before the junior obligations. |
■ | Junk bonds frequently have redemption features that permit an issuer to repurchase the security from the Fund before it matures. If an issuer redeems the junk bonds, the Fund may have to invest the proceeds in bonds with lower yields and may lose income. |
■ | Prices of junk bonds are subject to extreme price fluctuations. Negative economic developments may have a greater impact on the prices of junk bonds than on other higher rated fixed-income securities. |
■ | Junk bonds may be less liquid than higher rated fixed-income securities even under normal economic conditions. There are fewer dealers in the junk bond market, and there may be significant differences in the prices quoted for junk bonds by the dealers. Because they are less liquid, judgment may play a greater role in valuing certain of the Fund’s portfolio securities than in the case of securities trading in a more liquid market. |
■ | The Fund may incur expenses to the extent necessary to seek recovery upon default or to negotiate new terms with a defaulting issuer. |
Independent Board Members | |||
Name, Address, Age
Position(s) Portfolios Overseen |
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years | Other Directorships Held During Past Five Years | Length of Board Service |
Kevin J. Bannon (65)
Board Member Portfolios Overseen: 89 |
Retired; Managing Director (April 2008-May 2015) and Chief Investment Officer (October 2008-November 2013) of Highmount Capital LLC (registered investment adviser); formerly Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer (April 1993-August 2007) of Bank of New York Company; President (May 2003-May 2007) of BNY Hamilton Family of Mutual Funds. | Director of Urstadt Biddle Properties (equity real estate investment trust) (since September 2008). | Since July 2008 |
Linda W. Bynoe (65)
Board Member Portfolios Overseen: 89 |
President and Chief Executive Officer (since March 1995) and formerly Chief Operating Officer (December 1989-February 1995) of Telemat Ltd. (management consulting); formerly Vice President (January 1985-June 1989) at Morgan Stanley & Co. (broker-dealer). | Director of Simon Property Group, Inc. (retail real estate) (May 2003-May 2012); Director of Anixter International, Inc. (communication products distributor) (since January 2006); Director of Northern Trust Corporation (financial services) (since April 2006); Trustee of Equity Residential (residential real estate) (since December 2009). | Since March 2005 |
Barry H. Evans (57)±
Board Member Portfolios Overseen: 89 |
Retired; Formerly President (2005 – 2016), Global Chief Operating Officer (2014– 2016), Chief Investment Officer – Global Head of Fixed Income (1998-2014), and various portfolio manager roles (1986-2006), Manulife Asset Management U.S. | Director, Manulife Trust Company (2011- present); Director, Manulife Asset Management Limited (2015-present); Formerly Chairman of the Board of Directors of Manulife Asset Management U.S. (2005-2016); Formerly Chairman of the Board, Declaration Investment Management and Research (2008-2016). | Since September 2017 |
Keith F. Hartstein (61)
Board Member & Independent Chair Portfolios Overseen: 89 |
Retired; Member (since November 2014) of the Governing Council of the Independent Directors Council (organization of independent mutual fund directors); formerly President and Chief Executive Officer (2005-2012), Senior Vice President (2004-2005), Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing (1997-2004), and various executive management positions (1990-1997), John Hancock Funds, LLC (asset management); Chairman, Investment Company Institute’s Sales Force Marketing Committee (2003-2008). | None. | Since September 2013 |
Laurie Simon Hodrick (55)±
Board Member Portfolios Overseen: 89 |
A. Barton Hepburn Professor of Economics in the Faculty of Business, Columbia Business School (since 1996); Visiting Professor of Law and Rock Center for Corporate Governance Fellow, Stanford Law School (since 2015); Visiting Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University (since 2015); Sole Member, ReidCourt LLC (since 2008) (a consulting firm); Formerly Managing Director, Global Head of Alternative Investment Strategies, Deutsche Bank (2006-2008); Formerly Director/Trustee, Merrill Lynch Investment Managers Funds (1999-2006). | Independent Director, Corporate Capital Trust (since April 2017) (a business development company). | Since September 2017 |
Michael S. Hyland, CFA (72)
Board Member Portfolios Overseen: 89 |
Retired (since February 2005); formerly Senior Managing Director (July 2001-February 2005) of Bear Stearns & Co, Inc.; Global Partner, INVESCO (1999-2001); Managing Director and President of Salomon Brothers Asset Management (1989-1999). | None. | Since July 2008 |
Richard A. Redeker (74)
Board Member & Independent Vice Chair Portfolios Overseen: 89 |
Retired Mutual Fund Senior Executive (47 years); Management Consultant; Director, Mutual Fund Directors Forum (since 2014); Independent Directors Council (organization of independent mutual fund directors)-Executive Committee, Chair of Policy Steering Committee, Governing Council. | None. | Since October 1993 |
Independent Board Members | |||
Name, Address, Age
Position(s) Portfolios Overseen |
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years | Other Directorships Held During Past Five Years | Length of Board Service |
Stephen G. Stoneburn (74)
Board Member Portfolios Overseen: 89 |
Chairman (since July 2011), President and Chief Executive Officer (since June 1996) of Frontline Medical Communications (publishing company); formerly President (June 1995-June 1996) of Argus Integrated Media, Inc.; Senior Vice President and Managing Director (January 1993-1995) of Cowles Business Media; Senior Vice President of Fairchild Publications, Inc. (1975-1989). | None. | Since July 2003 |
Fund Officers (a) | ||
Name, Address and Age
Position with Fund |
Principal Occupation(s) During Past Five Years |
Length of
Service as Fund Officer |
Raymond A. O’Hara (62)
Chief Legal Officer |
Vice President and Corporate Counsel (since July 2010) of Prudential Insurance Company of America (Prudential); Vice President (March 2011-Present) of Pruco Life Insurance Company and Pruco Life Insurance Company of New Jersey; Vice President and Corporate Counsel (March 2011-Present) of Prudential Annuities Life Assurance Corporation; Chief Legal Officer of PGIM Investments LLC (since June 2012); Chief Legal Officer of Prudential Mutual Fund Services LLC (since June 2012) and Corporate Counsel of AST Investment Services, Inc. (since June 2012); formerly Assistant Vice President and Corporate Counsel (September 2008-July 2010) of The Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.; formerly Associate (September 1980-December 1987) and Partner (January 1988–August 2008) of Blazzard & Hasenauer, P.C. (formerly, Blazzard, Grodd & Hasenauer, P.C.). | Since June 2012 |
Chad A. Earnst (42)
Chief Compliance Officer |
Chief Compliance Officer (September 2014-Present) of PGIM Investments LLC; Chief Compliance Officer (September 2014-Present) of the Prudential Funds, Target Funds, Advanced Series Trust, The Prudential Series Fund, Prudential's Gibraltar Fund, Inc., Prudential Global Short Duration High Yield Income Fund, Inc., Prudential Short Duration High Yield Fund, Inc. and Prudential Jennison MLP Income Fund, Inc.; formerly Assistant Director (March 2010-August 2014) of the Asset Management Unit, Division of Enforcement, US Securities & Exchange Commission; Assistant Regional Director (January 2010-August 2014), Branch Chief (June 2006–December 2009) and Senior Counsel (April 2003-May 2006) of the Miami Regional Office, Division of Enforcement, US Securities & Exchange Commission. | Since September 2014 |
Deborah A. Docs (59)
Secretary |
Vice President and Corporate Counsel (since January 2001) of Prudential; Vice President (since December 1996) and Assistant Secretary (since March 1999) of PGIM Investments LLC; formerly Vice President and Assistant Secretary (May 2003-June 2005) of AST Investment Services, Inc. | Since May 2004 |
Jonathan D. Shain (59)
Assistant Secretary |
Vice President and Corporate Counsel (since August 1998) of Prudential; Vice President and Assistant Secretary (since May 2001) of PGIM Investments LLC; Vice President and Assistant Secretary (since February 2001) of Prudential Mutual Fund Services LLC; formerly Vice President and Assistant Secretary (May 2003-June 2005) of AST Investment Services, Inc. | Since May 2005 |
Claudia DiGiacomo (43)
Assistant Secretary |
Vice President and Corporate Counsel (since January 2005) of Prudential; Vice President and Assistant Secretary of PGIM Investments LLC (since December 2005); Associate at Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP (1999-2004). | Since December 2005 |
Andrew R. French (54)
Assistant Secretary |
Vice President and Corporate Counsel (since February 2010) of Prudential; formerly Director and Corporate Counsel (2006-2010) of Prudential; Vice President and Assistant Secretary (since January 2007) of PGIM Investments LLC; Vice President and Assistant Secretary (since January 2007) of Prudential Mutual Fund Services LLC. | Since October 2006 |
Charles H. Smith (44)
Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer |
Vice President, Corporate Compliance, Anti-Money Laundering Unit (since January 2015) of Prudential; committee member of the American Council of Life Insurers Anti-Money Laundering and Critical Infrastructure Committee (since January 2016); formerly Global Head of Economic Sanctions Compliance at AIG Property Casualty (February 2007 – December 2014); Assistant Attorney General at the New York State Attorney General's Office, Division of Public Advocacy. (August 1998 —January 2007). | Since January 2017 |
M. Sadiq Peshimam (53)
Treasurer and Principal Financial and Accounting Officer |
Vice President (since 2005) of PGIM Investments LLC; formerly Assistant Treasurer of funds in the Prudential Mutual Fund Complex (2006-2014). | Since February 2006 |
Peter Parrella (59)
Assistant Treasurer |
Vice President (since 2007) and Director (2004-2007) within Prudential Mutual Fund Administration; formerly Tax Manager at SSB Citi Fund Management LLC (1997-2004). | Since June 2007 |
Lana Lomuti (50)
Assistant Treasurer |
Vice President (since 2007) and Director (2005-2007), within Prudential Mutual Fund Administration; formerly Assistant Treasurer (December 2007-February 2014) of The Greater China Fund, Inc. | Since April 2014 |
Linda McMullin (56)
Assistant Treasurer |
Vice President (since 2011) and Director (2008-2011) within Prudential Mutual Fund Administration. | Since April 2014 |
Kelly A. Coyne (49)
Assistant Treasurer |
Director, Investment Operations of Prudential Mutual Fund Services LLC (since 2010). | Since March 2015 |
■ | Board Members are deemed to be “Interested,” as defined in the 1940 Act, by reason of their affiliation with PGIM Investments LLC and/or an affiliate of PGIM Investments LLC. |
■ | Unless otherwise noted, the address of all Board Members and Officers is c/o PGIM Investments LLC, 655 Broad Street, Newark, New Jersey 07102-4410. |
■ | There is no set term of office for Board Members or Officers. The Board Members have adopted a retirement policy, which calls for the retirement of Board Members on December 31 of the year in which they reach the age of 75. |
■ | “Other Directorships Held” includes only directorships of companies required to register or file reports with the SEC under the 1934 Act (that is, “public companies”) or other investment companies registered under the 1940 Act. |
■ | “Portfolios Overseen” includes all investment companies managed by PGIM Investments LLC. The investment companies for which PGIM Investments LLC serves as manager include the Prudential Mutual Funds, The Prudential Variable Contract Accounts, Target Mutual Funds, Prudential Short Duration High Yield Fund, Inc., Prudential Global Short Duration High Yield Fund, Inc., The Prudential Series Fund, Prudential's Gibraltar Fund, Inc. and the Advanced Series Trust. |
Board Committee Meetings (for most recently completed fiscal year) | ||
Audit Committee | Nominating & Governance Committee | Dryden Investment Committee |
4 | 5 | 3 |
■ | the salaries and expenses of all of its and the Fund's personnel except the fees and expenses of Independent Board Members and Non-Management Interested Board Members; |
■ | all expenses incurred by the Manager or the Fund in connection with managing the ordinary course of a Fund’s business, other than those assumed by the Fund as described below; and |
■ | the fees, costs and expenses payable to any investment subadviser pursuant to a subadvisory agreement between PGIM Investments and such investment subadviser. |
■ | the fees and expenses incurred by the Fund in connection with the management of the investment and reinvestment of the Fund's assets payable to the Manager; |
■ | the fees and expenses of Independent Board Members and Non-Management Interested Board Members; |
■ | the fees and certain expenses of the Custodian and transfer and dividend disbursing agent, including the cost of providing records to the Manager in connection with its obligation of maintaining required records of the Fund and of pricing the Fund's shares; |
■ | the charges and expenses of the Fund's legal counsel and independent auditors and of legal counsel to the Independent Board Members; |
■ | brokerage commissions and any issue or transfer taxes chargeable to the Fund in connection with securities (and futures, if applicable) transactions; |
■ | all taxes and corporate fees payable by the Fund to governmental agencies; |
■ | the fees of any trade associations of which the Fund may be a member; |
■ | the cost of share certificates representing, and/or non-negotiable share deposit receipts evidencing, shares of the Fund; |
■ | the cost of fidelity, directors and officers and errors and omissions insurance; |
■ | the fees and expenses involved in registering and maintaining registration of the Fund and of Fund shares with the SEC and paying notice filing fees under state securities laws, including the preparation and printing of the Fund's registration statements and prospectuses for such purposes; allocable communications expenses with respect to investor services and all expenses of shareholders' and Board meetings and of preparing, printing and mailing reports and notices to shareholders; and |
■ | litigation and indemnification expenses and other extraordinary expenses not incurred in the ordinary course of the Fund's business and distribution and service (12b-1) fees. |
Management Fees Paid by the Fund | ||||
2017 | 2016 | 2015* | 2015 | |
Gross Fee | $1,260,681 | $1,198,210 | $653,879 | $708,792 |
Amount Waived/Reimbursed by PGIM Investments | $(1,011,865) | $(978,766) | $(752,512) | $(861,457) |
Net Fee | $248,816 | $219,444 | $(98,633) | $(152,665) |
Subadvisory Fees Paid by PGIM Investments | ||||
2017 | 2016 | 2015* | 2015 | |
QMA | $316,878 | $308,111 | $169,293 | $180,014 |
PGIM Fixed Income | $37,310 | $43,178 | $20,219 | $19,232 |
CoreCommodity | $127,748 | $104,940 | $53,557 | $67,726 |
Other Funds and Investment Accounts Managed by the Portfolio Managers | ||||
Subadviser | Portfolio Managers |
Registered Investment
Companies/Total Assets |
Other Pooled
Investment Vehicles/* Total Assets |
Other Accounts/*
Total Assets |
Quantitative Management Associates LLC** | Ted Lockwood, MBA, MS | 39 / $83.87 billion | 5 / $1.83 billion |
22 / $1.706 billion
1 / $31.53 million |
Edward F. Keon, Jr., MBA | 38 / $83.38 billion | 5 / $1.83 billion |
19 / $1.46 billion
0 / $0 |
|
Edward L. Campbell, MBA, CFA | 38 / $83.38 billion | 5 / $1.83 billion |
19 / $1.46 billion
0 / $0 |
|
Joel M. Kallman, MBA, CFA | 38 / $83.38 billion | 5 / $1.83 billion |
19 / $1.46 billion
0 / $0 |
|
Rory Cummings, MBA, CFA | 38 / $83.38 billion | 5 / $1.83 billion |
19 / $1.46 billion
0 / $0 |
|
Yesim Tokat-Acikel, PhD± | 1 / $32,455,839 | None |
1 / $31,533,839
1 / $31,533,839 |
|
Marco Aiolfi, PhD± | 1 / $32,455,839 | None |
1/ $31,533,839
1 / $31,533,839 |
|
PGIM Fixed Income | Robert Tipp, CFA | 24 / $38,618,943,251 |
18 / $1,532,671,386
1 / $419,292 |
90 / $22,862,077,067 |
Craig Dewling | 37 / $10,373,540,563 |
28 / $10,426,054,206
2 / $760,110,169 |
150 / $41,240,383,573
2 / $(401,214,319) |
|
Erik Schiller, CFA | 37 / $13,484,138,988 |
27 / $10,254,128,867
2 / $760,110,169 |
148 / $39,564,356,283
6 / $(187,502,808) |
|
Gary Wu, CFA | 1 / $17,735,481 | None | 2 / $27,930,938 | |
CoreCommodity Management, LLC | Adam De Chiara*** | 1 / $4,271,268,794 |
7 / $1,363,511,662
5 / $1,006,600,248 |
22 / $2,400,372,503
14 / $1,026,466,689 |
Personal Investments and Financial Interests of the Portfolio Managers | ||
Subadviser | Portfolio Managers |
Investments and Other Financial Interests
in the Fund and Similar Strategies* |
Quantitative Management Associates LLC | Ted Lockwood | None |
Edward F. Keon, Jr. | $1-$10,000 | |
Edward L. Campbell, CFA | None | |
Joel M. Kallman, CFA | None | |
Rory Cummings | $1-$10,000 | |
Yesim Tokat-Acikel, PhD± | None | |
Marco Aiolfi, PhD± | None | |
PGIM Fixed Income | Robert Tipp, CFA | None |
Craig Dewling | None | |
Erik Schiller, CFA | None | |
Gary Wu, CFA | None | |
CoreCommodity Management, LLC | Adam De Chiara# | None |
■ | direct the best investment ideas or give favorable allocation to those accounts that pay performance-based fees; |
■ | use trades by an account that does not pay performance-based fees to benefit those accounts that do pay performance-based fees, such as where a private fund sells short before a sale by an account that does not pay incentive fees, or a private fund sells a security only after an account that does not pay incentive fees has made a large purchase of the security; and |
■ | benefit those accounts paying a performance-based fee over those clients that do not pay performance-based fees and which have a different and potentially conflicting investment strategy. |
■ | business initiatives; |
■ | the number of investment professionals receiving a bonus and related peer group compensation; |
■ | financial metrics of the business relative to those of appropriate peer groups; and |
■ | investment performance of portfolios: (i) relative to appropriate peer groups; and/or (ii) as measured against relevant investment indices. |
■ | elimination of the conflict; |
■ | disclosure of the conflict; or |
■ | management of the conflict through the adoption of appropriate policies, procedures or other mitigants. |
■ | Performance Fees - PGIM Fixed Income manages accounts with asset-based fees alongside accounts with performance-based fees. This side-by-side management may be deemed to create an incentive for PGIM Fixed Income and its investment professionals to favor one account over another. Specifically, PGIM Fixed Income or its affiliates could be considered to have the incentive to favor accounts for which PGIM Fixed Income or an affiliate receives performance fees, and possibly take greater investment risks in those accounts, in order to bolster performance and increase its fees. |
■ | Affiliated accounts - PGIM Fixed Income manages accounts on behalf of its affiliates as well as unaffiliated accounts. PGIM Fixed Income could be considered to have an incentive to favor accounts of affiliates over others. |
■ | Large accounts - large accounts typically generate more revenue than do smaller accounts and certain of PGIM Fixed Income’s strategies have higher fees than others. As a result, a portfolio manager could be considered to have an incentive when allocating scarce investment opportunities to favor accounts that pay a higher fee or generate more income for PGIM Fixed Income. |
■ | Long only and long/short accounts - PGIM Fixed Income manages accounts that only allow it to hold securities long as well as accounts that permit short selling. PGIM Fixed Income may, therefore, sell a security short in some client accounts while holding the same security long in other client accounts. These short sales could reduce the value of the securities held in the long only accounts. In addition, purchases for long only accounts could have a negative impact on the short positions. |
■ | Securities of the same kind or class - PGIM Fixed Income sometimes buys or sells for one client account securities of the same kind or class that are purchased or sold for another client at prices that may be different. PGIM Fixed Income may also, at any time, execute trades of securities of the same kind or class in one direction for an account and in the opposite direction for another account due to differences in investment strategy or client direction. Different strategies trading in the same securities or types of securities may appear as inconsistencies in PGIM Fixed Income’s management of multiple accounts side-by-side. |
■ | Financial interests of investment professionals - PGIM Fixed Income investment professionals may invest in certain investment vehicles that it manages, including mutual funds and private funds. Also, certain of these investment vehicles are options under the 401(k) and deferred compensation plans offered by Prudential Financial, Inc. In addition, the value of grants under PGIM Fixed Income’s long-term incentive plan and targeted long-term incentive plan is affected by the performance of certain client accounts. As a result, PGIM Fixed Income investment professionals may have financial interests in accounts managed by PGIM Fixed Income or that are related to the performance of certain client accounts. |
■ | Non-discretionary accounts - PGIM Fixed Income provides non-discretionary investment advice to some clients and manages others on a discretionary basis. Trades in non-discretionary accounts could occur before, in concert with, or after PGIM Fixed Income executes similar trades in its discretionary accounts. The non-discretionary clients may be disadvantaged if PGIM Fixed Income delivers investment advice to them after it initiates trading for the discretionary clients, or vice versa. |
■ | The chief investment officer/head of PGIM Fixed Income periodically reviews and compares performance and performance attribution for each client account within its various strategies during meetings typically attended by members of PGIM Fixed Income’s senior leadership team, chief compliance officer or his designee, and senior portfolio managers. |
■ | In keeping with PGIM Fixed Income’s fiduciary obligations, its policy with respect to trade aggregation and allocation is to treat all of its accounts fairly and equitably over time. PGIM Fixed Income’s trade management oversight committee, which generally meets quarterly, is responsible for providing oversight with respect to trade aggregation and allocation. Its compliance group periodically reviews a sampling of new issue allocations and related documentation to confirm compliance with the trade aggregation and allocation procedures. In addition, the compliance and investment risk management groups review forensic reports regarding new issue and secondary trade activity on a quarterly basis. This forensic analysis includes such data as the: (i) number of new issues allocated in the strategy; (ii) size of new issue allocations to each portfolio in the strategy; (iii) profitability of new issue transactions; and (iv) portfolio turnover. The results of these analyses are reviewed and discussed at PGIM Fixed Income’s trade management oversight committee meetings. The procedures above are designed to detect patterns and anomalies in PGIM Fixed Income’s side-by-side management and trading so that it may assess and improve its processes. |
■ | PGIM Fixed Income has procedures that specifically address its side-by-side management of long/short and long only portfolios. These procedures address potential conflicts that could arise from differing positions between long/short and long only portfolios. In addition, lending opportunities with respect to securities for which the market is demanding a slight premium rate over normal market rates are allocated to long only accounts prior to allocating the opportunities to long/short accounts. |
■ | Conflicts Arising Out of Legal Restrictions . PGIM Fixed Income may be restricted by law, regulation, contract or other constraints as to how much, if any, of a particular security it may purchase or sell on behalf of a client, and as to the timing of such purchase or sale. Sometimes these restrictions apply as a result of its relationship with Prudential Financial, Inc. and its other affiliates. For example, PGIM Fixed Income does not purchase securities issued by Prudential Financial, Inc. for client accounts. In addition, PGIM Fixed Income’s holdings of a security on behalf of its clients are required, under some SEC rules, to be aggregated with the holdings of that security by other Prudential Financial, Inc. affiliates. These holdings could, on an aggregate basis, exceed certain reporting or ownership thresholds. Prudential Financial, Inc. tracks these aggregated holdings and may restrict purchases to avoid exceeding these thresholds because of the potential consequences to Prudential Financial, Inc. if such thresholds are exceeded. In addition, PGIM Fixed Income could receive material, non-public information with respect to a particular issuer and, as a result, be unable to execute transactions in securities of that issuer for its clients. For example, PGIM Fixed Income’s bank loan team often invests in private bank loans in connection with which the borrower provides material, non-public information, resulting in restrictions on trading securities issued by those borrowers. PGIM Fixed Income has procedures in place to carefully consider whether to intentionally accept material, non-public information with respect to certain issuers. PGIM Fixed Income is generally able to avoid receiving material, non-public information from its affiliates and other units within PGIM by maintaining information barriers. In some instances, it may create an isolated information barrier around a small number of its employees so that material, non-public information received by such employees is not attributed to the rest of PGIM Fixed Income. |
■ | Conflicts Related to Outside Business Activity . From time to time, certain of PGIM Fixed Income employees or officers may engage in outside business activity, including outside directorships. Any outside business activity is subject to prior approval pursuant to PGIM Fixed Income’s personal conflicts of interest and outside business activities policy. Actual and potential conflicts of interest are |
analyzed during such approval process. PGIM Fixed Income could be restricted in trading the securities of certain issuers in client portfolios in the unlikely event that an employee or officer, as a result of outside business activity, obtains material, non-public information regarding an issuer. | |
■ | Conflicts Related to Investment of Client Assets in Affiliated Funds . PGIM Fixed Income may invest client assets in funds that it manages or subadvises for an affiliate. PGIM Fixed Income may also invest cash collateral from securities lending transactions in these funds. These investments benefit both PGIM Fixed Income and its affiliate. |
■ | PICA General Account . Because of the substantial size of the general account of The Prudential Insurance Company of America (PICA), trading by PICA’s general account, including PGIM Fixed Income’s trades on behalf of the account, may affect market prices. Although PGIM Fixed Income does not expect that PICA’s general account will execute transactions that will move a market frequently, and generally only in response to unusual market or issuer events, the execution of these transactions could have an adverse effect on transactions for or positions held by other clients. |
■ | PGIM Fixed Income invests in the securities of one or more clients for the accounts of other clients. |
■ | PGIM Fixed Income’s affiliates sell various products and/or services to certain companies whose securities we purchase and sell for PGIM Fixed Income clients. |
■ | PGIM Fixed Income invests in the debt securities of companies whose equity is held by its affiliates. |
■ | PGIM Fixed Income’s affiliates hold public and private debt and equity securities of a large number of issuers and may invest in some of the same companies as other client accounts but at different levels in the capital structure. For example: |
■ | Affiliated accounts can hold the senior debt of an issuer whose subordinated debt is held by PGIM Fixed Income’s clients or hold secured debt of an issuer whose public unsecured debt is held in client accounts. In the event of restructuring or insolvency, the affiliated accounts as holders of senior debt may exercise remedies and take other actions that are not in the interest of, or are adverse to, other clients that are the holders of junior debt. |
■ | To the extent permitted by applicable law, PGIM Fixed Income may also invest client assets in offerings of securities the proceeds of which are used to repay debt obligations held in affiliated accounts or other client accounts. PGIM Fixed Income’s interest in having the debt repaid creates a conflict of interest. PGIM Fixed Income has adopted a refinancing policy to address this conflict. |
■ | Certain of PGIM Fixed Income’s affiliates (as well as directors or officers of its affiliates) are officers or directors of issuers in which PGIM Fixed Income invests from time to time. These issuers may also be service providers to PGIM Fixed Income or its affiliates. |
■ | In addition, PGIM Fixed Income may invest client assets in securities backed by commercial mortgage loans that were originated or are serviced by an affiliate. |
■ | Elimination of the conflict; |
■ | Disclosure of the conflict; or |
■ | Management of the conflict through the adoption of appropriate policies and procedures. |
■ | Asset-Based Fees vs. Performance-Based Fees; Other Fee Considerations. QMA manages accounts with asset-based fees alongside accounts with performance-based fees. Asset-based fees are calculated based on the value of a client’s portfolio at periodic measurement dates or over specified periods of time. Performance-based fees are generally based on a share of the capital appreciation of a portfolio, and may offer greater upside potential to an investment manager than asset-based fees, depending on how the fees are structured. This side-by-side management can create an incentive for QMA and its investment professionals to favor one account over another. Specifically, QMA has the incentive to favor accounts for which it receives performance fees, and possibly take greater investment risks in those accounts, in order to bolster performance and increase its fees. In addition, since fees are negotiable, one client may be paying a higher fee than another client with similar investment objectives or goals. In negotiating fees, QMA takes into account a number of factors including, but not limited to, the investment strategy, the size of a portfolio being managed, the relationship with the client, and the required level of service. Fees may also differ based on account type. For example, fees for commingled vehicles, including those that QMA subadvises, may differ from fees charged for single client accounts. |
■ | Long Only/Long-Short Accounts. QMA manages accounts that only allow it to hold securities long as well as accounts that permit short selling. QMA may, therefore, sell a security short in some client accounts while holding the same security long in other client accounts, creating the possibility that QMA is taking inconsistent positions with respect to a particular security in different client accounts. |
■ | Compensation/Benefit Plan Accounts/Other Investments by Investment Professionals. QMA manages certain funds and strategies whose performance is considered in determining long-term incentive plan benefits for certain investment professionals. Investment professionals involved in the management of accounts in these strategies have an incentive to favor them over other accounts they manage in order to increase their compensation. Additionally, QMA’s investment professionals may have an interest in those strategies if the funds are chosen as options in their 401(k) or deferred compensation plans offered by Prudential or if they otherwise invest in those funds directly. |
■ | Affiliated Accounts. QMA manages accounts on behalf of its affiliates as well as unaffiliated accounts. QMA could have an incentive to favor accounts of affiliates over others. |
■ | Non-Discretionary Accounts or Model Portfolios. QMA provides non-discretionary model portfolios to some clients and manages other portfolios on a discretionary basis. When QMA manages accounts on a non-discretionary basis, the investment team will typically deliver a model portfolio to a non-discretionary client at or around the same time as executing discretionary trades in the same strategy. The non-discretionary clients may be disadvantaged if QMA delivers the model investment portfolio to them after it initiates trading for the discretionary clients, or vice versa. |
■ | Large Accounts. Large accounts typically generate more revenue than do smaller accounts. As a result, a portfolio manager has an incentive when allocating scarce investment opportunities to favor accounts that pay a higher fee or generate more income for QMA. |
■ | Securities of the Same Kind or Class. QMA sometimes buys or sells, or directs or recommends that one client buy or sell, securities of the same kind or class that are purchased or sold for another client, at prices that may be different. QMA may also, at any time, execute trades of securities of the same kind or class in one direction for an account and in the opposite direction for another account, due to differences in investment strategy or client direction. Different strategies effecting trading in the same securities or types of securities can appear as inconsistencies in QMA’s management of multiple accounts side-by-side. |
■ | Conflicts Arising Out of Legal Restrictions. QMA may be restricted by law, regulation, contract or other constraints as to how much, if any, of a particular security it may purchase or sell on behalf of a client, and as to the timing of such purchase or sale. Sometimes, these restrictions apply as a result of QMA’s relationship with Prudential Financial and its other affiliates. For example, QMA’s holdings of a security on behalf of its clients are required, under some SEC rules, to be aggregated with the holdings of that security by other Prudential Financial affiliates. These holdings could, on an aggregate basis, exceed certain reporting or ownership thresholds. QMA tracks these aggregate holdings and may restrict purchases to avoid crossing such thresholds because of the potential consequences to Prudential if such thresholds are exceeded. In addition, QMA could receive material, non-public information with respect to a particular issuer from an affiliate and, as a result, be unable to execute purchase or sale transactions in securities of that issuer for its clients. QMA is generally able to avoid receiving material, non-public information from its affiliates by maintaining information barriers to prevent the transfer of information between affiliates. |
■ | The Fund may be prohibited from engaging in transactions with its affiliates even when such transactions may be beneficial for the Fund. Certain affiliated transactions are permitted in accordance with procedures adopted by the Fund and reviewed by the independent board members of the Fund. |
■ | QMA performs asset allocation services as subadviser for affiliated mutual funds managed or co-managed by the Manager, including for some Portfolios offered by the Funds. Where, in these arrangements, QMA also manages underlying funds or accounts within asset classes included in the mutual fund guidelines (as is the case with the Funds), QMA will allocate assets to such underlying funds or accounts. In these circumstances, QMA receives both an asset allocation fee and a management fee. As a result, QMA has an incentive to allocate assets to an asset class or underlying fund that it manages in order to increase its fees. To help mitigate this conflict, the compliance group reviews the asset allocation to determine that the investments were made within the guidelines established for each asset class or fund. QMA’s affiliates can have an incentive to seek to influence QMA’s asset allocation decisions, for example to facilitate hedging or improve profit margins. Through training and the establishment of communication barriers, however, QMA seeks to avoid any influence by its affiliates and implements its asset allocation decisions solely in what QMA believes to be the best interests of the funds and in compliance with applicable guidelines. QMA also believes that it makes such allocations in a manner consistent with its fiduciary obligations. |
■ | In certain arrangements, QMA subadvises mutual funds for the Manager through a program where they have selected QMA as a manager, resulting in QMA’s collection of subadvisory fees from them. The Manager also selects managers for some of QMA’s asset allocation products and, in certain cases, is compensated by QMA for these services under service agreements. The Manager and QMA may have a mutual incentive to continue these types of arrangements that benefit both companies. These and other types of conflicts of interest are reviewed to verify that appropriate oversight is performed. |
■ | QMA, Prudential Financial, Inc., The Prudential Insurance Company of America (PICA) and other affiliates of QMA have financial interests in, or relationships with, companies whose securities QMA holds, purchases or sells in its client accounts. Certain of these interests and relationships are material to QMA or to the Prudential enterprise. At any time, these interests and relationships could be inconsistent or in potential or actual conflict with positions held or actions taken by QMA on behalf of its client accounts. For example, QMA invests in the securities of one or more clients for the accounts of other clients. QMA’s affiliates sell various products and/or services to certain companies whose securities QMA purchases and sells for its clients. QMA’s affiliates hold public and private debt and equity securities of a large number of issuers. QMA invests in some of the same issuers for its client accounts but at different levels in the capital structure. For instance, QMA may invest client assets in the equity of companies whose debt is held by an affiliate. Certain of QMA’s affiliates (as well as directors of QMA’s affiliates) are officers or directors of issuers in which QMA invests from time to time. These issuers may also be service providers to QMA or its affiliates. In general, conflicts related to the financial interests described above are addressed by the fact that QMA makes investment decisions for each client independently considering the best economic interests of such client. |
■ | Certain of QMA’s employees may offer and sell securities of, and interests in, commingled funds that QMA manages or subadvises. Employees may offer and sell securities in connection with their roles as registered representatives of Prudential Investment Management Services LLC (a broker-dealer affiliate), or as officers, agents, or approved persons of other affiliates. There is an incentive for QMA’s employees to offer these securities to investors regardless of whether the investment is appropriate for such investor since increased assets in these vehicles will result in increased advisory fees to QMA. In addition, although sales commissions are not paid for such activities, such sales could result in increased compensation to the employee. To mitigate this conflict, QMA performs suitability checks on new clients as well as on an annual basis with respect to all clients. |
■ | A portion of the long-term incentive grant of some of QMA’s investment professionals will increase or decrease based on the performance of several of QMA’s strategies over defined time periods. Consequently, some of QMA’s portfolio managers from time to time have financial interests in the accounts they advise. To address potential conflicts related to these financial interests, QMA has procedures, including supervisory review procedures, designed to verify that each of its accounts is managed in a manner that is consistent with QMA’s fiduciary obligations, as well as with the account’s investment objectives, investment strategies and restrictions. Specifically, QMA’s chief investment officer will perform a comparison of trading costs between accounts in the strategies whose performance is considered in connection with the long-term incentive grant and other accounts, to verify that such costs are consistent with each other or otherwise in line with expectations. The results of the analysis are discussed at a trade management meeting. |
■ | QMA and its affiliates, from time to time, have service agreements with various vendors that are also investment consultants. Under these agreements, QMA or its affiliates compensate the vendors for certain services, including software, market data and technology services. QMA’s clients may also retain these vendors as investment consultants. The existence of service agreements between these consultants and QMA may provide an incentive for the investment consultants to favor QMA when they advise their clients. QMA does not, however, condition its purchase of services from consultants upon their recommending QMA to their clients. QMA will provide clients with information about services that QMA or its affiliates obtain from these consultants upon request. QMA retains third party advisors and other service providers to provide various services for QMA as well as for funds that QMA manages or subadvises. A service provider may provide services to QMA or one of its funds while also providing services to PGIM, Inc. (PGIM), other PGIM-advised funds, or affiliates of PGIM, and may negotiate rates in the context of the overall relationship. QMA may benefit from negotiated fee rates offered to its funds and vice-versa. There is no assurance that QMA will be able to obtain advantageous fee rates from a given service provider negotiated by its affiliates based on their relationship with the service provider, or that it will know of such negotiated fee rates. |
Securities Lending Activities | |
Gross income from securities lending activities | None |
Fees and/or compensation for securities lending activities and related services | None |
Fees paid to securities lending agent from a revenue split | |
Fees paid for any cash collateral management service (including fees deducted from a pooled cash collateral reinvestment vehicle) | |
Administrative fees not included in revenue split | |
Indemnification fee not included in revenue split | |
Rebate (paid to borrower) | |
Other fees not included in revenue split (specify) | |
Aggregate fees/compensation for securities lending activities | None |
Net income from securities lending activities | None |
Fees Paid to PMFS | |
Amount | |
$69,800 |
Amounts Spent by Distributor | ||||
Share Class |
Printing and Mailing
Prospectuses to Other Than Current Shareholders |
Compensation to Broker/Dealers for
Commissions to Representatives and Other Expenses* |
Overhead Costs** |
Total Amount
Spent By Distributor |
CLASS A | $0 | $18,126 | $6,802 | $24,928 |
CLASS B | $0 | $1,494 | $350 | $1,844 |
CLASS C | $0 | $29,464 | $2,192 | $31,656 |
■ | Prudential Retirement |
■ | Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC |
■ | Ameriprise Financial Services Inc. |
■ | Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith Inc. |
■ | Raymond James |
■ | Morgan Stanley Smith Barney |
■ | Fidelity |
■ | UBS Financial Services Inc. |
■ | Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. |
■ | LPL Financial |
■ | Principal Life Insurance Company |
■ | GWFS Equities, Inc. |
■ | Commonwealth Financial Network |
■ | Cetera |
■ | Matrix Financial Solutions |
■ | Nationwide Financial Services Inc. |
■ | ADP Broker-Dealer, Inc. |
■ | American United Life Insurance Company |
■ | AIG Advisor Group |
■ | Ascensus |
■ | Voya Financial |
■ | Massachusetts Mutual |
■ | Hartford Life |
■ | JH Trust Co |
■ | Reliance Trust Company |
■ | MidAtlantic Capital Corp. |
■ | Vanguard Group, Inc. |
■ | Hewitt Associates LLC |
■ | TIAA Cref |
■ | Lincoln Retirement Services Company LLC |
■ | Standard Insurance Company |
■ | John Hancock USA |
■ | TD Ameritrade Trust Company |
■ | T. Rowe Price Retirement Plan Services |
■ | Cambridge |
■ | The Ohio National Life Insurance Company |
■ | RBC Capital Markets Corporation |
■ | VALIC Retirement Services Company |
■ | Northwestern |
■ | Sammons Retirement Solutions, Inc. |
■ | Security Benefit Life Insurance Company |
■ | Janney Montgomery & Scott, Inc. |
■ | Citigroup |
■ | Securities America, Inc. |
■ | Xerox HR Solutions LLC |
■ | Newport Retirement Plan Services, Inc. |
■ | Genworth |
■ | Mercer HR Services, LLC |
■ | 1st Global Capital Corp. |
■ | United Planners Financial Services of America |
■ | Oppenheimer & Co. |
■ | Securities Service Network |
■ | Triad Advisors Inc. |
■ | Investacorp |
■ | Northern Trust |
Real
Assets Fund |
|
Class A | |
NAV and redemption price per Class A share | $9.44 |
Maximum initial sales charge (5.50 % of public offering price) | 0.55 |
Maximum offering price to public | $9.99 |
Class B | |
NAV, offering price and redemption price per Class B share | $9.40 |
Class C | |
NAV, offering price and redemption price per Class C share | $9.39 |
Class Q | |
NAV, offering price and redemption price per Class Q share | $9.44 |
Class Z | |
NAV, offering price and redemption price per Class Z share | $9.45 |
Brokerage Commissions Paid by the Fund | ||||
2017 | 2016 | 2015* | 2015 | |
Total brokerage commissions paid by the Fund | $11,467 | $819 | None | None |
Brokerage Commissions Paid by the Fund | ||||
2017 | 2016 | 2015* | 2015 | |
Total brokerage commissions paid to affiliated brokers | None | None | None | None |
Percentage of total brokerage commissions paid to affiliated brokers | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Percentage of the aggregate dollar amount of portfolio transactions involving the payment of commissions to affiliated brokers | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Broker-Dealer Securities Holdings ($) (as of most recently completed fiscal period) | ||
Broker/Dealer Name | Equity or Debt | Amount |
None | None | None |
Principal Fund Shareholders (as of December 7, 2017) | |||
Share Class and Fund Name | Shareholder Name and Address | No. of Shares | % of Class |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL Z |
PRUDENTIAL RETIREMENT
INSURANCE & ANNUITY COMPANY 280 TRUMBULL ST HARTFORD CT 06103-3509 |
1,127,316.261 | 12.58% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL Z |
PIMS/PRUDENTIAL RETIREMENT
AS NOMINEE FOR THE TTEE/CUST PL 764 STIFEL FINANCIAL PROFIT ONE FINANCIAL PLZ 501 N BROADWAY ST LOUIS MO 63102 |
1,689,066.299 | 18.85% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL C |
LPL FINANCIAL
4707 EXECUTIVE DRIVE SAN DIEGO CA 92121-3091 |
29,544.755 | 10.96% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL C |
NATIONAL FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FOR EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CUSTOMERS ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS DEPT - 4TH FLOOR 499 WASHINGTON BLVD JERSEY CITY NJ 07310 |
88,170.384 | 32.70% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL C |
MORGAN STANLEY & CO
HARBORSIDE FINANCIAL CENTER PLAZA II 3RD FLOOR JERSEY CITY NJ 07311 |
19,651.890 | 7.29% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL C |
PERSHING LLC
1 PERSHING PLAZA JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002 |
50,323.469 | 18.66% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL C |
RAYMOND JAMES
OMNIBUS FOR MUTUAL FUNDS HOUSE ACCT FIRM ATTN COURTNEY WALLER 880 CARILLON PARKWAY ST PETERSBURG FL 33716 |
30,881.405 | 11.45% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL B |
LPL FINANCIAL
4707 EXECUTIVE DRIVE SAN DIEGO CA 92121-3091 |
4,344.133 | 8.19% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL B |
NATIONAL FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FOR EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CUSTOMERS ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS DEPT - 4TH FLOOR 499 WASHINGTON BLVD JERSEY CITY NJ 07310 |
7,207.313 | 13.59% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL B |
UBS WM USA
SPEC CDY A/C EXL BEN CUSTOMERS OF UBSFSI 1000 HARBOR BLVD WEEHAWKEN, NJ 07086 |
5,344.621 | 10.07% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL B |
PERSHING LLC
1 PERSHING PLAZA JERSEY CITY NJ 07399-0002 |
8,054.260 | 15.18% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL A |
PIMS/PRUDENTIAL RETIREMENT
AS NOMINEE FOR THE TTEE/CUST PL 880 MRCUS EMPLOYEE SAVINGS PLAN 1822 REYNOLDS AVE IRVINE CA 92614 |
88,052.092 | 12.80% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL A |
PIMS/PRUDENTIAL RETIREMENT
AS NOMINEE FOR THE TTEE/CUST PL 002 AAA NORTH PENN 401(K) PLAN 1035 NORTH WASHINGTON AVENUE SCRANTON PA 18509 |
52,824.120 | 7.68% |
Principal Fund Shareholders (as of December 7, 2017) | |||
Share Class and Fund Name | Shareholder Name and Address | No. of Shares | % of Class |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL A |
LPL FINANCIAL
4707 EXECUTIVE DRIVE SAN DIEGO CA 92121-3091 |
40,136.994 | 5.83% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL A |
NATIONAL FINANCIAL SERVICES LLC
FOR EXCLUSIVE BENEFIT OF OUR CUSTOMERS ATTN MUTUAL FUNDS DEPT - 4TH FLOOR 499 WASHINGTON BLVD JERSEY CITY NJ 07310 |
87,682.952 | 12.74% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL A |
CHARLES SCHWAB CO
211 MAIN ST SAN FRANCISCO CA 94105-1901 |
54,481.161 | 7.92% |
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS CL A |
PIMS/PRUDENTIAL RETIREMENT
AS NOMINEE FOR THE TTEE/CUST PL 007 403(B)(7) TAX DEFERRED MUTUAL C/O PARADIGM EQUITIES, INC. 1216 KENDALE BLVD EAST LANSING MI 488232501 |
126,740.992 | 18.42% |
■ | After a shareholder is deceased or permanently disabled (or, in the case of a trust account, after the death or disability of the grantor). This waiver applies to individual shareholders as well as shares held in joint tenancy, provided the shares were purchased before the death or permanent disability, |
■ | To provide for certain distributions—made without IRS penalty—from a qualified or tax-deferred retirement plan, benefit plan, IRA or Section 403(b) custodial account, |
■ | To withdraw excess contributions from a qualified or tax-deferred retirement plan, IRA or Section 403(b) custodial account, and |
■ | On certain redemptions effected through a Systematic Withdrawal Plan (Class B shares only). |
■ | A request for release of portfolio holdings shall be prepared setting forth a legitimate business purpose for such release which shall specify the Fund(s), the terms of such release, and frequency (e.g., level of detail, staleness). Such request shall address whether there are any conflicts of interest between the Fund and the investment adviser, subadviser, principal underwriter or any affiliated person thereof and how such conflicts shall be dealt with to demonstrate that the disclosure is in the best interest of the shareholders of the Fund(s). |
■ | The request shall be forwarded to PGIM Investments’ Product Development Group and to the Chief Compliance Officer or his delegate for review and approval. |
■ | A confidentiality agreement in the form approved by a Fund officer must be executed by the recipient of the portfolio holdings. |
■ | A Fund officer shall approve the release and the agreement. Copies of the release and agreement shall be sent to PGIM Investments’ Law Department. |
■ | Written notification of the approval shall be sent by such officer to PGIM Investments’ Fund Administration Group to arrange the release of portfolio holdings. |
■ | PGIM Investments’ Fund Administration Group shall arrange the release by the Custodian Bank. |
■ | Full holdings on a daily basis to Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), Broadridge and Glass, Lewis & Co. (proxy voting administrator/agents) at the end of each day; |
■ | Full holdings on a daily basis to ISS (securities class action claims administrator) at the end of each day; |
■ | Full holdings on a daily basis to a Fund's Subadviser(s), Custodian Bank, sub-custodian (if any) and accounting agents (which includes the Custodian Bank and any other accounting agent that may be appointed) at the end of each day. When a Fund has more than one Subadviser, each Subadviser receives holdings information only with respect to the “sleeve” or segment of the Fund for which the Subadviser has responsibility; |
■ | Full holdings on a daily basis to eSecLending (securities lending agent) at the end of each day; |
■ | Full holdings to a Fund's independent registered public accounting firm as soon as practicable following the Fund's fiscal year-end or on an as-needed basis; |
■ | Full holdings to a Fund’s counsel on an as-needed basis; |
■ | Full holdings to counsel of a Fund’s independent board members on an as-needed basis; and |
■ | Full holdings to financial printers as soon as practicable following the end of a Fund's quarterly, semi-annual and annual period-ends. |
■ | Fund trades on a quarterly basis to Abel/Noser Corp. (an agency-only broker and transaction cost analysis company) as soon as practicable following a Fund's fiscal quarter-end; |
■ | Full holdings on a daily basis to FactSet Research Systems, Inc. (investment research provider) at the end of each day; |
■ | Full holdings on a daily basis to FT Interactive Data (a fair value information service) at the end of each day; |
■ | Full holdings on a quarterly basis to Frank Russell Company (investment research provider) when made available ; |
■ | Full holdings on a monthly basis to Fidelity Advisors (wrap program provider) approximately five days after the end of each month (Prudential Jennison Growth Fund and certain other selected Prudential Funds only); |
■ | Full holdings on a daily basis to ICE (InterContinental Exchange), IHS Markit and Thompson Reuters (securities valuation); |
■ | Full holdings on a daily basis to Standard & Poor’s Corporation (securities valuation); |
■ | Full holdings on a monthly basis to FX Transparency (foreign exchange/transaction analysis) when made available. |
■ | Personnel are under an obligation (i) to be aware of the potential for conflicts of interest on the part of CoreCommodity with respect to voting proxies on behalf of Accounts both as a result of a personal relationship and due to special circumstances that may arise during the conduct of our business, and (ii) to bring conflicts of interest of which they become aware to the attention of our compliance officer. |
■ | CoreCommodity is deemed to have a material conflict of interest in voting proxies relating to issuers that are our clients and that have historically accounted for or are projected to account for a material percentage of our annual revenues. |
■ | CoreCommodity shall not vote proxies relating to issuers on such list on behalf of Accounts until it has been determined that the conflict of interest is not material or a method for resolving such conflict of interest has been agreed upon and implemented. |
■ | disclosing the conflict to clients and obtaining their consent before voting; |
■ | suggesting to clients that they engage another party to vote the proxy on their behalf; or |
■ | such other method as is deemed appropriate under the circumstances given the nature of the conflict. |
■ | a copy of these policies and procedures; |
■ | a copy of each proxy form (as voted); |
■ | a copy of each proxy solicitation (including proxy statements) and related materials with regard to each vote; |
■ | documentation relating to the identification and resolution of conflicts of interest; |
■ | any documents created by us that were material to a proxy voting decision or that memorialized the basis for that decision; and |
■ | a copy of each written client request for information on how we voted proxies on behalf of the client, and a copy of any written response by us to any (written or oral) client request for information on how we voted proxies on behalf of the requesting client. |
■ | Leading market positions in well-established industries. |
■ | High rates of return on funds employed. |
■ | Conservative capitalization structure with moderate reliance on debt and ample asset protection. |
■ | Broad margins in earnings coverage of fixed financial charges and high internal cash generation. |
■ | Well-established access to a range of financial markets and assured sources of alternate liquidity. |
■ | Amortization schedule-the longer the final maturity relative to other maturities the more likely it will be treated as a note. |
■ | Source of payment-the more dependent the issue is on the market for its refinancing, the more likely it will be treated as a note. |
Name and Principal Business Address | Positions and Offices with Underwriter | Positions and Offices with Registrant | ||
Adam Scaramella (1) | President | N/A | ||
Gary F. Neubeck (2) | Executive Vice President | N/A | ||
Stuart S. Parker (2) | Executive Vice President |
Board Member and
President |
||
James Gemus (2) | Executive Vice President | N/A | ||
Scott E. Benjamin (2) | Vice President |
Board Member and
Vice President |
||
Francine Boucher (1) |
Senior Vice President, Chief
Legal Officer and Secretary |
N/A | ||
Peter J. Boland (2) |
Senior Vice President
and Chief Operating Officer |
N/A | ||
John N. Christolini (3) | Senior Vice President | N/A | ||
Mark R. Hastings (2) |
Senior Vice President
and Chief Compliance Officer |
N/A | ||
Michael J. McQuade (2) |
Senior Vice President, Comptroller
and Chief Financial Officer |
N/A | ||
Hansjerg Schlenker (2) |
Senior Vice President and
Chief Operations Officer |
N/A | ||
Monica Oswald (3) |
Senior Vice President and
Co-Chief Operations Officer |
N/A | ||
Charles Smith (4) |
Vice President and Anti-Money
Laundering Officer |
Anti-Money Laundering
Compliance Officer |
(1) | 213 Washington Street, Newark, NJ 07102 |
(2) | 655 Broad Street, Newark, NJ 07102 |
(3) | 280 Trumbull Street, Hartford, CT 06103 |
(4) | 751 Broad Street, Newark NJ, 07102 |
Prudential Investment Portfolios 3 |
* |
Stuart S. Parker, President |
Signature | Title | Date | ||
*
Ellen S. Alberding |
Trustee | |||
*
Kevin J. Bannon |
Trustee | |||
*
Scott E. Benjamin |
Trustee | |||
*
Linda W. Bynoe |
Trustee | |||
*
Barry H. Evans |
Trustee | |||
*
Keith F. Hartstein |
Trustee | |||
*
Laurie Simon Hodrick |
Trustee | |||
*
Michael S. Hyland |
Trustee | |||
*
Stuart S. Parker |
Trustee and President, Principal Executive Officer | |||
*
Richard A. Redeker |
Trustee | |||
*
Stephen Stoneburn |
Trustee | |||
*
Grace C. Torres |
Trustee | |||
*
M. Sadiq Peshimam |
Treasurer, Principal Financial and Accounting Officer |
Signature | Title | Date | ||
*By: /s/ Jonathan D. Shain
Jonathan D. Shain |
Attorney-in-Fact | December 27, 2017 |
/s/ Ellen S. Alberding
Ellen S. Alberding |
/s/ Laurie Simon Hodrick
Laurie Simon Hodrick |
/s/ Kevin J. Bannon
Kevin J. Bannon |
/s/ Michael S. Hyland
Michael S. Hyland |
/s/ Scott E. Benjamin
Scott E. Benjamin |
/s/ Stuart S. Parker
Stuart S. Parker |
/s/ Linda W. Bynoe
Linda W. Bynoe |
/s/ M. Sadiq Peshimam
M. Sadiq Peshimam |
/s/ Barry H. Evans
Barry S. Evans |
/s/ Richard A. Redeker
Richard A. Redeker |
/s/ Keith F. Hartstein
Keith F. Hartstein |
/s/ Stephen Stoneburn
Stephen Stoneburn |
/s/ Grace C. Torres
Grace C. Torres |
|
Dated: September 13, 2017 |
Item 28
Exhibit No. |
Description | |
(d)(7)(i) | Amendment to Management Agreement between Registrant and PI with respect to Prudential Real Assets Fund. | |
(d)(11)(i) | Amendment to Management Agreement between PI and the Prudential Real Assets Subsidiary, Ltd. | |
(h)(4) | Expense waivers for the Prudential Real Assets Fund and the Prudential Real Assets Subsidiary Fund, Ltd. | |
(j) | Consent of independent registered public accounting firm. | |
(m)(7) | Rule 12b-1 fee waiver for Class A shares or Prudential Real Assets Fund. |
PRUDENTIAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIOS 3
Prudential Real Assets Fund
AMENDMENT TO MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT
Amendment to Management Agreement made this 1st day of July, 2017 between Prudential Investment Portfolios 3 (PIP 3), on behalf of its separate investment series, Prudential Real Assets Fund (the Fund), and PGIM Investments LLC (the Manager) (formerly, Prudential Investments LLC).
WHEREAS, PIP 3 and the Manager have mutually agreed to reduce the management fee rate pursuant to which PIP 3 compensates the Manager for the services provided by the Manager to the Fund under the Management Agreement;
NOW THEREFORE, the parties mutually agree as follows:
1. The management fee rate schedule appearing in Schedule A to the Management Agreement dated December 1, 2010 is hereby deleted in its entirety and is replaced with the following new management fee rate schedule applicable to the Fund:
0.60% of average daily net assets up to $3 billion;
0.58% of average daily net assets from $3 billion to $5 billion;
0.57% of average daily net assets from $5 billion to $10 billion;
0.56% of average daily net assets over $10 billion
2. The Management Agreement is unchanged in all other respects.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this instrument to be executed by their officers designated below as of the day and year first above written.
PRUDENTIAL INVESTMENT PORTFOLIOS 3
By:
/s/ Stuart S. Parker
Name: Stuart Parker
Title: President
PGIM INVESTMENTS LLC
By:
/s/ Scott E. Benjamin
Name: Scott E. Benjamin
Title: Executive Vice President
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS SUBSIDIARY, LTD.
A wholly-owned subsidiary of Prudential Real Assets Fund, a series of
Prudential Investment Portfolios 3
AMENDMENT TO MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT
Amendment to Management Agreement made this 1st day of July, 2017 between Prudential Real Assets Subsidiary, Ltd, a Cayman Islands exempt company and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Prudential Real Assets Fund, a series of Prudential Investment Portfolios 3, and PGIM Investments LLC (the Manager) (formerly, Prudential Investments LLC).
WHEREAS, Prudential Real Assets Subsidiary, Ltd. and the Manager have mutually agreed to reduce the management fee rate pursuant to which Prudential Real Assets Subsidiary, Ltd. compensates the Manager for the services provided by the Manager to Prudential Real Assets Subsidiary, Ltd. under the Management Agreement;
NOW THEREFORE, the parties mutually agree as follows:
1. The management fee rate schedule appearing in Schedule A to the Management Agreement dated December 6, 2010 is hereby deleted in its entirety and is replaced with the following new management fee rate schedule applicable to the Prudential Real Assets Subsidiary, Ltd.:
0.60% of average daily net assets up to $3 billion;
0.58% of average daily net assets from $3 billion to $5 billion;
0.57% of average daily net assets from $5 billion to $10 billion;
0.56% of average daily net assets over $10 billion
2. The Management Agreement is unchanged in all other respects.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this instrument to be executed by their officers designated below as of the day and year first above written.
PRUDENTIAL REAL ASSETS SUBSIDIARY, LTD.
By:
/s/ Scott E. Benjamin
Name: Scott E. Benjamin
Title: Director
PGIM INVESTMENTS LLC
By:
/s/ Stuart Parker
Name: Stuart Parker
Title: President
PGIM Investments LLC
655 Broad Street – 17
th
Floor
Newark, New Jersey 07102
November 1, 2017
The Board of Trustees
Prudential Investment Portfolios 3
655 Broad Street—17
th
Floor
Newark, New Jersey 07102
Re: Prudential Real Assets Fund
To the Board of Trustees:
PGIM Investments LLC (PGIM Investments) has contractually agreed through February 28, 2019 to limit net annual operating expenses and acquired fund fees and expenses (exclusive of distribution and service (12b-1) fees, interest, dividend and interest expense on short sales (including acquired fund dividend and interest expense on short sales), brokerage, taxes (such as income and foreign withholding taxes, stamp duty and deferred tax expenses (including acquired fund taxes), transfer agency expenses (including sub-transfer agency and networking fees), and extraordinary expenses) of each class of shares to 0.85% of the Fund’s average daily net assets. Fees and/or expenses waived and/or reimbursed by PGIM Investments may be recouped by PGIM Investments within the same fiscal year during which such waiver and/or reimbursement is made if such recoupment can be realized without exceeding the expense limit in effect at the time of the recoupment for that fiscal year. This waiver may not be terminated prior to February 28, 2019 without the prior approval of the Fund’s Board of Trustees. Separately, PGIM Investments has contractually agreed, through February 29, 2020 to limit transfer agency, shareholder servicing, sub-transfer agency, and blue sky fees, as applicable, to the extent that such fees cause the Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses to exceed 2.20% of average daily net assets for Class B shares. This contractual expense limitation excludes interest, brokerage, taxes (such as income and foreign withholding taxes, stamp duty and deferred tax expenses) extraordinary expenses, and certain other Fund expenses such as dividend and interest expense and broker charges on short sales. Fees and/or expenses waived and/or reimbursed by PGIM Investments may be recouped by PGIM Investments within the same fiscal year during which such waiver and/or reimbursement is made if such recoupment can be realized without exceeding the expense limit in effect at the time of the recoupment for that fiscal year. This expense limitation may not be terminated prior to February 29, 2020 without the prior approval of the Fund’s Board of Trustees.
Separately, the PGIM Investments has contractually agreed to waive any management fees it receives from the Fund in an amount equal to the management fees paid by the Cayman Subsidiary. This waiver will remain in effect for as long as the Fund remains invested or intends to invest in the Cayman Subsidiary.
Very truly yours,
PGIM INVESTMENTS LLC
By: /s/ Scott E. Benjamin
Name: Scott E. Benjamin
Title: Executive Vice President
Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
The Board of Trustees
Prudential Investment Portfolios 3:
We consent to the use of our report, dated December 18, 2017, with respect to the consolidated financial statements and consolidated financial highlights of Prudential Real Assets Fund, a series of Prudential Investment Portfolios 3, as of October 31, 2017, and for the respective years or periods presented therein, incorporated by reference herein. We also consent to the references to our firm under the headings “Consolidated Financial Highlights” in the prospectus and “Other Service Providers – Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm” and “Consolidated Financial Statements” in the statement of additional information.
New York, New York
December 22, 2017
Prudential Investment Portfolios 3
Prudential Real Assets Fund
Notice of Rule 12b-1 Fee Waiver
Class A Shares
THIS NOTICE OF RULE 12B-1 FEE WAIVER is signed as of November 1, 2017, by PRUDENTIAL
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT SERVICES LLC (PIMS), the principal
underwriter of Prudential Real Assets Fund (the Fund), a series of Prudential Investment Portfolios 3, an open-end management investment
company (the RIC).
WHEREAS, PIMS desires to waive a portion of its distribution and shareholder services fees payable on Class A shares of the Fund (Rule 12b-1 fees); and
WHEREAS, PIMS understands and intends that the RIC will rely on this Notice and agreement in preparing a registration statement
on Form N-1A and in accruing the Fund’s expenses for purposes of calculating net asset value and for other purposes, and
expressly permits the Fund to do so; and
WHEREAS, shareholders of the Fund will benefit from the ongoing contractual waivers by incurring lower Fund operating expenses than they would absent such waivers.
NOW, THEREFORE, PIMS hereby provides notice that it has agreed to limit the distribution or service (12b-1) fees incurred by Class
A shares of the Fund to 0.25 of 1% of the average daily net assets of the Fund. This contractual waiver shall be effective from
the date hereof until February 28, 2019.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, PIMS has signed this Notice of Rule 12b-1 Fee Waiver as of the day and year first above written.
PRUDENTIAL INVESTMENT
MANAGEMENT SERVICES LLC
By: /s/ Scott E. Benjamin
Name: Scott E. Benjamin
Title: Vice President