|
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
|
x
|
|
Pre-Effective Amendment No.
|
¨
|
|
<R>
Post-Effective
Amendment No. 14
</R>
|
x
|
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE
|
|
INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
|
x
|
|
<R>
Amendment
No. 15
</R>
|
x
|
Counsel for the Fund:
FRANK P. BRUNO, Esq.
Sidley Austin Brown & Wood
LLP
875 Third Avenue
New York, New York 10022-6225
|
PHILIP L. KIRSTEIN, Esq.
Fund Asset Management, L.P.
PO
Box 9011
Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011
|
¨
|
immediately
upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)<R>
|
x
|
on
May 29, 2002 pursuant to paragraph (b)</R>
|
¨
|
60
days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)<R>
|
¨
|
on
(date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
</R>
|
¨
|
75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
|
¨
|
on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of Rule 485.
|
¨
|
this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a previously filed post-effective amendment.
|
Title of Securities Being Registered: Shares of Common Stock, par value $.10 per share.
|
<R>
</R>
|
Prospectus
www.mlim.ml.com
|
May 29, 2002
Merrill Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund
|
This
Prospectus contains information you should know before investing, including
information about risks. Please read it before you invest and keep it
for future reference.
|
|
The
Securities and Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved these
securities or passed upon the adequacy of this Prospectus. Any representation
to the contrary is a criminal offense.
|
|
<R> | ||
|
PAGE
|
|
[GRAPHIC] | ||
KEY FACTS | ||
|
||
Merrill Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund at a Glance |
3
|
|
|
||
Risk/Return Bar Chart |
5
|
|
|
||
Fees and Expenses |
7
|
|
|
||
|
||
[GRAPHIC] |
|
|
DETAILS ABOUT THE FUND |
|
|
|
||
|
||
How the Fund Invests |
9
|
|
|
||
Investment Risks |
11
|
|
|
||
|
||
[GRAPHIC] |
|
|
YOUR ACCOUNT |
|
|
|
||
|
||
Merrill Lynch Select Pricing SM System |
18
|
|
|
||
How to Buy, Sell, Transfer and Exchange Shares |
24
|
|
|
||
Participation in Fee-Based Programs |
28
|
|
|
||
|
||
[GRAPHIC] |
|
|
MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND |
|
|
|
||
|
||
Merrill Lynch Investment Managers |
31
|
|
|
||
Financial Highlights |
32
|
|
|
||
[GRAPHIC] | ||
FOR MORE INFORMATION | ||
|
||
Shareholder Reports | Back Cover | |
Statement of Additional Information | Back Cover | |
</R> |
You should purchase shares of the Fund to diversify your overall investments and not as a balanced investment program.
|
Are investing to achieve long term goals, such as retirement or funding a childs education
|
|
Want a professionally managed and diversified mid cap portfolio
|
|
Are willing to accept the risk that the value of your investment may decline in order to seek capital
appreciation
|
|
Are not looking for a significant amount of current income
|
[BAR CHART] 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ 17.86% 18.53% 6.78% 6.75% 14.30% 24.37%
<R>During the period shown in the bar chart, the highest return for a quarter was 23.68% (quarter ended December 31, 2001) and the lowest return for a quarter was -14.34 % (quarter ended September 30, 2001). The year-to-date return as of March 31, 2002 was -0.12%.</R>
The table below compares the average annual total returns of the Funds shares with those of S&P MidCap 400® Index for the periods indicated. After-tax returns are shown only for Class B shares and will vary for other classes. The after-tax returns are calculated using the historical highest marginal Federal individual income tax rates in effect during the periods measured and do not reflect the impact of state and local taxes. Actual after-tax returns depend on an investors tax situation and may differ from those shown. The after-tax returns shown are not relevant to investors who hold their Fund shares through tax-deferred arrangements, such as 401(k) plans or individual retirement accounts or through tax advantaged education savings accounts.
*
|
Includes all applicable fees and sales charges.
|
**
|
<R>The
S&P MidCap 400® Index is a widely recognized, unmanaged index
of common stock prices in the middle capitalization range. The index is
unmanaged and does not include fund expenses. Past performance is not
predictive of future performance.
|
|
Inception
date is February 1, 1995.</R>
|
(a)
|
In
addition, Merrill Lynch may charge a processing fee (currently $5.35)
when a client buys or sells shares. See
Your
Account
How
to Buy, Sell, Transfer and Exchange Shares.</R>
|
(b)
|
Class B shares automatically convert to Class D shares approximately eight years after you buy them and will no longer be
subject to distribution fees.
|
(c)
|
Some investors may qualify for reductions in the sales charge (load).
|
(d)
|
You may pay a deferred sales charge if you purchase $1 million or more and you redeem within one year.
|
(e)
|
The Fund calls the Service Fee an Account Maintenance Fee. Account Maintenance Fee is the term used
in this Prospectus and in all other Fund materials. If you hold Class B or C shares over time, it may cost you more in distribution (12b-1) fees than the maximum sales charge that you would have paid if you had bought one of the other
classes.
|
(f)
|
Financial
Data Services, Inc., an affiliate of the Investment Adviser, provides
transfer agency services to the Fund. The Fund pays a fee for these services.
The Investment Adviser or its affiliates also provide certain accounting
services to the Fund and the Fund reimburses the Investment Adviser or
its affiliates for such services.
|
*
|
Assumes
conversion to Class D shares approximately eight years after purchase.
See note (b) to the Fees and Expenses table on the previous page.</R>
|
[GRAPHIC] Details About the Fund
The Fund is managed by Merrill Lynch Investment Managers.
|
are trading at the low end of their historical valuation ranges based on one or more measures, such as price/book value or
price/earnings or price/sales ratios;
|
|
have strong management;
|
|
have particular qualities that affect the outlook for that company, such as strong research capabilities, new or unusual
products or occupation of an attractive market niche; or
|
|
have the potential to increase earnings over an extended period of time.
|
[GRAPHIC] Details About the Fund
Short sale a transaction in which the Fund sells a security it does not own in anticipation of a decline in the market price of that security.
As a temporary measure for defensive purposes, the Fund may invest without limit in short term investment grade debt securities, such as commercial paper or Treasury bill agreements. The Fund may also increase its investment in these securities when Fund management is unable to find enough attractive long term investments, to reduce exposure to long term investments when Fund management believes it is advisable to do so on a temporary basis, or to meet redemptions. Short term investments may, therefore, limit the potential for the Fund to achieve its investment objective.
<R>The Fund may engage in short sales of securities, either as a hedge against potential declines in value of a portfolio security or to realize appreciation when a security that the Fund does not own declines in value. When the Fund makes a short sale, it borrows the security sold short and delivers it to the broker-dealer through which it made the short sale as collateral for its obligation to deliver the security upon conclusion of the sale. The Fund may </R>
have to pay a fee to borrow particular securities and is often obligated to turn over any payments received on such borrowed securities to the lender of the securities.
<R> T he Fund will not make a short sale if, after giving effect to such sale, the market value of all securities sold short exceeds 5% of the value of its total assets.
The Fund may also lend its portfolio securities.</R>
Market Risk
and Selection Risk
Market
risk is the risk that the equity markets will go down in value, including
the possibility that the equity markets will go down sharply and unpredictably.
Selection risk is the risk that the stocks that Fund management selects will
underperform the stock market, the relevant indices or other funds with similar
investment objectives and investment strategies.
[Graphic] Details About the Fund
<R> fewer investors on foreign exchanges and a smaller number of securities traded each day, it may make it difficult for the Fund to buy and sell securities on those exchanges. In addition, prices of foreign securities may go up and down more than prices of securities traded in the United States.</R>
Other foreign
market risks include foreign exchange controls, difficulties in pricing securities,
defaults on foreign government securities, difficulties in enforcing favorable
legal judgments in foreign courts, and political and social instability. Legal
remedies available to investors in certain foreign countries may be less extensive
than those available to investors in the United States or other foreign countries.
Small Cap and
Emerging Growth Securities
Small
cap or emerging growth companies may have limited product lines or markets.
They may be less financially secure than larger, more established companies.
They may depend on a small number of key personnel. If a product fails, or
if management changes, or there are other adverse developments, the Funds
investment in a small cap or emerging growth company may lose substantial
value.
The securities of small cap and emerging growth companies generally trade in lower volumes and are subject to greater and less predictable price changes than securities of larger, more established companies. Investing in smaller and emerging growth companies requires a long term view.
[Graphic] Details About the Fund
unsponsored Depositary Receipts are not obligated to disclose material information in the United States. Therefore, there may be less information available regarding such issuers and there may not be a correlation between such information and the market value of Depositary Receipts.
<R>Short Sales If the price of a security increases between the time of a short sale and the time the Fund must deliver the security, the Fund will incur a loss; conversely, if the price declines, the Fund will realize a gain. Although the Fund's gain in a short sale is limited to the price at which it sold the security short, it's potential loss is limited only by the maximum price the security may attain, less the price at which the security was sold. The Fund may also pay transaction costs and borrowing fees in connection with short sales.</R>
Credit risk
the risk that the counterparty (the party on the other side of the transaction) on a derivative transaction will be unable to
honor its financial obligation to the Fund.
|
Currency risk
the
risk that changes in the exchange rate between currencies will adversely
affect the value (in US dollar terms) of an investment.
|
Leverage
risk
the
risk associated with certain types of investments or trading strategies
(such as borrowing money to increase the amount of the investments) that
relatively small market movements may result in large changes in the value
of an investment. Certain investments or trading strategies that involve
leverage can result in losses that greatly exceed the amount originally
invested.
|
Liquidity
Risk
the
risk that certain securities may be difficult or impossible to sell at
the time that the seller would like or at the price that the seller believes
the security is currently worth.
|
The Fund may use derivatives for hedging purposes, including anticipatory hedges. Hedging is a strategy in which the Fund uses a derivative to offset the risk associated with other Fund holdings. While hedging can reduce losses, it can also reduce or eliminate gains or cause losses if the market moves in a different manner than anticipated by the Fund or if the cost of the derivative outweighs the benefit of the hedge. Hedging also involves the risk that changes in the value of the derivative will not match those of the holdings being hedged as expected by the Fund, in which case any losses on the holdings being hedged may not be reduced. There can be no assurance that the Funds hedging strategy will reduce risk or that hedging transactions will be either available or cost effective. The Fund is not required to use hedging and may choose not to do so.
Covered Call Options The Fund can sell covered call options which are options that give the purchaser the right to require the Fund to sell a security owned by the Fund to the purchaser at a specified price within a limited time period. The Fund will receive a premium (an upfront payment) for selling a covered call option, and if the option expires unexercised because the price of the underlying security has gone down the premium received by the Fund will partially offset any losses on the underlying security. By writing a covered call option, however, the Fund limits its ability to sell the underlying security and gives up the opportunity to profit from any increase in the value of the underlying security beyond the sale price specified in the option.
[Graphic] Details About the Fund
<R>
When
Issued Securities, Delayed Delivery Securities and Forward Commitments
When
issued and delayed delivery securities and forward commitments involve the
risk that a security the Fund buys will lose value prior to its delivery to
the Fund. There also is the risk that the security will not be issued or that
the other party will not meet its obligation. If this occurs, the Fund both
loses the investment opportunity for the assets it has set aside to pay for
the security and any gain in the securitys price.</R>
Illiquid Securities The Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities that it cannot easily sell within seven days at current value or that have contractual or legal restrictions on resale. If the Fund buys illiquid securities it may be unable to quickly resell them or may be able to sell them only at a price below current value.
Restricted
securities may be illiquid. The Fund may be unable to sell them on short notice
or may be able to sell them only at a price below current value. The Fund
may get only limited information about the issuer, so it may be less able
to predict a loss. In addition, if Fund management receives material adverse
nonpublic information about the issuer, the Fund will not be able to sell
the securities.
[GRAPHIC] Your Account
[Graphic] Your Account
Right of Accumulation
permits
you to pay the sales charge that would apply to the cost or value (whichever
is higher) of all shares you own in the Merrill Lynch mutual funds that offer
Select Pricing
SM
options.
Your Investment |
As a % of
Offering Price |
As a % of
Your Investment* |
Dealer
Compensation as a % of Offering Price |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|||||||
Less than $25,000 | 5.25% | 5.54% | 5.00% | ||||
|
|||||||
$25,000 but less than
$50,000 |
4.75% | 4.99% | 4.50% | ||||
|
|||||||
$50,000 but less than
$100,000 |
4.00% | 4.17% | 3.75% | ||||
|
|||||||
$100,000 but less than
$250,000 |
3.00% | 3.09% | 2.75% | ||||
|
|||||||
$250,000 but less than
$1,000,000 |
2.00% | 2.04% | 1.80% | ||||
|
|||||||
$1,000,000 and over** | 0.00% | 0.00% | 0.00% | ||||
|
*
|
Rounded to the nearest one-hundredth percent.
|
**
|
If you invest $1,000,000 or more in Class A or Class D shares, you may not pay an initial sales charge. In that case, the
Investment Adviser compensates the selling dealer or other financial intermediary from its own funds. If you redeem your shares within one year after purchase, you may be charged a deferred sales charge. This charge is 1.00% of the lesser of the
original cost of the shares being redeemed or your redemption proceeds. A sales charge of 0.75% will be charged on purchases of $1,000,000 or more of Class A and Class D shares by certain employer-sponsored retirement or savings plans.
|
|
Purchases under a
Right of Accumulation
or
Letter of Intent
|
|
TMA
SM
Managed Trusts
|
|
Certain Merrill Lynch investment or central asset accounts
|
|
Certain employer-sponsored retirement or savings plans
|
|
Purchases using proceeds from the sale of certain Merrill Lynch closed-end funds under certain circumstances
|
|
Certain investors, including directors or trustees of Merrill Lynch mutual funds and Merrill Lynch employees
|
|
Certain fee-based programs of Merrill Lynch and other financial intermediaries that have agreements with the Distributor or
its affiliates
|
<R>If you select Class B or Class C shares, you do not pay an initial sales charge at the time of purchase. However, if you redeem your Class B shares within six years after purchase or Class C shares within one year after purchase, you may be required to pay a deferred sales charge. You will also pay distribution fees of 0.75% and account maintenance fees of 0.25% each year under distribution plans that the Fund has adopted under Rule 12b-1. Because these fees are paid out of the Funds assets on an ongoing basis, over time these fees increase the cost of your investment and may cost you more than paying other types of sales charges. The Distributor uses the money that it receives from the deferred sales charge and the distribution fees to cover the costs of marketing, advertising and compensating the Merrill Lynch Financial Advisor, selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary who assists you in your decision in purchasing Fund shares.</R>
Class B Shares
Years Since Purchase | Sales Charge* | ||
---|---|---|---|
|
|||
0 1 | 4.00% | ||
|
|||
1 2 | 4.00% | ||
|
|||
2 3 | 3.00% | ||
|
|||
3 4 | 3.00% | ||
|
|||
4 5 | 2.00% | ||
|
|||
5 6 | 1.00% | ||
|
|||
6 and thereafter | None | ||
|
*
|
The percentage charge will apply to the lesser of the original cost of the shares being redeemed or the proceeds of your
redemption. Shares acquired by dividend reinvestment are not subject to a deferred sales charge. For shares acquired before June 1, 2001, the four-year deferred sales charge in effect at that time will apply. Merrill Lynch funds may not all have identical deferred sales charge schedules. In the event of an exchange for the shares of another Merrill Lynch
fund, the higher charge would apply.
|
|
Certain
post-retirement withdrawals from an IRA or other retirement plan if you
are over 59
1
/
2
years old
|
|
Redemption by certain eligible 401(a) and 401(k) plans, certain related accounts, group plans participating in the Merrill
Lynch Blueprint
SM
Program and certain retirement plan rollovers
|
|
Redemption in connection with participation in certain fee-based programs of Merrill Lynch or other financial intermediaries
that have agreements with the Distributor or its affiliates, or in connection with involuntary termination of an account in which Fund shares are held
|
|
Withdrawals resulting from shareholder death or disability as long as the waiver request is made within one year after death
or disability or, if later, reasonably promptly following completion of probate
|
|
Withdrawal
through the Merrill Lynch Systematic Withdrawal Plan of up to 10% per
year of your Class B account value at the time the plan is established
|
If You Want To | Your Choices | Information Important for You to Know | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|||||
Buy Shares |
First,
select the share
class appropriate for you |
Please
refer to the Merrill Lynch Select Pricing table on page 16.
Be sure to read this Prospectus carefully. |
|||
|
|||||
Next,
determine the
amount of your investment |
The
minimum initial investment for the Fund is $1,000 for all
accounts except: $250 for certain Merrill Lynch fee-based programs $100 for retirement plans |
||||
(The
minimums for initial investments may be waived under
certain circumstances.) |
|||||
|
|||||
Have
your Merrill Lynch
Financial Advisor, selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary submit your purchase order |
The
price of your shares is based on the next calculation of net
asset value after your order is placed. Any purchase orders placed prior to the close of business on the New York Stock Exchange (generally, 4:00 p.m. Eastern time) will be priced at the net asset value determined that day. Certain financial intermediaries, however, may require submission of orders prior to that time. |
||||
Purchase
orders placed after that time will be priced at the net
asset value determined on the next business day. The Fund may reject any order to buy shares and may suspend the sale of shares at any time. Selected securities dealers or other financial intermediaries, including Merrill Lynch, may charge a processing fee to confirm a purchase. Merrill Lynch currently charges a fee of $5.35. |
|||||
|
|||||
Or
contact the Transfer
Agent |
To
purchase shares directly, call the Transfer Agent at 1-800
MER-FUND and request a purchase application. Mail the completed purchase application to the Transfer Agent at the address on the inside back cover of this Prospectus. |
||||
|
|||||
Add
to Your
Investment |
Purchase additional shares |
The
minimum investment for additional purchases is generally $50
except that retirement plans have a minimum additional purchase of $1 and certain programs, such as automatic investment plans, may have higher minimums. |
|||
(The
minimum for additional purchases may be waived under
certain circumstances.) |
|||||
|
|||||
Acquire
additional
shares through the automatic dividend reinvestment plan |
All dividends are automatically reinvested without a sales charge. | ||||
|
|||||
Participate
in the automatic
investment plan |
You
may invest a specific amount on a periodic basis through
certain Merrill Lynch investment or central asset accounts. |
||||
|
[GRAPHIC] Your Account
If You Want To | Your Choices | Information Important for You to Know | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|||||
Sell
Shares
Systematically |
Participate
in the Funds
Systematic Withdrawal Plan |
You
can choose to receive systematic payments from your Fund
account either by check or through direct deposit to your bank account on a monthly or quarterly basis. If you hold your Fund shares in a Merrill Lynch CMA®, CBA® or Retirement Account, you can arrange for systematic redemptions of a fixed dollar amount on a monthly, bi-monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or annual basis, subject to certain conditions. Under either method you must have dividends automatically reinvested. For Class B and Class C shares your total annual withdrawals cannot be more than 10% per year of the value of your shares at the time your plan is established. The deferred sales charge is waived for systematic redemptions. Ask your Merrill Lynch Financial Advisor or other financial intermediary for details. |
|||
|
|||||
Exchange
Your
Shares |
Select
the fund into which
you want to exchange. Be sure to read that funds prospectus |
You
can exchange your shares of the Fund for shares of many
other Merrill Lynch mutual funds. You must have held the shares used in the exchange for at least 15 calendar days before you can exchange to another fund. |
|||
<R>Each
class of Fund shares is generally exchangeable for shares of
the same class of another fund. If you own Class A shares and wish to exchange into a fund in which you have no Class A shares (and you are not eligible to buy Class A shares), you will exchange into Class D shares.</R> |
|||||
Some
of the Merrill Lynch mutual funds impose a different initial
or deferred sales charge schedule. If you exchange Class A or Class D shares for shares of a fund with a higher initial sales charge than you originally paid, you will be charged the difference at the time of exchange. If you exchange Class B shares for shares of a fund with a different deferred sales charge schedule, the higher schedule will generally apply. The time you hold Class B or Class C shares in both funds will count when determining your holding period for calculating a deferred sales charge at redemption. If you exchange Class A or Class D shares for money market fund shares, you will receive Class A shares of Summit Cash Reserves Fund. Class B or Class C shares of a Fund will be exchanged for Class B shares of Summit. |
|||||
To
exercise the exchange privilege, contact your Merrill Lynch
Financial Advisor or other financial intermediary or call the Transfer Agent at 1-800-MER-FUND. |
|||||
<R>Although
there is currently no limit on the number of exchanges
that you can make, the exchange privilege may be modified or terminated at any time in the future.</R> |
[GRAPHIC] Your Account
Net Asset Value the market value of the Funds total assets after deducting liabilities, divided by the number of shares outstanding.
<R> Dividends ordinary income and capital gains paid to shareholders. Dividends may be reinvested in additional Fund shares as they are paid.</R>
Details about these features and the relevant charges are included in the client agreement for each fee-based program and are available from your Merrill Lynch Financial Advisor, selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary.
DIVIDENDS AND TAXES
[GRAPHIC] Management of the Fund
[GRAPHIC] Management of the Fund
<R>The Financial Highlights table is intended to help you understand the Funds financial performance for the periods shown. Certain information reflects financial results for a single Fund share. The total returns in the table represent the rate that an investor would have earned or lost on an investment in the Fund (assuming reinvestment of all dividends). The information has been audited by Deloitte & Touche LLP , whose report, along with the Funds financial statements, is included in the Funds Annual Report, which is available upon request.
*
|
Total investment returns exclude the effects of sales charges.
|
|
Based on average shares outstanding.
|
#
|
Amount is less than $.01 per share.
|
<R> |
Class C
|
Class D
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Increase (Decrease) in |
For the Year Ended January
31,
|
For the Year Ended January
31,
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net Asset Value: | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999 | 1998 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999 | 1998 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Per Share Operating Performance: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, beginning of year | $ 15.84 | $ 13.70 | $ 13.91 | $ 13.75 | $ 13.39 | $16.14 | $14.05 | $14.13 | $13.94 | $13.54 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment income (loss) net | (.12 | ) | (.12 | ) | (.02 | ) | (.06 | ) | (.09 | ) | | # | | # | .11 | .07 | .03 | ||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Realized
and unrealized gain on
investments net |
1.55 | 4.18 | .21 | 1.03 | 2.19 | 1.60 | 4.27 | .22 | 1.04 | 2.22 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total from investment operations | 1.43 | 4.06 | .19 | .97 | 2.10 | 1.60 | 4.27 | .33 | 1.11 | 2.25 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Less
distributions from realized gain on
investment net |
(.66 | ) | (1.92 | ) | (.40 | ) | (.81 | ) | (1.74 | ) | (.70 | ) | (2.18 | ) | (.41 | ) | (.92 | ) | (1.85 | ) | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, end of year | $ 16.61 | $ 15.84 | $ 13.70 | $ 13.91 | $ 13.75 | $17.04 | $16.14 | $14.05 | $14.13 | $13.94 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total Investment Return:* | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Based on net asset value per share | 9.38 | % | 32.55 | % | 1.38 | % | 7.23 | % | 15.93 | % | 10.31 | % | 33.66 | % | 2.35 | % | 8.19 | % | 16.89 | % | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ratios to Average Net Assets: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Expenses | 2.19 | % | 2.65 | % | 2.55 | % | 2.58 | % | 2.75 | % | 1.36 | % | 1.78 | % | 1.67 | % | 1.70 | % | 1.89 | % | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment income (loss) net | (.79 | %) | (.84 | %) | (.15 | %) | (.39 | %) | (.63 | %) | (.02 | %) | .02 | % | .73 | % | .50 | % | .23 | % | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Supplemental Data: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net assets, end of year (in thousands) | $80,227 | $37,475 | $32,543 | $31,188 | $22,896 | $36,225 | $7,757 | $5,913 | $6,236 | $5,314 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Portfolio turnover | 98.94 | % | 153.48 | % | 52.89 | % | 40.10 | % | 68.75 | % | 98.94 | % | 153.48 | % | 52.89 | % | 40.10 | % | 68.75 | % | |||||||||
</R> | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
*
|
Total investment returns exclude the effects of sales charges.
|
|
Based on average shares outstanding.
|
#
|
Amount is less than $.01 per share.
|
<R> </R>
POTENTIAL INVESTORS Open an account (two options). 1 2 ---------------------- ---------------- MERRILL LYNCH TRANSFER AGENT FINANCIAL ADVISOR ---------------- or SECURITIES DEALER Financial Data Services, Inc. ---------------------- ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES Advises shareholders on 4800 Deer Lake Drive East their Fund investments. Jacksonville, Florida 32246-6484 MAILING ADDRESS PO BOX 45289 Jacksonville, Florida 32232-5289 Performs recordkeeping and reporting services ------------- DISTRIBUTOR ------------- FAM Distributors, Inc. PO Box 9081 Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9081 Arranges for the sale of Fund shares.--------- ----------- COUNSEL CUSTODIAN --------- ----------- Sidley Austin Brown & Wood LLP The Bank of New York 875 Third Avenue 5 Penn Plaza New York, New York 10022-6225 New York, New York 10001-1810 Provides legal advice to the Fund. Holds the Fund's assets for safekeeping. ---------------------- THE FUND <R>The Board of Directors</R> oversees the Fund. ---------------------- ----------------------- ------------------------ INDEPENDENT AUDITORS INVESTMENT ADVISER ----------------------- ------------------------ <R>Deloitte & Touche LLP Merrill Lynch Investment Managers, LP Two World Financial Center ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES New York, New York 10281-1008</R> 800 Scudders Mill Road Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 Audits the financial statements of the Fund on behalf of the shareholders. MAILING ADDRESS PO BOX 9011 ---------------------- Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011 ACCOUNTING SERVICES PROVIDER TELEPHONE NUMBER ---------------------- 1-800-MER-FUND State Street Bank and Trust Company <R>Manages the Fund's day-to-day activities.
500 College Road East Princeton, New Jersey 08540 Merrill Lynch Asset Provides certain Management UK Limited accounting services to the Fund. 33 King William Street London, EC4R 9AS England Sub-Adviser to the Fund.</R>
[GRAPHIC] For More Information
Additional
information about the Funds investments will be available in the
Programs annual and semiannual reports to shareholders. In the Programs
annual report you will find a discussion of the market conditions and
investment strategies that significantly affected the Funds performance
during its last fiscal year. You may obtain these reports at no cost by
calling 1-800-MER-FUND.
|
The
Fund will send you one copy of each shareholder report and certain other
mailings, regardless of the number of Fund accounts you have. To receive
separate shareholder reports for each account, call your Merrill Lynch
Financial Advisor, or other financial intermediary or write to the Transfer
Agent at its mailing address. Include your name, address, tax identification
number and Merrill Lynch brokerage or mutual fund account number. If you
have any questions, please call your Merrill Lynch Financial Advisor or
other financial intermediary or call the Transfer Agent at 1-800-MER-FUND.
|
The Funds Statement of Additional Information contains further information about the
|
[LOGO] | Merrill Lynch | ||
Investment Managers |
May 29,
2002
|
Merrill
Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund
|
This Prospectus contains information you should
know before investing, including information about risks. Please read it before
you invest and keep it for future reference.
The Securities and Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved these
securities or passed upon the adequacy of this Prospectus. Any representation
to the contrary is a criminal offense.
www.mlim.ml.com
<R>Under normal circumstances, the Fund will invest primarily (at least 65% of the Funds total assets, and effective July 31, 2002, at least 80% of the Fund's net assets) in equity securities of mid cap companies. For the Fund, mid cap companies typically have total market capitalizations, at the time of initial purchase, within the minimum and maximum market capitalization range, over a 24-month rolling time period, of companies in the S&P MidCap 400® Index, a widely known mid cap investment benchmark. This range is updated monthly and currently has a minimum market capitalization of approximately $86 million and a maximum market capitalization of approximately $18 billion. Mid cap companies whose market capitalizations fall below or exceed the range after purchase continue to be considered mid cap companies. The Fund may change such categorization to include companies outside the range if circumstances so dictate. In purchasing equity securities for the Fund, the Investment Adviser will seek to identify the securities of companies and industry sectors which are expected to provide high total return relative to alternative equity investments. The Fund generally will seek to invest in securities the Investment Adviser believes have long term potential to grow in size or to become more profitable or that the stock market may value more highly in the future. Fund management places particular emphasis on stocks trading at the low end of one or more historical valuation measures such as price/book value, price/sales or price/earnings ratios.</R>
Investment in the securities of small and emerging growth companies involves greater risk than investment in larger, more established companies. Such risks include the fact that securities of small or emerging growth companies may be subject to more abrupt or erratic market movements than larger, more established companies or the market average in general. Also, these companies may have limited product lines, markets or financial resources, or they may be dependent on a limited management group.
There may be periods when market and economic conditions exist that favor certain types of tangible assets as compared to other types of investments.
With respect to certain foreign countries, there is the possibility of expropriation of assets, confiscatory taxation, political or social instability or diplomatic developments which could affect investment in those countries. There may be less publicly available information about a foreign financial instrument than about a US instrument, and foreign entities may not be subject to accounting, auditing and financial reporting standards and requirements comparable to those to which US entities are subject. Foreign financial markets, while growing in volume, generally have substantially less volume than US markets, and securities of many foreign companies are less liquid and their prices more volatile than securities of comparable domestic companies.
<R>Foreign markets also have different clearance and settlement procedures and in certain markets there have been times when settlements have been unable to keep pace with the volume of securities transactions, making it difficult to conduct such transactions. Delays or other problems in settlement could result in temporary periods when assets of the Fund are uninvested and no return is earned thereon. The inability of the Fund to make intended security purchases due to settlement problems could cause the Fund to miss attractive investment opportunities. Inability to dispose of portfolio securities due to settlement problems could result either in losses to the Fund due to subsequent declines in value of the portfolio security or, if the Fund has entered into a contract to sell the security, could result in possible liability to the purchaser. Brokerage commissions and costs associated with transactions in foreign securities generally are higher than costs associated with transactions in US securities. There is generally less government supervision and regulation of exchanges, financial institutions and issuers in foreign countries than there is in the United States. For example, there may be no provisions under certain foreign laws comparable to insider trading and similar investor protection provisions of the securities laws that apply with respect to securities transactions consummated in the United States.</R>
<R>The U.S. Government has from time to time in the past imposed restrictions, through penalties and otherwise, on foreign investments by US investors such as the Fund. If such restrictions should be reinstituted, it might become necessary for the Fund to invest all or substantially all of its assets in US securities. In such event, the Fund would review its investment objective and investment policies to determine whether changes are appropriate. Any
changes in the investment objective or fundamental policies set forth under Investment Restrictions below would require the approval of the holders of a majority of the Fund's outstanding voting securities.
The Fund's ability and decisions to purchase or sell portfolio securities may be affected by laws or regulations relating to the convertibility and repatriation of assets. Because the shares of the Fund are redeemable on a daily basis on each day the Fund determines its net asset value in US dollars, the Fund intends to manage its portfolio so as to give reasonable assurance that it will be able to obtain US dollars to the extent necessary to meet anticipated redemptions. See Redemption of Shares below. Under present conditions, the Investment Adviser does not believe that these considerations will have any significant effect on its portfolio strategy, although there can be no assurance in this regard.</R>
Smaller capital markets, while often growing in trading volume, typically have substantially less volume than US markets, and securities in many smaller capital markets are less liquid and their prices may be more volatile than securities of comparable US companies. Brokerage commissions, custodial services, and other costs relating to investment in smaller capital markets are generally more expensive than in the United States. Such markets have different clearance and settlement procedures, and in certain markets there have been times when settlements have been unable to keep pace with the volume of securities transactions, making it difficult to conduct such transactions. Further, satisfactory custodial services for investment securities may not be available in some countries having smaller capital markets, which may result in the Funds incurring additional costs and delays in transporting and custodying such securities outside such countries. Delays in settlement problems could result in temporary periods when Fund assets are uninvested and no return is earned thereon. The inability of the Fund to make intended security purchases due to settlement problems could cause the Fund to miss attractive investment opportunities. Inability to dispose of a portfolio security due to settlement problems could result either in losses to the Fund due to subsequent declines in value of the portfolio security or, if the Fund has entered into a contract to sell the security, could result in possible liability to the purchaser. There is generally less government supervision and regulation of exchanges, brokers and issuers in countries having smaller capital markets than there are in the United States.
Temporary Investments.
For temporary or defensive
purposes or in anticipation of redemptions, the Fund is authorized to invest
up to 100% of its assets in money market instruments (short term, high quality
debt instruments), including obligations of or guaranteed by the US Government
or its instrumentalities or agencies,
certificates of deposit, bankers acceptances and other bank obligations,
commercial paper rated in the highest category by a nationally recognized
rating agency or other fixed income securities deemed by the Investment Adviser
to be consistent with the objectives of the Fund, or the Fund may hold its
assets in cash.
The characteristics of convertible securities make them appropriate investments for an investment company seeking a high total return from capital appreciation and investment income. These characteristics include the potential for capital appreciation as the value of the underlying common stock increases, the relatively high yield received from dividend or interest payments as compared to common stock dividends and decreased risks of decline in value relative to the underlying common stock due to their fixed-income nature. As a result of the conversion feature, however, the interest rate or dividend preference on a convertible security is generally less than would be the case if the securities were issued in nonconvertible form.
To the extent the conversion value of a convertible security increases to a point that approximates or exceeds its investment value, the price of the convertible security will be influenced principally by its conversion value. A convertible security will sell at a premium over the conversion value to the extent investors place value on the right to acquire the underlying common stock while holding a fixed-income security. The yield and conversion premium
of convertible securities issued in Japan and the Euromarket are frequently determined at levels that cause the conversion value to affect their market value more than the securities investment value.
As indicated above, synthetic convertible securities may include either Cash-Settled Convertibles or Manufactured Convertibles. Cash-Settled Convertibles are instruments that are created by the issuer and have the economic characteristics of traditional convertible securities but may not actually permit conversion into the underlying equity securities in all circumstances. As an example, a private company may issue a Cash-Settled Convertible that is convertible into common stock only if the company successfully completes a public offering of its common stock prior to maturity and otherwise pays a cash amount to reflect any equity appreciation. Manufactured Convertibles are created by the Investment Adviser by combining separate securities that possess one of the two principal characteristics of a convertible security, i.e. , fixed income (fixed income component) or a right to acquire equity securities (convertibility component). The fixed income component is achieved by investing in nonconvertible fixed income securities, such as nonconvertible bonds, preferred stocks and money market instruments. The convertibility component is achieved by investing in call options, warrants, or other securities with equity conversion features (equity features) granting the holder the right to purchase a specified quantity of the underlying stocks within a specified period of time at a specified price or, in the case of a stock index option, the right to receive a cash payment based on the value of the underlying stock index.
<R>The Fund may invest in securities that are not registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the Securities Act), or that are subject to trading restrictions under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction. (restricted securities). Restricted securities may be sold in private placement transactions between issuers and their purchasers and may be neither listed on an exchange nor traded in other established markets. In many cases, privately placed securities may not be freely transferable under the laws of the applicable jurisdiction or due to contractual restrictions on resale. As a result of the absence of a public trading market, privately placed securities may be less liquid and more difficult to value than publicly traded securities. To the extent that privately placed securities may be resold in privately negotiated transactions, the prices realized from the sales, due to illiquidity, could be less than those originally paid by the Fund or less than their fair market value. In addition, issuers whose securities are not publicly traded may not be subject to the disclosure and other investor protection requirements that may be applicable if their securities were publicly traded. If any privately placed securities held by the Fund are required to be registered under the securities laws of one or more jurisdictions before being resold, the Fund may be required to bear the expenses of registration. Certain of the Funds investments in private placements may consist of direct investments and may include investments in smaller, less seasoned issuers, which may involve
greater risks. These issuers may have limited product lines, markets or financial resources, or they may be dependent on a limited management group. In making investments in such securities, the Fund may obtain access to material nonpublic information which may restrict the Funds ability to conduct portfolio transactions in such securities.</R>
<R> Securities Lending. The Fund may lend securities from its portfolio with a value not exceeding 33 1 / 3 % of its total assets to banks, brokers and other financial institutions. In return, the Fund receives collateral in cash or securities issued or guaranteed by the US Government, which will be maintained at all times in an amount equal to at least 100% of the current market value of the loaned securities. This limitation is a fundamental policy and it may not be changed without the approval of the holders of a majority of the Funds outstanding voting securities, as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the Investment Company Act). The Fund receives the income on the loaned securities. Where the Fund receives securities as collateral, the Fund receives a fee for its loan from the borrower. Where the Fund receives cash collateral, it may invest such collateral and retain the amount earned on such investment, net of any amount rebated to the borrower. As a result, the Funds yield may increase. Loans of securities are terminable at any time and the borrower, after notice, is required to return borrowed securities within the standard time period for settlement of securities transactions. The Fund may pay reasonable finders, lending agent, administrative and custodial fees in connection with its loans. In the event that the borrower defaults on its obligation to return borrowed securities because of insolvency or for any other reason, the Fund could experience delays and costs in gaining access to the collateral. The Fund also could suffer a loss in the event of losses on investments made with cash collateral or, in the event of borrower default, where the value of the collateral falls below the market value of the borrowed securities. The Fund has received an exemptive order from the Commission permitting it to lend portfolio securities to Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated (Merrill Lynch) or its affiliates and to retain an affiliate of the Fund as lending agent. See Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage.
Standby
Commitment Agreements.
The Fund may enter into
standby commitment agreements. These agreements commit the Fund, for a stated
period of time, to purchase a stated amount of securities which may be issued
and sold to that Fund at the option of the issuer. The price of the security
is fixed at the time of the
commitment. At the time of entering into the agreement the Fund is paid a commitment fee, regardless of whether or not the security is ultimately issued. The Fund will enter into such agreements for the purpose of investing in the security underlying the commitment at a price that is considered advantageous to the Fund. The Fund will not enter into a standby commitment with a remaining term in excess of 45 days and will limit its investment in such commitments so that the aggregate purchase price of securities subject to such commitments, together with the value of portfolio securities subject to legal restrictions on resale that affect their marketability, will not exceed 15% of its net assets taken at the time of the commitment. The Fund segregates liquid assets in an aggregate amount equal to the purchase price of the securities underlying the commitment.
Repurchase Agreements and Purchase and Sale Contracts. The Fund may invest in securities pursuant to repurchase agreements or purchase and sale contracts. Repurchase agreements and purchase and sale contracts may be entered into only with financial institutions which have capital of at least $50 million or whose obligations are guaranteed by an entity having capital of at least $50 million. Under such agreements, the other party agrees, upon entering into the contract with the Fund, to repurchase the security at a mutually agreed upon time and price in a specified currency, thereby determining the yield during the term of the agreement. This results in a fixed rate of return insulated from market fluctuations during such period, although such return may be affected by currency fluctuations. In the case of repurchase agreements, the prices at which the trades are conducted do not reflect accrued interest on the underlying obligation; whereas, in the case of purchase and sale contracts, the prices take into account accrued interest. Such agreements usually cover short periods, such as under one week. Repurchase agreements may be construed to be collateralized loans by the purchaser to the seller secured by the securities transferred to the purchaser. In the case of a repurchase agreement, as a purchaser, the Fund will require the seller to provide additional collateral if the market value of the securities falls below the repurchase price at any time during the term of the repurchase agreement; the Fund does not have the right to seek additional collateral in the case of purchase and sale contracts. In the event of default by the seller under a repurchase agreement constructed to be a collateralized loan, the underlying securities are not owned by the Fund but only constitute collateral for the sellers obligation to pay the repurchase price. Therefore, the Fund may suffer time delays and incur costs or possible losses in connection with disposition of the collateral.
Borrowings and Leverage . The Fund may borrow up to 33 1 / 3 % of its total assets, taken at market value, but only from banks as a temporary measure for extraordinary or emergency purposes, including to meet redemptions (so as not to force the Fund to liquidate securities at a disadvantageous time) or to settle securities transactions. The Fund will not purchase securities at any time when borrowings exceed 5% of its total assets, except (a) to honor prior commitments or (b) to exercise subscription rights when outstanding borrowings have been obtained exclusively for settlements of other securities transactions. The purchase of securities while borrowings are outstanding will have the effect of leveraging the Fund. Such leveraging increases the Programs exposure to capital risk, and borrowed funds are subject to interest costs that will reduce net income.
The use of leverage by the Fund creates an opportunity for greater total return, but, at the same time, creates special risks. For example, leveraging may exaggerate changes in the net asset value of the Funds shares and in the yield on the Fund. Although the principal of such borrowings will be fixed, the Funds assets may change in value during the time the borrowings are outstanding. Borrowings will create interest expenses for the Fund which can exceed the income from the assets purchased with the borrowings. To the extent the income or capital appreciation derived from securities purchased with borrowed funds exceeds the interest the Fund will have to pay on the borrowings, the Funds return will be greater than if leverage had not been used. Conversely, if the income or capital appreciation from the securities purchased with such borrowed funds is not sufficient to cover the cost of borrowing, the return to the Fund will be less than if leverage had not been used, and therefore the amount available for distribution to shareholders as dividends will be reduced. In the latter case, the Investment Adviser in its best judgment nevertheless may determine to maintain the Funds leveraged position if it expects that the benefits to the Funds shareholders of maintaining the leveraged position will outweigh the current reduced return.
Short
Sales.
The Fund may make short sales of securities,
either as a hedge against potential declines in value of a portfolio security
or to realize appreciation when a security that the Fund does not own declines
in value. When
the
Fund makes a short sale, it borrows the security sold short and delivers
it to the broker-dealer through which it made the short sale as collateral
for its obligation to deliver the security upon conclusion of the sale.
The Fund may have to pay a fee to borrow particular securities and is often
obligated to turn over any payments received on such borrowed securities
to the lender of the securities.
The Fund secures its obligation
to replace the borrowed security by depositing collateral with the broker-dealer,
usually in cash, US Government securities or other liquid securities deposit
similar collateral with its custodian, if necessary, to the extent that
the value of both collateral deposits in the aggregate is at all times equal
to at least 100% of the current market value for the security sold short.
Depending on arrangements made with the broker-dealer from which the Fund
borrowed the security, regarding payment over of any payments received by
the Fund on such security, the Fund may not receive any payments (including
interest) on its collateral deposited with such broker-dealer.
Because making short sales
in securities that it does not own exposes the Fund to risks associated
with those securities, such short sales involve speculative exposure risk.
As a result, if the Fund makes short sales in securities that increase in
value, it will likely underperform similar mutual funds that do not make
short sales in securities they do not own. The Fund will incur a loss as
a result of a short sale if the price of the security increases between
the date of the short sale and the date on which the Fund replaces the borrowed
security. The Fund will realize a gain if the security declines in price
between those dates. There can be no assurance that the Fund will be able
to close out a short sale position at any particular time or at an acceptable
price. Although the Funds gain is limited to the amount at which it
sold a security short, its potential loss is limited only by the maximum
attainable price of the security, less the price at which the security was
sold.
The Fund may also make short
sales against the box without being subject to such limitations.
In this type of short sale, at the time of the sale, the Fund owns or has
the immediate and unconditional right to acquire the identical security
at no additional cost.
Indexed and Inverse Securities. The Fund may invest in securities the potential return of which is based on an index or interest rate. As an illustration, the Fund may invest in a debt security that pays interest based on the current value of an interest rate index, such as the prime rate. The Fund may also invest in a debt security which returns principal at maturity based on the level of a securities index or a basket of securities, or based on the relative changes of two indices. In addition, the Fund may invest in securities the potential return of which is based inversely on the change in an index or interest rate (that is, a security the value of which will move in the opposite direction of changes to an index or interest rate). For example, the Fund may invest in securities that pay a higher rate of interest when a particular index or interest rate decreases and pay a lower rate of interest (or do not fully return principal) when the value of the index or interest rate increases. If the Fund invests in such securities, it may be subject to reduced or eliminated interest payments or loss of principal in the event of an adverse movement in the relevant index or indices. Indexed and inverse securities involve credit risk, and certain indexed and inverse securities may involve leverage risk, liquidity risk, and currency risk. The Fund may invest in indexed and inverse securities for hedging purposes, to increase return or to vary the degree of portfolio leverage relatively efficiently under different market conditions. When used for hedging purposes, indexed and inverse securities involve correlation risk. Indexed and inverse securities are currently issued by a number of US governmental agencies such as FHLMC and FNMA, as well as a number of other financial institutions. To the extent the Fund invests in such instruments, under current market conditions, it most likely will purchase indexed and inverse securities issued by the above-mentioned US governmental agencies.</R>
The Fund also may write put options which give the holder of the option the right to sell the underlying security to the Fund at the stated exercise price. The Fund will receive a premium for writing a put option which increases the Funds return. The Fund writes only covered put options, which means that so long as the Fund is obligated as the writer of the option it will, through its custodian, have deposited and maintained cash, cash equivalents, US Government securities or other high grade liquid debt or equity securities denominated in US dollars or non-U.S. currencies with a securities depository with a value equal to or greater than the exercise price of the underlying securities. By writing a put, the Fund will be obligated to purchase the underlying security at a price that may be higher than the market value of that security at the time of exercise for as long as the option is outstanding. The Fund may engage in closing transactions in order to terminate put options that it has written.
Purchasing Options . The Fund is authorized to purchase put options to hedge against a decline in the market value of its securities. By buying a put option, the Fund has a right to sell the underlying security at the exercise price, thus limiting the Funds risk of loss through a decline in the market value of the security until the put option expires. The amount of any appreciation in the value of the underlying security will be partially offset by the amount of the premium paid for the put option and any related transaction costs. Prior to its expiration, a put option may be sold in a closing sale transaction, and profit or loss from the sale will depend on whether the amount received is more or less than the premium paid for the put option plus the related transaction costs. A closing sale transaction cancels out the Funds position as the purchaser of an option by means of an offsetting sale of an identical option prior to the expiration of the option it has purchased. In certain circumstances, the Fund may purchase call options on securities held in its portfolio on which it has written call options or on securities which it intends to purchase. The Fund will not purchase options on securities (including stock index options discussed below) if, as a result of such purchase, the aggregate cost of all outstanding options on securities held by the Fund would exceed 5% of the market value of the Funds total assets.
Stock Index Options . The Fund is authorized to engage in transactions in stock index options. The Fund may purchase or write put and call options on stock indexes to hedge against the risks of market-wide stock price movements in the securities in which the Fund invests. Options on indexes are similar to options on securities, except that on exercise or assignment, the parties to the contract pay or receive an amount of cash equal to the difference between the closing value of the index and the exercise price of the option times a specified multiple. The Fund may invest in stock index options based on a broad market index, e.g. , the Standard & Poors Composite 500 Index (S&P 500 Index), or on a narrow index representing an industry or market segment, e.g. , the AMEX Oil & Gas Index.
Foreign Currency Hedging . The Fund is authorized to deal in forward foreign exchange among currencies of the different countries in which it will invest and multinational currency units as a hedge against possible variations in the foreign exchange rates among these currencies. Foreign currency hedging is accomplished through contractual agreements to purchase or sell a specified currency at a specified future date (up to one year) and price set at the time of the contract. The Funds dealings in forward foreign exchange will be limited to hedging involving either specific transactions or portfolio positions.
Restrictions on OTC Options . The Fund may engage in OTC options, including OTC stock index options, OTC foreign currency options and options on foreign currency futures, only with such banks or dealers which have capital of at least $50 million or whose obligations are guaranteed by an entity having capital of at least $50 million.
All options referred to herein and in the Funds Prospectus are options issued by the Options Clearing Corporation which are currently traded on the Chicago Board Options Exchange, American Stock Exchange, Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Pacific Stock Exchange or New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). An option gives the purchaser of the option the right to buy, and obligates the writer (seller) to sell the underlying security at the exercise price during the option period. The option period normally ranges from three to nine months from the date the option is written. For writing an option, the Program receives a premium, which is the price of such option on the exchange on which it is traded. The exercise price of the option may be below, equal to, or above the current market value of the underlying security at the time the option is written.
The
Fund has adopted the following restrictions and policies relating to the investment
of the Funds assets and its activities. The fundamental restrictions
set forth below may not be changed without the approval of the holders of
a majority of the Funds outstanding voting securities (which for this
purpose and under the Investment
Company Act means the lesser of (i) 67% of the shares represented at a meeting
at which more than 50% of the outstanding shares are represented or (ii) more
than 50% of the outstanding shares). Unless otherwise provided, all references
to the Funds assets below are in terms of current market value.
Under the fundamental investment restrictions, the Fund may not:
1. Make any investment inconsistent with the Funds
classification as a diversified company under the Investment Company Act.
|
2. Invest
more than 25% of its total assets, taken at market value at the time of
each investment, in the securities of issuers in any particular industry
(excluding the US Government and its agencies and instrumentalities).
|
3. Make investments for the purpose of exercising control or
management.
|
4. Purchase or sell real estate, except that, to the extent
permitted by applicable law, the Fund may invest in securities directly or indirectly secured by real estate or interests therein or issued by companies that invest in real estate or interests therein.
|
5. Make
loans to other persons, except that the acquisition of bonds, debentures
or other corporate debt securities and investment in governmental obligations,
commercial paper, pass-through instruments, certificates of deposit, bankers
acceptances, repurchase agreements, purchase and sale contracts or any
similar instruments shall not be deemed to be the making of a loan, and
except further that the Fund may lend its portfolio securities, provided
that the lending of portfolio securities may be made only in accordance
with applicable law and the guidelines set forth in the Programs
Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information, as they may be amended
from time to time.
|
6. Issue senior securities to the extent such issuance would
violate applicable law.
|
7. Borrow
money, except that (i) the Fund may borrow from banks (as defined in the
Investment Company Act) in amounts up to 33
1
/
3
%
of its total assets (including the amount borrowed), (ii) the Fund may
borrow up to an additional 5% of its total assets for temporary purposes,
(iii) the Fund may obtain such short-term credit as may be necessary for
the clearance of purchases and sales of portfolio securities and (iv)
the Fund may purchase securities on margin to the extent permitted by
applicable law. The Fund may not pledge its assets other than to secure
such borrowings or, to the extent permitted by the Funds investment
policies as set forth in its Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information,
as they may be amended from time to time, in connection with hedging transactions,
short sales, when issued and forward commitment transactions and similar
investment strategies.
|
8. Underwrite securities of other issuers except insofar as the
Fund technically may be deemed an underwriter under the Securities Act in selling portfolio securities.
|
9. Purchase or sell commodities or contracts on commodities,
except to the extent that the Fund may do so in accordance with applicable law and the Funds Prospectus and this Statement of Additional Information, as they may be amended from time to time, and without registering as a commodity pool
operator under the Commodity Exchange Act.
|
a. Purchase securities of other investment companies, except to
the extent such purchases are permitted by applicable law. As a matter of policy, however, the Fund will not purchase shares of any registered open-end investment company or registered unit investment trust, in reliance on Section 12(d)(1)(F) or (G)
(the fund of funds provisions) of the Investment Company Act, at any time its shares are owned by another investment company that is part of the same group of investment companies as the Program.
|
b. Make
short sales of securities or maintain a short position, except to the
extent permitted under the Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information
and by applicable law.
|
c. Invest
in securities that cannot be readily resold because of legal or contractual
restrictions or that cannot otherwise be marketed, redeemed or put to
the issuer or a third party, if at the time of acquisition more
|
than 15% of its net assets would be invested in such securities. This
restriction shall not apply to securities that mature within seven days
or securities that the Board of Directors of the Program have otherwise
determined to be liquid pursuant to applicable law. Securities purchased
in accordance with Rule 144A under the Securities Act (which are restricted
securities that can be resold to qualified institutional buyers, but not
to the general public) and determined to be liquid by the Board of Directors
of the Program are not subject to the limitations set forth in this investment
restriction.
|
d. Notwithstanding fundamental investment restriction (7) above,
borrow amounts in excess of 10% of its total assets, taken at market value, and then only from banks as a temporary measure for extraordinary or emergency purposes such as redemption of Fund shares. The Fund will not purchase securities while
borrowings exceed 5% (taken at market value) of its total assets.
|
<R>e. Effective
July 31, 2002, change its policy of investing, under normal circumstances,
at least 80% of its net assets, at the time of initial purchase, in
equity securities of mid cap companies as defined by the Fund, unless
the Fund provides shareholders with at least 60 days prior written notice
of such change.</R>
|
Portfolio securities of the Fund generally may not be purchased from, sold or loaned to the Investment Adviser or its affiliates or any of their directors, officers or employees, acting as principal, unless pursuant to rule or exemptive order under the Investment Company Act.
The staff of the Commission has taken the position that purchased OTC options and the assets used as cover for written OTC options are illiquid securities. Therefore, the Fund has adopted an investment policy pursuant to which it will not purchase or sell OTC options if, as a result of such transaction, the sum of the market value of OTC options currently outstanding that are held by the Fund, the market value of the underlying securities covered by OTC call options currently outstanding that were sold by the Fund and margin deposits on the Funds existing OTC options on futures contracts exceeds 15% of the net assets of the Fund taken at market value, together with all other Fund assets that are illiquid or are not otherwise readily marketable. However, if the OTC option is sold by the Fund to a primary US Government securities dealer recognized by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and if the Fund has the unconditional contractual right to repurchase such OTC option from the dealer at a predetermined price, then the Fund will treat as illiquid such amount of the underlying securities as is equal to the repurchase price less the amount by which the option is in-the-money ( i.e. , current market value of the underlying securities minus the options strike price). The repurchase price with the primary dealers is typically a formula price that is generally based on a multiple of the premium received for the option plus the amount by which the option is in-the-money. This policy as to OTC options is not a fundamental policy of the Fund and may be amended by the Directors without the approval of the shareholders. However, the Directors will not change or modify this policy prior to the change or modification by the Commission staff of its position.
Each non-interested Director is a member of the Programs Audit Committee (Audit Committee). The principal responsibilities of the Committee are to (i) recommend to the board the selection, retention or termination of the Funds independent auditors; (ii) review with the independent auditors the scope, performance and anticipated cost of their audit; (iii) discuss with the independent auditors certain matters relating to the Funds financial statements, including any adjustment to such financial statements recommended by such independent auditors, or any other results of any audit; (iv) ensure that the independent auditors submit on a periodic basis a formal written statement with respect to their independence, discuss with the independent auditors any relationships or services disclosed in the statement that may impact the objectivity and independence of the Programs independent auditors and recommend that the Board take appropriate action in response thereto to satisfy itself of the independent auditors independence; and (v) consider the comments of the independent auditors and managements responses thereto with respect to the quality and adequacy of the Funds accounting and financial reporting policies and practices and internal controls. The Board of the Program has adopted a written charter for the Committee. The Committee also reviews and nominates candidates to serve as non-interested Directors. The Committee generally will not consider nominees recommended by shareholders. The Committee has retained independent legal counsel to assist them in connection with these duties. </R>
<R> Biographical Information . Certain biographical and other information relating to the non-interested Directors of the Program is set forth below, including their ages, their principal occupations for at least the last five years, the length of the time served, the total number of portfolios overseen in the complex of funds advised by the Investment Adviser and its affiliate, Fund Asset Management, LP (FAM), (MLIM/FAM-Advised Funds) and other public directorships.
Name, Address and Age |
Position(s) Held with the Program |
Term of Office* and Length of Time Served |
Principal Occupation During
|
Number of MLIM/FAM-Advised Funds Overseen |
Public Directorships |
|||||
James H. Bodurtha (58)
|
Director |
Director since 2002 |
Director and Executive Vice President, The China Business Group, Inc. since 1996; Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, China Enterprise Management Corporation from 1993 to 1996; Partner, Squire, Sanders & Dempsey from 1980 to 1993.
|
53 registered investment companies consisting of 74 portfolios |
None |
|||||
Joe Grills (67)
|
Director |
Director since 1994 |
Member of the Committee of Investment of Employee Benefit Assets of the Association of Financial Professionals (CIEBA) since 1986; Member of CIEBAs Executive Committee since 1988 and its Chairman from 1991 to 1992; Assistant Treasurer of International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) and Chief Investment Officer of IBM Retirement Funds from 1986 to 1993; Member of the Investment Advisory Committee of the State of New York Common Retirement Fund since 1989; Member of the Investment Advisory Committee of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute from 1997 to 2000; Director, |
56 Registered investment companies consisting of 77 portfolios |
Kimco Realty Corporation |
|||||
</R> |
</R> |
* Each Director serves
until his or her successor is elected or qualified, or until his or her death
or resignation, or removal as provided in the Programs by-laws or charter
or by statute, or until December 31 of the year in which he or she turns 72.</R>
Certain
biographical and other information relating to the Director who is an interested
person as defined in the Investment Company Act, and other officers
of the Program is set forth below:
Name, Address
and Age
|
|
Position(s) Held with the Program |
|
Term of Office and Length of Time Served |
|
Principal Occupation During
|
|
Number of MLIM/FAM-Advised Funds Overseen |
|
Public Directorships |
Teresa Giacino (39)
|
|
Vice President and Portfolio Manager |
|
Senior Vice President since 2002 and Portfolio Manager since 2001*** |
|
Vice President of the Investment Adviser since 1992. |
|
1 registered investment company consisting of 3 portfolios |
|
None |
<R> | ||||||||||
Frank Viola (37)
|
|
Senior Vice President and Portfolio Manager |
|
Senior Vice President since 2002 and Portfolio
|
|
Director of the Investment Adviser since 1997 and a Portfolio Manager thereof since 1997; Treasurer of Merrill Lynch Bank & Trust from 1996 to 1997 and Vice President of Merrill Lynch Capital Markets from 1993 to 1996. |
|
5 registered investment companies consisting of 5 portfolios |
|
None |
Susan B. Baker (44)
|
|
Secretary |
|
Secretary since
|
|
Director (Legal Advisory) of the Investment Adviser since 1999; Vice President of the Investment Adviser from 1993 to 1999; attorney associated with the Investment Adviser since 1987. |
|
45 registered investment companies consisting of 53 portfolios |
|
None |
_____________
The address
for Mr. Glenn and each officer listed is PO Box 9011, Princeton, New Jersey
08543-9011.
Mr.
Glenn is an interested person, as defined in the Investment Company
Act, of the Fund based on his positions with FAM, MLIM, FAMD, Princeton Services
and Princeton Administrators.
* Mr. Glenn was elected President of the Fund in 1999. Prior to that he served as Executive Vice President of the Fund.
** Each Director
serves until his or her successor is elected and qualified, or until his or
her death or resignation, or removal as provided in the Programs by-laws
or charter or by statute, or until December 31 of the year in which he or
she turns 72.
***
Elected by
and serves at the pleasure of the Board of Directors of the Program.</R>
Share Ownership. Information relating to each Directors share ownership in the Fund and in all registered funds in the Merrill Lynch family of funds that are overseen by the respective Director (Supervised Merrill Lynch Funds) as of December 31, 2001 is set forth in the chart below:
Name |
Aggregate Dollar Range of Equity in the Fund |
Aggregate Dollar Range of Securities in Supervised Merrill Lynch Funds |
||
Interested Director : |
||||
Terry K. Glenn |
None |
Over $100,000 |
||
Non-Interested Directors: |
||||
James H. Bodurtha |
None |
$50,001 - $100,000 |
||
Joe Grills |
None |
Over $100,000 |
||
Herbert I. London |
None |
$50,001 - $100,000 |
||
André F. Perold |
None |
Over $100,000 |
||
Roberta Cooper Ramo |
None |
None |
||
Melvin R. Seiden |
None |
$1 - $10,000 |
||
Robert S. Salomon, Jr. |
None |
None |
||
Stephen B. Swensrud |
None |
None |
<R>As
of May 10, 2002, the Directors and officers of the Fund as a group (16 persons)
owned an aggregate of less than 1% of the outstanding shares of the Fund.
At such date, Mr. Glenn, a Director and officer of the Program, and the other
officers of the Program owned an aggregate of less than 1% of the outstanding
shares of common stock of Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. (ML & Co.).
As of December 31, 2001, none of the non-interested Directors of the Fund
nor any of their immediate family members owned beneficially or of record
any securities in ML & Co.</R>
Name
|
Position
with
Program |
Compensation
from Program |
Pension
or
Retirement Benefits Accrued as Part of Program Expense |
Estimated
Annual
Benefits upon Retirement |
Aggregate
Compensation from Program and Other MLIM/FAM-Advised Funds(1) |
|||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
James H. Bodurtha* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Joe Grills | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $259,500 | |||||
Herbert I. London* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Andr é F. Perold* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Roberta Cooper Ramo* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Robert S. Salomon, Jr. | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $222,000 | |||||
Melvin R. Seiden | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $222,000 | |||||
Stephen B. Swensrud | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $406,083 |
*
|
Ms.
Ramo and Messrs. Bodurtha, London and Perold were elected to serve as
Directors of the Program on April 15, 2002.</R>
|
Fiscal
Year Ended January 31,
<R> |
Investment
Advisory Fee |
|
---|---|---|
2002 | $1,406,820 | |
2001 | $ 615,299 | |
2000 | $ 691,824 |
The Investment Adviser has entered into a sub-advisory agreement (the Sub-Advisory Agreement) with Merrill Lynch Asset Management U.K. Limited (MLAM UK) pursuant to which MLAM UK provides investment advisory services to the Investment Adviser with respect to the Fund. For the fiscal years ended January 31, 2002, 2001 and 2000, the Investment Adviser paid no fees to MLAM UK pursuant to this agreement. </R>
Payment
of Fund Expenses.
The Investment Advisory Agreement
obligates the Investment Adviser to provide investment advisory services and
to pay all compensation of and furnish office space for officers and employees
of the Fund connected with investment and economic research, trading and investment
management of the Fund, as well as the fees of all Directors of the Fund who
are affiliated persons of ML & Co. or any of its affiliates. The Fund
pays all other expenses incurred in the operation of the Fund, including among
other things: taxes, expenses for legal and auditing services, costs of preparing,
printing and mailing proxies, stock certificates, shareholder reports, prospectuses
and statements of additional information, except to the extent paid by FAMD
(the Distributor); charges of the custodian and the transfer agent;
expenses of redemption of shares; Commission fees; expenses of registering
the shares under Federal and state securities laws; fees and expenses of unaffiliated
Directors; accounting and pricing costs (including the daily calculations
of net asset value); insurance; interest;
brokerage costs; litigation and other extraordinary or non-recurring expenses;
and other expenses properly payable by the Fund. Certain accounting services
are provided to the Fund by State Street Bank and Trust Company (State
Street) pursuant to an agreement between State Street and the Program
on behalf of the Fund. The Fund pays a fee for these services. In addition,
the Fund reimburses the Investment Adviser for the cost of certain other accounting
services. The Distributor pays certain promotional expenses of the Fund incurred
in connection with the offering of shares of the Fund. Certain expenses are
financed by the Fund pursuant to distribution plans in compliance with Rule
12b-1 under the Investment Company Act. See Purchase of SharesDistribution
Plans.
At a meeting of the Board of Directors held on April 10, 2002, the Board approved the continuation of the Funds Investment Advisory Agreement for an additional year. In connection with its deliberations, the Board reviewed information derived from a number of sources and covering a range of issues. The Board considered the services provided to the Fund by the Investment Adviser under the Investment Advisory Agreement, as well as other services provided by the Investment Advisor and its affiliates under other agreements, and the personnel who provide these services. In addition to investment advisory services, the Investment Adviser and its affiliates provide administrative services, shareholder services, oversight of fund accounting, marketing services, assistance in meeting legal and regulatory requirements, and other services necessary for the operation of the Fund. The Board also considered the Investment Advisers costs of providing services, and the direct and indirect benefits to the Investment Adviser from its relationship with the Fund. The benefits considered by the Board included not only the Investment Advisers compensation for investment advisory services under the Investment Advisory Agreement and the Investment Advisers profitability under the Investment Advisory Agreement, but also compensation paid to the Investment Adviser or its affiliates for other, non-advisory, services provided to the Fund. The Directors also considered the Investment Advisers access to research services from brokers to which the Investment Adviser may have allocated Fund brokerage in a soft dollar arrangement. In connection with its consideration of the Investment Advisory Agreement, the Board also compared the Funds advisory fee rate, expense ratios and historical performance to those of comparable funds. The Board considered whether there should be changes in the advisory fee rate or structure in order to enable the Fund to participate in any economies of scale that the Investment Adviser may experience as a result of growth in the Funds assets. The Board also reviewed materials supplied by Fund counsel that were prepared for use by the Board in fulfilling its duties under the Investment Company Act.</R>
Based on the information reviewed and the discussions, the Board, including a majority of the non-interested Directors, concluded that it was satisfied with the nature and quality of the services provided by the Investment Adviser to the Fund and that the investment advisory fee rate was reasonable in relation to such services. The non-interested Directors were represented by independent counsel who assisted the non-interested Directors in their deliberations.
Transfer
Agency Services
. Financial Data Services, Inc.
(the Transfer Agent), a subsidiary of ML & Co., acts as the
Funds Transfer Agent pursuant to a Transfer Agency, Dividend Disbursing
Agency and Shareholder Servicing Agency Agreement (the Transfer Agency
Agreement). Pursuant to the Transfer Agency Agreement, the Transfer
Agent is responsible for the issuance, transfer and redemption of shares and
the opening and maintenance
of shareholder accounts. The Fund currently pays between $16.00 and $20.00
for each Class A or Class D shareholder account and between $19.00 and $23.00
for each Class B or Class C shareholder account, depending on the level of
service required. The Fund also reimburses the Transfer Agents reasonable
out-of-pocket expenses and pays a fee of 0.10% of account assets for certain
accounts that participate in the Merrill Lynch Mutual Fund Advisor (Merrill
Lynch MFA
SM
) Program (the MFA Program).
For purposes of the Transfer Agency Agreement, the term account
includes a shareholder account maintained directly by the Transfer Agent and
any other account representing the beneficial interest of a person in the
relevant share class on a recordkeeping system, provided the recordkeeping
system is maintained by a subsidiary of ML & Co.
<R>The table below sets forth information about the total amounts paid by the Fund to the Transfer Agent for the periods indicated.
Fiscal
Year Ended January 31,
|
Transfer
Agent Fee*
|
|
---|---|---|
2002 | $630,279 | |
2001 | $538,515 | |
2000 | $589,241 | |
*
|
During
the periods shown, the Fund paid fees to the Transfer Agent at lower
rates than the ones currently in effect. If the current rates had been
in effect for the periods shown, the fees paid may have been higher.
|
Fiscal
Year Ended January 31,
|
Paid
to
State Street |
Paid
to the
Investment Adviser |
|||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
<R> | |||||
2002 | $126,122 | $14,297 | |||
2001 | $3,837* | $95,639 | |||
2000 | N/A | $83,333 |
<R>The
Fund issues four classes of shares under the Merrill Lynch Select Pricing
SM
System: shares of Class A and Class D are sold to investors choosing the initial
sales charge alternatives and shares of Class B and Class C are sold to investors
choosing the deferred sales charge alternatives. Each Class A, Class B, Class
C and Class D share of the Fund represents an identical interest in the investment
portfolio of the Fund and has the same rights, except
that Class B, Class C and Class D shares bear the expenses of the ongoing
account maintenance fees (also known as service fees) and Class B and Class
C shares bear the expenses of the ongoing distribution fees and the additional
incremental transfer agency costs resulting from the deferred sales charge
arrangements. The contingent deferred sales charges (CDSCs), distribution
fees and account maintenance fees that are imposed on Class B and Class C
shares, as well as the account maintenance fees that are imposed on Class
D shares, are imposed directly against those classes and not against all assets
of the Fund and, accordingly, such charges do not affect the net asset value
of any other class or have any impact on investors choosing another sales
charge option. Dividends paid by the Fund for each class of shares are calculated
in the same manner at the same time and differ only to the extent that account
maintenance and distribution fees and any incremental transfer agency costs
relating to a particular class are borne exclusively by that class. Each class
has different exchange privileges. See Shareholder ServicesExchange
Privilege.</R>
Initial
Sales Charge AlternativesClass A and Class D Shares
|
<R>
|
||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
For
the
fiscal year ended January 31, |
Gross
Sales
Charges Collected |
Sales
Charges
Retained by Distributor |
Sales
Charges
Paid to Merrill Lynch |
CDSCs
Received on
Redemption of Load-Waived Shares |
||||
2002 | $ 325 | $17 | $ 308 | $0 | ||||
2001 | $1,152 | $53 | $1,099 | $0 | ||||
2000 | $ 282 | $13 | $ 269 | $0 |
|
For
the
fiscal year ended January 31, |
Gross
Sales
Charges Collected |
Sales
Charges
Retained by Distributor |
Sales
Charges
Paid to Merrill Lynch |
CDSCs
Received on
Redemption of Load-Waived Shares |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | $207,996 | $13,042 | $194,954 | $0 | ||||
2001 | $ 14,324 | $ 837 | $ 13,487 | $0 | ||||
2000 | $ 23,567 | $ 1,195 | $ 22,373 | $0 | ||||
</R>
|
Letter of Intent . Reduced sales charges are applicable to purchases aggregating $25,000 or more of Class A or Class D shares of the Fund or any other Merrill Lynch mutual funds made within a 13-month period starting with the first purchase pursuant to the Letter of Intent. The Letter of Intent is available only to investors whose accounts are established and maintained at the Funds Transfer Agent. The Letter of Intent is not available to employee benefit plans for which affiliates of the Investment Adviser provide plan participant record-keeping services. The Letter of Intent is not a binding obligation to purchase any amount of Class A or Class D shares; however, its execution will result in the purchaser paying a lower sales charge at the appropriate quantity purchase level. A purchase not originally made pursuant to a Letter of Intent may be included under a subsequent Letter of Intent executed within 90 days of such purchase if the Distributor is informed in writing of this intent within such 90-day period. The value of Class A and Class D shares of the Fund and other Select Pricing Funds presently held, at cost or maximum offering price (whichever is higher), on the date of the first purchase under the Letter of Intent, may be included as a credit toward the completion of such Letter, but the reduced sales charge applicable to the amount covered by such Letter will be applied only to new purchases. If the total amount of shares does not equal the amount stated in the Letter of Intent (minimum of $25,000), the investor will be notified and must pay, within 20 days of the execution of such Letter, the difference between the sales charge on the Class A or Class D shares purchased at the reduced rate and the sales charge applicable to the shares actually purchased through the Letter. Class A or Class B shares equal to at least 5.0% of the intended amount will be held in escrow during the 13-month period (while remaining registered in the name of the purchaser) for this purpose. The first purchase under the Letter of Intent must be at least 5.0% of the dollar amount of such Letter. If a purchase during the term of such Letter would otherwise be subject to a further reduced sales charge based on the right of accumulation, the purchaser will be entitled on that purchase and subsequent purchases to that further reduced percentage sales charge but there will be no retroactive reduction of the sales charge on any previous purchase.
Class D shares of the Fund are offered at net asset value, without a sales charge, to an investor that has a business relationship with a Merrill Lynch Financial Advisor and that has invested in a mutual fund for which Merrill Lynch has not served as a selected dealer if the following conditions are satisfied: first, the investor must advise Merrill Lynch that it will purchase Class D shares of the Fund with proceeds from the redemption of shares of such other mutual fund and that such shares have been outstanding for a period of no less than six months; and, second, such purchase of Class D shares must be made within 60 days after the redemption and the proceeds from the redemption must be maintained in the interim in cash or a money market fund.
Contingent Deferred Sales ChargesClass B Shares .
Class
B shares that are redeemed within six years of purchase may be subject to
a CDSC at the rates set forth below charged as a percentage of the dollar
amount subject thereto. In determining whether a CDSC is applicable to a redemption,
the calculation will be determined in the manner that results in the lowest
applicable rate being charged. The charge will be assessed on an amount equal
to the lesser of the proceeds of redemption or the cost of the shares being
redeemed. Accordingly, no CDSC will be imposed on increases in net asset value
above the initial purchase price. In addition, no CDSC will be assessed on
shares derived from reinvestment of dividends. It will be assumed that the
redemption is first of shares held for over six years or shares acquired pursuant
to reinvestment of dividends and then of shares held longest during the six-year
period. A transfer of shares from a shareholders account to another
account will be assumed to be made in the same order as a redemption.
The
following table sets forth the Class B CDSC:
Year Since Purchase Payment Made
|
CDSC as a Percentage
of Dollar Amount Subject to Charge |
|
---|---|---|
0-1 | 4.0% | |
1-2 | 4.0% | |
2-3 | 3.0% | |
3-4 | 3.0% | |
4-5 | 2.0% | |
5-6 | 1.0% | |
6 and thereafter | None |
To provide an example, assume an investor purchased 100 shares at $10 per share (at a cost of $1,000) and in the third year after purchase, the net asset value per share is $12 and, during such time, the investor has acquired 10 additional shares upon dividend reinvestment. If at such time the investor makes his or her first redemption of 50 shares (proceeds of $600), 10 shares will not be subject to a CDSC because they were issued through dividend reinvestment. With respect to the remaining 40 shares, the charge is applied only to the original cost of $10 per share and not to the increase in net asset value of $2 per share. Therefore, $400 of the $600 redemption proceeds will be charged at a rate of 3.0% (the applicable rate in the third year after purchase).
In general, Class B shares of equity Select Pricing Funds will convert approximately eight years after initial purchase and Class B shares of taxable and tax-exempt fixed income Select Pricing Funds will convert approximately ten years after initial purchase. If, during the Conversion Period, a shareholder exchanges Class B shares with an eight-year Conversion Period for Class B shares with a ten-year Conversion Period, or vice versa, the Conversion Period applicable to the Class B shares acquired in the exchange will apply and the holding period for the shares exchanged will be tacked on to the holding period for the shares acquired. The Conversion Period also may be modified for investors that participate in certain fee-based programs. See Shareholder Services Fee-Based Programs.
Contingent Deferred Sales ChargesClass C Shares .
<R>
Class
C shares that are redeemed within one year of purchase may be subject to a
1.0% CDSC charged as a percentage of the dollar amount subject thereto. In
determining whether a Class C CDSC is applicable to a redemption, the calculation
will be determined in the manner that results in the lowest possible rate
being charged. The charge will be assessed on an amount equal to the lesser
of the proceeds of redemption or the cost of the shares being redeemed. Accordingly,
no Class C CDSC will be imposed on increases in net asset value above the
initial purchase price. In addition, no Class C CDSC will be assessed on shares
derived from reinvestment of dividends.
It will be assumed that the redemption is first of shares held for over one
year or shares acquired pursuant to reinvestment of dividends and then of
shares held longest during the one-year period. The charge will not be applied
to dollar amounts representing an increase in net asset value since the time
of purchase. A transfer of shares from a shareholders account to another
account will be assumed to be made in the same order as a redemption. The
Class C CDSC may be reduced or waived in connection with involuntary termination
of an account in which Fund shares are held or withdrawals through the Merrill
Lynch Systematic Withdrawal Plan. See Shareholder ServicesSystematic
Withdrawal Plan.</R>
|
For
the
fiscal year ended January 31, |
CDSCs
Received
by Distributor |
CDSCs
Paid to
Merrill Lynch |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | $101,453 | $101,453 | ||
2001 | $139,670 | $139,670 | ||
2000 | $171,348 | $171,348 | ||
</R> |
*
|
Additional Class B CDSCs payable to the Distributor may have been waived or converted to a contingent obligation in
connection with a shareholders participation in certain fee-based programs.
|
|
<R>
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
For
the
fiscal year ended January 31, |
CDSCs
Received
by Distributor |
CDSCs
Paid to
Merrill Lynch |
||
2002 | $ 15,749 | $ 15,749 | ||
2001 | $ 12,597 | $ 12,597 | ||
2000 | $ 13,744 | $ 13,744 |
Closed-End
Fund Reinvestment Options
<R> The Distribution Plan for each of the Class B and Class C shares provides that the Fund also pays the Distributor a distribution fee relating to the shares of the relevant class, accrued daily and paid monthly, at the annual rate of 0.75% of the average daily net assets of the Fund attributable to the shares of the relevant class in order to compensate the Distributor, Merrill Lynch, a selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary (pursuant to a sub-agreement) for providing shareholder and distribution services and bearing certain distribution-related expenses of the Fund, including payments to financial advisors or other financial intermediaries for selling Class B and Class C shares of the Fund. The Distribution Plans relating to Class B or Class C shares are designed to permit an investor to purchase Class B or Class C shares through selected securities dealers or other financial intermediaries, without the assessment of an initial sales charge, and at the same time permit the dealer to compensate its financial advisors, selected securities dealers or other financial intermediaries in connection with the sale of the Class B and Class C shares.</R>
The
Funds Distribution Plans are subject to the provisions of Rule 12b-1
under the Investment Company Act. In their consideration of each Distribution
Plan, the Directors must consider all factors they deem relevant, including
information as to the benefits of the Distribution Plan to the Fund and the
related class of shareholders. Each Distribution Plan further provides that,
so long as the Distribution Plan remains in effect, the selection and nomination
of non-interested Directors shall be committed to the discretion of the non-interested
Directors then in office. In approving each Distribution Plan in accordance
with Rule 12b-1, the non-interested Directors concluded that there is reasonable
likelihood that each Distribution Plan will benefit the Fund and its related
class of shareholders. Each Distribution Plan can be terminated at any time,
without penalty, by the vote of a majority of the non-interested Directors
or by the vote of the holders of a majority of the outstanding related class
of voting securities of the Fund. A Distribution Plan cannot be amended to
increase materially the amount to be spent by the Fund without the approval
of the related class of shareholders and all material amendments are required
to be approved by the vote of Directors, including a majority of the non-interested
Directors who have no direct or
indirect financial interest in the Distribution Plan, cast in person at a
meeting called for that purpose. Rule 12b-1 further requires that the Fund
preserve copies of the Distribution Plan and any report made pursuant to such
plan for a period of not less than six years from the date of the Distribution
Plan or such report, the first two years in an easily accessible place.
The
maximum sales charge rule in the Conduct Rules of the NASD imposes a limitation
on certain asset-based sales charges such as the distribution fee and the
CDSC borne by the Class B and Class C shares but not the account maintenance
fee. The maximum sales charge rule is applied separately to each class. As
applicable to the
Fund,
the maximum sales charge rule limits the aggregate of distribution fee payments
and CDSCs payable by the Fund to (1) 6.25% of eligible gross sales of Class
B shares and Class C shares, computed separately (defined to exclude shares
issued pursuant to dividend reinvestments and exchanges), plus (2) interest
on the unpaid balance for the respective class, computed separately, at the
prime rate plus 1% (the unpaid balance being the maximum amount payable minus
amounts received from the payment of the distribution fee and the CDSC). In
connection with the Class B shares, the Distributor has voluntarily agreed
to waive interest charges on the unpaid balance in excess of 0.50% of eligible
gross sales. Consequently, the maximum amount payable to the Distributor (referred
to as the voluntary maximum) in connection with the Class B shares
is 6.75% of eligible gross sales. The Distributor retains the right to stop
waiving the interest charges at any time. To the extent payments would exceed
the voluntary maximum, the Fund will not make further payments of the distribution
fee with respect to Class B shares and any CDSCs will be paid to the Fund
rather than to the Distributor; however, the Fund will continue to make payments
of the account maintenance fee. In certain circumstances the amount payable
pursuant to the voluntary maximum may exceed the amount payable under the
NASD formula. In such circumstance payment in excess of the amount payable
under the NASD formula will not be made.
(1)
|
Purchase price of all eligible Class B or Class C shares sold during the periods indicated other than shares acquired through
dividend reinvestment and the exchange privilege.
|
(2)
|
Includes
amounts attributable to exchanges from Summit that are not reflected in
Eligible Gross Sales. Shares of Summit can only be purchased by exchange
from another fund (the redeemed fund). Upon such an exchange,
the maximum allowable sales charge payment to the redeemed fund is reduced
in accordance with the amount of the redemption. This amount is then added
to the maximum allowable sales charge payment with respect to Summit.
Upon an exchange out of Summit, the remaining balance of this amount is
deducted from the maximum allowable sales charge payment to Summit and
added to the maximum allowable sales charge payment to the fund into which
the exchange is made.
|
(3)
|
Interest is computed on a monthly basis based upon the prime rate, as reported in
The Wall Street Journal,
plus 1.0%,
as permitted under the NASD Rule.
|
(4)
|
Consists
of CDSC payments, distribution fee payments and accruals. See Key
FactsFees and Expenses in the Prospectus. This figure may
include CDSCs that were deferred when a shareholder redeemed shares prior
to the expiration of the applicable CDSC period and invested the proceeds,
without the imposition of a sales charge, in Class A shares in conjunction
with the shareholders participation in the MFA Program. The CDSC
is booked as a contingent obligation that may be payable if the shareholder
terminates participation in the MFA Program.</R>
|
(5)
|
Provided to illustrate the extent to which the current level of distribution fee payments (not including any CDSC payments)
is amortizing the unpaid balance. No assurance can be given that payments of the distribution fee will reach either the voluntary maximum (with respect to Class B shares) or the NASD maximum (with respect to Class B and Class C shares).
|
Reference is made to Your AccountHow to Buy, Sell, Transfer and Exchange Shares in the Prospectus for certain information as to the redemption and purchase of Fund shares.
Since the account feature involves a risk of loss from unauthorized or fraudulent transactions, the Transfer Agent will take certain precautions to protect your account from fraud. Telephone redemption may be refused if the caller is unable to provide: the account number, the name and address registered on the account and the social security number registered on the account. The Fund or the Transfer Agent may temporarily suspend telephone transactions at any time.
The net asset value of the shares of all classes of the Fund is determined once daily Monday through Friday after the close of business on the NYSE on each day the NYSE is open for trading based on prices at the time of closing. The NYSE generally closes at 4:00 p.m. Eastern time. Any assets or liabilities expressed in terms of non-U.S. Dollar currencies are translated into US dollars at the prevailing market rates as quoted by one or more banks or dealers on the day of valuation. The NYSE is not open for trading on New Years Day, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Presidents Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day.
<R>Portfolio
securities of the Fund that are traded on stock exchanges are valued at the
last sale price on the exchange on which such securities are traded, as of
the close of business on the day the securities are being valued or, lacking
any sales, at the last available bid price for long positions, and at the
last available ask price for short positions. In cases where securities are
traded on more than one exchange, the securities are valued on the exchange
designated by or under the authority of the Board of Directors of the Program
as the primary market. Long positions in securities traded in the OTC market
are valued at the last available bid price or yield equivalent obtained from
one or more dealers or pricing services approved by the Board of Directors
of the Program. Short positions in securities traded in the OTC market are
valued at the last available ask price. Portfolio securities that are traded
both in the OTC market and on a stock exchange are valued according to the
broadest and most representative market. When the Fund writes an option, the
amount of the premium received is recorded on the books of the Fund as an
asset and an equivalent liability. The amount of the liability is subsequently
valued to reflect the current market value of the option written, based on
the last sale price in the case of exchange-traded options or, in the case
of options traded in the OTC market, the last ask price. Options purchased
by the Fund are valued at their last sale price in the case of exchange-traded
options or, in the case of options traded in the OTC market, the last bid
price. Other investments, including financial futures contracts and related
options, are generally valued at market value. Obligations with remaining
maturities of 60 days or less are valued at amortized cost unless the Investment
Adviser believes that this method no longer produces fair valuations. Repurchase
agreements will be valued at cost plus accrued interest. Securities and assets
for which market quotations are not readily available are valued at fair value
as determined in good faith by or under the direction of the Board of Directors
of the Program. Such valuations and procedures will be reviewed periodically
by the Board of Directors of the Program.
Option Accounting Principles . When the Fund sells an option, an amount equal to the premium received by the Fund is included in that Funds Statement of Assets and Liabilities as a deferred credit. The amount of such liability subsequently will be marked-to-market to reflect the current market value of the option written. If current market value exceeds the premium received there is an unrealized loss; conversely, if the premium exceeds current market value there is an unrealized gain. The current market value of a traded option is the last sale price or, in the absence of a sale, the last offering price. If an option expires on its stipulated expiration date or if the Fund enters into a closing purchasing transaction, the affected Fund will realize a gain (or loss if the cost of a closing purchase transaction exceeds the premium received when the option was sold) without regard to any unrealized gain or loss on the underlying security, and the liability related to such option will be extinguished. If an option is exercised, the Fund will realize a gain or loss from the sale of the underlying security and the proceeds of sales are increased by the premium originally received.
Class
A
|
Class
B
|
Class
C
|
Class
D
|
|||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Net Assets | $72,569,510 | $162,315,808 | $80,226,743 | $36,225,462 | ||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Number of Shares Outstanding | 4,238,516 | 9,755,948 | 4,829,867 | 2,126,104 | ||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Net
Asset Value Per Share (net assets divided by
number of shares outstanding) |
$ 17.12 | $ 16.64 | $ 16.61 | $ 17.04 | ||||
Sales
Charge (Class A and Class D shares: 5.25% of
offering price; 5.54% of net asset value) * |
.95 | ** | ** | .94 | ||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Offering Price | $ 18.07 | $ 16.64 | $ 16.61 | $ 17.98 | ||||
|
|
|
|
*
|
Rounded to the nearest one-hundredth percent; assumes maximum sales charge is applicable.
|
**
|
Class B and Class C shares are not subject to an initial sales charge but may be subject to a CDSC on redemption of shares.
See Purchase of SharesDeferred Sales Charge AlternativesClass B and Class C Shares herein.
|
Section 28(e) of the Exchange Act (Section 28(e)) permits an investment adviser, such as the Investment Adviser, under certain circumstances, to cause an account to pay a broker or dealer a commission for effecting a transaction in excess of the amount of commission another broker or dealer would have charged for effecting the transaction in recognition of the value of brokerage and research services provided by that broker or dealer. This includes commissions paid on riskless principal transactions under certain conditions. Brokerage and research services include (1) furnishing advice as to the value of securities, the advisability of investing in, purchasing or selling securities, and the availability of securities or purchasers or sellers of securities; (2) furnishing analyses and reports concerning issuers, industries, securities, economic factors and trends, portfolio strategy, and the performance of accounts; and (3) effecting securities transactions and performing functions incidental thereto (such as clearance, settlement, and custody). The Investment Adviser believes that access to independent investment research is beneficial to its investment decision-making processes and, therefore, to the Fund.</R>
<R>
To
the extent research services may be a factor in selecting brokers, such services
may be in written form or through direct contact with individuals and may
include information as to particular companies and securities as well as market,
economic, or institutional areas and information which assists in the valuation
of investments. Examples of research-oriented services for which the Investment
Adviser might use Fund commissions include</R>
<R>research reports and other information on the economy, industries,
groups of securities, individual companies, statistical information, political
developments, technical market action, pricing and appraisal services, credit
analysis, risk measurement analysis, performance and other analysis. Except
as noted immediately below, research services furnished by brokers may be
used in servicing some or all client accounts and not all services may be
used in connection with the account that paid commissions to the broker providing
such services. In some cases, research information received from brokers by
mutual fund management personnel or personnel principally responsible for
the Investment Advisers individually managed portfolios is not necessarily
shared by and between such personnel. Any investment advisory or other fees
paid by the Fund to the Investment Adviser are not reduced as a result of
the Investment Adviser's receipt of research services.</R>
In some cases the Investment Adviser may receive a service from a broker that has both a research and a non-research use. When this occurs, the Investment Adviser makes a good faith allocation, under all the circumstances, between the research and non-research uses of the service. The percentage of the service that is used for research purposes may be paid for with client commissions, while the Investment Adviser will use its own funds to pay for the percentage of the service that is used for non-research purposes. In making this good faith allocation, the Investment Adviser faces a potential conflict of interest, but the Investment Adviser believes that its allocation procedures are reasonably designed to ensure that it appropriately allocates the anticipated use of such services to their research and non-research uses.
<R> From time to time, the Fund may purchase new issues of securities in a fixed price offering. In these situations, the broker may be a member of the selling group that will, in addition to selling securities, provide the Investment Adviser with research services. The NASD has adopted rules expressly permitting these types of arrangements under certain circumstances. Generally, the broker will provide research credits in these situations at a rate that is higher than that which is available for typical secondary market transactions. These arrangements may not fall within the safe harbor of Section 28(e).</R>
In addition, consistent with the Conduct Rules of the NASD and policies established by the Board of Directors of the Fund and subject to best execution, the Investment Adviser may consider sales of shares of the Fund as a factor in the selection of brokers or dealers to execute portfolio transactions for the Fund; however, whether or not a particular broker or dealer sells shares of the Fund neither qualifies nor disqualifies such broker or dealer to execute transactions for the Fund.
Foreign
equity securities may be held by the Fund in the form of ADRs, EDRs, GDRs
or other securities convertible into foreign equity securities. ADRs, EDRs
and GDRs may be listed on stock exchanges, or traded in over-the-counter markets
in the United States or Europe, as the case may be. ADRs, like other securities
traded in the United States, will be subject to negotiated commission rates.
The Funds ability and
decisions to purchase or sell portfolio securities of foreign issuers may
be affected by laws or regulations relating to the convertibility and repatriation
of assets. Because the shares of the Fund are
redeemable
on a daily basis in US dollars, the Program intends to manage the Fund so
as to give reasonable assurance that it will be able to obtain US dollars
to the extent necessary to meet anticipated redemptions. Under present conditions,
it is not believed that these considerations will have significant effect
on the Programs portfolio strategies.
Fiscal
Year Ended
January 31, |
Aggregate
Brokerage
Commissions Paid |
Commissions
Paid
to Merrill Lynch |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | $1,027,335 | $130,036 | ||
2001 | $ 305,505 | $ 30,941 | ||
2000 | $ 193,078 | $ 9,432 | ||
</R>
|
Because of the affiliation of Merrill Lynch with the Investment Adviser, the Fund is prohibited from engaging in certain transactions involving Merrill Lynch or its affiliates except for brokerage transactions permitted under the Investment Company Act involving only usual and customary commissions or transactions pursuant to an exemptive order under the Investment Company Act. Without such an exemptive order, the Fund would be prohibited from engaging in portfolio transactions with Merrill Lynch or any of its affiliates acting as principal.
The Fund has received an exemptive order from the Commission permitting it to lend portfolio securities to Merrill Lynch or its affiliates. Pursuant to that order, the Fund also has retained an affiliated entity of the Investment Adviser as the securities lending agent for a fee, including a fee based on a share of the returns on investment of cash collateral. That entity may, on behalf of the Fund, invest cash collateral received by the Fund for such loans, among other things, in a private investment company managed by that entity or in registered money market funds advised by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates. For the fiscal year ended January 31, 2002 (the first fiscal year during which the exemptive order was applicable) that affiliated entity received $3,957 in securities lending agent fees from the Fund.
Section 11(a) of the Exchange Act generally prohibits members of the US national securities exchanges from executing exchange transactions for their affiliates and institutional accounts that they manage unless the member (i) has obtained prior express authorization from the account to effect such transactions, (ii) at least annually furnishes the account with a statement setting forth the aggregate compensation received by the member in effecting such transactions, and (iii) complies with any rules the Commission has prescribed with respect to the requirements of clauses (i) and (ii). To the extent Section 11(a) would apply to Merrill Lynch acting as a broker for the Fund in any of its portfolio transactions executed on any such securities exchange of which it is a member, appropriate consents have been obtained from the Fund and annual statements as to aggregate compensation will be provided to the Fund.The Board of Directors of the Program have considered the possibility of seeking to recapture for the benefit of the Fund brokerage commissions and other expenses of possible portfolio transactions by conducting portfolio transactions through affiliated entities. For example, brokerage commissions received by affiliated brokers could be offset against the advisory fee paid by the Fund to the Investment Adviser. After considering all factors deemed relevant, the Directors made a determination not to seek such recapture. The Board will reconsider this matter from time to time.</R>
Exchanges of Class A or Class D shares outstanding (outstanding Class A or Class D shares) for Class A or Class D shares of another Select Pricing Fund, or for Class A shares of Summit (new Class A or Class D shares) are transacted on the basis of relative net asset value per Class A or Class D share, respectively, plus an amount equal to the difference, if any, between the sales charge previously paid on the outstanding Class A or Class D shares and the sales charge payable at the time of the exchange on the new Class A or Class D shares. With respect to outstanding Class A or Class D shares as to which previous exchanges have taken place, the sales charge previously paid shall include the aggregate of the sales charges paid with respect to such Class A or Class D shares in the initial purchase and any subsequent exchange. Class A or Class D shares issued pursuant to dividend reinvestment are sold on a no-load basis in each of the funds offering Class A or Class D shares. For purposes of the exchange privilege, Class A and Class D shares acquired through dividend reinvestment shall be deemed to have been sold with a sales charge equal to the sales charge previously paid on the Class A or Class D shares on which the dividend was paid. Based on this formula, Class A and Class D shares of the Fund generally may be exchanged into the Class A or Class D shares, respectively, of the other funds with a reduced sales charge or without a sales charge.
<R> Exchanges of Class B and Class C Shares . Certain Select Pricing Funds with Class B and Class C shares outstanding (outstanding Class B or Class C shares) offer to exchange their Class B or Class C shares for Class B or Class C shares, respectively, of certain other Select Pricing Funds or for Class B shares of Summit (new Class B or Class C shares) on the basis of relative net asset value per Class B or Class C share, without the payment of any CDSC that might otherwise be due on redemption of the outstanding shares. Class B shareholders of the Fund exercising the exchange privilege will continue to be subject to the Funds CDSC schedule if such schedule is higher than the CDSC schedule relating to the new Class B shares acquired through use of the exchange privilege. In addition, Class B shares of the fund acquired through use of the exchange privilege will be subject to the Funds CDSC schedule if such schedule is higher than the CDSC schedule relating to the Class B shares of the fund from which the exchange was made. For purposes of computing the CDSC that may be payable on a disposition of the new Class B or Class C shares, the holding period for the outstanding Class B or Class C shares is tacked to the holding period of the new Class B or Class C shares. For example, an investor may exchange Class B shares of the Fund for those of Merrill Lynch Small Cap Value Fund, Inc. (Small Cap Value Fund) after having held the Funds Class B shares for two-and-a-half years. The 3.0% CDSC that generally would apply to a redemption would not apply to the exchange. Four years later the investor may decide to redeem the Class B shares of Small Cap Value Fund and receive cash. There will be no CDSC due on this redemption, since by tacking the two and a half year holding period of the Funds Class B shares to the four-year holding period for the Small Cap Value Fund Class B shares, the investor will be deemed to have held the Small Cap Value Fund Class B shares for more than six years. Class B shares of the Fund and certain other Select Pricing Funds purchased prior to June 1, 2001 are subject to the four-year CDSC schedule in effect at that time. This four-year CDSC schedule will also apply to Class B shares received in exchange for such shares.</R>
Telephone exchange requests are also available in accounts held with the Transfer Agent for amounts up to $50,000. To request an exchange from your account, call the Transfer Agent at 1-800-MER-FUND. The request must be from the shareholder of record. Before telephone requests will be honored, signature approval from all shareholders of record must be obtained. The shares being exchanged must have been held for at least 15 days. Telephone requests for an exchange will not be honored in the following situations: the accountholder is deceased, the request is by an individual other than the accountholder of record, the account is held by joint tenants who are divorced or the address on the account has changed within the last 30 days. Telephone exchanges may be refused if the caller is unable to provide: the account number, the name and address registered on the account and the social security number registered on the account. The Fund or the Transfer Agent may temporarily suspend telephone transactions at any time.
Unless specific instructions are given as to the method of payment, dividends will be automatically reinvested, without sales charge, in additional full and fractional shares of the Fund. Such reinvestment will be at the net asset value of shares of the Fund as determined after the close of business on the NYSE on the monthly payment date for such dividends. No CDSC will be imposed upon redemption of shares issued as a result of the automatic reinvestment of dividends.
Alternatively, a shareholder whose shares are held within a CMA ® or CBA ® Account may elect to have shares redeemed on a monthly, bimonthly, quarterly, semiannual or annual basis through the CMA ® or CBA ® Systematic Redemption Program. The minimum fixed dollar amount redeemable is $50. The proceeds of systematic redemptions will be posted to the shareholders account three business days after the date the shares are redeemed. All redemptions are made at net asset value. A shareholder may elect to have his or her shares redeemed on the first, second, third or fourth Monday of each month, in the case of monthly redemptions, or of every other month, in the case of bimonthly redemptions. For quarterly, semiannual or annual redemptions, the shareholder may select the month in which the shares are to be redeemed and may designate whether the redemption is to be made on the first, second, third or fourth Monday of the month. If the Monday selected is not a business day, the redemption will be processed at net asset value on the next business day. The CMA ® or CBA ® Systematic Redemption Program is not available if Fund shares are being purchased within the account pursuant to the Automated Investment Program. For more information on the CMA ® or CBA ® Systematic Redemption Program, eligible shareholders should contact their Merrill Lynch Financial Advisor.
Dividends paid by the Fund from its ordinary income or from an excess of net short term capital gains over net long term capital losses (together referred to hereafter as ordinary income dividends) are taxable to shareholders as ordinary income. Distributions made from an excess of net long term capital gains over net short term capital losses (including gains or losses from certain transactions in warrants, futures and options) (capital gain dividends) are taxable to shareholders as long term capital gains, regardless of the length of time the shareholder has owned Fund shares. Any loss upon the sale or exchange of Fund shares held for six months or less will be treated as long term capital loss to the extent of any capital gain dividends received by the shareholder. Distributions in excess of the Funds earnings and profits will first reduce the adjusted tax basis of a holders shares and, after such adjusted tax basis is reduced to zero, will constitute capital gains to such holder (assuming the shares are held as a capital asset). Certain categories of capital gains are taxable at different rates. Generally not later than 60 days after the close of its taxable year, the Fund will provide its shareholders with a written notice designating the amount of any capital gain dividends as well as any amount of capital gain dividends in the different categories of capital gain referred to above.
A loss realized on a sale or exchange of shares of the Fund will be disallowed if such shares are acquired (whether through the automatic reinvestment of dividends or otherwise) within a 61-day period beginning 30 days before and ending 30 days after the date that the shares are disposed of. In such case, the basis of the shares acquired will be adjusted to reflect the disallowed loss.
The Fund may write, purchase or sell options, futures and forward foreign exchange contracts. Options and futures contracts that are Section 1256 contracts will be marked to market for Federal income tax purposes at the end of each taxable year, i.e., each such option or futures contract will be treated as sold for its fair market value on the last day of the taxable year. Unless such contract is a forward foreign exchange contract, or is a non-equity option or a regulated futures contract for a foreign currency for which the Fund elects to have gain or loss treated as ordinary gain or loss under Code Section 988 (as described below), gain or loss from Section 1256 contracts will be 60% long-term and 40% short-term capital gain or loss. Application of these rules to Section 1256 contracts held by the Fund may alter the timing and character of distributions to shareholders. The mark-to-market rules outlined above, however, will not apply to certain transactions entered into by the Fund solely to reduce the risk of changes in price or interest or currency exchange rates with respect to its investments.
From
time to time the Fund may include its average annual total return and other
total return data in advertisements or information furnished to present or
prospective shareholders. Total return is based on the Funds historical
performance and is not intended to indicate future performance. Average annual
total return is determined separately for Class A, Class B, Class C and Class
D shares in accordance with a formula specified by the Commission.
Quotations of average annual
total return before tax for the specified periods are computed by finding
the average annual compounded rates of return (based on net investment income
and any realized and unrealized capital gains or losses on portfolio investments
over such periods) that would equate the initial amount invested to the redeemable
value of such investment at the end of each period. Average annual total return
before taxes is computed assuming all dividends are reinvested and taking
into account all applicable recurring and nonrecurring expenses, including
the maximum sales charge in the case of Class A and Class D shares and the
CDSC that would
be applicable to a complete redemption of the investment at the end of the
specified period in the case of Class B and Class C shares but does not take
into account taxes payable on dividends or on redemption.
Quotations of average annual
total return after taxes on dividends for the specified periods are computed
by finding the average annual compounded rates of return that would equate
the initial amount invested to the ending value of such investment at the
end of each period assuming payment of taxes on dividends received during
such period. Average annual total return after taxes on dividends is computed
assuming all dividends, less the taxes due on such dividends, are reinvested
and taking into account all applicable recurring and nonrecurring expenses,
including the maximum sales charge in the case of Class A and Class D shares
and the CDSC that would be applicable to a complete redemption of the investment
at the end of the specified period in the case of Class B and Class C shares.
The taxes due on dividends are calculated by applying to each dividend the
highest marginal Federal individual income tax rates in effect on the reinvestment
date for that dividend. The rates used correspond to the tax character of
each dividend. The taxable amount and tax character of each dividend are specified
by the Fund on the dividend declaration date, but may be adjusted to reflect
subsequent recharacterizations of distributions. The applicable tax rates
may vary over the measurement period. The effects of state and local taxes
are not reflected. Applicable tax credits, such as foreign credits, are taken
into account according to Federal law. The ending value is determined assuming
complete redemption at the end of the applicable periods with no tax consequences
associated with such redemption.
Quotations of average annual
total return after taxes on both dividends and redemption for the specified
periods are computed by finding the average annual compounded rates of return
that would equate the initial amount invested to the ending value of such
investment at the end of each period assuming payment of taxes on dividends
received during such period as well as on complete redemption. Average annual
total return after taxes on distributions and redemption is computed assuming
all dividends, less the taxes due on such dividends, are reinvested and taking
into account all applicable recurring and nonrecurring expenses, including
the maximum sales charge in the case of Class A and Class D shares and the
CDSC that would be applicable to a complete redemption of the investment at
the end of the specified period in the case of Class B and Class C shares
and assuming, for all classes of shares, complete redemption and payment of
taxes due on such redemption. The ending value is determined assuming complete
redemption at the end of the applicable periods, subtracting capital gains
taxes resulting from the redemption and adding the presumed tax benefit from
capital losses resulting from redemption. The taxes due on dividends and on
the deemed redemption are calculated by applying the highest marginal Federal
individual income tax rates in effect on the reinvestment and/or the redemption
date. The rates used correspond to the tax character of each component of
each dividend and/or the redemption payment. The applicable tax rates may
vary over the measurement period. The effects of state and local taxes are
not reflected.
<R>The Fund also may quote annual, average annual and annualized total return and aggregate total return performance data, both as a percentage and as a dollar amount based on a hypothetical investment of $1,000 or some other amount, for various periods other than those noted below. Such data will be computed as described above, except that (1) as required by the periods of the quotations, actual annual, annualized or aggregate data, rather than average annual data, may be quoted and (2) the maximum applicable sales charges will not be included with respect to annual or annualized rates of return calculations. Aside from the impact on the performance data calculations of including or excluding the maximum applicable sales charges, actual annual or annualized total return data generally will be lower than average annual total return data since the average rates of return reflect compounding of return; aggregate total return data generally will be higher than average annual total return data since the aggregate rates of return reflect compounding over a longer period of time.</R>
|
Average
Annual Total Return
After Taxes on Dividends (including maximum applicable sales charge) |
|||||||
|
||||||||
One Year Ended January 31, 2002 |
3.01 |
% |
3.74 |
% |
6.68 |
% |
2.82 |
% |
Five Years Ended January 31, 2002 |
10.20 |
% |
10.29 |
% |
10.53 |
% |
10.03 |
% |
Inception (February 1, 1995) to January 31, 2002 |
12.85 |
% |
12.81 |
% |
12.79 |
% |
12.66 |
% |
|
Average
Annual Total Return
After Taxes on Dividends and Redemptions (including maximum applicable sales charge) |
|||||||
|
||||||||
One Year Ended January 31, 2002 |
2.87 |
% |
3.30 |
% |
5.11 |
% |
2.73 |
% |
Five Years Ended January 31, 2002 |
9.45 |
% |
9.48 |
% |
9.67 |
% |
9.28 |
% |
Inception (February 1, 1995) to January 31, 2002 |
11.77 |
% |
11.68 |
% |
11.66 |
% |
11.58 |
% |
</R> |
The Fund may provide information designed to help investors understand how the Fund is seeking to achieve its investment objectives. This may include information about past, current or possible economic, market, political, or other conditions, descriptive information on general principles of investing such as asset allocation, diversification and risk tolerance, discussion of the Funds portfolio composition, investment philosophy, strategy or investment techniques, comparisons of the Funds performance or portfolio composition to that of other funds or types of investments, indices relevant to the comparison being made, or to a hypothetical or model portfolio. The Fund may also quote various measures of volatility and benchmark correlation in advertising and other materials, and may compare these measures to those of other funds or types of investments. As with other performance data, performance comparisons should not be considered indicative of the Funds relative performance for any future period.
<R>To the knowledge of the Fund, the following persons or entities owned beneficially or of record 5% or more of any class of stock of the Fund as of May 10, 2002:
Name
|
Address
|
Percentage
and Class |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Merrill
Lynch Trust Company*
Trustee FBO Merrill Lynch |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
22.41% of Class A | ||
Merrill
Lynch Trust Company*
Trustee FBO COBANK |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
19.09% of Class A | ||
Merrill
Lynch Trust Company*
Trustee FBO Merrill Lynch |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
7.59% of Class A | ||
</R> |
*
|
Merrill Lynch Trust Company is the record holder on behalf of certain employee retirement, personal trust or savings plan
accounts for which it acts as trustee.
|
<R></R>
PROSPECTUS
·
May 29, 2002
Mercury U.S. Government Securities Fund
|
The Securities And
Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved these securities or passed
upon the adequacy of this Prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is
a criminal offense.
[LOGO]
MERCURY FUNDS
PAGE
|
||
---|---|---|
[GRAPHIC] | ||
FUND FACTS | ||
|
||
About the Mercury U.S. Government Securities Fund |
2
|
|
Risk/Return Bar Chart |
4
|
|
Fees and Expenses |
6
|
|
[GRAPHIC] | ||
ABOUT THE DETAILS | ||
|
||
How the Fund Invests |
8
|
|
Investment Risks | 9 | |
Statement of Additional Information |
14
|
|
[GRAPHIC] | ||
ACCOUNT CHOICES | ||
|
||
Pricing of Shares |
15
|
|
How to Buy, Sell, Transfer and Exchange Shares |
20
|
|
How Shares are Priced |
25
|
|
Participation in Fee-Based Programs |
25
|
|
Dividends and Taxes |
26
|
|
[GRAPHIC] | ||
THE MANAGEMENT TEAM | ||
|
||
Management of the Fund |
28
|
|
Financial Highlights |
29
|
|
[GRAPHIC] | ||
TO LEARN MORE | ||
|
||
Shareholder Reports |
Back
Cover
|
|
Statement of Additional Information |
Back
Cover
|
It is anticipated that a meeting of the stockholders of the Fund to consider the Reorganization will be called for August 23, 2002. Stockholders of the Fund of record as of June 21, 2002 will be entitled to receive notice of and to vote at such meeting. If approved, it is anticipated that the Reorganization will take place in late 2002.</R>
|
Are looking for an investment that provides income
|
|
Want a professionally managed portfolio
|
|
Are willing to accept the risk that the value of your investment may decline as the result of interest rate movements in
order to seek high current return
|
|
Are looking for an investment that provides current return with relatively minimal credit risk
|
[GRAPHIC] Fund Facts
[GRAPH] 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- 4.57% 8.95% 8.42% 0.08% 10.05% 6.29%
<R>During the period shown in the bar chart, the highest return for a quarter was 4.44% (quarter ended September 30, 1998) and the lowest return for a quarter was -0.85% (quarter ended June 30, 1999). The year-to-date return as of March 31, 2002 was 0.61%.</R>
*
|
Includes sales charges.
|
**
|
This unmanaged Index reflects the performance of a capital market weighting of the outstanding agency-issued
mortgage-backed securities. Past performance is not predictive of future performance.
|
|
Inception
date is February 1, 1995.<R>
|
[GRAPHIC] Fund Facts
(a)
|
Certain
securities dealers or other financial intermediaries may charge a fee
to process a purchase or sale of shares. See How to Buy, Sell, Transfer
and Exchange Shares.
|
(b)
|
Class
B shares automatically convert to Class A shares approximately ten years
after you buy them and will no longer be subject to distribution fees.
|
(c)
|
Some
investors may qualify for reductions in the sales charge (load).
|
(d)
|
You
may pay a deferred sales charge if you purchase $1 million or more and
you redeem within one year.
|
(e)
|
The
Fund calls the Service Fee an Account Maintenance Fee.
Account Maintenance Fee is the term used elsewhere in this Prospectus
and in all other Fund materials. If you hold Class B or C shares, over
time, it may cost you more in distribution (12b-1) fees than the maximum
sales charge that you would have paid if you had bought one of the other
classes.
|
(f)
|
Financial
Data Services, Inc., an affiliate of the Investment Adviser, provides
transfer agency services to the Fund. The Fund pays a fee for these services.
The Investment Adviser or its affiliates also provide certain accounting
services to the Fund and the Fund reimburses the Investment Adviser or
its affiliates for such services.
|
(g)
|
The
Investment Adviser has agreed to voluntarily waive management fees and/or
reimburse expenses. The Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses shown in
the table does not reflect such voluntary management fee waiver and/or
reimbursement of expenses because they may be discontinued by the Investment
Adviser at any time without notice. During the fiscal year ended January
31, 2002, the Investment Adviser waived management of $252,010 fees and
reimbursed expenses totaling $314,841. After taking into account the fee
levels described above and such waiver and reimbursement, the total expense
ratio was 0.25% for Class A, 0.75% for Class B and 0.80% for Class C.
All expenses for Class I were reimbursed.
</R>
|
Example:
Expenses if you did redeem your shares:
<R> | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Class I | Class A | Class B | Class C | ||||||
|
|||||||||
One Year | $ 508 | $ 533 | $ 590 | $ 297 | |||||
|
|||||||||
Three Years | $ 736 | $ 814 | $ 888 | $ 609 | |||||
|
|||||||||
Five Years | $ 982 | $1,115 | $1,211 | $1,047 | |||||
|
|||||||||
Ten Years | $1,687 | $1,970 | $2,190 | $2,264 | |||||
|
|||||||||
</R> |
<R> | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Class I | Class A | Class B | Class C | ||||||
|
|||||||||
One Year | $ 508 | $ 533 | $ 190 | $ 197 | |||||
|
|||||||||
Three Years | $ 736 | $ 814 | $ 588 | $ 609 | |||||
|
|||||||||
Five Years | $ 982 | $1,115 | $1,011 | $1,047 | |||||
|
|||||||||
Ten Years | $1,687 | $1,970 | $2,190 | $2,264 | |||||
|
|||||||||
</R> |
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
The Fund will normally invest a portion of its assets in short term U.S. government and government agency debt securities, such as Treasury bills. As a temporary measure for defensive purposes, the Fund may invest more heavily in these securities, without limitation. The Fund may also increase its investment in these securities when Fund management is unable to find enough attractive longer term investments, to reduce exposure to longer term investments when management believes it is advisable to do so on a temporary basis, or to meet redemptions. Investments in short term securities can be sold easily and have limited risk of loss but earn only limited returns. Short term investments may, therefore, limit the potential for the Fund to achieve its investment objective.
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
Mortgage-Backed Securities Mortgage-backed securities represent the right to receive a portion of principal and/or interest payments made on a pool of residential or commercial mortgage loans. When interest rates fall, borrowers may refinance or otherwise repay principal on their mortgages earlier than scheduled. When this happens, certain types of mortgage-backed securities will be paid off more quickly than originally
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
anticipated and the Fund has to invest the proceeds in securities with lower yields. This risk is known as prepayment risk. When interest rates rise, certain types of mortgage-backed securities will be paid off more slowly than originally anticipated and the value of these securities will fall. This risk is known as extension risk.
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
|
Credit
Risk
the
risk that the counterparty (the party on the other side of the transaction)
on a derivative transaction will be unable to honor its financial obligations
to the Fund.
|
|
Leverage
Risk
the
risk associated with certain types of investments or trading strategies
that relatively small market movements may result in large changes in
the value of an investment. Certain investments or trading strategies
that involve leverage can result in losses that greatly exceed the amount
originally invested.
|
|
Liquidity
Risk
the
risk that certain securities may be difficult or impossible to sell at
the time that the seller would like or at the price that the seller believes
the security is currently worth.
|
Indexed and Inverse Floater Securities The Fund may invest in debt securities the potential returns of which are directly related to changes in an underlying index or interest rate, known as indexed securities. The return on indexed securities will rise when the underlying index or interest rate rises and fall when the index or interest rate falls. The Fund may also invest in securities whose return is inversely related to changes in an index or interest rate. In general, inverse securities change in value in a manner that is opposite to most securitiesthat is, the return of inverse securities will decrease when interest rates increase. Investments in indexed and inverse securities may subject the Fund to the risks of reduced or eliminated interest payments and losses of principal. In addition, certain indexed and inverse securities may increase or decrease in value at a greater rate than the underlying index, which effectively leverages the Funds investment. As a result, the market value of such securities will generally be more volatile than that of other securities.
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
Borrowing and Leverage The Fund may borrow for temporary emergency purposes including to meet redemptions. Borrowing may exaggerate changes in the net asset value of the Funds shares and in the return on the Funds portfolio. Borrowing will cost the Fund interest expense and other fees. The costs of borrowing may reduce the Funds return. Certain securities that the Fund buys may create leverage including, for example, derivatives, when issued securities, futures, forward commitments and options. The use of investments that create leverage subjects the Fund to the risk that relatively small market movement may result in large changes in the value of an investment and may result in losses that greatly exceed the amount invested.
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
Securities Lending The Fund may lend securities with a value not exceeding 33 1 / 3 % of its assets to financial institutions that provide cash or securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government as collateral. Securities lending involves the risk that the borrower may fail to return the securities in a timely manner or at all. As a result, the Fund may lose money and there may be a delay in recovering the loaned securities. The Fund could also lose money if it does not recover the securities and/or the value of the collateral falls, including the value of investments made with cash collateral. These events could trigger adverse tax consequences to the Fund.
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
If you would like further information about the Fund, including how the Fund invests, please see the Statement of Additional Information.
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
The Funds shares are distributed by FAM Distributors, Inc., an affiliate of the Investment Adviser.
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
Class I | Class A | Class B | Class C | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|||||||||
Availability |
Limited to certain
investors including: |
Generally available
through selected |
Generally available
through selected |
Generally available
through selected |
|||||
Current
Class I
shareholders Certain Retirement |
securities dealers and
other financial intermediaries. |
securities dealers and
other financial intermediaries. |
securities dealers and
other financial intermediaries. |
||||||
Plans
Participants in certain sponsored programs. |
|||||||||
Certain affiliates of
selected securities dealers and other financial intermediaries. |
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
Initial Sales
Charge? |
Yes. Payable at time of
purchase. Lower sales charges available for certain larger investments. |
Yes. Payable at time of
purchase. Lower sales charges available for certain larger investments. |
No. Entire purchase
price is invested in shares of the Fund. |
No. Entire purchase
price is invested in shares of the Fund. |
|||||
|
|||||||||
Deferred Sales
Charge? |
No. (May be charged
for purchases over $1 million that are redeemed within one year.) |
No. (May be charged
for purchases over $1 million that are redeemed within one year.) |
Yes. Payable if you
redeem within six years of purchase. |
Yes. Payable if you
redeem within one year of purchase. |
|||||
|
|||||||||
Account
Maintenance and Distribution Fees? |
No. |
0.25% Account
Maintenance Fee. No Distribution Fee. |
0.25% Account
Maintenance Fee. 0.50% Distribution Fee. |
0.25% Account
Maintenance Fee. 0.55% Distribution Fee. |
|||||
|
|||||||||
Conversion to
Class A Shares? |
No. | N/A |
Yes, automatically after
approximately ten years. |
No. | |||||
|
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
Your Investment |
As a % of
Offering Price |
As a % of
Your Investment* |
Dealer
Compensation as a % of Offering Price |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|||||||
Less than $25,000 | 4.00% | 4.17% | 3.75% | ||||
|
|||||||
$25,000 but less
than $50,000 |
3.75% | 3.90% | 3.50% | ||||
|
|||||||
$50,000 but less
than $100,000 |
3.25% | 3.36% | 3.00% | ||||
|
|||||||
$100,000 but less
than $250,000 |
2.50% | 2.56% | 2.25% | ||||
|
|||||||
$250,000 but less
than $1,000,000 |
1.50% | 1.52% | 1.25% | ||||
|
|||||||
$1,000,000 and over** | 0.00% | 0.00% | 0.00% | ||||
|
*
|
Rounded
to the nearest one-hundredth percent.
<R>
|
**
|
If
you invest $1,000,000 or more in Class I or Class A shares, you may not
pay an initial sales charge. In that case, the Investment Adviser compensates
the selling dealer from its own resources. If you redeem your shares within
one year after purchase, you may be charged a deferred sales charge. This
charge is 1.00% of the lesser of the original cost of the shares being
redeemed or your redemption proceeds. A sales charge of 0.75% will be
charged on purchases of $1,000,000 or more of Class I and Class A shares
by certain employer-sponsored retirement or savings plans.
</R>
|
|
Purchases under a
Right of Accumulation
or
Letter of Intent
|
|
Certain trusts managed by banks, thrifts or trust companies including those affiliated with the Investment Adviser or its
affiliates
|
|
Certain employer-sponsored retirement or savings plans
|
|
Certain investors, including directors or trustees of mutual funds sponsored by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates,
employees of the Investment Adviser and its affiliates and employees or customers of selected dealers
|
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
|
Certain fee-based programs managed by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates and other financial intermediaries that have
agreements with the Distributor or its affiliates
|
|
Certain fee-based programs of selected dealers and other financial intermediaries that have an agreement with the Distributor
or its affiliates
|
|
Purchases through certain financial advisers that meet and adhere to standards established by the Investment Adviser or its
affiliates
|
|
Purchases through certain accounts over which the Investment Adviser or an affiliate exercises investment
discretion
|
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
Year Since Purchase | Sales Charge* | ||
---|---|---|---|
|
|||
0-1 | 4.00% | ||
|
|||
1-2 | 4.00% | ||
|
|||
2-3 | 3.00% | ||
|
|||
3-4 | 3.00% | ||
|
|||
4-5 | 2.00% | ||
|
|||
5-6 | 1.00% | ||
|
|||
6 and thereafter | 0.00% | ||
|
*
|
<R>
The
percentage charge will apply to the lesser of the original cost of the
shares being redeemed or the proceeds of your redemption. Shares acquired
by dividend reinvestment are not subject to a deferred sales charge. Mercury funds may not all have identical deferred sales charge schedules.
If you exchange your shares for the shares of another Mercury fund, the
higher charge, if any, would apply.
<R>
|
|
Certain post-retirement withdrawals from an IRA or other retirement plan if you are over 59
1
/
2
years old
|
|
Redemption
by certain eligible 401(a) and 401(k) plans and certain retirement plan
rollovers
<R>
|
|
Redemption
in connection with participation in certain fee-based programs managed
by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates or in connection with involuntary
termination of an account in which Fund shares are held
|
|
Redemption
in connection with participation in certain fee-based programs managed
by selected securities dealers or other financial intermediaries that
have agreements with the Distributor or its affiliates
</R>
|
|
Withdrawals resulting from shareholder death or disability as long as the waiver request is made within one year after death
or disability or, if later, reasonably promptly following completion of probate
|
|
Withdrawal through the Systematic Withdrawal Plan of up to 10% per year of your Class B account value at the time the plan is
established
|
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
The chart on the following pages summarizes how to buy, sell, transfer and exchange shares through your financial advisor, a selected securities dealer, broker, investment adviser, service provider or other financial intermediary. You may also buy shares through the Transfer Agent. To learn more about buying shares through the Transfer Agent, call 1-888-763-2260. Because the selection of a mutual fund involves many considerations, your financial advisor or financial intermediary may help you with this decision. The Fund does not issue share certificates.
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
If you want to | Your choices | Information important for you to know | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|||||
Transfer
shares to
another securities dealer or other financial intermediary |
Transfer
to a participating
securities dealer or other financial intermediary |
You
may transfer your Fund shares to another securities dealer or
other financial intermediary if authorized agreements are in place between the Distributor and the transferring securities dealer or financial intermediary and the Distributor and the receiving securities dealer or other financial intermediary. Certain shareholder services may not be available for all transferred shares. You may only purchase additional shares of a fund previously owned before transfer. All future trading of these shares must be coordinated by the receiving securities dealer or other financial intermediary. |
|||
|
|||||
Transfer
to a non-participating
securities dealer or other financial intermediary |
You
cannot transfer your shares of the Fund to a securities
dealer or financial intermediary that does not have an authorized dealer agreement with the Distributor. |
||||
You must either: | |||||
Transfer
your shares to an account with the Transfer Agent;
or |
|||||
Sell your shares, paying any applicable deferred sales charge. <R> | |||||
|
|||||
Sell your shares |
Have
your financial advisor,
selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary submit your sales order |
The
price of your shares is based on the next calculation of net
asset value after your order is placed. For your redemption request to be priced at the net asset value on the day of your request, you must submit your request to your dealer or other financial intermediary prior to that days close of business on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). Certain financial intermediaries, however, may require submission of orders prior to that time. Generally, any redemption request placed after that time will be priced at the net asset value at the close of business on the next business day. |
|||
Certain
securities dealers or other financial intermediaries may
charge a fee to process a sale of shares. For example Merrill Lynch currently charges a fee of $5.35. No processing fee is charged if you redeem shares directly through the Transfer Agent. |
|||||
The
Fund may reject an order to sell shares under certain
circumstances. |
|||||
|
|||||
Sell through the Transfer Agent |
You
may sell shares held at the Transfer Agent by writing to
the Transfer Agent at the address on the inside back cover of this Prospectus. All shareholders on the account must sign the letter. A signature guarantee generally will be required but may be waived in certain limited circumstances. You can obtain a signature guarantee from a bank, securities dealer, securities broker, credit union, savings association, national securities exchange or registered securities association. A notary public seal will not be acceptable. The Transfer Agent will normally mail redemption proceeds within seven days following receipt of a properly completed request. If you make a redemption request before the Fund has collected payment for the purchase of shares, the Fund or the Transfer Agent may delay mailing your proceeds. This delay usually will not exceed ten days. </R> |
||||
You
may also sell shares held at the Transfer Agent by
telephone request if the amount being sold is less than $50,000 and if certain other conditions are met. Contact the Transfer Agent at 1-888-763-2260 for details. |
|||||
|
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
If you want to | Your choices | Information important for you to know | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|||||
Sell
shares
systematically |
Participate
in the Funds
Systematic Withdrawal Plan |
You
can choose to receive systematic payments from your Fund
account either by check or through direct deposit to your bank account on a monthly or quarterly basis. You can generally arrange through your selected dealer or financial intermediary for systematic sales of shares of a fixed dollar amount on a monthly, bi-monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or annual basis, subject to certain conditions. You must have dividends automatically reinvested. <R> For Class B and Class C shares your total annual withdrawals cannot be more than 10% per year of the value of your shares at the time your plan is established. The deferred sales charge is waived for systematic redemptions. Ask your financial advisor, selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary for details. </R> |
|||
|
|||||
Exchange
your shares |
Select
the fund into which
you want to exchange. Be sure to read that funds prospectus |
You
can exchange your shares of the Fund for shares of other
Mercury mutual funds or for shares of the Summit Cash Reserves Fund. You must have held the shares used in the exchange for at least 15 calendar days before you can exchange to another fund. |
|||
Each
class of Fund shares is generally exchangeable for shares of
the same class of another Mercury fund. If you own Class I shares and wish to exchange into a fund in which you have no Class I shares (and are not eligible to buy Class I shares), you will exchange into Class A shares. If you own Class I or Class A shares and wish to exchange into Summit, you will exchange into Class A shares of Summit. Class B or Class C shares can be exchanged for Class B shares of Summit. <R> |
|||||
Some
of the Mercury mutual funds may impose a different initial
or deferred sales charge schedule. If you exchange Class I or Class A shares for shares of a fund with a higher initial sales charge than you originally paid, you may be charged the difference at the time of exchange. If you exchange Class B or Class C shares for shares of a fund with a different deferred sales charge schedule, the higher schedule will generally apply. The time you hold Class B or Class C shares in both funds will count when determining your holding period for calculating a deferred sales charge at redemption. Your time in both funds will also count when determining the holding period for a conversion from Class B to Class A shares. To exercise the exchange privilege contact your financial advisor, selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary or call the Transfer Agent at 1-888-763-2260. </R> |
|||||
Although
there is currently no limit on the number of exchanges
that you can make, the exchange privilege may be modified or terminated at any time in the future. |
|||||
|
Short term or excessive trading into and out of the Fund may harm performance by disrupting portfolio management strategies
and by increasing expenses. Accordingly, the Fund may reject any purchase orders, including exchanges, particularly from market timers or investors who, in Fund managements opinion, have a pattern of short term or excessive trading or whose
trading has been or may be disruptive to the Fund. For these purposes, Fund management may consider an investors trading history in the Fund or other affiliated funds, and accounts under common ownership or control.
|
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
You generally cannot transfer shares held through a fee-based program into another account. Instead, you will have to redeem your shares held through the program and purchase shares of another class, which may be subject to
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
distribution and account maintenance fees. This may be a taxable event and you will pay any applicable sales charges.
<R> If you are neither a lawful permanent resident nor a citizen of the U.S. or if you are a foreign entity, the Funds ordinary income dividends (which include distributions of the excess of net short term capital gains over net long term capital losses) will generally be subject to a 30% U.S. withholding tax, unless a lower treaty rate applies. </R>
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
This section summarizes some of the consequences under current Federal tax law of an investment in the Fund. It is not a substitute for personal tax advice. Consult your personal tax adviser about the potential tax consequences of an investment in the Fund under all applicable tax laws.
Class I
|
Class A
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Increase (Decrease) in |
For the Year Ended January 31,
|
For the Year Ended January 31,
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net Asset Value: | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999 | 1998 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999 | 1998 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Per Share Operating Performance: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, beginning of year | $10.41 | $ 9.85 | $10.52 | $10.48 | $10.20 | $10.41 | $ 9.84 | $10.52 | $10.48 | $10.20 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment income net | .57 | .66 | .64 | .64 | .69 | .55 | .64 | .61 | .61 | .67 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Realized
and unrealized gain (loss) on
investments net |
.13 | .56 | (.67 | ) | .21 | .35 | .12 | .57 | (.68 | ) | .21 | .35 | |||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total from investment operations | .70 | 1.22 | (.03 | ) | .85 | 1.04 | .67 | 1.21 | (.07 | ) | .82 | 1.02 | |||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Less dividends and distributions: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment income net | (.57 | ) | (.66 | ) | (.64 | ) | (.64 | ) | (.69 | ) | (.55 | ) | (.64 | ) | (.61 | ) | (.61 | ) | (.67 | ) | |||||||||
Realized gain on investments net | (.02 | ) | | | (.17 | ) | (.07 | ) | (.02 | ) | | | (.17 | ) | (.07 | ) | |||||||||||||
In excess of realized gain on investments net | | | | | | | | | | | | | |||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total dividends and distributions | (.59 | ) | (.66 | ) | (.64 | ) | (.81 | ) | (.76 | ) | (.57 | ) | (.64 | ) | (.61 | ) | (.78 | ) | (.74 | ) | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, end of year | $10.52 | $10.41 | $ 9.85 | $10.52 | $10.48 | $10.51 | $10.41 | $ 9.84 | $10.52 | $10.48 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total Investment Return:* | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Based on net asset value per share | 6.89 | % | 12.85 | % | (.28 | %) | 8.39 | % | 10.66 | % | 6.53 | % | 12.68 | % | (.63 | %) | 8.12 | % | 10.38 | % | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ratios to Average Net Assets: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Expenses, net of reimbursement | .00 | % | .00 | % | .00 | % | .00 | % | .00 | % | .25 | % | .25 | % | .25 | % | .25 | % | .25 | % | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Expenses | 1.10 | % | 1.38 | % | 1.38 | % | 1.73 | % | 2.00 | % | 1.36 | % | 1.63 | % | 1.67 | % | 1.67 | % | 2.25 | % | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment income net | 5.37 | % | 6.49 | % | 6.22 | % | 6.13 | % | 6.80 | % | 5.08 | % | 6.26 | % | 6.02 | % | 5.73 | % | 6.53 | % | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Supplemental Data: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net assets, end of year (in thousands) | $4,700 | $ 600 | $ 140 | $1,278 | $3,233 | $5,413 | $1,980 | $ 708 | $1,701 | $ 315 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Portfolio turnover | 185.42 | % | 84.53 | % | 91.75 | % | 310.91 | % | 361.31 | % | 185.42 | % | 84.53 | % | 91.75 | % | 310.91 | % | 361.31 | % | |||||||||
|
*
|
Total investment returns exclude the effects of
sales charges.
|
|
Amount
is less than $.01 per share.
|
|
Prior
to April 3, 2000, Class I shares were designated as Class A shares, and
Class A shares were designated as Class D shares.</R>
|
[GRAPHIC] The Management Team
*
|
Total
investment returns exclude the effects of sales charges.
|
|
Amount
is less than $.01 per share.
|
To Learn More
Additional information about the Funds investments is available in the Funds annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders. In the Funds Annual Report you will find a discussion of the relevant market conditions and investment strategies that significantly affected the Funds performance during its last fiscal year. You may obtain these reports at no cost by calling 1-888-763-2260.
<R> If you hold your Fund shares through a brokerage account or directly at the Transfer Agent, you may receive only one copy of each shareholder report and certain other mailings regardless of the number of Fund accounts you have. If you prefer to receive separate shareholder reports for each account (or if you are receiving multiple copies and prefer to receive only one), call your financial advisor or other financial intermediary or write to the Transfer Agent at its mailing address. Include your name, address, tax identification number and brokerage or mutual fund account number. If you have any questions, please call your financial advisor or other financial intermediary or call the Transfer Agent at 1-888-763-2260. </R>
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
The Funds Statement of Additional Information contains further information about the Fund and is incorporated by reference (legally considered to be part of this prospectus). You may request a free copy by writing or calling the Fund at Financial Data Services, Inc., P.O. Box 44064, Jacksonville, Florida 32232-4062 or by calling 1-888-763-2260.
<R> Contact your financial advisor or other financial intermediary, or contact the Fund at the telephone number or address indicated above if you have any questions. </R>
Information about the Funds (including the Statement of Additional Information) can be reviewed and copied at the SECs Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. Call 1-202-942-8090 for information on the operation of the Public Reference Room. This information is also available on the SECs Internet Site at http://www.sec.gov and copies may be obtained upon payment of a duplicating fee, by electronic request at the following e-mail address: publicinfo@sec.gov, or by writing the Public Reference Section of the SEC, Washington, D.C. 20549-0102.
You should rely only on the information contained in this Prospectus. No one is authorized to provide you with information that is different from information in this Prospectus.
<R>
Investment Company Act File #811-7177.
Code #MF-19096-05-02
[LOGO] MERCURY FUNDS
800 Scudders Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536
866-MERCURY
FAM Distributors, Inc. Member NASD
www.mercuryfunds.com </R>
The average maturity of the Funds holdings will vary based on the Investment Advisers assessment of pertinent economic and market conditions. As with all debt securities, changes in market yields will affect the value of such securities. Prices generally increase when interest rates decline and decrease when interest rates rise. Prices of longer term securities generally fluctuate more in response to interest rate changes than do shorter term securities. In as much as the Fund invests in mortgage-backed securities, however, it is also important to note that the Funds net asset value may also fall when interest rates fall to the extent the Funds holdings expose the Fund to losses from prepayment risk. See GNMA Certificates and Other Mortgage-Backed Government Securities below.
GNMA Certificates and Other Mortgage-Backed Government SecuritiesThe Fund will invest a significant portion of its assets in GNMA Certificates and other mortgage-backed government securities. GNMA Certificates are mortgage-backed securities of the modified pass-through type, which means that both interest and principal payments (including prepayments) are passed through monthly to the
holder of the Certificate. The National Housing Act provides that the full faith and credit of the United States is pledged to the timely payment of principal and interest by GNMA of amounts due on these GNMA Certificates. Each Certificate evidences an interest in a specific pool of mortgage loans insured by the FHA or the Farmers Home Administration or guaranteed by the Veterans Administration (VA). GNMA is a wholly-owned corporate instrumentality of the United States within the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities . The Fund may invest in stripped mortgage-backed securities (SMBSs) issued by agencies or instrumentalities of the United States. SMBSs are derivative multiclass mortgage-backed securities. SMBS arrangements commonly involve two classes of securities that receive different proportions of the interest and principal distributions on a pool of mortgage assets. A common variety of SMBS is where one class (the principal-only or PO class) receives some of the interest and most of the principal from the underlying assets, while the other class (the interest-only or IO class) receives most of the interest and the remainder of the principal. In the most extreme case, the IO class receives all of the interest, while the PO class receives all of the principal. The yield to maturity of an IO class is extremely sensitive to the rate of principal payments (including prepayments) on the related underlying assets, and a rapid rate of principal payments in excess of that considered in pricing the securities will have a material adverse effect on an IO securitys yield to maturity. If the underlying mortgage assets experience greater than anticipated payments of principal, the Fund may fail to recoup fully its initial investment in IOs. In addition, there are certain types of IOs which represent the interest portion of a particular class as opposed to the interest portion of the entire pool. The sensitivity of this type
of IO to interest rate fluctuations may be increased because of the characteristics of the principal portion to which they relate. As a result of the above factors, the Fund generally will purchase IOs only as a component of so-called synthetic securities. This means that purchases of IOs will be matched with certain purchases of other securities such as POs, inverse floating rate collateralized mortgage obligations (CMOs) or fixed rate securities; as interest rates fall, presenting a greater risk of unanticipated prepayments of principal, the negative effect on the Fund because of its holdings of IOs should be diminished somewhat because of the increased yield on the inverse floating rate CMOs or the increased appreciation on the POs or fixed rate securities. IOs and POs of SMBSs are considered by the staff of the Commission to be illiquid securities and, consequently, as long as the staff maintains this position, the Fund will not invest in IOs or POs in an amount which, taken together with the Funds other investments in illiquid securities, exceeds 15% (10% to the extent required by certain state laws) of the Funds total assets.
There can be no assurance that the securities subject to a standby commitment will be issued, and the value of the security, if issued, on the delivery date may be more or less than its purchase price. Since the issuance of the security underlying the commitment is at the option of the issuer, the Fund may bear the risk of a decline in the value of such security and may not benefit from an appreciation in the value of the security during the commitment period.
Illiquid or Restricted Securities. The Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in securities that lack an established secondary trading market or otherwise are considered illiquid. Liquidity of a security relates to the ability to dispose easily of the security and the price to be obtained upon disposition of the security, which may be less than would be obtained for a comparable more liquid security. Illiquid securities may trade at a discount from
comparable, more liquid investments. Investment of the Funds assets in illiquid securities may restrict the ability of the Fund to dispose of that investment in a timely fashion and for a fair price as well as its ability to take advantage of market opportunities. The risks associated with illiquidity will be particularly acute where the Funds operations require cash, such as when the Fund redeems shares or pays dividends, and could result in the Fund borrowing to meet short-term cash requirements or incurring capital losses on the sale of illiquid investments.
Borrowing and Leverage . The Fund may borrow up to 33 1 / 3 % of its total assets, taken at market value, but only from banks as a temporary measure for extraordinary or emergency purposes, including to meet redemptions or to settle securities transactions. The Fund will not purchase securities at any time when borrowings exceed 5% of its total assets, except (a) to honor prior commitments or (b) to exercise subscription rights when outstanding borrowings have been obtained exclusively for settlements of other securities transactions. The purchase of securities while borrowings are outstanding will have the effect of leveraging the Fund. Such leveraging increases the Funds exposure to capital risk, and borrowed funds are subject to interest costs that will reduce net income. The use of leverage by the Fund creates an opportunity for greater total return, but, at the same time, creates special risks. For example, leveraging may exaggerate changes in the net asset value of Fund shares and in the yield on the Funds portfolio. Although the principal of such borrowings will be fixed, the Funds assets may change in value during the time the borrowings are outstanding. Borrowings will create interest expenses for the Fund which can exceed the income from the assets purchased with the borrowings. To the extent the income or capital
appreciation derived from securities purchased with borrowed funds exceeds the interest the Fund will have to pay on the borrowings, the Funds return will be greater than if leverage had not been used. Conversely, if the income or capital appreciation from the securities purchased with such borrowed funds is not sufficient to cover the cost of borrowing, the return to the Fund will be less than if leverage had not been used, and therefore the amount available for distribution to shareholders as dividends will be reduced. In the latter case, the Investment Adviser in its best judgment nevertheless may determine to maintain the Funds leveraged position if it expects that the benefits to the Funds shareholders of maintaining the leveraged position will outweigh the current reduced return.
Certain types of borrowings by the Fund may result in the Fund being subject to covenants in credit agreements relating to asset coverage, portfolio composition requirements and other matters. It is not anticipated that observance of such covenants would impede the Investment Adviser from managing the Funds portfolio in accordance with the Funds investment objectives and policies. However, a breach of any such covenants not cured within the specified cure period may result in acceleration of outstanding indebtedness and require the Fund to dispose of portfolio investments at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so.The Fund at times may borrow from affiliates of the Investment Adviser, provided that the terms of such borrowings are no less favorable than those available from comparable sources of funds in the marketplace.
Options and Futures Transactions. The Fund may engage in various portfolio strategies to seek to increase its return through the use of listed or over-the-counter (OTC) options on its portfolio securities and to hedge its portfolio against adverse movements in the markets in which it invests. The Fund is authorized to write ( i.e. , sell)
covered put and call options on its portfolio securities or securities in which it anticipates investing and purchase put and call options on securities. The Fund may also engage in transactions in interest rate futures and related options on such futures. Although certain risks are involved in options and futures transactions, the Investment Adviser believes that, because the Fund will (i) write only covered options on portfolio securities or securities in which they anticipate investing and (ii) engage in other options and futures transactions only for hedging purposes, the options and portfolio strategies of the Fund will not subject it to the risks frequently associated with the speculative use of options and futures transactions. While the Funds use of hedging strategies is intended to reduce the volatility of the net asset value of its shares, its net asset value will fluctuate. There can be no assurance that the Funds hedging transactions will be effective. Furthermore, the Fund will only engage in hedging activities from time to time and may not necessarily be engaging in hedging activities when movements in the equity or debt markets, interest rates or currency exchange rates occur.
The Fund also may write put options which give the holder of the option the right to sell the underlying security to the Fund at the stated exercise price. The Fund will receive a premium for writing a put option, which increases the Funds return. The Fund writes only covered put options, which means that so long as the Fund is obligated as the writer of the option it will, through its custodian, have deposited and maintained cash, cash equivalents, U.S. Government securities or other high grade liquid debt securities denominated in U.S. dollars with a securities depository with a value equal to or greater than the exercise price of the underlying securities. By writing a put, the Fund will be obligated to purchase the underlying security at a price that may be higher than the market value of that security at the time of exercise for so long as the option is outstanding. The Fund may engage in closing transactions in order to terminate put options that it has written.
A closing purchase transaction is effected by purchasing on an exchange an option of the same series ( i.e. , same underlying security, exercise price and expiration date) as the option previously written. Such a purchase does not result in the ownership of an option. A closing purchase transaction ordinarily will be effected to realize a profit on an outstanding call option, to prevent an underlying security from being called, to permit the sale of the underlying security or to permit the writing of a new call option containing different terms on such underlying security. The cost of such a liquidation purchase plus transaction costs may be greater than the premium received upon the original option, in which event the Fund will have incurred a loss in the transaction. An option may be closed out only on an exchange which provides a secondary market for an option of the same series and there is no assurance that a liquid secondary market on an exchange will exist for any particular option. A covered option writer unable to effect a closing purchase transaction will not be able to sell the underlying security until the option expires or the underlying security is delivered upon exercise, with the result that the writer will be subject to the risk of market decline in the underlying security during such period. The Fund will write an option on a particular security only if management believes that a liquid secondary market will exist on an exchange for options of the same series which will permit the Fund to make a closing purchase transaction in order to close out its position.
The Fund may engage in options and futures transactions on U.S. exchanges and in the over-the-counter markets (OTC options). In general, exchange-traded contracts are third-party contracts ( i.e., performance of the parties obligations is guaranteed by an exchange or clearing corporation) with standardized strike prices and expiration dates. OTC options are two-party contracts with prices and terms negotiated by the buyer and seller. See Restrictions on OTC Options below for information as to restrictions on the use of OTC options.
Restrictions on the Use of Futures Transactions. Regulations of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the CFTC) applicable to the Fund provide that the futures trading activities described herein will not result in the Fund being deemed a commodity pool as defined under such regulations if the Fund adheres to certain restrictions. In particular, the Fund may purchase and sell futures contracts and options thereon (i) for bona fide
hedging purposes and (ii) for non-hedging purposes, if the aggregate initial margin and premiums required to establish positions in such contracts and options does not exceed 5% of the liquidation value of the Funds holdings, after taking into account unrealized profits and unrealized losses on any such contracts and options. Margin deposits may consist of cash or securities acceptable to the broker and the relevant contract market.
Risks Factors in Options and Futures Transactions. Utilization of options and futures transactions to hedge a Fund involves the risk of imperfect correlation in movements in the price of options and futures and movements in the price of the securities which are the subject of the hedge. If the price of the options or futures moves more or less than the price of the hedged securities, the Fund will experience a gain or loss which will not be completely offset by movements in the price of the subject of the hedge. The successful use of options and futures also depends on the Investment Advisers ability to correctly predict price movements in the market involved in a particular options or futures transaction. To compensate for imperfect correlations, the Fund may purchase or sell options or futures contracts in a greater dollar amount than the hedged securities if the volatility of the hedged securities is historically greater than the volatility of the options or futures contracts. Conversely, the Fund may purchase or sell
fewer options or futures contracts if the volatility of the price of the hedged securities is historically less than that of the options or futures contracts. The risk of imperfect correlation generally tends to diminish as the maturity date of the options or futures contract approaches.
The Fund intends to enter into options and futures transactions, on an exchange or in the over-the-counter market, only if there appears to be a liquid secondary market for such options or futures or, in the case of over-the-counter transactions, the Investment Adviser believes the Fund can receive in each business day at least two independent bids or offers. However, there can be no assurance that a liquid secondary market will exist at any specific time. Thus, it may not be possible to close an options or futures position. The inability to close options and futures positions also could have an adverse impact on the Funds ability to hedge effectively its portfolio. There is also a risk of loss by the Fund of margin deposits or collateral in the event of bankruptcy of a broker with whom the Fund has an open position in an option, a futures contract or a related option.
The exchanges on which the Fund intends to conduct options transactions have generally established limitations governing the maximum number of call or put options on the same underlying security or currency (whether or not covered) which may be written by a single investor, whether acting alone or in concert with others (regardless of whether such options are written on the same or different exchanges or are held or written on one or more accounts or through one or more brokers). Trading limits are imposed on the maximum number of contracts which any person may trade on a particular trading day. The Investment Adviser does not believe that these trading and position limits will have any adverse impact of the portfolio strategies for hedging the Funds holdings.
1. Make any investment inconsistent with the Funds
classification as a diversified company under the Investment Company Act.
|
2. Invest more than 25% of its assets, taken at market value, in
the securities of issuers in any particular industry (excluding the U.S. Government and its agencies and instrumentalities).
|
3. Make investments for the purpose of exercising control or
management.
|
4. Purchase or sell real estate, except that, to the extent
permitted by applicable law, the Fund may invest in securities directly or indirectly secured by real estate or interests therein or issued by companies that invest in real estate or interests therein.
|
5. Make
loans to other persons, except that the acquisition of bonds, debentures
or other corporate debt securities and investment in governmental obligations,
commercial paper, pass-through instruments, certificates of deposit, bankers
acceptances, repurchase agreements or any similar instruments shall not
be
|
deemed to be the making of a loan, and except further that the Fund may lend its portfolio securities, provided that the lending of portfolio securities may be made only in accordance with applicable law and the guidelines set forth in the Funds Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information, as they may be amended from time to time. 6. Issue senior securities to the extent such issuance would violate applicable law. |
7. Borrow
money, except that (i) the Fund may borrow from banks (as defined in the
Investment Company Act) in amounts up to 33
1
/
3
%
of its total assets (including the amount borrowed), (ii) the Fund may
borrow up to an additional 5% of its total assets for temporary purposes,
(iii) the Fund may obtain such short-term credit as may be necessary for
the clearance of purchases and sales of portfolio securities and (iv)
the Fund may purchase securities on margin to the extent permitted by
applicable law. The Fund may not pledge its assets other than to secure
such borrowings or, to the extent permitted by the Funds investment
policies as set forth in the Funds Prospectus and Statement of Additional
Information, as they may be amended from time to time, in connection with
hedging transactions, short sales, when issued and forward commitment
transactions and similar investment strategies. The Fund will not purchase
securities while borrowings exceed 5% of its assets. The Fund has no present
intention to borrow money in amounts exceeding 5% of its assets.
|
8. Underwrite securities of other issuers except insofar as the
Fund technically may be deemed an underwriter under the Securities Act in selling portfolio securities.
|
9. Purchase or sell commodities or contracts on commodities,
except to the extent that the Fund may do so in accordance with applicable law and the Funds Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information, as they may be amended from time to time, and without registering as a commodity pool operator
under the Commodity Exchange Act.
|
(a) Purchase securities of other investment companies, except to
the extent such purchases are permitted by applicable law. As a matter of policy, however, the Fund will not purchase shares of any registered open-end investment company or registered unit investment trust, in reliance on Section 12(d)(1)(F) or (G)
(the fund of funds provisions) of the Investment Company Act, at any time the Funds shares are owned by another investment company that is part of the same group of investment companies as the Program.
|
(b) Make short sales of securities or maintain a short position,
except to the extent permitted by applicable law.
|
(c) Invest in securities that cannot be readily resold because of
legal or contractual restrictions or that cannot otherwise be marketed, redeemed or put to the issuer or a third party, if at the time of acquisition more than 15% of its net assets would be invested in such securities. This restriction shall not
apply to securities that mature within seven days or securities that the Directors of the Program have otherwise
determined to be liquid pursuant to applicable law. Securities purchased in accordance with Rule 144A under the Securities Act and determined to be liquid by the Programs Board of Directors are not subject to the limitations set forth in this
investment restriction.
|
(d) Notwithstanding fundamental investment restriction (7) above,
borrow amounts in excess of 10% of its total assets, taken at market value, and then only from banks as a temporary measure for extraordinary or emergency purposes such as redemption of Fund shares. The Fund will not purchase securities while
borrowing exceeds 5% (taken at market value) of its total assets.
|
The staff of the Commission has taken the position that purchased OTC options and the assets used as cover for written OTC options are illiquid securities. Therefore, the Fund has adopted an investment policy pursuant to which it will not purchase or sell OTC options if, as a result of such transaction, the sum of the market value of OTC options currently outstanding that are held by the Fund, the market value of the underlying securities covered by OTC call options currently outstanding that were sold by the Fund and margin deposits on the Funds existing
OTC options on futures contracts exceeds 15% of the net assets of the Fund taken at market value, together with all other assets of the Fund that are illiquid or are not otherwise readily marketable. However, if the OTC option is sold by the Fund to a primary U.S. Government securities dealer recognized by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and if the Fund has the unconditional contractual right to repurchase such OTC option from the dealer at a predetermined price, then the Fund will treat as illiquid such amount of the underlying securities as is equal to the repurchase price less the amount by which the option is in-the-money ( i.e. , current market value of the underlying securities minus the options strike price). The repurchase price with the primary dealers is typically a formula price that is generally based on a multiple of the premium received for the option plus the amount by which the option is in-the-money. This policy as to OTC options is not a fundamental policy of the Fund and may be amended by the Directors without the approval of the shareholders. However, the Directors will not change or modify this policy prior to the change or modification by the Commission staff of its position.
<R>The Investment Adviser will effect portfolio transactions without regard to any holding period if, in its judgment, such transactions are advisable in light of a change in general market, economic or financial conditions. The Funds portfolio turnover increased from 84.53% in the fiscal year ended Januray 31, 2001 to 185.42% in the fiscal year ended January 31, 2002 due to a significant net inflow of assets into the Fund, changes in interest rates and an increase in the use of purchase and sale contracts involving GNMA Certificates. A high portfolio turnover rate involves certain tax consequences such as increased capital gain dividends and/or ordinary income dividends and correspondingly greater transaction costs in the form of dealer spreads and brokerage commissions, which are borne directly by the Fund. See Portfolio Transactions.</R>
Each non-interested Director is a member of the Programs Audit Committee (Audit Committee). The principal responsibilities of the Committee are to (i) recommend to the board the selection, retention or termination of the Funds independent auditors; (ii) review with the independent auditors the scope, performance and anticipated cost of their audit; (iii) discuss with the independent auditors certain matters relating to the Funds financial statements, including any adjustment to such financial statements recommended by such independent auditors, or any other results of any audit; (iv) ensure that the independent auditors submit on a periodic basis a formal written statement with respect to their independence, discuss with the independent auditors any relationships or services disclosed in the statement that may impact the objectivity and independence of the Programs independent auditors and recommend that the Board take appropriate action in response thereto to satisfy itself of the independent auditors independence; and (v) consider the comments of the independent auditors and managements responses thereto with respect to the quality and adequacy of the Funds accounting and financial reporting policies and practices and internal controls. The Board of the Program has adopted a written charter for the Committee. The Committee also reviews and nominates candidates to serve as non-interested Directors. The Committee generally will not consider nominees recommended by shareholders. The Committee has retained independent legal counsel to assist them in connection with these duties.
<R> Biographical Information. Certain biographical and other information relating to the non-interested Directors of the Program is set forth below, including their ages, their principal occupations for at least the last five years, the length of the time served, the total number of portfolios overseen in the complex of funds advised by the Investment Adviser and its affiliate, Merrill Lynch Investment Managers, L.P. (MLIM), (MLIM/FAM-Advised Funds) and other public directorships.</R>
|
|
*
|
Each
Director serves until his or her successor is elected or qualified,
or until his or her death or resignation, or removal as provided in
the Programs by-laws or charter or by statute, or until December
31 of the year in which he or she turns 72.
</R>
|
Certain biographical and other information relating to the Director who is an interested person as defined in the Investment Company Act, and other officers of the Program is set forth below:
|
||
| The address for each officer listed is P.O. Box 9011, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011. | |
| Mr. Glenn is an interested person, as defined in the Investment Company Act, of the Program based on his positions with MLIM, FAM, FAMD, Princeton Services and Princeton Administrators. | |
* | Mr. Glenn was elected President of the Program in 1999. Prior to that he served as Executive Vice President of the Fund. | |
** |
Each
Director serves until his or her successor is elected and qualified,
or until his or her death or resignation, or removal as provided in
the Funds by-laws or charter or by statute, or until December
31 of the year in which he or she turns 72.
|
|
*** | Elected by and serves at the pleasure of the Board of Directors of the Program. </R> |
Share
Ownership.
Information relating to each Directors share
ownership in the Fund and in all registered funds in the Merrill Lynch family
of funds that are overseen by the respective Director (Supervised
Merrill Lynch Funds) as of December 31, 2001 is set forth in the chart
below:
Name
|
Aggregate Dollar Range
|
Aggregate Dollar Range
|
||
Interested Directors: |
||||
Terry K. Glenn |
None |
Over $100,000 |
||
Non-Interested Directors: |
||||
James H. Bodurtha |
None |
$50,001 - $100,000 |
||
Joe Grills |
None |
Over $100,000 |
||
Herbert I. London |
None |
$50,001 - $100,000 |
||
André F. Perold |
None |
Over $100,000 |
||
Roberta Cooper Ramo |
None |
None |
||
Melvin R. Seiden |
None |
$1 - $10,000 |
||
Robert S. Salomon, Jr. |
None |
None |
||
Stephen B. Swensrud |
None |
None |
<R> As of May 10, 2002, the Directors and officers of the Fund as a group (16 persons) owned an aggregate of less than 1% of the outstanding shares of the Fund. At such date, Mr. Glenn, a Director and officer of the Program, and the other officers of the Program owned an aggregate of less than 1% of the outstanding shares of common stock of Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. (ML & Co.). As of December 31, 2001, none of the non-interested Directors of the Program nor any of their immediate family members owned beneficially or of record any securities in ML & Co..
Compensation of DirectorsThe Program pays each non-interested Director, for service to the Program, a fee of $1,300 per year plus $300 per in-person meeting attended, together with such individuals actual out-of-pocket expenses relating to attendance at meetings. The Program also compensates members of the Audit Committee, which consists of all of the non-affiliated Directors at the rate of $1,300 annually for service to the Program plus $300 per Committee meeting attended. The Committee met four times during the fiscal year ended January 31, 2002.</R>
Name
|
Position
with
Program |
Compensation
from Program |
Pension
or
Retirement Benefits Accrued as Part of Program Expense |
Estimated
Annual
Benefits upon Retirement |
Aggregate
Compensation from Program and Other MLIM/FAM-Advised Funds |
|||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
James H. Bodurtha* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Joe Grills | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $259,500 | |||||
Herbert I. London* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Andr é F. Perold* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Roberta Cooper Ramo* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Robert S. Salomon, Jr. | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $222,000 | |||||
Melvin R. Seiden | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $222,000 | |||||
Stephen B. Swensrud | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $406,083 |
|
|
*
|
Ms.
Ramo and Messrs. Bodurtha, London and Perold were elected to serve as
Directors of the Program on April 15, 2002.</R>
|
Period
|
Fee
Amount ($)
|
Investment Advisory
Fee Waived |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Fiscal year ended January 31, 2002 | $252,010 | $252,010 | ||
Fiscal year ended January 31, 2001 | $ 83,077 | $ 83,077 | ||
Fiscal year ended January 31, 2000 | $100,949 | $100,949 | ||
</R> |
Payment of Fund Expenses . The Investment Advisory Agreement obligates the Investment Adviser to provide investment advisory services and to pay all compensation of and furnish office space for officers and employees of the Fund connected with investment and economic research, trading and investment management of the Fund, as well as the fees of all Directors of the Program who are affiliated persons of ML & Co. or any of its affiliates. The Fund pays all other expenses incurred in the operation of the Fund, including among other things: taxes, expenses for legal and auditing services, costs of preparing, printing, and mailing proxies, stock certificates, shareholder reports, prospectuses and statements of additional information, except to the extent paid by the Distributor; charges of the custodian and the transfer agent; expenses of redemption of shares; Commission fees; expenses of registering the shares under Federal and state securities laws; fees and expenses of unaffiliated Directors; accounting and pricing costs (including the daily calculations of net asset value); insurance; interest; brokerage costs; litigation and other extraordinary or non-recurring expenses; and other expenses properly payable by the Fund. Certain accounting services are provided for the Fund by State Street Bank and Trust Company (State Street) pursuant to an agreement between State Street and the Program, on behalf of the Fund. The Fund
pays a fee for these services. In addition, the Fund reimburses the Investment Adviser for the cost of other accounting services. The Distributor will pay certain promotional expenses of the Fund incurred in connection with the offering of shares of the Fund. Certain expenses will be financed by the Fund pursuant to distribution plans in compliance with Rule 12b-1 under the Investment Company Act. See Purchase of SharesDistribution Plans.
Duration and Termination. Unless earlier terminated as described herein, the Investment Advisory Agreement for the Fund will remain in effect from year to year if approved annually (a) by the Board of Directors of the Program or by a majority of the outstanding shares of the subject Fund and (b) by a majority of the Directors who are not parties to such contract or interested persons (as defined in the Investment Company Act) of any such party. Such contracts are not assignable and may be terminated without penalty on 60 days written notice at the option of either party or by vote of the shareholders of the Fund.
<R>At a meeting of the Board of Directors held on April 10, 2002, the Board approved the continuation of the Funds Investment Advisory Agreement for an additional year. In connection with its deliberations, the Board reviewed information derived from a number of sources and covering a range of issues. The Board considered the services provided to the fund by the Investment Adviser and its affiliated under other agreement, and the personnel who provide these services. In addition to investment advisory services, the Investment Adviser and its affiliates provide administrative services, shareholder services, oversight of fund accounting, marketing services, assistance in meeting legal and regulatory requirements, and other services necessary for the operation of the Fund. The Board also considered the Investment Advisers costs of providing services, and the direct and indirect benefits to the Investment Adviser from its relationship with the Fund. The benefits considered by the Board included not only the Investment Advisers compensation for investment advisory services under the Investment Advisory Agreement and the Investment Advisers profitability under the Investment Advisory Agreement, but also compensation paid to the Investment Adviser or its affiliates for other, non-advisory, services provided to the Fund. The Directors also considered the Investment Advisers access to research services from brokers to which the Investment Adviser may have allocated Fund brokerage in a soft dollar arrangement. In connection with its consideration of the Investment Advisory Agreement, the Board also compared the Funds advisory fee rate, expense ratios and historical performance to those of comparable funds. The Board considered whether there should be changes in the advisory fee rate or structure in order to enable the fund to participate in any economies of scale that the Investment Adviser may experience as a result of growth in the Funds assets. The Board also reviewed materials supplied by Fund counsel that were prepared for use by the Board in fulfilling its duties under the Investment Company Act and state law.</R>
Based on the information reviewed and the discussions, the Board, including a majority of the non-interested Directors, concluded that it was satisfied with the nature and quality of the services provided by the Investment Adviser to the Fund and that the investment management fee rate was reasonable in relation to such services. The non-interested Directors were represented by independent counsel who assisted the non-interested Directors in their deliberations.
<R> Transfer Agency Services . Financial Data Services, Inc. (the Transfer Agent), a subsidiary of ML & Co., acts as the Programs Transfer Agent pursuant to a Transfer Agency, Dividend Disbursing Agency and Shareholder Servicing Agency Agreement (the Transfer Agency Agreement). Pursuant to the Transfer Agency Agreement, the Transfer Agent is responsible for the issuance, transfer and redemption of shares and the opening and maintenance of shareholder accounts. The Fund currently pays between $16.00 and $20.00 for each Class I or Class A shareholder account and between $19.00 and $23.00 for each Class B or Class C shareholder account depending on the level of service required. The Fund also reimburses the Transfer Agents reasonable out-of-pocket expenses and pays a fee of 0.10% of account assets for certain accounts that participate in certain fee-based programs. For purposes of the Transfer Agency Agreement, the term account includes a shareholder account maintained directly by the Transfer Agent and any other account representing the beneficial interest of a person in the relevant share class on a recordkeeping system, provided the recordkeeping system is maintained by a subsidiary of ML & Co. </R>
<R> The table below sets forth information about the total amounts paid by the Fund to the Transfer Agent for the periods indicated.
Accounting Services . The Program, on behalf of the Fund, entered into an agreement with State Street, effective January 1, 2001, pursuant to which State Street provides certain accounting services to the Fund. The Fund pays a fee for these services. Prior to January 1, 2001, the Investment Adviser provided accounting services to the Fund and was reimbursed by the Fund at its cost in connection with such services. The Investment Adviser continues to provide certain accounting services to the Fund and the Fund reimburses the Investment Adviser for the cost of these services.
<R> | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Fiscal
Year Ended January 31,
|
Paid to
State Street |
Paid to the
Investment Adviser |
||
2002 | $30,433 | $ 4,793 | ||
2001 | $897 | * | $22,200 | |
2000 | N/A | $13,556 | ||
</R> |
|
|
*
|
Represents
payments pursuant to the agreement with State Street effective on January
1, 2001.
|
The Fund issues four classes of shares: shares of Class I and Class A are sold to investors choosing the initial sales charge alternatives and shares of Class B and Class C are sold to investors choosing the deferred sales charge alternatives. Each Class I, Class A, Class B and Class C share of the Fund represents an identical interest in the investment portfolio of the Fund, and has the same rights, except that Class A, Class B and Class C shares bear the expenses of the ongoing account maintenance fees (also known as service fees) and Class B and Class C shares bear the expenses of the ongoing distribution fees and the additional incremental transfer agency costs resulting from the deferred sales charge arrangements. The contingent deferred sales charges (CDSCs), distribution fees and account maintenance fees that are imposed on Class B and Class C shares, as well as the account maintenance fees that are imposed on Class A shares, are imposed directly against those classes and not against all assets of the Fund, and, accordingly, such charges do not affect the net asset value of any other class or have any impact on investors choosing another sales charge option. Dividends paid by the Fund for each class of shares are calculated in the same manner at the same time and differ only to the extent that account maintenance and distribution fees
and any incremental transfer agency costs relating to a particular class are borne exclusively by that class. Class A, Class B and Class C shares each have exclusive voting rights with respect to the Rule 12b-1 distribution plan adopted with respect to such class pursuant to which the account maintenance and/or distribution fees are paid (except that Class B shareholders may vote upon any material changes to expenses charged under the distribution plan for Class A Shares). Each class has different exchange privileges. See Shareholder ServicesExchange Privilege.
Investors should understand that the purpose and function of the initial sales charges with respect to the Class I and Class A shares are the same as those of the CDSCs and distribution fees with respect to the Class B and Class C shares in that the sales charges and distribution fees applicable to each class provide for the financing of the distribution of the shares of the Fund. The distribution-related revenues paid with respect to a class will not be used to finance the distribution expenditures of another class. Sales personnel may receive different compensation for selling different classes of shares.The term purchase, as used in the Prospectus and this Statement of Additional Information in connection with an investment in Class I and Class A shares of the Fund, refers to a single purchase by an individual or to
concurrent purchases, which in the aggregate are at least equal to the prescribed amounts, by an individual, his or her spouse and their children under the age of 21 years purchasing shares for his or her or their own account and to single purchases by a trustee or other fiduciary purchasing shares for a single trust estate or single fiduciary account although more than one beneficiary is involved. The term purchase also includes purchases by any company, as that term is defined in the Investment Company Act, but does not include purchases by any such company that has not been in existence for at least six months or which has no purpose other than the purchase of shares of the Fund or shares of other registered investment companies at a discount; provided, however, that it shall not include purchases by any group of individuals whose sole organizational nexus is that the participants therein are credit cardholders of a company, policyholders of an insurance company, customers of either a bank or broker-dealer or clients of an investment adviser.
<R> Eligible Class I Investors. Class I shares are offered to a limited group of investors and also will be issued upon reinvestment of dividends paid on outstanding Class I shares. Investors who currently own Class I shares in a shareholder account are entitled to purchase additional Class I shares of a Fund in that account. Certain employer-sponsored retirement or savings plans, including eligible 401(k) plans, may purchase Class I shares at net asset value provided such plans meet the required minimum number of eligible employees or required amount of assets advised by the Investment Adviser or any of its affiliates. Also eligible to purchase Class I shares at net asset value are participants in certain investment programs including certain managed accounts for which a trust institution, thrift, or bank trust department provides discretionary trustee services, certain collective investment trusts for which a trust institution, thrift, or bank trust department serves as trustee, certain purchases made in connection with certain fee-based programs and certain purchases made through certain financial advisers that meet and adhere to standards established by the Investment Adviser. In addition, Class I shares are offered at net asset value to ML & Co. and its subsidiaries and their directors and employees, to members of the Boards of Mercury and Affiliate-Advised Funds, including the Fund, and to employees of certain selected dealers. Class I shares may also be offered at net asset value to certain accounts over which the Investment Adviser or an affiliate exercises investment discretion.</R>
Class
A Shares
|
||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
For
the
Fiscal year ended January 31, |
Gross
Sales Charges Collected |
Sales
Charges Retained by Distributor |
Sales
Charges
Paid to Merrill Lynch |
CDSCs
Received
on Redemption of Load-Waived Shares |
||||
2002 | $47,579 | $3,153 | $44,426 | $2 | ||||
2001 | $ 6,065 | $ 406 | $ 5,659 | $0 | ||||
2000 | $ 1,180 | $ 73 | $ 1,106 | $0 | ||||
</R> |
The Distributor may reallow discounts to selected securities dealers and other financial intermediaries and retain the balance over such discounts. At times the Distributor may reallow the entire sales charge to such dealers and financial intermediaries. Since securities dealers and other financial intermediaries selling Class I and Class A shares of the Fund will receive a concession equal to most of the sales charge, they may be deemed to be underwriters under the Securities Act.
Reduced Initial Sales ChargesReinvested Dividends . No initial sales charges are imposed upon Class I and Class A shares issued as a result of the automatic reinvestment of dividends.
Purchase Privileges of Certain Persons . Directors of the Program, members of the Boards of other investment companies advised by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates, directors and employees of ML & Co. and its subsidiaries (the term subsidiaries, when used herein with respect to ML & Co., includes the Investment Adviser, MLIM, Mercury Asset Management International, Ltd. and certain other entities directly or indirectly wholly
owned and controlled by ML & Co.), employees of certain selected dealers and financial intermediaries, and any trust, pension, profit-sharing or other benefit plan for such persons, may purchase Class I shares of the Fund at net asset value. The Fund realizes economies of scale and reduction of sales-related expenses by virtue of the familiarity of these persons with the Fund. Employees and directors or trustees wishing to purchase shares of the Fund must satisfy the Funds suitability standards.
Year Since Purchase Payment Made
|
CDSC as a Percentage
of Dollar amount Subject to Charge |
|
---|---|---|
0-1 | 4.0% | |
1-2 | 4.0% | |
2-3 | 3.0% | |
3-4 | 3.0% | |
4-5 | 2.0% | |
5-6 | 1.0% | |
6 and thereafter | None |
As discussed in the Prospectus under Account ChoicesPricing of SharesClass B and C SharesDeferred Sales Charge Options, while Class B shares redeemed within six years of purchase are subject to a CDSC under most circumstances, the charge may be reduced or waived in certain instances. These include certain post-retirement withdrawals from an individual retirement account (IRA) or other retirement plan or redemption of Class B shares in certain circumstances following the death of a Class B shareholder. In the case of such withdrawal, the reduction or waiver applies to: (a) any partial or complete redemption in connection with a distribution following retirement under a tax-deferred retirement plan on attaining age 59 1/2 in the case of an IRA or other retirement plan, or part of a series of equal periodic payments (not less frequently than annually) made for life (or life expectancy) or any redemption resulting from the tax-free return of an excess contribution to an IRA (certain legal documentation may be required at the time of liquidation establishing eligibility for qualified distribution); or (b) any partial or complete redemption following the death or disability (as defined in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code)) of a Class B shareholder (including one who owns the Class B shares as joint tenant with his or her spouse), provided the redemption is requested within one year of the death or initial determination of disability, or if later, reasonably promptly following completion of probate or in connection with involuntary termination of an account in which Fund shares are held (certain legal documentation may be required at the time of liquidation establishing eligibility for qualified distribution).
The Conversion Period may be modified for investors that participate in certain fee-based programs. See Shareholder ServicesFee-Based Programs.
Class
B Shares*
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
For
the fiscal year
ended January 31, |
CDSCs
Received
by Distributor |
CDSCs
Paid to
Merrill Lynch |
||
2002 | $58,945 | $58,945 | ||
2001 | $47,511 | $47,511 | ||
2000 | $44,536 | $44,536 | ||
</R> | ||||
* Additional
Class B CDSCs payable to the Distributor may have been waived or converted
to a contingent
obligation in connection with a shareholders participation in certain fee-based programs. |
<R>
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Class
C Shares
|
||||
For
the fiscal year
ended January 31, |
CDSCs
Received
by Distributor |
CDSCs
Paid to
Merrill Lynch |
||
2002 | $11,057 | $11,057 | ||
2001 | $ 1,402 | $ 1,402 | ||
2000 | $ 5,163 | $ 5,163 | ||
</R>
|
The Distribution Plan for each of the Class A, Class B and Class C shares provides that the Fund pays the Distributor an account maintenance fee relating to the shares of the relevant class, accrued daily and paid monthly, at the annual rate of 0.25% of the average daily net assets of the Fund attributable to shares of the relevant class in
order to compensate the Distributor, a selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary (pursuant to a sub-agreement) in connection with account maintenance activities with respect to Class A, Class B and Class C shares. Each of those classes has exclusive voting rights with respect to the Distribution Plan adopted with respect to such class pursuant to which account maintenance and/or distribution fees are paid (except that Class B shareholders may vote on any material changes to expenses charged under the Class A Distribution Plan).
<R>The Distribution Plans for Class B and Class C shares provide that the Fund also pays the Distributor a distribution fee relating to the shares of the relevant class, accrued daily and paid monthly, at the annual rate of 0.50% for Class B shares and 0.55% for Class C shares of the average daily net assets of the Fund attributable to the shares of the relevant class in order to compensate the Distributor, a selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary (pursuant to a sub-agreement) for providing shareholder and distribution services, bearing certain distribution-related expenses of the Fund, including payments to financial advisors for selling Class B and Class C shares of the Fund. The Distribution Plans relating to Class B and Class C shares are designed to permit an investor to purchase Class B or Class C shares through selected securities dealers or other financial intermediaries, without the assessment of an initial sales charge, and at the same time permit the dealer to compensate its financial advisors, selected securities dealers or other financial intermediaries in connection with the sale of the Class B and Class C shares. </R>
<R>Among other things, each Distribution Plan provides that the Distributor shall provide and the Directors shall review quarterly reports of the disbursement of the account maintenance and/or distribution fees paid to the Distributor. Payments under the Distribution Plans are based on a percentage of average daily net assets attributable to the shares regardless of the amount of expenses incurred and, accordingly, distribution-related revenues from each Distribution Plan may be more or less than distribution-related expenses of the related class. Information with respect to the distribution-related revenues and expenses is presented to the Directors for their consideration quarterly, and, in connection with their deliberations as to the continuance of the Class B and Class C Distribution Plans, annually. Distribution-related revenues consist of the account maintenance fees, distribution fees and CDSCs. Distribution-related expenses consist of financial advisor compensation, branch office and regional operation center selling and transaction processing expenses, advertising, sales promotion and marketing expense, and interest expense.
For the fiscal year ended January 31, 2002, the Fund paid the Distributor $241,852 pursuant to the Class B Distribution Plan (based on average daily net assets subject to such Class B Distribution Plan of approximately $32.3 million), all of which was paid to Merrill Lynch for providing account maintenance and distribution-related activities and services in connection with Class B shares. For the fiscal year ended January 31, 2002, the Fund paid </R>
<R>the Distributor $100,810 pursuant to the Class C Distribution Plan (based on average daily net assets subject to such Class C Distribution Plan of approximately $12.6 million), all of which was paid to Merrill Lynch for providing account maintenance and distribution-related activities and services in connection with Class C shares. For the fiscal year ended January 31, 2002, the Fund paid the Distributor $9,323 pursuant to the Class A Distribution Plan (based on average daily net assets subject to such Class A Distribution Plan of approximately $3.7 million), all of which was paid to Merrill Lynch for providing account maintenance activities in connection with Class A shares.</R>
(1)
|
Purchase price of all eligible Class B or Class C shares sold during the periods indicated other than shares acquired through
dividend reinvestment and the exchange privilege.
|
(2)
|
Includes
amounts attributable to exchanges from Summit are not reflected in Eligible
Gross Sales. Shares of Summit can only be purchased by exchange from another
fund (the redeemed fund). Upon such an exchange, the maximum
allowable sales charge payment to the redeemed fund is reduced in accordance
with the amount of the redemption. This amount is then added to the maximum
allowable sales charge payment with respect to Summit. Upon an exchange
out of Summit, the remaining balance of this amount is deducted from the
maximum allowable sales charge payment to Summit and added to the maximum
allowable sales charge payment to the fund into which the exchange is
made.
|
(3) | Interest is computed on a monthly basis based upon the prime rate, as reported in The Wall Street Journal, plus 1.0%, as permitted under the NASD Rule. |
(footnotes continued on next page)</R>
|
<R>(footnotes continued from previous page)
|
(4)
|
<R>Consists
of CDSC payments, distribution fee payments and accruals. See Fund
Facts Fees and Expenses in the Prospectus. This figure may
include CDSCs that were deferred when a shareholder redeemed shares prior
to the expiration of the applicable CDSC period and invested the proceeds,
without the imposition of a sales charge, in Class A shares in conjunction
with the shareholders participation in the MFA Program. The CDSC
is booked as a contingent obligation that may be payable if the shareholder
terminates participation in the MFA Program.</R>
|
(5)
|
Provided to illustrate the extent to which the current level of distribution fee payments (not including any CDSC payments)
is amortizing the unpaid balance. No assurance can be given that payments of the distribution fee will reach either the voluntary maximum (with respect to Class B shares) or the NASD maximum (with respect to Class B and Class C shares).</R>
|
A shareholder wishing to redeem shares held with the Transfer Agent may do so without charge by tendering the shares directly to the Funds Transfer Agent, Financial Data Services, Inc., PO Box 44062, Jacksonville, Florida 32232-4062. Redemption requests delivered other than by mail should be delivered to Financial Data Services, Inc., 4800 Deer Lake Drive East, Jacksonville, Florida 32246-6484. Proper notice of redemption in the case of shares deposited with the Transfer Agent may be accomplished by a written letter requesting redemption. Redemption requests should not be sent to the Program or the Fund. A redemption request in either event requires the signature(s) of all persons in whose name(s) the shares are registered, signed exactly as such name(s) appear(s) on the Transfer Agents register. The signature(s) on the redemption request may require a guarantee by an eligible guarantor institution as defined in Rule 17Ad-15 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act), the existence and validity of which may be verified by the Transfer Agent through the use of industry publications. In the event a signature guarantee is required, notarized signatures are not sufficient. In general, signature guarantees are waived on redemptions of less than $50,000 as long as the following requirements are met: (i) all requests require the signature(s) of all persons in whose name(s) shares are recorded on the Transfer Agents register; (ii) all checks must be mailed to the stencil address of record on the Transfer Agents register and (iii) the stencil address must not have changed within 30 days. Certain rules may apply regarding certain account types such as but not limited to UGMA/UTMA accounts, Joint Tenancies With Rights of Survivorship, contra broker transactions and institutional accounts. In certain instances, the Transfer Agent may require additional documents such as, but not limited to, trust instruments, death certificates, appointments as executor or administrator, or certificates of corporate authority.
For shareholders redeeming directly with the Transfer Agent, payments will generally be mailed within seven days of receipt of a proper notice of redemption. At various times the Fund may be requested to redeem shares for which it has not yet received good payment ( e.g. , cash, Federal funds or certified check drawn on a U.S. bank). The Fund may delay or cause to be delayed the mailing of a redemption check until such time as good payment ( e.g. , cash, Federal funds or certified check drawn on a U.S. Bank) has been collected for the purchase of such Fund shares, which will not usually exceed 10 days. In the event that a shareholder account held directly with the Transfer Agent contains a fractional share balance, such fractional share balance will be automatically redeemed by the Fund.
RepurchaseShareholders of the Fund who have redeemed their Class I and Class A shares have a privilege to reinstate their accounts by purchasing Class I or Class A shares, as the case may be, at net asset value without a sales charge up to the dollar amount redeemed. The reinstatement privilege may be exercised by sending a notice of exercise along with a check for the amount to be reinstated to the Transfer Agent within 30 days after the date the request for redemption
was accepted by the Transfer Agent or the Distributor. Alternatively, the reinstatement privilege may be exercised through the investors financial advisor within 30 days after the date the request for redemption was accepted by the Transfer Agent or the Distributor. The reinstatement will be made at the net asset value per share next determined after the notice of reinstatement is received and cannot exceed the amount of the redemption proceeds.
Generally, trading in non-U.S. securities as well as U.S. Government securities and money market instruments, is substantially completed each day at various times prior to the close of business on the NYSE. The values of such securities used in computing the net asset value of the Funds shares are determined as of such times. Occasionally, events affecting the values of such securities and such exchange rates may occur between the times at which they are determined and the close of business on the NYSE that may not be reflected in the computation</R>
<R>of the Funds net asset value. If events occur during such periods that are expected to materially affect the value of such securities, then those securities may be valued at their fair value as determined in good faith but the Board of Directors of the Fund.</R>
*
|
Rounded to the nearest one-hundredth percent; assumes maximum sales charge is applicable.
|
**
|
Class B and Class C shares are not subject to an initial sales charge but may be subject to a CDSC on redemption. See
Purchase of SharesDeferred Sales Charge AlternativesClass B and Class C Shares herein.
|
Section 28(e) of the Exchange Act (Section 28(e)) permits an investment adviser, such as the Investment Adviser, under certain circumstances, to cause an account to pay a broker or dealer a commission for effecting a transaction in excess of the amount of commission another broker or dealer would have charged for effecting the same transaction in recognition of the value of brokerage and research services provided by that broker or dealer. This includes commissions paid on riskless principal transactions under certain conditions. Brokerage and research services include (1) furnishing advice as to the value of securities, the advisability of investing in, purchasing or selling securities, and the availability of securities or purchasers or sellers of securities; (2) furnishing analyses and reports concerning issuers, industries, securities, economic factors and trends, portfolio strategy, and the performance of accounts; and (3) effecting securities transactions and performing functions incidental thereto (such as clearance, settlement, and custody). The Investment Adviser believes that access to independent investment research is beneficial to its investment decision-making processes and, therefore, to the Fund.
To the extent research services may be a factor in selecting brokers, such services may be in written form or through direct contact with individuals and may include information as to particular companies and securities as well as market, economic, or institutional areas and information which assists in the valuation of investments. Examples of research-oriented services for which the Investment Adviser might use Fund commissions include research reports and other information on the economy, industries, groups of securities, individual companies,
statistical information, political developments, technical market action, pricing and appraisal services, credit analysis, risk measurement analysis, performance and other analysis. Except as noted immediately below, research services furnished by brokers may be used in servicing some or all client accounts and not all services may be used in connection with the account that paid commissions to the broker providing such services. In some cases, research information received from brokers by mutual fund management personnel or personnel principally responsible for the Investment Advisers individually managed portfolios is not necessarily shared by and between such personnel. Any investment advisory or other fees paid by the Fund to the Investment Adviser are not reduced as a result of the Investment Advisers receipt of research services.
In some cases the Investment Adviser may receive a service from a broker that has both a research and a non-research use. When this occurs, the Investment Adviser makes a good faith allocation, under all the circumstances, between the research and non-research uses of the service. The percentage of the service that is used for research purposes may be paid for with client commissions, while the Investment Adviser will use its own funds to pay for the percentage of the service that is used for non-research purposes. In making this good faith allocation, the Investment Adviser faces a potential conflict of interest, but the Investment Adviser believes that its allocation procedures are reasonably designed to ensure that it appropriately allocates the anticipated use of such services to their research and non-research uses.
From time to time, the Fund may purchase new issues of securities in a fixed price offering. In these situations, the broker may be a member of the selling group that will, in addition to selling securities, provide the Investment Adviser with research services. The NASD has adopted rules expressly permitting these types of arrangements under certain circumstances. Generally, the broker will provide research credits in these situations at a rate that is higher than that which is available for typical secondary market transactions. These arrangements may not fall within the safe harbor of Section 28(e).
In addition, consistent with the Conduct Rules of the NASD and policies established by the Board of Directors of the Fund and subject to best execution, the Investment Adviser may consider sales of shares of the Fund as a factor in the selection of brokers or dealers to execute portfolio transactions for the Fund; however, whether or not a particular broker or dealer sells shares of the Fund neither qualifies nor disqualifies such broker or dealer to execute transactions for the Fund.
<R></R>
Foreign equity securities may be held by the Fund in the form of ADRs, EDRs, GDRs or other securities convertible into foreign equity securities. ADRs, EDRs and GDRs may be listed on stock exchanges, or traded in over-the-counter markets in the United States or Europe, as the case may be. ADRs, like other securities traded in the United States, will be subject to negotiated commission rates.
The Funds ability and decisions to purchase or sell portfolio securities of foreign issuers may be affected by laws or regulations relating to the convertibility and repatriation of assets. Because the shares of each Fund are redeemable on a daily basis in U.S. Dollars, the Program intends to manage each Fund so as to give reasonable assurance that it will be able to obtain U.S. Dollars to the extent necessary to meet anticipated redemptions. Under present conditions, it is not believed that these considerations will have significant effect on the Programs portfolio strategies.
<R>During the fiscal years ended January 31, 2000, 2001, and 2002 the Fund did not pay any brokerage commissions.</R>
Under the Investment Company Act, persons affiliated with the Fund and persons who are affiliated with such persons are prohibited from dealing with the Fund as principal in the purchase and sale of securities unless a permissive order allowing such transactions is obtained from the Commission. Since transactions in the OTC market usually involve transactions with dealers acting as principal for their own accounts, affiliated persons of the Fund, including Merrill Lynch and any of its affiliates, will not serve as the Funds dealer in such transactions. However, affiliated persons of the Fund may serve as its broker in listed or OTC transactions conducted on an agency basis provided that, among other things, the fee or commission received by such affiliated broker is reasonable and fair compared to the fee or commission received by nonaffiliated brokers in connection with comparable transactions. In addition, the Fund may not purchase securities during the existence of any underwriting syndicate for such securities of which Merrill Lynch is a member or in a private placement in which Merrill Lynch serves as placement agent except pursuant to procedures adopted by the Board of Trustees of the Fund that either comply with rules adopted by the Commission or with interpretations of the Commission staff.
Because of the affiliation of Merrill Lynch with the Investment Adviser, the Fund is prohibited from engaging in certain transactions involving Merrill Lynch or its affiliates except for brokerage transactions permitted under the Investment Company Act involving only usual and customary commissions or transactions pursuant to an exemptive order under the Investment Company Act. Without such an exemptive order, the Fund would be prohibited from engaging in portfolio transactions with Merrill Lynch or any of its affiliates acting as principal.
<R> The Fund has received an exemptive order from the Commission permitting it to lend portfolio securities to Merrill Lynch or its affiliates. Pursuant to that order, the Fund also has retained an affiliated entity of the Investment Adviser as the securities lending agent for a fee, including a fee based on a share of the returns on investment of cash collateral. That entity may, on behalf of the Fund, invest cash collateral received by the Fund for such loans, among other things, in a private investment company managed by that entity or in registered money market funds advised by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates. For the fiscal year ended January 31, 2002 (the first fiscal year during which the exemption order was applicable) that affiliated entity received no securities lending agent fees from the Fund.</R>
Section 11(a) of the Exchange Act generally prohibits members of the U.S. national securities exchanges from executing exchange transactions for their affiliates and institutional accounts that they manage unless the member (i) has obtained prior express authorization from the account to effect such transactions, (ii) at least annually furnishes the account with a statement setting forth the aggregate compensation received by the member in effecting such transactions, and (iii) complies with any rules the Commission has prescribed with respect to the requirements of clauses (i) and (ii). To the extent Section 11(a) would apply to Merrill Lynch acting as a broker for the Program in any of its portfolio transactions executed on any such securities exchange of which it is a member, appropriate consents have been obtained from the Program and annual statements as to aggregate compensation will be provided to the Program. Securities may be held by, or be appropriate investments for, the Program as well as other funds or investment advisory clients of the Investment Adviser or its affiliates.
The Board of Directors have considered the possibility of seeking to recapture for the benefit of the Fund brokerage commissions and other expenses of possible portfolio transactions by conducting portfolio transactions through affiliated entities. For example, brokerage commissions received by affiliated brokers could be offset against the advisory fee paid to the Investment Adviser. After considering all factors deemed relevant, the Directors made a determination not to seek such recapture. The Directors will reconsider this matter from time to time.
Because of different objectives or other factors, a particular security may be bought for one or more clients of the Investment Adviser or its affiliates when one or more clients of the Investment Adviser or its affiliates are selling the same security. If purchases or sales of securities arise for consideration at or about the same time that would involve the Fund or other clients or funds for which the Investment Adviser or an affiliate act as investment adviser, transactions in such securities will be made, insofar as feasible, for the respective funds and clients in a manner deemed equitable to all. To the extent that transactions on behalf of more than one client of the Investment Adviser or its affiliates during the same period may increase the demand for securities being purchased or the supply of securities being sold, there may be an adverse effect on price.
Each shareholder whose account is maintained at the Transfer Agent has an Investment Account and will receive statements, at least quarterly, from the Transfer Agent. These statements will serve as transaction confirmations for automatic investment purchases and the reinvestment of dividends. The statements also will show any other activity in the account since the preceding statement. Shareholders also will receive separate confirmations for each purchase or sale transaction other than automatic investment purchases and the reinvestment of dividends. A shareholder with an account held at the Transfer Agent may make additions to his or her Investment Account at any time by mailing a check directly to the Transfer Agent. The Fund does not issue share certificates.
Shareholders considering transferring their Class I or Class A shares from a selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary to another brokerage firm or financial institution should be aware that, if the firm to which the Class I or Class A shares are to be transferred will not take delivery of Fund shares, a shareholder either must redeem the Class I or Class A shares so that the cash proceeds can be transferred to the account at the new firm or such shareholder must continue to maintain an Investment Account at the Transfer Agent for those Class I or Class A shares.
<R>Shareholders interested in transferring their Class B or Class C shares from a selected dealer or financial intermediary and who do not wish to have an Investment Account maintained for such shares at the Transfer Agent may request their new brokerage firm to maintain such shares in an account registered in the name of the brokerage firm for the benefit of the shareholder at the Transfer Agent. Certain shareholder services may not be available for the transferred shares. After the transfer, the shareholder may purchase additional shares of funds owned before the transfer, and all future trading of these assets must be coordinated by the new firm.</R>Exchanges of Class B and Class C Shares . In addition, each of the funds with Class B and Class C shares outstanding (outstanding Class B or Class C shares) offers to exchange its Class B or Class C shares for Class B or Class C shares, respectively, of another Mercury mutual fund or for Class B shares of Summit (new Class B or Class C shares) on the basis of relative net asset value per Class B or Class C share, without the payment of
any CDSC that might otherwise be due on redemption of the outstanding shares. Class B shareholders of the Fund exercising the exchange privilege will continue to be subject to the Funds CDSC schedule if such schedule is higher than the CDSC schedule relating to the new Class B shares acquired through use of the exchange privilege. In addition, Class B shares of the Fund acquired through use of the exchange privilege will be subject to the Funds CDSC schedule if such schedule is higher than the CDSC schedule relating to the Class B shares of the fund from which the exchange was made. For purposes of computing the CDSC that may be payable on a disposition of the new Class B or Class C shares, the holding period for the outstanding Class B or Class C shares is tacked to the holding period of the new Class B or Class C shares. For example, an investor may exchange Class B shares of the Fund for those of another Mercury fund (new Mercury Fund) after having held the Funds Class B shares for two-and-a-half years. The 3.0% CDSC that generally would apply to a redemption would not apply to the exchange. Four years later the investor may decide to redeem the Class B shares of the new Mercury Fund and receive cash. There will be no CDSC due on this redemption since by tacking the two-and-a-half year holding period of the Funds Class B shares to the four year holding period for the new Mercury Fund Class B shares, the investor will be deemed to have held the new Mercury Fund Class B shares for more than six years.
<R>Prior to October 12, 1998, exchanges from the Fund and other MLIM/FAM-advised funds into a money market fund were directed to certain MLIM/FAM-advised money market funds other than Summit. Shareholders who exchanged MLIM/FAM-advised fund shares for such other money market funds and subsequently wish to exchange those money market fund shares for shares of the Fund will be subject to the CDSC schedule applicable to such Fund shares, if any. The holding period for those money market fund shares will not count toward satisfaction of the holding period requirement for reduction of the CDSC imposed on such shares, if any, and, with respect to Class B shares, toward satisfaction of the Conversion Period. However, the holding period for Class B or Class C shares of the Fund received in exchange for such money market fund shares will be aggregated with the holding period for the fund shares originally exchanged for such money market fund shares for purposes of reducing the CDSC or satisfying the Conversion Period.</R>
Exercise of the Exchange Privilege . To exercise the exchange privilege, a shareholder should contact his or her financial advisor, who will advise the Fund of the exchange. Shareholders of the Fund and shareholders of the other funds described above with shares for which certificates have not been issued may exercise the exchange privilege by wire through their securities dealers or other financial intermediary. The Fund reserves the right to require a properly completed Exchange Application.This exchange privilege may be modified or terminated in accordance with the rules of the Commission. The Fund reserves the right to limit the number of times an investor may exercise the exchange privilege. Certain funds may suspend the continuous offering of their shares to the general public at any time and may thereafter resume
such offering from time to time. The exchange privilege is available only to U.S. Shareholders in states where the exchange legally may be made. It is contemplated that the exchange privilege may be applicable to other new mutual funds whose shares may be distributed by the Distributor.
Individual retirement accounts and other retirement and education savings plans are available from Merrill Lynch. Under these plans, investments may be made in the Fund and certain of the other mutual funds sponsored by Merrill Lynch as well as in other securities. There may be fees associated with investing through these plans. Information with respect to these plans is available on request from Merrill Lynch.
Shareholders may, at any time, by written notification to their selected dealer or financial intermediary if their account is maintained with a selected dealer or financial intermediary, or by written notification or by telephone (1-888-763-2260) to the Transfer Agent, if their account is maintained with the Transfer Agent, elect to have subsequent dividends of ordinary income and/or capital gains paid with respect to shares of the Fund in cash, rather than reinvested in shares of the Fund (provided that, in the event that a payment on an account maintained at the Transfer Agent would amount to $10.00 or less, a shareholder will not receive such payment in cash and such payment will automatically be reinvested in additional shares). If the shareholders account is maintained with the Transfer Agent, he or she may contact the Transfer Agent in writing or by telephone (1-888-763-2260). For other accounts, the shareholder should contact his or her financial advisor, selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary. Commencing ten days after the receipt by the Transfer Agent of such notice, those instructions will be effected. The Fund is not responsible for any failure of delivery to the shareholders address of record and no interest will accrue on amounts represented by uncashed dividend checks. Cash payments can also be directly deposited to the shareholders bank account.
<R>Withdrawal payments generally should not be considered as dividends. Withdrawals generally are treated as sales of shares and may result in taxable gain or loss. If periodic withdrawals continuously exceed reinvested dividends, the shareholders original investment may be reduced correspondingly. Purchases of additional shares concurrent with withdrawals are ordinarily disadvantageous to the shareholder because of sales charges and tax liabilities. The Fund will not knowingly accept purchase orders for shares of the Fund from investors who maintain a systematic withdrawal plan unless such purchase is equal to at least one years scheduled withdrawals or $1,200, whichever is greater. Periodic investments may not be made into an Investment Account in which the shareholder has elected to make systematic withdrawals.</R>
For information concerning the manner in which dividends may be reinvested automatically in shares of the Fund, see Shareholder ServicesAutomatic Dividend Reinvestment Plan. A shareholder whose account is maintained at the Transfer Agent or whose account is maintained through his or her selected dealer may elect in writing to receive any such dividends in cash. Dividends are taxable to shareholders, as discussed below, whether they are reinvested in shares of the Fund or received in cash. The per share dividends on Class B and Class C shares will be lower than the per share dividends on Class I and Class A shares as a result of the account maintenance, distribution and higher transfer agency fees applicable with respect to the Class B and Class C shares; similarly, the per share dividends on Class A shares will be lower than the per share dividends on Class I shares as a result of the account maintenance fees applicable with respect to the Class A shares. See Pricing of SharesDetermination of Net Asset Value.
TaxesDividends are taxable to shareholders even though they are reinvested in additional shares of the Fund. Distributions by the Fund, whether from ordinary income or capital gains, generally will not be eligible for the dividends received deduction allowed to corporations under the Code. If the Fund pays a dividend in January that was declared in the previous October, November or December to shareholders of record on a specified date in one of such months, then such dividend will be treated for tax purposes as being paid by the Fund and received by its shareholders on December 31 of the year in which such dividend was declared.
The foregoing is a general and abbreviated summary of the applicable provisions of the Code and Treasury regulations presently in effect. For the complete provisions, reference should be made to the pertinent Code
sections and the Treasury regulations promulgated thereunder. The Code and the Treasury regulations are subject to change by legislative, judicial or administrative action either prospectively or retroactively.
Quotations of average annual total return after taxes on both dividends and redemption for the specified periods are computed by finding the average annual compounded rates of return that would equate the initial amount invested to the ending value of such investment at the end of each period assuming payment of taxes on dividends received during such period as well as on complete redemption. Average annual total return after taxes on distributions and redemption is computed assuming all dividends, less the taxes due on such dividends, are reinvested and taking into account all applicable recurring and non recurring expenses, including the maximum sales charge in the case of Class I and Class A shares and the CDSC that would be applicable to a complete redemption of the investment at the end of the specified period in the case of Class B and Class C shares and assuming, for all classes of shares, complete redemption and payment of taxes due on such redemption. The ending value is determined assuming complete redemption at the end of the applicable periods, subtracting capital gains taxes resulting from the redemption and adding the presumed tax benefit from capital losses resulting from redemption. The taxes due on dividends and on the deemed redemption are calculated by applying the highest marginal Federal individual income tax rates in effect on the reinvestment and/or the redemption date. The rates used correspond to the tax character of each component of each dividend and/or the redemption payment. The applicable tax rates may vary over the measurement period. The effects of state and local taxes are not reflected.
<R> |
Class
I
Shares |
Class
A
Shares |
Class
B
Shares |
Class
C
Shares |
|||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Average
Annual Total Return
(including maximum applicable sales charge) |
|||||||
One year ended January 31, 2002 | 2.62% | 2.26% | 2.10% | 5.16% | |||
Five years ended January 31, 2002 | 6.73% | 6.45% | 6.44% | 6.74% | |||
Inception
(February 1, 1995) through January 31,
2002 |
7.65% | 7.36% | 7.41% | 7.37% | |||
Class
I
Shares |
Class
A
Shares |
Class
B
Shares |
Class
C
Shares |
||||
Average
Annual Total Return
After Taxes on Dividends (including maximum applicable sales charge) |
|||||||
One year ended January 31, 2002 | 0.40% | 0.15% | 0.10% | 3.18% | |||
Five years ended January 31, 2002 | 3.96% | 3.79% | 3.95% | 4.30% | |||
Inception
(February 1, 1995) through January 31,
2002 |
4.64% | 4.46% | 4.73% | 4.71% | |||
Class
I
Shares |
Class
A
Shares |
Class
B
Shares |
Class
C
Shares |
||||
Average
Annual Total Return
After Taxes on Dividends and Redemptions (including maximum applicable sales charge) |
|||||||
One year ended January 31, 2002 | 1.54% | 1.33% | 1.24% | 3.12% | |||
Five years ended January 31, 2002 | 3.98% | 3.81% | 3.91% | 4.18% | |||
Inception
(February 1, 1995) through January 31,
2002 |
4.60% | 4.43% | 4.61% | 4.58% | |||
</R> |
Total return figures are based on the Funds historical performance and are not included to indicate future performance. The Funds total return will vary depending on market conditions, the securities comprising the Funds portfolio, the Funds operating expenses and the amount of realized and unrealized net capital gains or losses during the period. The value of an investment in the Fund will fluctuate and an investors shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost.
In order to reflect the reduced sales charges in the case of Class I or Class A shares or the waiver of the CDSC in the case of Class B or Class C shares applicable to certain investors, as described under Purchase of Shares and Redemption of Shares, respectively, the total return data quoted by the Fund in advertisements directed to such investors may take into account the reduced, and not the maximum, sales charge or may take into account the CDSC and therefore may reflect greater total return since, due to the reduced sales charges or the waiver of sales charges, a lower amount of expenses is deducted.On occasion, the Fund may compare its performance to various indices including, among other things, the Standard & Poors 500 Index, the Value Line Composite Index, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, or other published indices, or to data contained in publications such as Lipper Analytical Services, Inc., Morningstar
<R>Publications, Inc. (Morningstar), Money Magazine, U.S. News & World Report, Business Week, Forbes Magazine, Fortune Magazine or other industry publications. When comparing its performance to a market index, the Fund may refer to various statistical measures derived from the historic performance of the Fund and the index, such as standard deviation and beta. In addition, from time to time, the Fund may include its Morningstar risk-adjusted performance rating in advertisements or supplemental sales literature.
The Fund may provide information designed to help investors understand how the Fund is seeking to achieve its investment objectives. This may include information about past, current or possible economic, market, political, or other conditions, descriptive information on general principles of investing such as asset allocation, diversification and risk tolerance, discussion of the Funds portfolio composition, investment philosophy, strategy or investment techniques, comparisons of the Funds performance or portfolio composition to that of other funds or types of investments, indices relevant to the comparison being made, or to a hypothetical or model portfolio. The Fund may also quote various measures of volatility and benchmark correlation in advertising and other materials, and may compare these measures to those of other funds or types of investments. As with other performance data, performance comparisons should not be considered indicative of the Funds relative performance for any future period.</R>
The Bank of New York, 5 Penn Plaza, New York, New York 10001-1810, (the Custodian) acts as the Custodian of the Programs assets. Under its contract with the Program, the Custodian is authorized to establish separate accounts in foreign currencies and to cause foreign securities owned by the Program to be held in its offices outside the United States and with certain foreign banks and securities depositories. The Custodian is
responsible for safeguarding and controlling the Programs cash and securities, handling the receipt and delivery of securities and collecting interest and dividends on the Programs investments.
Transfer Agent
|
|
|
|
|
---|---|---|---|---|
Merrill Lynch
Trust Company*
Trustee FBO Merrill Lynch |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
23.46% of Class I | ||
Bishop Institutional Advisors LLC |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
13.47% of Class I | ||
Knight Advisers, LLC |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
10.40% of Class I | ||
A. Delia, Inc. |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
7.70% of Class I | ||
Hudson View, LLC |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
7.25% of Class I | ||
Merrill Lynch
Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Incorporated,
Custodian FBO Arthur W. John IRRA |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
13.53% of Class A | ||
</R> |
|
|
*
|
Merrill
Lynch Trust Company is the record holder on behalf of certain employee
retirement, personal trust or savings plan accounts for which it acts
as trustee.
|
The Funds audited financial statements are incorporated in this Statement of Additional Information by reference to its 2002 Annual Report. You may request a copy of the Annual Report at no additional charge by calling 1-888-673-2260 between 8:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. Eastern time on any business day.
<R>CODE NO. 19097-05-02</R>
<R></R>
PROSPECTUS · May 29, 2002
Mercury Growth Opportunity Fund |
The Securities And Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved these securities or passed upon the adequacy of this Prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
[LOGO] MERCURY FUNDS
PAGE
|
||
[GRAPHIC] | ||
FUND FACTS | ||
|
||
About the Mercury Growth Opportunity Fund | 2 | |
Risk/Return Bar Chart | 4 | |
Fees and Expenses | 6 | |
[GRAPHIC] | ||
ABOUT THE DETAILS | ||
|
||
How the Fund Invests | 8 | |
Investment Risks | 9 | |
Statement of Additional Information | 16 | |
[GRAPHIC] | ||
ACCOUNT CHOICES | ||
|
||
Pricing of Shares | 17 | |
How to Buy, Sell, Transfer and Exchange Shares | 22 | |
How Shares are Priced | 27 | |
Participation in Fee-Based Programs | 27 | |
Dividends and Taxes | 28 | |
[GRAPHIC] | ||
THE MANAGEMENT TEAM | ||
|
||
Management of the Fund | 30 | |
Financial Highlights | 31 | |
[GRAPHIC] | ||
TO LEARN MORE | ||
|
||
Shareholder Reports | Back Cover | |
Statement of Additional Information | Back Cover |
[GRAPHIC] Fund Facts
The Fund may invest in foreign securities. Foreign investing involves special risks, including foreign currency risk and the possibility of substantial volatility due to adverse political, economic or other developments. Foreign securities may also be less liquid and harder to value than U.S. securities. These risks are greater for investments in emerging markets.
The Fund is a non-diversified fund, which means that it may invest more of its assets in securities of a single issuer than if it were a diversified fund. By concentrating in a smaller number of issuers, the Funds risk is increased because developments affecting an individual issuer have a greater impact on the Funds performance.
[GRAPHIC] Fund Facts
| Are investing with long term goals, such as retirement or funding a childs education |
| Want a professionally managed portfolio |
| Are willing to accept the risk that the value of your investment may decline in order to seek long term capital growth |
| Are not looking for a significant amount of current income |
[GRAPHIC] Fund Facts
<R>The bar chart and table shown below provide an indication of the risks of investing in the Fund. The bar chart shows changes in the Funds performance for Mercury Class B shares for each complete calendar year since the Funds inception. Sales charges are not reflected in the bar chart. If these amounts were reflected, returns would be less than those shown. The table compares the Funds average annual total return (before and after taxes) with a broad measure of market performance. How the Fund performed in the past (before and after taxes) is not necessarily an indication of how the Fund will perform in the future.
[GRAPH]1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 ------ ------ ------ ---- ---- 27.19% 32.05% 32.45% -8.03% -20.24%
During the period shown in the bar chart, the highest return for a quarter was 26.74% (quarter ended December 31, 1998) and the lowest return for a quarter was -14.96% (quarter ended March 31, 2001). The year-to-date return as of March 31, 2002 was -1.34%.</R>
[GRAPHIC] Fund Facts
The table below compares the average annual total returns of the Funds shares with those of the S&P 500 Index and Lipper Growth Fund Index for the periods indicated. After-tax returns are shown only for Class B shares and will vary for other classes. The after-tax returns are calculated using the historical highest marginal Federal individual income tax rates in effect during the periods measured. The after-tax returns do not reflect the impact of state and local taxes. Actual after-tax returns depend on an investors tax situation and may differ from those shown. The after-tax returns shown are not relevant to investors who hold their Fund shares through tax-deferred arrangements, such as 401(k) plans or individual retirement accounts or through tax advantaged education savings accounts.<R>
* | Includes all applicable fees and sales charges. |
** | The S&P 500 ® Index is the Standard & Poors Composite Index of 500 stocks, a widely recognized, unmanaged index of common stock prices. Parst Performance is not predictive of future performances. |
*** | Lipper Growth Fund Index is an equally weighted Index of the largest mutual funds which normally invest in companies whose long-term earnings are expected to grow significantly faster than the earnings of the stocks represented in the major unmanaged stock indexes. Past performance is not predictive of future performance. |
| Inception date is February 2, 1996. </R> |
[GRAPHIC] Fund Facts
Shareholder Fees these fees include sales charges which you may pay when you buy or sell shares of the Fund.
Annual Fund Operating Expenses expenses that cover the costs of operating the Fund.
Management Fee a fee paid to the Investment Adviser for managing the Fund.
Distribution Fees fees used to support the Funds marketing and distribution efforts, such as compensating financial advisors and other financial intermediaries, advertising and promotion.
Service (Account Maintenance) Fees fees used to compensate securities dealers and other financial intermediaries for account maintenance activities.
Shareholder
Fees
(Fees paid directly from your
investment)(a): |
Class I | Class A | Class B(b) | Class C | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|||||||||||||
Maximum
Sales Charge (Load) imposed on purchases (as a
percentage of offering price) |
5.25 | %(c) | 5.25 | %(c) | None | None | |||||||
|
|||||||||||||
Maximum
Deferred Sales Charge (Load) (as a percentage of
original purchase price or redemption proceeds, whichever is lower) |
None | (d) | None | (d) | 4.00 | %(c) | 1.00 | %(c) | |||||
|
|||||||||||||
Maximum
Sales Charge (Load) imposed on Dividend
Reinvestments |
None | None | None | None | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
Redemption Fee | None | None | None | None | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
Exchange Fee | None | None | None | None | |||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
Annual
Fund Operating Expenses
(expenses that are
deducted from Fund assets): |
|||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
Management Fee | 0.65 | % | 0.65 | % | 0.65 | % | 0.65 | % | |||||
|
|||||||||||||
Distribution and/or Service (12b-1) Fees(e) | None | 0.25 | % | 1.00 | % | 1.00 | % | ||||||
|
|||||||||||||
Other Expenses (including transfer agency fees)(f) | 0.65 | % | 0.66 | % | 0.74 | % | 0.77 | % | |||||
|
|||||||||||||
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses | 1.30 | % | 1.56 | % | 2.39 | % | 2.42 | % | |||||
|
(a) | Certain securities dealers or other financial intermediaries may charge a fee to process a purchase or sale of shares. See How to Buy, Sell, Transfer and Exchange Shares. |
(b) | Class B shares automatically convert to Class A shares approximately eight years after you buy them and will no longer be subject to distribution fees. |
(c) | Some investors may qualify for reductions in the sales charge (load). |
(d) | You may pay a deferred sales charge if you purchase $1 million or more and you redeem within one year. |
(e) | The Fund calls the Service Fee an Account Maintenance Fee. Account Maintenance Fee is the term used elsewhere in this Prospectus and in all other Fund materials. If you hold Class B or C shares over time, it may cost you more in distribution (12b-1) fees than the maximum sales charge that you would have paid if you had bought one of the other classes. |
(f) | Financial Data Services, Inc., an affiliate of the Investment Adviser, provides transfer agency services to the Fund. The Fund pays a fee for these services. The Investment Adviser or its affiliates also provide certain accounting services to the Fund and the Fund reimburses the Investment Adviser or its affiliates for such services. |
[GRAPHIC] Fund Facts
These examples are intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the Fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds.
These examples assume that you invest $10,000 in the Fund for the time periods indicated, that your investment has a 5% return each year, that you pay the sales charges, if any, that apply to the particular class and that the Funds operating expenses remain the same. This assumption is not meant to indicate that you will receive a 5% annual rate of return. Your annual return may be more or less than the 5% used in this example. Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, based on these assumptions, your costs would be:<R>
* | Assumes conversion to Class A shares approximately eight years after purchase. See note (b) to the Fees and Expenses table on the previous page. |
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
| common stock |
| preferred stock |
| securities convertible into common stock |
| rights to subscribe for common stock |
The Fund also can invest in non-convertible preferred stock and fixed income securities of growth companies during temporary periods if warranted by market or economic conditions. Normally, the Fund will invest at least 65% of its total assets in equity securities.
Fund management emphasizes growth companies which possess above-average growth rates in earnings, resulting from a variety of factors including, but not limited to, above-average growth rates in sales, profit margin improvement, proprietary or niche products or services, leading market shares, and underlying strong industry growth. Fund management believes that companies which possess above-average earnings growth frequently provide the prospect of above-average stock market returns, although such companies tend to have higher relative stock market valuation. The Fund may invest in companies of any size; however, emphasis will be given to companies having medium to large stock market capitalizations ($500 million or more). Fund management may also select growth companies on the basis of their long term potential for gaining increased market recognition. The Fund does not select companies with the objective of providing current income.
To analyze a security, Fund management focuses on the long range view of a companys prospects including a fundamental analysis of:
| companys management |
| financial structure |
| product development |
| marketing ability |
| other relevant factors |
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
Fund management will select the percentages of the total portfolio invested in equity, fixed income and other types of securities based on its view of market or economic conditions. Fund management may consider general economic and financial trends in various industries, such as inflation, commodity prices, interest movements, estimates of growth in industrial output and profits, and government fiscal policies. Fund management will seek to allocate the Funds investments among the various types of securities in which the Fund may invest in a manner that it believes will best capitalize on the economic and financial trends that it perceives. There is no guarantee Fund management will be able to correctly forecast economic or financial trends or be able to select investments that will benefit from the trends it perceives.
The Fund may invest up to 20% of its total assets in equity securities of foreign issuers. There are no limits on the geographical allocations of these investments. Investments in American Depository Receipts are not subject to the 20% restriction.
The Fund will normally invest a portion of its assets in short term debt securities, such as commercial paper or Treasury bills. As a temporary measure for defensive purposes, the Fund may invest more heavily in these securities, without limitation. The Fund may also increase its investment in these securities when Fund management is unable to find enough attractive long term investments, to reduce exposure to long term investments when management believes it is advisable to do so on a temporary basis, or to meet redemptions. Investments in short term debt securities can be sold easily and have limited risk of loss but earn only limited returns. Short term investments may therefore limit the potential for the Fund to achieve its investment objective.
Market and Selection Risk Market risk is the risk that a stock market in one or more countries in which the Fund invests will go down in value, including the possibility that one or more markets will go down sharply and unpredictably. Selection risk is the risk that the securities that Fund management selects will underperform the markets, the</R>
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
relevant indices or other funds with similar investment objectives and investment strategies.
Concentration Risk
The Fund is a non-diversified portfolio. By concentrating in a smaller number of investments, the Funds risk is increased because each investment has a greater effect on the Funds performance.
Foreign Market Risk
Since the Fund
may invest in foreign securities, it offers the potential for more diversification
than an investment only in the United States. This is because securities traded
on foreign markets have often (though not always) performed differently than
securities traded in the United States. However, such investments involve special
risks not present in U.S. investments that can increase the chances that the
Fund will lose money. In particular, the Fund is subject to the risk that because
there are generally fewer investors on foreign exchanges and a smaller number
of shares traded each day, it may make it difficult for the Fund to buy and
sell securities on those exchanges. In addition, prices of foreign securities
may go up and down more than prices of securities traded in the United States.</R>
Foreign Economy
Risk
The economies of certain foreign markets often do not compare favorably with the economy of the United States with respect to such issues as growth of gross national product, reinvestment of capital, resources and balance of payments position. Certain such economies may rely heavily on particular industries or foreign capital and are more vulnerable to diplomatic developments, the imposition of economic sanctions against a particular country or countries, changes in international trading patterns, trade barriers and other protectionist or retaliatory measures.
Investments in foreign markets may also be adversely affected by governmental actions such as the imposition of capital controls, nationalization of companies or industries, expropriation of assets or the imposition of punitive taxes. In addition, the governments of certain countries may prohibit or impose substantial restrictions on foreign investing in their capital markets or in certain industries. Any of these actions could severely affect security prices, impair the Funds ability to purchase or sell foreign securities or transfer the Funds assets or
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
income back into the United States, or otherwise adversely affect the Funds operations.
Other foreign market risks include foreign exchange controls, difficulties in pricing securities, defaults on foreign government securities, difficulties in enforcing favorable legal judgments and political and social instability. Legal remedies available to investors in some foreign countries may be less extensive than those available to investors in the United States or other foreign countries.
Currency Risk
Securities in which the Fund invests may be denominated or quoted in currencies other than the U.S. dollar. Changes in foreign currency exchange rates affect the value of the Funds portfolio. Generally, when the U.S. dollar rises in value against a foreign currency, a security denominated in that currency loses value because the currency is worth fewer U.S. dollars. Conversely, when the U.S. dollar decreases in value against a foreign currency, a security denominated in that currency gains value because the currency is worth more U.S. dollars. The risk, generally known as currency risk, means that a strong US dollar will reduce returns for US investors while a weak US dollar will increase those returns.
Convertibles
Convertibles are generally debt securities or preferred stocks that may be converted into common stock. Convertibles typically pay current income as either interest (debt security convertibles) or dividends (preferred stocks). A convertibles value usually reflects both the stream of current income payments and the value of the underlying common stock. The market value of a convertible performs like that of a regular debt security; that is, if market interest rates rise, the value of a convertible usually falls. Since it is convertible into common stock, the convertible also has the same types of market and issuer risk as the underlying common stock.
|
Conversion and Call Risk For some convertibles, the issuer can choose when to convert to common stock, or can call (redeem) the convertible security. An issuer may convert or call a convertible when it is disadvantageous for the Fund, causing the Fund to lose an opportunity for gain. For other convertibles, the Fund can choose when to convert the security to common stock or to put (sell) the convertible back to the issuer. Some convertibles may convert only under certain circumstances and carry the additional risk that conversion may never occur. Others may convert into a cash payment, which is generally based on the underlying stocks value. |
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
| Synthetics The Fund Manager may combine fixed income securities (fixed income components) with a right to acquire equities (convertibility component) to create synthetic convertible securities. Synthetic convertible securities provide the flexibility to create an investment that is not available in the market directly. The separate components of synthetic convertibles trade separately; each has its own trading market and value. The value of the synthetic convertible is the sum of the value of the fixed income and convertibility components. A synthetic convertible gives the Fund Manager the flexibility to create an investment that is not available in the market. However, because its components trade separately, often in different markets, the value of a synthetic convertible may respond differently to market movements and other events than a traditional convertible. The convertibility component in a synthetic convertible may be a warrant or option to purchase common stock at a set price (exercise price), or an option on a stock index. If the value of the underlying common stock or index falls below the exercise price, the warrant or option may lose all value. |
Warrants
A warrant gives the Fund the right to buy a quantity of stock. The warrant specifies the amount of underlying stock, the purchase (or exercise) price, and the date the warrant expires. The Fund has no obligation to exercise the warrant and buy the stock. A warrant has value only if the Fund can exercise it or sell it before it expires. If the price of the underlying stock does not rise above the exercise price before the warrant expires, the warrant generally expires without any value and the Fund loses any amount it paid for the warrant. Thus, investments in warrants may involve substantially more risk than investments in common stock. Warrants may trade in the same markets as their underlying stock; however, the price of the warrant does not necessarily move with the price of the underlying stock.
Small Cap and Emerging Growth Securities
Small cap or emerging growth companies may have limited product lines or markets. They may be less financially secure than larger, more established companies. They may depend on a small number of key personnel. If a product fails, or if management changes, or there are other adverse developments, the Funds investment in a small cap or emerging growth company may lose substantial value.
The securities of small cap and emerging growth companies generally trade in lower volumes and are subject to greater and less predictable price changes than
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
securities of larger, more established companies. Investing in smaller and emerging growth companies requires a long term view.
Depositary Receipts
The Fund may invest in securities of foreign issuers in the form of Depositary Receipts. American Depositary Receipts are receipts typically issued by an American bank or trust company that show evidence of underlying securities issued by a foreign corporation. European Depositary Receipts evidence a similar ownership arrangement. The Fund may also invest in unsponsored Depositary Receipts. The issuers of such unsponsored Depositary Receipts are not obligated to disclose material information in the United States. Therefore, there may be less information available regarding such issuers and there may not be a correlation between such information and the market value of the Depositary Receipts.
Derivatives
The Fund may use derivative instruments including futures, forwards, options indexed securities and inverse securities. Derivatives allow the Fund to increase or decrease its risk exposure more quickly and efficiently than other types of instruments.
Derivatives are volatile and involve significant risks, including:
| Credit risk the risk that the counterparty (the party on the other side of the transaction) on a derivative transaction will be unable to honor its financial obligation to the Fund |
| Currency risk the risk that changes in the exchange rate between currencies will adversely affect the value (in US dollar terms) of an investment |
| Leverage risk the risk associated with certain types of investments or trading strategies (such as borrowing money to increase the amount of investments) that relatively small market movements may result in large changes in the value of an investment. Certain investments or trading strategies that involve leverage can result in losses that greatly exceed the amount originally invested |
| Liquidity Risk the risk that certain securities may be difficult or impossible to sell at the time that the seller would like or at the price that the seller believes the security is currently worth |
The Fund may use derivatives for hedging purposes, including anticipatory hedges. Hedging is a strategy in which the Fund uses a derivative to offset the
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
risk associated with other Fund holdings. While hedging can reduce losses, it can also reduce or eliminate gains or cause losses if the market moves in a different manner than anticipated by the Fund or if the cost of the derivative outweighs the benefit of the hedge. Hedging also involves the risk that changes in the value of the derivative will not match those of the holdings being hedged as expected by the Fund, in which case any losses on the holdings being hedged may not be reduced. There can be no assurance that the Funds hedging strategy will reduce risk or that hedging transactions will be either available or cost effective. The Fund is not required to use hedging and may choose not to do so.
Indexed and Inverse Floater Securities
The Fund may invest in debt securities whose potential returns are directly related to changes in an underlying index or interest rate, known as indexed securities. The return on indexed securities will rise when the underlying index or interest rate rises and fall when the index or interest rate falls. The Fund may also invest in securities whose return is inversely related to changes in an index or interest rate. In general, inverse securities change in value in a manner that is opposite to most securitiesthat is, the return of inverse securities will decrease. Investments in indexed and inverse securities may subject the Fund to the risks of reduced or eliminated interest payments and losses of principal. In addition, certain indexed and inverse securities may increase or decrease in value at a greater rate than the underlying index, which effectively leverages the Funds investment. As a result, the market value of such securities will generally be more volatile than that of other securities.
The Fund can sell covered call options, which are options that give the purchaser the right to require the Fund to sell a security owned by the Fund to the purchaser at a specified price within a limited time period. The Fund will receive a premium (an upfront payment) for selling a covered call option, and if the option expires unexercised because the price of the underlying security has gone down the premium received by the Fund will partially offset any losses on the underlying security. By writing a covered call option, however, the Fund limits its ability to sell the underlying security and gives up the opportunity to profit from any increase in the value of the underlying security beyond the sale price specified in the option.
Short Term Trading
The Fund can buy and sell securities whenever it sees a market opportunity, and therefore the Fund may engage in short term trading. Short term trading may increase the Funds expenses and have tax consequences.
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
Repurchase Agreement Risk
The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements. Under a repurchase agreement, the seller agrees to repurchase a security at a mutually agreed upon time and price. If the other party to a repurchase agreement defaults on its obligation under the agreement, the Fund may suffer delays and incur costs or even lose money in exercising its rights under the agreements. <R>
When Issued Securities, Delayed Delivery Securities and Forward Commitments
When issued and delayed delivery securities and forward commitments involve the risk that the security the Fund buys will lose value prior to its delivery to the Fund. There also is the risk that the security will not be issued or that the other party will not meet its obligation. If this occurs, the Fund both loses the investment opportunity for the assets it has set aside to pay for the security and any gain in the securitys price. </R>
Borrowing and Leverage
The Fund may borrow for temporary emergency purposes, including to meet redemptions. Borrowings may exaggerate changes in the net asset value of Fund shares and in the yield on the Funds portfolio. Borrowing will cost the Fund interest expense and other fees. The cost of borrowing may reduce the Funds return. Certain securities that the Fund buys may create leverage including, for example, when issued securities, forward commitments, options, warrants and reverse repurchase agreements.
The Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in illiquid securities that it cannot easily sell within seven days at current value or that have contractual or legal restrictions on sale. If the Fund buys illiquid securities it may be unable to quickly sell them or may be able to sell them only at a price below current value.
Restricted Securities
Restricted securities have contractual or legal restrictions on their resale. They include private placement securities that the Fund buys directly from the issuer. Private placement and other restricted securities may not be listed on an exchange and may have no active trading market.
Restricted securities may be illiquid. The Fund may be unable to sell them on short notice or may be able to sell them only at a price below current value. The Fund may get only limited information about the issuer, so it may be less able to
[GRAPHIC] About the Details
predict a loss. In addition, if Fund management receives material adverse nonpublic information about the issuer, the Fund will not be able to sell the securities.
Rule 144A Securities
Rule 144A securities are restricted securities that can be resold to qualified institutional buyers but not to the general public. Rule 144A securities may have an active trading market, but carry the risk that the active trading market may not continue.
Securities Lending
The Fund may lend securities with a value not exceeding 33 1 / 3 % of its assets to financial institutions that provide government securities as collateral. Securities lending involves the risk that the borrower may fail to return the securities in a timely manner or at all. As a result, the Fund may lose money and there may be a delay in recovering the loaned securities. The Fund could also lose money if it does not recover the securities and/or the value of the collateral falls, including the value of investments made with cash collateral. These events could trigger adverse tax consequences to the Fund.
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
The Fund offers four Mercury classes of shares, each with its own sales charge and expense structure, allowing you to invest in the way that best suits your needs. Unless otherwise indicated, all references in this Prospectus to classes of the Funds shares are to the Mercury classes. Each share class represents an ownership interest in the same investment portfolio. When you choose your class of shares, you should consider the size of your investment and how long you plan to hold your shares. Your financial advisor or other financial intermediary can help you determine which share class is best suited to your personal financial goals.<R>
For example, if you select Class I or Class A shares, you generally pay the Distributor a sales charge at the time of purchase. If you buy Class A shares, you also pay out of Fund assets an ongoing account maintenance fee of 0.25%. You may be eligible for a sales charge reduction or waiver. </R>
Certain financial intermediaries may charge additional fees in connection with transactions in Fund shares. The Investment Adviser, the Distributor or their affiliates may make payments out of their own resources to selected securities dealers and other financial intermediaries for providing services intended to result in the sale of Fund shares or for shareholder servicing activities.<R>
If you select Class B or Class C shares, you will invest the full amount of your purchase price, but you will be subject to a distribution fee of 0.75% and an account maintenance fee of 0.25%. Because these fees are paid out of the Funds assets on an ongoing basis, over time these fees increase the cost of your investment and may cost you more than paying other types of sales charges. In addition, you may be subject to a deferred sales charge when you sell Class B or Class C shares. </R>
The Funds shares are distributed by FAM Distributors, Inc., an affiliate of the Investment Adviser.
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
Letter of Intent permits you to pay the sales charge that would be applicable if you add up all shares of Mercury mutual funds that you agree to buy within a 13-month period. Certain restrictions apply.
Your Investment |
As a % of
Offering Price |
As a % of
Your Investment* |
Dealer
Compensation as a % of Offering Price |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|||||||
Less than $25,000 | 5.25% | 5.54% | 5.00% | ||||
|
|||||||
$25,000
but less
than $50,000 |
4.75% | 4.99% | 4.50% | ||||
|
|||||||
$50,000
but less
than $100,000 |
4.00% | 4.17% | 3.75% | ||||
|
|||||||
$100,000
but less
than $250,000 |
3.00% | 3.09% | 2.75% | ||||
|
|||||||
$250,000
but less
than $1,000,000 |
2.00% | 2.04% | 1.80% | ||||
|
|||||||
$1,000,000 and over** | 0.00% | 0.00% | 0.00% | ||||
|
* | Rounded to the nearest one-hundredth percent. <R> |
** | If you invest $1,000,000 or more in Class I or Class A shares, you may not pay an initial sales charge. In that case, the Investment Adviser compensates the selling dealer from its own resources. If you redeem your shares within one year after purchase, you may be charged a deferred sales charge. This charge is 1.00% of the lesser of the original cost of the shares being redeemed or your redemption proceeds. A sales charge of 0.75% will be charged on purchases of $1,000,000 or more of Class I and Class A shares by certain employer sponsored retirement or savings plans.</R> |
No initial sales charge applies to Class I or Class A shares that you buy through reinvestment of dividends.
A reduced or waived sales charge on a purchase of Class I or Class A shares may apply for:
| Purchases under a Right of Accumulation or Letter of Intent |
| Certain trusts managed by banks, thrifts or trust companies including those affiliated with the Investment Adviser or its affiliates |
| Certain employer-sponsored retirement or savings plans |
| Certain investors, including directors or trustees of mutual funds sponsored by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates, employees of the Investment Adviser and its affiliates and employees or customers of selected dealers |
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
| <R>Certain fee-based programs managed by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates and other financial intermediaries that have agreements with the Distributor or its affiliates</R> |
| Certain fee-based programs of selected securities dealers and other financial intermediaries that have an agreement with the Distributor or its affiliates |
| Purchases through certain financial advisers that meet and adhere to standards established by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates |
| Purchases through certain accounts over which the Investment Adviser or an affiliate exercises investment discretion |
If you decide to buy shares under the initial sales charge alternative and you are eligible to buy both Class I and Class A shares, you should buy Class I shares since Class A shares are subject to a 0.25% account maintenance fee, while Class I shares are not.
If you redeem Class I or Class A shares and within 30 days buy new shares of the same class, you will not pay a sales charge on the new purchase amount. The amount eligible for this Reinstatement Privilege may not exceed the amount of your redemption proceeds. To exercise the privilege, contact your financial advisor, selected securities dealer, or other financial intermediary or contact the Funds Transfer Agent at 1-888-763-2260. <R>
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
Year Since Purchase | Sales Charge* | ||
---|---|---|---|
|
|||
0-1 | 4.00% | ||
|
|||
1-2 | 4.00% | ||
|
|||
2-3 | 3.00% | ||
|
|||
3-4 | 3.00% | ||
|
|||
4-5 | 2.00% | ||
|
|||
5-6 | 1.00% | ||
|
|||
6 and thereafter | 0.00% | ||
|
* | The percentage charge will apply to the lesser of the original cost of the shares being redeemed or the proceeds of your redemption. Shares acquired by dividend reinvestment are not subject to a deferred sales charge. Mercury funds may not all have identical deferred sales charge schedules. If you exchange your shares for the shares of another Mercury fund, the higher charge, if any, would apply.</R> |
The deferred sales charge relating to Class B shares may be reduced or waived in certain circumstances, such as:
| Certain post-retirement withdrawals from an IRA or other retirement plan if you are over 59 1 / 2 years old |
| Redemption by certain eligible 401(a) and 401(k) plans and certain retirement plan rollovers<R> |
| Redemption in connection with participation in certain fee-based programs managed by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates or in connection with involuntary termination of an account in which Fund shares are held |
| Redemption in connection with participation in certain fee-based programs managed by selected securities dealers or other financial intermediaries that have agreements with the Distributor or its affiliates </R> |
| Withdrawals resulting from shareholder death or disability as long as the waiver request is made within one year after death or disability or, if later, reasonably promptly following completion of probate |
| Withdrawal through the Systematic Withdrawal Plan of up to 10% per year of your Class B account value at the time the plan is established |
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
Your Class B shares convert automatically into Class A shares approximately eight years after purchase. Any Class B shares received through reinvestment of dividends paid on converting shares will also convert at that time. Class A shares are subject to lower annual expenses than Class B shares. The conversion of Class B shares to Class A shares is not a taxable event for Federal income tax purposes.
Different conversion schedules may apply to Class B shares of different Mercury mutual funds. If you acquire your Class B shares in an exchange from another fund with a shorter conversion schedule, the Funds eight year conversion schedule will apply. If you exchange your Class B shares in the Fund for Class B shares of a fund with a longer conversion schedule, the other funds conversion schedule will apply. The length of time that you hold the original and exchanged Class B shares in both funds will count toward the conversion schedule.
The conversion schedule may be modified in certain other cases as well.
Class C shares do not offer a conversion privilege.
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
Because of the high costs of maintaining smaller shareholder accounts, a Fund may redeem the shares in your account (without charging any deferred sales charge) if the net asset value of your account falls below $500 due to redemptions you have made. You will be notified that the value of your account is less than $500 before the Fund makes an involuntary redemption. You will then have 60 days to make an additional investment to bring the value of your account to at least $500 before a Fund takes any action. This involuntary redemption does not apply to retirement plans or Uniform Gifts or Transfers to Minors Act accounts.
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
If You Want To | Your Choices | Information Important For You To Know | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|||||
Transfer
Shares to
Another Securities Dealer or Financial Intermediary |
Transfer
to a
participating securities dealer or financial intermediary |
You
may transfer your Fund shares to another securities dealer or other
financial intermediary if authorized agreements are in place between the Distributor and the transferring securities dealer or financial intermediary and the Distributor and the receiving securities dealer or other financial intermediary. Certain shareholder services may not be available for all transferred shares. You may only purchase additional shares of a fund previously owned before transfer. All future trading of these shares must be coordinated by the receiving securities dealer or other financial intermediary. |
|||
|
|||||
Transfer
to a
non-participating securities dealer or other financial intermediary |
You
must either:
Transfer your shares to an account with the Transfer Agent; or Sell your shares, paying any applicable deferred sales charge.<R> |
||||
|
|||||
Sell Your Shares |
Have
your financial
advisor, securities dealer or financial intermediary submit your sales order |
The
price of your shares is based on the next calculation of net asset
value after your order is placed. Generally, for your redemption request to be priced at the net asset value on the day of your request, you must submit your request to your dealer or other financial intermediary prior to that days close of business on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). Certain financial intermediaries, however, may require submission or orders prior to that time. Any redemption request placed after that time will be priced at the net asset value at the close of business on the next business day. |
|||
Certain
securities dealers or financial intermediaries may charge a fee in
connection with a sale of shares. For example, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated currently charges a fee of $5.35. No processing fee is charged if you redeem shares directly through the Transfer Agent. The fees charged by other securities dealers or financial intermediaries may be higher or lower. |
|||||
</R> | |||||
The Fund may reject an order to sell shares under certain circumstances. | |||||
|
|||||
Sell
through the
Transfer Agent |
You
may sell shares held at the Transfer Agent by writing to the
Transfer Agent at the address on the inside back cover of this prospectus. All shareholders on the account must sign the letter. A signature guarantee generally will be required but may be waived in certain limited circumstances. You can obtain a signature guarantee from a bank, securities dealer, securities broker, credit union, savings association, national securities exchange and registered securities association. A notary public seal will not be acceptable. The Transfer Agent will normally mail redemption proceeds within seven days following receipt of a properly completed request. If you make a redemption request before the Fund has collected payment for the purchase of shares, the Fund or the Transfer Agent may delay mailing your proceeds. This delay usually will not exceed ten days. |
||||
You
may also sell shares held at the Transfer Agent by telephone
request if the amount being sold is less than $50,000 and if certain other conditions are met. Contact the Transfer Agent at 1-888-763-2260 for details. |
|||||
|
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
Short-term or excessive trading into and out of the Fund may harm performance by disrupting portfolio management strategies and by increasing expenses. Accordingly, the Fund may reject any purchase orders, including exchanges, particularly from market timers or investors who, in Fund managements opinion, have a pattern of short-term or excessive trading or whose trading has been or may be disruptive to the Fund. For these purposes, Fund management may consider an investors trading history in the Fund or other Mercury funds, and accounts under common ownership or control.
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
Net Asset Value the market value in US dollars of the Funds total assets after deducting liabilities, divided by the number of shares outstanding.
The Fund may accept orders from certain authorized financial intermediaries or their designees. The Fund will be deemed to receive an order when accepted by the intermediary or designee and the order will receive the net asset value next computed by the Fund after such acceptance. If payment for a purchase order is not made by a designated later time, the order will be canceled and the financial intermediary could be held liable for any losses.
Generally, Class I shares will have the highest net asset value because that class has the lowest expenses, and Class A shares will have a higher net asset value than Class B or Class C shares. Also, dividends paid on Class I and Class A shares will generally be higher than dividends paid on Class B and Class C shares because Class I and Class A shares have lower expenses.
You generally cannot transfer shares held through a fee-based program into another account. Instead, you will have to redeem your shares held through the program and purchase shares of another class, which may be subject to
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
distribution and account maintenance fees. This may be a taxable event and you will pay any applicable sales charges.
If you leave one of these programs, your shares may be redeemed or automatically exchanged into another class of the Funds shares or into the Summit Fund. The class you receive may be the class you originally owned when you entered the program, or in certain cases, a different class. If the exchange is into Class B shares, the period before conversion to Class A shares may be modified. Any redemption or exchange will be at net asset value. However, if you participate in the program for less than a specified period, you may be charged a fee in accordance with the terms of the program.
Details about these features and the relevant charges are included in the client agreement for each fee-based program and are available from your financial advisor, selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary.
You will pay tax on dividends from the Fund whether you receive them in cash or additional shares. If you redeem Fund shares or exchange them for shares of another fund, you generally will be treated as having sold your shares, and any gain on the transaction may be subject to tax. Capital gain dividends are generally taxed at different rates than ordinary income dividends. <R>
If you are neither a lawful permanent resident nor a citizen of the United States or if you are a foreign entity, the Funds ordinary income dividends (which include distributions of the excess of net short term capital gains over net long term capital losses) will generally be subject to a 30% US withholding tax, unless a lower treaty rate applies. </R>
[GRAPHIC] Account Choices
Dividends and interest received by the Fund may give rise to withholding and other taxes imposed by foreign countries. Tax conventions between certain countries and the United States may reduce or eliminate such taxes.
By law, your dividends and redemption proceeds will be subject to a withholding tax if you have not provided a taxpayer identification number or social security number or if the number you have provided is incorrect.
This section summarizes some of the consequences under current Federal tax law of an investment in the Fund. It is not a substitute for personal tax advice. Consult your personal tax adviser about the potential tax consequences of an investment in the Fund under all applicable tax laws.
[GRAPHIC] The Management Team
Mercury Advisors was organized as an investment adviser in 1977 and offers investment advisory services to more than 50 registered investment companies. Funds Asset Management UK was organized as an investment adviser in 1986 and acts as sub-adviser to more than 50 registered investment companies. Mercury Advisors and its affiliates had approximately $517 billion in investment company and other portfolio assets under management as of March 2002.</R>
[GRAPHIC] The Management Team
Class I
|
Class A
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Increase (Decrease)
in Net Asset Value: |
For the Year Ended January 31,
|
For the Year Ended January 31,
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999 | 1998 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999 | 1998 | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Per Share Operating Performance: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, beginning of year | $17.49 | $22.01 | $18.53 | $13.42 | $11.79 | $17.45 | $ 21.93 | $18.51 | $13.42 | $11.78 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment loss net** | (.05 | ) | (.05 | ) | (.01 | ) | (.06 | ) | (.07 | ) | (.08 | ) | (.12 | ) | (.07 | ) | (.10 | ) | (.11 | ) | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Realized
and unrealized gain (loss)
on investments and foreign currency transactions net |
(3.32 | ) | (1.64 | ) | 4.58 | 5.63 | 2.83 | (3.33 | ) | (1.61 | ) | 4.58 | 5.62 | 2.84 | ||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total from investment operations | (3.37 | ) | (1.69 | ) | 4.57 | 5.57 | 2.76 | (3.41 | ) | (1.73 | ) | 4.51 | 5.52 | 2.73 | ||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Less
distributions from realized
gain on investments net |
(.43 | ) | (2.83 | ) | (1.09 | ) | (.46 | ) | (1.13 | ) | (.43 | ) | (2.75 | ) | (1.09 | ) | (.43 | ) | (1.09 | ) | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net asset value, end of year | $13.69 | $17.49 | $22.01 | $18.53 | $13.42 | $13.61 | $ 17.45 | $21.93 | $18.51 | $13.42 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total Investment Return:* | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Based on net asset value per share | (19.27 | %) | (8.37 | %) | 25.11 | % | 42.02 | % | 23.52 | % | (19.55 | %) | (8.57 | %) | 24.80 | % | 41.59 | % | 23.30 | % | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ratios to Average Net Assets: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Expenses | 1.30 | % | 1.31 | % | 1.36 | % | 1.56 | % | 1.98 | % | 1.56 | % | 1.55 | % | 1.62 | % | 1.80 | % | 2.23 | % | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Investment loss net | (.33 | %) | (.25 | %) | (.07 | %) | (.39 | %) | (.55 | %) | (.58 | %) | (.55 | %) | (.34 | %) | (.64 | %) | (.80 | %) | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Supplemental Data: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net
assets, end of year (in
thousands) |
$2,550 | $2,142 | $ 939 | $ 582 | $ 207 | $11,847 | $10,515 | $7,659 | $3,700 | $1,612 | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Portfolio turnover | 131.76 | % | 100.88 | % | 81.27 | % | 40.59 | % | 60.24 | % | 131.76 | % | 100.88 | % | 81.27 | % | 40.59 | % | 60.24 | % | ||||||||||
|
* | Total investment returns exclude the effects of sales charges. |
** | Based on average shares outstanding. |
| Prior to April 3, 2000, Class I shares were designated as Class A shares, and Class A shares were designated as Class D shares. </R> |
[GRAPHIC] The Management Team
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS (CONCLUDED) <R>
Class B
Class C
For the Year Ended January 31,
For the Year Ended January 31,
Increase
(Decrease) in
Net Asset Value:
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
Per
Share Operating
Performance:
Net
asset value,
beginning of year
$17.13
$ 21.44
$ 18.26
$ 13.27
$ 11.68
$17.09
$ 21.40
$ 18.24
$ 13.26
$ 11.67
Investment
loss net
(.20
)
(.30
)
(.22
)
(.23
)
(.22
)
(.20
)
(.30
)
(.23
)
(.24
)
(.23
)
Realized
and unrealized
gain (loss) on
investments and foreign
currency transactions
net
(3.25
)
(1.56
)
4.48
5.54
2.80
(3.25
)
(1.56
)
4.47
5.55
2.81
Total
from investment
operations
(3.45
)
(1.86
)
4.26
5.31
2.58
(3.45
)
(1.86
)
4.24
5.31
2.58
Less
distributions from
realized gain on
investments net
(.43
)
(2.45
)
(1.08
)
(.32
)
(.99
)
(.43
)
(2.45
)
(1.08
)
(.33
)
(.99
)
Net
asset value, end of
year
$13.25
$ 17.13
$ 21.44
$ 18.26
$ 13.27
$13.21
$ 17.09
$ 21.40
$ 18.24
$ 13.26
Total
Investment Return:*
Based
on net asset
value per share
(20.16
%)
(9.31
%)
23.76
%
40.41
%
22.16
%
(20.20
%)
(9.34
%)
23.68
%
40.39
%
22.17
%
Ratios
to Average Net Assets:
Expenses
2.39
%
2.36
%
2.45
%
2.66
%
3.09
%
2.42
%
2.38
%
2.48
%
2.71
%
3.14
%
Investment
loss net
(1.42
%)
(1.38
%)
(1.16
%)
(1.50
%)
(1.66
%)
(1.44
%)
(1.41
%)
(1.20
%)
(1.55
%)
(1.71
%)
Supplemental
Data:
Net
assets, end of
year (in thousands)
$85,072
$109,589
$115,216
$69,601
$25,752
$55,039
$69,476
$72,650
$40,710
$13,059
Portfolio
turnover
131.76
%
100.88
%
81.27
%
40.59
%
60.24
%
131.76
%
100.88
%
81.27
%
40.59
%
60.24
%
* | Total investment returns exclude the effects of sales charges. |
| Based on average shares outstanding. </R> |
This page intentionally left blank.
This page intentionally left blank.
Fund<R>
Mercury Growth
Opportunity Fund
of The Asset Program, Inc.
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536
(866-MERCURY)
[GRAPHIC]
To Learn More |
SHAREHOLDER REPORTS |
Additional information about the Funds investments is available in the Funds annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders. In the Funds Annual Report you will find a discussion of the relevant market conditions and investment strategies that significantly affected the Funds performance during its last fiscal year. You may obtain these reports at no cost by calling 1-888-763-2260.<R> |
If you hold your Fund shares through a brokerage account or directly at the Transfer Agent, you may receive only one copy of each shareholder report and certain other mailings regardless of the number of Fund accounts you have. If you prefer to receive separate shareholder reports for each account (or if you are receiving multiple copies and prefer to receive only one), call your financial advisor, or other financial intermediary, or write to the Transfer Agent at its mailing address. Include your name, address, tax identification number and brokerage or mutual fund account number. If you have any questions, please call your financial advisor or other financial intermediary or call the Transfer Agent at 1-888-763-2260.</R> |
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION |
The Funds Statement of Additional Information contains further information about the Funds and is incorporated by reference (legally considered to be part of this prospectus). You may request a free copy by writing or calling the Fund at Financial Data Services, Inc., P.O. Box 44062, Jacksonville, Florida 32232-4062 or by calling 1-888-763-2260.<R> |
Contact your financial advisor or other financial intermediary, or contact the Fund at the telephone number or address indicated above if you have any questions.</R> |
Information about the Funds (including the Statement of Additional Information) can be reviewed and copied at the SECs Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. Call 1-202-942-8090 for information on the operation of the Public Reference Room. This information is also available on the SECs Internet Site at http://www.sec.gov and copies may be obtained upon payment of a duplicating fee, by electronic request at the following e-mail address: publicinfo@sec.gov, or by writing the Public Reference Section of the SEC, Washington, D.C. 20549-0102. |
You should rely only on the information contained in this Prospectus. No one is authorized to provide you with information that is different from information in this Prospectus. |
<R> |
Investment Company Act File #811-7177.
Code #MF-18471-05-02 |
[LOGO] MERCURY FUNDS |
800 Scudders Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 866-MERCURY FAM Distributors, Inc. Member NASD www.mercuryfunds.com </R> |
For purposes of the diversification requirements set forth above with respect to regulated investment companies, and to the extent required by the Commission, the Fund, as a non-fundamental policy, will consider securities issued or guaranteed by the government of any one foreign country as the obligations of a single issuer.
The Fund will, except during temporary periods as market or economic conditions may warrant, maintain at least 65% of its total assets invested in equity securities. In purchasing equity securities for the Fund, Fund Asset Management, L.P., doing business as Mercury Advisors (the Investment Adviser) will seek to identify the
securities of companies and industry sectors which are expected to provide high total return relative to alternative equity investments. The Fund generally will seek to invest in securities the Investment Adviser believes to be undervalued. Undervalued issues include securities selling at a discount from the price-to-book value ratios and price-earnings ratios computed with respect to the relevant stock market averages. The Fund also may consider as undervalued securities selling at a discount from their historic price-to-book value or price-earnings ratios, even though these ratios may be above the ratios for the stock market averages. Securities offering dividend yields higher than the yields for the relevant stock market averages or higher than such securities historic yields may also be considered to be undervalued. The Fund may also invest in the securities of small and emerging growth companies when such companies are expected to provide a higher total return than other equity investments. Such companies are characterized by rapid historical growth rates, above-average returns on equity or special investment value in terms of their products or services, research capabilities or other unique attributes. The Investment Adviser will seek to identify small and emerging growth companies that possess superior management, marketing ability, research and product development skills and sound balance sheets.
High
yield bonds may be issued by less creditworthy companies or by larger, highly
leveraged companies and are frequently issued in corporate restructurings
such as mergers and leveraged buyouts. Such securities are particularly
vulnerable to adverse changes in the issuers industry and in general
economic conditions. High yield
bonds frequently are junior obligations of their issuers, so that in the event of the issuers bankruptcy, claims of the holders of high yield bonds will be satisfied only after satisfaction of the claims of senior security holders. While the high yield bonds in which the portfolios may invest normally do not include securities which, at the time of investment, are in default or the issuers of which are in bankruptcy, there can be no assurance that such events will not occur after the Fund purchases a particular security, in which case the Fund may experience losses and incur costs.
Smaller capital markets, while often growing in trading volume, typically have substantially less volume than U.S. markets, and securities in many smaller capital markets are less liquid and their prices may be more volatile than securities of comparable U.S. companies. Brokerage commissions, custodial services, and other costs relating to investment in smaller capital markets are generally more expensive than in the United States. Such markets have different clearance and settlement procedures, and in certain markets there have been times when settlements have been unable to keep pace with the volume of securities transactions, making it difficult to conduct such transactions. Further, satisfactory custodial services for investment securities may not be available in some countries having smaller capital markets, which may result in the Funds incurring additional costs and delays in transporting and custodying such securities outside such countries. Delays in settlement problems could result in temporary periods when Fund assets are uninvested and no return is earned thereon. The inability of the Fund to make intended security purchases due to settlement problems could cause the Fund to miss attractive investment
opportunities. Inability to dispose of a portfolio security due to settlement problems could result either in losses to the Fund due to subsequent declines in value of the portfolio security or, if the Fund has entered into a contract to sell the security, could result in possible liability to the purchaser. There is generally less government supervision and regulation of exchanges, brokers and issuers in countries having smaller capital markets than there are in the United States.
Investments in Securities Denominated in
Foreign Currencies.
The
Fund may invest in securities denominated in currencies other than the U.S.
dollar. In selecting securities denominated in foreign currencies, the Investment
Adviser will consider, among other factors, the effect of movement in currency
exchange rates on the U.S. dollar value of such securities. An increase in
the value of a currency will increase the total return to the Fund of securities
denominated in such currency. Conversely, a decline in the value of the currency
will reduce the total return. The Investment Adviser may seek to hedge all
or a portion of the Funds foreign securities through the use of forward
foreign currency contracts, currency options, futures contracts and options
thereon or derivative securities. See Indexed and Inverse Floating Rate
Securities, and Options and Futures Transactions below.
The
Fund may use the following types of derivative investments and trading strategies:
Options
and Futures Transactions.
The Fund may engage
in various portfolio strategies to seek to increase its return through the
use of listed or over-the-counter (OTC) options on its portfolio
securities and to hedge its portfolio against adverse movements in the markets
in which it invests. The Fund is authorized to write (
i.e.
, sell) covered
put and call options on its portfolio securities or securities in which it
anticipates investing and purchase put and call options on securities. In
addition, the Fund may engage in transactions in stock index options, stock
index futures and related options on such futures and may deal in forward foreign exchange transactions and foreign currency options and futures and related options on such futures. Each of these portfolio strategies is described in more detail below. Although certain risks are involved in options and futures transactions, the Investment Adviser believes that, because the Fund will (i) write only covered options on portfolio securities or securities in which they anticipate investing and (ii) engage in other options and futures transactions only for hedging purposes, the options and portfolio strategies of the Fund will not subject it to the risks frequently associated with the speculative use of options and futures transactions. While the Funds use of hedging strategies is intended to reduce the volatility of the net asset value of its shares, its net asset value will fluctuate. There can be no assurance that the Funds hedging transactions will be effective. Furthermore, the Fund will only engage in hedging activities from time to time and may not necessarily be engaging in hedging activities when movements in the equity or debt markets, interest rates or currency exchange rates occur.
Hedging against a decline in the value of a currency does not eliminate fluctuations in the prices of portfolio securities or prevent losses if the prices of such securities decline. Such transactions also preclude the opportunity for gain if the value of the hedged currency should rise. Moreover, it may not be possible for a Portfolio to hedge
against a devaluation that is so generally anticipated that the Portfolio is not able to contract to sell the currency at a price above the devaluation level it anticipates.
The staff of the Commission has taken the position that purchased OTC options and the assets used as cover for written OTC options are illiquid securities. Therefore, the Fund has adopted an investment policy pursuant to which it will not purchase or sell OTC options (including OTC options on futures contracts) if, as a result of such transaction, the sum of the market value of OTC options currently outstanding which are held by the Fund, the market value of the underlying securities covered by OTC call options currently outstanding which were sold by the Fund and margin deposits on the Funds existing OTC options on futures contracts exceed 15% (10% to the extent required by certain state laws) of the total assets of the Fund taken at market value, together with all other assets of the Fund which are illiquid or are not otherwise readily marketable. However, if the OTC option is sold by the Fund to a primary U.S. Government securities dealer recognized by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and if the Fund has the unconditional contractual right to repurchase such OTC option from the dealer at a
predetermined price, then the Fund will treat as illiquid such amount of the underlying securities as is equal to the repurchase price less the amount by which the option is in-the-money) ( i.e. , current market value of the underlying security minus the options strike price). The repurchase price with the primary dealers is typically a formula price which is generally based on a multiple of the premium received for the option, plus the amount by which the option is in-the-money. This policy as to OTC options is not a fundamental policy of the Fund and may be amended by the Directors of the Fund without the approval of its shareholders. However, the Fund will not change or modify this policy prior to the change or modification by the Commission staff of its position.
The writer may terminate its obligation prior to the expiration date of the option by executing a closing purchase transaction which is effected by purchasing on an exchange an option of the same series ( i.e. , same underlying security, exercise price and expiration date) as the option previously written. Such a purchase does not result in the ownership of an option. A closing purchase transaction ordinarily will be effected to realize a profit on an outstanding call option, to prevent an underlying security from being called, to permit the sale of the underlying security or to permit the writing of a new call option containing different terms on such underlying security. The cost of such a liquidation purchase plus transaction costs may be greater than the premium received upon the original option, in which event the Fund will have incurred a loss in the transaction. An option may be closed out only on an exchange which provides a secondary market for an option of the same series and there is no assurance that a liquid secondary market on an exchange will exist for any particular option. A covered option
writer unable to effect a closing purchase transaction will not be able to sell the underlying security until the option expires or the underlying security is delivered upon exercise, with the result that the writer will be subject to the risk of market decline in the underlying security during such period. The Fund will write an option on a particular security only if management believes that a liquid secondary market will exist on an exchange for options of the same series which will permit the Fund to make a closing purchase transaction in order to close out its position.
Other Investment Policies and Practices
Borrowing and Leverage. The Fund may borrow up to 33 1 / 3 % of its total assets, taken at market value, but only from banks as a temporary measure for extraordinary or emergency purposes, including to meet redemptions or to settle securities transactions. The Fund will not purchase securities at any time when borrowings exceed 5% of its total assets, except (a) to honor prior commitments or (b) to exercise subscription rights when outstanding borrowings have been obtained exclusively for settlements of other securities transactions. The purchase of securities while borrowings are outstanding will have the effect of leveraging the Fund. Such leveraging increases the Funds exposure to capital risk, and borrowed funds are subject to interest costs that will reduce net income. The use of leverage by the Fund creates an opportunity for greater total return, but, at the same time, creates special risks. For example, leveraging may exaggerate changes in the net asset value of Fund shares and in the yield on the Funds portfolio. Although the principal of such borrowings will be fixed, the Funds assets may change in value during the time the borrowings are outstanding. Borrowings will create interest expenses for the Fund which can exceed the income from the assets purchased with the borrowings. To the extent the income or capital appreciation derived from securities purchased with borrowed funds exceeds the interest the Fund will have to pay on the borrowings, the Funds return will be greater than if leverage had not been used. Conversely, if the income or capital appreciation from the securities purchased with such borrowed funds is not sufficient to cover the cost of borrowing, the
There can be no assurance that a security purchased on a when issued basis will be issued or that a security purchased or sold through a forward commitment will be delivered. The value of securities in these transactions on the delivery date may be more or less than the Funds purchase price. The Fund may bear the risk of a decline in the value of the security in these transactions and may not benefit from an appreciation in the value of the security during the commitment period.
Warrants. The Fund may invest in warrants, which are securities permitting, but not obligating, the warrant holder to subscribe for other securities. Buying a warrant does not make the Fund a shareholder of the underlying stock. The warrant holder has no right to dividends or votes on the underlying stock. A warrant does not carry any right to assets of the issuer, and for this reason investment in warrants may be more speculative than other equity-based investments.
Standby Commitment Agreements . The Fund may enter into standby commitment agreements. These agreements commit the Fund, for a stated period of time, to purchase a stated amount of securities which may be issued and sold to that Fund at the option of the issuer. The price of the security is fixed at the time of the commitment. At the time of entering into the agreement the Fund is paid a commitment fee, regardless of whether or not the security is ultimately issued. The Fund will enter into such agreements for the purpose of investing in the security underlying the commitment at a price that is considered advantageous to the Fund. The Fund will not enter into a standby commitment with a remaining term in excess of 45 days and will limit its investment in such commitments so that the aggregate purchase price of securities subject to such commitments, together with the value of portfolio securities subject to legal restrictions on resale that affect their marketability, will not exceed 15% of its net assets taken at the time of the commitment. The Fund segregates liquid assets in an aggregate amount equal to the purchase price of the securities underlying the commitment.
Illiquid or Restricted Securities . The Fund may invest up to 15% of its net assets in securities that lack an established secondary trading market or otherwise are considered illiquid. Liquidity of a security relates to the ability to dispose easily of the security and the price to be obtained upon disposition of the security, which may be less than would be obtained for a comparable more liquid security. Illiquid securities may trade at a discount from comparable, more liquid investments. Investment of the Funds assets in illiquid securities may restrict the ability of the Fund to dispose of its investments in a timely fashion and for a fair price as well as its ability to take advantage of market opportunities. The risks associated with illiquidity will be particularly acute where the Funds operations require cash, such as when the Fund redeems shares or pays dividends, and could result in the Fund borrowing to meet short term cash requirements or incurring capital losses on the sale of illiquid investments.
The
Fund may invest in securities that are not registered (restricted securities)
under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the Securities Act).
Restricted securities may be sold in private placement transactions between
issuers and their purchasers and may be neither listed on an exchange nor traded
in other established markets. In many cases, privately placed securities may
not be freely transferable under the laws of the applicable jurisdiction or
due to contractual restrictions on resale. As a result of the absence of a public
trading market, privately placed securities may be less liquid and more difficult
to value than publicly traded securities. To the extent that privately placed
securities may be resold in privately negotiated transactions, the prices realized
from the sales, due to illiquidity, could be less than those originally paid
by the Fund or less than their fair market value. In addition, issuers whose
securities are not publicly traded may not be subject to the disclosure and
other investor protection requirements that may be applicable if their securities
were publicly traded. If any privately placed securities held by the Fund are
required to be registered under the securities laws of one or more jurisdictions
before being resold, the Fund may be required to bear the expenses of registration.
Certain of the Funds investments in private placements may consist of
direct investments and may include investments in smaller, less seasoned issuers,
which may involve greater risks. These issuers may have limited product lines,
markets or financial resources, or they may be dependent on a limited management
group. In making investments in such securities, the Fund may obtain access
to material nonpublic information which may restrict the Funds ability
to conduct portfolio transactions in such securities.
Suitability
The economic benefit of an investment in the Fund depends upon many factors beyond the control of the Fund, the Investment Adviser and its affiliates. Because of its emphasis on growth securities, the Fund should be considered a vehicle for diversification and not as a balanced investment program. The suitability for any particular investor of a purchase of shares in the Fund will depend on, among other things, such investors investment objectives and such investors ability to accept the risks associated with investing in growth securities, including the risk of loss of principal.
The Fund is classified as non-diversified within the meaning of the Investment Company Act, which means that the Fund is not limited by such Act in the proportion of its assets that it may invest in securities of a single issuer. The Funds investments are limited, however, in order to qualify for the special tax treatment afforded regulated investment companies under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). See Taxes. To qualify, the Fund will comply with certain requirements, including limiting its investments so that at the close of each quarter of the taxable year (i) not more than 25% of the market value of the Funds total assets will be invested in the securities of a single issuer and (ii) with respect to 50% of the market value of its total assets, not more than 5% of the market value of its total assets will be invested in the securities of a single issuer, and the Fund will not own more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of a single issuer. A fund which elects to be classified as diversified under the Investment Company Act must satisfy the foregoing 5% and 10% requirements with respect to 75% of its total assets. To the extent that the Fund assumes large positions in the securities of a small number of issuers, the Funds net asset value may fluctuate to a greater extent than that of a diversified company as a result of changes in the financial condition or in the markets assessment of the issuers, and the Fund may be more susceptible to any single economic, political or regulatory occurrence than a diversified company.
1. Invest more than 25% of its assets, taken at market value, in
the securities of issuers in any particular industry (excluding the U.S. Government and its agencies and instrumentalities).
|
2. Make investments for the purpose of exercising control or
management.
|
3. Purchase or sell real estate, except that, to the extent
permitted by applicable law, the Fund may invest in securities directly or indirectly secured by real estate or interests therein or issued by companies that invest in real estate or interests therein.
|
4. Make loans to other persons, except that the acquisition of
bonds, debentures or other corporate debt securities and investment in governmental obligations, commercial paper, pass-through instruments, certificates of deposit, bankers acceptances, repurchase agreements or any similar instruments shall
not be deemed to be the making of a loan, and except further that the Fund may lend its portfolio securities, provided that the lending of portfolio securities may be made only in accordance with applicable law and the guidelines set forth in the
Funds Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information, as they may be amended from time to time.
|
5. Issue senior securities to the extent such issuance would
violate applicable law.
|
6. Borrow money, except that (i) the Fund may borrow from banks
(as defined in the Investment Company Act) in amounts up to 33
1
/
3
% of its total assets (including the
amount borrowed), (ii) the Fund may borrow up to an additional 5% of its total assets for temporary purposes, (iii) the Fund may obtain such short-term credit as may be necessary for the clearance of purchases and sales of portfolio securities and
(iv) the Fund may purchase securities on margin to the extent permitted by applicable law. The Fund may not pledge its assets other than to secure such borrowings or, to the extent permitted by the Funds investment policies as set forth in the
Funds Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information, as they may be amended from time to time, in connection with hedging transactions, short sales, when issued and forward commitment transactions and similar investment strategies. The
Fund will not purchase securities while borrowings exceed 5% of its assets. The Fund has no present intention to borrow money in amounts exceeding 5% of its assets.
|
7. Underwrite securities of other issuers except insofar as the
Fund technically may be deemed an underwriter under the Securities Act in selling portfolio securities.
|
8. Purchase or sell commodities or contracts on commodities,
except to the extent that the Fund may do so in accordance with applicable law and the Funds Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information, as they may be amended from time to time, and without registering as a commodity pool operator
under the Commodity Exchange Act.
|
(a) Purchase securities of other investment companies, except to
the extent such purchases are permitted by applicable law. As a matter of policy, however, the Fund will not purchase shares of any registered open-end investment company or registered unit investment trust, in reliance on Section 12(d)(1)(F) or (G)
(the fund of funds provisions) of the Investment Company Act, at any time the Funds shares are owned by another investment company that is part of the same group of investment companies as the Program.
|
(b) Make short sales of securities or maintain a short position,
except to the extent permitted by applicable law.
|
(c) Invest in securities that cannot be readily resold because of
legal or contractual restrictions or that cannot otherwise be marketed, redeemed or put to the issuer or a third party, if at the time of acquisition more than 15% of its net assets would be invested in such securities. This restriction shall not
apply to securities
|
that mature within seven days or securities that the Directors of the Program have otherwise determined to be liquid pursuant to applicable law. Securities purchased in accordance with Rule 144A under the Securities Act and
determined to be liquid by the Programs Board of Directors are not subject to the limitations set forth in this investment restriction.
|
(d) Notwithstanding fundamental investment restriction (6) above,
borrow amounts in excess of 10% of its total assets, taken at market value, and then only from banks as a temporary measure for extraordinary or emergency purposes such as redemption of Fund shares. The Fund will not purchase securities while
borrowing exceeds 5% (taken at market value) of its total assets.
|
Each non-interested Director is a member of the Programs Audit Committee (Audit Committee). The principal responsibilities of the Committee are to (i) recommend to the board the selection, retention or termination of the Funds independent auditors; (ii) review with the independent auditors the scope, performance and anticipated cost of their audit; (iii) discuss with the independent auditors certain matters relating to the Funds financial statements, including any adjustment to such financial statements recommended by such independent auditors, or any other results of any audit; (iv) ensure that the independent auditors submit on a periodic basis a formal written statement with respect to their independence, discuss with the independent auditors any relationships or services disclosed in the statement that may impact the objectivity and independence of the Programs independent auditors and recommend that the Board take appropriate action in response thereto to satisfy itself of the independent auditors independence; and (v) consider the comments of the independent auditors and managements responses thereto with respect to the quality and adequacy of the Funds accounting and financial reporting policies and practices and internal controls. The Board of the Program has adopted a written charter for the Committee. The Committee also reviews and nominates candidates to serve as non-interested Directors. The Committee generally will not consider nominees recommended by shareholders. The Committee has retained independent legal counsel to assist them in connection with these duties.
Biographical
Information.
Certain biographical and other information relating
to the non-interested Directors of the Program is set forth below, including
their ages, their principal occupations for at least the last five years,
the length of the time served, the total number of portfolios overseen in
the complex of funds advised by the Investment Adviser and its affiliate,
Merrill Lynch Investment Managers, L.P. (MLIM), (MLIM/FAM-Advised
Funds) and other public directorships.<R>
Name, Address and Age |
Position(s) Held with Program |
Term of Office* and Length of Time Served |
Principal Occupation During
|
Number of MLIM/FAM-Advised Funds Overseen |
Public Directorships |
|||||
James H. Bodurtha (58)
|
Director |
Director since 2002 |
Director and Executive Vice President, The China Business Group, Inc. since 1996; Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, China Enterprise Management Corporation from 1993 to 1996; Partner, Squire, Sanders & Dempsey from 1980 to 1993.
|
53 registered investment companies consisting of 74 portfolios |
None |
|||||
Joe Grills (67)
|
Director |
Director since 1994 |
Member of the Committee of Investment of Employee Benefit Assets of the Association of Financial Professionals (CIEBA) since 1986; Member of CIEBAs Executive Committee since 1988 and its Chairman from 1991 to 1992; Assistant Treasurer of International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) and Chief Investment Officer of IBM Retirement Funds from 1986 to 1993; Member of the Investment Advisory Committee of the State of New York Common Retirement Fund since 1989; Member of the Investment Advisory Committee of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute from 1997 to 2000; Director, Duke Management Company since 1992 and Vice Chairman thereof since 1998; Director, LaSalle Street Fund from 1995 to 2001; Director, Kimco Realty Corporation since 1997; Member of the Investment Advisory Committee of the
|
56 registered investment companies consisting of 77 portfolios |
Kimco Realty Corporation |
|||||
</R> |
<R>
Name, Address and Age |
Position(s) Held with Program |
Term of Office* and Length of Time Served |
Principal Occupation During
|
Number of MLIM/FAM-Advised Funds Overseen |
Public Directorships |
|||||
Melvin R. Seiden (71)
|
Director |
Director since 1994 |
Director of Silbanc Properties, Ltd. (real estate, investment and consulting) since 1987; Chairman and President of Seiden & de Cuevas, Inc. (private investment firm) from 1964 to 1987.
|
56 registered investment companies consisting of 77 portfolios |
None |
|||||
Stephen B. Swensrud (68)
|
Director |
Director since 1994 |
Chairman of Fernwood Advisors (investment adviser) since 1996; Principal of Fernwood Associates (financial consultant) since 1975; Chairman of RPP Corporation (manufacturing) since 1978; Director, International Mobile Communications, Inc. (telecommunications) since 1998. |
56 registered investment companies consisting of 77 portfolios |
None |
|
|
*
|
Each
Director serves until his or her successor is elected or qualified,
or until his or her death or resignation, or removal as provided in
the Programs by-laws or charter or by statute, or until December
31 of the year in which he or she turns 72.
</R>
|
Certain biographical and other information relating to the Director who is an interested person as defined in the Investment Company Act, and other officers of the Program is set forth below:
|
|
| The address for Mr. Glenn and each officer listed is P.O. Box 9011, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011 |
|
Mr.
Glenn is an interested person, as defined in the Investment Company Act, of the Program based on his positions with MLIM, FAM, FAMD, Princeton Services and Princeton Administrators.
|
*
|
Mr.
Glenn was elected President of the Fund in 1999. Prior to that he served
as Executive Vice President of the Fund.
|
**
|
Each
Director serves until his or her successor is elected and qualified,
or until his or her death or resignation, or removal as provided in
the Programs by-laws or charter or by statute, or until December
31 of the year in which he or she turns 72.
|
** * | Elected by and serves at the pleasure of the Board of Directors of the Program. </R> |
Share Ownership. Information relating to each Directors share ownership in the Fund and in all registered funds in the Merrill Lynch family of funds that are overseen by the respective Director (Supervised Merrill Lynch Funds) as of December 31, 2001 is set forth in the chart below:
Name
|
Aggregate Dollar Range
|
Aggregate Dollar Range
|
||
Interested Directors: |
||||
Terry K. Glenn |
None |
Over $100,000 |
||
Non-Interested Directors: |
||||
James H. Bodurtha |
None |
$50,001 - $100,000 |
||
Joe Grills |
None |
Over $100,000 |
||
Herbert I. London |
None |
$50,001 - $100,000 |
||
André F. Perold |
None |
Over $100,000 |
||
Roberta Cooper Ramo |
None |
None |
||
Melvin R. Seiden |
None |
$1 - $10,000 |
||
Robert S. Salomon, Jr. |
None |
None |
||
Stephen B. Swensrud |
None |
None |
<R>As of May 10, 2002, the Directors and officers of the Program as a group (16 persons) owned an aggregate of less than 1% of the outstanding shares of the Fund. At such date, Mr. Glenn, a Director and officer of the Program, and the other officers of the Fund owned an aggregate of less than 1% of the outstanding shares of common stock of Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. (ML & Co.). As of December 31, 2001, none of the non-interested Directors of the Program nor any of their immediate family members owned beneficially or of record any securities in ML & Co. </R>
Name
|
Position
with
Program |
Compensation
from Program |
Pension
or
Retirement Benefits Accrued as Part of Program Expense |
Estimated
Annual
Benefits upon Retirement |
Aggregate
Compensation from Program and Other MLIM/FAM-Advised Funds |
|||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
James H. Bodurtha* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Joe Grills | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $259,500 | |||||
Herbert I. London* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Andr é F. Perold* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Roberta Cooper Ramo* | Director | None | None | None | $160,000 | |||||
Robert S. Salomon, Jr. | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $222,000 | |||||
Melvin R. Seiden | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $222,000 | |||||
Stephen B. Swensrud | Director | $9,167 | None | None | $406,083 |
|
|
*
|
Ms. Ramo and Messrs. Bodurtha,
London and Perold were elected to serve as Directors of the Program on
April 15, 2002.</R>
|
Investment Advisory Services . The Investment Adviser provides the Program with investment advisory and management services with respect to the Fund. Subject to the supervision of the Board of Directors, the Investment Adviser
is responsible for the actual management of the Funds portfolio and constantly reviews the Funds holdings in light of its own research analysis and that from other relevant sources. The responsibility for making decisions to buy, sell or hold a particular security rests with the Investment Adviser. The Investment Adviser performs certain of the other administrative services and provides all the office space, facilities, equipment and necessary personnel for management of the Program.
For
the fiscal year ended January 31,
|
Fee
Amount($)
|
|
---|---|---|
2002 | $1,055,233 | |
2001 | $1,354,477 | |
2000 | $ 992,233 | |
</R> |
Duration and Termination. Unless earlier terminated as described herein, the Investment Advisory Agreement and the Sub-Advisory Agreement for the Fund will continue in effect from year to year if approved annually (a) by the Directors of the Program or by a majority of the outstanding shares of the Fund and (b) by a majority of the Directors who are not parties to such contract or interested persons (as defined in the Investment Company Act) of any such party. Such contracts are not assignable and may be terminated without penalty on 60 days written notice at the option of either party or by vote of the shareholders of the Fund.
At a meeting of the Board of Directors held on April 10, 2002, the Board approved the continuation of the Funds Investment Advisory Agreement for an additional year. In connection with its deliberations, the Board reviewed information derived from a number of sources and covering a range of issues. The Board considered the services provided to the fund by the Investment Adviser and its affiliated under other agreement, and the personnel who provide these services. In addition to investment advisory services, the Investment Adviser and its affiliates provide administrative services, shareholder services, oversight of fund accounting, marketing services, assistance in meeting legal and regulatory requirements, and other services necessary for the operation of the Fund. The Board also considered the Investment Advisers costs of providing services, and the direct and indirect benefits to the Investment Adviser from its relationship with the Fund. The benefits considered by the Board included not only the Investment Advisers compensation for investment advisory services under the Investment Advisory Agreement and the Investment Advisers profitability under the Investment Advisory Agreement, but also compensation paid to the Investment Adviser or its affiliates for other, non-advisory, services provided to the Fund. The Directors also considered the Investment Advisers access to research services from brokers to which the Investment Adviser may have allocated Fund brokerage in a soft dollar arrangement. In connection with its consideration of the Investment Advisory Agreement, the Board also compared the Funds advisory fee rate, expense ratios and historical performance to those of comparable funds. The Board considered whether there should be changes in the advisory fee rate or structure in order to enable the fund to participate in any economies of scale that the Investment Adviser may experience as a result of growth in the Funds assets. The Board also reviewed materials supplied by Fund counsel that were prepared for use by the Board in fulfilling its duties under the Investment Company Act and state law.</R>
Based on the information reviewed and the discussions, the Board, including a majority of the non-interested Directors concluded that it was satisfied with the nature and quality of the services provided by the Investment Adviser to the Fund and that the investment advisory fee rate was reasonable in relation to such services. The non-interested Directors were represented by independent counsel who assisted the non-interested Directors in their deliberations.
<R>
The table below sets forth information about the total amounts paid by the Fund to the Transfer Agent for the periods indicated.
Fiscal
Year Ended January 31,
|
Transfer
Agent Fee*
|
|
---|---|---|
2002 | $806,873 | |
2001 | $848,773 | |
2000 | $797,869 |
|
Accounting Services. The Program, on behalf of the Fund, entered into an agreement with State Street, effective January 1, 2001, pursuant to which State Street provides certain accounting services to the Fund. The Fund pays a fee for these services. Prior to January 1, 2001 the Investment Adviser provided accounting services to the Fund and was reimbursed by the Fund at its cost in connection with such services. The Investment Adviser continues to provide certain accounting services to the Fund and the Fund reimburses the Investment Adviser for the cost of these services.<R>
Fiscal
Year ended Januray 31,
|
Paid
to
State Street |
Paid
to the
Investment Adviser |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | $72,932 | $ 12,655 | ||
2001 | $ 8,898* | $233,435 | ||
2000 | N/A | $113,160 | ||
</R> |
|
*
|
Represents payments pursuant
to the agreement with State Street effective on January 1, 2001.
|
Investors should understand that the purpose and function of the initial sales charges with respect to the Class I and Class A shares are the same as those of the CDSCs and distribution fees with respect to the Class B and Class C shares in that the sales charges and distribution fees applicable to each class provide for the financing of the distribution of the shares of the Fund. The distribution-related revenues paid with respect to a class will not be used to finance the distribution expenditures of another class. Sales personnel may receive different compensation for selling different classes of shares.
The term purchase, as used in the Prospectus and this Statement of Additional Information in connection with an investment in Class I and Class A shares of the Fund, refers to a single purchase by an individual or to concurrent purchases, which in the aggregate are at least equal to the prescribed amounts, by an individual, his or her spouse and their children under the age of 21 years purchasing shares for his or her or their own account and to single purchases by a trustee or other fiduciary purchasing shares for a single trust estate or single fiduciary account although more than one beneficiary is involved. The term purchase also includes purchases by any company, as that term is defined in the Investment Company Act, but does not include purchases by any such company that has not been in existence for at least six months or which has no purpose other than the purchase of
shares of a Fund or shares of other registered investment companies at a discount; provided, however, that it shall not include purchases by any group of individuals whose sole organizational nexus is that the participants therein are credit cardholders of a company, policyholders of an insurance company, customers of either a bank or broker-dealer or clients of an investment adviser.
Class I shares are offered to a limited group of investors and also will be issued upon reinvestment of dividends paid on outstanding Class I shares. Investors who currently own Class I shares in a shareholder account are entitled to purchase additional Class I shares of a Fund in that account. Certain employer-sponsored retirement or savings plans, including eligible 401(k) plans, may purchase Class I shares at net asset value provided such plans meet the required minimum number of eligible employees or required amount of assets advised by the Investment Adviser or any of its affiliates. Also eligible to purchase Class I shares at net asset value are participants in certain investment programs including certain managed accounts for which a trust institution, thrift, or bank trust department provides discretionary trustee services, certain collective investment trusts for which a trust institution, thrift, or bank trust department serves as trustee, certain purchases made in connection with certain fee-based programs and certain purchases made through certain financial advisers that meet and adhere to standards established by the Investment Adviser. In addition, Class I shares are offered at net asset value to ML & Co. and its subsidiaries and their directors and employees, to members of the Boards of Mercury and Affiliate-Advised Funds, including the Fund, and to employees of certain selected dealers. Class I shares may also be offered at net asset value to certain accounts over which the Investment Adviser or an affiliate exercises investment discretion.
For
the Fiscal year
ended January 31, |
Gross
Sales
Charges Collected |
Sales
Charges
Retained by Distributor |
Sales
Charges
Paid to Merrill Lynch |
CDSCs
Received on
Redemption of Load-Waived Shares |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | $153 | $ 7 | $146 | $0 | ||||
2001 | $174 | $ 8 | $166 | $0 | ||||
2000 | $550 | $26 | $524 | $0 |
For
the Fiscal year
ended January 31, |
Gross
Sales
Charges Collected |
Sales
Charges
Retained by Distributor |
Sales
Charges
Paid to Merrill Lynch |
CDSCs
Received on
Redemption of Load-Waived Shares |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | $22,820 | $1,018 | $21,802 | $2 | ||||
2001 | $38,757 | $1,917 | $36,840 | $0 | ||||
2000 | $44,411 | $2,192 | $42,219 | $0 | ||||
<R>
|
Right of Accumulation . Reduced sales charges are applicable through a right of accumulation under which eligible investors are permitted to purchase shares of the Fund subject to an initial sales charge at the offering price applicable to the total of (a) the public offering price of the shares then being purchased plus (b) an amount equal to the then current net asset value or cost, whichever is higher, of the purchasers combined holdings of all classes of shares of the Fund and of other Mercury mutual funds. For any such right of accumulation to be made available, the Distributor must be provided at the time of purchase, by the purchaser or the purchasers securities dealer or other financial intermediary, with sufficient information to permit confirmation of qualification. Acceptance of the purchase order is subject to such confirmation. The right of accumulation may be amended or terminated at any time. Shares held in the name of a nominee or custodian under pension, profit-sharing, or other employee benefit plans may not be combined with other shares to qualify for the right of accumulation.
Purchase Privileges of Certain Persons . Directors of the Program, members of the Boards of other investment companies advised by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates, directors and employees of ML & Co. and its subsidiaries (the term subsidiaries, when used herein with respect to ML & Co., includes the Investment Adviser, MLIM, Mercury Asset Management International, Ltd. and certain other entities directly or indirectly wholly owned and controlled by ML & Co.), employees of certain selected dealers and financial intermediaries,
and any trust, pension, profit-sharing or other benefit plan for such persons, may purchase Class I shares of the Fund at net asset value. The Fund realizes economies of scale and reduction of sales-related expenses by virtue of the familiarity of these persons with the Fund. Employees and directors or trustees wishing to purchase shares of the Fund must satisfy the Funds suitability standards.
<R>Year Since Purchase Payment Made
|
CDSC as a Percentage
of Dollar Amount Subject to Charge |
|
---|---|---|
0-1 | 4.0% | |
1-2 | 4.0% | |
2-3 | 3.0% | |
3-4 | 3.0% | |
4-5 | 2.0% | |
5-6 | 1.0% | |
6 and thereafter | None</R> |
To provide an example, assume an investor purchased 100 shares at $10 per share (at a cost of $1,000) and in the third year after purchase, the net asset value per share is $12 and, during such time, the investor has acquired 10 additional shares upon dividend reinvestment. If at such time the investor makes his or her first redemption of
50 shares (proceeds of $600), 10 shares will not be subject to a CDSC because they were issued through dividend reinvestment. With respect to the remaining 40 shares, the charge is applied only to the original cost of $10 per share and not to the increase in net asset value of $2 per share. Therefore, $400 of the $600 redemption proceeds will be charged at a rate of 3.0% (the applicable rate in the third year after purchase).
Contingent Deferred Sales ChargesClass C Shares. Class C shares that are redeemed within one year of purchase may be subject to a 1.0% CDSC charged as a percentage of the dollar amount subject thereto. In determining whether a Class C CDSC is applicable to a redemption, the calculation will be determined in the
manner that results in the lowest possible rate being charged. The charge will be assessed on an amount equal to the lesser of the proceeds of redemption or the cost of the shares being redeemed. Accordingly, no Class C CDSC will be imposed on increases in net asset value above the initial purchase price. In addition, no Class C CDSC will be assessed on shares derived from reinvestment of dividends. It will be assumed that the redemption is first of shares held for over one year or shares acquired pursuant to reinvestment of dividends and then of shares held longest during the one-year period. A transfer of shares from a shareholders account to another account will be assumed to be made in the same order as a redemption. The Class C CDSC may be waived in connection with involuntary termination of an account in which Fund shares are held and withdrawals through the Systematic Withdrawal Plans. See Shareholder ServicesSystematic Withdrawal Plan.
Class B Shares*
|
<R> | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
For
the fiscal year
ended January 31, |
CDSCs
Received by Distributor |
CDSCs
Paid to
Merrill Lynch |
||
2002 | $141,493 | $141,493 | ||
2001 | $242,150 | $242,150 | ||
2000 | $203,017 | $203,017 | ||
</R> |
*
|
Additional
Class B CDSCs payable to the Distributor may have been waived or converted
to a contingent obligation in connection with a shareholders participation
in certain fee-based programs.
|
Class C Shares
|
<R>
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
For
the fiscal year
ended January 31, |
CDSCs
Received by Distributor |
CDSCs
Paid to
Merrill Lynch |
||
2002 | $ 9,579 | $ 9,579 | ||
2001 | $21,850 | $21,850 | ||
2000 | $24,460 | $24,460 | ||
</R>
|
The Distribution Plans for Class B and Class C shares provide that the Fund also pays the Distributor a distribution fee relating to the shares of the relevant class, accrued daily and paid monthly, at the annual rate of 1.00% of the average daily net assets of the Fund attributable to the shares of the relevant class in order
to compensate the Distributor, a selected securities dealer or other financial intermediary (pursuant to a sub-agreement) for providing shareholder and distribution services, and bearing certain distribution-related expenses of the Fund, including payments to financial advisors or other financial intermediaries for selling Class B and Class C shares of the Fund. The Distribution Plans relating to Class B and Class C shares are designed to permit an investor to purchase Class B and Class C shares through selected securities dealers or other financial intermediaries, without the assessment of an initial sales charge, and at the same time compensate the dealer and financial intermediaries to compensate its financial advisors, selected securities dealers or other financial intermediaries in connection with the sale of the Class B and Class C shares.
Among other things, each Distribution Plan provides that the Distributor shall provide and the Directors shall review quarterly reports of the disbursement of the account maintenance and/or distribution fees paid to the Distributor. Payments under the Distribution Plans are based on a percentage of average daily net assets attributable to the shares regardless of the amount of expenses incurred and, accordingly, distribution-related revenues from each Distribution Plan may be more or less than distribution-related expenses of the related class. Information with respect to the distribution-related revenues and expenses is presented to the Directors for their consideration quarterly, and, in connection with their deliberations as to the continuance of the Class B and Class C Distribution Plans, annually. Distribution-related revenues consist of the account maintenance fees, distribution fees and the CDSCs. Distribution-related expenses consist of financial advisor compensation, branch office and regional operation center selling and transaction processing expenses, advertising, sales promotion and marketing expenses, corporate overhead and interest expense.
(1)
|
Purchase price of all eligible Class B or Class C shares sold during the periods indicated other than shares acquired through
dividend reinvestment and the exchange privilege.
|
(2)
|
Includes amounts attributable
to exchanges from Summit that are not reflected in Eligible Gross Sales.
Shares of Summit can only be purchased by exchange from another fund (the
redeemed fund). Upon such an exchange, the maximum allowable
sales charge payment to the redeemed fund is reduced in accordance with
the amount of the redemption. This amount is then added to the maximum
allowable sales charge payment with respect to Summit. Upon an exchange
out of Summit, the remaining balance of this amount is deducted from the
maximum allowable sales charge payment to Summit and added to the maximum
allowable sales charge payment to the fund into which the exchange is
made.
|
(3)
|
Interest is computed on
a monthly basis based upon the prime rate, as reported in
The Wall
Street Journal
, plus 1.0%, as permitted under the NASD Rule.
|
(4)
|
Consists of CDSC payments,
distribution fee payments and accruals. See Fund Facts Fees
and Expenses in the Prospectus. This figure may include CDSCs that
were deferred when a shareholder redeemed shares prior to the expiration
of the applicable CDSC period and invested the proceeds, without the imposition
of a sales charge, in class A shares in conjunction with the shareholders
participation in the MFA Program. The CDSC is booked as a contingent obligation
that may be payable if the shareholder terminates participation in the
MFA Program.</R>
|
(5)
|
Provided to illustrate
the extent to which the current level of distribution fee payments (not
including any CDSC payments) is amortizing the unpaid balance. No assurance
can be given that payments of the distribution fee will reach either the
voluntary maximum (with respect to Class B shares) or the NASD maximum
(with respect to Class B and Class C shares).
</R>
|
For shareholders redeeming directly with the Transfer Agent, payments will generally be mailed within seven days of receipt of a proper notice of redemption. At various times the Fund may be requested to redeem shares for which it has not yet received good payment ( e.g. , cash, Federal funds or certified check drawn on a U.S. bank). The Fund may delay or cause to be delayed the mailing of a redemption check until such time as good payment ( e.g. , cash, Federal funds or certified check drawn on a U.S. bank) has been collected for the purchase of such Fund shares, which will not usually exceed 10 days. In the event that a shareholder account held directly with the Transfer Agent contains a fractional share balance, such fractional share balance will be automatically redeemed by the Fund.
The per share net asset value of Class A, Class B and Class C shares generally will be lower than the per share net asset value of Class I shares, reflecting the daily expense accruals of the account maintenance, distribution and higher transfer agency fees applicable with respect to Class B and Class C shares, and the daily expense accruals of the account maintenance fees applicable with respect to Class A shares. Moreover, the per share net asset value of the Class B and Class C shares of the Fund generally will be lower than the per share net asset value of Class A shares, reflecting the daily expense accruals of the distribution fees and higher transfer agency fees applicable with respect to Class B and Class C shares. It is expected, however, that the per share net asset value of the four classes of the Fund will tend to converge (although not necessarily meet) immediately after the payment of dividends, which will differ by approximately the amount of the expense accrual differentials between the classes.
Generally, trading in non-U.S. securities, as well as U.S. Government securities and money market instruments, is substantially completed each day at various times prior to the close of business on the NYSE. The </R>
<R>values of such securities used in computing the net asset value of the Funds shares are determined as of such times. Foreign currency exchange rates also are generally determined prior to the close of business on the NYSE. Occasionally, events affecting the values of such securities and such exchange rates may occur between the times at which they are determined and the close of business on the NYSE that may not be reflected in the computation of the Funds net asset value. If events occur during such periods that are expected to materially affect the value of such securities, then those securities may be valued at their fair value as determined in good faith by the Board of Directors of the Program.</R>
Class
I
|
Class
A
|
Class
B
|
Class
C
|
|||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Net Assets | $2,550,568 | $11,846,855 | $85,071,738 | $55,038,969 | ||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Number of Shares Outstanding | 186,359 | 870,237 | 6,422,763 | 4,166,303 | ||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Net
Asset Value Per Share (net assets divided by
number of shares outstanding) |
$ 13.69 | $ 13.61 | $ 13.25 | $ 13.21 | ||||
Sales
Charge (for Class I and Class A Shares:
5.25% of Offering Price (5.54% of net amount invested))* |
.76 | .75 |
**
|
**
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
Offering Price | $ 14.45 | $ 14.36 | $ 13.25 | $ 13.21 | ||||
|
|
|
|
|||||
</R> |
*
|
Rounded to the nearest one-hundredth percent; assumes maximum sales charge is applicable.
|
**
|
Class B and Class C shares are not subject to an initial sales charge but may be subject to a CDSC on redemption. See
Purchase of SharesDeferred Sales Charge AlternativesClass B and Class C Shares herein.
|
Subject to policies established by the Directors of the Program, the Investment Adviser is primarily responsible for the execution of the Funds portfolio transactions and the allocation of brokerage. The Investment
Adviser does not execute transactions through any particular broker or dealer, but seeks to obtain the best net results for the Fund, taking into account such factors as price (including the applicable brokerage commission or dealer spread), size of order, difficulty of execution, operational facilities of the firm and the firms risk in and skill positioning blocks of securities. While the Investment Adviser generally seeks reasonably competitive trade execution costs, the Fund does not necessarily pay the lowest spread or commission available. Subject to applicable legal requirements, the Investment Adviser may select a broker based partly upon brokerage or research services provided to the Investment Adviser and its clients, including the Fund. In return for such services, the Investment Adviser may pay a higher commission than other brokers would charge if the Investment Adviser determines in good faith that the commission is reasonable in relation to the services provided.
Section 28(e) of the Exchange Act (Section 28(e)) permits an investment adviser, such as the Investment Adviser, under certain circumstances, to cause an account to pay a broker or dealer a commission for effecting a transaction that exceeds the amount of commission another broker or dealer would have charged for effecting the same transaction in recognition of the value of brokerage and research services provided by that broker or dealer. This includes commissions paid on riskless principal transactions under certain conditions. Brokerage and research services include (1) furnishing advice as to the value of securities, the advisability of investing in, purchasing or selling securities, and the availability of securities or purchasers or sellers of securities; (2) furnishing analyses and reports concerning issuers, industries, securities, economic factors and trends, portfolio strategy, and the performance of accounts; and (3) effecting securities transactions and performing functions incidental thereto (such as clearance, settlement, and custody). The Investment Adviser believes that access to independent investment research is beneficial to its investment decision-making processes and, therefore, to the Fund.
In some cases the Investment Adviser may receive a service from a broker that has both a research and a non-research use. When this occurs, the Investment Adviser makes a good faith allocation, under all the circumstances, between the research and non-research uses of the service. The percentage of the service that is used for research purposes may be paid for with client commissions, while the Investment Adviser will use its own funds to pay for the percentage of the service that is used for non-research purposes. In making this good faith allocation, the Investment Adviser faces a potential conflict of interest, but the Investment Adviser believes that its allocation procedures are reasonably designed to ensure that it appropriately allocates the anticipated use of such services to their research and non-research uses.
From time to time, the Fund may purchase new issues of securities in a fixed price offering. In these situations, the broker may be a member of the selling group that will, in addition to selling securities, provide the Investment Adviser with research services. The NASD has adopted rules expressly permitting these types of arrangements under certain circumstances. Generally, the broker will provide research credits in these situations at a rate that is higher than that which is available for typical secondary market transactions. These arrangements may not fall within the safe harbor of Section 28(e).
In addition, consistent with the Conduct Rules of the NASD and policies established by the Board of Directors of the Fund and subject to best execution, the Investment Adviser may consider sales of shares of the Fund as a factor in the selection of brokers or dealers to execute portfolio transactions for the Fund; however, whether or not a particular broker or dealer sells shares of the Fund neither qualifies nor disqualifies such broker or dealer to execute transactions for the Fund.
The Fund anticipates that its brokerage transactions involving securities of issuers domiciled in countries other than the United States generally will be conducted primarily on the principal stock exchanges of such countries. Brokerage commissions and other transaction costs on foreign stock exchange transactions generally are higher than in the United States, although the Fund will endeavor to achieve the best net results in effecting its portfolio transactions. There generally is less governmental supervision and regulation of foreign stock exchanges and brokers than in the United States.
Foreign equity securities may be held by the Fund in the form of ADRs, EDRs, GDRs or other securities convertible into foreign equity securities. ADRs, EDRs and GDRs may be listed on stock exchanges, or traded in over-the-counter markets in the United States or Europe, as the case may be. ADRs, like other securities traded in the United States, will be subject to negotiated commission rates.
The Funds ability and decisions to purchase or sell portfolio securities of foreign issuers may be affected by laws or regulations relating to the convertibility and repatriation of assets. Because the shares of each Fund are redeemable on a daily basis in U.S. dollars, the Program intends to manage each Fund so as to give reasonable assurance that it will be able to obtain U.S. dollars to the extent necessary to meet anticipated redemptions. Under present conditions, it is not believed that these considerations will have significant effect on the Programs portfolio strategies.
Information about the brokerage commissions paid by the Fund, including commissions paid to Merrill Lynch, is set forth in the following table:<R>
Fiscal
Year Ended January 31,
|
Aggregate
Brokerage
Commissions Paid |
Commissions
Paid
to Merrill Lynch |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | $514,999 | $92,321 | ||
2001 | $308,175 | $46,492 | ||
2000 | $266,711 | $20,491 |
For the fiscal year ended January 31, 2002, the brokerage commissions paid to Merrill Lynch represented 17.93% of the aggregate brokerage commissions paid and involved 19.00% of the Funds dollar amount of transactions involving payment of brokerage commissions. </R>
Under the Investment Company Act, persons affiliated with the Fund and persons who are affiliated with such persons are prohibited from dealing with the Fund as principal in the purchase and sale of securities unless a permissive order allowing such transactions is obtained from the Commission. Since transactions in the OTC market usually involve transactions with dealers acting as principal for their own accounts, affiliated persons of the Fund, including Merrill Lynch and any of its affiliates, will not serve as the Funds dealer in such transactions. However, affiliated persons of the Fund may serve as its broker in listed or OTC transactions conducted on an agency basis provided that, among other things, the fee or commission received by such affiliated broker is reasonable and fair compared to the fee or commission received by non-affiliated brokers in connection with comparable transactions. In addition, the Fund may not purchase securities during the existence of any underwriting syndicate for such securities of which Merrill Lynch is a member or in a private placement in which Merrill Lynch serves as placement agent except pursuant to procedures adopted by the Board of Trustees of the Fund that either comply with rules adopted by the Commission or with interpretations of the Commission staff.
Because of the affiliation of Merrill Lynch with the Investment Adviser, the Fund is prohibited from engaging in certain transactions involving Merrill Lynch or its affiliates except for brokerage transactions permitted under the Investment Company Act involving only usual and customary commissions or transactions pursuant to an exemptive order under the Investment Company Act. Without such an exemptive order, the Fund would be prohibited from engaging in portfolio transactions with Merrill Lynch or any of its affiliates acting as principal.<R>
The Fund has received an exemptive order from the Commission permitting it to lend portfolio securities to Merrill Lynch or its affiliates. Pursuant to that order, the Fund also has retained an affiliated entity of the Investment Adviser as the securities lending agent for a fee, including a fee based on a share of the returns on investment of cash collateral. That entity may, on behalf of the Fund, invest cash collateral received by the Fund for such loans, among other things, in a private investment company managed by that entity or in registered money market funds advised by the Investment Adviser or its affiliates. For the fiscal year ended January 31, 2002
<R>(the first fiscal year during which the exemption order was applicable) that affiliated entity received $161 in securities lending agent fees from the Fund.</R>
Section 11(a) of the Exchange Act generally prohibits members of the U.S. national securities exchanges from executing exchange transactions for their affiliates and institutional accounts that they manage unless the member (i) has obtained prior express authorization from the account to effect such transactions, (ii) at least annually furnishes the account with a statement setting forth the aggregate compensation received by the member in effecting such transactions, and (iii) complies with any rules the Commission has prescribed with respect to the requirements of clauses (i) and (ii). To the extent Section 11(a) would apply to Merrill Lynch acting as a broker for the Program in any of its portfolio transactions executed on any such securities exchange of which it is a member, appropriate consents have been obtained from the Program and annual statements as to aggregate compensation will be provided to the Program. Securities may be held by, or be appropriate investments for, the Program as well as other funds or investment advisory clients of the Investment Adviser or its affiliates.
The Board of Directors have considered the possibility of seeking to recapture for the benefit of the Fund brokerage commissions and other expenses of possible portfolio transactions by conducting portfolio transactions through affiliated entities. For example, brokerage commissions received by affiliated brokers could be offset against the advisory fee paid to the Investment Adviser. After considering all factors deemed relevant, the Directors made a determination not to seek such recapture. The Directors will reconsider this matter from time to time.
Because of different objectives or other factors, a particular security may be bought for one or more clients of the Investment Adviser or its affiliates when one or more clients of the Investment Adviser or its affiliates are selling the same security. If purchases or sales of securities arise for consideration at or about the same time that would involve the Fund or other clients or funds for which the Investment Adviser or an affiliate act as investment adviser, transactions in such securities will be made, insofar as feasible, for the respective funds and clients in a manner deemed equitable to all. To the extent that transactions on behalf of more than one client of the Investment Adviser or its affiliates during the same period may increase the demand for securities being purchased or the supply of securities being sold, there may be an adverse effect on price.
Shareholders interested in transferring their Class B or Class C shares from a selected dealer or financial intermediary and who do not wish to have an Investment Account maintained for such shares at the Transfer
Agent may request their new brokerage firm to maintain such shares in an account registered in the name of the brokerage firm for the benefit of the shareholder at the Transfer Agent.
Exchanges of Class I and Class A Shares . Under the Funds pricing system, Class I shareholders may exchange Class I shares of the Fund for Class I shares of a second Mercury mutual fund. If the Class I shareholder wants to exchange Class I shares for shares of a second Mercury mutual fund, but does not hold Class I shares of the second fund in his or her account at the time of exchange and is not otherwise eligible to acquire Class I shares of the second fund, the shareholder will receive Class A shares of the second fund as a result of the exchange. Class A shares also may be exchanged for Class I shares of a second Mercury mutual fund at any time as long as, at the time of the exchange, the shareholder is eligible to acquire Class I shares of any Mercury mutual fund.<R>
Exchanges of Class B and Class C Shares . In addition, outstanding Class B or Class C shares can be exchanged for Class B or Class C shares, respectively, of another Mercury mutual fund or for Class B shares of Summit (new Class B or Class C shares) on the basis of relative net asset value per Class B or Class C share, without the payment of any CDSC that might otherwise be due on redemption of the outstanding shares. Class B shareholders of the Fund exercising the exchange privilege will continue to be subject to the Funds CDSC schedule if such schedule is higher than the CDSC schedule relating to the new Class B shares acquired through use of the exchange privilege. In addition, Class B shares of the Fund acquired through use of the exchange privilege will be subject to the Funds CDSC schedule if such schedule is higher than the CDSC schedule relating
to the Class B shares of the fund from which the exchange was made. For purposes of computing the CDSC that may be payable on a disposition of the new Class B or Class C shares, the holding period for the outstanding Class B or Class C shares is tacked to the holding period of the new Class B or Class C shares. For example, an investor may exchange Class B shares of the Fund for those of another Mercury fund (new Mercury Fund) after having held the Funds Class B shares for two-and-a-half years. The 3.0% CDSC that generally would apply to a redemption would not apply to the exchange. Four years later the investor may decide to redeem the Class B shares of new Mercury Fund and receive cash. There will be no CDSC due on this redemption since by tacking the two-and-a-half year holding period of the Funds Class B shares to the four year holding period for the new Mercury Fund Class B shares, the investor will be deemed to have held the new Mercury Fund Class B shares for more than six years.<R>
Exercise of the Exchange Privilege . To exercise the exchange privilege, a shareholder should contact his or her financial advisor, who will advise the Fund of the exchange. Shareholders of the Fund and shareholders of the other funds described above with shares for which certificates have not been issued may exercise the exchange privilege by wire through their securities dealers or other financial intermediary. The Fund reserves the right to require a properly completed Exchange Application.
For information concerning the manner in which dividends may be reinvested automatically in shares of the Fund see Shareholder ServicesAutomatic Dividend Reinvestment Plan. A shareholder may also elect in writing to receive any such dividends in cash. Dividends are taxable to shareholders, as discussed below, whether they are reinvested in shares of the Fund or received in cash. The per share dividends on Class B and Class C shares will be lower than the per share dividends on Class I and Class A shares as a result of the account maintenance, distribution and higher transfer agency fees applicable with respect to the Class B and Class C shares; similarly, the per share dividends on Class A shares will be lower than the per share dividends on Class I
shares as a result of the account maintenance fees applicable with respect to the Class A shares. See Pricing of SharesDetermination of Net Asset Value.
A loss realized on a sale or exchange of shares of the Fund will be disallowed if such shares are acquired (whether through the automatic reinvestment of dividends or otherwise) within a 61-day period beginning 30 days
before and ending 30 days after the date that the shares are disposed of. In such a case, the basis of the shares acquired will be adjusted to reflect the disallowed loss.
Quotations
of average annual total return after taxes on dividends for the specified
periods are computed by finding the average annual compounded rates of return
that would equate the initial amount invested to the ending value of such
investment at the end of each period assuming payment of taxes on dividends
received during such period. Average annual total return after taxes on
dividends is computed assuming all dividends, less the taxes due on such
dividends, are reinvested and taking into account all applicable recurring
and nonrecurring expenses, including the maximum sales charge in the case
of Class I and Class A shares and the CDSC that would be applicable to a
complete redemption of the investment at the end of the specified period
in the case of Class B and Class C shares. The taxes due on dividends are
calculated by applying to each dividend the highest marginal Federal individual
income tax rates in effect on the reinvestment date for that dividend. The
rates used correspond to the tax character of each dividend. The taxable
amount and tax character of each dividend are specified by the
Fund on the dividend declaration date, but may be adjusted to reflect subsequent recharacterizations of distributions. The applicable tax rates may vary over the measurement period. The effects of state and local taxes are not reflected. Applicable tax credits, such as foreign credits, are taken into account according to Federal law. The ending value is determined assuming complete redemption at the end of the applicable periods with no tax consequences associated with such redemption.
In order to reflect the reduced sales charges in the case of Class I or Class A shares or the waiver of the CDSC in the case of Class B or Class C shares applicable to certain investors, as described under Purchase of Shares and Redemption of Shares, respectively, the total return data quoted by the Fund in advertisements directed to such investors may take into account the reduced, and not the maximum, sales charge or may take into account the CDSC and therefore may reflect greater total return since, due to the reduced sales charges or the waiver of sales charges, a lower amount of expenses is deducted.
Shareholders are entitled to one vote for each share held and fractional votes for fractional shares held and will vote on the election of Directors and any other matter submitted to a shareholder vote. The Program does not intend to hold meetings of shareholders in any year in which the Investment Company Act does not require shareholders to act on any of the following matters: (i) election of Directors; (ii) approval of an investment
advisory agreement; (iii) approval of a distribution agreement; and (iv) ratification of selection of independent auditors. Generally, under Maryland law, a meeting of shareholders may be called for any purpose on the written request of the holders of at least 10% of the outstanding shares of the Program. Voting rights for Directors are not cumulative. Shares issued are fully paid and non-assessable and have no preemptive or conversion rights. Redemption rights are discussed elsewhere herein and in the Prospectus. Each share is entitled to participate equally in dividends declared by the Program and in the net assets of the Program on liquidation or dissolution after satisfaction of outstanding liabilities. Stock certificates are issued by the Transfer Agent only on specific request. Certificates for fractional shares are not issued in any case.
The
Prospectus and this Statement of Additional Information do not contain all
the information set forth in the Registration Statement and the exhibits relating
thereto, which the Corporation has filed with the Commission, Washington,
D.C., under the Securities Act and the Investment Company Act, to which reference
is hereby made.
As of the date of this Statement
of Additional Information, the Investment Adviser owned 100% of the Merrill
Lynch classes of the Fund.
|
|
|
|
|
---|---|---|---|---|
Merrill Lynch
Trust Company*
Trustee FBO Merrill Lynch |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
28.32% of Class I | ||
Merrill Lynch
Trust Company*
Trustee FBO Merrill Lynch |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
8.82% of Class I | ||
Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner &
Smith, Incorporated, Custodian FBO C. Christopher Hagy IRRA |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
8.28% of Class I | ||
Gift Growth
Portfolio
Gift College Investing Plan Arkansas Teacher Retirement System |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
13.60% of Class A | ||
Gift Growth
& Income Portfolio
Gift College Investing Plan Arkansas Teacher Retirement System |
800 Scudders
Mill Road
Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536 |
7.64% of Class A | ||
</R> | ||||
*
|
Merrill Lynch Trust Company is the record holder on behalf of certain employee retirement, personal trust or savings plan
accounts for which it acts as trustee.
|
AAA
|
An obligation rated AAA has the highest rating assigned by Standard & Poors. The obligors capacity to meet
its financial commitment is extremely strong.
|
AA
|
An obligation rated AA differs from the highest rated obligations only in small degree. The obligors capacity to meet
its financial commitment is very strong.
|
A
|
An obligation rated A is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions
than obligations in higher rated categories. However, the obligors capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is still strong.
|
BBB
|
An obligation rated BBB exhibits adequate protection parameters. However, adverse economic conditions or changing
circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity of the obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
|
BB
|
An obligation rated BB is less vulnerable to nonpayment than other speculative issues. However, it faces major ongoing
uncertainties or exposure to adverse business, financial, or economic conditions which could lead to the obligors inadequate capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
|
B
|
An obligation rated B is more vulnerable to nonpayment than obligations rated BB, but the obligor currently has the capacity
to meet its financial commitment on the obligation. Adverse business, financial, or economic conditions will likely impair the obligors capacity or willingness to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
|
CCC
|
An obligation rated CCC is currently vulnerable to nonpayment, and is dependent upon favorable business, financial, and
economic conditions to meet its financial commitment on the obligation. In the event of adverse business, financial, or economic conditions, the obligor is not likely to have the capacity to meet its financial commitment on the
obligation.
|
CC
|
An obligation rated CC is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment.
|
C
|
A
subordinated debt or preferred stock obligation rated C is CURRENTLY HIGHLY
VULNERABLE to nonpayment. The C rating may be used to cover a situation
where a bankruptcy petition has been filed or similar action taken, but
payments on this obligation are being continued. A C also will be assigned
to a preferred stock issue in arrears on dividends or sinking fund payments,
but that is currently paying.
|
D
|
An obligation rated D is in payment default. The D rating category is used when payments on an obligation are not made on the
date due even if the applicable grace period has not expired, unless Standard & Poors believes that such payments will be made during such grace period. The D rating also will be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking
of similar action if payments on an obligation are jeopardized.
|
Plus (+) or minus (-):
|
The ratings from AA to CCC may be modified by the addition of a plus or minus sign to show relative standing within the major rating
categories.
|
r
|
This symbol is attached to the ratings of instruments with significant non credit risks. It highlights risks to principal or
volatility of expected returns which are not addressed in the credit rating.
|
N.R.
|
This indicates that no rating has been requested, that there is insufficient information on which to base a rating, or that
Standard & Poors does not rate a particular obligation as a matter of policy.
|
A-1
|
A short-term obligation rated A-1 is rated in the highest category by Standard & Poors. The
obligors capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is strong. Within this category, certain obligations are designated with a plus sign (+). This indicates that the obligors capacity to meet its financial commitment on
these obligations is extremely strong.
|
A-2
|
A short-term obligation rated A-2 is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes in circumstances
and economic conditions than obligations in higher rating categories. However, the obligors capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is satisfactory.
|
A-3
|
A short-term obligation rated A-3 exhibits adequate protection parameters. However, adverse economic conditions
or changing circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity of the obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
|
B
|
A short-term obligation rated B is regarded as having significant speculative characteristics. The obligor
currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation; however, it faces major ongoing uncertainties which could lead to the obligors inadequate capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
|
C
|
A short-term obligation rated C is currently vulnerable to nonpayment and is dependent upon favorable business,
financial, and economic conditions for the obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.
|
D
|
A short-term obligation rated D is in payment default. The D rating category is used when payments on
an obligation are not made on the date due even if the applicable grace period has not expired, unless Standard & Poors believes that such payments will be made during such grace period. The D rating also will be used upon the
filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of a similar action if payments on an obligation are jeopardized.
|
Aaa
|
Bonds which are rated Aaa are judged to be of the best quality. They carry the smallest degree of investment risk and are
generally referred to as gilt edged. Interest payments are protected by a large or by an exceptionally stable margin and principal is secure. While the various protective elements are likely to change, such changes as can be visualized
are most unlikely to impair the fundamentally strong position of such issues.
|
Aa
|
Bonds which are rated Aa are judged to be of high quality by all standards. Together with the Aaa group they comprise what
are generally known as high-grade bonds. They are rated lower than the best bonds because margins of protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or fluctuation of protective elements may be of greater amplitude or there may be other elements
present which make the long-term risks appear somewhat larger than in Aaa securities.
|
A
|
Bonds which are rated A possess many favorable investment attributes and are to be considered as upper-medium-grade
obligations. Factors giving security to principal and interest are considered adequate, but elements may be present which suggest a susceptibility to impairment some time in the future.<R>
|
Baa
|
Bonds
which are rated Baa are considered as medium-grade obligations
(i.e.,
they are neither highly protected nor poorly secured). Interest payments
and principal security appear adequate for the present but certain protective
elements may be lacking or may be characteristically unreliable over
any great length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding investment characteristics
and in fact have speculative characteristics as well.
|
Ba
|
Bonds
which are rated Ba are judged to have speculative elements; their future
cannot be considered as well-assured. Often the protection of interest
and principal payments may be very moderate, and thereby not well safeguarded
during both good and bad times over the future. Uncertainty of position
characterizes bonds in this class.</R>
|
B
|
Bonds
which are rated B generally lack characteristics of the desirable investment.
Assurance of interest and principal payments or of maintenance of other
terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.
|
Caa
|
Bonds which are rated Caa are of poor standing. Such issues may be in default or there may be present elements of danger with
respect to principal or interest.
|
Ca
|
Bonds which are rated Ca represent obligations which are speculative in a high degree. Such issues are often in default or
have other marked shortcomings.
|
C
|
Bonds which are rated C are the lowest rated class of bonds, and issues so rated can be regarded as having extremely poor
prospects of ever attaining any real investment standing.
|
Moodys short-term debt ratings are opinions of the ability of issuers to honor senior financial obligations and contracts. Such obligations generally have an original maturity not exceeding one year, unless explicity noted.
Moodys employs the following three designations, all judged to be investment grade, to indicate the relative repayment ability of rated issuers:</R>
|
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.<R>
|
AAA
|
Highest credit quality. AAA ratings denote the lowest expectation of credit risk. They are assigned only in case
of exceptionally strong capacity for timely payment of financial commitments. This capacity is highly unlikely to be adversely affected by foreseeable events.<R>
|
AA
|
Very high credit quality. AA ratings denote a very low expectation of credit risk. They indicate very strong
capacity for timely payment of financial commitments. This capacity is not significantly vulnerable to foreseeable events.</R>
|
A
|
High credit quality. A ratings denote a low expectation of credit risk. The capacity for timely payment of
financial commitments is considered strong. This capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to changes in circumstances or in economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.<R>
|
BBB
|
Good credit quality. BBB ratings indicate that there is currently a low expectation of credit risk. The capacity
for timely payment of financial commitments is considered adequate, but adverse changes in circumstances and in economic conditions are more likely to impair this capacity. This is the lowest investment grade-category.</R>
|
BB
|
Speculative. BB ratings indicate that there is a possibility of credit risk developing, particularly as the
result of adverse economic change over time; however, business or financial alternatives may be available to allow financial commitments to be met. Securities rated in this category are not investment grade.
|
B
|
Highly speculative. B ratings indicate that significant credit risk is present, but a limited margin of safety
remains. Financial commitments are currently being met; however, capacity for continued payment is contingent upon a sustained, favourable business and economic environment.
|
CCC,
CC, C |
High default risk. Default is a real possibility. Capacity for meeting financial commitments is solely reliant upon sustained, favourable business or economic
developments. A CC rating indicates that default of some kind appears probable. C ratings signal imminent default.
|
DDD,
DD, and D |
Default.
The ratings of obligations in this category are based on their prospects
for achieving partial or full recovery in a reorganization or liquidation
of the obligor. While expected recovery values are highly speculative
and cannot be estimated with any precision, the following serve as general
guidelines. DDD obligations have the highest potential for
recovery, around 90%-100% of outstanding amounts and accrued interest.
DD indicates potential recoveries in the range of 50%-90%
and D the lowest recovery potential, i.e., below 50%.
Entities
rated in this category have defaulted on some or all of their obligations.
Entities rated DDD have the highest prospect for resumption
of performance or continued operation
|
|
with or without a formal reorganization process. Entities rated DD
and D are generally undergoing a formal reorganization or
liquidation process; those rated DD are likely to satisfy
a higher portion of their outstanding obligations, while entities rated
D have a poor prospect of repaying all obligations.
|
F1
|
Highest credit quality. Indicates the strongest capacity for timely payment of financial commitments; may have an added
+ to denote any exceptionally strong credit feature.
|
F2
|
Good credit quality. A satisfactory capacity for timely payment of financial commitments, but the margin of safety is not as
great as in the case of the higher ratings.
|
F3
|
Fair credit quality. The capacity for timely payment of financial commitments is adequate; however, near-term adverse changes
could result in a reduction to non-investment grade.
|
B
|
Speculative. Minimal capacity for timely payment of financial commitments, plus vulnerability to near-term adverse changes in
financial and economic conditions.
|
C
|
High default risk. Default is a real possibility. Capacity for meeting financial commitments is solely reliant upon a
sustained, favourable business and economic environment.
|
D
|
Default. Denotes actual or imminent payment default.
|
Exhibit
Number |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
9 | | Opinion of Brown & Wood LLP , counsel for the Registrant.(a)<R> | ||
10 | | Consent of Deloitte & Touche LLP , independent auditors for the Registrant.</R> | ||
11 | | None. | ||
12 | | Certificate of Merrill Lynch Investment Managers, L.P.(a) | ||
13(a) | | Form of Amended and Restated Class B Distribution Plan of Merrill Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund.(q)<R> | ||
(b) | | Form of Amended and Restated Class C Distribution Plan of Merrill Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund.(q) | ||
(c) | | Form of Amended and Restated Class D Distribution Plan of Merrill Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund.(q) | ||
(d) | | Form of Amended and Restated Class A Distribution Plan of Mercury Growth Opportunity Fund.(g)</R> | ||
(e) | | Form of Amended and Restated Class B Distribution Plan of Mercury Growth Opportunity Fund.(q) | ||
(f) | | Form of Amended and Restated Class C Distribution Plan of Mercury Growth Opportunity Fund.(q)<R> | ||
(g) | |
Form
of Amended and Restated Class A Distribution Plan of Mercury U.S. Government
Securities
Fund.(g)</R> |
||
(h) | |
Form
of Amended and Restated Class B Distribution Plan of Mercury U.S. Government
Securities
Fund.(q) |
||
(i) | |
Form
of Amended and Restated Class C Distribution Plan of Mercury U.S. Government
Securities
Fund.(q) |
||
(j) | | Form of Amended and Restated Class B Distribution Plan of Merrill Lynch Growth Opportunity Fund.(q) | ||
(k) | | Form of Amended and Restated Class C Distribution Plan of Merrill Lynch Growth Opportunity Fund.(q) | ||
(l) | | Form of Amended and Restated Class D Distribution Plan of Merrill Lynch Growth Opportunity Fund.(q) | ||
14(a) | | Merrill Lynch Select Pricing System Plan pursuant to Rule 18f-3.(n) | ||
(b) | | Mercury Select Pricing System Plan pursuant to Rule 18f-3.(n) | ||
15 | | Code of Ethics.(m) |
(a)
|
Filed on December 16, 1994 as an Exhibit to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to Registrants Registration Statement on
Form N-IA (File No. 33-5388 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the Registration Statement).
|
(b)
|
Filed on May 27, 1994 as an Exhibit to the Pre-Effective Registration Statement.
|
(c)
|
Reference is made to Articles IV, V (Sections 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6), VI, VII and IX of the Registrants Articles of
Incorporation, as amended, filed as Exhibits 1(a), 1(b) and 1(c) to this Registration Statement; and to Articles II, III (Sections 1, 3, 5, 6 and 17), VI, VII, XII, XIII and XIV of the Registrants By-Laws filed as Exhibit 2 to this
Registration Statement.
|
(d)
|
Filed on May 30, 1995, as an Exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement.
|
(e)
|
Filed on August 9, 1995, as an Exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No. 2 to the Registration Statement.
|
(f)
|
Filed on May 29, 1996, as an Exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No. 5 to the Registration Statement.<R>
|
(g)
|
Filed on March 21, 2002 as an Exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No. 13 to the Registration Statement.</R>
|
(h)
|
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit b to the Issuer Tender Offer Statement on Schedule TO of Merrill Lynch Senior Floating
Rate Fund, Inc. (File No. 333-15973), filed on December 14, 2000.
|
(i)
|
Filed
on May 19, 1998, as an Exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No. 7 to the
Registration Statement.
|
(j)
|
Filed on April 1, 1999, as an Exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to the Registration Statement.
|
(k)
|
Incorporated
by reference as Exhibit 8(b) to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A
of Master Premier Growth Trust (File No. 811-09733), filed on December
21, 1999.
|
(l)
|
Filed on February 1, 2000, as Exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No. 11 to the Registration Statement.
|
(m)
|
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 15 to Post-Effective Amendment No. 9 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of
Merrill Lynch Multi-State Limited Maturity Municipal Series Trust (File No. 33-50417), filed on November 22, 2000.
|
(n)
|
Filed on April 4, 2000, as an Exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No. 12 to the Registration Statement.
|
(o)
|
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 5 to Post-Effective Amendment No. 12 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of
Merrill Lynch Adjustable Rate Securities Fund, Inc. (File No. 33-40332), filed on July 5, 2000.
|
(p)
|
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 8(d) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of
Merrill Lynch Focus Twenty Fund, Inc. (File No. 333-89775) filed on March 20, 2001.
|
(q)
|
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 13 to Post-Effective Amendment No. 14 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of
Merrill Lynch Adjustable Rate Securities Fund, Inc. (File No. 33-40332), filed on September 28, 2000.
|
(r)
|
Incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 8(d) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 11 to the
Registration Statement on Form N-1A of Merrill Lynch International Equity
Fund (File No. 33-44917) filed on September 28, 2001.
|
(s)
|
Filed
on May 25, 2001 as an Exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No. [ ]
to the Registration Statement.
|
(t)
|
Incorporated
by reference to Exhibit (b)(2) to the Issuer Tender Offer Statement on
schedule TO of Merrill Lynch Senior Floating Rate Fund, Inc. (File No.
333-39837), filed on December 14, 2001.
|
Insofar as the conditional advancing of indemnification moneys for actions based on the Investment Company Act of 1940,
as amended (the Investment Company Act) may be concerned, Article VI of the Registrants By-Laws provides that such payments will be made only on the following conditions: (i) advances may be made only on receipt of a written
affirmation of such persons good faith belief that the standard of conduct necessary for indemnification has been met and a written undertaking to repay any such advance if it is ultimately determined that the standard of conduct has not been
met; and (ii) (a) such promise must be secured by a security for the undertaking in form and amount acceptable to the Registrant, (b) the Registrant is insured against losses arising by receipt by the advance, or (c) a majority of a quorum of the
Registrants disinterested non-party Directors, or an independent legal counsel in a written opinion, shall determine, based upon a review of readily available facts, that at the time the advance is proposed to be made, there is reason to
believe that the person seeking indemnification will ultimately be found to be entitled to indemnification.
In
Section 9 of the Distribution Agreement relating to the securities being offered
hereby, the Registrant agrees to indemnify the Distributor and each person,
if any, who controls the Distributor within the meaning of the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended (the Securities Act), against certain types
of civil liabilities arising in connection with the Registration Statement or
Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information.
Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may be permitted to Directors, officers and controlling persons of the Registrant and the principal underwriter pursuant to the foregoing provisions or otherwise, the Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a Director, officer, or controlling person of the Registrant and the principal underwriter in connection with the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such Director, officer or controlling person or the principal underwriter in connection with the shares being registered, the Registrant will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.
The address of each of these registered investment companies is P.O. Box 9011, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011, except that the address of Merrill Lynch Funds for Institutions Series is One Financial Center, 23rd Floor, Boston, Massachusetts 02111-2665. The address of MLIM, FAM, Princeton Services, Inc. (Princeton Services) and Princeton Administrators, L.P. (Princeton Administrators) is also P.O. Box 9011, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011. The address of FAM Distributors, Inc. (FAMD) is P.O. Box 9081, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9081. The address of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated (Merrill Lynch) and Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. (ML & Co.) is 800 Scudders Mill Road, Plainsboro, New Jersey 08536. The address of the Funds transfer agent, Financial Data Services, Inc. (FDS), is 4800 Deer Lake Drive East, Jacksonville, Florida 32246-6484.</R>
<R>Set forth below is a list of each executive officer and partner of FAM and MLIM indicating each business, profession, vocation or employment of a substantial nature in which each such person or entity has been engaged since February 1, 2000, for his, her or its own account or in the capacity of director, officer, partner or trustee. In addition, Mr. Glenn is President and Mr. Burke is Vice President and Treasurer of all or substantially all of the investment companies described in the first two paragraphs of this Item 26, and Mr. Doll is an officer of one or more of such companies.
Name
|
Position(s)
with MLIM/FAM
|
Other
Substantial Business, Profession,
Vocation or Employment |
|||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ML & Co | Limited Partner | Financial Services Holding Company | |||
Princeton Services | General Partner | ||||
Robert C. Doll, Jr. | President |
Co-Head (Americas Region) of MLIM
from 2000 to 2001 and Senior Vice President thereof from 1999 to 2001; Director of Princeton Services; Chief Investment Officer of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. in 1999 and Executive Vice President thereof from 1991 to 1999 |
|||
Terry K. Glenn |
Chairman
(Americas
Region) and Executive Vice President |
President
of Merrill Lynch Mutual Funds; Executive Vice
President and Director of Princeton Services; President and Director of FAMD; President of Princeton Administrators; Director of FDS |
|||
Donald C. Burke |
First
Vice President
and Treasurer; Director of Taxation of MLIM |
Senior Vice President and Treasurer of Princeton Services; Vice President of FAMD | |||
Philip L. Kirstein |
General
Counsel
(Americas Region) |
Senior Vice President, Secretary, General Counsel and Director of Princeton Services | |||
Debra W. Landsman-Yaros | Senior Vice President | Senior Vice President of Princeton Services; Vice President of FAMD | |||
Stephen M.M. Miller | Senior Vice President of MLIM |
Executive
Vice President of Princeton Administrators;
Senior Vice President of Princeton Services |
|||
Mary E. Taylor |
Head
(Americas
Region) of MLIM |
Senior
Vice President of ML & Co.; President and
Chief Operating Officer of Merrill Lynch Canada Inc. |
|||
Merrill Lynch Asset Management U.K. Limited (MLAM U.K.) acts as sub-adviser for the following registered investment companies: Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc., Corporate High Yield Fund II, Inc., Corporate High Yield Fund III, Inc., Corporate High Yield Fund IV, Inc., Corporate High Yield Fund V, Inc., Debt Strategies Fund, Inc., Global Financial Services Master Trust, Master Focus Twenty Trust, Master Large Cap Series Trust. Mercury Global Holdings, Inc., Merrill Lynch Balanced Capital Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Bond Fund, Inc. Merrill Lynch Developing Capital Markets Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Disciplined Equity Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Dragon Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Emerging Markets Debt Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Equity Income Fund, Merrill Lynch EuroFund, Merrill Lynch Focus Value Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Fundamental Growth Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Global Allocation Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Global Bond Fund for Investment and Retirement, Merrill Lynch Global Growth Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Global SmallCap Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Global Technology Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Global Value Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Healthcare Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch International Equity Fund, Merrill Lynch Latin America Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Natural Resources Trust, Merrill Lynch Pacific Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Senior Floating Rate Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Series Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Short-Term Global</R>
<R>Income Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Utilities and Telecommunications Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Variable Series Funds, Inc., Merrill Lynch World Income Fund, Inc., The Asset Program, Inc., The Corporate Fund Accumulation Program, Inc. and The Municipal Fund Accumulation Program, Inc. The address of each of these registered investment companies is P.O. Box 9011, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-9011. The address of MLAM U.K. is 33 King William Street, London EC4R 9AS, England.
Name
|
Position(s)
With
MLAM UK |
Other
Substantial Business,
Profession, Vocation or Employment |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Terry K. Glenn | Director and Chairman |
President
of Merrill Lynch Mutual Funds; Chairman
(Americas Region) of MLIM and FAM; Executive Vice President of MLIM and FAM; Executive Vice President and Director of Princeton Services; President and Director of FAMD; President of Princeton Administrators; Director of FDS </R> |
||
Nicholas C.D. Hall | Director |
Director
of Mercury Asset Management Ltd. and the
Institutional Liquidity Fund PLC; First Vice President and General Counsel for Merrill Lynch Mercury Asset Management |
||
James T. Stratford | Alternate Director |
Director of Mercury Asset Management Group Ltd.;
Head of Compliance, Merrill Lynch Mercury Asset Management <R> |
||
Donald C. Burke | Treasurer |
First
Vice President and Treasurer of MLIM and
FAM; Director of Taxation of MLIM; Senior Vice President and Treasurer of Princeton Services; Vice President of FAMD</R> |
||
Carol Ann Langham | Company Secretary | None | ||
Debra Anne Searle | Assistant Company Secretary | None |
Item 27.
Principal Underwriters.
<R> (a) FAMD acts as the principal underwriter for the Registrant and for each of the open-end registered investment companies referred to in the first two paragraphs of Item 26 except CBA Money Fund, CMA Government Securities Fund, CMA Money Fund, CMA Multi-State Municipal Series Trust, CMA Tax-Exempt Fund, CMA Treasury Fund, Global Financial Services Master Trust, Master Basic Value Trust, Master Focus Twenty Trust, Master Large Cap Series Trust, Master Small Cap Value Trust, Master U.S. High Yield Trust, The Corporate Fund Accumulation Program, Inc. and The Municipal Fund Accumulation Program, Inc. FAMD acts as the principal underwriter for each of the following additional open-end registered investment companies: Mercury Basic Value Fund, Inc., Mercury Global Balanced Fund of Mercury Funds, Inc., Mercury International Fund of Mercury Funds, Inc., Mercury Large Cap Series Funds, Inc., Mercury Pan-European Growth Fund of Mercury Funds, Inc., Mercury Small Cap Value Fund, Inc., Mercury U.S. High Yield Fund, Inc., Summit Cash Reserves Fund of Financial Institutions Series Trust, Merrill Lynch Basic Value Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Focus Twenty Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Global Financial Services Fund, Inc., Merrill Lynch Large Cap Growth Focus Fund of Mercury V.I. Funds, Inc., Merrill Lynch Large Cap Series Funds, Inc., Merrill Lynch Small Cap Value Fund, Inc. and Merrill Lynch U.S. High Yield Fund, Inc. FAMD also acts as the principal underwriter for the following closed-end registered investment company: Merrill Lynch Senior Floating Rate Fund II, Inc.</R>
Name
|
Position(s) and
Office(s) with FAMD |
Position(s)
and Office(s) with Registrant
|
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Terry K. Glenn | President and Director | President and Director | ||
Michael G. Clark | Treasurer and Director | None | ||
Thomas J. Verage | Director | None | ||
Michael J. Brady | Vice President | None | ||
William M. Breen | Vice President | None | ||
Donald C. Burke | Vice President | Vice President and Treasurer | ||
James T. Fatseas | Vice President | None | ||
Debra W. Landsman-Yaros | Vice President | None | ||
William Wasel | Vice President | None | ||
Robert Harris | Secretary | None | ||
</R> |
Item 28. Location of Accounts and Records.
Not applicable.
T
HE
A
SSET
P
ROGRAM
I
NC
.
|
(Registrant)
|
/
S
/ T
ERRY
K.
G
LENN
|
By:
|
|
(Terry K. Glenn, President)
|
Signatures
|
Title
|
Date
|
||
---|---|---|---|---|
T
ERRY
K. G
LENN
*
(Terry K. Glenn) |
President
(Principal Executive
Officer) and Director |
|||
D
ONALD
C. B
URKE
*
(Donald C. Burke) |
Vice
President and Treasurer
(Principal Financial and Accounting Officer) |
|||
<R> POWER OF ATTORNEY
The
undersigned Directors/Trustees and Officers of each of the registered investment
companies listed below hereby authorize Terry K. Glenn, Donald C. Burke
and Robert C. Doll, Jr., or any of them, as attorney-in-fact, to sign on
his or her behalf in the capacities indicated, any Registration Statement
or amendment thereto (including post-effective amendments) for each of the
following registered investment companies and to file the same, with all
exhibits thereto, with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the Commission):
Apex Municipal Fund, Inc.; The Asset Program, Inc.; Corporate High Yield
Fund, Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund II, Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund
III, Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund IV, Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund
V, Inc.; Financial Institutions Series Trust; Fund Asset Management Master
Trust; Master Focus Twenty Trust; Master Large Cap Series Trust; Master
Mid Cap Growth Trust; Master Premier Growth Trust; Mercury Focus Twenty
Fund, Inc.; Mercury HW Funds; Mercury HW Variable Trust; Mercury Large Cap
Series Funds, Inc.; Mercury Mid Cap Growth Fund, Inc.; Mercury Premier Growth
Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch California Municipal Series Trust; Merrill Lynch
Focus Twenty Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Focus Value Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch
Fundamental Growth Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Investment Managers Funds,
Inc.; Merrill Lynch Large Cap Series Funds, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Mid Cap
Growth Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Multi-State Limited Maturity Municipal
Series Trust; Merrill Lynch Multi-State Municipal Series Trust; Merrill
Lynch Premier Growth Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Retirement Series Trust;
Merrill Lynch Short Term U.S. Government Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch U.S.
Government Mortgage Fund; Merrill Lynch Variable Series Funds, Inc.; Merrill
Lynch World Income Fund, Inc.; MuniAssets Fund, Inc.; MuniEnhanced Fund,
Inc.; MuniHoldings California Insured Fund, Inc.; MuniHoldings Insured Fund
II, Inc.; MuniInsured Fund, Inc.; MuniYield Arizona Fund, Inc.; MuniYield
California Fund, Inc.; MuniYield California Insured Fund II, Inc.; MuniYield
Florida Fund; MuniYield Fund, Inc.; MuniYield Insured Fund, Inc.; MuniYield
Michigan Fund, Inc.; MuniYield New Jersey Fund, Inc.; MuniYield New York
Insured Fund, Inc.; MuniYield Quality Fund, Inc.; and MuniYield Quality
Fund II, Inc.
Further,
the undersigned Directors/Trustees and Officers of each of the registered
investment companies listed below hereby authorize Susan B. Baker, as attorney-in-fact,
to sign on his or her behalf in the capacities indicated, any Registration
Statement or amendment thereto (including post-effective amendments) for
each of the following registered investment companies and to file the same,
with all exhibits thereto, with the Commission: Master Focus Twenty Trust;
Master Mid Cap Growth Trust; Master Premier Growth Trust; Mercury Focus
Twenty Fund, Inc.; Mercury Mid Cap Growth Fund, Inc.; Mercury Premier Growth
Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Focus Twenty Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Mid Cap
Growth Fund, Inc.; and Merrill Lynch Premier Growth Fund, Inc.
Further,
the undersigned Directors/Trustees and Officers of each of the registered
investment companies listed below hereby authorize Stephen Benham, as attorney-in-fact,
to</R>
<R>sign on his or her behalf in the capacities
indicated, any Registration Statement or amendment thereto (including post-effective amendments) for each of the
following registered investment companies and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto, with the Commission:
Apex Municipal Fund, Inc.; MuniAssets Fund, Inc.; MuniHoldings Insured Fund II, Inc., MuniInsured Fund, Inc.; and
MuniYield Insured Fund, Inc.
Further, the undersigned Directors/Trustees and Officers of each of the
registered investment companies listed below hereby authorize Phillip S.
Gillespie, as attorney-in-fact, to sign on his or her behalf in the capacities
indicated, any Registration Statement or amendment thereto (including
post-effective amendments) for each of the following registered investment
companies and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto, with the Commission:
Fund Asset Management Master Trust; Mercury HW Funds; Mercury HW Variable Trust;
Merrill Lynch Investment Managers Funds, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Retirement Series
Trust; Merrill Lynch Short Term U.S. Government Fund, Inc.; and Merrill Lynch
U.S. Government Mortgage Fund.
Further, the undersigned Directors/Trustees and Officers of each of the
registered investment companies listed below hereby authorize Robert Harris, as
attorney-in-fact, to sign on his or her behalf in the capacities indicated, any
Registration Statement or amendment thereto (including post-effective
amendments) for each of the following registered investment companies and to
file the same, with all exhibits thereto, with the Commission: Financial
Institutions Series Trust and Merrill Lynch World Income Fund, Inc.
Further, the undersigned Directors/Trustees and Officers of each of the registered investment companies
listed below hereby authorize Bradley J. Lucido, as attorney-in-fact, to sign on his or her behalf in the
capacities indicated, any Registration Statement or amendment thereto (including post-effective amendments) for
each of the following registered investment companies and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto, with the
Commission: Corporate High Yield Fund, Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund II, Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund III,
Inc.; Corporate High Yield Fund IV, Inc.; and Corporate High Yield Fund V, Inc.
Further, the undersigned Directors/Trustees and Officers of each of the registered investment companies
listed below hereby authorize Allan J. Oster, as attorney-in-fact, to sign on his or her behalf in the capacities
indicated, any Registration Statement or amendment thereto (including post-effective amendments) for each of the
following registered investment companies and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto, with the Commission:
The Asset Program, Inc., Merrill Lynch Focus Value Fund, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Fundamental Growth Fund, Inc.; and
Merrill Lynch Variable Series Funds, Inc.
Further, the undersigned Directors/Trustees and Officers of each of the registered investment companies
listed below hereby authorize Alice A. Pellegrino, as attorney-in-fact, to sign on his or her behalf in the
capacities indicated, any Registration Statement or amendment thereto (including post-effective amendments) for
each of the following registered investment</R>
<R>companies and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto, with the Commission: Master Large Cap Series Trust; Mercury Large Cap Series Funds, Inc.; Merrill Lynch California Municipal Series Trust; Merrill Lynch Large Cap Series Funds, Inc.; Merrill Lynch Multi-State Limited Maturity Municipal Series Trust; Merrill Lynch Multi-State Municipal Series Trust; MuniEnhanced Fund, Inc.; MuniHoldings California Insured Fund, Inc.; MuniYield Arizona Fund, Inc.; MuniYield California Fund, Inc.; MuniYield California Insured Fund II, Inc.; MuniYield Florida Fund; MuniYield Fund, Inc.; MuniYield Michigan Fund, Inc.; MuniYield New Jersey Fund, Inc.; MuniYield New York Insured Fund, Inc.; MuniYield Quality Fund, Inc.; and MuniYield Quality Fund II, Inc.</R>
<R>Dated: April 16, 2002
/s/ T ERRY K. G LENN Terry K. Glenn (President/Principal Executive Officer/Director/Trustee) |
/s/ D ONALD C. B URKE Donald C. Burke (Vice President/Treasurer/Principal Financial and Accounting Officer) |
|
/s/ J AMES H. B ODURTHA James H. Bodurtha (Director/Trustee) |
/s/ J OE G RILLS Joe Grills (Director/Trustee) |
|
/s/ H ERBERT I. L ONDON Herbert I. London (Director/Trustee) |
/s/ A NDRÉ F. P EROLD André F. Perold (Director/Trustee) |
|
/s/ R OBERTA C OOPER R AMO Roberta Cooper Ramo (Director/Trustee |
/s/ R OBERT S. S ALOMON , J R . Robert S. Salomon, Jr. (Director/Trustee) |
|
/s/ M ELVIN R. S EIDEN Melvin R. Seiden (Director/Trustee) |
/s/ S TEPHEN B. S WENSRUD Stephen B. Swensrud (Director/Trustee) |
<R> | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Exhibit
Number |
||||
10 | | Consent of Deloitte & Touche LLP , independent auditors for the Registrant. | ||
1 | (m) | | Articles Supplementary to the Articles of Incorporation of the Registrant filed on May 22, 2002. </R> |
Exhibit 1(m)
THE ASSET PROGRAM, INC.
ARTICLES SUPPLEMENTARY
THE ASSET PROGRAM, INC. (hereinafter called the "Corporation"), a Maryland corporation, having its principal office in the State of Maryland in the City of Baltimore, hereby certifies to the State Department of Assessments and Taxation of the State of Maryland that:
1. The Corporation is registered as an open-end investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, with the authority to issue Two Hundred Million (200,000,000) shares of capital stock as follows:
Number of Funds/Classes Authorized Shares ------------- ----------------- Merrill Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund Class A Common Stock 8,000,000 Class B Common Stock 20,000,000 Class C Common Stock 8,000,000 Class D Common Stock 8,000,000 Mercury U.S. Government Securities Fund Class A Common Stock 6,250,000 Class B Common Stock 6,250,000 Class C Common Stock 6,250,000 Class I Common Stock 6,250,000 Mercury Growth Opportunity Fund Mercury Class I Common Stock 6,250,000 Mercury Class A Common Stock 6,250,000 Mercury Class B Common Stock 6,250,000 Mercury Class C Common Stock 15,000,000 Merrill Lynch Class A Common Stock 15,000,000 Merrill Lynch Class B Common Stock 6,250,000 Merrill Lynch Class C Common Stock 15,000,000 Merrill Lynch Class D Common Stock 15,000,000 ------------------ Total: 154,000,000 |
The remaining Forty Six Million (46,000,000) shares of authorized capital stock are not designated as to any series or class. All shares of all series and classes of the Corporation's capital stock have a par value of Ten Cents ($0.10) per share, and an aggregate par value of Twenty Million Dollars ($20,000,000).
2. The Board of Directors of the Corporation, acting in accordance with
Section 2-105(c) of the Maryland General Corporation Law and Article IV,
paragraph (2) of the Articles of Incorporation, hereby: (a) increases the
number shares of stock of the Class A, Class B,
Class C, and Class D Common Stock of the Merrill Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund of the Corporation by classifying the authorized but undesignated capital stock of the Corporation as follows: Twelve Million (12,000,000) shares are classified as Class A Common Stock, Twenty Million (20,000,000) shares are classified as Class B Common Stock, Two Million (2,000,000) shares are classified as Class C Common Stock, and Two Million (2,000,000) shares are classified as Class D Common Stock; and (b) increases the number of shares of Class B Common Stock of the Mercury U.S. Government Securities Fund by classifying Eight Million, Seven Hundred Fifty-Thousand (8,750,000) shares of authorized but undesignated capital stock of the Corporation as Class B Common Stock of the Mercury U.S. Government Securities Fund.
3. After these increases in the number of authorized shares of the Class A, Class B, Class C, and Class D Common Stock of the Merrill Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund and the Class B Common Stock of the Mercury U.S. Government Securities Fund, the Corporation will have the authority to issue Two Hundred Million (200,000,000) shares of capital stock as follows:
Number of Funds/Classes Authorized Shares ------------- ----------------- Merrill Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund Class A Common Stock 20,000,000 Class B Common Stock 40,000,000 Class C Common Stock 10,000,000 Class D Common Stock 10,000,000 Mercury U.S. Government Securities Fund Class A Common Stock 6,250,000 Class B Common Stock 15,000,000 Class C Common Stock 6,250,000 Class I Common Stock 6,250,000 Mercury Growth Opportunity Fund Mercury Class I Common Stock 6,250,000 Mercury Class A Common Stock 6,250,000 Merrill Lynch Class A Common Stock 6,250,000 Mercury Class B Common Stock 15,000,000 Merrill Lynch Class B Common Stock 15,000,000 Mercury Class C Common Stock 6,250,000 Merrill Lynch Class C Common Stock 15,000,000 Merrill Lynch Class D Common Stock 15,000,000 ------------------ Total: 198,750,000 |
The remaining One Million Two Hundred Fifty-Thousand (1,250,000) shares of authorized capital stock are not designated as to any series or class. All shares of all series and classes of the Corporation's capital stock will have a par value of Ten Cents ($0.10) per share, and an aggregate par value of Twenty Million Dollars ($20,000,000).
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, THE ASSET PROGRAM, INC. has caused these presents to be signed in its name and on its behalf by its President and attested by its Secretary on May 20, 2002.
THE ASSET PROGRAM, INC.
By: /s/ Terry K. Glenn ----------------------- Terry K. Glenn President ATTEST: /s/ Susan B. Baker ----------------------- Susan B. Baker Secretary |
The undersigned, President of THE ASSET PROGRAM, INC., who executed on behalf of said Corporation the foregoing Articles Supplementary, of which this certificate is made a part, hereby acknowledges, in the name and on behalf of said Corporation, the foregoing Articles Supplementary to be the corporate act of said Corporation and further certifies that, to the best of his knowledge, information and belief, the matters set forth therein with respect to the approval thereof are true in all material respects, under the penalties of perjury.
Dated: May 20, 2002 By: /s/ Terry K. Glenn ----------------------- Terry K. Glenn President |
Exhibit 10
INDEPENDENT AUDITORS CONSENT
We consent to the incorporation by reference in Post-Effective
Amendment No. 14 to Registration Statement No. 33-53887 on Form N-1A of
The Asset Program, Inc. of our reports dated as indicated below, on each
of the Funds, appearing in each Funds January 31, 2002 Annual Report.
Date of our Report
Name
March 8, 2002
Merrill Lynch Mid Cap Value Fund
March 14, 2002
Mercury U.S. Government Securities Fund
March 8, 2002
Mercury Growth Opportunity Fund
We also consent to the reference to us under the caption Financial Highlights in each Prospectus, which is part of such Registration Statement. /s/ Deloitte & Touche LLP |
New York, New York
May 24, 2002 |