As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 4, 2022

1933 Act File No. 333-257996
1940 Act File No. 811-22396

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM N-2

Check appropriate box or boxes

[X]          REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
[X]          PRE-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 1
[ ]          POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. [  ]

and

[X]          REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940
[X]          AMENDMENT NO. 3

Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
(Registrant Exact Name of as Specified in Charter)
c/o Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC
1290 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10104-0002
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)

212-476-8800
(Registrant’s Telephone Number, including Area Code)

Joseph V. Amato
Chief Executive Officer and President
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
c/o Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC
1290 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10104-0002
(Name and Address of Agent for Service)

With copies to:

Jennifer R. Gonzalez, Esq.
K&L Gates LLP
1601 K Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20006

Approximate Date of Proposed Public Offering: As soon as practicable after the effective date of this Registration Statement.

[   ]          The only securities being registered on this Form are being offered pursuant to a dividend or interest reinvestment plan.

[X]          Any securities being registered on this Form will be offered on a delayed or continuous basis in reliance on Rule 415 under the Securities Act of 1933, (“Securities Act”) other than securities offered in connection with a dividend reinvestment plan.

[   ]          This Form is a registration statement pursuant to General Instruction A.2 or a post-effective amendment thereto.

[   ]          This Form is a registration statement pursuant to General Instruction B or a post-effective amendment thereto that will become effective upon filing with the Commission pursuant to Rule 462(e) under the Securities Act.

[   ]          This Form is a post-effective amendment to a registration statement filed pursuant to General Instruction B to register additional securities or additional classes of securities pursuant to Rule 413(b) under the Securities Act.

It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box):

[X]          when declared effective pursuant to section 8(c) of the Securities Act

If appropriate, check the following box:

[   ]          This [post-effective] amendment designates a new effective date for a previously filed [post-effective amendment] [registration statement].

[   ]          This Form is filed to register additional securities for an offering pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, and the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering is: _______.

[   ]          This Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c) under the Securities Act, and the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering is: ______.

[   ]          This Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(d) under the Securities Act, and the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering is: ______.

Check each box that appropriately characterizes the Registrant:

[X]          Registered Closed-End Fund (closed-end company that is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “Investment Company Act”)).

[   ]          Business Development Company (closed-end company that intends or has elected to be regulated as a business development company under the Investment Company Act.

[   ]          Interval Fund (Registered Closed-End Fund or a Business Development Company that makes periodic repurchase offers under Rule 23c-3 under the Investment Company Act).

[X]          A.2 Qualified (qualified to register securities pursuant to General Instruction A.2 of this Form).

[   ]          Well-Known Seasoned Issuer (as defined by Rule 405 under the Securities Act).

[   ]          Emerging Growth Company (as defined by Rule 12b-2 under the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934).

[   ]          If an Emerging Growth Company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 7(a)(2)(B) of the Securities Act.

[   ]          New Registrant (registered or regulated under the Investment Company Act for less than 12 calendar months preceding this filing).


The Registrant hereby amends this Registration Statement on such date or dates as may be necessary to delay its effective date until the Registrant shall file a further amendment which specifically states that the Registration Statement shall thereafter become effective in accordance with Section 8(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 or until the Registration Statement shall become effective on such date as the Securities and Exchange Commission, acting pursuant to said Section 8(a), may determine.


The information in this prospectus is not complete and may be changed. We may not sell these securities until the registration statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This prospectus is not an offer to sell these securities and it is not soliciting an offer to buy these securities in any jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted.
Subject to Completion
Preliminary Prospectus dated April 4, 2022
PRELIMINARY BASE PROSPECTUS
$150,000,000
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.

                     Shares of Common Stock
                     Subscription Rights to Acquire Shares of Common Stock

Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc. (the “Fund”) may issue, from time to time, in one or more offerings, shares of Common Stock, each with a par value of $0.0001 per share, and/or its transferable subscription rights to acquire Shares of Common Stock (“Rights,” and, together with the Common Stock, “Securities”) to its Stockholders of record on the record date for the offering (the “Record Date”) entitling the holders of these Rights to subscribe (an “Offer”) for additional Shares of Common Stock. The Securities may be offered at prices and on terms to be set forth in one or more supplements to this prospectus (this “Prospectus,” and each supplement thereto, a “Prospectus Supplement” or “Supplement”). You should read this Prospectus and the applicable Supplement(s) carefully before you invest in the Fund’s Securities.
 
The net asset value (“NAV”) per share of the Fund’s Common Stock at the close of business on March 25, 2022, was $11.08 and the last reported sale price of a share of Common Stock on the NYSE American on that date was $10.97, representing a discount to NAV of 0.99%. The Fund’s Common Stock is traded on the NYSE American under the symbol “NHS.”
 
Investing in the Fund’s Securities involves risks, including the risk that you may receive little or no return on your investment or that you may lose part or all of your investment. Before buying any Securities, you should read the discussion of the principal risks of investing in the Fund. The principal risks of investing in the Fund are summarized in “Prospectus Summary — Risk Factors” beginning on page 6 of this Prospectus and further described in “Risk Factors” beginning on page 27 of this Prospectus.
 
Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) nor any state securities commission has approved or disapproved of these securities or determined if this prospectus is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
 
Investment Objective. The Fund is a closed-end, diversified management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”). The Fund’s investment objective is to seek high total return (income plus capital appreciation).
 
Principal Investment Strategy. Under normal market conditions, at least 80% of the Fund’s total assets are invested in high yield debt securities of U.S. and foreign issuers. High yield debt securities include securities that,

at the time of investment, are rated below investment grade (commonly referred to as “junk”) by at least one independent credit rating agency or, if unrated, determined by the Fund’s portfolio managers to be of comparable quality. High yield debt securities may include distressed securities. To the extent not invested in high yield debt securities, the Fund may invest a portion of its assets (normally, not more than 20% of its total assets) in other securities and financial instruments, including investment grade debt securities, equity securities and derivatives. The Fund’s investment objective and its policy of investing at least 80% of its total assets in high yield debt securities of U.S. and foreign issuers are not fundamental and may be changed by the Fund’s Board without stockholder approval, however stockholders would be provided at least 60 days’ notice of any changes.

The Fund uses leverage to pursue its investment objective. The Fund currently utilizes leverage through the issuance of privately placed notes and preferred stock, and may borrow money or use a variety of additional strategies to increase funds available for investment. Under the 1940 Act, the Fund is permitted to issue debt up to 33 1/3% of its total Managed Assets (defined below) or equity securities (e.g., preferred stock) up to 50% of its total Managed Assets. “Managed Assets” means the Fund’s total assets minus liabilities other than the aggregate indebtedness entered into for purposes of leverage. The Fund may voluntarily elect to limit its leverage to less than the maximum amount permitted under the 1940 Act. In addition, the Fund may be subject to certain asset coverage, leverage or portfolio composition requirements imposed by the Fund’s notes and preferred stock governing instruments or by agencies rating the preferred stock and notes, which may be more stringent than those imposed by the 1940 Act. As of March 25, 2022, the Fund had 6,080,000 Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series C outstanding, with an aggregate liquidation preference of $76,000,000, and $19,500,000 of Senior Notes outstanding, resulting in a total leverage ratio of 37%.

Securities purchased by the Fund may have fixed or variable principal payments and various types of interest rate and dividend payment and reset terms, including fixed rate, variable rate, floating rate, zero coupon, deferred, payment in kind and auction rate features. Although the Fund may invest in debt securities having a broad range of maturities, the average portfolio maturity of the Fund is expected to be within the intermediate range (2 to 7 years) and will vary over time, based on the judgment of the Fund’s portfolio managers.
  
The Fund may invest in a variety of direct debt instruments, including bank loans, notes and other interests in amounts owed to financial institutions by borrowers, such as companies and governments. Corporate loans in which the Fund may invest will primarily consist of direct obligations of borrowers. The Fund may invest in corporate loans at origination as a co-lender or may acquire loans in the secondary market by purchasing participations in, assignments of or novations of corporate loans. The bank loans in which the Fund invests may be structured and administered by a third party that acts as agent for a group of lenders that make or hold interests in the loan. The Fund may acquire interests in such loans by taking an assignment of all or a portion of a direct interest in a loan previously held by another institution or by acquiring a participation in an interest in a loan that continues to be held by another institution.
The Fund may invest in asset-backed securities, mortgage-backed securities and equity securities, including common stocks, preferred stocks, depositary receipts, warrants and rights. The Fund may also invest in bonds and preferred stocks that are convertible into equity securities. The Fund invests primarily in securities of U.S. issuers, but may also invest in securities of foreign issuers. Up to 25% of the Fund’s total assets may be invested in securities of foreign issuers traded outside of the U.S. Liquid securities purchased by the Fund may subsequently become illiquid.
The Fund may invest in derivatives. The Fund may purchase and sell derivative instruments such as exchange listed and over-the-counter put and call options on securities, foreign currencies and securities indices. It may also purchase and sell financial futures contracts (and options thereon) and enter into various other types of transactions in derivatives, such as swaps, caps, floors and collars. These transactions may include the use of interest rate swaps (to hedge against adverse changes in interest rates affecting securities held by the Fund, dividends payable on any preferred stock issued by the Fund or interest payable on the Fund’s borrowings) and credit default swaps. Although the Fund will not use derivatives as a primary investment technique, it may use derivatives for a variety of purposes, including: (1) as a hedge against adverse changes in securities prices, interest rates or foreign currency exchange rates; and (2) as a substitute for purchasing or selling securities.
The Fund may invest in other investment companies, including exchange-traded funds, if the investment companies invest principally in the types of investments in which the Fund may invest directly.
In connection with the Fund’s use of leverage through the issuance of preferred stock and notes, the Fund may seek to hedge the interest rate risks associated with leverage through interest rate swaps, caps or other derivative
ii

transactions. These transactions involve investment techniques and risks different from those associated with portfolio transactions in securities of high yield debt securities. There is no assurance that any interest rate hedging transactions, if undertaken, will be successful, and such transactions may adversely affect the Fund’s achievement of its investment objective. See “Investment Objective and Principal Investment Strategy” and “Leverage” below and “Investment Restrictions” in the Statement of Additional Information, dated April 4, 2022 (the “SAI”).
The Fund’s portfolio managers will seek high total returns through in-depth credit research utilizing proprietary analytics processes to assess the strength of a company’s credit profile, examples of which include but are not limited to: their ability to pay principal and interest, their cash flow and balance sheet composition, their market position relative to competitors, the team’s assessment of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) factors through the team’s proprietary scoring system as well as proactive engagement on ESG related topics.
Management.  Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC (“NBIA” or the “Adviser”) serves as the Fund’s investment adviser. NBIA, an investment adviser registered with the SEC under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the “Advisers Act”), is located at 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10104-0002. See “Management of the Fund.” As of December 31, 2021 Neuberger Berman and its affiliates had $460 billion in assets under management and continue an asset management history that began in 1939. 
This Prospectus may not be used to consummate sales of securities by us through agents, underwriters or dealers unless accompanied by a Prospectus Supplement. This Prospectus, together with any applicable Prospectus Supplement, sets forth concisely the information about the Fund that a prospective investor should know before investing. You should read this Prospectus and any applicable Prospectus Supplement before deciding whether to invest in the Securities, and retain both for future reference. A Statement of Additional Information, dated April 4, 2022 (the “SAI”), containing additional information about the Fund, has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and is incorporated by reference in its entirety into this Prospectus. You can review the table of contents of the SAI at the end of this Prospectus. You may receive free of charge a copy of the SAI or the Fund’s annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders by visiting our website at www.nb.com, by calling (877) 461-1899, or by writing to the Fund, or obtain a copy (and other information regarding the Fund) from the Securities and Exchange Commission’s website at http://www.sec.gov. The SAI is only updated in connection with an offering and is therefore not available on the Fund’s website.

The Securities do not represent a deposit or obligation of, and are not guaranteed or endorsed by, any bank or other insured depository institution, and are not federally insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve Board, or any other government agency.

You should rely only on the information contained or incorporated by reference in this Prospectus and any applicable Prospectus Supplement in making your investment decisions. The Fund has not authorized anyone to provide you with different information. The Fund is not making an offer to sell Securities in any jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted. You should not assume that the information contained in this Prospectus or any applicable Prospectus Supplement is accurate as of any date other than the dates on their covers. The Fund’s business, financial condition and prospects may have changed since the date of its description in this Prospectus or the date of its description in any Prospectus Supplement.

As permitted by regulations adopted by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, paper copies of the Fund’s annual and semi-annual stockholder reports will not be sent by mail, unless you specifically request paper copies of the reports. Instead, the reports will be made available on the Fund’s website www.nb.com/CEFliterature, and you will be notified by mail each time a report is posted and provided with a website link to access the report.
iii



TABLE OF CONTENTS

1
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19
25
27
41
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43
44
45
47
51
52
55
57
57
58
58
59
60

iv

 
Cautionary notice regarding forward-looking statements
 
This Prospectus and the SAI incorporated by reference into the Prospectus contain “forward-looking statements.” Forward-looking statements can be identified by the words “may,” “will,” “intend,” “expect,” “estimate,” “continue,” “plan,” “anticipate,” and similar terms with the negative of such terms. By their nature, all forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, and actual results could differ materially from those contemplated by the forward-looking statements. Several factors that could materially affect the Fund’s actual results are the performance of the portfolio of securities the Fund holds, the price at which the Fund’s shares will trade in the public markets and other factors discussed in the Fund’s periodic filings with the SEC.
 
Although the Fund believes that the expectations expressed in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, actual results could differ materially from those projected or assumed in the Fund’s forward-looking statements. Future financial condition and results of operations, as well as any forward-looking statements, are subject to change and are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties, such as those disclosed in the “Risk Factors” section of this Prospectus. All forward-looking statements contained in this Prospectus or in the SAI are made as of the date of this Prospectus or SAI, as the case may be. Except for ongoing obligations under the federal securities laws, the Fund does not intend and is not obligated, to update any forward-looking statement.


PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
 
This is only a summary. You should review the more detailed information elsewhere in this prospectus (“Prospectus”), in any related supplement to this Prospectus (each, a “Prospectus Supplement”), and in the Statement of Additional Information (the “SAI”) prior to making an investment in the Fund. See “Risk Factors.”

The Fund
 
Information regarding the Fund
 
The Fund is the surviving entity of a reorganization between a predecessor to the Fund and another Neuberger Berman closed-end fund, which reorganization was completed after the close of business on August 6, 2010.  The Fund has outstanding privately placed notes (“PNs”) with an aggregate principal value to $19,500,000 and Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Stock, Series C (“MRPS” and, together with the PNs, “Private Securities”) with an aggregate liquidation preference of $76,000,000. The PNs have a maturity date of September 18, 2023 and the MRPS have a maturity date of August 3, 2023. As of March 25, 2022, the Fund’s NAV per share of Common Stock was $11.08.

The Offering

The Fund may offer, from time to time, in one or more offerings, shares of Common Stock, $0.0001 par value per share, and/or transferrable rights to purchase such shares of Common Stock (“Rights,” and together with the Common Stock, “Securities”). The Securities may be offered at prices and on terms to be set forth in one or more supplements to this prospectus (this “Prospectus,” and each supplement thereto, a “Prospectus Supplement” or “Supplement”). The offering price per share of Common Stock will not be less than the net asset value per share of Common Stock at the time the Fund makes the offering, exclusive of any underwriting commissions or discounts; however, transferable rights offerings that meet certain conditions may be offered at a price below the then current net asset value per share of Common Stock of the Fund. You should read this Prospectus and any applicable Prospectus Supplement carefully before you invest in the Fund’s securities.

Other Information Regarding the Fund

NYSE American listed
 
As of March 25, 2022, the Fund had 14,667,295 shares of Common Stock outstanding. The Fund’s Common Stock is traded on the NYSE American under the symbol “NHS.” As of March 25, 2022, the last reported sales price of a share of Common Stock of the Fund on the NYSE American was $10.97, representing a discount to NAV of 0.99%. See “The Fund.”

Use of proceeds

Unless otherwise specified in a Prospectus Supplement, the Adviser anticipates that investment of the net proceeds of an offer in accordance with the Fund’s investment objective and policies will take approximately three months after completion of such offer. The Fund may use the proceeds of an offer to make investments consistent with its investment objective. However, the investment of the net proceeds may take up to six months from completion of an offer, depending on market conditions and the availability of appropriate securities. Depending on market conditions and operations, a portion of the proceeds to be identified in any relevant Prospectus Supplement may be used to pay distributions in accordance with the Fund’s distribution policy.

Investment objective and principal investment strategy
 
The Fund’s investment objective is to seek high total return (income plus capital appreciation). There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective.

The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing, under normal market conditions, at least 80% of its total assets in high yield debt securities of U.S. and foreign issuers. High yield debt securities include securities that,
at the time of investment, are rated below investment grade (commonly referred to as “junk”) by at least one independent credit rating agency or, if unrated, determined by the Fund’s portfolio managers to be of comparable quality.  High yield debt securities may include distressed securities. To the extent not invested in high yield debt securities, the Fund may invest a portion of its assets (normally, not more than 20% of its total assets) in other securities and financial instruments, including investment grade debt securities, equity securities and derivatives. The Fund’s investment objective and its policy of investing at least 80% of its total assets in high yield debt securities of U.S. and foreign issuers are not fundamental and may be changed by the Fund’s Board without stockholder approval, however stockholders would be provided at least 60 days’ notice of any changes.

The Fund invests primarily in securities of U.S. issuers, but may also invest in securities of foreign issuers. Up to 25% of the Fund’s total assets may be invested in securities of foreign issuers traded outside of the U.S. Liquid securities purchased by the Fund may subsequently become illiquid.

The Fund uses leverage to pursue its investment objective. The Fund currently utilizes leverage through the issuance of privately placed notes and preferred stock, and may borrow money or use a variety of additional strategies to increase funds available for investment. Under the 1940 Act, the Fund is permitted to issue debt up to 33 1/3% of its total Managed Assets (defined below) or equity securities (e.g., preferred stock) up to 50% of its total Managed Assets. “Managed Assets” means the Fund’s total assets minus liabilities other than the aggregate indebtedness entered into for purposes of leverage The Fund may voluntarily elect to limit its leverage to less than the maximum amount permitted under the 1940 Act. In addition, the Fund may be subject to certain asset coverage, leverage or portfolio composition requirements imposed by the Fund’s notes and preferred stock governing instruments or by agencies rating the preferred stock and notes, which may be more stringent than those imposed by the 1940 Act.

Securities purchased by the Fund may have fixed or variable principal payments and various types of interest rate and dividend payment and reset terms, including fixed rate, variable rate, floating rate, zero coupon, deferred, payment in kind and auction rate features. Auction rate securities are preferred securities and debt securities with dividends/coupons based on a rate set at auction. The auction is usually held weekly for each series of a security, but may be held less frequently. The auction sets the rate, and securities may be bought and sold at the auction, normally at par value at specified intervals.

Although the Fund may invest in debt securities having a broad range of maturities, the average portfolio maturity of the Fund is expected to be within the intermediate range (2 to 7 years) and will vary over time, based on the judgment of the Fund’s portfolio managers.

The Fund may invest in a variety of direct debt instruments, including bank loans, notes and other interests in amounts owed to financial institutions by borrowers, such as companies and governments. Corporate loans in which the Fund may invest will primarily consist of direct obligations of borrowers. The Fund may invest in corporate loans at origination as a co-lender or may acquire loans in the secondary market by purchasing participations in, assignments of or novations of corporate loans. The bank loans in which the Fund invests may be structured and administered by a third party that acts as agent for a group of lenders that make or hold interests in the loan. The Fund may acquire interests in such loans by taking an assignment of all or a portion of a direct interest in a loan previously held by another institution or by acquiring a participation in an interest in a loan that continues to be held by another institution.

The Fund may invest in asset-backed securities, mortgage-backed securities and equity securities, including common stocks, preferred stocks, depositary receipts, warrants and rights. The Fund may also invest in bonds and preferred stocks that are convertible into equity securities.

The Fund may invest in derivatives. The Fund may purchase and sell derivative instruments such as exchange listed and over-the-counter put and call options on securities, foreign currencies and securities indices. It may also purchase and sell financial futures contracts (and options thereon) and enter into various other types of transactions in derivatives, such as swaps, caps, floors and collars. These transactions may include the use of interest rate swaps (to hedge against adverse changes in interest rates affecting securities held by the Fund, dividends payable on any preferred stock issued by the Fund or interest payable on the Fund’s borrowings) and credit default swaps. Although the Fund will not use derivatives as a primary investment technique, it may use derivatives for a variety of purposes,
including: (1) as a hedge against adverse changes in securities prices, interest rates or foreign currency exchange rates; and (2) as a substitute for purchasing or selling securities.
  
The Fund may invest in other investment companies, including exchange-traded funds, if the investment companies invest principally in the types of investments in which the Fund may invest directly.
In connection with the Fund’s use of leverage through the issuance of preferred stock and notes, the Fund may seek to hedge the interest rate risks associated with leverage through interest rate swaps, caps or other derivative transactions. These transactions involve investment techniques and risks different from those associated with portfolio transactions in securities of high yield debt securities. There is no assurance that any interest rate hedging transactions, if undertaken, will be successful, and such transactions may adversely affect the Fund’s achievement of its investment objective.

The Fund’s portfolio managers will seek high total returns through in-depth credit research utilizing proprietary analytics processes to assess the strength of a company’s credit profile, examples of which include but are not limited to: their ability to pay principal and interest, their cash flow and balance sheet composition, their market position relative to competitors, the team’s assessment of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) factors through the team’s proprietary scoring system as well as proactive engagement on ESG related topics. The Fund’s portfolio managers believe ESG analysis is an important component of fundamental credit research, and can help to identify business risks, which may cause deterioration in an issuer’s overall credit profile. Proprietary ESG scores are a key component of the team’s credit ratings, which may be notched up or down depending on the ESG profile of an issuer. The Fund’s portfolio managers may consider and analyze a variety of ESG topics and factors, examples of which include but are not limited to: climate change, sustainability, energy resources & management, job creation/employee relations, human rights, health and safety, transparency/disclosures, data security, board expertise, audit practices, transparency and accountability. The Fund believes that ESG considerations, like other more traditional subjects of investment analysis, have the potential to impact financial risk and investment returns. The consideration of ESG factors as part of the portfolio managers’ investment process does not mean that the Fund pursues a specific “impact” or “sustainable” investment strategy.

In an effort to achieve its goal, the Fund may engage in active and frequent trading.

Temporary Investments. For temporary defensive purposes, or to manage cash pending investment or payout, the Fund may invest up to 100% of its total assets in cash and cash equivalents, U.S. Government and Agency Securities, commercial paper and certain other money market instruments, as well as repurchase agreements collateralized by the foregoing. The Fund may not achieve its investment objective under these circumstances.

Leverage
 
The Fund uses leverage to pursue its investment objective. The Fund currently utilizes leverage through the issuance of privately placed notes and preferred stock, and may borrow money or use a variety of additional strategies to increase funds available for investment. Under the 1940 Act, the Fund is permitted to issue debt up to 33 1/3% of its total Managed Assets or equity securities (e.g., preferred stock) up to 50% of its total Managed Assets. The Fund may voluntarily elect to limit its leverage to less than the maximum amount permitted under the 1940 Act. In addition, the Fund may be subject to certain asset coverage, leverage or portfolio composition requirements imposed by the Fund’s notes and preferred stock governing instruments or by agencies rating the preferred stock and notes, which may be more stringent than those imposed by the 1940 Act.
  
Use of leverage creates an opportunity for increased income and return for the Common Stockholders but, at the same time, creates risks, including the likelihood of greater volatility in the NAV and market price of, and distributions on, the Common Stock. There is a risk that fluctuations in the dividend rates on any preferred stock issued by the Fund may adversely affect the return to the Common Stockholders. If the income from the securities purchased with such funds is not sufficient to cover the cost of leverage, the return on the Fund will be less than if leverage had not been used, and therefore the amount available for distribution to Common Stockholders as dividends and other distributions will be reduced and may not satisfy the level dividend rate distribution policy set
by the Board. There can be no assurance that the Fund will continue to use leverage or that its leveraging strategy will be successful during any period in which it is employed. The Fund may be subject to investment restrictions of one or more NRSROs as a result of its use of financial leverage. These restrictions may impose asset coverage or portfolio composition requirements that are more stringent than those imposed on the Fund by the 1940 Act. It is not anticipated that these covenants or portfolio requirements will significantly impede the Advisers in managing the Fund’s portfolio in accordance with its investment objective and policies. Nonetheless, if these covenants or guidelines are more restrictive than those imposed by the 1940 Act, the Fund may not be able to utilize as much leverage as it otherwise could have, which could reduce the Fund’s investment returns. In addition, the Fund’s outstanding notes contain covenants that, among other things, will likely impose credit quality minimums, liquidity minimums, concentration limitations and currency hedging requirements on the Fund. These covenants also likely limit the Fund’s ability to pay distributions in certain circumstances, incur additional debt, change fundamental investment policies and engage in certain transactions, including mergers and consolidations. Such restrictions could cause the Adviser to make different investment decisions than if there were no such restrictions and could limit the ability of the Board of Directors and Common Stockholders to change any fundamental investment policies. 

The costs of a financial leverage program (including the costs of offering preferred stock and notes) are borne by Common Stockholders and consequently will result in a reduction of the NAV of the Common Stock. During periods in which the Fund is using leverage, the fees paid by the Fund for investment advisory services will be higher than if the Fund did not use leverage because the investment advisory fees paid will be calculated on the basis of the Fund’s Managed Assets, which includes proceeds from (and assets subject to) any issuance of preferred stock or notes, so that the investment advisory fees payable to the Adviser will be higher when leverage is utilized. This creates a conflict of interest between the Adviser, on the one hand, and Common Stockholders, on the other hand. Fees and expenses in respect of financial leverage, as well as the investment advisory fee and all other expenses of the Fund, will be borne entirely by the Common Stockholders, and not by preferred stockholders, noteholders or any other leverage providers.
 
The Fund may enter into other transactions that may give rise to a form of leverage including, among others, swaps, futures contracts, options and other derivative transactions. See “Investment Objective and Principal Investment Strategy — Use of Leverage and Related Risks” and “Risk Factors.” To the extent that the Fund covers its obligations under such other transactions, as described in this prospectus, such transactions should not be treated as borrowings for purposes of the 1940 Act. However, these transactions, even if covered, may represent a form of economic leverage and will create risks. The potential loss on derivative instruments may be substantial relative to the initial investment therein. See “Investment Objective and Principal Investment Strategy,” “Portfolio Composition,” “Risk Factors — Risks Relating to Investing in the Fund’s Common Stock — Derivatives Risk.”
 
The Adviser
 
NBIA serves as the Fund’s investment manager. NBIA is located at 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10104-0002. See “Management of the Fund.” As of December 31, 2021, Neuberger Berman and its affiliates had $460 billion in assets under management and continue an asset management history that began in 1939. 

The Administrator
 
NBIA, located at 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10104-0002, serves as administrator to the Fund. Under the administration agreement, NBIA is generally responsible for managing the administrative affairs of the Fund.
 
For administration related services, NBIA is entitled to receive a fee that is accrued daily and paid monthly at an annual rate of 0.05% of the Fund’s average daily Managed Assets, plus certain out-of-pocket expenses.
 
During periods when the Fund is using leverage, the fee paid to NBIA (for various services) will be higher than if the Fund did not use leverage because the fees paid are calculated on the basis of the Fund’s Managed Assets, which includes the assets purchased through leverage. For the purpose of calculating Managed Assets, derivatives are valued at their market value. See “Management of the Fund — The Administrator.”
 
State Street Bank and Trust Company (“State Street”) serves as sub-administrator of the Fund and is paid by NBIA out of the fees it receives as the Fund’s administrator.

Distributions

The Fund distributes its net investment income on a monthly basis. The Fund intends to distribute at least annually, all of its realized net long- and short-term capital gains, if any. Both monthly and annual distributions to Common Stockholders will be made only after paying any accrued dividends on, or redeeming or liquidating, any preferred stock and making interest and required principal payments on notes or any other borrowings.

Over time, all the net investment income of the Fund will be distributed. That income will consist of all dividends earned and interest income accrued on portfolio assets less all expenses of the Fund, which will be accrued each day.
 
To maintain more stable monthly distributions, the Fund may include a return of capital as part of the distributions or may distribute less than the entire amount of its net investment income earned in a particular period (the “Level-Rate Distribution Policy”). A return of capital is a distribution by the Fund that exceeds the Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits and which represents a return of a Common Stockholder’s original investment. To the extent a distribution paid by the Fund represents a return of capital, a Common Stockholder’s cost basis in Fund shares will be reduced, which will increase a capital gain or reduce a capital loss upon sale of those shares. The undistributed net investment income may be available to supplement future distributions. Therefore, the distributions the Fund pays for any particular monthly period may be more or less than the amount of net investment income it actually earns during the period, and the Fund may have to sell a portion of its investment portfolio to make a distribution at a time when independent investment judgment might not dictate such action. Undistributed net investment income is included in the Common Stock’s net asset value, and, correspondingly, distributions from net investment income will reduce the Common Stock’s net asset value.  Pursuant to the requirements of the 1940 Act and other applicable laws, a notice would be provided for each monthly distribution that does not consist entirely of net investment income that would provide estimated sources of the distribution made.
 
While the Fund intends to pay a level dividend, investors should understand that there is no assurance that it will always be able to pay a dividend or that the dividend will be of any particular size.

The Fund has exemptive relief from the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) to permit it to pay long-term capital gain more frequently than is currently allowed under the 1940 Act, which would allow it to adopt a managed distribution policy (“Managed Distribution Policy”). Pursuant to a Managed Distribution Policy, the Fund could make regular cash distributions to Common Stockholders, at a fixed rate per share of Common Stock or at a fixed percentage of its NAV, that may include periodic distributions of net long- and short-term capital gains or, in certain instances, return of capital.

If the Board determines to rely on the exemptive relief and adopt a Managed Distribution Policy, the Fund would terminate its Level-Rate Distribution Policy.

The distribution rate that the Fund expects to pay on its Common Stock will depend on a number of factors, including the level of investment income received by the Fund and other Fund fees and expenses. As portfolio and market conditions change, the rate of distributions on the Common Stock could be adjusted upward or downward from time to time.

See “Distributions” and “Distribution Reinvestment Plan.”
 
An investor who acquires Common Stock in an offering issued after the record date for a monthly distribution (if any) to be paid by the Fund will not receive such distribution.
 
Distribution reinvestment plan
 
Unless you elect to receive distributions in cash, all of your distributions will be automatically reinvested in additional shares of Common Stock under the Fund’s Distribution Reinvestment Plan. See “Distribution Reinvestment Plan.”

Custodian, dividend paying agent, transfer agent and registrar

State Street Bank and Trust Company serves as custodian (the “Custodian”) for the Fund. American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC serves as Transfer Agent, Dividend Paying Agent and Registrar.

Closed-end fund structure
 
Closed-end funds differ from open-end management investment companies (commonly referred to as mutual funds) in that closed-end funds generally list their shares for trading on a securities exchange and do not redeem their shares at the option of the shareholder. By comparison, mutual funds issue securities redeemable at NAV at the option of the shareholder and typically engage in a continuous offering of their shares. Mutual funds are subject to continuous asset in-flows and out-flows that can complicate portfolio management, whereas closed-end funds generally can stay more fully invested in securities consistent with the closed-end fund’s investment objectives and policies. In addition, in comparison to open-end funds, closed-end funds have greater flexibility in the employment of financial leverage and in the ability to make certain types of investments, including investments in illiquid securities.
 
However, shares of closed-end funds frequently trade at a discount from their NAV. In recognition of the possibility that the Common Stock might trade at a discount to NAV and that any such discount may not be in the interest of Common Stockholders, the Board, in consultation with the Adviser, from time to time may review possible actions to reduce any such discount, such as tender offers for Common Stock at NAV. There can be no assurance, however, that the Board will decide to undertake any of these actions or that, if undertaken, such actions would result in the Common Stock trading at a price equal to or close to NAV.
  
Risk factors

Investing in any investment company security involves risk, including the risk that you may receive little or no return on your investment or even that you may lose part or all of your investment. The following summarizes some of the risks that you should consider before making an investment in the Fund under any offering. A more detailed description of these and other risks of investing in the Fund are described under “Risk Factors” below. You should carefully consider the following risk factors, as well as the other information in this Prospectus and any applicable Prospectus Supplement, before making an investment in the Fund under any offer. The Securities do not represent a deposit or obligation of, and are not guaranteed or endorsed by, any bank or other insured depository institution, and are not federally insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve Board, or any other government agency.

The actual risk exposure taken by the Fund in its investment program will vary over time, depending on various factors including the portfolio managers’ evaluation of issuer, political, regulatory, market, or economic developments. There can be no guarantee that the portfolio managers will be successful in their attempts to manage the risk exposure of the Fund or will appropriately evaluate or weigh the multiple factors involved in investment decisions, including issuer, market and/or instrument-specific analysis, valuation and ESG factors. Information used by the portfolio managers in their assessment of ESG factors, like other information used in their credit analysis discipline and security selection process, may not be readily available, complete, or accurate, which could negatively impact the Fund’s performance or create additional risk in the portfolio.

Each of the following risks, which are described in alphabetical order and not in order of any presumed importance, can significantly affect the Fund’s performance. The relative importance of, or potential exposure as a result of, each of these risks will vary based on market and other investment-specific considerations.

Risks Relating to Investing in the Fund’s Common Stock
 
Anti-takeover Provisions Risk. The Fund’s Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws include provisions that could limit the ability of other entities or persons to acquire control of the Fund or convert the Fund to an open-end fund. If the Fund were converted to open-end status, the Fund would have to redeem Preferred Stock and prepay Notes.  By resolution of the Board, the Fund has opted into the Maryland Control Share Acquisition Act and the Maryland
Business Combination Act.  See “Anti-Takeover and Certain Other Provisions in the Articles of Incorporation” below for additional information.

Call Risk. Upon the issuer’s desire to call a security, or under other circumstances where a security is called, including when interest rates are low and issuers opt to repay the obligation underlying a “callable security” early, the Fund may have to reinvest the proceeds in an investment offering a lower yield and may not benefit from any increase in value that might otherwise result from declining interest rates.

Closed-end Fund Risk. The Fund is a diversified, closed-end management investment company and designed primarily for long-term investors. Closed-end funds differ from open-end management investment companies (commonly known as mutual funds) because investors in a closed-end fund do not have the right to redeem their shares on a daily basis. The Fund’s Common Stock may trade at a discount to the Fund’s NAV. See “Risk Factors — Market Premium/Discount Risk.”

Conflicts of Interest Risk. The Adviser’s advisory fees are based on Managed Assets. Consequently, the Adviser will benefit from an increase in the Fund’s Managed Assets resulting from an offering. In addition, a Director who is an “interested person” (as such term is defined under the 1940 Act) of the Fund or a portfolio manager of the Fund could benefit indirectly from an offering because of such affiliations.

Convertible Securities Risk. The value of a convertible security, which is a form of hybrid security (i.e., a security with both debt and equity characteristics), typically increases or decreases with the price of the underlying common stock. In general, a convertible security is subject to the market risks of stocks when the underlying stock’s price is high relative to the conversion price and is subject to the market risks of debt securities when the underlying stock’s price is low relative to the conversion price. The general market risks of debt securities that are common to convertible securities include, but are not limited to, interest rate risk and credit risk. Many convertible securities have credit ratings that are below investment grade and are subject to the same risks as an investment in lower-rated debt securities. To the extent the Fund invests in convertible securities issued by small- or mid-cap companies, it will be subject to the risks of investing in such companies. The securities of small- and mid-cap companies may fluctuate more widely in price than the market as a whole and there may also be less trading in small- or mid-cap securities.

Credit Risk. Credit risk is the risk that issuers, guarantors, or insurers may fail, or become less able or unwilling, to pay interest and/or principal when due. Changes in the actual or perceived creditworthiness of an issuer or a downgrade or default affecting any of the Fund’s securities could affect the Fund’s performance. Generally, the longer the maturity and the lower the credit quality of a security, the more sensitive it is to credit risk.
Currency Risk. To the extent that the Fund invests in securities or other instruments denominated in or indexed to foreign currencies, changes in currency exchange rates could adversely impact investment gains or add to investment losses. Currency exchange rates may fluctuate significantly over short periods of time and can be affected unpredictably by intervention, or failure to intervene, by U.S. or foreign governments or central banks or by currency controls or political developments in the U.S. or abroad.
Depositary Receipts Risk. Depositary receipts are certificates issued by a financial institution evidencing ownership of underlying foreign securities. Depositary receipts involve many of the same risks of investing directly in the underlying foreign securities. Depositary receipts are subject to the risk of fluctuation in the currency exchange rate if, as is often the case, the underlying foreign securities are denominated in foreign currency, and there may be an imperfect correlation between the market value of depositary receipts and the underlying foreign securities.
Derivatives Risk. Use of derivatives is a highly specialized activity that can involve investment techniques and risks different from, and in some respects greater than, those associated with investing in more traditional investments, such as stocks and bonds. Derivatives can be highly complex and highly volatile and may perform in unanticipated ways. Derivatives can create leverage, and the Fund could lose more than the amount it invests; some derivatives can have the potential for unlimited losses. Derivatives may at times be highly illiquid, and the Fund may not be able to close out or sell a derivative at a particular time or at an anticipated price. Derivatives can be difficult to
value and valuation may be more difficult in times of market turmoil. The value of a derivative instrument depends largely on (and is derived from) the value of the reference instrument underlying the derivative. There may be imperfect correlation between the behavior of a derivative and that of the reference instrument underlying the derivative. An abrupt change in the price of a reference instrument could render a derivative worthless. Derivatives may involve risks different from, and possibly greater than, the risks associated with investing directly in the reference instrument. Suitable derivatives may not be available in all circumstances, and there can be no assurance that the Fund will use derivatives to reduce exposure to other risks when that might have been beneficial. Derivatives involve counterparty risk, which is the risk that the other party to the derivative will fail to make required payments or otherwise comply with the terms of the derivative. That risk is generally thought to be greater with over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives than with derivatives that are exchange traded or centrally cleared. When the Fund uses derivatives, it will likely be required to provide margin or collateral and/or segregate cash or other liquid assets; these practices are intended to satisfy contractual undertakings and regulatory requirements and will not prevent the Fund from incurring losses on derivatives. The need to provide margin or collateral and/or segregate assets could limit the Fund’s ability to pursue other opportunities as they arise. Ongoing changes to regulation of the derivatives markets and actual and potential changes in the regulation of funds using derivative instruments could limit the Fund’s ability to pursue its investment strategies. New regulation of derivatives may make them more costly, or may otherwise adversely affect their liquidity, value or performance.

Additional risks associated with certain types of derivatives are discussed below:
Futures.  Futures contracts are subject to the risk that an exchange may impose price fluctuation limits, which may make it difficult or impossible for the fund to close out a position when desired. In the absence of such limits, the liquidity of the futures market depends on participants entering into offsetting transactions rather than taking or making delivery.  To the extent the Fund enters into futures contracts requiring physical delivery (e.g., certain commodities contracts), the inability of the Fund to take or make physical delivery can negatively impact performance.

Options. The use of options involves investment strategies and risks different from those associated with ordinary portfolio securities transactions. By writing put options, the Fund takes on the risk of declines in the value of the underlying instrument, including the possibility of a loss up to the entire strike price of each option it sells, but without the corresponding opportunity to benefit from potential increases in the value of the underlying instrument. When the Fund writes a put option, it assumes the risk that it must purchase the underlying instrument at a strike price that may be higher than the market price of the instrument. If there is a broad market decline and the Fund is not able to close out its written put options, it may result in substantial losses to the Fund. By writing a call option, the Fund may be obligated to deliver instruments underlying an option at less than the market price. When the Fund writes a covered call option, it gives up the opportunity to profit from a price increase in the underlying instrument above the strike price. The Fund will receive a premium from writing options, but the premium received may not be sufficient to offset any losses sustained from exercised options. If an option that the Fund has purchased is never exercised or closed out, the Fund will lose the amount of the premium it paid and the use of those funds.

Swaps. The risk of loss with respect to swaps generally is limited to the net amount of payments that the Fund is contractually obligated to make or, in the case of the other party to a swap defaulting, the net amount of payments that the Fund is contractually entitled to receive. If the Fund sells a credit default swap, however, the risk of loss may be the entire notional amount of the swap.
Some swaps are now executed through an organized exchange or regulated facility and cleared through a regulated clearing organization. The absence of an organized exchange or market for swap transactions may result in difficulties in trading and valuation, especially in the event of market disruptions. The use of an organized exchange or market for swap transactions is expected to result in swaps being easier to trade or value, but this may not always be the case.
Distressed Securities Risk. Distressed securities may present a substantial risk of default, including the loss of the entire investment, or may be in default. The Fund may not receive interest payments on the distressed securities and may incur costs to protect its investment. The prices of such securities may be subject to periods of abrupt and
erratic market movements and above-average price volatility and it may be difficult to value such securities. In certain periods, there may be little or no liquidity in the markets for distressed securities meaning that the Fund may be unable to exit its position.
Distributions Risk. There can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve investment results that will allow the Fund to make a specified level of cash distributions or maintain certain levels of cash distributions. All distributions will be paid at the discretion of the Board and may depend on the Fund’s earnings, the Fund’s net investment income, the Fund’s financial condition, compliance with applicable regulations and such other factors as the Board may deem relevant from time to time. This distribution policy may, under certain circumstances, have certain adverse consequences to the Fund and its stockholders because it may result in a return of capital, which would reduce the Fund’s NAV and, over time, potentially increase the Fund’s expense ratio. See “Distributions.”
Foreign Risk. Foreign securities involve risks in addition to those associated with comparable U.S. securities. Additional risks include exposure to less developed or less efficient trading markets; social, political, diplomatic, or economic instability; trade barriers and other protectionist trade policies (including those of the U.S.); fluctuations in foreign currencies or currency redenomination; potential for default on sovereign debt; nationalization or expropriation of assets; settlement, custodial or other operational risks; higher transaction costs; confiscatory withholding or other taxes; and less stringent auditing, corporate disclosure, governance, and legal standards. As a result, foreign securities may fluctuate more widely in price, and may also be less liquid, than comparable U.S. securities. World markets, or those in a particular region, may all react in similar fashion to important economic or political developments. In addition, foreign markets may perform differently than the U.S. market. The effect of economic instability on specific foreign markets or issuers may be difficult to predict or evaluate. Regardless of where a company is organized or its stock is traded, its performance may be affected significantly by events in regions from which it derives its profits or in which it conducts significant operations.
Securities of issuers traded on foreign exchanges may be suspended, either by the issuers themselves, by an exchange or by governmental authorities. Trading suspensions may be applied from time to time to the securities of individual issuers for reasons specific to that issuer, or may be applied broadly by exchanges or governmental authorities in response to market events. In the event that the Fund holds material positions in such suspended securities, the Fund’s ability to liquidate its positions may be compromised and the Fund could incur significant losses.
High Portfolio Turnover. The Fund may engage in active and frequent trading and may have a high portfolio turnover rate, which may increase the Fund’s transaction costs, may adversely affect the Fund’s performance and may generate a greater amount of capital gain distributions to Common Stockholders than if the Fund had a low portfolio turnover rate.
Interest Rate Risk. The Fund’s distribution rate and NAV will fluctuate in response to changes in interest rates. In general, the value of investments with interest rate risk, such as debt securities, will move in the direction opposite to movements in interest rates. If interest rates rise, the value of such securities may decline. Typically, the longer the maturity or duration of a debt security, the greater the effect a change in interest rates could have on the security’s price. Thus, the sensitivity of the Fund’s debt securities to interest rate risk will increase with any increase in the duration of those securities.
Issuer-Specific Risk. An individual security may be more volatile, and may perform differently, than the market as a whole.
Leverage Risk. The Fund’s use of leverage may cause higher volatility for the Fund’s NAV, market price, and distribution rate. Leverage typically magnifies the total return of the Fund’s portfolio, whether that return is positive or negative. Leverage is intended to increase common stock net income, but there is no assurance that the Fund’s leveraging strategy will be successful or that the use of leverage will result in a higher yield on the Fund’s shares of common stock. Different forms of leverage, including swaps, may introduce additional credit or interest rate risk. Leverage may also increase the Fund’s liquidity risk, as the Fund may need to sell securities at inopportune times to stay within Fund, contractual or regulatory limits. The Fund’s use of leverage may increase operating costs, which
may reduce total return. The Fund’s use of leverage may increase or decrease from time to time in its discretion and the Fund may, in the future, determine not to use leverage.
Liquidity Risk. From time to time, the trading market for a particular investment in which the Fund invests, or a particular type of instrument in which the Fund is invested, may become less liquid or even illiquid. Illiquid investments frequently can be more difficult to purchase or sell at an advantageous price or time, and there is a greater risk that the investments may not be sold for the price at which the Fund is carrying them. Certain investments that were liquid when the Fund purchased them may become illiquid, sometimes abruptly. Additionally, market closures due to holidays or other factors may render a security or group of securities (e.g., securities tied to a particular country or geographic region) illiquid for a period of time. An inability to sell a portfolio position can adversely affect the Fund’s value or prevent the Fund from being able to take advantage of other investment opportunities. Market prices for such securities or other investments may be volatile. During periods of substantial market volatility, an investment or even an entire market segment may become illiquid, sometimes abruptly, which can adversely affect the Fund’s ability to limit losses.

Loan Interests Risk. Loan interests generally are subject to restrictions on transfer, and the Fund may be unable to sell its loan interests at a time when it may otherwise be desirable to do so or may be able to sell them promptly only at prices that are less than what the Fund regards as their fair market value. Accordingly, loan interests may at times be illiquid. Loan interests may be difficult to value and may have extended settlement periods (the settlement cycle for many bank loans exceeds 7 days). Extended settlement periods may result in cash not being immediately available to the Fund. A significant portion of floating rate loans may be “covenant lite” loans that may contain fewer or less restrictive constraints on the borrower and/or may contain other characteristics that would be favorable to the borrower, limiting the ability of lenders to take legal action to protect their interests in certain situations. Interests in loans made to finance highly leveraged companies or to finance corporate acquisitions or other transactions may be especially vulnerable to adverse changes in economic or market conditions. Interests in secured loans have the benefit of collateral and, typically, of restrictive covenants limiting the ability of the borrower to further encumber its assets. There is a risk that the value of any collateral securing a loan in which the Fund has an interest may decline and that the collateral may not be sufficient to cover the amount owed on the loan. In the event the borrower defaults, the Fund’s access to the collateral may be limited or delayed by bankruptcy or other insolvency laws. Further, in the event of a default, second or lower lien secured loans, and unsecured loans, will generally be paid only if the value of the collateral exceeds the amount of the borrower’s obligations to the senior secured lenders, and the remaining collateral may not be sufficient to cover the full amount owed on the loan in which the Fund has an interest. Further, there is a risk that a court could take action with respect to a loan that is adverse to the holders of the loan and the Fund may need to retain legal counsel to enforce its rights in any resulting event of default, bankruptcy, or similar situation. Interests in loans expose the Fund to the credit risk of the underlying borrower and may expose the Fund to the credit risk of the lender.
The Fund may acquire a loan interest by obtaining an assignment of all or a portion of the interests in a particular loan that are held by an original lender or a prior assignee. As an assignee, the Fund normally will succeed to all rights and obligations of its assignor with respect to the portion of the loan that is being assigned. However, the rights and obligations acquired by the purchaser of a loan assignment may differ from, and be more limited than, those held by the original lenders or the assignor. Alternatively, the Fund may acquire a participation in a loan interest that is held by another party. When the Fund’s loan interest is a participation, the Fund may have less control over the exercise of remedies than the party selling the participation interest, and the Fund normally would not have any direct rights against the borrower. It is possible that the Fund could be held liable, or may be called upon to fulfill other obligations, with respect to loans in which it receives an assignment in whole or in part, or in which it owns a participation. The potential for such liability is greater for an assignee than for a participant.
Lower-Rated Debt Securities Risk. Lower-rated debt securities (commonly known as “junk bonds”) and unrated debt securities determined to be of comparable quality involve greater risks than investment grade debt securities. Such securities may fluctuate more widely in price and yield and may fall in price during times when the economy is weak or is expected to become weak. These securities also may require a greater degree of judgment to establish a price and may be difficult to sell at the time and price the Fund desires. Lower-rated debt securities are considered by the major rating agencies to be predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer’s continuing ability to pay principal and interest and carry a greater risk that the issuer of such securities will default in the timely payment of
principal and interest. Issuers of securities that are in default or have defaulted may fail to resume principal or interest payments, in which case the Fund may lose its entire investment. The creditworthiness of issuers of these securities may be more complex to analyze than that of issuers of investment grade debt securities, and the overreliance on credit ratings may present additional risks.
Market Premium/Discount Risk. The market price of the Fund’s shares of common stock will generally fluctuate in accordance with changes in the Fund’s NAV as well as the relative supply of and demand for shares on the secondary market. The Fund’s investment advisor cannot predict whether shares will trade below, at or above their NAV because the shares trade on the secondary market at market prices and not at NAV. Because the market price of the Fund’s shares of common stock will be determined by factors such as relative supply of and demand for shares in the market, general market and economic circumstances, and other factors beyond the control of the Fund, the Fund cannot predict whether the Common Stock will trade at, below or above NAV. This characteristic is a risk separate and distinct from the risk that the Fund’s NAV could decrease as a result of investment activities. Common stockholders bear a risk of loss to the extent that the price at which they sell their shares is lower in relation to the Fund’s NAV than at the time of purchase.
Market Volatility Risk. Markets may be volatile and values of individual securities and other investments, including those of a particular type, may decline significantly in response to adverse issuer, political, regulatory, market, economic or other developments that may cause broad changes in market value, public perceptions concerning these developments, and adverse investor sentiment or publicity. Geopolitical and other risks, including environmental and public health risks may add to instability in world economies and markets generally. Changes in value may be temporary or may last for extended periods. If the Fund sells a portfolio position before it reaches its market peak, it may miss out on opportunities for better performance.
Mortgage- and Asset-Backed Securities Risk. The value of mortgage- and asset-backed securities, including collateralized mortgage instruments, will be influenced by the factors affecting the housing market or the assets underlying the securities. These securities tend to be more sensitive to changes in interest rates than other types of debt securities. In addition, investments in mortgage- and asset-backed securities may be subject to prepayment risk and extension risk, call risk, credit risk, valuation risk, and illiquid investment risk, sometimes to a higher degree than various other types of debt securities. These securities are also subject to the risk of default on the underlying mortgages or assets, particularly during periods of market downturn, and an unexpectedly high rate of defaults on the underlying assets will adversely affect the security’s value.
Operational and Cybersecurity Risk. The Fund and its service providers, and your ability to transact with the Fund, may be negatively impacted due to operational matters arising from, among other problems, human errors, systems and technology disruptions or failures, or cybersecurity incidents. Cybersecurity incidents may allow an unauthorized party to gain access to fund assets, customer data, or proprietary information, or cause the Fund or its service providers, as well as the securities trading venues and their service providers, to suffer data corruption or lose operational functionality. It is not possible for the Manager or the other Fund service providers to identify all of the cybersecurity or other operational risks that may affect the Fund or to develop processes and controls to completely eliminate or mitigate their occurrence or effects. Most issuers in which the Fund invests are heavily dependent on computers for data storage and operations, and require ready access to the internet to conduct their business. Thus, cybersecurity incidents could also affect issuers of securities in which the Fund invests, leading to significant loss of value.

Other Investment Company Risk. To the extent the Fund invests in other investment companies, including money market funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), its performance will be affected by the performance of those other investment companies.  Investments in other investment companies are subject to the risks of the other investment companies’ investments, as well as to the other investment companies’ expenses.

An ETF may trade in the secondary market at a price below the value of its underlying portfolio and may not be liquid. An actively managed ETF’s performance will reflect its adviser’s ability to make investment decisions that are suited to achieving the ETF’s investment objectives. A passively managed ETF may not replicate the performance of the index it intends to track.
Prepayment and Extension Risk. The Fund’s performance could be affected if borrowers pay back principal on certain debt securities, such as mortgage- or asset-backed securities, before (prepayment) or after (extension) the market anticipates such payments, shortening or lengthening their duration. Due to a decline in interest rates or an excess in cash flow into the issuer, a debt security might be called or otherwise converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity. As a result of prepayment, the Fund may have to reinvest the proceeds in an investment offering a lower yield, may not benefit from any increase in value that might otherwise result from declining interest rates, and may lose any premium it paid to acquire the security. Conversely, rising market interest rates generally result in slower payoffs or extension, which effectively increases the duration of certain debt securities, heightening interest rate risk and increasing the magnitude of any resulting price declines.
Private Placements and Other Restricted Securities Risk. Private placements and other restricted securities, including securities for which Fund management has material non-public information, are securities that are subject to legal and/ or contractual restrictions on their sales. These securities may not be sold to the public unless certain conditions are met, which may include registration under the applicable securities laws. As a result of the absence of a public trading market, the prices of these securities may be more difficult to determine than publicly traded securities and these securities may involve heightened risk as compared to investments in securities of publicly traded companies. Private placements and other restricted securities may be illiquid, and it frequently can be difficult to sell them at a time when it may otherwise be desirable to do so or the Fund may be able to sell them only at prices that are less than what the Fund regards as their fair market value. Transaction costs may be higher for these securities. In addition, the Fund may get only limited information about the issuer of a private placement or other restricted security.
Recent Market Conditions. National economies are substantially interconnected, as are global financial markets, which creates the possibility that conditions in one country or region might adversely impact issuers in a different country or region. Some countries, including the U.S., have in recent years adopted more protectionist trade policies. The rise in protectionist trade policies, changes to some major international trade agreements and the potential for changes to others, could affect the economies of many nations in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen at the present time. Markets have been sensitive to the outlook for resolving the U.S.-China “trade war,” a trend that may continue in the future. Russia’s assertion of its influence in its surrounding region, including potential actions in Ukraine, increases the likelihood of additional sanctions by the U.S. and other countries, which may cause volatility in the markets.
High public debt in the U.S. and other countries creates ongoing systemic and market risks and policymaking uncertainty, and there may be a further increase in public debt due to the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and ensuing economic relief and public health measures. Governments and central banks have moved to limit the potential negative economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic with interventions that are unprecedented in size and scope and may continue to do so, but the ultimate impact of these efforts is uncertain. Governments’ efforts to limit potential negative economic effects of the pandemic may be altered, delayed, or eliminated at inopportune times for political, policy or other reasons. Interest rates have been unusually low in recent years in the U.S. and abroad. It is difficult to predict the impact on various markets of a significant rate increase or other significant policy changes, perhaps in response to indications of increasing inflation. Over the longer term, rising interest rates may present a greater risk than has historically been the case due to the current period of relatively low rates and the effect of government fiscal and monetary policy initiatives and potential market reaction to those initiatives or their alteration or cessation.
The impact of the pandemic has negatively affected and may continue to affect the economies of many nations, individual companies and the global securities and commodities markets, including their liquidity, in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen at the present time.  The pandemic has accelerated trends toward working remotely and shopping on-line, which may negatively affect the value of office and commercial real estate and companies that have been slow to transition to an on-line business model, and has disrupted the supply chains that many businesses depend on.  The travel, hospitality and public transit industries may suffer long-term negative effects from the pandemic and resulting changes to public behavior.
Over the past several years, the U.S. has moved away from tighter industry regulation, a trend that appears to be changing. Increased regulation may impose added costs on the Fund and its service providers for monitoring and compliance, and affect the businesses of various portfolio companies, in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen at the present time.
LIBOR Transition. Certain financial contracts around the world specify rates that are based on the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), which is produced daily by averaging the rates for inter-bank lending reported by a number of banks. As previously announced by the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority, most maturities and currencies of LIBOR were phased out at the end of 2021, with the remaining ones to be phased out on June 30, 2023. There are risks that the financial services industry will not have a suitable substitute in place by that time and that there will not be time to perform the substantial work necessary to revise the many existing contracts that rely on LIBOR. The transition process, or a failure of the industry to transition properly, might lead to increased volatility and illiquidity in markets that currently rely on LIBOR. It also could lead to a reduction in the value of some LIBOR-based investments and reduce the effectiveness of new hedges placed against existing LIBOR-based instruments. New York has passed legislation to ease the transition from LIBOR and federal LIBOR transition relief legislation has been proposed, but there is no assurance whether or when such legislation will be enacted or if it will adequately address all issues or be subject to litigation.
Regulated Investment Company Status. The Fund has qualified, and intends to remain qualified, for federal income tax purposes as a regulated investment company (“RIC”) under Subchapter M of the Code. Qualification requires, among other things, compliance by the Fund with certain distribution requirements. If the Fund does not qualify as a RIC for any taxable year, the Fund’s taxable income will be subject to corporate income taxes, and all distributions from earnings and profits, including distributions of net capital gain (if any), will be taxable to stockholders as ordinary income. Such distributions generally would be eligible (i) to be treated as qualified dividend income in the case of individual and other non-corporate stockholders and (ii) for the dividends received deduction (“DRD”) in the case of corporate stockholders. In addition, in order to requalify for taxation as a RIC, the Fund may be required to recognize unrealized gain, pay substantial taxes and interest, and make certain distributions. See “Tax Matters” for a more complete discussion of these and other federal income tax considerations.
Repurchase Agreement Risk. Repurchase agreements generally are for a short period of time and involve the risk that the counterparty may default on its obligation to repurchase the underlying instruments collateralizing the repurchase agreement, which may result in costs, delays, and/or losses to the Fund.
Risk Management. Risk is an essential part of investing. No risk management program can eliminate the Fund’s exposure to adverse events; at best, it may only reduce the possibility that the Fund will be affected by such events, and especially those risks that are not intrinsic to the Fund’s investment program. The Fund could experience losses if judgments about risk prove to be incorrect.
Sector Risk. From time to time, based on market or economic conditions, the Fund may have significant positions in one or more sectors of the market. To the extent the Fund invests more heavily in particular sectors, its performance will be especially sensitive to developments that significantly affect those sectors. Individual sectors may be more volatile, and may perform differently, than the broader market. The industries that constitute a sector may all react in the same way to economic, political or regulatory events.
Securities Lending Risk. Securities lending involves a possible delay in recovery of the loaned securities or a possible loss of rights in the collateral should the borrower fail financially. The Fund could also lose money if the value of the collateral decreases.
Stockholder Activism Risk. Stockholder activism can take many forms, including making public demands that the Fund consider certain alternatives, engaging in public campaigns to attempt to influence the Fund’s governance and/or management, commencing proxy contests in an effort to elect the activists’ representatives or others to the Fund’s Board of Directors or to seek other actions such as a tender offer or Fund liquidation, and commencing litigation. Stockholder activism arises in a variety of situations, and has been increasing in the closed-end fund space recently. While the Fund is currently not subject to any shareholder activism, due to the potential volatility of the Fund’s common stock market price and for a variety of other reasons, the Fund may in the future become the target of stockholder activism. Stockholder activism could result in substantial costs and divert Management’s and the Fund’s Board’s attention and resources from its business. Also, the Fund may be required to incur significant legal and other expenses related to any activist shareholder matters. Further, the Fund’s stock price could be subject to
significant fluctuation or otherwise be adversely affected by the events, risks and uncertainties of any stockholder activism. Stockholder activists seek short-term actions that can increase Fund costs per share and be detrimental to long-term stockholders.
U.S. Government Securities Risk. Although the Fund may hold securities that carry U.S. government guarantees, these guarantees do not extend to shares of the Fund itself and do not guarantee the market prices of the securities. Furthermore, not all securities issued by the U.S. government and its agencies and instrumentalities are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury. Securities not backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury carry at least some risk of non-payment or default.
Valuation Risk. The Fund may not be able to sell an investment at the price at which the Fund has valued the investment. Such differences could be significant, particularly for illiquid securities and securities that trade in relatively thin markets and/or markets that experience extreme volatility. If market or other conditions make it difficult to value some investments, SEC rules and applicable accounting protocols may require the Fund to value these investments using more subjective methods, known as fair value methodologies. Using fair value methodologies to price investments may result in a value that is different from an investment’s most recent price and from the prices used by other funds to calculate their NAVs. The Fund’s ability to value its investments in an accurate and timely manner may be impacted by technological issues and/or errors by third party service providers, such as pricing services or accounting agents.
Variable and Floating Rate Instruments Risk. The market prices of instruments with variable and floating interest rates are generally less sensitive to interest rate changes than are the market prices of instruments with fixed interest rates. Variable and floating rate instruments may decline in value if market interest rates or interest rates paid by such instruments do not move as expected. Certain types of floating rate instruments, such as interests in bank loans, may be subject to greater liquidity risk than other debt securities.
Warrants and Rights Risk. Warrants and rights do not carry with them the right to dividends or voting rights with respect to the securities that they entitle their holder to purchase, and they do not represent any rights in the assets of the issuer. As a result, warrants and rights may be considered more speculative than certain other types of investments. In addition, the value of a warrant or right does not necessarily change with the value of the underlying securities. The Fund could lose the value of a warrant or right if the right to subscribe to additional shares is not exercised prior to the warrant’s or right’s expiration date. The market for warrants and rights may be very limited and there may at times not be a liquid secondary market for warrants and rights.
Zero Coupon Securities, Step Coupon Securities, Pay-in-Kind Securities and Discount Obligations. Zero coupon securities and step coupon securities are debt obligations that are issued and traded at a discount from their face amount or par value (known as “original issue discount” or “OID”) and do not entitle the holder to any periodic payment of interest prior to maturity or that specify a future date when the securities begin to pay current interest. The Fund may also acquire certain debt securities at a discount. These discount obligations involve special risk considerations. OID varies depending on prevailing interest rates, the time remaining until cash payments begin, the liquidity of the security, and the perceived credit quality of the issuer. Zero coupon securities and step coupon securities are redeemed at face value when they mature. Accrued OID must be included in the Fund’s gross income for federal tax purposes ratably each taxable year prior to the receipt of any actual payments. Pay-in-kind securities pay “interest” through the issuance of additional securities. The market prices of zero coupon securities, step coupon securities, pay-in-kind securities and discount obligations generally are more volatile than the prices of securities that pay cash interest periodically. Those securities and obligations are likely to respond to changes in interest rates to a greater degree than other types of debt securities having a similar maturity and credit quality.

SUMMARY OF FUND EXPENSES
 
The purpose of the following table and the example below is to help you understand the fees and expenses that you, as an investor in the Fund would bear directly or indirectly. The tables also reflect the use of leverage by the Fund through preferred stock and notes representing in the aggregate 34.5% of Managed Assets (consistent with the percentage of leverage in place as of October 31, 2021) of the Fund’s total assets (including the assets subject to,
and obtained with the proceeds of, such borrowings), and show Fund expenses as a percentage of net assets attributable to Common Stock.
 
Stockholder Transaction Expenses
 
 
 
Sales load(1)
 
%
Offering expenses(1)
 
%
Distribution Reinvestment Plan fees(2)
 
%
 
 
 
Estimated annual expenses
(as a percentage of net assets
attributable to
 
 
 
Common Stock)
 
 
 
 
 
Management fees(3)
 
0.99
%
Interest expenses on notes
 
0.15
%
Other expenses
 
0.46
%
Total annual fund operating expenses
 
1.60
%
Distributions on preferred stock
 
0.95
%
Net annual fund operating expenses and distributions on preferred stock
 
2.55
%


(1)         If Shares of Common Stock are sold to or through underwriters, the Prospectus Supplement will set forth any applicable sales load and the estimated offering expenses.
  
(2)         The Plan Agent’s fees for the handling of the reinvestment of distributions will be paid by the Fund. However, you will pay brokerage charges if you direct the Plan Agent to sell your Common Stock held in a distribution reinvestment account. See “Distribution Reinvestment Plan.”

(3)
The Adviser receives a management fee payable on a monthly basis at an annual rate of 0.60% of the Fund’s average daily Managed Assets for investment advisory services. In addition, the Adviser receives a fee payable on a monthly basis at an annual rate of 0.05% of the Fund’s average daily Managed Assets for administrative services.
    
Example

The following example illustrates the expenses that Common Stockholders would pay on a $1,000 investment in Common Stock, assuming (i) total annual expenses set forth above; (ii) a 5% annual return; and (iii) all distributions are reinvested at NAV:
 
The example should not be considered a representation of future expenses or rate of return and actual Fund expenses may be greater or less than those shown. For more complete descriptions of certain of the Fund’s costs and expenses, see “Management of the Fund.” In addition, while the example assumes reinvestment of all dividends and distributions at NAV, participants in the Fund’s distribution reinvestment plan may receive Common Stock purchased or issued at a price or value different from NAV. See “Distribution Reinvestment Plan.” The example does not include sales load or estimated offering costs, which would cause the expenses shown in the example to increase.
 
1 Year
 
3 Years
 
5 Years
 
10 Years
 
$
26
 
$
79
 
$
136
 
$
289
 
 
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

Financial highlights tables are intended to help you understand the Fund’s financial performance. The financial highlights as of and for the fiscal years ended October 31, 2012 through 2021 are derived from the Fund’s financial statements audited by Ernst & Young LLP, independent registered public accounting firm for the Fund, and such financial highlights are incorporated by reference to the Fund’s Annual Report on Form N-CSR for the fiscal year
ended October 31, 2016 and the Annual Report on Form N-CSR for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021. The report of Ernst & Young LLP and the Fund’s financial statements are included in the Fund’s Annual Report on Form N-CSR for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021, and are incorporated by reference into the SAI.

The following table sets forth information about the Fund’s outstanding senior securities as of the end of each fiscal year for the past ten years.


Year
Class of
Senior Securities
Total Amount Outstanding(1)
Asset Coverage
Per Unit(2)
Involuntary
Liquidating
Preference Per Unit(3)
Average
Market Value Per Unit(4)
October 31, 2021
Floating Rate Senior Notes
$19,500,000
$14,207
N/A
N/A
 
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series C
$76,000,000
$42
$12.50
N/A
October 31, 2020
Floating Rate Senior Notes
$30,000,000
$11,830
N/A
N/A
 
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series C
$95,000,000
$43
$12.50
N/A
October 31, 2019
Floating Rate Senior Notes
$90,000,000
$4,012
N/A
N/A
 
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series B
$35,000,000
$201,889
$25,000
N/A
October 31, 2018
Floating Rate Senior Notes
$90,000,000
$4,098
N/A
N/A
 
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series B
$35,000,000
$198,912
$25,000
N/A
October 31, 2017
Floating Rate Senior Notes
$90,000,000
$4,309
N/A
N/A
 
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series B
$35,000,000
$212,582
$25,000
N/A
October 31, 2016
Floating Rate Senior Notes
$90,000,000
$4,238
N/A
N/A
 
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series B
$35,000,000
$208,182
$25,000
N/A
October 31, 2015
Floating Rate Senior Notes
$90,000,000
$4,143
N/A
N/A
 
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series B
$35,000,000
$202,029
$25,000
N/A
October 31, 2014
Floating Rate Senior Notes
$90,000,000
$4,520
N/A
N/A
 
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series B
$35,000,000
$226,286
$25,000
N/A
October 31, 2013
Floating Rate Senior Notes
$90,000,000
$4,575
N/A
N/A
 
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series B
$35,000,000
$229,815
$25,000
N/A
October 31, 2012
Floating Rate Senior Notes
$82,600,000
$4,649
N/A
N/A
 
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series A
$27,175,000
$277,268
$25,000
N/A


(1)   Total amount of each class of senior securities outstanding at the end of the period presented.
  
(2)   The asset coverage ratio for the Floating Rate Senior Notes is calculated by subtracting the Fund’s total liabilities and indebtedness not represented by senior securities from the Fund’s total assets, dividing the result by the aggregate amount of the Fund’s senior securities representing indebtedness then outstanding, and then multiplying by $1,000. The asset coverage ratio for the Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares is calculated as the Fund's total assets, less all liabilities and indebtedness not represented by the Fund's senior securities, divided by secured senior securities representing indebtedness plus the aggregate of the involuntary liquidation preference of the Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares. With respect to the Mandatory Redeemable
  
Preferred Shares, the asset coverage per unit figure is expressed in terms of dollar amounts per share of the outstanding Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares.

(3)
The amount to which a holder of Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares would be entitled upon the involuntary liquidation of the Fund in preference to the holder of any class of security with a junior ranking.

(4)
Not applicable, as senior securities are not registered for public trading.

THE FUND
 
The Fund is the surviving entity of a reorganization between a predecessor to the Fund and another Neuberger Berman closed-end fund, which reorganization was completed after the close of business on August 6, 2010. The Fund was incorporated in the State of Maryland on March 18, 2010.  The Fund has outstanding privately placed notes (“PNs”) with an aggregate principal value of $19,500,000 and Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series C (“MRPS” and, together with the PNs, “Private Securities”) with an aggregate liquidation preference of $76,000,000. The PNs have a maturity date of September 18, 2023 and the MRPS have a maturity date of August 3, 2023. As of March 25, 2022, the Fund’s NAV per share of Common Stock was $11.08. The Fund was organized a closed-end, non-diversified management investment company registered under the 1940 Act.   Under the 1940 Act, the status of a fund that was registered as non-diversified may, under certain circumstances, change to that of a diversified fund. The Fund is currently a diversified fund.
 
The Fund’s investment objective is to seek high total return (income plus capital appreciation). There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective.
 
The Fund’s Adviser is NBIA. NBIA is located at 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10104-0002. See “Management of the Fund.” As of December 31, 2021, Neuberger Berman and its affiliates had $460 billion in assets under management and continue an asset management history that began in 1939.

THE OFFERING
 
The Fund may offer, from time to time, in one or more offerings, shares of Common Stock, $0.0001 par value per share, and/or transferrable rights to purchase such Shares of Common Stock (“Rights,” and together with the Common Stock, “Securities”). The Securities may be offered at prices and on terms to be set forth in one or more supplements to this prospectus (this “Prospectus,” and each supplement thereto, a “Prospectus Supplement” or “Supplement”). The offering price per Share of Common Stock will not be less than the net asset value per share of Common Stock at the time the Fund makes the offering, exclusive of any underwriting commissions or discounts; however, transferable rights offerings that meet certain conditions may be offered at a price below the then current net asset value per share of Common Stock of the Fund. You should read this Prospectus and any applicable Prospectus Supplement carefully before you invest in the Fund’s securities.

USE OF PROCEEDS
 
Unless otherwise specified in a Prospectus Supplement, the Adviser anticipates that investment of the net proceeds of an offer in accordance with the Fund’s investment objective and policies will take approximately three months after completion of such offer. The Fund may use the proceeds of an offer to make investments consistent with its investment objective. However, the investment of the net proceeds may take up to six months from completion of an offer, depending on market conditions and the availability of appropriate securities. Depending on market conditions and operations, a portion of the proceeds to be identified in any relevant Prospectus Supplement may be used to pay distributions in accordance with the Fund’s distribution policy.
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND PRINCIPAL INVESTMENT STRATEGY
 
The Fund’s investment objective is to seek high total return (income plus capital appreciation). There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective.

The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing, under normal market conditions, at least 80% of its total assets in high yield debt securities of U.S. and foreign issuers. High yield debt securities include securities that, at the time of investment, are rated below investment grade (commonly referred to as “junk”) by at least one independent credit rating agency or, if unrated, determined by the Fund’s portfolio managers to be of comparable quality. High yield debt securities may include distressed securities. To the extent not invested in high yield debt securities, the Fund may invest a portion of its assets (normally, not more than 20% of its total assets) in other securities and financial instruments, including investment grade debt securities, equity securities and derivatives. The Fund’s investment objective and its policy of investing at least 80% of its total assets in high yield debt securities of U.S. and foreign issuers are not fundamental and may be changed by the Fund’s Board without stockholder approval, however stockholders would be provided at least 60 days’ notice of any changes.

The Fund invests primarily in securities of U.S. issuers, but may also invest in securities of foreign issuers. Up to 25% of the Fund’s total assets may be invested in securities of foreign issuers traded outside of the U.S. Liquid securities purchased by the Fund may subsequently become illiquid.

The Fund uses leverage to pursue its investment objective. The Fund currently utilizes leverage through the issuance of privately placed notes and preferred stock, and may borrow money or use a variety of additional strategies to increase funds available for investment. Under the 1940 Act, the Fund is permitted to issue debt up to 33 1/3% of its total Managed Assets or equity securities (e.g., preferred stock) up to 50% of its total Managed Assets. The Fund may voluntarily elect to limit its leverage to less than the maximum amount permitted under the 1940 Act. In addition, the Fund may be subject to certain asset coverage, leverage or portfolio composition requirements imposed by the Fund’s notes and preferred stock governing instruments or by agencies rating the preferred stock and notes, which may be more stringent than those imposed by the 1940 Act.

Securities purchased by the Fund may have fixed or variable principal payments and various types of interest rate and dividend payment and reset terms, including fixed rate, variable rate, floating rate, zero coupon, deferred, payment in kind and auction rate features. Although the Fund may invest in debt securities having a broad range of maturities, the average portfolio maturity of the Fund is expected to be within the intermediate range (2 to 7 years) and will vary over time, based on the judgment of the Fund’s portfolio managers. Auction rate securities are preferred securities and debt securities with dividends/coupons based on a rate set at auction. The auction is usually held weekly for each series of a security, but may be held less frequently. The auction sets the rate, and securities may be bought and sold at the auction, normally at par value at specified intervals.

The Fund may invest in a variety of direct debt instruments, including bank loans, notes and other interests in amounts owed to financial institutions by borrowers, such as companies and governments. Corporate loans in which the Fund may invest will primarily consist of direct obligations of borrowers. The Fund may invest in corporate loans at origination as a co-lender or may acquire loans in the secondary market by purchasing participations in, assignments of or novations of corporate loans. The bank loans in which the Fund invests may be structured and administered by a third party that acts as agent for a group of lenders that make or hold interests in the loan. The Fund may acquire interests in such loans by taking an assignment of all or a portion of a direct interest in a loan previously held by another institution or by acquiring a participation in an interest in a loan that continues to be held by another institution.

The Fund may invest in asset-backed securities, mortgage-backed securities and equity securities, including common stocks, preferred stocks, depositary receipts, warrants and rights. The Fund may also invest in bonds and preferred stocks that are convertible into equity securities.

The Fund may invest in derivatives. The Fund may purchase and sell derivative instruments such as exchange listed and over-the-counter put and call options on securities, foreign currencies and securities indices. It may also purchase and sell financial futures contracts (and options thereon) and enter into various other types of transactions in derivatives, such as swaps, caps, floors and collars. These transactions may include the use of interest rate swaps (to hedge against adverse changes in interest rates affecting securities held by the Fund, dividends payable on any preferred stock issued by the Fund or interest payable on the Fund’s borrowings) and credit default swaps. Although the Fund will not use derivatives as a primary investment technique, it may use derivatives for a variety of purposes, including: (1) as a hedge against adverse changes in securities prices, interest rates or foreign currency exchange rates; and (2) as a substitute for purchasing or selling securities.

The Fund may invest in other investment companies, including exchange-traded funds, if the investment companies invest principally in the types of investments in which the Fund may invest directly.  In connection with the Fund’s use of leverage through the issuance of preferred stock and notes, the Fund may seek to hedge the interest rate risks associated with leverage through interest rate swaps, caps or other derivative transactions. These transactions involve investment techniques and risks different from those associated with portfolio transactions in securities of high yield debt securities.

There is no assurance that any interest rate hedging transactions, if undertaken, will be successful, and such transactions may adversely affect the Fund’s achievement of its investment objective.
   
The Fund’s portfolio managers will seek high total returns through in-depth credit research utilizing proprietary analytics processes to assess the strength of a company’s credit profile, examples of which include but are not limited to: their ability to pay principal and interest, their cash flow and balance sheet composition, their market position relative to competitors, the team’s assessment of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) factors through the team’s proprietary scoring system as well as proactive engagement on ESG related topics. The Fund’s portfolio managers believe ESG analysis is an important component of fundamental credit research, and can help to identify business risks, which may cause deterioration in an issuer’s overall credit profile. Proprietary ESG scores are a key component of the team’s credit ratings, which may be notched up or down depending on the ESG profile of an issuer. The Fund’s portfolio managers may consider and analyze a variety of ESG topics and factors, examples of which include but are not limited to: climate change, sustainability, energy resources & management, job creation/employee relations, human rights, health and safety, transparency/disclosures, data security, board expertise, audit practices, transparency and accountability. The Fund believes that ESG considerations, like other more traditional subjects of investment analysis, have the potential to impact financial risk and investment returns. The consideration of ESG factors as part of the portfolio managers’ investment process does not mean that the Fund pursues a specific “impact” or “sustainable” investment strategy.
In an effort to achieve its goal, the Fund may engage in active and frequent trading.

Temporary Investments. For temporary defensive purposes, or to manage cash pending investment or payout, the Fund may invest up to 100% of its total assets in cash and cash equivalents, U.S. Government and Agency Securities, commercial paper and certain other money market instruments, as well as repurchase agreements collateralized by the foregoing. The Fund may not achieve its investment objective under these circumstances.
PORTFOLIO COMPOSITION

The Fund may engage in certain practices and invest in certain securities in addition to those described as its “Principal Investment Strategy” in the summary section above. The following provides further descriptions of certain investments that the Fund may make, and are not intended to be an exhaustive discussion of the Fund’s investments. For additional information on the types of investments the Fund may make, please see the Statement of Additional Information.

High Yield Debt Securities. High yield debt securities are rated below investment grade by a rating agency, or are unrated debt securities determined to be of comparable quality by the Manager, at the time of purchase. Debt securities rated below investment grade are commonly referred to as “high yield securities” or “junk bonds” and are considered speculative with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and repay principal. They involve greater risk of loss, are subject to greater price volatility and are potentially less liquid, especially during periods of economic uncertainty or change than higher rated debt securities. For purposes of the Fund’s investment policies relating to credit quality, if a security receives different ratings from two or more nationally recognized securities rating organizations, the Fund will use the rating chosen by the Manager as most representative of the security’s credit quality.
 
Although the Fund may invest in debt securities having a broad range of maturities, the average portfolio maturity of the Fund is initially expected to be within the intermediate range (2 to 7 years) and will vary over time, based on the judgment of the Manager.
 
Direct Debt Instruments. Direct debt includes interests in bank loans, notes and other interests in amounts owed to financial institutions by borrowers, such as companies and governments. Direct debt instruments are interests in amounts owed by corporate, governmental, or other borrowers to lenders or lending syndicates. The direct debt instruments in which the Fund may invest may be rated below investment grade or, if unrated by either of those entities, considered by the Manager to be of comparable quality. Direct debt determined to be below investment grade will be included in the Fund’s calculation of its 80% investment in high yield debt securities.

Purchasers of loans and other forms of direct indebtedness depend primarily upon the creditworthiness of the borrower for payment of principal and interest. The borrower may be in financial distress or may default. If the Fund does not receive scheduled interest or principal payments on such indebtedness, the Fund’s share price and yield could be adversely affected. Participations in debt instruments may involve a risk of insolvency of the selling bank. In addition, there may be fewer legal protections for owners of participation interests than for direct lenders.

Direct debt instruments may have floating interest rates.  These interest rates will vary depending on the terms of the underlying loan and market conditions.   

Corporate Loans. The Fund may invest in corporate loans, including various types of direct obligations of corporate borrowers and loan participations. Corporate loans may be of investment grade quality or below investment grade quality, as determined by the Manager. Corporate loans determined to be below investment grade will be included in the Fund’s calculation of its 80% investment in high yield securities. Corporate loans in which the Fund may invest will primarily consist of direct obligations of borrowers. The Fund may invest in corporate loans at origination as a co-lender or may acquire loans in the secondary market by purchasing participations in, assignments of or novations of corporate loans. Many corporate loans are secured, although some may be unsecured. Loans that are fully secured offer the Fund more protection than unsecured loans in the event of non-payment of scheduled interest or principal. However, there is no assurance that the liquidation of collateral from a secured loan would fully satisfy the corporate borrower’s obligation, or that the collateral can be liquidated. Like debt securities, corporate loans involve a risk of loss in case of default or insolvency of the borrower; however, they may offer less legal protection to the Fund in the event of fraud or misrepresentation. In addition, loan participations involve a risk of insolvency of the lending bank or other financial intermediary. The markets in corporate loans are not regulated by federal securities laws or the SEC.
 
As in the case of other high yield investments, corporate loans may be rated in the lower rating categories of rating agencies (Ba or lower by Moody’s or BB or lower by S&P or Fitch), or may be unrated investments determined by the Manager to be of comparable credit quality. Lower rated corporate loans can be expected to provide higher yields than lower yielding, higher rated fixed income securities, but may be subject to greater risk of loss of principal and income. There are, however, some significant differences between corporate loans and high yield bonds. Corporate loans are frequently secured by pledges of liens and security interests in the assets of the borrower, and the holders of corporate loans are frequently the beneficiaries of debt service subordination provisions imposed on the borrower’s bondholders. These arrangements are designed to give corporate loan investors preferential treatment over high yield investors in the event of deterioration in the credit quality of the borrower. Even when these arrangements exist, however, there can be no assurance that the borrowers will repay principal or pay interest in full. Corporate loans generally bear interest at rates set at a margin above a generally recognized base lending rate that may fluctuate on a day-to-day basis, such as the prime rate of a U.S. bank. Thus, the value of corporate loans held by the Fund may be expected to fluctuate less than the value of fixed rate, debt obligations as a result of changes in the interest rate environment. On the other hand, the secondary dealer market for corporate loans is not as well developed as the secondary dealer market for high yield debt securities and, therefore, presents increased risk relating to liquidity and pricing. By purchasing a participation interest in a loan, the Fund will acquire some or all of the interest of a bank or other lending institution in a loan to a borrower.
 
Bank Loans. Bank loans, which are a type of a direct debt instrument, are a type of debt security that may be made in connection with, among other things, recapitalizations, acquisitions, leveraged buyouts, dividend issuances and refinancings. The bank loans in which the Fund invests may be structured and administered by a third party that acts as agent for a group of lenders that make or hold interests in the loan. The Fund may acquire interests in such loans by taking an assignment of all or a portion of a direct interest in a loan previously held by another institution or by acquiring a participation in an interest in a loan that continues to be held by another institution.

Banks are subject to extensive governmental regulations that may limit both the amounts and types of loans and other financial commitments that may be made and the interest rates and fees that may be charged. The profitability of this industry is largely dependent upon the availability and cost of capital, which can fluctuate significantly when interest rates change. Also, general economic conditions, consolidation and competition among banking and savings institutions play an important part in the operations of this industry and exposure to credit losses arising from possible financial difficulties of borrowers might affect a bank’s ability to meet its obligations. Bank obligations may be general obligations of the parent bank or may be limited to the issuing branch by the terms of the specific obligations or by government regulation.
  
Asset-Backed Securities. The Fund may invest in asset-backed securities. Asset-backed securities represent direct or indirect participations in, or are secured by and payable from, pools of assets such as, among other things, motor vehicle installment sales contracts, installment loan contracts, leases of various types of real and personal property, and receivables from revolving credit (credit card) agreements, or a combination of the foregoing. These assets are securitized through the use of trusts and special purpose corporations. Credit enhancements, such as various forms of cash collateral accounts or letters of credit, may support payments of principal and interest on asset-backed securities. Although these securities may be supported by letters of credit or other credit enhancements, payment of interest and principal ultimately depends upon individuals paying the underlying loans, which may be affected adversely by general downturns in the economy. Asset-backed securities are subject to the same risk of prepayment described with respect to mortgage-backed securities and to extension risk (the risk that an issuer of a security will make principal payments slower than anticipated by the investor, thus extending the securities’ duration). The risk that recovery on repossessed collateral might be unavailable or inadequate to support payments, however, is greater for asset-backed securities than for mortgage-backed securities. 

Equity Securities. The Fund may invest, to a limited extent, in equity securities, which may include common stocks, preferred stocks, convertible securities and warrants. Common stocks and preferred stocks represent shares of ownership in a corporation. Preferred stocks usually have specific dividends and rank after bonds and before common stock in claims on assets of the corporation should it be dissolved. Increases and decreases in earnings are usually reflected in a corporation’s stock price. Convertible securities are debt or preferred equity securities convertible into common stock. Usually, convertible securities pay dividends or interest at rates higher than common stock, but lower than other securities. Convertible securities usually participate to some extent in the appreciation or depreciation of the underlying stock into which they are convertible. Warrants are options to buy a stated number of shares of common stock at a specified price anytime during the life of the warrants.

To the extent the Fund invests in such securities, the value of securities held by the Fund will be affected by changes in the stock markets, which may be the result of domestic or international political or economic news, changes in interest rates or changing investor sentiment. At times, the stock markets can be volatile and stock prices can change substantially. Because some investors purchase equity securities with borrowed money, an increase in interest rates can cause a decline in equity prices. The equity securities of smaller companies are more sensitive to these changes than those of larger companies. This market risk will affect the Fund’s NAV per share, which will fluctuate as the value of the securities held by the Fund changes. Not all stock prices change uniformly or at the same time and not all stock markets move in the same direction at the same time. Other factors affect a particular stock’s prices, such as poor earnings reports by an issuer, loss of major customers, major litigation against an issuer, or changes in governmental regulations affecting an industry. Adverse news affecting one company can sometimes depress the stock prices of all companies in the same industry. Not all factors can be predicted.
 
Convertible Securities. A convertible security is a bond, debenture, note, preferred stock, or other security or debt obligation that may be converted into or exchanged for a prescribed amount of common stock of the same or a different issuer within a particular period of time at a specified price or formula. Convertible securities generally have features of, and risks associated with, both equity and fixed income instruments. As such, the value of most convertible securities will vary with changes in the price of, and will be subject to the risks associated with, the underlying common stock.  Additionally, convertible securities are also subject to the risk that the issuer may not be able to pay principal or interest when due and the value of the convertible security may change based on the issuer’s credit rating. A convertible security may have a mandatory conversion feature or a call feature that subjects it to redemption at the option of the issuer at a price established in the security’s governing instrument. If a convertible security held by the Fund is called for redemption, the Fund will be required to convert it into the underlying
common stock, sell it to a third party or permit the issuer to redeem the security. Any of these actions could have an adverse effect on the Fund’s ability to achieve its investment objective.
 
Preferred Stocks. The Fund may invest in preferred stocks. Shares of preferred stock are equity securities, but they have many characteristics of debt securities, such as a fixed dividend payment rate and a liquidation preference over the issuer’s Common Stock. Unlike interest payments on debt securities, dividends on preferred stock are generally payable at the discretion of the issuer’s board of directors. Preferred stockholders may have certain rights if dividends are not paid but generally have no legal recourse against the issuer. Stockholders may suffer a loss of value if dividends are not paid. The market prices of preferred stocks are generally more sensitive to changes in the issuer’s creditworthiness than are the prices of debt securities. Because shares of preferred stock are equity securities, they may be more susceptible to risks traditionally associated with equity investments than the debt securities in which the Fund invests.
 
Structured Securities. The Fund may invest in structured securities. Structured securities are securities whose value is determined by reference to changes in the value of specific currencies, securities, interest rates, commodities, indices or other financial indicators (the “Reference”) or the relative change in two or more References. Investments in structured securities may provide exposure to certain securities or markets in situations where regulatory or other restrictions prevent direct investments in such issuers or markets. The interest rate or the principal amount payable upon the maturity or redemption of those securities may increase or decrease depending upon changes in the applicable Reference. The terms of the structured securities may provide in certain circumstances that no principal is due at maturity and, therefore, may result in a complete loss of the Fund’s investment. Changes in the interest rate or principal payable at maturity may be a multiple of the changes in the value of the Reference. Consequently, structured securities may entail a greater degree of risk than other types of fixed income securities.
 
Derivatives. The Fund may invest in derivatives. A derivative is a financial instrument the value of which is determined by reference to the value or the change in value of one or more securities, currencies, indices or other financial instruments. The Fund may, but is not required to, use various types of derivatives as a hedge against adverse changes in securities prices, interest rates or foreign currency exchange rates; or as a substitute for purchasing or selling securities. Although the Manager may use derivatives to further the Fund’s investment objective, no assurance can be given that it will be successful or that this result will be achieved.
 
The Fund may purchase and sell derivative instruments such as exchange-listed and over-the-counter put and call options on securities, foreign currencies and securities indices. It may also purchase and sell financial futures contracts (and options thereon) and enter into various other types of transactions in derivatives, such as swaps, caps, floors or collars. These transactions may include the use of interest rate swaps (to hedge against adverse changes in interest rates affecting securities held by the Fund, dividends payable on any preferred stock issued by the Fund or interest payable on the Fund’s borrowings) and credit default swaps. The Fund also may purchase derivative instruments that combine features of these instruments. The Fund generally intends to use derivatives as a portfolio management or hedging technique in seeking: to protect against possible adverse changes in the market value of securities held in or to be purchased for the Fund’s portfolio; to facilitate the sale of certain securities for investment purposes; to manage the effective interest rate exposure of the Fund or the effective maturity or duration of the Fund’s portfolio; or to establish positions in the derivatives markets as a substitute for purchasing or selling particular securities. These transactions may include the use of derivatives, such as interest rate swaps, to hedge against adverse changes in interest rates affecting dividends payable on any preferred stock issued by the Fund or payable on borrowings by the Fund.
 
The primary risks in using derivatives are:  (1) imperfect correlation or no correlation between changes in market value of the securities or currencies held or to be acquired by the Fund and the prices of derivatives; (2) possible lack of a liquid secondary market for derivatives and the resulting inability to close out derivatives when desired; (3) the fact that the skills needed to use derivatives are different from those needed to select the Fund’s securities; (4) the fact that, although use of derivatives for hedging purposes can reduce the risk of loss, they also can reduce the opportunity for gain, or even result in losses, by offsetting favorable price movements in hedged investments; (5) the possible inability of the Fund to purchase or sell a portfolio security at a time that would otherwise be favorable for it to do so, or the possible need for the Fund to sell a portfolio security at a disadvantageous time, due to its need to maintain cover or to segregate securities in connection with its use of derivatives; and (6) when traded on non-U.S. exchanges, derivatives may not be regulated as rigorously as in the United States.

In addition, derivatives may contain leverage to magnify the exposure to the underlying asset or assets.

The Fund’s use of derivatives may be limited by the provisions of the Code and Treasury Department regulations with which it must comply to continue to qualify as a RIC. See “Tax Matters.”
 
U.S. Government and Agency Securities. “U.S. Government Securities” are obligations of the Treasury Department backed by the full faith and credit of the United States.  During times of market turbulence, investors may turn to the safety of securities issued or guaranteed by the Treasury Department, causing the prices of these securities to rise and their yields to decline.  As a result of this and other market influences, yields of short-term Treasury Department debt instruments are currently near historical lows.

“U.S. Government Agency Securities” are issued or guaranteed by U.S. Government agencies or by instrumentalities of the U.S. Government, such as Ginnie Mae (also known as the Government National Mortgage Association), Fannie Mae (also known as the Federal National Mortgage Association), Freddie Mac (also known as the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation), SLM Corporation (formerly, the Student Loan Marketing Association) (commonly known as “Sallie Mae”), Federal Home Loan Banks (“FHLB”), and the Tennessee Valley Authority.  Some U.S. Government Agency Securities are supported by the full faith and credit of the United States, while others may be supported by the issuer’s ability to borrow from the Treasury Department, subject to the Treasury Department’s discretion in certain cases, or only by the credit of the issuer.  Accordingly, there is at least a possibility of default.  U.S. Government Agency Securities include U.S. Government agency mortgage-backed securities.  (See “Mortgage-Backed Securities” above.)  The market prices of U.S. Government Agency Securities are not guaranteed by the U.S. Government and generally fluctuate inversely with changing interest rates.

U.S. Government Agency Securities are deemed to include (i) securities for which the payment of principal and interest is backed by an irrevocable letter of credit issued by the U.S. Government, its agencies, authorities or instrumentalities and (ii) participations in loans made to foreign governments or their agencies that are so guaranteed.  The secondary market for certain of these participations is extremely limited.  In the absence of a suitable secondary market, such participations may therefore be regarded as illiquid.

The Fund may invest in separately traded principal and interest components of securities issued or guaranteed by the Treasury Department.  The principal and interest components of selected securities are traded independently under the Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities (“STRIPS”) program.  Under the STRIPS program, the principal and interest components are individually numbered and separately issued by the Treasury Department at the request of depository financial institutions, which then trade the component parts independently.  The market prices of STRIPS generally are more volatile than that of Treasury Department bills with comparable maturities.

Other Investment Companies. Investments by the Fund in shares of other investment companies are subject to the limitations of the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder. Effective January 19, 2022, the SEC rescinded related fund of funds exemptive orders, certain no-action letters related to fund of funds investments, and Rule 12d1-2 under the 1940 Act.  As of that date, fund of funds arrangements must comply with the provisions of the 1940 Act, Rule 12d1-4, or another rule. Pursuant to Rule 12d1-4, the Fund is permitted to exceed the limits of Section 12 of the 1940 Act if the Fund complies with Rule 12d1-4’s conditions, which contain elements from the SEC’s prior exemptive orders permitting fund of funds arrangements, including (i) limits on control and voting; (ii) required evaluations and findings; (iii) required fund of funds investment agreements; and (iv) limits on complex structures. The Fund may invest in the securities of other investment companies, including open-end management companies, closed-end management companies (including business development companies (“BDCs”)) and unit investment trusts, that are consistent with its investment objective and policies. Such an investment may be the most practical or only manner in which the Fund can invest in certain asset classes or participate in certain markets, such as foreign markets, because of the expenses involved or because other vehicles for investing in those markets may not be available at the time the Fund is ready to make an investment.  When investing in the securities of other investment companies, the
Fund will be indirectly exposed to all the risks of such investment companies’ portfolio securities.  In addition, as a shareholder in an investment company, the Fund would indirectly bear its pro rata share of that investment company’s advisory fees and other operating expenses.

Repurchase Agreements. In a repurchase agreement, the Fund purchases securities from a bank that is a member of the Federal Reserve System, from a foreign bank or from a U.S. branch or agency of a foreign bank, or from a securities dealer that agrees to repurchase the securities from the Fund at a higher price on a designated future date.  Repurchase agreements generally are for a short period of time, usually less than a week. Costs, delays, or losses could result if the selling party to a repurchase agreement becomes bankrupt or otherwise defaults. The Manager monitors the creditworthiness of sellers.  If the Fund enters into a repurchase agreement subject to foreign law and the counter-party defaults, the Fund may not enjoy protections comparable to those provided to certain repurchase agreements under U.S. bankruptcy law and may suffer delays and losses in disposing of the collateral as a result.
 
Cash Positions. In anticipation of or in response to adverse market conditions, for cash management purposes, during a reasonable start-up period following any future offering of additional preferred stock or notes or for defensive purposes, the Fund may temporarily hold all or a portion of its assets in cash, money market instruments or bonds or other debt securities. Doing so may help the Fund avoid losses but may mean lost opportunities for the Fund to achieve its investment objective. A reasonable start up period following any offering generally would not exceed three months.
 
Money market instruments in which the Fund may invest its cash reserves will generally consist of obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government, its agencies or instrumentalities, repurchase agreements collateralized by such obligations, commercial paper and shares of money market funds. To the extent the Fund purchases shares of a money market fund, the Fund will indirectly bear its proportionate share of the advisory fees and other operating expenses of such fund.
 
Securities Lending. The Fund may lend portfolio securities to banks, brokerage firms, and other institutional investors, provided that cash or equivalent collateral, initially equal to at least 102% (105% in the case of foreign securities) of the market value of the loaned securities, is maintained by the borrower with the Fund or with the Fund’s lending agent, who holds the collateral on the Fund’s behalf.  Thereafter, cash or equivalent collateral, equal to at least 100% of the market value of the loaned securities, is to be continuously maintained by the borrower with the Fund. The Fund may invest the cash collateral and earn income, or it may receive an agreed upon amount of interest income from a borrower that has delivered equivalent collateral. During the time securities are on loan, the borrower will pay the Fund an amount equivalent to any dividends or interest paid on such securities. These loans are subject to termination at the option of the Fund or the borrower. The Fund may pay reasonable administrative and custodial fees in connection with a loan and may pay a negotiated portion of the interest earned on the cash or equivalent collateral to the borrower. The Fund does not have the right to vote on securities while they are on loan.  However, it is the Fund’s policy to attempt to terminate loans in time to vote those proxies that the Fund has determined are material to the interests of the Fund.  The Manager believes the risk of loss on these transactions is slight because if a borrower were to default for any reason, the collateral should satisfy the obligation. However, as with other extensions of secured credit, loans of portfolio securities involve some risk of loss of rights in the collateral should the borrower fail financially. The Fund may loan securities through third parties not affiliated with Neuberger Berman BD LLC (“Neuberger Berman”) that would act as agent to lend securities to principal borrowers.
 
Portfolio Turnover. The Fund may engage in portfolio trading when the Manager considers it to be appropriate, but the Fund will not use short-term trading as the primary means of achieving its investment objective.  There are no limits on the rate of portfolio turnover, and investments may be sold without regard to the length of time held when, in the opinion of the Manager, investment considerations warrant such action. A higher turnover rate would result in correspondingly greater brokerage commissions and other transactional expenses that are borne by the Fund. High portfolio turnover may result in the Fund’s realization of net short-term capital gains that, when distributed to stockholders, will be taxable as ordinary income. See “Tax Matters.”
 
Temporary investments. For temporary defensive purposes, or to manage cash pending investment or payout, the Fund may invest up to 100% of its total assets in cash and cash equivalents, U.S. Government and Agency Securities, commercial paper and certain other money market instruments, as well as repurchase agreements collateralized by the foregoing. The Fund may not achieve its investment objectives under these circumstances.
 
USE OF LEVERAGE AND RELATED RISKS
 
The Fund utilizes financial leverage for investment purposes (i.e., to purchase additional portfolio securities consistent with the Fund’s investment objective and primary investment strategy). The Fund has utilized leverage since shortly after it began investment operations and expects to continue to use leverage, although there can be no assurance, however, that the Fund will continue to engage in any leveraging techniques. The Fund currently utilizes leverage through the issuance of privately placed notes and preferred stock, and may borrow money or use a variety of additional strategies to increase funds available for investment.  The Fund has outstanding PNs with an aggregate principal value to $19,500,000 and MRPS with an aggregate liquidation preference of $76,000,000. The PNs have a maturity date of September 18, 2023 and the MRPS have a maturity date of August 3, 2023. The interest on the PNs is accrued daily and paid quarterly. The MRPS have a liquidation preference of $12.50 per share plus any accumulated unpaid distributions, whether or not earned or declared by the Fund, but excluding interest thereon.   During the six months ended April 30, 2021, the average annualized interest rate of the PNs was 1.45%, and average annualized distribution rate of the MRPS was 2.29%.

Preferred stock and notes typically pay dividends, distributions or interest based on short-term interest rates. The proceeds of preferred stock and notes would be used to buy portfolio securities that pay interest based on intermediate- and long-term yields.  These interest payments are typically, although not always, higher than short-term interest rates. High-yield debt securities, as well as long-term and short-term interest rates, fluctuate. If short-term interest rates rise, distributions rates on preferred stock and interest rates on notes may rise so that the amount of distributions to be paid to holders of preferred stock and the amount of interest to be paid to holders of notes exceed the income from the portfolio securities.  Because income from the Fund’s entire investment portfolio would be available to pay distributions on preferred stock and interest on notes, however, dividend rates on preferred stock and interest rates on notes would need to greatly exceed the Fund’s net portfolio income before the Fund’s ability to pay dividends on preferred stock and interest on notes would be jeopardized.  If long-term interest rates rise, this could negatively impact the value of the Fund’s investment portfolio, reducing the amount of assets serving as asset coverage for the preferred stock and notes. The Fund anticipates entering into interest rate swap or cap transactions with the intent to reduce or eliminate the risk posed by an increase in short-term interest rates. There is no guarantee that the Fund will engage in these transactions or that these transactions will be successful in reducing or eliminating interest rate risk.
 
The Fund is permitted to obtain leverage using any form or combination of financial leverage instruments, including derivative instruments discussed above and through the issuance of additional preferred stock or notes. Subject to prevailing market conditions, the Fund intends to use leveraging instruments to maintain leverage on its portfolio representing up to approximately 33 1/3% of the Fund’s total assets (including the assets subject to, and obtained with the proceeds of, such instruments), the maximum amount of leverage allowable under the 1940 Act. The Fund intends to use leverage opportunistically and may choose to increase or decrease its leverage, or use different types or combinations of leveraging instruments, at any time based on the Fund’s assessment of market conditions and the investment environment.

On October 28, 2020, the SEC adopted new regulations governing the use of derivatives by registered investment companies (“Rule 18f-4”). The Fund will be required to implement and comply with Rule 18f-4 by the third quarter of 2022. Once implemented, Rule 18f-4 will impose new limits on the amount of derivatives that the Fund can enter into; eliminate the asset segregation framework the Fund initially intends to use to comply with Section 18 of the 1940 Act; treat certain derivatives as senior securities so that a failure to comply with the limits might be alleged by a regulator to be a statutory violation; and potentially require the Fund to establish and maintain a comprehensive derivatives risk management program and appoint a derivatives risk manager. The extent of the impact of such new regulations on the Fund, including the ability of the Fund to continue to utilize derivatives in an amount similar to its initial use of such instruments, remains uncertain as of the date of this Prospectus.
  
Leverage creates risks for holders of the Common Stock, including the likelihood of greater volatility in the NAV and market price of, and distributions on, the Common Stock. There is a risk that fluctuations in the distribution rates on any outstanding preferred stock or notes may adversely affect the return to the holders of the Common Stock. If the income from the investments purchased with such funds is not sufficient to cover the cost of leverage, the return on the Fund will be less than if leverage had not been used, and therefore the amount available for
distribution to Common Stockholders will be reduced. The Fund in its reasonable judgment nevertheless may determine to maintain the Fund’s leveraged position if it deems such action to be appropriate in the circumstances.
 
Changes in the value of the Fund’s investment portfolio (including investments bought with the proceeds of leverage) will be borne entirely by the Fund and indirectly by the Fund’s Common Stockholders. If there is a net decrease (or increase) in the value of the Fund’s investment portfolio, the leverage will decrease (or increase) the NAV to a greater extent than if the Fund were not leveraged. The use of leverage by the Fund may magnify the Fund’s losses when there is a decrease in the value of a Fund investment and even totally eliminate the Fund’s equity in its portfolio or a Common Stockholder’s equity in the Fund. During periods in which the Fund is using leverage, the fees paid by the Fund for investment advisory services will be higher than if the Fund did not use leverage because the investment advisory fees paid will be calculated on the basis of the Fund’s Managed Assets, which include proceeds from leverage.
 
Leverage creates an opportunity for a greater return per share of Common Stock, but at the same time it is a speculative technique that will increase the Fund’s exposure to capital risk. Unless the income and appreciation, if any, on assets acquired with leverage exceeds the cost of such leverage, the use of leverage will diminish the investment performance of the Fund’s Common Stock compared with what it would have been without leverage.
 
The Fund’s willingness to utilize further leverage, and the amount of leverage the Fund will assume, will depend on many factors, the most important of which are market conditions and interest rates. Successful use of a leveraging strategy may depend on the Fund’s ability to predict correctly interest rates and market movements, and there is no assurance that a leveraging strategy will be successful during any period in which it is employed.

The following table is furnished in response to requirements of the SEC. It is designed to illustrate the effects of leverage on Common Stock total return, assuming investment portfolio total returns (consisting of income and changes in the value of investments held in the Fund’s portfolio) of -10%, -5%, 0%, 5% and 10%. These assumed investment portfolio returns are hypothetical figures and are not necessarily indicative of the investment portfolio returns expected to be experienced by the Fund. The table assumes that the Fund adds financial leverage to its portfolio through PNs and MRPS representing 34.5% of Managed Assets (the percentage of leverage as of October 31, 2021) of the Fund’s total assets (including the assets subject to, and obtained with the proceeds of, such instruments) with an estimated blended annual interest rate of 2.0766%.
 
Assumed portfolio return (net of expenses)
 
(10
)%
(5
)%
0
%
5
%
10
%
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Corresponding Common Stock return assuming 34.5% of Managed Assets leverage through Private Securities
 
-16.37
%
-8.73
%
-1.10
%
6.54
%
14.18
%
 
Common Stock total return is composed of two elements — the Common Stock dividends paid by the Fund (the amount of which is largely determined by the net investment income of the Fund) and gains or losses on the value of the securities the Fund owns. As required by SEC rules, the table above assumes that the Fund is more likely to suffer capital losses than to enjoy capital appreciation. For example, to assume a total return of 0% the Fund must assume that the interest it receives on its investments is entirely offset by losses in the value of those investments.
 
In addition to leverage for investment purposes, the Fund may also borrow money as a temporary measure for extraordinary or emergency purposes, including the payment of distributions and the settlement of securities transactions which otherwise might require untimely dispositions of Fund investments.
 
RISK FACTORS

Investing in any investment company security involves risk, including the risk that you may receive little or no return on your investment or even that you may lose part or all of your investment. The following summarizes some of the risks that you should consider before making an investment in the Fund under any offering. You should carefully consider the following risk factors, as well as the other information in this Prospectus and any applicable Prospectus Supplement, before making an investment in the Fund under any offer. The Securities do not represent a deposit or obligation of, and are not guaranteed or endorsed by, any bank or other insured depository institution, and
are not federally insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve Board, or any other government agency.

The actual risk exposure taken by the Fund in its investment program will vary over time, depending on various factors including the portfolio managers’ evaluation of issuer, political, regulatory, market, or economic developments. There can be no guarantee that the portfolio managers will be successful in their attempts to manage the risk exposure of the Fund or will appropriately evaluate or weigh the multiple factors involved in investment decisions, including issuer, market and/or instrument-specific analysis, valuation and ESG factors. Information used by the portfolio managers in their assessment of ESG factors, like other information used in their credit analysis discipline and security selection process, may not be readily available, complete, or accurate, which could negatively impact the Fund’s performance or create additional risk in the portfolio.

Each of the following risks, which are described in alphabetical order and not in order of any presumed importance, can significantly affect the Fund’s performance. The relative importance of, or potential exposure as a result of, each of these risks will vary based on market and other investment-specific considerations.

Risks Relating to Investing in the Fund’s Common Stock

Anti-takeover Provisions Risk.
 
The Fund’s Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws include provisions that could limit the ability of other entities or persons to acquire control of the Fund or convert the Fund to an open-end fund. If the Fund were converted to open-end status, the Fund would have to redeem Preferred Stock and prepay Notes.  By resolution of the Board, the Fund has opted into the Maryland Control Share Acquisition Act and the Maryland Business Combination Act.  In general, the Maryland Control Share Acquisition Act provides that “control shares” of a Maryland corporation acquired in a control share acquisition may not be voted except to the extent approved by stockholders at a special meeting by a vote of two-thirds of the votes entitled to be cast on the matter (excluding shares owned by the acquirer and by officers or by directors who are employees of the corporation).  In general, the Maryland Business Combination Act prohibits an interested stockholder (a stockholder that holds 10% or more of the voting power of the outstanding stock of the corporation) of a Maryland corporation from engaging in a business combination with the corporation for a period of five years after the most recent date on which the interested stockholder became an interested stockholder.  See “Anti-Takeover and Certain Other Provisions in the Articles of Incorporation” for additional information.

Call Risk. 

Upon the issuer’s desire to call a security, or under other circumstances where a security is called, including when interest rates are low and issuers opt to repay the obligation underlying a “callable security” early, the Fund may have to reinvest the proceeds in an investment offering a lower yield or other less favorable characteristics. This may reduce the amount of the Fund’s distributions. In addition, the Fund may not benefit from any increase in value in the securities that might otherwise result from declining interest rates. The likelihood of a call also may impact the price of a security.

Closed-end Fund Risk.

The Fund is a diversified, closed-end management investment company and designed primarily for long-term investors. Closed-end funds differ from open-end management investment companies (commonly known as mutual funds) because investors in a closed-end fund do not have the right to redeem their shares on a daily basis. The Fund’s Common Stock may trade at a discount to the Fund’s NAV. See “Market Premium/Discount Risk.”

Conflicts of Interest Risk.

The Adviser’s advisory fees are based on Managed Assets. Consequently, the Adviser will benefit from an increase in the Fund’s Managed Assets resulting from an offering. In addition, a Director who is an “interested person” (as
such term is defined under the 1940 Act) of the Fund or a portfolio manager of the Fund could benefit indirectly from an offering because of such affiliations.

Convertible Securities Risk.

The value of a convertible security, which is a form of hybrid security (i.e., a security with both debt and equity characteristics), typically increases or decreases with the price of the underlying common stock. In general, a convertible security is subject to the market risks of stocks, and its price may be as volatile as that of the underlying stock, when the underlying stock’s price is high relative to the conversion price, and a convertible security is subject to the market risks of debt securities, and is particularly sensitive to changes in interest rates, when the underlying stock’s price is low relative to the conversion price. The general market risks of debt securities that are common to convertible securities include, but are not limited to, interest rate risk and credit risk. Because their value can be influenced by many different factors, convertible securities generally have less potential for gain or loss than the underlying common stocks. Securities that are convertible other than at the option of the holder generally do not limit the potential for loss to the same extent as securities that are convertible only at the option of the holder.

Many convertible securities have credit ratings that are below investment grade and are subject to the same risks as an investment in lower-rated debt securities. The credit rating of a company’s convertible securities is generally lower than that of its non-convertible debt securities. Convertible securities are normally considered “junior” securities — that is, the company usually must pay interest on its non-convertible debt securities before it can make payments on its convertible securities. If the issuer stops paying interest or principal, convertible securities may become worthless and the Fund could lose its entire investment. To the extent the Fund invests in convertible securities issued by small- or mid-cap companies, it will be subject to the risks of investing in such companies. The securities of small- and mid-cap companies may fluctuate more widely in price than the market as a whole. There may also be less trading in small- or mid-cap securities, which means that buy and sell transactions in those securities could have a larger impact on a security’s price than is the case with large-cap securities.

Credit Risk. 
Credit risk is the risk that issuers, guarantors, or insurers may fail, or become less able or unwilling, to pay interest and/or principal when due. Changes in the actual or perceived creditworthiness of an issuer, factors affecting an issuer directly (such as management changes, labor relations, collapse of key suppliers or customers, or material changes in overhead), factors affecting the industry in which a particular issuer operates (such as competition or technological advances) and changes in general social, economic or political conditions can increase the risk of default by an issuer, which may affect a security’s credit quality or value.  Generally, the longer the maturity and the lower the credit quality of a security, the more sensitive it is to credit risk. In addition, lower credit quality may lead to greater volatility in the price of a security and may negatively affect a security’s liquidity. Ratings represent a rating agency’s opinion regarding the quality of the security and are not a guarantee of quality and do not protect against a decline in the value of a security.  A downgrade or default affecting any of the Fund’s securities could affect the Fund’s performance. In addition, rating agencies may fail to make timely changes to credit ratings in response to subsequent events and a rating may become stale in that it fails to reflect changes in an issuer’s financial condition.  The credit quality of a security or instrument can deteriorate suddenly and rapidly, which may negatively impact its liquidity and value.  The securities in which the Fund invests may be subject to credit enhancement (for example, guarantees, letters of credit, or bond insurance). Entities providing credit or liquidity support also may be affected by credit risk. Credit enhancement is designed to help assure timely payment of the security; it does not protect the Fund against losses caused by declines in a security’s value due to changes in market conditions.
Currency Risk. 
To the extent that the Fund invests in securities or other instruments denominated in or indexed to foreign currencies, changes in currency exchange rates could adversely impact investment gains or add to investment losses.  Domestic issuers that hold substantial foreign assets may be similarly affected.  Currency exchange rates may fluctuate significantly over short periods of time and can be affected unpredictably by intervention, or failure to intervene, by U.S. or foreign governments or central banks or by currency controls or political developments in the
U.S. or abroad. To the extent the Fund invests or hedges based on the perceived relationship between two currencies, there is a risk that the correlation between those currencies may not behave as anticipated.
Depositary Receipts Risk.
Depositary receipts are certificates issued by a financial institution evidencing ownership of underlying foreign securities. Depositary receipts involve many of the same risks of investing directly in the underlying foreign securities. Depositary receipts are subject to the risk of fluctuation in the currency exchange rate if, as is often the case, the underlying foreign securities are denominated in foreign currency, and there may be an imperfect correlation between the market value of depositary receipts and the underlying foreign securities. In addition, holders of depositary receipts may have limited or no rights, including voting rights, to take action with respect to the underlying securities or to compel the issuer of the receipts to take action. There is no guarantee that a financial institution will continue to sponsor a depositary receipt, or that a depositary receipt will continue to trade on an exchange, either of which could adversely affect the liquidity, availability and pricing of the instrument.

Derivatives Risk. 

Use of derivatives is a highly specialized activity that can involve investment techniques and risks different from, and in some respects greater than, those associated with investing in more traditional investments, such as stocks and bonds. Derivatives can be highly complex and highly volatile and may perform in unanticipated ways.  Derivatives can create leverage, which can magnify the impact of a decline in the value of the reference instrument underlying the derivative, and the Fund could lose more than the amount it invests. Derivatives can have the potential for unlimited losses, for example, where the Fund may be called upon to deliver a security it does not own. Derivatives may at times be highly illiquid, and the Fund may not be able to close out or sell a derivative at a particular time or at an anticipated price.  Derivatives can be difficult to value and valuation may be more difficult in times of market turmoil.  The value of a derivative instrument depends largely on (and is derived from) the value of the reference instrument underlying the derivative.  There may be imperfect correlation between the behavior of a derivative and that of the reference instrument underlying the derivative, and the reference instrument may not perform as anticipated. An abrupt change in the price of a reference instrument could render a derivative worthless. Derivatives may involve risks different from, and possibly greater than, the risks associated with investing directly in the reference instrument. Suitable derivatives may not be available in all circumstances, and there can be no assurance that the Fund will use derivatives to reduce exposure to other risks when that might have been beneficial.  Derivatives may involve fees, commissions, or other costs that may reduce the Fund’s gains or exacerbate losses from the derivatives.  In addition, the Fund’s use of derivatives may have different tax consequences for the Fund than an investment in the reference instruments, and those differences may increase the amount and affect the timing and character of taxable distributions payable to shareholders. Thus, the Fund could be required at times to liquidate other investments in order to satisfy its distribution requirements.  Certain aspects of the regulatory treatment of derivative instruments, including federal income tax, are currently unclear and may be affected by changes in legislation, regulations, or other legally binding authority. In October 2020, the SEC adopted Rule 18f-4 under the 1940 Act which will regulate the use of derivatives for certain funds registered under the Investment Company Act (‘‘Rule 18f-4’’). Unless the Fund qualifies as a ‘‘limited derivatives user’’ as defined in Rule 18f-4, Rule 18f-4 would, among other things, require the Fund to establish a comprehensive derivatives risk management program, to comply with certain value-at-risk based leverage limits, to appoint a derivatives risk manager and to provide additional disclosure both publicly and to the SEC regarding its derivatives positions. If the Fund qualifies as a limited derivatives user, Rule 18f-4 requires the Fund to have policies and procedures to manage its aggregate derivatives risk. These requirements could have an impact on the Fund, including a potential increase in cost to enter into derivatives transactions. The full impact of Rule 18f-4 on the Fund remains uncertain, however, due to the compliance timeline within Rule 18f-4, it is unlikely that the Fund will be required to fully comply with the requirements until August 2022.

Derivatives involve counterparty risk, which is the risk that the other party to the derivative will fail to make required payments or otherwise comply with the terms of the derivative. Counterparty risk may arise because of market activities and developments, the counterparty’s financial condition (including financial difficulties, bankruptcy, or insolvency), or other reasons. Not all derivative transactions require a counterparty to post collateral, which may expose the Fund to greater losses in the event of a default by a counterparty.  Counterparty risk is
generally thought to be greater with OTC derivatives than with derivatives that are exchange traded or centrally cleared. However, derivatives that are traded on organized exchanges and/or through clearing organizations involve the possibility that the futures commission merchant or clearing organization will default in the performance of its obligations.

When the Fund uses derivatives, it will likely be required to provide margin or collateral and/or segregate cash or other liquid assets; these practices are intended to satisfy contractual undertakings and regulatory requirements and will not prevent the Fund from incurring losses on derivatives.  The need to provide margin or collateral and/or segregate assets could limit the Fund's ability to pursue other opportunities as they arise.  The amount of assets required to be segregated will depend on the type of derivative the Fund uses and the nature of the contractual arrangement.  If the Fund is required to segregate assets equal to only the current market value of its obligation under a derivative, the Fund may be able to use derivatives to a greater extent, which would increase the degree of leverage the Fund could undertake through derivatives and otherwise, than if it were required to segregate assets equal to the full notional value of such derivative.  Derivatives that have margin requirements involve the risk that if the Fund has insufficient cash or eligible margin securities to meet daily variation margin requirements, it may have to sell securities or other instruments from its portfolio at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so.  The Fund normally will remain obligated to meet margin requirements until a derivatives position is closed.

Ongoing changes to regulation of the derivatives markets and actual and potential changes in the regulation of funds using derivative instruments could limit the Fund’s ability to pursue its investment strategies. New regulation of derivatives may make them more costly, or may otherwise adversely affect their liquidity, value or performance.

Although the Fund may use derivatives to attempt to hedge against certain risks, the hedging instruments may not perform as expected and could produce losses.

Additional risks associated with certain types of derivatives are discussed below:

Futures.  There can be no assurance that, at all times, a liquid market will exist for offsetting a futures contract that the Fund has previously bought or sold and this may result in the inability to close a futures position when desired.  This could be the case if, for example, a futures price has increased or decreased by the maximum allowable daily limit and there is no buyer (or seller) willing to purchase (or sell) the futures contract that the Fund needs to sell (or buy) at that limit price. In the absence of such limits, the liquidity of the futures market depends on participants entering into offsetting transactions rather than taking or making delivery.  To the extent the Fund enters into futures contracts requiring physical delivery (e.g., certain commodities contracts), the inability of the Fund to take or make physical delivery can negatively impact performance.

Options. The use of options involves investment strategies and risks different from those associated with ordinary portfolio securities transactions. By writing put options, the Fund takes on the risk of declines in the value of the underlying instrument, including the possibility of a loss up to the entire strike price of each option it sells, but without the corresponding opportunity to benefit from potential increases in the value of the underlying instrument. When the Fund writes a put option, it assumes the risk that it must purchase the underlying instrument at a strike price that may be higher than the market price of the instrument. If there is a broad market decline and the Fund is not able to close out its written put options, it may result in substantial losses to the Fund. By writing a call option, the Fund may be obligated to deliver instruments underlying an option at less than the market price. In the case of an uncovered call option, there is a risk of unlimited loss. When an uncovered call is exercised, the Fund must purchase the underlying instrument to meet its call obligations and the necessary instruments may be unavailable for purchase.  Additionally, volatility in the market for equity securities, which has been dramatically increased recently for certain stocks, can meaningfully increase the risk of loss associated with options. When the Fund writes a covered call option, it gives up the opportunity to profit from a price increase in the underlying instrument above the strike price. If a covered call option that the Fund has written is exercised, the Fund will experience a gain or loss from the sale of the underlying instrument, depending on the price at which the Fund purchased the instrument and the strike price of the option. The Fund will receive a premium from writing options, but the premium received may not be sufficient to offset any losses sustained from exercised options. In the case of a covered call, the premium received may be offset by a decline in the market value of the underlying instrument during the option period.  If

an option that the Fund has purchased is never exercised or closed out, the Fund will lose the amount of the premium it paid and the use of those funds.

Swaps. Swap transactions generally do not involve delivery of reference instruments or payment of the notional amount of the contract. Accordingly, the risk of loss with respect to swaps generally is limited to the net amount of payments that the Fund is contractually obligated to make or, in the case of the other party to a swap defaulting, the net amount of payments that the Fund is contractually entitled to receive. If the Fund sells a credit default swap, however, the risk of loss may be the entire notional amount of the swap.

Some swaps are now executed through an organized exchange or regulated facility and cleared through a regulated clearing organization. The absence of an organized exchange or market for swap transactions may result in difficulties in trading and valuation, especially in the event of market disruptions. The use of an organized exchange or market for swap transactions is expected to result in swaps being easier to trade or value, but this may not always be the case.

Distressed Securities Risk. 
Distressed securities are securities of companies that are in financial distress and that may be in or about to enter bankruptcy or some other legal proceeding.  The Fund may not receive interest payments on the distressed securities and may incur costs to protect its investment. These securities may present a substantial risk of default, including the loss of the entire investment, or may be in default.  The Fund may incur additional expenses to the extent it is required to seek recovery upon a default in the payment of principal of or interest on its portfolio holdings. Distressed securities include loans, bonds and notes, many of which are not publicly traded, and may involve a substantial degree of risk.  In certain periods, there may be little or no liquidity in the markets for distressed securities meaning that the Fund may be unable to exit its position. Distressed securities and any securities received in an exchange for such securities may be subject to restrictions on resale. In addition, the prices of such securities may be subject to periods of abrupt and erratic market movements and above-average price volatility. It may be difficult to obtain information regarding the financial condition of a borrower or issuer, and its financial condition may change rapidly. Also, it may be difficult to value such securities and the spread between the bid/ask prices of such securities may be greater than expected. The Fund may lose a substantial portion or all of its investment in distressed securities or may be required to accept cash, securities or other property with a value less than its original investment.
Distributions Risk.
There can be no assurance that the Fund will achieve investment results that will allow the Fund to make a specified level of cash distributions or maintain certain levels of cash distributions. All distributions will be paid at the discretion of the Board and may depend on the Fund’s earnings, the Fund’s net investment income, the Fund’s financial condition, compliance with applicable regulations and such other factors as the Board may deem relevant from time to time. The distributions for any full or partial calendar year might not be made in equal amounts, and one distribution may be larger than others. The Fund will make a distribution only if authorized by the Board and declared by the Fund out of assets legally available for these distributions. This distribution policy may, under certain circumstances, have certain adverse consequences to the Fund and its stockholders because it may result in a return of capital, which would reduce the Fund’s NAV and, over time, potentially increase the Fund’s expense ratio. If the Fund distributes a return of capital, it means that the Fund is returning to stockholders a portion of their investment rather than making a distribution that is funded from the Fund’s earned income or other profits. The Fund’s distribution policy may be changed by the Board at any time without stockholder approval. See “Distributions.”
Foreign Risk. 
Foreign securities, involve risks in addition to those associated with comparable U.S. securities. Additional risks include exposure to less developed or less efficient trading markets; social, political, diplomatic, or economic instability; trade barriers and other protectionist trade policies (including those of the U.S.); fluctuations in foreign currencies or currency redenomination; potential for default on sovereign debt; nationalization or expropriation of
assets; settlement, custodial or other operational risks; higher transaction costs; confiscatory withholding or other taxes; and less stringent auditing, corporate disclosure, governance, and legal standards. The Fund may have limited or no legal recourse in the event of default with respect to certain foreign securities. In addition, key information about the issuer, the markets or the local government or economy may be unavailable, incomplete or inaccurate. As a result, foreign securities may fluctuate more widely in price, and may also be less liquid, than comparable U.S. securities. World markets, or those in a particular region, may all react in similar fashion to important economic or political developments.  In addition, securities issued by U.S. entities with substantial foreign operations may involve risks relating to political, economic, or regulatory conditions in foreign countries, as well as currency exchange rates. Regardless of where a company is organized or its stock is traded, its performance may be affected significantly by events in regions from which it derives its profits or in which it conducts significant operations.

Securities of issuers traded on foreign exchanges may be suspended, either by the issuers themselves, by an exchange or by governmental authorities. Trading suspensions may be applied from time to time to the securities of individual issuers for reasons specific to that issuer, or may be applied broadly by exchanges or governmental authorities in response to market events. Suspensions may last for significant periods of time, during which trading in the securities and in instruments that reference the securities, such as derivative instruments, may be halted. In the event that the Fund holds material positions in such suspended securities, the Fund’s ability to liquidate its positions may be compromised and the Fund could incur significant losses.

In addition, foreign markets may perform differently than the U.S. market. Over a given period of time, foreign securities may underperform U.S. securities—sometimes for years. The Fund could also underperform if it invests in countries or regions whose economic performance falls short. To the extent that the Fund invests a portion of its assets in one country, state, region or currency, an adverse economic, business or political development may affect the value of the Fund’s investments more than if its investments were not so invested.

The effect of economic instability on specific foreign markets or issuers may be difficult to predict or evaluate. Some national economies continue to show profound instability, which may in turn affect their international trading and financial partners or other members of their currency bloc.

High Portfolio Turnover. 
The Fund may engage in active and frequent trading and may have a high portfolio turnover rate, which may increase the Fund’s transaction costs, may adversely affect the Fund’s performance and may generate a greater amount of capital gain distributions to Common Stockholders than if the Fund had a low portfolio turnover rate.
Interest Rate Risk. 
In general, the value of investments with interest rate risk, such as debt securities or income-oriented equity securities that pay dividends, will move in the direction opposite to movements in interest rates. If interest rates rise, the value of such securities may decline. Interest rates may change in response to the supply and demand for credit, changes to government monetary policy and other initiatives, inflation rates, and other factors.  Debt securities have varying levels of sensitivity to changes in interest rates. Typically, the longer the maturity (i.e., the term of a debt security) or duration (i.e., a measure of the sensitivity of a debt security to changes in market interest rates, based on the entire cash flow associated with the security) of a debt security, the greater the effect a change in interest rates could have on the security’s price. For example, if interest rates increase by 1%, a debt security with a duration of two years will decrease in value by approximately 2%.  Thus, the Fund’s sensitivity to interest rate risk will increase with any increase in the Fund’s overall duration.  Short-term securities tend to react to changes in short-term interest rates, and long-term securities tend to react to changes in long-term interest rates. Short-term and long-term interest rates, and interest rates in different countries, do not necessarily move in the same direction or by the same amount. The link between interest rates and debt security prices tends to be weaker with lower-rated debt securities than with investment grade debt securities.

Issuer-Specific Risk. 
An individual security may be more volatile, and may perform differently, than the market as a whole. The value of an issuer’s securities may deteriorate because of a variety of factors, including disappointing earnings reports by the issuer, unsuccessful products or services, loss of major customers, major litigation against the issuer, or changes in government regulations affecting the issuer or the competitive environment. Certain unanticipated events, such as natural disasters, may have a significant adverse effect on the value of an issuer’s securities.
Leverage Risk. 
Leverage amplifies changes in the Fund’s net asset value and may make the Fund more volatile. Derivatives such as options, futures, and swaps, securities lending and borrowing may create leverage and can result in losses to the Fund that exceed the amount originally invested and may accelerate the rate of losses. For certain instruments or transactions that create leverage, or have embedded leverage, relatively small market fluctuations may result in large changes in the value of such investments. In addition, the interest and other costs that the Fund pays to engage in these practices are additional costs borne by the Fund and could reduce or eliminate any net investment profits. Unless the profits from engaging in these practices exceed the costs of engaging in these practices, the use of leverage will diminish the investment performance of the Fund compared with what it would have been had the Fund not used leverage. There can be no assurance that the Fund’s use of any leverage will be successful. The Fund’s investment exposure can exceed its net assets, sometimes by a significant amount. When the Fund uses leverage or utilizes certain of these practices, it may need to dispose of some of its holdings at unfavorable times or prices in order to satisfy its obligations or to comply with certain asset coverage requirements.
In connection with the Fund’s use of leverage through the issuance of preferred stock and notes, the Fund may seek to hedge the interest rate risks associated with leverage through interest rate swaps, caps or other derivative transactions. These transactions involve investment techniques and risks different from those associated with portfolio transactions in securities of high yield debt securities. There is no assurance that any interest rate hedging transactions, if undertaken, will be successful, and such transactions may adversely affect the Fund’s achievement of its investment objective.
Liquidity Risk. 

From time to time, the trading market for a particular investment or type of investment in which the Fund invests is or may become less liquid or even illiquid. Illiquid investments frequently can be more difficult to purchase or sell at an advantageous price or time. An illiquid investment means any investment that the Fund reasonably expects cannot be sold or disposed of in current market conditions in seven calendar days or less without the sale or disposition significantly changing the market value of the investment. Judgment plays a greater role in pricing these investments than it does in pricing investments having more active markets, and there is a greater risk that the investments may not be sold for the price at which the Fund is carrying them. The Fund may receive illiquid securities as a result of its investment in securities involved in restructurings.  Certain investments that were liquid when the Fund purchased them may become illiquid, sometimes abruptly, particularly during periods of increased market volatility or adverse investor perception. Additionally, market closures due to holidays or other factors may render a security or group of securities (e.g., securities tied to a particular country or geographic region) illiquid for a period of time. An inability to sell a portfolio position can adversely affect the Fund’s value or prevent the Fund from being able to take advantage of other investment opportunities.  Market prices for such securities or other investments may be volatile.  Market participants attempting to sell the same or a similar investment at the same time as the Fund could decrease the liquidity of such investments, especially during times of market volatility.  During periods of substantial market volatility, an investment or even an entire market segment may become illiquid, sometimes abruptly, which can adversely affect the Fund’s ability to limit losses.

Loan Interests Risk. 
Loan interests generally are subject to restrictions on transfer, and the Fund may be unable to sell its loan interests at a time when it may otherwise be desirable to do so or may be able to sell them promptly only at prices that are less than what the Fund regards as their fair market value.  Accordingly, loan interests may at times be illiquid. Loan interests may be difficult to value and may have extended settlement periods (the settlement cycle for many bank
loans exceeds 7 days).  Extended settlement periods may result in cash not being immediately available to the Fund. A significant portion of floating rate loans may be “covenant lite” loans that may contain fewer or less restrictive constraints on the borrower and/or may contain other characteristics that would be favorable to the borrower, limiting the ability of lenders to take legal action to protect their interests in certain situations. Interests in loans made to finance highly leveraged companies or to finance corporate acquisitions or other transactions may be especially vulnerable to adverse changes in economic or market conditions.

Interests in secured loans have the benefit of collateral and, typically, of restrictive covenants limiting the ability of the borrower to further encumber its assets, although many covenants may be waived or modified with the consent of a certain percentage of the holders of the loans even if the Fund does not consent. There is a risk that the value of any collateral securing a loan in which the Fund has an interest may decline and that the collateral may not be sufficient to cover the amount owed on the loan. In most loan agreements there is no formal requirement to pledge additional collateral. In the event the borrower defaults, the Fund’s access to the collateral may be limited or delayed by bankruptcy or other insolvency laws. Further, in the event of a default, second or lower lien secured loans, and unsecured loans, will generally be paid only if the value of the collateral exceeds the amount of the borrower’s obligations to the senior secured lenders, and the remaining collateral may not be sufficient to cover the full amount owed on the loan in which the Fund has an interest. In addition, if a secured loan is foreclosed, the Fund may bear the costs and liabilities associated with owning and disposing of the collateral.  The collateral may be difficult to sell and the Fund would bear the risk that the collateral may decline in value while the Fund is holding it. Further, there is a risk that a court could take action with respect to a loan that is adverse to the holders of the loan and the Fund may need to retain legal counsel to enforce its rights in any resulting event of default, bankruptcy, or similar situation, which may increase the Fund’s operating expenses.  Interests in loans expose the Fund to the credit risk of the underlying borrower and may expose the Fund to the credit risk of the lender.

The Fund may acquire a loan interest by direct investment as a lender, by obtaining an assignment of all or a portion of the interests in a particular loan that are held by an original lender or a prior assignee or by participation in a loan interest that is held by another party.  As an assignee, the Fund normally will succeed to all rights and obligations of its assignor with respect to the portion of the loan that is being assigned. However, the rights and obligations acquired by the purchaser of a loan assignment may differ from, and be more limited than, those held by the original lenders or the assignor.

When the Fund’s loan interest is a participation, the Fund may have less control over the exercise of remedies than the party selling the participation interest, and the Fund normally would not have any direct rights against the borrower. As a participant, the Fund also would be subject to the risk that the lending bank or other party selling the participation interest would not remit the Fund’s pro rata share of loan payments to the Fund. It may be difficult for the Fund to obtain an accurate picture of a lending bank’s financial condition. It is possible that the Fund could be held liable, or may be called upon to fulfill other obligations, with respect to loans in which it receives an assignment in whole or in part, or in which it owns a participation.  The potential for such liability is greater for an assignee than for a participant.

The liquidity of floating rate loans, including the volume and frequency of secondary market trading in such loans, may vary, sometimes significantly, over time and among individual floating rate loans and loans may be subject to wide bid/ask spreads. During periods of infrequent trading, valuing a floating rate loan can be more difficult; and buying and selling a floating rate loan at an acceptable price can be more difficult and delayed.

Courts have held in some situations that loan interests are not “securities,” and purchasers, such as the Fund, therefore may not have the benefit of the anti-fraud protections of the federal securities laws.  Also, if Fund management receives material non-public information about the issuer (which is not uncommon in the loan market), the Fund may, as a result, be unable to sell the issuer’s securities.
Lower-Rated Debt Securities Risk. 
Lower-rated debt securities (commonly known as “junk bonds”) and unrated debt securities determined to be of comparable quality involve greater risks than investment grade debt securities. Such securities may fluctuate more widely in price and yield and may fall in price during times when the economy is weak or is expected to become
weak. These securities may be less liquid and also may require a greater degree of judgment to establish a price, may be difficult to sell at the time and price the Fund desires, and may carry higher transaction costs. In particular, these securities may be issued by smaller companies or by highly indebted companies, which are generally less able than more financially stable companies to make scheduled payments of interest and principal.  Lower-rated debt securities are considered by the major rating agencies to be predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer’s continuing ability to pay principal and interest and carry a greater risk that the issuer of such securities will default in the timely payment of principal and interest. Such securities are susceptible to such a default or decline in market value due to real or perceived adverse economic and business developments relating to the issuer, the industry in general, market interest rates and market liquidity.  Issuers of securities that are in default or have defaulted may fail to resume principal or interest payments, in which case the Fund may lose its entire investment.  Where it deems it appropriate and in the best interests of Fund Stockholders, the Fund may incur additional expenses to seek recovery on a defaulted security and/or to pursue litigation to protect the Fund’s investment.

The credit rating of a security may not accurately reflect the actual credit risk associated with such a security. The creditworthiness of issuers of these securities may be more complex to analyze than that of issuers of investment grade debt securities, and the overreliance on credit ratings may present additional risks.


Adverse publicity and investor perceptions, whether or not based on fundamental analysis, may decrease the values and liquidity of such securities, especially in a thinly traded or illiquid market.  To the extent the Fund owns or may acquire illiquid or restricted lower-rated debt securities or unrated debt securities of comparable quality, these securities may involve special registration responsibilities, liabilities, costs, and liquidity and valuation difficulties.
Market Premium/Discount Risk. 
The market price of the Fund’s shares of common stock will generally fluctuate in accordance with changes in the Fund’s NAV as well as the relative supply of and demand for shares on the secondary market. The Fund’s investment advisor cannot predict whether shares will trade below, at or above their NAV because the shares trade on the secondary market at market prices and not at NAV. Because the market price of the Fund’s shares of common stock will be determined by factors such as relative supply of and demand for shares in the market, general market and economic circumstances, and other factors beyond the control of the Fund, the Fund cannot predict whether the Common Stock will trade at, below or above NAV. This characteristic is a risk separate and distinct from the risk that the Fund’s NAV could decrease as a result of investment activities. Common stockholders bear a risk of loss to the extent that the price at which they sell their shares is lower in relation to the Fund’s NAV than at the time of purchase.
Market Volatility Risk. 
Markets may be volatile and values of individual securities and other investments, including those of a particular type, may decline significantly in response to adverse issuer, political, regulatory, market, economic or other developments that may cause broad changes in market value, public perceptions concerning these developments, and adverse investor sentiment or publicity. Changes in the financial condition of a single issuer may impact a market as a whole. Changes in value may be temporary or may last for extended periods. If the Fund sells a portfolio position before it reaches its market peak, it may miss out on opportunities for better performance.

Geopolitical risks, including terrorism, tensions or open conflict between nations, or political or economic dysfunction within some nations that are major players on the world stage or major producers of oil, may lead to overall instability in world economies and markets generally and have led, and may in the future lead, to increased market volatility and may have adverse long-term effects.  Similarly, environmental and public health risks, such as natural disasters or epidemics, or widespread fear that such events may occur, may impact markets and economies adversely and cause market volatility in both the short- and long-term.
Mortgage- and Asset-Backed Securities Risk. 

The value of mortgage- and asset-backed securities, including collateralized mortgage instruments, will be influenced by the factors affecting the housing market or the assets underlying the securities.  These securities differ from more traditional debt securities because the principal is paid back over the life of the security rather than at the security’s maturity; however, principal may be repaid early if a decline in interest rates causes many borrowers to refinance (known as prepayment risk), or repaid more slowly if a rise in rates causes refinancings to slow down (known as extension risk).  Thus, they tend to be more sensitive to changes in interest rates than other types of debt securities and as a result, these securities may exhibit additional volatility during periods of interest rate turmoil.  In addition, investments in mortgage- and asset-backed securities may be subject to call risk, credit risk, valuation risk, and illiquid investment risk, sometimes to a higher degree than various other types of debt securities.  These securities are also subject to the risk of default on the underlying mortgages or assets, particularly during periods of market downturn, and an unexpectedly high rate of defaults on the underlying assets will adversely affect the security’s value.  Further, such securities may have credit support, the utility of which could be negatively affected by such conditions as well.

Other Investment Company Risk.

To the extent the Fund invests in other investment companies, including money market funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), its performance will be affected by the performance of those other investment companies and to the allocation of its assets among those other investment companies. Investments in other investment companies are subject to the risks of the other investment companies’ investments, as well as to the other investment companies’ expenses. If the Fund invests in other investment companies, the Fund may receive distributions of taxable gains from portfolio transactions by that investment company and may recognize taxable gains from transactions in shares of that investment company, which could be taxable to the Fund’s stockholders when distributed to them.
An ETF may trade in the secondary market at a price below the value of its underlying portfolio and may not be liquid. An actively managed ETF’s performance will reflect its adviser’s ability to make investment decisions that are suited to achieving the ETF’s investment objectives. A passively managed ETF may not replicate the performance of the index it intends to track because of, for example, the temporary unavailability of certain index securities in the secondary market or discrepancies between the ETF and the index with respect to the weighting of securities or the number of stocks held. A passively managed ETF may not be permitted to sell poorly performing stocks that are included in its index.
Operational and Cybersecurity Risk. 
The Fund and its service providers, and your ability to transact with the Fund, may be negatively impacted due to operational matters arising from, among other problems, human errors, systems and technology disruptions or failures, or cybersecurity incidents.  Cybersecurity incidents may allow an unauthorized party to gain access to fund assets, customer data, or proprietary information, or cause the Fund or its service providers, as well as the securities trading venues and their service providers, to suffer data corruption or lose operational functionality. A cybersecurity incident could, among other things, result in the loss or theft of customer data or funds, customers or employees being unable to access electronic systems (“denial of services”), loss or theft of proprietary information or corporate data, physical damage to a computer or network system, or remediation costs associated with system repairs. Any of these results could have a substantial adverse impact on the Fund and its Stockholders.

The occurrence of any of these problems could result in a loss of information, regulatory scrutiny, reputational damage and other consequences, any of which could have a material adverse effect on the Fund or its Stockholders. The Manager, through its monitoring and oversight of Fund service providers, endeavors to determine that service providers take appropriate precautions to avoid and mitigate risks that could lead to such problems. While the Manager has established business continuity plans and risk management systems seeking to address these problems, there are inherent limitations in such plans and systems, and it is not possible for the Manager or the other Fund service providers to identify all of the cybersecurity or other operational risks that may affect the Fund or to develop processes and controls to completely eliminate or mitigate their occurrence or effects.  Most issuers in which the Fund invests are heavily dependent on computers for data storage and operations, and require ready access to the
internet to conduct their business. Thus, cybersecurity incidents could also affect issuers of securities in which the Fund invests, leading to significant loss of value.
Prepayment and Extension Risk. 
The Fund’s performance could be affected if borrowers pay back principal on certain debt securities, such as mortgage- or asset-backed securities, before (prepayment) or after (extension) the market anticipates such payments, shortening or lengthening their duration. Due to a decline in interest rates or an excess in cash flow into the issuer, a debt security might be called or otherwise converted, prepaid or redeemed before maturity. As a result of prepayment, the Fund may have to reinvest the proceeds in an investment offering a lower yield, may not benefit from any increase in value that might otherwise result from declining interest rates, and may lose any premium it paid to acquire the security. Prepayments could also create capital gains tax liability in some instances. Conversely, rising market interest rates generally result in slower payoffs or extension, which effectively increases the duration of certain debt securities, heightening interest rate risk and increasing the magnitude of any resulting price declines. If the Fund’s investments are locked in at a lower interest rate for a longer period of time, the Fund may be unable to capitalize on securities with higher interest rates or wider spreads.
Private Placements and Other Restricted Securities Risk. 
Private placements and other restricted securities, including securities for which Fund management has material non-public information, are securities that are subject to legal and/or contractual restrictions on their sales. These securities may not be sold to the public unless certain conditions are met, which may include registration under the applicable securities laws. These securities may not be listed on an exchange and may have no active trading market. As a result of the absence of a public trading market, the prices of these securities may be more volatile and more difficult to determine than publicly traded securities and these securities may involve heightened risk as compared to investments in securities of publicly traded companies. Private placements and other restricted securities may be illiquid, and it frequently can be difficult to sell them at a time when it may otherwise be desirable to do so or the Fund may be able to sell them only at prices that are less than what the Fund regards as their fair market value. A security that was liquid at the time of purchase may subsequently become illiquid. In addition, transaction costs may be higher for private placements and other restricted securities. The Fund may have to bear the expense of registering such securities for sale and there may be substantial delays in effecting the registration. If, during such a delay, adverse market conditions were to develop, the Fund might obtain a less favorable price than prevailed at the time it decided to seek registration of the securities. In addition, the Fund may get only limited information about the issuer of a private placement or other restricted security, so it may be less able to anticipate a loss. Also, if Fund management receives material non-public information about the issuer, the Fund may, as a result, be legally prohibited from selling the securities.
Recent Market Conditions. 

Certain illnesses spread rapidly and have the potential to significantly and adversely affect the global economy. Outbreaks such as the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, or other similarly infectious diseases may have material adverse impacts on a Fund. Epidemics and/or pandemics, such as the coronavirus, have and may further result in, among other things, closing borders, extended quarantines and stay-at-home orders, order cancellations, disruptions to supply chains and customer activity, widespread business closures and layoffs, as well as general concern and uncertainty. The impact of this virus, and other epidemics and/or pandemics that may arise in the future, has negatively affected and may continue to affect the economies of many nations, individual companies and the global securities and commodities markets, including their liquidity, in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen at the present time. The impact of any outbreak may last for an extended period of time. The current pandemic has accelerated trends toward working remotely and shopping on-line, which may negatively affect the value of office and commercial real estate and companies that have been slow to transition to an on-line business model. The travel, hospitality and public transit industries may suffer long-term negative effects from the pandemic and resulting changes to public behavior.
Governments and central banks have moved to limit these negative economic effects with interventions that are unprecedented in size and scope and may continue to do so, but the ultimate impact of these efforts is uncertain. Governments’ efforts to limit potential negative economic effects of the pandemic may be altered, delayed, or eliminated at inopportune times for political, policy or other reasons. The impact of infectious diseases may be greater in countries that do not move effectively to control them, which may occur for political reasons or because of a lack of health care or economic resources. Health crises caused by the recent coronavirus outbreak may exacerbate other pre-existing political, social and economic risks in certain countries. Although effective vaccines are available, it may be many months before vaccinations are sufficiently widespread in many countries to allow the restoration of full economic activity. The failure to control the coronavirus in less developed countries may impact the economies of more developed countries.
Russia’s invasion of the Ukraine, and corresponding events in late February 2022, have had, and could continue to have, severe adverse effects on regional and global economic markets for securities and commodities. Following Russia's actions, various governments, including the United States, have issued broad-ranging economic sanctions against Russia, including, among other actions, a prohibition on doing business with certain Russian companies, large financial institutions, officials and oligarchs; the removal  by certain countries and the European Union of selected Russian banks from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications (“SWIFT”), the electronic banking network that connects banks globally; and restrictive measures to prevent the Russian Central Bank from undermining the impact of the sanctions.  The current events, including sanctions and the potential for future sanctions, including any impacting Russia's energy sector, and other actions, and Russia's retaliatory responses to those sanctions and actions, may continue to adversely impact the Russian and Ukrainian economies and may result in the further decline of the value and liquidity of Russian and Ukrainian securities, a continued weakening of the ruble and hryvnia and continued exchange closures, and may have other adverse consequences on the Russian and Ukrainian economies that could impact the value of these investments and impair the ability of a Fund to buy, sell, receive or deliver those securities.  Moreover, those events have, and could continue to have, an adverse effect on global markets performance and liquidity, thereby negatively affecting the value of a Fund’s investments beyond any direct exposure to Russian and Ukrainian issuers. The duration of ongoing hostilities and the vast array of sanctions and related events cannot be predicted. Those events present material uncertainty and risk with respect to markets globally and the performance of a Fund and its investments or operations could be negatively impacted.
Municipal issuers may suffer declines in tax revenue because of the business and economic disruptions associated with the COVID-19 pandemic and it may be difficult to evaluate the effect on any single issuer. Some municipal issuers may be prohibited by law from borrowing, and those that can borrow may face higher interest rates. This situation may result in disruption of municipal programs and services.
High public debt in the U.S. and other countries creates ongoing systemic and market risks and policymaking uncertainty and there may be a further increase in the amount of debt due to the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and ensuing economic relief and public health measures. Interest rates have been unusually low in recent years in the U.S. and abroad. It is difficult to predict the impact on various markets of a significant rate increase or other significant policy changes, whether brought about by government policy makers, perhaps in response to indications of increasing inflation, or by dislocations in world markets. For example, because investors may buy equity securities or other investments with borrowed money, a significant increase in interest rates may cause a decline in the markets for those investments. In addition, ongoing inflation pressures from tight labor markets and supply chain disruptions could cause a material increase in interest rates and/or negatively impact companies. Also, regulators have expressed concern that rate increases may cause investors to sell fixed income securities faster than the market can absorb them, contributing to price volatility. Over the longer term, rising interest rates may present a greater risk than has historically been the case due to the current period of relatively low rates and the effect of government fiscal and monetary policy initiatives and potential market reaction to those initiatives, or their alteration or cessation. Historical patterns of correlation among asset classes may break down in unanticipated ways during times of high volatility, disrupting investment programs and potentially causing losses. There is no assurance that the U.S. Congress will act to raise the nation’s debt ceiling; a failure to do so could cause market turmoil and substantial investment risks that cannot now be fully predicted.
National economies are substantially interconnected, as are global financial markets, which creates the possibility that conditions in one country or region might adversely impact issuers in a different country or region. A rise in protectionist trade policies, tariff “wars,” changes to some major international trade agreements and the potential for changes to others, and campaigns to “buy American,” could affect international trade and the economies of many nations in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen at the present time.
Markets have been sensitive to the outlook for resolving the U.S.-China “trade war,” a trend that may continue in the future. China’s economy, which has been sustained in recent years largely through a debt-financed housing boom, may be approaching the limits of that strategy and may experience a significant slowdown as a result of debt that cannot be repaid. Due to the size of China’s economy, such a slowdown could impact a number of other countries.
In December 2020, the United Kingdom (“UK”) and the European Union (“EU”) signed a Trade and Cooperation Agreement (“TCA”) to delineate the terms on which the UK left the EU. The TCA did little to address financial services and products provided by UK entities to customers in the EU, leaving the future of such services and products uncertain. New trading rules have disrupted the cross-border flow of products and supplies for many businesses; it remains to be seen whether these will be smoothed out with the passage of time or cause long-term damage to affected businesses. There is some uncertainty as to whether dislocations in the UK’s economy are mainly the result of COVID-19 (as the government claims) or the result of the country having left the EU.
Over the past several years, the U.S. has moved away from tighter legislation and regulation impacting businesses and the financial services industry. There is a strong potential for materially increased regulation in the future, as well as higher taxes and/or taxes restructured to incentivize different activities. These changes, should they occur, may impose added costs on a Fund and its service providers, and affect the businesses of various portfolio companies, in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen at the present time. Unexpected political, regulatory and diplomatic events within the U.S. and abroad may affect investor and consumer confidence and may adversely impact financial markets and the broader economy.
LIBOR Transition. Certain financial contracts around the world specify rates that are based on the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), which is produced daily by averaging the rates for inter-bank lending reported by a number of banks. As previously announced by the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority, most maturities and currencies of LIBOR were phased out at the end of 2021, with the remaining ones to be phased out on June 30, 2023. There are risks that the financial services industry will not have a suitable substitute in place by that time and that there will not be time to perform the substantial work necessary to revise the many existing contracts that rely on LIBOR. The transition process, or a failure of the industry to transition properly, might lead to increased volatility and illiquidity in markets that currently rely on LIBOR. It also could lead to a reduction in the value of some LIBOR-based investments and reduce the effectiveness of new hedges placed against existing LIBOR-based instruments. New York has passed legislation to ease the transition from LIBOR and federal LIBOR transition relief legislation has been proposed, but there is no assurance whether or when such legislation will be enacted or if it will adequately address all issues or be subject to litigation.
Regulated Investment Company Status.
The Fund has qualified, and intends to remain qualified, for federal income tax purposes as a RIC under Subchapter M of the Code. Qualification requires, among other things, compliance by the Fund with certain distribution requirements. If the Fund does not qualify as a RIC for any taxable year, the Fund’s taxable income will be subject to corporate income taxes, and all distributions from earnings and profits, including distributions of net capital gain (if any), will be taxable to stockholders as ordinary income. Such distributions generally would be eligible (i) to be treated as qualified dividend income in the case of individual and other non-corporate stockholders and (ii) for the dividends received deduction in the case of corporate stockholders. In addition, in order to requalify for taxation as a RIC, the Fund may be required to recognize unrealized gain, pay substantial taxes and interest, and make certain distributions. See “Tax Matters” for a more complete discussion of these and other federal income tax considerations.
Repurchase Agreement Risk.
Repurchase agreements generally are for a short period of time and involve the risk that the counterparty may default on its obligation to repurchase the underlying instruments collateralizing the repurchase agreement, which may result in costs, delays, and/or losses to the Fund. In such a case, the Fund may incur expenses in enforcing its rights under the repurchase agreement. Repurchase agreements also involve the risk that the Fund could lose money if the underlying instruments used as collateral lose their value before they can be sold, or if the Fund is required to return collateral to a borrower at a time when it may realize a loss on the investment of that collateral.
Risk Management. 
Management undertakes certain analyses with the intention of identifying particular types of risks and reducing the Fund’s exposure to them. However, risk is an essential part of investing, and the degree of return an investor might expect is often tied to the degree of risk the investor is willing to accept. By its very nature, risk involves exposure to the possibility of adverse events. Accordingly, no risk management program can eliminate the Fund’s exposure to such events; at best, it may only reduce the possibility that the Fund will be affected by adverse events, and especially those risks that are not intrinsic to the Fund’s investment program. While the prospectus describes material risk factors associated with the Fund’s investment program, there is no assurance that as a particular situation unfolds in the markets, management will identify all of the risks that might affect the Fund, rate their probability or potential magnitude correctly, or be able to take appropriate measures to reduce the Fund’s exposure to them. Measures taken with the intention of decreasing exposure to identified risks might have the unintended effect of increasing exposure to other risks.
Sector Risk. 
From time to time, based on market or economic conditions, the Fund may have significant positions in one or more sectors of the market. To the extent the Fund invests more heavily in one sector, industry, or sub-sector of the market, its performance will be especially sensitive to developments that significantly affect those sectors, industries, or sub-sectors.  An individual sector, industry, or sub-sector of the market may be more volatile, and may perform differently, than the broader market.  The industries that constitute a sector may all react in the same way to economic, political or regulatory events. The Fund’s performance could also be affected if the sectors, industries, or sub-sectors do not perform as expected. Alternatively, the lack of exposure to one or more sectors or industries may adversely affect performance. For a summary of the Fund’s recent sector allocations, see its most recent shareholder report. (The information in the report is as of the date of the report and may have changed.)  For information about the risks of investing in particular sectors, see the Fund’s Statement of Additional Information.
Securities Lending Risk.
Securities lending involves a possible delay in recovery of the loaned securities or a possible loss of rights in the collateral should the borrower fail financially. The Fund could also lose money if the value of the collateral decreases.
To the extent that the portfolio securities acquired with such collateral have decreased in value, it may result in the Fund realizing a loss at a time when it would not otherwise do so. As such, securities lending may introduce leverage into the Fund. The Fund also may incur losses if the returns on securities that it acquires with cash collateral are less than the applicable rebate rates paid to borrowers and related administrative costs.
Stockholder Activism Risk. 
Stockholder activism can take many forms, including making public demands that the Fund consider certain alternatives, engaging in public campaigns to attempt to influence the Fund’s governance and/or management, commencing proxy contests in an effort to elect the activists’ representatives or others to the Fund’s Board of Directors or to seek other actions such as a tender offer or Fund liquidation, and commencing litigation. Stockholder activism arises in a variety of situations, and has been increasing in the closed-end fund space recently. While the Fund is currently not subject to any stockholder activism, due to the potential volatility of the Fund’s common stock market price and for a variety of other reasons, the Fund may in the future become the target of stockholder activism. Stockholder activism could result in substantial costs and divert Management’s and the Fund’s Board’s attention and resources from its business. Also, the Fund may be required to incur significant legal and other expenses related to any activist stockholder matters. Further, the Fund’s stock price could be subject to significant fluctuation or otherwise be adversely affected by the events, risks and uncertainties of any stockholder activism. Stockholder activists seek short-term actions that can increase Fund costs per share and be detrimental to long-term stockholders.
U.S. Government Securities Risk.
Although the Fund may hold securities that carry U.S. government guarantees, these guarantees do not extend to shares of the Fund itself and do not guarantee the market prices of the securities. Furthermore, not all securities issued by the U.S. government and its agencies and instrumentalities are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury. Some are backed by the issuer’s right to borrow from the U.S. Treasury, while others are backed only by the credit of the issuing agency or instrumentality. These securities carry at least some risk of non-payment or default by the issuer. The maximum potential liability of the issuers of some U.S. government securities may greatly exceed their current resources, including their legal right to support from the U.S. Treasury. It is possible that these issuers will not have the funds to meet their payment obligations in the future.
In recent periods, the values of U.S. government securities have been affected substantially by increased demand for them around the world. Increases or decreases in the demand for U.S. government securities may occur at any time and may result in increased volatility in the values of those securities. In recent years, credit rating agencies have shown some concern about whether the U.S. government has the political will necessary to service all of its outstanding and expected future debt, and some have adjusted their ratings or outlook for U.S. government debt accordingly. These developments, and the factors underlying them, could cause an increase in interest rates and borrowing costs, which may negatively impact both the perception of credit risk associated with the debt securities issued by the U.S. and the government's ability to access the debt markets on favorable terms. In addition, these developments could create broader financial turmoil and uncertainty, which could increase volatility in both stock and bond markets. These events could result in significant adverse impacts on issuers of securities held by the Fund.
Valuation Risk. 
The price at which the Fund sells any particular investment may differ from the Fund’s valuation of the investment. Such differences could be significant, particularly for illiquid securities and securities that trade in relatively thin markets and/or markets that experience extreme volatility. If market or other conditions make it difficult to value some investments, SEC rules and applicable accounting protocols may require the Fund to value these investments using more subjective methods, known as fair value methodologies. Using fair value methodologies to price investments may result in a value that is different from an investment’s most recent closing price and from the prices used by other mutual funds to calculate their NAVs. The value of foreign securities, certain futures and fixed income securities, and currencies, as applicable, may be materially affected by events after the close of the markets on which they are traded but before the Fund determines its net asset value.  The Fund’s ability to value its investments in an accurate and timely manner may be impacted by technological issues and/or errors by third party service providers, such as pricing services or accounting agents.
Variable and Floating Rate Instruments Risk. 

The market prices of instruments with variable and floating interest rates are generally less sensitive to interest rate changes than are the market prices of instruments with fixed interest rates. Variable and floating rate instruments may decline in value if market interest rates or interest rates paid by such instruments do not move as expected. Conversely, variable and floating rate instruments will not generally rise in value if market interest rates decline.  Thus, investing in variable and floating rate instruments generally allows less opportunity for capital appreciation and depreciation than investing in instruments with a fixed interest rate.  Certain types of floating rate instruments, such as interests in bank loans, may be subject to greater liquidity risk than other debt securities.

Certain variable and floating rate instruments have an interest rate floor feature, which prevents the interest rate payable by the instrument from dropping below a specified level as compared to a reference interest rate (the “reference rate”), such as LIBOR. Such a floor protects the Fund from losses resulting from a decrease in the reference rate below the specified level. However, if the reference rate is below the floor, there will be a lag between a rise in the reference rate and a rise in the interest rate payable by the instrument, and the Fund may not benefit from increasing interest rates for a significant period of time.  Rates on certain variable rate instruments typically only reset periodically.  As a result, changes in prevailing interest rates, particularly sudden and significant changes, can cause some fluctuations in the Fund’s value to the extent that it invests in variable rate instruments.

Warrants and Rights Risk.

Warrants and rights do not carry with them the right to dividends or voting rights with respect to the securities that they entitle their holder to purchase, and they do not represent any rights in the assets of the issuer. As a result, warrants and rights may be considered more speculative than certain other types of investments. In addition, the value of a warrant or right does not necessarily change with the value of the underlying securities. If a warrant or right to subscribe to additional shares is not exercised or, when permissible, sold prior to the warrant’s or right’s expiration date or redemption by the issuer, the Fund would lose all or substantially all of the purchase price of the warrant or right. The market for warrants and rights may be very limited and there may at times not be a liquid secondary market for warrants and rights.

Zero Coupon Securities, Step Coupon Securities, Pay-in-Kind Securities and Discount Obligations. 
Zero coupon securities and step coupon securities are debt obligations that are issued and traded at a discount from their face amount or par value (known as “original issue discount” or “OID”) and do not entitle the holder to any periodic payment of interest prior to maturity or that specify a future date when the securities begin to pay current interest. The Fund may also acquire certain debt securities at a discount. These discount obligations involve special risk considerations. OID varies depending on prevailing interest rates, the time remaining until cash payments begin, the liquidity of the security, and the perceived credit quality of the issuer. Zero coupon securities and step coupon securities are redeemed at face value when they mature. Accrued OID must be included in the Fund’s gross income for federal tax purposes ratably each taxable year prior to the receipt of any actual payments. Pay-in-kind securities pay “interest” through the issuance of additional securities. The market prices of zero coupon securities, step coupon securities, pay-in-kind securities and discount obligations generally are more volatile than the prices of securities that pay cash interest periodically. Those securities and obligations are likely to respond to changes in interest rates to a greater degree than other types of debt securities having a similar maturity and credit quality. 

MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND
 
Board of Directors
 
The management of the Fund, including general supervision of the duties performed by the Adviser, is the responsibility of the Board under the laws of the State of Maryland and the 1940 Act.
 
The Adviser
 
The Adviser provides day-to-day investment management services to the Fund. NBIA serves as the Fund’s investment manager. NBIA is located at 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10104-0002. See “Management of the Fund.” As of December 31, 2021, Neuberger Berman and its affiliates had $460 billion in assets under management and continue an asset management history that began in 1939.
 
Management Agreement
 
The Fund retains NBIA as its investment manager under a Management Agreement. For such investment management services, the Fund pays NBIA an investment management fee computed at an annual rate of 0.60% of the Fund’s average daily Managed Assets. Managed Assets equal the total assets of the Fund, less liabilities other than the aggregate indebtedness entered into for purposes of leverage. For purposes of calculating Managed Assets, the liquidation preference of any MRPS outstanding and principal amount of the PNs are not considered liabilities.

A discussion regarding the basis for the approval of the management agreement by the Board is available in the Fund’s annual report to stockholders for the period ending October 31, 2021.

In addition to the fees of NBIA, the Fund will pay all other costs and expenses of its operations, including compensation of its Directors (other than those affiliated with NBIA), custodial expenses, transfer agency and distribution disbursing expenses, legal fees, expenses of independent auditors, expenses of repurchasing shares,
leveraging expenses, expenses of preparing, printing and distributing Prospectuses, stockholder reports, notices, proxy statements and reports to governmental agencies, and taxes, if any.

The Adviser will benefit from any offering because its fees are based on the Managed Assets of the Fund. It is not possible to state precisely the amount of additional compensation the Adviser will receive as a result of any offering because it is not known how many Shares of Common Stock will be subscribed for and because the proceeds of such offering will be invested in additional portfolio securities, which will fluctuate in value.
 
Portfolio Managers
 
William “Russ” Covode is a Managing Director of NBIA. He has served as a Portfolio Manager for the Registrant since 2012.  Mr. Covode also manages non-investment grade credit portfolios for NBIA and serves on firm’s credit committee for high yield bonds and senior floating rate loans. He joined the Firm in 2004.

Daniel Doyle, CFA, is a Managing Director of NBIA. He has served as a Portfolio Manager for the Registrant since 2014. Mr. Doyle also manages non-investment grade credit portfolios for NBIA and serves on the Firm’s credit committee for high yield bonds and senior floating rate loans. He joined the Firm in 2012.

Christopher Kocinski, CFA, is a Managing Director of NBIA. Mr. Kocinski joined the firm in 2006. Before being named co-portfolio manager to the Fund in 2019, Mr. Kocinski was co-director of non-investment grade credit research and a senior research analyst for the Manager.

Joseph Lind, CFA, is a Managing Director of NBIA. He has served as a Portfolio Manager for the Registrant since 2018. Mr. Lind also manages non-investment grade credit portfolios for NBIA and serves on the Firm’s credit committee for high yield bonds and senior floating rate loans. He joined the Firm in 2018.

Please see the SAI for additional information about each Portfolio Manager’s compensation, other accounts managed by each Portfolio Manager, and each Portfolio Manager’s ownership of stock of the Fund.
 
The Administrator
 
The Fund retains NBIA as its administrator under an Administration Agreement. The Fund pays NBIA an administration fee at the annual rate of 0.05% of its average daily Managed Assets under this agreement. Additionally, NBIA retains State Street as its sub-administrator under a Sub-Administration Agreement. NBIA pays State Street a fee for all services received under the Sub-Administration Agreement.
 
During periods when the Fund is using leverage, the fee paid to NBIA (for various services) will be higher than if the Fund did not use leverage because the fees paid are calculated on the basis of the Fund’s Managed Assets, which includes the assets purchased through leverage. See “Management of the Fund — The Administrator.”

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

Affiliates of NBIA may act as principal brokers for the Fund, subject to periodic evaluation by the Portfolio Transactions and Pricing Committee of the Board of the quality and cost of execution.
In effecting securities transactions, the Fund seeks to obtain the best price and execution of orders. While affiliates of NBIA are permitted to act as brokers for the Fund in the purchase and sale of its portfolio securities (other than certain securities traded on the OTC market) where such brokers are capable of providing best execution, the Fund generally will use unaffiliated brokers.
NET ASSET VALUE OF COMMON STOCK
 
The Common Stock is listed on the NYSE American. The NAV of the Common Stock of the Fund is computed based upon the value of the Fund’s total assets. NAV is generally determined daily by the Custodian as of the close of the regular trading session on each day that the NYSE American is open for business. The NAV of the Common
Stock is determined by calculating the total value of the Fund’s assets (the value of the securities, plus cash or other assets, including interest accrued but not yet received), deducting its total liabilities (including accrued expenses or dividends), and dividing the result by the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding of the Fund. The Fund reserves the right to calculate the NAV more frequently if deemed desirable.
 
Loans and securities are valued by the Fund following valuation guidelines established and periodically reviewed by the Board. Under the valuation guidelines, loans and securities for which reliable market quotes are readily available are valued at current market value and all other loans, securities and assets of the Fund are valued at fair value in good faith following procedures established by the Board.
 
If events materially affecting the price of foreign portfolio securities occur between the time when their price was last determined on such foreign securities exchange or market and the time when the Fund’s NAV was last calculated (for example, movements in certain U.S. securities indices which demonstrate strong correlation to movements in certain foreign securities markets), such securities may be valued at their fair value as determined in good faith in accordance with procedures established by the Board. For purposes of calculating NAV, all assets and liabilities initially expressed in foreign currencies will be converted into U.S. dollars at the mean of the bid price and ask price of such currencies against the U.S. dollar, as quoted by a major bank.
 
When a Common Stockholder sells Common Stock, he or she will typically receive the market price for such Common Stock, which may be less than the NAV of such Common Stock. See “Closed-End Fund Structure.”
 
DISTRIBUTIONS
 
The Fund intends to distribute its net investment income on a monthly basis. At least annually, the Fund intends to distribute all of its realized net long- and short-term capital gains, if any. Both monthly and annual distributions to Common Stockholders will be made only after paying any accrued distributions on, or, if applicable, redeeming or liquidating, preferred stock, if any, and making interest and required principal payments on notes or any other borrowings, if any. See “Tax Matters.” There is no guarantee that the Fund’s investment strategy will be successful and/or that the Fund will generate a consistent or specific amount of investment income. The Fund may distribute short-term capital gain and/or return of capital to Common Stockholders in an effort to maintain a level distribution. A return of capital distribution may involve a return of a Common Stockholder’s original investment.

Level-Rate Distribution Policy

The Fund intends to continue to make regular monthly cash distributions to Common Stockholders at a fixed rate per share of Common Stock based on its projected performance, which rate may be adjusted from time to time (“Level-Rate Distribution Policy”). The Fund’s ability to maintain its Level-Rate Distribution Policy will depend on a number of factors, including the stability of income received from its investments and Fund expenses.

To permit the Fund to maintain more stable monthly distributions, the Fund may include a return of capital as part of the distributions or may distribute less than the entire amount of its net investment income earned in a particular period. The undistributed net investment income may be available to supplement future distributions. The distribution the Fund pays for any particular monthly period may be more or less than the amount of net investment income it actually earns during the period, and the Fund may have to sell a portion of its investment portfolio to make a distribution at a time when independent investment judgment might not dictate such action. Undistributed net investment income is included in the Common Stock’s net asset value, and, correspondingly, distributions from net investment income will reduce the Common Stock’s net asset value. Pursuant to the requirements of the 1940 Act and other applicable laws, a notice would be provided for each monthly distribution that does not consist entirely of net investment income that would provide estimated sources of the distribution made.

While the Fund intends to pay a level distribution, investors should understand that there is no assurance that the Fund will always be able to pay a distribution, or that the distribution will be of any particular size.

Managed Distribution Policy

The Fund has received exemptive relief from the SEC under the 1940 Act permitting it to pay long-term capital gains more frequently than is currently allowed under the 1940 Act, which facilitates the implementation of a Managed Distribution Policy. The Fund may, subject to the determination of its Board of Directors, implement a Managed Distribution Policy pursuant to this order but does not expect to do so at this time. If implemented, the Managed Distribution Policy would supersede the Level-Rate Distribution Policy.

Under a Managed Distribution Policy, the Fund would intend to make monthly distributions to Common Stockholders, at a fixed rate per share of Common Stock or a fixed percentage of its net asset value, that may include periodic distributions of realized net long- and short-term capital gains or, in certain circumstances, return of capital. Under a Managed Distribution Policy, if, for any monthly distribution, the sum of net investment income and any net realized capital gains for the month was less than the amount of the distribution, the difference would be distributed from the Fund’s capital. If, for any fiscal year, the Fund’s total distributions exceeded such income and gains (an “Excess”), the Excess generally would first be treated as dividend income to the extent of the Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits, if any, and then would be treated by each Common Stockholder as a tax-free return of capital up to the amount of its tax basis in the Common Stock, with any amounts exceeding such basis being treated as gain from the sale of those shares of Common Stock. Pursuant to the requirements of the 1940 Act and other applicable laws, a notice would be provided for each monthly distribution that does not consist entirely of net investment income that would provide estimated sources of the distribution made.

Any distribution of an Excess would decrease the Fund’s total assets and, as a result, would have the likely effect of increasing its expense ratio. There is a risk that the Fund would not eventually realize capital gain in an amount corresponding to an Excess. In addition, in an effort to make such distributions, the Fund may have to sell a portion of its investment portfolio at a time when independent investment judgment might not dictate such action.

The Board of Directors reserves the right to change the Fund’s distribution policy from time to time.
 
CLOSED-END FUND STRUCTURE
 
The Fund is a closed-end management investment company. Closed-end funds differ from open-end management investment companies (commonly referred to as mutual funds) in that closed-end funds generally list their shares for trading on a securities exchange and do not redeem their shares at the option of the stockholder. By comparison, mutual funds issue securities redeemable at NAV at the option of the stockholder and typically engage in a continuous offering of their shares. Mutual funds are subject to continuous asset in-flows and out-flows that can complicate portfolio management, whereas closed-end funds generally can stay more fully invested in securities consistent with the closed-end fund’s investment objective and policies. In addition, in comparison to open-end funds, closed-end funds have greater flexibility in the employment of financial leverage and in the ability to make certain types of investments, including investments in illiquid securities.
 
However, shares of closed-end funds frequently trade at a discount from their NAV. In recognition of the possibility that the Common Stock might trade at a discount to NAV and that any such discount may not be in the interest of Common Stockholders, the Board, in consultation with the Advisers, from time to time may review possible actions to reduce any such discount. The Board might consider various options to reduce the discount, such as repurchase of its Common Stock on the open market or in private transactions, the making of a tender offer for such shares or the conversion of the Fund to an open-end management investment company. There can be no assurance, however, that the Board will decide to undertake any of these actions or that, if undertaken, such actions would result in the Common Stock trading at a price equal to or close to NAV.
  
DISTRIBUTION REINVESTMENT PLAN
 
American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC (the “Plan Agent”) will act as Plan Agent for stockholders who have not elected in writing to receive dividends and distributions in cash (each a “Participant”), will open an account for each Participant under the Distribution Reinvestment Plan (“Plan”) in the same name as their then-current shares of the Fund’s common stock (“Shares”) are registered, and will put the Plan into effect for each Participant as of the first record date for a dividend or capital gains distribution.

Whenever the Fund declares a dividend or distribution with respect to the Shares, each Participant will receive such dividends and distributions in additional Shares, including fractional Shares acquired by the Plan Agent and credited to each Participant’s account. If on the payment date for a cash dividend or distribution, the net asset value is equal to or less than the market price per Share plus estimated brokerage commissions, the Plan Agent shall automatically receive such Shares, including fractions, for each Participant’s account. Except in the circumstances described in the next paragraph, the number of additional Shares to be credited to each Participant’s account shall be determined by dividing the dollar amount of the dividend or distribution payable on their Shares by the greater of the net asset value per Share determined as of the date of purchase or 95% of the then-current market price per Share on the payment date.

Should the net asset value per Share exceed the market price per Share plus estimated brokerage commissions on the payment date for a cash dividend or distribution, the Plan Agent or a broker-dealer selected by the Plan Agent shall endeavor, for a purchase period lasting until the last business day before the next date on which the Shares trade on an “ex-dividend” basis, but in no event, except as provided below, more than 30 days after the payment date, to apply the amount of such dividend or distribution on each Participant’s Shares (less their pro rata share of brokerage commissions incurred with respect to the Plan Agent’s open-market purchases in connection with the reinvestment of such dividend or distribution) to purchase Shares on the open market for each Participant’s account. No such purchases may be made more than 30 days after the payment date for such dividend or distribution except where temporary curtailment or suspension of purchase is necessary to comply with applicable provisions of federal securities laws. If, at the close of business on any day during the purchase period the net asset value per Share equals or is less than the market price per Share plus estimated brokerage commissions, the Plan Agent will not make any further open-market purchases in connection with the reinvestment of such dividend or distribution. If the Plan Agent is unable to invest the full dividend or distribution amount through open-market purchases during the purchase period, the Plan Agent shall request that, with respect to the uninvested portion of such dividend or distribution amount, the Fund issue new Shares at the close of business on the earlier of the last day of the purchase period or the first day during the purchase period on which the net asset value per Share equals or is less than the market price per Share, plus estimated brokerage commissions, such Shares to be issued in accordance with the terms specified in the third paragraph hereof. These newly issued Shares will be valued at the then-current market price per Share at the time such Shares are to be issued.

For purposes of making the reinvestment purchase comparison under the Plan, (a) the market price of the Shares on a particular date shall be the last sales price on the New York Stock Exchange (or if the Shares are not listed on the New York Stock Exchange, such other exchange on which the Shares are principally traded) on that date, or, if there is no sale on such Exchange (or if not so listed, in the over-the-counter market) on that date, then the mean between the closing bid and asked quotations for such Shares on such Exchange on such date and (b) the net asset value per Share on a particular date shall be the net asset value per Share most recently calculated by or on behalf of the Fund. All dividends, distributions and other payments (whether made in cash or Shares) shall be made net of any applicable withholding tax.

Open-market purchases provided for above may be made on any securities exchange where the Fund’s Shares are traded, in the over-the-counter market or in negotiated transactions and may be on such terms as to price, delivery and otherwise as the Plan Agent shall determine. Each Participant’s uninvested funds held by the Plan Agent will not bear interest, and it is understood that, in any event, the Plan Agent shall have no liability in connection with any inability to purchase Shares within 30 days after the initial date of such purchase as herein provided, or with the timing of any purchases effected. The Plan Agent shall have no responsibility as to the value of the Shares acquired for each Participant’s account. For the purpose of cash investments, the Plan Agent may commingle each Participant’s funds with those of other stockholders of the Fund for whom the Plan Agent similarly acts as agent, and the average price (including brokerage commissions) of all Shares purchased by the Plan Agent as Plan Agent shall be the price per Share allocable to each Participant in connection therewith.

The Plan Agent may hold each Participant’s Shares acquired pursuant to the Plan together with the Shares of other stockholders of the Fund acquired pursuant to the Plan in noncertificated form in the Plan Agent’s name or that of the Plan Agent’s nominee. The Plan Agent will forward to each Participant any proxy solicitation material and will vote any Shares so held for each Participant only in accordance with the instructions set forth on proxies returned by the Participant to the Fund.

The Plan Agent will confirm to each Participant each acquisition made for their account as soon as practicable but not later than 60 days after the date thereof. Although each Participant may from time to time have an undivided fractional interest (computed to three decimal places) in a Share, no certificates for a fractional Share will be issued. However, dividends and distributions on fractional Shares will be credited to each Participant’s account. In the event of termination of a Participant’s account under the Plan, the Plan Agent will adjust for any such undivided fractional interest in cash at the market value of the Shares at the time of termination, less the pro rata expense of any sale required to make such an adjustment.

Any Share dividends or split Shares distributed by the Fund on Shares held by the Plan Agent for Participants will be credited to their accounts. In the event that the Fund makes available to its stockholders rights to purchase additional Shares or other securities, the Shares held for each Participant under the Plan will be added to other Shares held by the Participant in calculating the number of rights to be issued to each Participant.

The Plan Agent’s service fee for handling capital gains and other distributions or income dividends will be paid by the Fund. Participants will be charged their pro rata share of brokerage commissions on all open-market purchases.

Each Participant may terminate their account under the Plan by notifying the Plan Agent in writing. Such termination will be effective immediately if the Participant’s notice is received by the Plan Agent not less than ten days prior to any dividend or distribution record date, otherwise such termination will be effective the first trading day after the payment date for such dividend or distribution with respect to any subsequent dividend or distribution. The Plan may be terminated by the Plan Agent or the Fund upon notice in writing mailed to each Participant at least 30 days prior to any record date for the payment of any dividend or distribution by the Fund.

These terms and conditions may be amended or supplemented by the Plan Agent or the Fund at any time or times but, except when necessary or appropriate to comply with applicable law or the rules or policies of the Securities and Exchange Commission or any other regulatory authority, only by mailing to each Participant appropriate written notice at least 30 days prior to the effective date thereof. The amendment or supplement shall be deemed to be accepted by each Participant unless, prior to the effective date thereof, the Plan Agent receives written notice of the termination of their account under the Plan. Any such amendment may include an appointment by the Plan Agent in its place and stead of a successor Plan Agent under these terms and conditions, with full power and authority to perform all or any of the acts to be performed by the Plan Agent under these terms and conditions. Upon any such appointment of any Plan Agent for the purpose of receiving dividends and distributions, the Fund will be authorized to pay to such successor Plan Agent, for each Participant’s account, all dividends and distributions payable on Shares held in their name or under the Plan for retention or application by such successor Plan Agent as provided in these terms and conditions.

The Plan Agent shall at all times act in good faith and agrees to use its best efforts within reasonable limits to ensure the accuracy of all services performed under this Agreement and to comply with applicable law, but assumes no responsibility and shall not be liable for loss or damage due to errors unless such error is caused by the Plan Agent’s negligence, bad faith, or willful misconduct or that of its employees.

These terms and conditions are governed by the laws of the State of Maryland.

Reinvested dividends and distributions are taxed in the same manner as cash dividends and distributions — i.e., reinvestment in additional Shares does not relieve stockholders of, or defer the need to pay, any income tax that may be payable (or that is required to be withheld) on Fund dividends and distributions. Participants should contact their tax professionals for information on how the Plan impacts their personal tax situation. For additional information about the Plan, please contact the Plan Agent by telephone at 1-866-227-2136 or by mail at 6201 15th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY, 11219 or online at www.astfinancial.com. 
 
DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STRUCTURE
 
The Fund is a closed-end, diversified management investment company registered under the laws of the State of Maryland pursuant to the Articles of Incorporation signed by Arthur C. Delibert dated March 18, 2010. The Fund is authorized to issue 1,000,000,000 shares of capital stock, par value $0.0001 per share. The Fund intends to hold
annual meetings of Stockholders so long as the Common Stock is listed on a national securities exchange and such meetings are required as a condition to such listing. An investor who acquires Common Stock in an Offer issued after the Record Date for a meeting of Stockholders will not be entitled to vote such Common Stock, or otherwise participate with respect to such Common Stock, at such meeting.
 
General
 
Set forth below is information with respect to the Fund’s outstanding capital stock as of December 31, 2021:
 
Title of Class
 
Amount
Authorized
 
Amount Held by
the Fund or for its
Account
 
Amount Outstanding
Exclusive of Common
Stock Held by the Fund
or for its Own Account
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Common Stock
 
992,397,100
 
0
 
14,665,976
 
Preferred Stock (Perpetual Preferred Shares Series A)
 
1,500
 
0
 
0
 
Preferred Stock (MRPS Series B)
 
1,400
 
0
 
0
 
Preferred Stock (MRPS Series C)
 
7,600,000
 
0
 
6,080,000
 
 
Common Stock
 
Each share of Common Stock represents an equal proportionate interest in the assets of the Fund with each other share of Common Stock in the Fund. Common Stockholders will be entitled to the payment of distributions when, as and if declared by the Board. Under the stable distribution policy, in certain circumstances, the Fund may be required to sell a portion of its investment portfolio to fund distributions. Therefore, these payments may represent a reduction of the stockholder’s principal investment. The 1940 Act or the terms of any borrowings or preferred stock may limit the payment of distributions to the Common Stockholders. Each whole Share of Common Stock shall be entitled to one (1) vote as to matters on which it is entitled to vote pursuant to the terms of the Articles of Incorporation on file with the SEC. Upon liquidation of the Fund, after paying or adequately providing for the payment of all claims and obligations of the Fund and the liquidation preference with respect to any outstanding preferred stock, and (upon receipt of such releases, indemnities and refunding agreements as they deem necessary for their protection), the directors may distribute the remaining assets of the Fund among the holders of the Common Stock.
 
In general, except as provided in the following paragraph, when there are any borrowings, including preferred stock and/or notes outstanding, the Fund may not be permitted to declare any cash distribution on its Common Stock, unless at the time of such declaration, (i) all accrued distributions on preferred stock or accrued interest on borrowings have been paid and (ii) the value of the Fund’s total assets (determined after deducting the amount of such distribution), less all liabilities and indebtedness of the Fund not represented by senior securities, is at least 300% of the aggregate amount of such securities representing indebtedness and at least 200% of the aggregate amount of securities representing indebtedness plus the aggregate liquidation value of the outstanding preferred stock (expected to equal the aggregate original purchase price of the outstanding preferred stock plus the applicable redemption premium, if any, together with any accrued and unpaid distributions thereon, whether or not earned or declared and on a cumulative basis). In addition to the requirements of the 1940 Act, the Fund may be required to comply with other asset coverage requirements as a condition of the Fund obtaining a rating of the preferred stock or notes from a NRSRO. These requirements may include an asset coverage test more stringent than under the 1940 Act. This limitation on the Fund’s ability to make distributions on its Common Stock could in certain circumstances impair the ability of the Fund to maintain its qualification for taxation as a regulated investment company for federal income tax purposes. The Fund intends, however, to the extent possible to purchase or redeem preferred stock or notes or reduce borrowings from time to time to maintain compliance with such asset coverage requirements and may pay special distributions to the holders of the preferred stock in certain circumstances in connection with any such impairment of the Fund’s status as a regulated investment company. See “Distributions.” Depending on the timing of any such redemption or repayment, the Fund may be required to pay a premium in addition to the liquidation preference of the preferred stock to the holders thereof.

Any offerings of the Fund’s Common Stock, if made, will require approval of the Board. Any additional offering will not be sold at a price per Share of Common Stock below the then current NAV (exclusive of underwriting discounts and commissions) except in connection with an offering to existing Common Stockholders or with the consent of a majority of the Fund’s outstanding Common Stockholders. The Shares of Common Stock have no preemptive rights.
 
The Fund currently issues its Common Stock without certificates.
 
The Fund is authorized to issue 1,000,000,000 Shares of Common Stock. All Shares of Common Stock have equal voting, dividend, distribution and liquidation rights. The Shares of Common Stock outstanding are, and the Shares of Common Stock issuable upon the exercise of the Rights, when issued and paid for pursuant to the terms of any offering, will be, fully paid and non-assessable. Shares of Common Stock are not redeemable and have no preemptive rights, conversion rights, cumulative voting rights or appraisal rights.
  
The Fund’s Common Stock is publicly held and is listed and traded on the NYSE American under the symbol “NHS”. The following table sets forth for the fiscal quarters indicated the highest and lowest daily prices during the applicable quarter at the close of market on the NYSE American per Share of Common Stock along with (i) the highest and lowest closing NAV and (ii) the highest and lowest premium or discount from NAV represented by such prices at the close of the market on the NYSE American. 

 
 
NYSE American
Market Price(1)
 
NAV on Date of
NYSE American
Market Price(1)
 
Market Premium/(Discount) to
NAV on Date of NYSE
American Market Price(1)
 
Quarter Ended(2)
 
High
 
Low
 
High
 
Low
 
High
 
Low
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
January 31, 2022
  $
13.20
  $
11.17
  $
12.31
  $
11.87
  7.23%
  -5.90%
 
October 31, 2021
 
$
13.16
 
$
12.47
 
$
12.35
 
$
12.58
 
 6.56%
 
-0.87%
 
July 31, 2021
 
$
13.53
 
$
12.57
 
$
12.79
 
$
12.54
 
 5.79%
 
 0.24%
 
April 30, 2021
 
$
13.05
 
$
11.88
 
$
12.69
 
$
12.66
 
 2.84%
 
-6.16%
 
January 31, 2021
 
$
12.04
 
$
10.79
 
$
12.53
 
$
11.78
 
-3.91%
 
-8.40%
 
October 31, 2020
 
$
11.46
 
$
10.75
 
$
12.02
 
$
11.74
 
-4.66%
 
-8.43%
 
July 31, 2020
 
$
11.18
 
$
9.61
 
$
11.95
 
$
10.30
 
-6.44%
 
-6.70%
 
April 30, 2020
 
$
12.72
 
$
7.14
 
$
13.03
 
$
8.07
 
-2.38%
 
-11.52%
 
January 31, 2020
 
$
12.50
 
$
11.81
 
$
13.05
 
$
12.57
 
-4.21%
 
-6.05%
 
October 31, 2019
 
$
12.09
 
$
11.57
 
$
12.84
 
$
12.47
 
-5.84%
 
-7.22%
 


(1)         Source: Bloomberg
(2)         Data presented are with respect to a short period of time and are not indicative of future performance.
 
On March 25, 2022, the Fund’s NAV was $11.08 and the last reported sale price of a Share of Common Stock on the NYSE American was $10.97, representing a discount to NAV of 0.99%.  The Fund’s Shares of Common Stock have historically traded at both a premium and discount to NAV.
 
Preferred Stock and Notes Outstanding
 
The Fund has outstanding PNs with an aggregate principal value to $19,500,000 and MRPS with an aggregate liquidation preference of $76,000,000. The PNs have a maturity date of September 18, 2023 and the MRPS have a maturity date of August 3, 2023. The interest on the PNs is accrued daily and paid quarterly. The MRPS have a liquidation preference of $12.50 per share plus any accumulated unpaid distributions, whether or not earned or declared by the Fund, but excluding interest thereon.

The Articles of Incorporation authorize the issuance of 1,000,000,000 of capital stock, including preferred stock, having a par value of $0.0001 per share, in one or more series, with rights as determined by the Board, by action of the Board without the approval of the Common Stockholders.  To the extent the Directors authorize the issuance of any preferred stock, the Directors are also permitted to amend or supplement the Articles of Incorporation, as they
deem appropriate. Any such amendment or supplement may set forth the rights, preferences, powers and privileges of such preferred stock.

Prior to issuance of additional preferred stock, the Board of Directors is required by Maryland law and by the Fund’s Charter to set the terms, preferences, conversion and other rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends or other distributions, qualifications and terms or conditions of redemption for such shares. Thus, the Board of Directors could authorize the issuance of preferred stock with terms and conditions that could have the effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a transaction or a change in control that might involve a premium price for Fund’s Common Stockholder or otherwise be in their best interest.

Under the requirements of the 1940 Act, the Fund must, immediately after the issuance of any preferred stock, have an “asset coverage” of at least 200%. Asset coverage means the ratio which the value of the total assets of the Fund, less all liability and indebtedness not represented by senior securities (as defined in the 1940 Act), bears to the aggregate amount of senior securities representing indebtedness of the Fund, if any, plus the aggregate liquidation preference of the preferred stock. If the Fund seeks a rating of the preferred stock, asset coverage requirements, in addition to those set forth in the 1940 Act, may be imposed. The liquidation value of the preferred stock is expected to equal their aggregate original purchase price plus the applicable redemption premium, if any, together with any accrued and unpaid distributions thereon (on a cumulative basis), whether or not earned or declared. The terms of the preferred stock, including their distribution rate, voting rights, liquidation preference and redemption provisions, will be determined by the Board (subject to applicable law and the Fund’s charter) if and when it authorizes the preferred stock. The Fund may issue preferred stock that provide for the periodic redetermination of the distribution rate at relatively short intervals through an auction or remarketing procedure, although the terms of the preferred stock may also enable the Fund to lengthen such intervals. At times, the distribution rate on the Fund’s preferred stock may exceed the Fund’s return after expenses on the investment of proceeds from the preferred stock, resulting in a lower rate of return to Common Stockholders than if the preferred stock were not outstanding.
 
In the event of any voluntary or involuntary liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Fund, the terms of any preferred stock may entitle the holders of preferred stock to receive a preferential liquidating distribution (expected to equal the original purchase price per share plus the applicable redemption premium, if any, together with accrued and unpaid distributions, whether or not earned or declared and on a cumulative basis) before any distribution of assets is made to Common Stockholders. After payment of the full amount of the liquidating distribution to which they are entitled, the preferred stockholders would not be entitled to any further participation in any distribution of assets by the Fund.
 
If issued, the Fund expects that holders of preferred stock, voting as a class, shall be entitled to elect at least two of the Fund’s directors. Under the 1940 Act, if at any time distributions on the preferred stock are unpaid in an amount equal to two (2) full years’ distributions thereon, the holders of all outstanding preferred stock, voting as a class, will be allowed to elect at least a majority of the Fund’s directors with the number of Directors increased appropriately to the extent necessary to effectuate such rights until all distributions in arrears have been paid or declared and set apart for payment. The 1940 Act also requires that, in addition to any approval by stockholders that might otherwise be required, the approval of the holders of a majority of any outstanding preferred stock, voting separately as a class, would be required to (1) adopt any plan of reorganization that would adversely affect the preferred stock and (2) take any action requiring a vote of security holders under Section 13(a) of the 1940 Act, including among other things, changes in the Fund’s sub-classification as a closed-end investment company or changes in its fundamental investment restrictions. In addition, if required by a NRSRO rating the preferred stock or if the Board determines it to be in the best interests of the Common Stockholders, issuance of the preferred stock may result in more restrictive provisions than required by the 1940 Act being imposed. In this regard, holders of the preferred stock may be entitled to elect a majority of the Fund’s Board in other circumstances, for example, if one payment on the preferred stock is in arrears.
 
The Fund expects that the affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of any outstanding preferred stock, voting as a separate class, will be required to amend, alter or repeal any of the preferences, rights or powers of holders of preferred stock so as to affect materially and adversely such preferences, rights or powers, or to increase or decrease the authorized number of preferred stock. The class vote of holders of preferred stock described above will in each case be in addition to any other vote required to authorize the action in question.
 
The Fund currently has ratings from an NRSRO on its Private Securities and currently intends that, as long as the Private Securities are outstanding, the composition of its portfolio will reflect guidelines established by such NRSRO. In order to maintain these ratings, the Fund is required to comply with asset coverage requirements that are currently more restrictive than those under the 1940 Act, restrictions on certain portfolio investments and investment practices, requirements that the Fund maintain a portion of its assets in short-term, high-quality investments at certain times and certain mandatory redemption or prepayment requirements relating to the Private Securities.
 
The Fund also may enter into other transactions that may give rise to a form of leverage including, among others, swaps, futures and forward contracts, options and other derivative transactions. As of the date of this prospectus, to the extent that the Fund covers its obligations under such other transactions, as described in this prospectus, such transactions should not be treated as borrowings for purposes of the 1940 Act. However, these transactions, even if covered, may represent a form of economic leverage and will create risks. Further, the Fund may incur losses on such transactions (including the entire amount of the Fund’s investment in such transaction) even if they are covered.

Subscription Rights

The Fund may issue subscription rights to holders of our common stock to purchase additional common stock.  Subscription rights may be issued independently or together with any other offered security and may or may not be transferable by the person purchasing or receiving the subscription rights. In connection with a subscription rights offering to holders of our common stock, the Fund will provide a Prospectus Supplement to Common Stockholders as of the record date set for determining the stockholders eligible to receive subscription rights in such subscription rights offering.
 
The applicable Prospectus Supplement would describe the following terms of subscription rights in respect of which this Prospectus is being delivered, along with general risks associated with subscription rights such as risks relating to dilution, market price volatility and undersubscription:
 
 
the period of time the offering would remain open (which will be open a minimum number of days such that all record holders would be eligible to participate in the offering and will not be open longer than 120 days);
 
 
the title of such subscription rights;
 
 
the exercise price for such subscription rights (or method of calculation thereof);
 
 
the number of such subscription rights issued in respect of each share of common stock;
  
 
the extent to which such subscription rights are transferable and the market on which they may be traded if they are transferable;
 
 
if applicable, a discussion of the material U.S. federal income tax considerations applicable to the issuance or exercise of such subscription rights;
 
 
the date on which the right to exercise such subscription rights will commence, and the date on which such right will expire (subject to any extension);
 
 
the extent to which such subscription rights include an over-subscription privilege with respect to unsubscribed securities and the terms of such over-subscription privilege;
 
 
 
any termination right we may have in connection with such subscription rights offering; and
 
 
any other terms of such subscription rights, including exercise, settlement and other procedures and limitations relating to the transfer and exercise of such subscription rights.
 

Each subscription right would entitle the holder of the subscription right to purchase for cash such number of shares of common stock at such exercise price as in each case is set forth in, or be determinable as set forth in, the prospectus supplement relating to the subscription rights offered thereby. Subscription rights would be exercisable at any time up to the close of business on the expiration date for such subscription rights set forth in the prospectus supplement. After the close of business on the expiration date, all unexercised subscription rights would become void.
 
Subscription rights would be exercisable as set forth in the prospectus supplement relating to the subscription rights offered thereby. Upon expiration of any rights offering and the receipt of payment and the subscription rights certificate properly completed and duly executed at the corporate trust office of the subscription rights agent or any other office indicated in a prospectus supplement the Fund would issue, as soon as practicable, the shares of common stock purchased as a result of such exercise. To the extent permissible under applicable law, the Fund may determine to offer any unsubscribed offered securities directly to persons other than Stockholders, to or through agents, underwriters or dealers or through a combination of such methods, as set forth in an applicable prospectus supplement.

REPURCHASE OF COMMON STOCK; TENDER OFFERS; CONVERSION TO OPEN-END FUND
 
Because shares of closed-end management investment companies frequently trade at a discount to their net asset values, the Board of Directors has determined that from time to time it may be in the interest of Common Stockholders for the Fund to take action. The Board of Directors, in consultation with NBIA, periodically reviews the possibility of various actions, which may include tender offers for Common Stock and/or open market repurchases and considers in connection with such review such factors as the market price of the Common Stock, the net asset value of Common Stock, the liquidity of the assets of the Fund, effect on the Fund’s expenses, whether such transactions would impair the Fund’s status as a regulated investment company or result in a failure to comply with applicable asset coverage requirements, general economic conditions and such other events or conditions, which may have a material effect on the Fund’s ability to consummate such transactions. In December 2020, the Fund purchased 25% of its then-outstanding shares of Common Stock pursuant to a tender offer it conducted at a price equal to 96% of its NAV per share determined on the day the tender offer expired. Shares of the Fund’s Common Stock that were tendered but were not purchased remain outstanding. There are no assurances that the Board of Directors will decide to undertake any additional actions or, if undertaken, that such actions will result in the Fund’s shares of Common Stock trading at a price which is equal to or approximates their net asset value.

The Fund may be converted to an open-end management investment company at any time if approved by (i) both (a) a majority of the Board of Directors, including a majority of the directors who are not “interested persons” of the Fund, as that term is defined in the 1940 Act, and (b) the holders of seventy-five percent (75%) of the outstanding shares of the Fund’s Common Stock or (ii) if approved by the affirmative vote of 75% of the directors, including a majority of the directors who are not “interested persons” of the Fund, as that term is defined in the 1940 Act, in addition to any requirements under federal or Maryland law. The composition of the Fund’s portfolio and/or its investment policies could prohibit the Fund from complying with regulations of the SEC applicable to open-end management investment companies unless significant changes in portfolio holdings, which might be difficult and could involve losses, and investment policies are made. Conversion of the Fund to an open-end management investment company also would require the redemption of any outstanding preferred stock and could require the repayment of borrowings, which would reduce the leveraged capital structure of the Fund with respect to the Common Stock. In the event of conversion, the Common Stock would cease to be listed on the NYSE American or other national securities exchange or market system. The Board believes the closed-end structure is desirable, given the Fund’s investment objective and policies. Investors should assume, therefore, that it is unlikely that the Board would vote to convert the Fund to an open-end management investment company. Common Stockholders of an open-end management investment company can require the company to redeem their stock at any time (except in certain circumstances as authorized by or under the 1940 Act) at their NAV, less such redemption charge, if any, as
might be in effect at the time of a redemption. If converted to an open-end fund, the Fund expects to pay all redemption requests in cash, but reserves the right to pay redemption requests in a combination of cash or securities. If such partial payment in securities were made, investors may incur brokerage costs in converting such securities to cash. If the Fund were converted to an open-end fund, it is likely that new Common Stock would be sold at NAV plus a sales load.

TAX MATTERS

The following discussion briefly summarizes certain rules applicable to federal income taxation of the Fund and its stockholders. This discussion does not purport to be complete or to deal with all aspects of that taxation that may be relevant to Stockholders in light of their particular circumstances. It is based on current provisions of the Code and the Treasury regulations and judicial decisions and administrative pronouncements published at the date hereof, all of which are subject to change, some of which may be retroactive. Record Date Stockholders and potential future Rights holders are urged to consult with their own tax advisers for more detailed information and for information regarding other federal tax considerations and any state, local, or foreign taxes concerning their continued investment in the Fund and of their receipt and exercise of any Rights.

The Fund has elected to be treated and to qualify each year as a regulated investment company (a “RIC”) under the Code. Accordingly, the Fund intends to satisfy certain requirements relating to sources of its income and diversification of its total assets and to distribute substantially all of its net income and net short-term capital gain (after reduction by net long-term capital loss and any available capital loss carryforwards) in accordance with the timing requirements imposed by the Code, so as to maintain its RIC status and to avoid paying U.S. federal income or excise tax thereon. To the extent it qualifies for treatment as a RIC and satisfies the above-mentioned distribution requirements, the Fund will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax on income paid to its stockholders in the form of dividends or capital gain distributions.

At least annually, the Fund intends to distribute any net capital gain (which is the excess of net long-term capital gain over net short-term capital loss) or, alternatively, to retain all or a portion of the year’s net capital gain and pay U.S. federal income tax on the retained gain. As provided under U.S. federal tax law, Common Stockholders of record as of the end of the Fund’s taxable year will include their attributable share of the retained gain in their income for the year as long-term capital gain (regardless of holding period in Common Stock), and will be entitled to a tax credit or refund for the tax paid on their behalf by the Fund. Common Stockholders of record for the retained capital gain also will be entitled to increase their tax basis in their Common Stock by an amount equal to the deemed distribution less the tax credit. Distributions of the Fund’s net capital gain (“capital gain distributions”), if any, are taxable to Common Stockholders as long-term capital gain, regardless of their holding period in Common Stock. Distributions of the Fund’s net realized short-term capital gain will be taxable as ordinary income.

If, for any calendar year, the Fund’s total distributions exceed the Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits, the excess will be treated as a return of capital to each Common Stockholder (up to the amount of the Common Stockholder’s basis in his or her Common Stock) and thereafter as gain from the sale of Common Stock (assuming Common Stock is held as a capital asset). The amount treated as a return of capital reduces the Common Stockholder’s adjusted basis in his or her Common Stock, thereby increasing his or her potential gain or reducing his or her potential loss on the subsequent sale or other disposition of his or her Common Stock. See below for a summary of the current maximum tax rates applicable to long-term capital gain (including capital gain distributions).

For federal income tax purposes, the Fund is generally permitted to carry forward a net capital loss incurred in any taxable year, for an unlimited period to offset net capital gains, if any, during its taxable years following the year of the loss. Capital losses carried forward will retain their character as either short-term or long-term capital losses. To the extent subsequent net capital gains are offset by such losses, they would not result in federal income tax liability to the Fund and would not be distributed as such to stockholders.

To qualify as a RIC for income tax purposes, the Fund must derive at least 90% of its annual gross income from dividends, interest, payments with respect to securities loans, gain from the sale or other disposition of stock, securities or foreign currencies, or other income (including, but not limited to, gain from options, futures or forward
contracts) derived with respect to its business of investing in stock, securities and currencies, and net income derived from an interest in a qualified publicly traded partnership. A “qualified publicly traded partnership” is a publicly traded partnership that meets certain requirements with respect to the nature of its income. To qualify as a RIC, the Fund must also satisfy certain requirements with respect to the diversification of its assets. The Fund must have, at the close of each quarter of the taxable year, at least 50% of the value of its total assets represented by cash, cash items, U.S. government securities, securities of other regulated investment companies, and other securities that, in respect of any one issuer, do not represent more than 5% of the value of the assets of the Fund nor more than 10% of the voting securities of that issuer. In addition, at those times not more than 25% of the value of the Fund’s assets can be invested in securities (other than U.S. government securities or the securities of other regulated investment companies) of any one issuer, or of two or more issuers, which the Fund controls and which are engaged in the same or similar trades or businesses or related trades or businesses, or of one or more qualified publicly traded partnerships. If the Fund fails to meet the annual gross income test described above, the Fund will nevertheless be considered to have satisfied the test if (i) (a) such failure is due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect and (b) the Fund reports the failure, and (ii) the Fund pays an excise tax equal to the excess non-qualifying income. If the Fund fails to meet the asset diversification test described above with respect to any quarter, the Fund will nevertheless be considered to have satisfied the requirements for such quarter if the Fund cures such failure within 6 months and either (i) such failure is de minimis or (ii) (a) such failure is due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect and (b) the Fund reports the failure and pays an excise tax.

As a RIC, the Fund generally will not be subject to federal income tax on its investment company taxable income (as that term is defined in the Code, but without regard to the deductions for dividend paid) and net capital gain (the excess of net long-term capital gain over net short-term capital loss), if any, that it distributes in each taxable year to its stockholders, provided that it distributes at least the sum of 90% of its investment company taxable income and 90% of its net tax-exempt interest income for such taxable year. The Fund intends to distribute to its stockholders, at least annually, substantially all of its investment company taxable income, net tax-exempt income and net capital gain. In order to avoid incurring a nondeductible 4% federal excise tax obligation, the Code requires that the Fund distribute (or be deemed to have distributed) by December 31 of each calendar year an amount at least equal to the sum of (i) 98% of its ordinary income for such year, (ii) 98.2% of its capital gain net income (which is the excess of its realized net long-term capital gain over its realized net short-term capital loss), generally computed on the basis of the one-year period ending on October 31 of such year, after reduction by any available capital loss carryforwards and (iii) 100% of any ordinary income and capital gain net income from the prior year (as previously computed) that were not paid out during such year and on which the Fund paid no U.S. federal income tax.

If the Fund does not qualify as a RIC for any taxable year, the Fund’s taxable income will be subject to corporate income taxes, and all distributions from earnings and profits, including distributions of net capital gain (if any), will be taxable to the stockholder as ordinary income. Such distributions generally would be eligible (i) to be treated as qualified dividend income in the case of individual and other non-corporate stockholders and (ii) for the dividends received deduction (“DRD”) in the case of corporate stockholders. In addition, in order to requalify for taxation as a RIC, the Fund may be required to recognize unrealized gain, pay substantial taxes and interest, and make certain distributions.

Certain of the Fund’s investment practices are subject to special and complex U.S. federal income tax provisions that may, among other things, (i) convert dividends that would otherwise constitute qualified dividend income into ordinary income, (ii) treat dividends that would otherwise be eligible for the corporate DRD as ineligible for such treatment, (iii) disallow, suspend or otherwise limit the allowance of certain loss or deductions, (iv) convert long-term capital gain into short-term capital gain or ordinary income, (v) convert an ordinary loss or deduction into a capital loss (the deductibility of which is more limited), (vi) cause the Fund to recognize income or gain without a corresponding receipt of cash, (vii) adversely affect when a purchase or sale of stock or securities is deemed to occur, (viii) adversely alter the characterization of certain complex financial transactions, and (ix) produce income that will not qualify as good income for purposes of the income requirement that applies to RICs. While it may not always be successful in doing so, the Fund will seek to avoid or minimize the adverse tax consequences of its investment practices.

The Fund may recognize gain (but not loss) from a constructive sale of certain “appreciated financial positions” if the Fund enters into a short sale, offsetting notional principal contract, or forward contract transaction with respect to the appreciated position or substantially identical property. Appreciated financial positions subject to this
constructive sale treatment include interests (including options and forward contracts and short sales) in stock and certain other instruments. Constructive sale treatment does not apply if the transaction is closed out not later than thirty days after the end of the taxable year in which the transaction was initiated, and the underlying appreciated securities position is held unhedged for at least the next sixty days after the hedging transaction is closed.

Gain or loss from a short sale of property generally is considered as capital gain or loss to the extent the property used to close the short sale constitutes a capital asset in the Fund’s hands. Except with respect to certain situations where the property used to close a short sale has a long-term holding period on the date the short sale is entered into, gain on short sales generally are short-term capital gain. A loss on a short sale will be treated as a long-term capital loss if, on the date of the short sale, “substantially identical property” has been held by the Fund for more than one year. In addition, entering into a short sale may result in suspension of the holding period of “substantially identical property” held by the Fund.

Gain or loss on a short sale generally will not be realized until such time as the short sale is closed. However, as described above in the discussion of constructive sales, if the Fund holds a short sale position with respect to securities that have appreciated in value, and it then acquires property that is the same as or substantially identical to the property sold short, the Fund generally will recognize gain on the date it acquires such property as if the short sale were closed on such date with such property. Similarly, if the Fund holds an appreciated financial position with respect to securities and then enters into a short sale with respect to the same or substantially identical property, the Fund generally will recognize gain as if the appreciated financial position were sold at its fair market value on the date it enters into the short sale. The subsequent holding period for any appreciated financial position that is subject to these constructive sale rules will be determined as if such position were acquired on the date of the constructive sale.

The Fund will inform Common Stockholders of the source and tax status of all distributions promptly after the close of each calendar year.

Selling Common Stockholders generally will recognize gain or loss in an amount equal to the difference between the amount realized on the sale and the Common Stockholder’s adjusted tax basis in the Common Stock sold. If Common Stock is held as a capital asset, the gain or loss will be a capital gain or loss. The maximum tax rate applicable to net capital gain recognized by individuals and other non-corporate taxpayers is (i) the same as the maximum ordinary income tax rate for gain recognized on the sale of capital assets held for one year or less (currently 37%), or (ii) for gain recognized on the sale of capital assets held for more than one year (as well as any capital gain distributions), 20%, 15%, or 0% for individuals depending on the amount of their taxable income for the year. An additional 3.8% Medicare tax will also apply in the case of some individuals.

Any loss on a disposition of Shares of Common Stock held for six months or less will be treated as a long-term capital loss to the extent of any capital gain distributions received with respect to those Shares of Common Stock. For purposes of determining whether Shares of Common Stock have been held for six months or less, the holding period is suspended for any periods during which the Common Stockholder’s risk of loss is diminished as a result of holding one or more other positions in substantially similar or related property, or through certain options or short sales. Any loss realized on a sale or exchange of Common Stock will be disallowed to the extent those Shares of Common Stock are replaced by other Common Stock within a period of 61 days beginning 30 days before and ending 30 days after the date of disposition of Common Stock (whether through the reinvestment of distributions or otherwise). In that event, the basis of the replacement Common Stock will be adjusted to reflect the disallowed loss.

An investor should be aware that, if Common Stock is purchased shortly before the record date for any taxable distribution (including a capital gain distribution), the purchase price likely will reflect the value of the distribution and the investor then would receive a taxable distribution that is likely to reduce the trading value of such Common Stock, in effect resulting in a taxable return of some of the purchase price.

Taxable distributions to certain individuals and certain other non-corporate Common Stockholders, including those who have not provided their correct taxpayer identification number and other required certifications, may be subject to “backup” U.S. federal income tax withholding at the fourth lowest rate of tax applicable to a single individual (24%). Backup withholding is not an additional tax. Any amounts withheld may be refunded or credited against such
stockholder’s U.S. federal income tax liability, if any, provided that the required information is furnished to the Internal Revenue Service.

An investor also should be aware that the benefits of the reduced tax rate applicable to long-term capital gain and qualified dividend income may be impacted by the application of the alternative minimum tax to individual stockholders.

The Fund’s investments in non-U.S. securities may be subject to foreign withholding taxes on dividends, interest, or capital gain, which will decrease the Fund’s yield. Foreign withholding taxes may be reduced under income tax treaties between the U.S. and certain foreign jurisdictions.

Depending on the number of non-U.S. stockholders in the Fund, however, such reduced foreign withholding tax rates may not be available for investments in certain jurisdictions.

The foregoing briefly summarizes some of the important U.S. federal income tax consequences to Common Stockholders of investing in Common Stock, reflects the U.S. federal tax law as of the date of this Prospectus, and does not address special tax rules applicable to certain types of investors, such as corporate and non-U.S. investors. A more complete discussion of the tax rules applicable to the Fund and the Common Stockholders can be found in the SAI that is incorporated by reference into this Prospectus. Unless otherwise noted, this discussion assumes that an investor is a U.S. person and holds Common Stock as a capital asset. This discussion is based upon current provisions of the Code, the regulations promulgated thereunder, and judicial and administrative ruling authorities, all of which are subject to change or differing interpretations by the courts or the IRS retroactively or prospectively. Investors should consult their tax advisors regarding other U.S. federal, state or local tax considerations that may be applicable in their particular circumstances, as well as any proposed tax law changes.

ANTI-TAKEOVER PROVISIONS IN THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
 
The Fund’s Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws include provisions that could limit the ability of other entities or persons to acquire control of the Fund, to cause it to engage in certain transactions or to modify its structure.  The Articles require a vote by (a) a majority of the Fund’s Directors, including a majority of the Directors who are not “interested persons” of the Fund, as defined in the 1940 Act (“Independent Directors”) and (b) the holders of at least 75% of the Fund’s capital stock outstanding and entitled to vote, except as described below, to authorize the following types of actions:


1.
Merger, consolidation or statutory share exchange of the Fund with or into any other corporation or entity, including a trust;


2.
Issuance of any securities of the Fund to any Principal Stockholder for cash, except as part of an offering in which the Principal Stockholder has no special right to participate as compared to (1) other holders of the same class of stock, or (2) investors at large;


3.
Sale, lease, or exchange of all or any substantial part of the assets of the Fund to any Principal Stockholder (except assets having an aggregate fair market value of less than $1,000,000, aggregating for the purposes of such computation all assets sold, leased, or exchanged in any series of similar transactions within a twelve-month period);


4.
Sale, lease, or exchange to the Fund, in exchange for securities of the Fund, of any assets of any Principal Stockholder (except assets having an aggregate fair market value of less than $1,000,000, aggregating for the purposes of such computation all assets sold, leased, or exchanged in any series of similar transactions within a twelve-month period);


5.
The conversion of the Fund from a closed-end investment company to an open-end investment company;


6.
A change in the nature of the business of the Fund so that it would no longer be an investment company registered under the 1940 Act; or


7.
The dissolution or liquidation of the Fund.

The term “Principal Stockholder” shall mean any corporation, person, entity, or group (within the meaning of Rule 13d-5 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934), which is the beneficial owner, directly or indirectly, of more than five percent (5%) of the outstanding shares of the capital stock of the Fund and shall include any affiliate or associate, as such terms are defined in clause (2) below, of a Principal Stockholder.  For the purposes of this Article, in addition to the shares of capital stock which a corporation, person, entity, or group beneficially owns directly, any corporation, person, entity, or group shall be deemed to be the beneficial owner of any shares of capital stock of the Fund (1) which it has the right to acquire pursuant to any agreement or upon exercise of conversion rights or warrants, or otherwise or (2) which are beneficially owned, directly or indirectly (including shares deemed owned through application of clause (1) above), by any other corporation, person, entity, or group with which it or its “affiliate” or “associate,” as those terms are defined in Rule 12b-2 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, has any agreement, arrangement, or understanding for the purpose of acquiring, holding, voting, or disposing of capital stock of the Fund, or which is its “affiliate” or “associate” as so defined.  For purposes of determining a Principal Stockholder, calculation of the outstanding shares of capital stock of the Fund shall not include shares deemed owned through application of clause (1) above.

The percentage vote required under these provisions is higher than that required under Maryland law or by the 1940 Act. The Board believes that the provisions of the Articles relating to such a higher vote threshold are in the best interest of the Fund and its Common Stockholders. Even if agreed to by the Fund, however, certain of the transactions described above may be prohibited by the 1940 Act unless exemptive or other relief is sought from the SEC. In addition, preferred stockholders vote together with Common Stockholders on all matters on which Common Stockholders vote. The 1940 Act requires approval of the holders of a majority of the outstanding preferred stock, tallied separately, for any conversion from a closed-end to an open-end management investment company. As the 1940 Act also prohibits doing indirectly what cannot be done directly, a vote of the preferred stockholders may be required to effect some of the other transactions described above if the effective result would be conversion of the Fund from a closed-end to an open-end structure.

The Board is classified into three classes, each with a term of three years with only one class of Directors standing for election in any year. Such classification may prevent replacement of a majority of the Directors for up to a two-year period. Directors may be removed from office only for cause and only by vote of the holders of at least 75% of the stock entitled to be voted for such Director in an election of directors.

The Fund has opted in to the Maryland Business Combination Act. In general, the Maryland Business Combination Act prohibits an interested stockholder (a stockholder that holds 10% or more of the voting power of the outstanding stock of the corporation) of a Maryland corporation, or affiliates of such interested stockholder, from engaging in a business combination (generally defined to include a merger, consolidation, share exchange, sale of a substantial amount of assets, a transfer of the corporation’s securities and similar transactions to or with the interested stockholder or an entity affiliated with the interested stockholder) with the corporation for a period of five years after the most recent date on which the interested stockholder became an interested stockholder.

While some of the provisions described above are permitted by Maryland law, certain of the provisions described above are neither permitted nor prohibited by Maryland law. A final judgment by a court about these provisions has not been made as of the date of this Prospectus and it is not clear what judgment a court would reach regarding these provisions.

The Fund has opted in to the Maryland Control Share Acquisition Act (the “MCSAA”), which provides that control shares of a Maryland corporation acquired in a control share acquisition have no voting rights except to the extent approved by a vote of two-thirds of the votes entitled to be cast on the matter. Stock owned by the acquirer, by officers of the acquirer or by an employee of the acquirer who is also a director of the acquirer are excluded from stock entitled to vote on the matter. Control shares are voting stock of stock which, if aggregated with all other stock of stock owned by the acquirer, or in respect of which the acquirer is able to exercise or direct the exercise of voting power (except solely by virtue of a revocable proxy), would entitle the acquirer to exercise voting power in electing directors within one of the following ranges of voting power: (i) one-tenth or more but less than one-third; (ii) one-third or more but less than a majority, or (iii) a majority or more of all voting power.  Control shares do not include
stock the acquiring person is then entitled to vote as a result of having previously obtained stockholder approval. A control share acquisition means the acquisition of control shares, subject to certain exceptions.

A person who has made or proposes to make a control share acquisition may compel the board of directors of the corporation to call a special meeting of stockholders to be held within 50 days of demand to consider the voting rights of the stock. The right to compel the calling of a special meeting is subject to the satisfaction of certain conditions, including an undertaking to pay the expenses of the meeting. If no request for a meeting is made, the corporation may itself present the question at any stockholders meeting.

If voting rights are not approved at the meeting or if the acquiring person does not deliver an acquiring person statement as required by the MCSAA, then the corporation may redeem for fair value any or all of the control shares, except those for which voting rights have previously been approved. The right of the corporation to redeem control shares is subject to certain conditions and limitations. Fair value is determined, without regard to the absence of voting rights for the control shares, as of the date of the last control share acquisition by the acquirer or of any meeting of stockholders at which the voting rights of the stock are considered and not approved. If voting rights for control shares are approved at a stockholders meeting and the acquirer becomes entitled to vote a majority of the stock entitled to vote, all other stockholders may exercise appraisal rights. The fair value of the stock as determined for purposes of appraisal rights may not be less than the highest price per share paid by the acquirer in the control share acquisition.

Reference should be made to the Articles on file with the SEC for the full text of these provisions. See the SAI under “Certain Provisions in the Articles of Incorporation” for a discussion of the voting requirements applicable to certain other transactions.

CUSTODIAN, DIVIDEND PAYING AGENT, TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
 
State Street Bank and Trust Company serves as Custodian for the Fund. The Custodian holds cash, securities, and other assets of the Fund as required by the 1940 Act and also provides certain Fund accounting services. The principal business address of State Street is One Lincoln Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02111. American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC serves as Transfer Agent, Dividend Paying Agent and Registrar. The principal business address of American Stock Transfer & Trust Company is 6201 15th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11219.

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

The Fund may sell Common Stock, including to existing shareholders in a rights offering, through underwriters or dealers, directly to one or more purchasers (including existing shareholders in a rights offering), through agents, to or through underwriters or dealers, or through a combination of any such methods of sale. The applicable Prospectus Supplement will identify any underwriter or agent involved in the offer and sale of the Fund’s Securities, any sales loads, discounts, commissions, fees or other compensation paid to any underwriter, dealer or agent, the offering price, net proceeds and use of proceeds and the terms of any sale. In the case of a rights offering, the applicable Prospectus Supplement will set forth the number of shares of Common Stock issuable upon the exercise of each right and the other terms of such rights offering.

The distribution of Securities may be effected from time to time in one or more transactions at a fixed price or prices, which may be changed, at prevailing market prices at the time of sale, at prices related to such prevailing market prices, or at negotiated prices. Sales of shares of Common Stock may be made in transactions that are deemed to be “at the market,” as defined in Rule 415 under the Securities Act, including sales made directly on an exchange or sales made to or through a market maker other than on an exchange.

The Fund may sell its Securities directly to, and solicit offers from, institutional investors or others who may be deemed to be underwriters as defined in the Securities Act for any resales of the Securities. In this case, no underwriters or agents would be involved. The Fund may use electronic media, including the Internet, to sell offered Securities directly.

In connection with the sale of Securities, underwriters or agents may receive compensation in the form of discounts, concessions or commissions. Underwriters may sell Securities to or through dealers, and such dealers may receive compensation in the form of discounts, concessions or commissions from the underwriters and/or commissions from the purchasers for whom they may act as agents. Underwriters, dealers and agents that participate in the distribution of the Securities may be deemed to be underwriters under the Securities Act, and any discounts and commissions received and any profit realized by them on the resale of Securities may be deemed to be underwriting discounts and commissions under the Securities Act. Any such underwriter or agent will be identified and any such compensation received will be described in the applicable Prospectus Supplement. The maximum amount of compensation to be received by any Financial Industry Regulatory Authority member or independent broker-dealer will not exceed eight percent for the sale of any securities being offered pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act. The Fund will not pay any compensation to any underwriter or agent in the form of warrants, options, consulting or structuring fees or similar arrangements. In connection with any rights offering to existing shareholders, we may enter into a standby underwriting arrangement with one or more underwriters pursuant to which the underwriter(s) will purchase shares of Common Stock remaining unsubscribed after the rights offering.

If a Prospectus Supplement so indicates, we may grant the underwriters an option to purchase additional shares of Common Stock at the public offering price, less the underwriting discounts and commissions, within 45 days from the date of the Prospectus Supplement, to cover any over-allotments.

Under agreements into which we may enter, underwriters, dealers and agents who participate in the distribution of Securities may be entitled to indemnification by the Fund against certain liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act. Underwriters, dealers and agents may engage in transactions with the Fund, or perform services for the Fund, in the ordinary course of business.

To the extent permitted under the Investment Company Act and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, any underwriters may from time to time act as brokers or dealers and receive fees in connection with the execution of the Fund’s portfolio transactions after such underwriters have ceased to be underwriters and, subject to certain restrictions, each may act as a broker while it is an underwriter.

A Prospectus and accompanying Prospectus Supplement in electronic form may be made available on the websites maintained by underwriters. Such underwriters may agree to allocate a number of Securities for sale to their online brokerage account holders. Such allocations of Securities for Internet distributions will be made on the same basis as other allocations. In addition, Securities may be sold by the underwriters to securities dealers who resell securities to online brokerage account holders.

In order to comply with the securities laws of certain states, if applicable, our Securities offered hereby will be sold in such jurisdictions only through registered or licensed brokers or dealers.
 
LEGAL OPINIONS
 
Certain legal matters in connection with the Common Stock will be passed on for the Fund by K&L Gates LLP.
 
INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
 
The financial statements as of and for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021 are incorporated by reference in the SAI have been so incorporated in reliance on the report of Ernst & Young LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, given on the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting. The principal place of business of Ernst & Young is located at 200 Clarendon Street, Boston, MA 02116. Ernst & Young provides audit services, tax return preparation, and consultation with respect to the preparation of filings with the SEC.
 
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
The Prospectus and the SAI do not contain all of the information set forth in the registration statement that the Fund has filed with the SEC (File No. 811-22396) and available at www.sec.gov. The SAI can be obtained without charge by calling (877) 461-1899.
 
Statements contained in this Prospectus as to the contents of any contract or other documents referred to are not necessarily complete, and, in each instance, reference is made to the copy of such contract or other document filed as an exhibit to the registration statement of which this Prospectus forms a part, each such statement being qualified in all respects by such reference. To the extent they would be material to an investor’s decision to invest in the Offer, the terms of any such contract or other document are described in the Prospectus.

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR THE STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

   Page
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE, POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS
1
INVESTMENT STRATEGIES, TECHNIQUES AND RISKS
4
PORTFOLIO TRADING AND TURNOVER RATE
51
MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND
53
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION SERVICES
72
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
78
DISTRIBUTIONS
83
DESCRIPTION OF SHARES
84
CERTAIN PROVISIONS IN THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
86
REPURCHASE OF COMMON STOCK; TENDER OFFERS; CONVERSION TO OPEN-END FUND
87
TAX MATTERS
89
REPORTS TO STOCKHOLDERS
96
CUSTODIAN, TRANSFER AGENT AND DIVIDEND DISBURSEMENT AGENT
96
INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
96
COUNSEL
96
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
96
REGISTRATION STATEMENT
97
APPENDIX A RATINGS
A-1

60

The information in this statement of additional information is not complete and may be changed.
We may not sell these securities until the registration statement filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission is effective. This statement of additional information is not an offer to sell
these securities and is not soliciting an offer to buy these securities in any state where the offer or
sale is not permitted.

Subject To Completion
Preliminary Statement of Additional Information Dated April 4, 2022

NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND INC.
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc. (the “Fund”) is a closed-end, diversified management investment company.

This Statement of Additional Information (“SAI”) relating to shares of common stock of the Fund (“Common Stock”) is not a prospectus and should be read in conjunction with the Fund’s Prospectus relating to Common Stock dated April 4, 2022 (“Prospectus”). This SAI does not include all information that a prospective investor should consider before purchasing Common Stock, and investors should obtain and read the Fund’s Prospectus prior to purchasing such shares. You can get a free copy of the Prospectus from Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC (“NBIA” or the “Manager”), 1290 Avenue of the Americas, 22nd Floor, New York, NY 10104-0002 or by calling 877-461-1899. You may also obtain a copy of the Prospectus on the website (http://www.sec.gov) of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). Capitalized terms used but not defined in this SAI have the meanings ascribed to them in the Prospectus.

No person has been authorized to give any information or to make any representations not contained in the Prospectus or in this SAI in connection with the offering made by the Prospectus, and, if given or made, such information or representations must not be relied upon as having been authorized by the Fund. The Prospectus and this SAI do not constitute an offering by the Fund in any jurisdiction in which such offering may not lawfully be made.

The “Neuberger Berman” name and logo are registered service marks of Neuberger Berman Group LLC. “Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC” and the Fund name in this SAI are either service marks or registered service marks of Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC.

This Statement of Additional Information is dated April 4, 2022.


©2022 Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC. All rights reserved.


TABLE OF CONTENTS



INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE, POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS

The investment objective and general investment policies of the Fund are described in the Fund’s Prospectus relating to the Common Stock.

Additional information concerning the characteristics of certain of the Fund’s investments is set forth below. NBIA is responsible for the day-to-day management of the assets of the Fund.

Unless otherwise specified, the investment objective, policies and limitations of the Fund are not fundamental. Any investment policy or limitation that is not fundamental may be changed by the Board of Directors of the Fund (the “Board”) without stockholder approval. The fundamental investment policies and limitations of the Fund may not be changed without the approval of the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of Common Stock and, if outstanding, preferred stock (“Preferred Stock”) voting as a single class, as well as by the vote of the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of Preferred Stock tabulated separately. A “majority of the outstanding” shares means (i) 67% or more of the shares present at a meeting, if the holders of more than 50% of the shares are present or represented by proxy, or (ii) more than 50% of the shares, whichever of (i) or (ii) is less. These percentages are specified by the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (“1940 Act”).

Unless otherwise indicated, any investment policy or limitation that involves a maximum percentage of securities or assets will not be considered exceeded unless the percentage limitation is exceeded immediately after, and because of, a transaction by the Fund. If, because of changes in the value of the Fund’s portfolio, the asset coverage for any notes (“Notes”) or other borrowings (which, for the sake of clarity, do not include preferred stock) were to fall below 300%, this would limit the Fund’s ability to pay dividends and other distributions, and, therefore, the Fund intends to restore the 300% asset coverage as soon as practical in light of the circumstances.

The Fund’s fundamental investment policies and limitations are as follows:

1.          Borrowing. The Fund may not borrow money in excess of 33 1/3% of its total assets (including the amount of money borrowed) minus liabilities (other than the amount borrowed), except that the Fund may borrow up to an additional 5% of its total assets for temporary purposes.

2.          Commodities. The Fund may not purchase physical commodities or contracts thereon, except to the extent permitted under the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder, any applicable interpretations or modifications by the SEC, the SEC staff or other authority with appropriate jurisdiction, or exemptive or other relief or permission from the SEC, SEC staff or other authority, or unless acquired as a result of the ownership of securities or instruments, but this restriction shall not prohibit the Fund from purchasing futures contracts, options (including options on futures contracts, but excluding options or futures contracts on physical commodities other than foreign currency), foreign currencies or forward contracts, swaps, caps, collars, floors and other financial instruments or from investing in securities of any kind, including, for the sake of clarity, securities of companies whose principal or only business consists of investing in, owning, holding, extracting, transporting, processing, selling and/or dealing in or with physical commodities of any kind.

For purposes of the limitation on commodities, the Fund does not consider foreign
currencies or forward contracts to be physical commodities.

3.          Diversification. The Fund is non-diversified under the 1940 Act.1

4.          Industry Concentration. The Fund may not purchase any security if, as a result, 25% or more of its total assets (taken at current value) would be invested in the securities of issuers having their principal business activities in the same industry. This limitation does not apply to securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities (“U.S. Government and Agency Securities”).

5.           Lending. The Fund may not lend any security or make any other loan if, as a result, more than 33 1/3% of its total assets (taken at current value) would be lent to other parties, except, in accordance with its investment objective, policies, and limitations, (i) through the purchase of a portion of an issue of debt securities, loans, loan participations or other forms of direct debt instruments or (ii) by engaging in repurchase agreements.

6.          Real Estate. The Fund may not purchase real estate unless acquired as a result of the ownership of securities or instruments, but this restriction shall not prohibit the Fund from purchasing securities issued by entities or investment vehicles that own or deal in real estate or interests therein or instruments secured by real estate or interests therein.

7.          Senior Securities. The Fund may not issue senior securities, except as permitted by (i) the 1940 Act, the rules and regulations thereunder or any applicable interpretations or modifications by the SEC, the SEC staff or other authority with appropriate jurisdiction, or (ii) exemptive or other relief or permission from the SEC, SEC staff or other authority.

8.          Underwriting. The Fund may not underwrite securities of other issuers, except to the extent that the Fund, in disposing of portfolio securities, may be deemed to be an underwriter within the meaning of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (“1933 Act”).

Under the 1940 Act, a “senior security” does not include any promissory note or evidence of indebtedness regarding a loan for temporary purposes only and in an amount not exceeding 5% of the value of the total assets of the issuer at the time the loan is made. A loan is presumed to be for temporary purposes if it is repaid within sixty days and is not extended or renewed.  Any Preferred Stock, if outstanding, would be considered senior securities under the 1940 Act. The Fund may only issue Preferred Stock if the asset coverage (as defined in the 1940 Act) with respect to Preferred Stock would be at least 200% after such issuance.

To the extent the Fund covers its commitment under a derivative instrument by the segregation of assets determined by the Manager, as appropriate, to be liquid and/or by holding instruments representing offsetting commitments, such instrument will not be considered a “senior security” for purposes of the asset coverage requirements otherwise applicable to borrowings by the Fund or the Fund’s issuance, if any, of Preferred Stock.

1  Under the 1940 Act, the status of a fund that was registered as non-diversified may, under certain circumstances, change to that of a diversified fund. The Fund is currently a diversified fund. 

The Fund interprets its policies with respect to borrowing and lending to permit such activities as may be lawful for the Fund, to the fullest extent permitted by the 1940 Act or by any rules, exemptions or interpretations thereunder that may be adopted, granted or issued by the SEC.

If rating agencies assign different ratings to the same security, the Manager will determine which rating it believes best reflects the security’s quality and risk at that time, which may be the highest of the several assigned ratings.

The Fund has ratings for its Preferred Stock and Notes. In order to maintain these ratings, the Fund is required to comply with investment quality, diversification and other guidelines established by the rating agency, which may change over time. Such guidelines currently are more restrictive than the restrictions set forth above.  The Fund does not believe that such guidelines have a material adverse effect on its Common Stockholders or its ability to achieve its investment objective.

The Fund is also subject to the following non-fundamental restrictions and policies, which may be changed by the Board of Directors. The Fund must:

1. Diversification. The Fund must diversify its holdings so that, at the end of each quarter of the Fund’s taxable year, (a) at least 50% of the value of the Fund’s total assets is represented by cash and cash items, securities of other regulated investment companies, U.S. government securities and other securities, with such other securities limited, in respect of any one issuer, to an amount not greater than 5% of the value of the Fund’s total assets and not greater than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of such issuer, and (b) not more than 25% of the value of the Fund’s total assets is invested in the securities (other than U.S. government securities or securities of other regulated investment companies) of any one issuer or any two or more issuers that the Fund controls and which are determined to be engaged in the same, similar or related trades or businesses.

2. Investment Company Securities. The Fund may not invest in securities of other investment companies, except to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act and the rules thereunder, or as may be permitted by an order of the SEC under the 1940 Act, or other relief from the provisions of the 1940 Act.

With respect to these investment restrictions and other policies described in this SAI or the Proxy Statement/Prospectus (except the Fund’s policies on borrowings and the issuance of senior securities set forth above), if a percentage restriction is adhered to at the time of an investment or transaction, a later change in percentage resulting from a change in the values of investments or the value of the Fund’s assets, unless otherwise stated, will not constitute a violation of such restriction or policy.

Cash Management and Temporary Defensive Positions. In anticipation of or in response to adverse market conditions, for cash management purposes, during a reasonable start-up period following the completion of this offering, during the wind-down period, or for defensive purposes, the Fund may invest up to 100% of its total assets in cash or cash equivalents, U.S. Government and Agency Securities, commercial paper, and certain other money market instruments, as well as repurchase agreements collateralized by the foregoing. In such a case, the Fund may not be pursuing, and may not achieve, its investment objective, and Common Stockholders may be
adversely affected.

INVESTMENT STRATEGIES, TECHNIQUES AND RISKS

The following information supplements the discussion of the Fund’s investment objective, policies and techniques in the Prospectus. The Fund may make the following investments, among others, some of which are part of its principal investment strategies and some of which are not. The principal risks of the Fund’s principal strategies are discussed in the Prospectus. The Fund may not buy all of the types of securities or use all of the investment techniques that are described.

Fixed Income Securities. Fixed income securities are subject to the risk of an issuer’s inability to meet principal and interest payments on its obligations (“credit risk”) and are subject to price volatility due to such factors as interest rate sensitivity (“interest rate risk”), market perception of the creditworthiness of the issuer, and market liquidity (“market risk”). The value of the Fund’s fixed income investments is likely to decline in times of rising market interest rates. Conversely, the value of the Fund’s fixed income investments is likely to rise in times of declining.

Lower-rated securities are more likely to react to developments affecting market and credit risk than are more highly rated securities, which react primarily to movements in the general level of interest rates.  Debt securities in the lowest rating categories may involve a substantial risk of default or may be in default. Changes in economic conditions or developments regarding the individual issuer are more likely to cause price volatility and weaken the capacity of the issuer of such securities to make principal and interest payments than is the case for higher-grade debt securities. An economic downturn affecting the issuer may result in an increased incidence of default. The market for lower-rated securities may be thinner and less active than for higher-rated securities. Pricing of thinly traded securities requires greater judgment than pricing of securities for which market transactions are regularly reported. Odd lots may trade at lower prices than institutional round lots.

Ratings of Fixed Income Securities.  The Fund may purchase securities rated by S&P, Moody’s, Fitch, Inc. or any other nationally recognized statistical rating organization (“NRSRO”) (please see the Prospectuses for further information). The ratings of an NRSRO represent its opinion as to the quality of securities it undertakes to rate. Ratings are not absolute standards of quality; consequently, securities with the same maturity, duration, coupon, and rating may have different yields. In addition, NRSROs are subject to an inherent conflict of interest because they are often compensated by the same issuers whose securities they rate.  Although the Fund may rely on the ratings of any NRSRO, the Fund refer primarily to ratings assigned by S&P, Moody’s, and Fitch, Inc., which are described in Appendix A.  The Fund may also invest in unrated securities that have been determined by the Manager to be comparable in quality to the rated securities in which the Fund may permissibly invest.

High-Quality Debt Securities. High-quality debt securities are securities that have received from at least one NRSRO, such as S&P, Moody’s or Fitch, Inc., a rating in one of the two highest rating categories (the highest category in the case of commercial paper) or, if not rated by any NRSRO, such as U.S. Government and Agency Securities, have been determined by the Manager to be of comparable quality.

Investment Grade Debt Securities.  Investment grade debt securities are securities that have received, from at least one NRSRO that has rated it, a rating in one of the four highest rating categories or, if not rated by any NRSRO, have been determined by the Manager to be of comparable quality. Moody’s deems securities rated in its fourth highest rating category (Baa) to have speculative characteristics; a change in economic factors could lead to a weakened capacity of the issuer to repay. If a security receives one rating in one of the four highest rating categories and another rating below the fourth highest rating category, it will be considered investment grade.

Duration and Maturity. Duration is a measure of the sensitivity of debt securities to changes in market interest rates, based on the entire cash flow associated with the securities, including payments occurring before the final repayment of principal.

The Manager may utilize duration as a tool in portfolio selection instead of the more traditional measure known as “term to maturity.” “Term to maturity” measures only the time until a debt security provides its final payment, taking no account of the pattern of the security’s payments prior to maturity. Duration incorporates a bond’s yield, coupon interest payments, final maturity and call features into one measure. Duration therefore provides a more accurate measurement of a bond’s likely price change in response to a given change in market interest rates. The longer the duration, the greater the bond’s price movement will be as interest rates change. For any fixed income security with interest payments occurring prior to the payment of principal, duration is always less than maturity.

Futures, options and options on futures have durations which are generally related to the duration of the securities underlying them. Holding long futures or call option positions will lengthen the Fund’s duration by approximately the same amount as would holding an equivalent amount of the underlying securities. Short futures or put options have durations roughly equal to the negative of the duration of the securities that underlie these positions, and have the effect of reducing portfolio duration by approximately the same amount as would selling an equivalent amount of the underlying securities.

There are some situations where even the standard duration calculation does not properly reflect the interest rate exposure of a security. For example, floating and variable rate securities often have final maturities of ten or more years; however, their interest rate exposure corresponds to the frequency of the coupon reset. Another example where the interest rate exposure is not properly captured by duration is the case of mortgage-backed securities. The stated final maturity of such securities is generally 30 years, but current and expected prepayment rates are critical in determining the securities’ interest rate exposure. In these and other similar situations, the Manager, where permitted, will use more sophisticated analytical techniques that incorporate the economic life of a security into the determination of its interest rate exposure.

Lower-Rated Debt Securities. Lower-rated debt securities or “junk” or “junk bonds” are those rated below the fourth highest category (including those securities rated as low as D by S&P) or unrated securities of comparable quality.  Securities rated below investment grade are often considered to be speculative. These securities have poor protection with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and repay principal. Lower-rated debt securities generally offer a higher current yield than that available for investment grade issues with similar maturities, but they may involve significant risk under adverse conditions. In particular, adverse changes in general economic conditions and in the industries in which the issuers are engaged and changes in the financial condition of the issuers are more likely to cause price volatility and weaken the capacity of the issuer
to make principal and interest payments than is the case for higher-grade debt securities. These securities are susceptible to default or decline in market value due to real or perceived adverse economic and business developments relating to the issuer, market interest rates and market liquidity. In addition, the Fund that invests in lower-quality securities may incur additional expenses to the extent recovery is sought on defaulted securities. Because of the many risks involved in investing in lower-rated debt securities, the success of such investments is dependent on the credit analysis of the Manager.

During periods of economic downturn or rising interest rates, highly leveraged issuers may experience financial stress which could adversely affect their ability to make payments of interest and principal and increase the possibility of default. In addition, such issuers may not have more traditional methods of financing available to them and may be unable to repay debt at maturity by refinancing. The risk of loss due to default by such issuers is significantly greater because such securities frequently are unsecured and subordinated to the prior payment of senior indebtedness.

At certain times in the past, the market for lower-rated debt securities has expanded rapidly, and its growth generally paralleled a long economic expansion. In the past, the prices of many lower-rated debt securities declined substantially, reflecting an expectation that many issuers of such securities might experience financial difficulties. As a result, the yields on lower-rated debt securities rose dramatically. However, such higher yields did not reflect the value of the income stream that holders of such securities expected, but rather the risk that holders of such securities could lose a substantial portion of their value as a result of the issuers’ financial restructuring or defaults. There can be no assurance that such declines will not recur.

The market for lower-rated debt issues generally is thinner or less active than that for higher quality securities, which may limit the Fund’s ability to sell such securities at fair value in response to changes in the economy or financial markets. Judgment may play a greater role in pricing such securities than it does for more liquid securities. Adverse publicity and investor perceptions, whether or not based on fundamental analysis, may also decrease the values and liquidity of lower rated debt securities, especially in a thinly traded market.

The Fund may invest in securities whose ratings imply an imminent risk of default with respect to such payments.  Issuers of securities in default may fail to resume principal or interest payments, in which case the Fund may lose its entire investment.

See Appendix A for further information about the ratings of debt securities assigned by S&P, Fitch, Inc., and Moody’s.

U.S. Government and Agency Securities.  “U.S. Government Securities” are obligations of the Treasury Department backed by the full faith and credit of the United States.  During times of market turbulence, investors may turn to the safety of securities issued or guaranteed by the Treasury Department, causing the prices of these securities to rise and their yields to decline.  As a result of this and other market influences, yields of short-term Treasury Department debt instruments are currently near historical lows.

“U.S. Government Agency Securities” are issued or guaranteed by U.S. Government agencies or by instrumentalities of the U.S. Government, such as Ginnie Mae (also known as the Government National Mortgage Association), Fannie Mae (also known as the Federal National Mortgage
Association), Freddie Mac (also known as the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation), SLM Corporation (formerly, the Student Loan Marketing Association) (commonly known as “Sallie Mae”), Federal Home Loan Banks (“FHLB”), and the Tennessee Valley Authority.  Some U.S. Government Agency Securities are supported by the full faith and credit of the United States, while others may be supported by the issuer’s ability to borrow from the Treasury Department, subject to the Treasury Department’s discretion in certain cases, or only by the credit of the issuer.  Accordingly, there is at least a possibility of default.  U.S. Government Agency Securities include U.S. Government agency mortgage-backed securities.  (See “Mortgage-Backed Securities” above.)  The market prices of U.S. Government Agency Securities are not guaranteed by the U.S. Government and generally fluctuate inversely with changing interest rates.

U.S. Government Agency Securities are deemed to include (i) securities for which the payment of principal and interest is backed by an irrevocable letter of credit issued by the U.S. Government, its agencies, authorities or instrumentalities and (ii) participations in loans made to foreign governments or their agencies that are so guaranteed.  The secondary market for certain of these participations is extremely limited.  In the absence of a suitable secondary market, such participations may therefore be regarded as illiquid.

The Fund may invest in separately traded principal and interest components of securities issued or guaranteed by the Treasury Department.  The principal and interest components of selected securities are traded independently under the Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities (“STRIPS”) program.  Under the STRIPS program, the principal and interest components are individually numbered and separately issued by the Treasury Department at the request of depository financial institutions, which then trade the component parts independently.  The market prices of STRIPS generally are more volatile than that of Treasury Department bills with comparable maturities.

Policies and Limitations.  The Fund has no specific limits or requirements relating to the amount of assets invested in U.S. Government and Agency Securities; however, the Fund must invest according to its investment objective and policies.

Real Estate-Related Instruments. The Fund will not invest directly in real estate, but the Fund may invest in securities issued by real estate companies. Investments in the securities of companies in the real estate industry subject the Fund to the risks associated with the direct ownership of real estate. These risks include declines in the value of real estate, risks associated with general and local economic conditions, possible lack of availability of mortgage funds, overbuilding, extended vacancies of properties, increased competition, increase in property taxes and operating expenses, changes in zoning laws, losses due to costs resulting from the clean-up of environmental problems, liability to third parties for damages resulting from environmental problems, casualty or condemnation losses, limitation on rents, changes in neighborhood values and the appeal of properties to tenants, and changes in interest rates. In addition, certain real estate valuations, including residential real estate values, are influenced by market sentiments, which can change rapidly and could result in a sharp downward adjustment from current valuation levels.
Real estate-related instruments include securities of real estate investment trusts (also known as “REITs”), commercial and residential mortgage-backed securities and real estate financings. Such instruments are sensitive to factors such as real estate values and property taxes, interest rates, cash flow of underlying real estate assets, overbuilding, and the management skill and creditworthiness of
the issuer. Real estate-related instruments may also be affected by tax and regulatory requirements, such as those relating to the environment.

REITs are sometimes informally characterized as equity REITs, mortgage REITs and hybrid REITs. An equity REIT invests primarily in the fee ownership or leasehold ownership of land and buildings and derives its income primarily from rental income. An equity REIT may also realize capital gains (or losses) by selling real estate properties in its portfolio that have appreciated (or depreciated) in value. A mortgage REIT invests primarily in mortgages on real estate, which may secure construction, development or long-term loans, and derives its income primarily from interest payments on the credit it has extended. A hybrid REIT combines the characteristics of equity REITs and mortgage REITs, generally by holding both ownership interests and mortgage interests in real estate.
REITs (especially mortgage REITs) are subject to interest rate risk. Rising interest rates may cause REIT investors to demand a higher annual yield, which may, in turn, cause a decline in the market price of the equity securities issued by a REIT. Rising interest rates also generally increase the costs of obtaining financing, which could cause the value of the Fund’s REIT investments to decline. During periods when interest rates are declining, mortgages are often refinanced. Refinancing may reduce the yield on investments in mortgage REITs. In addition, because mortgage REITs depend on payment under their mortgage loans and leases to generate cash to make distributions to their shareholders, investments in such REITs may be adversely affected by defaults on such mortgage loans or leases.
REITs are dependent upon management skill, are not diversified, and are subject to heavy cash flow dependency, defaults by borrowers, and self-liquidation. Domestic REITs are also subject to the possibility of failing to qualify for tax-free “pass-through” of distributed net income and net realized gains under the Code and failing to maintain exemption from the 1940 Act.
REITs are subject to management fees and other expenses. Therefore, investments in REITs will cause the Fund to bear its proportionate share of the costs of the REITs’ operations. At the same time, the Fund will continue to pay its own management fees and expenses with respect to all of its assets, including any portion invested in REITs.
Direct Debt Instruments including Loans, Loan Assignments, and Loan Participations. Direct debt includes interests in loans, notes and other interests in amounts owed to financial institutions by borrowers, such as companies and governments, including emerging market countries. Direct debt instruments are interests in amounts owed by corporate, governmental, or other borrowers (including emerging market countries) to lenders or lending syndicates. Purchasers of loans and other forms of direct indebtedness depend primarily upon the creditworthiness of the borrower for payment of principal and interest. The borrower may be in financial distress or may default. If the Fund does not receive scheduled interest or principal payments on such indebtedness, the Fund’s share price and yield could be adversely affected. Participations in debt instruments may involve a risk of insolvency of the selling bank. In addition, there may be fewer legal protections for owners of participation interests than for direct lenders.  Direct indebtedness of developing countries involves a risk that the governmental entities responsible for the repayment of the debt may be unable or unwilling to pay interest and repay principal when due. See the additional risks described under “Foreign Securities” in this SAI.
Direct debt instruments may have floating interest rates.  These interest rates will vary depending on the terms of the underlying loan and market conditions.
Loans, Loan Assignments, and Loan Participations.  Floating rate securities, including loans, provide for automatic adjustment of the interest rate at fixed intervals (e.g., daily, weekly, monthly, or semi-annually) or automatic adjustment of the interest rate whenever a specified interest rate or index changes. The interest rate on floating rate securities ordinarily is determined by reference to LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate), a particular bank’s prime rate, the 90-day Treasury Department Bill rate, the rate of return on commercial paper or bank CDs, an index of short-term tax-exempt rates or some other objective measure. The Fund may invest in secured and unsecured loans.
The Fund may invest in direct debt instruments by direct investment as a lender, by taking an assignment of all or a portion of an interest in a loan previously held by another institution or by acquiring a participation interest in a loan that continues to be held by another institution. It also may be difficult for the Fund to obtain an accurate picture of a selling bank’s financial condition. Loans are subject to the same risks as other direct debt instruments discussed above and carry additional risks described in this section.
Direct Investments.  When the Fund invests as an initial investor in a new loan, the investment is typically made at par value.  Secondary purchases of loans may be made at a premium to par, at par, or at a discount to par. Therefore, the Fund’s return on a secondary investment may be lower, equal, or higher than if the Fund had made a direct investment. As an initial investor in a new loan, the Fund may be paid a commitment fee.
Assignments. When the Fund purchases a loan by assignment, the Fund typically succeeds to the rights of the assigning lender under the loan agreement and becomes a lender under the loan agreement. Subject to the terms of the loan agreement, the Fund typically succeeds to all the rights and obligations under the loan agreement of the assigning lender. However, assignments may be arranged through private negotiations between potential assignees and potential assignors, and the rights and obligations acquired by the purchaser of an assignment may differ from, and be more limited than, those held by the assigning lender.
Participation Interests.  The Fund’s rights under a participation interest with respect to a particular loan may be more limited than the rights of original lenders or of investors who acquire an assignment of that loan.  In purchasing participation interests, the Fund will have the right to receive payments of principal, interest and any fees to which it is entitled only from the lender selling the participation interest (the “participating lender”) and only when the participating lender receives the payments from the borrower.
In a participation interest, the Fund will usually have a contractual relationship only with the selling institution and not the underlying borrower.  The Fund normally will have to rely on the participating lender to demand and receive payments in respect of the loans, and to pay those amounts on to the Fund; thus, the Fund will be subject to the risk that the lender may be unwilling or unable to do so.  In such a case, the Fund would not likely have any rights against the borrower directly.  In addition, the Fund generally will have no right to object to certain changes to the loan agreement agreed to by the participating lender.

In buying a participation interest, the Fund might not directly benefit from the collateral supporting the related loan and may be subject to any rights of set off the borrower has against the
selling institution. In the event of bankruptcy or insolvency of the borrower, the obligation of the borrower to repay the loan may be subject to certain defenses that can be asserted by the borrower as a result of any improper conduct of the participating lender.  As a result, the Fund may be subject to delays, expenses and risks that are greater than those that exist when the Fund is an original lender or assignee.

Creditworthiness.  The Fund’s ability to receive payments in connection with loans depends on the financial condition of the borrower.  The Manager will not rely solely on another lending institution’s credit analysis of the borrower, but will perform its own investment analysis of the borrower.  The Manager’s analysis may include consideration of the borrower’s financial strength, managerial experience, debt coverage, additional borrowing requirements or debt maturity schedules, changing financial conditions, and responsiveness to changes in business conditions and interest rates.  Indebtedness of borrowers whose creditworthiness is poor involves substantially greater risks and may be highly speculative.  Borrowers that are in bankruptcy or restructuring may never pay off their indebtedness, or may pay only a small fraction of the amount owed.  In connection with the restructuring of a loan or other direct debt instrument outside of bankruptcy court in a negotiated work-out or in the context of bankruptcy proceedings, equity securities or junior debt securities may be received in exchange for all or a portion of an interest in the security.
          In buying a participation interest, the Fund assumes the credit risk of both the borrower and the participating lender.  If the participating lender fails to perform its obligations under the participation agreement, the Fund might incur costs and delays in realizing payment and suffer a loss of principal and/or interest. If a participating lender becomes insolvent, the Fund may be treated as a general creditor of that lender. As a general creditor, the Fund may not benefit from a right of set off that the lender has against the borrower. The Fund will acquire a participation interest only if the Manager determines that the participating lender or other intermediary participant selling the participation interest is creditworthy.

Ratings.  Loan interests may not be rated by independent rating agencies and therefore, investments in a particular loan participation may depend almost exclusively on the credit analysis of the borrower performed by the Manager.

Agents.  Loans are typically administered by a bank, insurance company, finance company or other financial institution (the “agent”) for a lending syndicate of financial institutions.  In a typical loan, the agent administers the terms of the loan agreement and is responsible for the collection of principal and interest and fee payments from the borrower and the apportionment of these payments to all lenders that are parties to the loan agreement.  In addition, an institution (which may be the agent) may hold collateral on behalf of the lenders.  Typically, under loan agreements, the agent is given broad authority in monitoring the borrower’s performance and is obligated to use the same care it would use in the management of its own property.  In asserting rights against a borrower, the Fund normally will be dependent on the willingness of the lead bank to assert these rights, or upon a vote of all the lenders to authorize the action.
If an agent becomes insolvent, or has a receiver, conservator, or similar official appointed for it by the appropriate regulatory authority, or becomes a debtor in a bankruptcy proceeding, the agent’s appointment may be terminated and a successor agent would be appointed.  If an appropriate regulator or court determines that assets held by the agent for the benefit of the purchasers of loans are subject to the claims of the agent’s general or secured creditors, the Fund might incur certain costs and delays
in realizing payment on a loan or suffer a loss of principal and/or interest.  The Fund may be subject to similar risks when it buys a participation interest or an assignment from an intermediary.

Collateral. Although most of the loans in which the Fund invests are secured, there is no assurance that the collateral can be promptly liquidated, or that its liquidation value will be equal to the value of the debt. In most loan agreements there is no formal requirement to pledge additional collateral if the value of the initial collateral declines.  As a result, a loan may not always be fully collateralized and can decline significantly in value.
If a borrower becomes insolvent, access to collateral may be limited by bankruptcy and other laws.  Borrowers that are in bankruptcy may pay only a small portion of the amount owed, if they are able to pay at all. In addition, if a secured loan is foreclosed, the Fund may bear the costs and liabilities associated with owning and disposing of the collateral.  The collateral may be difficult to sell and the Fund would bear the risk that the collateral may decline in value while the Fund is holding it.  There is also a possibility that the Fund will become the owner of its pro rata share of the collateral which may carry additional risks and liabilities.  In addition, under legal theories of lender liability, the Fund potentially might be held liable as a co-lender.  In the event of a borrower’s bankruptcy or insolvency, the borrower’s obligation to repay the loan may be subject to certain defenses that the borrower can assert as a result of improper conduct by the Agent.
Some loans are unsecured.  If the borrower defaults on an unsecured loan, the Fund will be a general creditor and will not have rights to any specific assets of the borrower.
Liquidity. Loans are generally subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale.  Loans are not currently listed on any securities exchange or automatic quotation system.  As a result, there may not be a recognized, liquid public market for loan interests.
Prepayment Risk and Maturity.  Because many loans are repaid early, the actual maturity of loans is typically shorter than their stated final maturity calculated solely on the basis of the stated life and payment schedule. The degree to which borrowers prepay loans, whether as a contractual requirement or at their election, may be affected by general business conditions, market interest rates, the borrower’s financial condition and competitive conditions among lenders.  Such prepayments may require the Fund to replace an investment with a lower yielding security which may have an adverse effect on the Fund’s share price.  Prepayments cannot be predicted with accuracy.  Floating rate loans can be less sensitive to prepayment risk, but the Fund’s net asset value (“NAV”) may still fluctuate in response to interest rate changes because variable interest rates may reset only periodically and may not rise or decline as much as interest rates in general.
Restrictive Covenants.  A borrower must comply with various restrictive covenants in a loan agreement such as restrictions on dividend payments and limits on total debt.  The loan agreement may also contain a covenant requiring the borrower to prepay the loan with any free cash flow.  A breach of a covenant is normally an event of default, which provides the agent or the lenders the right to call the outstanding loan.
Fees and ExpensesThe Fund may be required to pay and receive various fees and commissions in the process of purchasing, selling, and holding loans. The fee component may include any, or a combination of, the following elements: assignment fees, arrangement fees, non-use fees, facility fees, letter of credit fees, and ticking fees. Arrangement fees are paid at the commencement of a loan as compensation for the initiation of the transaction. A non-use fee is paid based upon the
amount committed but not used under the loan. Facility fees are on-going annual fees paid in connection with a loan. Letter of credit fees are paid if a loan involves a letter of credit. Ticking fees are paid from the initial commitment indication until loan closing if for an extended period. The amount of fees is negotiated at the time of closing. In addition, the Fund incurs expenses associated with researching and analyzing potential loan investments, including legal fees.

Available Information. Loans normally are not registered with the SEC or any state securities commission or listed on any securities exchange. As a result, the amount of public information available about a specific loan historically has been less extensive than if the loan were registered or exchange traded. They may also not be considered “securities,” and purchasers, such as the Fund, therefore may not be entitled to rely on the strong anti-fraud protections of the federal securities laws.
Leveraged Buy-Out Transactions.  Loans purchased by the Fund may represent interests in loans made to finance highly leveraged corporate acquisitions, known as “leveraged buy-out” transactions, leveraged recapitalization loans and other types of acquisition financing.  The highly leveraged capital structure of the borrowers in such transactions may make such loans especially vulnerable to adverse changes in economic or market conditions.
Junior Loans.  The Fund may invest in second lien secured loans and secured and unsecured subordinated loans, including bridge loans (“Junior Loans”). In the event of a bankruptcy or liquidation, second lien secured loans are generally paid only if the value of the borrower’s collateral is sufficient to satisfy the borrower’s obligations to the first lien secured lenders and even then, the remaining collateral may not be sufficient to cover the amount owed to the Fund.  Second lien secured loans give investors priority over general unsecured creditors in the event of an asset sale.
Junior Loans are subject to the same general risks inherent to any loan investment, including credit risk, market and liquidity risk, and interest rate risk. Due to their lower place in the borrower’s capital structure, Junior Loans involve a higher degree of overall risk than senior loans of the same borrower.
Bridge Loans.  Bridge loans or bridge facilities are short-term loan arrangements (e.g., 12 to 18 months) typically made by a borrower in anticipation of intermediate-term or long-term permanent financing. Most bridge loans are structured as floating-rate debt with step-up provisions under which the interest rate on the bridge loan rises over time.  Thus, the longer the loan remains outstanding, the more the interest rate increases. In addition, bridge loans commonly contain a conversion feature that allows the bridge loan investor to convert its loan interest into senior exchange notes if the loan has not been prepaid in full on or prior to its maturity date. Bridge loans may be subordinate to other debt and may be secured or unsecured. Like any loan, bridge loans involve credit risk. Bridge loans are generally made with the expectation that the borrower will be able to obtain permanent financing in the near future. Any delay in obtaining permanent financing subjects the bridge loan investor to increased risk. A borrower’s use of bridge loans also involves the risk that the borrower may be unable to locate permanent financing to replace the bridge loan, which may impair the borrower’s perceived creditworthiness. With the onset of the financial crisis in 2008, many borrowers found it more difficult to obtain loans, a situation that has been gradually improving.
Delayed draw term loans. The Fund may be obligated under the terms of the relevant loan documents to advance additional funds after the initial disbursement that it makes at the time of its investment.  For example, the loan may not have been fully funded” at that time or the lenders may have ongoing commitments to make further advances up to a stated maximum. When a loan has been
fully funded, however, repaid principal amounts normally may not be reborrowed.  Interest accrues on the outstanding principal amount of the loan. The borrower normally may pay a fee during any commitment period.

Policies and Limitations. The Fund do not intend to invest in loan instruments that could require additional investments upon the borrower’s demand, but may invest in loans that require funding at a later date following the initial investment in the loan.
The Fund’s policies limit the percentage of its assets that can be invested in the securities of one issuer or in issuers primarily involved in one industry. Legal interpretations by the SEC staff may require the Fund to treat both the lending bank and the borrower as “issuers” of a loan participation by the Fund. In combination, the Fund’s policies and the SEC staff’s interpretations may limit the amount the Fund can invest in loan participations.
For purposes of determining its dollar-weighted average maturity or duration, the Fund calculates the remaining maturity or duration of loans on the basis of the stated life and payment schedule.
Mortgage-Backed Securities. Mortgage-backed securities, including residential and commercial mortgage-backed securities, represent direct or indirect participations in, or are secured by and payable from, pools of mortgage loans. Those securities may be guaranteed by a U.S. Government agency or instrumentality (such as by Ginnie Mae); issued and guaranteed by a government-sponsored stockholder-owned corporation, though not backed by the full faith and credit of the United States (such as by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (collectively, the “GSEs”), and described in greater detail below); or issued by fully private issuers. Private issuers are generally originators of and investors in mortgage loans and include savings associations, mortgage bankers, commercial banks, investment bankers, and special purpose entities. Private mortgage-backed securities may be backed by U.S. Government agency supported mortgage loans or some form of non-governmental credit enhancement.

Government-related guarantors (i.e., not backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government) include Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Fannie Mae is a government-sponsored corporation owned by stockholders. It is subject to general regulation by the Federal Housing Finance Authority (“FHFA”). Fannie Mae purchases residential mortgages from a list of approved seller/servicers that include state and federally chartered savings and loan associations, mutual savings banks, commercial banks, credit unions and mortgage bankers. Fannie Mae guarantees the timely payment of principal and interest on pass-through securities that it issues, but those securities are not backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government.

Freddie Mac is a government-sponsored corporation formerly owned by the twelve Federal Home Loan Banks and now owned by stockholders. Freddie Mac issues Participation Certificates (“PCs”), which represent interests in mortgages from Freddie Mac’s national portfolio. Freddie Mac guarantees the timely payment of interest and ultimate collection of principal on the PCs it issues, but those PCs are not backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government.

The Treasury Department has historically had the authority to purchase obligations of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  However, in 2008, due to capitalization concerns, Congress provided the Treasury Department with additional authority to lend the GSEs emergency funds and to purchase
their stock.  In September 2008, those capital concerns led the Treasury Department and the FHFA to announce that the GSEs had been placed in conservatorship.

Since that time, the GSEs have received significant capital support through Treasury Department preferred stock purchases as well as Treasury Department and Federal Reserve purchases of their mortgage backed securities (“MBS”). While the MBS purchase programs ended in 2010, the Treasury Department announced in December 2009 that it would continue its support for the entities’ capital as necessary to prevent a negative net worth. However, no assurance can be given that the Federal Reserve, Treasury Department, or FHFA initiatives will ensure that the GSEs will remain successful in meeting their obligations with respect to the debt and MBS they issue into the future.

 In 2012, the FHFA initiated a strategic plan to develop a program related to credit risk transfers intended to reduce Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s overall risk through the creation of credit risk transfer assets (“CRTs”). CRTs come in two primary series: Structured Agency Credit Risk (“STACRs”) for Freddie Mac and Connecticut Avenue Securities (“CAS”) for Fannie Mae, although other series may be developed in the future. CRTs are typically structured as unsecured general obligations of either entities guaranteed by a government-sponsored stockholder-owned corporation, though not backed by the full faith and credit of the United States (such as by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac (collectively, the “GSEs”) or special purpose entities), and their cash flows are based on the performance of a pool of reference loans.  Unlike traditional residential MBS securities, bond payments typically do not come directly from the underlying mortgages.  Instead, the GSEs either make the payments to CRT investors, or the GSEs make certain payments to the special purpose entities and the special purpose entities make payments to the investors.  In certain structures, the special purpose entities make payments to the GSEs upon the occurrence of credit events with respect to the underlying mortgages, and the obligation of the special purpose entity to make such payments to the GSE is senior to the obligation of the special purpose entity to make payments to the CRT investors.   CRTs are typically floating rate securities and may have multiple tranches with losses first allocated to the most junior or subordinate tranche.  This structure results in increased sensitivity to dramatic housing downturns, especially for the subordinate tranches. Many CRTs also have collateral performance triggers (e.g., based on credit enhancement, delinquencies or defaults, etc.) that could shut off principal payments to subordinate tranches. Generally, GSEs have the ability to call all of the CRT tranches at par in 10 years.

In addition, the future of the GSEs is in serious question as the U.S. Government is considering multiple options, ranging on a spectrum from significant reform, nationalization, privatization, consolidation, or abolishment of the entities. Congress is considering several pieces of legislation that would reform the GSEs, proposing to address their structure, mission, portfolio limits, and guarantee fees, among other issues.

The FHFA and the Treasury Department (through its agreement to purchase GSE preferred stock) have imposed strict limits on the size of GSEs’ mortgage portfolios. In August 2012, the Treasury Department amended its preferred stock purchase agreements to provide that the GSEs’ portfolios would be wound down at an annual rate of 15 percent (up from the previously agreed annual rate of 10 percent), requiring the GSEs to reach the $250 billion target by December 31, 2018.  Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were below the $250 billion cap for year-end 2018. On December 21, 2017, a letter agreement between the Treasury and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac changed the terms of the senior preferred stock certificates to permit the GSEs each to retain a $3 billion capital reserve, quarterly. Under the 2017 letter, each GSE paid a dividend to Treasury equal to the amount that its net
worth exceeded $3 billion at the end of each quarter. On September 30, 2019, the Treasury and the FHFA, acting as conservator to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, announced amendments to the respective senior preferred stock certificates that will permit the GSEs to retain earnings beyond the $3 billion capital reserves previously allowed through the 2017 letter agreements. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are now permitted to maintain capital reserves of $25 billion and $20 billion, respectively.

Mortgage-backed securities may have either fixed or adjustable interest rates. Tax or regulatory changes may adversely affect the mortgage securities market. In addition, changes in the market’s perception of the issuer may affect the value of mortgage-backed securities. The rate of return on mortgage-backed securities may be affected by prepayments of principal on the underlying loans, which generally increase as market interest rates decline; as a result, when interest rates decline, holders of these securities normally do not benefit from appreciation in market value to the same extent as holders of other non-callable debt securities.

Because many mortgages are repaid early, the actual maturity and duration of mortgage-backed securities are typically shorter than their stated final maturity and their duration calculated solely on the basis of the stated life and payment schedule. In calculating its dollar-weighted average maturity and duration, the Fund may apply certain industry conventions regarding the maturity and duration of mortgage-backed instruments. Different analysts use different models and assumptions in making these determinations. The Fund uses an approach that the Manager believes is reasonable in light of all relevant circumstances. If this determination is not borne out in practice, it could positively or negatively affect the value of the Fund when market interest rates change. Increasing market interest rates generally extend the effective maturities of mortgage-backed securities, increasing their sensitivity to interest rate changes.

Mortgage-backed securities may be issued in the form of collateralized mortgage obligations (“CMOs”) or collateralized mortgage-backed bonds (“CBOs”). CMOs are obligations that are fully collateralized, directly or indirectly, by a pool of mortgages; payments of principal and interest on the mortgages are passed through to the holders of the CMOs, although not necessarily on a pro rata basis, on the same schedule as they are received. CBOs are general obligations of the issuer that are fully collateralized, directly or indirectly, by a pool of mortgages. The mortgages serve as collateral for the issuer’s payment obligations on the bonds, but interest and principal payments on the mortgages are not passed through either directly (as with mortgage-backed “pass-through” securities issued or guaranteed by U.S. Government agencies or instrumentalities) or on a modified basis (as with CMOs). Accordingly, a change in the rate of prepayments on the pool of mortgages could change the effective maturity or the duration of a CMO but not that of a CBO (although, like many bonds, CBOs may be callable by the issuer prior to maturity). To the extent that rising interest rates cause prepayments to occur at a slower than expected rate, a CMO could be converted into a longer-term security that is subject to greater risk of price volatility.

Governmental, government-related, and private entities (such as commercial banks, savings institutions, private mortgage insurance companies, mortgage bankers, and other secondary market issuers, including securities broker-dealers and special purpose entities that generally are affiliates of the foregoing established to issue such securities) may create mortgage loan pools to back CMOs and CBOs. Such issuers may be the originators and/or servicers of the underlying mortgage loans, as well as the guarantors of the mortgage-backed securities. Pools created by non-governmental issuers generally offer a higher rate of interest than governmental and government-related pools because of
the absence of direct or indirect government or agency guarantees. Various forms of insurance or guarantees, including individual loan, title, pool, and hazard insurance and letters of credit, may support timely payment of interest and principal of non-governmental pools. Governmental entities, private insurers, and mortgage poolers issue these forms of insurance and guarantees. The Manager considers such insurance and guarantees, as well as the creditworthiness of the issuers thereof, in determining whether a mortgage-backed security meets the Fund’s investment quality standards. There can be no assurance that private insurers or guarantors can meet their obligations under insurance policies or guarantee arrangements. The Fund may buy mortgage-backed securities without insurance or guarantees, if the Manager determines that the securities meet the Fund’s quality standards. The Manager will, consistent with the Fund’s investment objective, policies and limitations and quality standards, consider making investments in new types of mortgage-backed securities as such securities are developed and offered to investors.

Policies and Limitations.  The Fund may not purchase mortgage-backed securities that, in the Manager’s opinion, are illiquid if, as a result, more than 15% of the Fund’s net assets would be invested in illiquid securities.
Other Mortgage-Related Securities.  Other mortgage-related securities include securities other than those described above that directly or indirectly represent a participation in, or are secured by and payable from, mortgage loans on real property, including stripped mortgage-backed securities. Other mortgage-related securities may be equity or debt securities issued by agencies or instrumentalities of the U.S. Government or by private originators of, or investors in, mortgage loans, including savings and loan associations, homebuilders, mortgage banks, commercial banks, investment banks, partnerships, trusts and special purpose entities of the foregoing.

Asset-Backed Securities. Asset-backed securities represent direct or indirect participations in, or are secured by and payable from, pools of assets such as, among other things, motor vehicle installment sales contracts, installment loan contracts, leases of various types of real and personal property, and receivables from revolving credit (credit card) agreements, or a combination of the foregoing. These assets are securitized through the use of trusts and special purpose corporations. Credit enhancements, such as various forms of cash collateral accounts or letters of credit, may support payments of principal and interest on asset-backed securities. Although these securities may be supported by letters of credit or other credit enhancements, payment of interest and principal ultimately depends upon individuals paying the underlying loans, which may be affected adversely by general downturns in the economy. Asset-backed securities are subject to the same risk of prepayment described with respect to mortgage-backed securities and to extension risk (the risk that an issuer of a security will make principal payments slower than anticipated by the investor, thus extending the securities’ duration). The risk that recovery on repossessed collateral might be unavailable or inadequate to support payments, however, is greater for asset-backed securities than for mortgage-backed securities.

Certificates for Automobile ReceivablesSM (“CARSSM”) represent undivided fractional interests in a trust whose assets consist of a pool of motor vehicle retail installment sales contracts and security interests in the vehicles securing those contracts. Payments of principal and interest on the underlying contracts are passed through monthly to certificate holders and are guaranteed up to specified amounts by a letter of credit issued by a financial institution unaffiliated with the trustee or originator of the trust. Underlying installment sales contracts are subject to prepayment, which may reduce the overall return to certificate holders. Certificate holders also may experience delays in
payment or losses on CARSSM if the trust does not realize the full amounts due on underlying installment sales contracts because of unanticipated legal or administrative costs of enforcing the contracts; depreciation, damage, or loss of the vehicles securing the contracts; or other factors.

Credit card receivable securities are backed by receivables from revolving credit card agreements (“Accounts”). Credit balances on Accounts are generally paid down more rapidly than are automobile contracts. Most of the credit card receivable securities issued publicly to date have been pass-through certificates. In order to lengthen their maturity or duration, most such securities provide for a fixed period during which only interest payments on the underlying Accounts are passed through to the security holder; principal payments received on the Accounts are used to fund the transfer of additional credit card charges made on the Accounts to the pool of assets supporting the securities. Usually, the initial fixed period may be shortened if specified events occur which signal a potential deterioration in the quality of the assets backing the security, such as the imposition of a cap on interest rates. An issuer’s ability to extend the life of an issue of credit card receivable securities thus depends on the continued generation of principal amounts in the underlying Accounts and the non-occurrence of the specified events. The non-deductibility of consumer interest, as well as competitive and general economic factors, could adversely affect the rate at which new receivables are created in an Account and conveyed to an issuer, thereby shortening the expected weighted average life of the related security and reducing its yield. An acceleration in cardholders’ payment rates or any other event that shortens the period during which additional credit card charges on an Account may be transferred to the pool of assets supporting the related security could have a similar effect on its weighted average life and yield.
Credit cardholders are entitled to the protection of state and federal consumer credit laws. Many of those laws give a holder the right to set off certain amounts against balances owed on the credit card, thereby reducing amounts paid on Accounts. In addition, unlike the collateral for most other asset-backed securities, Accounts are unsecured obligations of the cardholder.
Variable or Floating Rate Securities; Demand and Put Features. Variable rate and floating rate securities provide for automatic adjustment of the interest rate at fixed intervals (e.g., daily, weekly, monthly, or semi-annually) or automatic adjustment of the interest rate whenever a specified interest rate or index changes. The interest rate on variable and floating rate securities (collectively, “Adjustable Rate Securities”) ordinarily is determined by reference to a particular bank’s prime rate, the 90-day Treasury Department Bill rate, the rate of return on commercial paper or bank CDs, an index of short-term tax-exempt rates or some other objective measure.
Adjustable Rate Securities frequently permit the holder to demand payment of the obligations’ principal and accrued interest at any time or at specified intervals not exceeding one year. The demand feature usually is backed by a credit instrument (e.g., a bank letter of credit) from a creditworthy issuer and sometimes by insurance from a creditworthy insurer. Without these credit enhancements, some Adjustable Rate Securities might not meet the Fund’s quality standards. Accordingly, in purchasing these securities, the Fund relies primarily on the creditworthiness of the credit instrument issuer or the insurer. The Fund can also buy fixed rate securities accompanied by a demand feature or by a put option, which permits the Fund to sell the security to the issuer or third party at a specified price. The Fund may rely on the creditworthiness of issuers of the credit enhancements in purchasing these securities.
Warrants and Rights. Warrants and rights may be acquired by the Fund in connection with other securities or separately.  Warrants are securities permitting, but not obligating, their holder to subscribe for other securities or commodities and provide the Fund with the right to purchase at a later date other securities of the issuer. Rights are similar to warrants but typically are issued by a company to existing holders of its stock and provide those holders the right to purchase additional shares of stock at a later date.  Rights also normally have a shorter duration than warrants.  Warrants and rights do not carry with them the right to dividends or voting rights with respect to the securities that they entitle their holder to purchase, and they do not represent any rights in the assets of the issuer. Warrants and rights may be more speculative than certain other types of investments and entail risks that are not associated with a similar investment in a traditional equity instrument. While warrants and rights are generally considered equity securities, because the value of a warrant or right is derived, at least in part, from the value of the underlying securities, they may be considered hybrid instruments that have features of both equity securities and derivative instruments.  However, there are characteristics of warrants and rights that differ from derivatives, including that the value of a warrant or right does not necessarily change with the value of the underlying securities. The purchase of warrants and rights involves the risk that the Fund could lose the purchase value of the warrants or rights if the right to subscribe to additional shares is not exercised prior to the warrants’ or rights’ expiration date because warrants and rights cease to have value if they are not exercised prior to their expiration date.  Also, the purchase of warrants and rights involves the risk that the effective price paid for the warrants or rights added to the subscription price of the related security may exceed the value of the subscribed security’s market price such as when there is no movement in the price of the underlying security.  The market for warrants or rights may be very limited and it may be difficult to sell them promptly at an acceptable price.
Illiquid Securities.  Generally, an illiquid security is any investment that may not reasonably be expected to be sold or disposed of in current market conditions in seven calendar days or less without the sale or disposition significantly changing the market value of the investment. Illiquid securities may include unregistered or other restricted securities and repurchase agreements maturing in greater than seven days. Illiquid securities may also include commercial paper under section 4(2) of the 1933 Act, and Rule 144A securities (restricted securities that may be traded freely among qualified institutional buyers pursuant to an exemption from the registration requirements of the securities laws); these securities are considered illiquid unless the Manager determines they are liquid. Most such securities held by the Fund are deemed liquid. Generally, foreign securities freely tradable in their principal market are not considered restricted or illiquid, even if they are not registered in the United States. Illiquid securities may be difficult for the Fund to value or dispose of due to the absence of an active trading market. The sale of some illiquid securities by the Fund may be subject to legal restrictions, which could be costly to the Fund.

Repurchase Agreements. In a repurchase agreement, the Fund purchases securities from a bank that is a member of the Federal Reserve System, from a foreign bank or from a U.S. branch or agency of a foreign bank, or from a securities dealer that agrees to repurchase the securities from the Fund at a higher price on a designated future date.  Repurchase agreements generally are for a short period of time, usually less than a week. Costs, delays, or losses could result if the selling party to a repurchase agreement becomes bankrupt or otherwise defaults. The Manager monitors the creditworthiness of sellers.  If the Fund enters into a repurchase agreement subject to foreign law and the counter-party defaults, the Fund may not enjoy protections comparable to those provided to certain repurchase agreements under U.S. bankruptcy law and may suffer delays and losses in disposing of the collateral as a result.
Policies and Limitations. Repurchase agreements with a maturity of more than seven days are considered to be illiquid securities. The Fund may enter into a repurchase agreement only if (1) the underlying securities are of a type that the Fund’s investment policies and limitations would allow it to purchase directly, (2) the market value of the underlying securities, including accrued interest, at all times equals or exceeds the repurchase price and (3) payment for the underlying securities is made only upon satisfactory evidence that the securities are being held for the Fund’s account by its custodian or a bank acting as the Fund’s agent.

Securities Loans.  The Fund may lend portfolio securities to banks, brokerage firms, and other institutional investors, provided that cash or equivalent collateral, initially equal to at least 102% (105% in the case of foreign securities) of the market value of the loaned securities, is maintained by the borrower with the Fund or with the Fund’s lending agent, who holds the collateral on the Fund’s behalf.  Thereafter, cash or equivalent collateral, equal to at least 100% of the market value of the loaned securities, is to be continuously maintained by the borrower with the Fund. The Fund may invest the cash collateral and earn income, or it may receive an agreed upon amount of interest income from a borrower that has delivered equivalent collateral. During the time securities are on loan, the borrower will pay the Fund an amount equivalent to any dividends or interest paid on such securities. These loans are subject to termination at the option of the Fund or the borrower. The Fund may pay reasonable administrative and custodial fees in connection with a loan and may pay a negotiated portion of the interest earned on the cash or equivalent collateral to the borrower. The Fund does not have the right to vote on securities while they are on loan.  However, it is the Fund’s policy to attempt to terminate loans in time to vote those proxies that the Fund has determined are material to the interests of the Fund.  The Manager believes the risk of loss on these transactions is slight because if a borrower were to default for any reason, the collateral should satisfy the obligation. However, as with other extensions of secured credit, loans of portfolio securities involve some risk of loss of rights in the collateral should the borrower fail financially. The Fund may loan securities through third parties not affiliated with NBIA that would act as agent to lend securities to principal borrowers.
Policies and Limitations. The Fund may lend its securities with a value not exceeding 33-1/3% of its total assets to banks, brokerage firms or other institutional investors judged creditworthy by the Manager. Borrowers are required continuously to secure their obligations to return securities on loan from the Fund by depositing collateral in a form determined to be satisfactory by the Board. The collateral, which must be marked to market daily, must be equal to at least 102% (105% in the case of foreign securities) of the market value of the loaned securities, which will also be marked to market daily.

Restricted Securities and Rule 144A Securities.  The Fund may invest in “restricted securities,” which generally are securities that may be resold to the public only pursuant to an effective registration statement under the 1933 Act or an exemption from registration.  Regulation S under the 1933 Act is an exemption from registration that permits, under certain circumstances, the resale of restricted securities in offshore transactions, subject to certain conditions, and Rule 144A under the 1933 Act is an exemption that permits the resale of certain restricted securities to qualified institutional buyers.
Since its adoption by the SEC in 1990, Rule 144A has facilitated trading of restricted securities among qualified institutional investors.  To the extent restricted securities held by the Fund qualify under Rule 144A and an institutional market develops for those securities, the Fund expects that it will be able to dispose of the securities without registering the resale of such securities under
the 1933 Act.  However, to the extent that a robust market for such 144A securities does not develop, or a market develops but experiences periods of illiquidity, investments in Rule 144A securities could increase the level of the Fund’s illiquidity.

Where an exemption from registration under the 1933 Act is unavailable, or where an institutional market is limited, the Fund may, in certain circumstances, be permitted to require the issuer of restricted securities held by the Fund to file a registration statement to register the resale of such securities under the 1933 Act.  In such case, the Fund will typically be obligated to pay all or part of the registration expenses, and a considerable period may elapse between the decision to sell and the time the Fund may be permitted to resell a security under an effective registration statement. If, during such a period, adverse market conditions were to develop, or the value of the security were to decline, the Fund might obtain a less favorable price than prevailed when it decided to sell. Restricted securities for which no market exists are priced by a method that the Fund Directors believe accurately reflects fair value.
Reverse Repurchase Agreements. In a reverse repurchase agreement, the Fund sells portfolio securities to another party and agrees to repurchase the securities at an agreed-upon price and date, which reflects an interest payment. Reverse repurchase agreements involve the risk that the other party will fail to return the securities in a timely manner, or at all, which may result in losses to the Fund. The Fund could lose money if it is unable to recover the securities and the value of the collateral held by the Fund is less than the value of the securities. These events could also trigger adverse tax consequences to the Fund. Reverse repurchase agreements also involve the risk that the market value of the securities sold will decline below the price at which the Fund is obligated to repurchase them. Reverse repurchase agreements may be viewed as a form of borrowing by the Fund. When the Fund enters into a reverse repurchase agreement, any fluctuations in the market value of either the securities transferred to another party or the securities in which the proceeds may be invested would affect the market value of the Fund’s assets. During the term of the agreement, the Fund may also be obligated to pledge additional cash and/or securities in the event of a decline in the fair value of the transferred security. The Manager monitors the creditworthiness of counterparties to reverse repurchase agreements. For the Fund’s policies and limitations on borrowing, see “Investment Policies and Limitations -- Borrowing” above.
Policies and Limitations. Reverse repurchase agreements are considered borrowings for purposes of the Fund’s investment policies and limitations concerning borrowings. While a reverse repurchase agreement is outstanding, the Fund will deposit in a segregated account with its custodian cash or appropriate liquid securities, marked to market daily, in an amount at least equal to the Fund’s obligations under the agreement.

Foreign Securities. The Fund may invest in equity, debt, or other securities of foreign issuers and foreign branches of U.S. banks.  These securities may be U.S. dollar denominated  or denominated in or indexed to foreign currencies and may include (1) common and preferred stocks, (2) negotiable certificates of deposit (“CDs”), commercial paper, fixed time deposits, and bankers’ acceptances, (3) obligations of other corporations, and (4) obligations of foreign governments and their subdivisions, agencies, and instrumentalities, international agencies, and supranational entities. Foreign issuers are issuers organized and doing business principally outside the United States and include banks, non-U.S. governments, and quasi-governmental organizations. Investments in foreign securities involve sovereign and other risks, in addition to the credit and market risks normally associated with domestic securities. These risks include the possibility of adverse political and economic developments (including political or social instability, nationalization, expropriation, or
confiscatory taxation); the potentially adverse effects of the unavailability of public information regarding issuers, less governmental supervision and regulation of financial markets, reduced liquidity of certain financial markets, and the lack of uniform accounting, auditing, and financial reporting standards or the application of standards that are different or less stringent than those applied in the United States; different laws and customs governing securities tracking; and possibly limited access to the courts to enforce the Fund’s rights as an investor.  It may be difficult to invoke legal process or to enforce contractual obligations abroad, and it may be especially difficult to sue a foreign government in the courts of that country.

Additionally, investing in foreign currency denominated securities involves the additional risks of (a) adverse changes in foreign exchange rates, (b) nationalization, expropriation, or confiscatory taxation, and (c) adverse changes in investment or exchange control regulations (which could prevent cash from being brought back to the United States). Additionally, dividends and interest payable on foreign securities (and gains realized on disposition thereof) may be subject to foreign taxes, including taxes withheld from those payments. Commissions on foreign securities exchanges are often at fixed rates and are generally higher than negotiated commissions on U.S. exchanges, although the Fund endeavors to achieve the most favorable net results on portfolio transactions.
Foreign securities often trade with less frequency and in less volume than domestic securities and therefore may exhibit greater price volatility. Additional costs associated with an investment in foreign securities may include higher custodial fees than apply to domestic custody arrangements and transaction costs of foreign currency conversions.
Foreign markets also have different clearance and settlement procedures. 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 in settlement could result in temporary periods when a portion of the 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 in losses to the Fund due to subsequent declines in value of the securities or, if the Fund has entered into a contract to sell the securities, could result in possible liability to the purchaser. The inability of the Fund to settle security purchases or sales due to settlement problems could cause the Fund to pay additional expenses, such as interest charges.
Securities of issuers traded on exchanges may be suspended, either by the issuers themselves, by an exchange or by government authorities. The likelihood of such suspensions may be higher for securities of issuers in emerging or less-developed market countries than in countries with more developed markets. Trading suspensions may be applied from time to time to the securities of individual issuers for reasons specific to that issuer, or may be applied broadly by exchanges or governmental authorities in response to market events. Suspensions may last for significant periods of time, during which trading in the securities and instruments that reference the securities, such as participatory notes (or “P-notes”) or other derivative instruments, may be halted. In the event that the Fund holds material positions in such suspended securities or instruments, the Fund’s ability to liquidate its positions or provide liquidity to investors may be compromised and the Fund could incur significant losses.
Interest rates prevailing in other countries may affect the prices of foreign securities and exchange rates for foreign currencies. Local factors, including the strength of the local economy, the demand for borrowing, the government’s fiscal and monetary policies, and the international balance
of payments, often affect interest rates in other countries. Individual foreign economies may differ favorably or unfavorably from the U.S. economy in such respects as growth of gross national product, rate of inflation, capital reinvestment, resource self-sufficiency, and balance of payments position.

The Fund may invest in American Depositary Receipts (“ADRs”), European Depositary Receipts (“EDRs”), Global Depositary Receipts (“GDRs”) and International Depositary Receipts (“IDRs”). ADRs (sponsored or unsponsored) are receipts typically issued by a U.S. bank or trust company evidencing its ownership of the underlying foreign securities. Most ADRs are denominated in U.S. dollars and are traded on a U.S. stock exchange. However, they are subject to the risk of fluctuation in the currency exchange rate if, as is often the case, the underlying securities are denominated in foreign currency. EDRs are receipts issued by a European bank evidencing its ownership of the underlying foreign securities and are often denominated in a foreign currency. GDRs are receipts issued by either a U.S. or non-U.S. banking institution evidencing its ownership of the underlying foreign securities and are often denominated in U.S. dollars. IDRs are receipts typically issued by a foreign bank or trust company evidencing its ownership of the underlying foreign securities.  Depositary receipts involve many of the same risks of investing directly in foreign securities, including currency risks and risks of foreign investing.
Issuers of the securities underlying sponsored depositary receipts, but not unsponsored depositary receipts, are contractually obligated to disclose material information in the United States. Therefore, the market value of unsponsored depositary receipts is less likely to reflect the effect of such information.
Securities of Issuers in Emerging Market Countries. The risks described above for foreign securities may be heightened in connection with investments in emerging market countries. Historically, the markets of emerging market countries have been more volatile than the markets of developed countries, reflecting the greater uncertainties of investing in less established markets and economies. In particular, emerging market countries may have less stable governments; may present the risks of nationalization of businesses, restrictions on foreign ownership and prohibitions on the repatriation of assets; and may have less protection of property rights than more developed countries. The economies of emerging market countries may be reliant on only a few industries, may be highly vulnerable to changes in local or global trade conditions and may suffer from high and volatile debt burdens or inflation rates. Local securities markets may trade a small number of securities and may be unable to respond effectively to increases in trading volume, potentially making prompt liquidation of holdings difficult or impossible at times.
Policies and Limitations. To limit the risks inherent in investing in foreign currency denominated securities of foreign issuers traded outside of the U.S., the Fund may not purchase such securities if, as a result, more than 20% of its total assets (taken at market value) would be invested in such securities. Within those limitations, however, the Fund is not restricted in the amount it may invest in securities denominated in any one foreign currency.
 
Investments in securities of foreign issuers are subject to the Fund’s quality standards.
 
Commercial Paper.  Commercial paper is a short-term debt security issued by a corporation, bank, municipality, or other issuer, usually for purposes such as financing current operations. The Fund may invest in commercial paper that cannot be resold to the public without an effective
registration statement under the 1933 Act. While some restricted commercial paper normally is deemed illiquid, the Manager may in certain cases determine that such paper is liquid.

Banking and Savings Institution Securities.  These include CDs, time deposits, bankers’ acceptances, and other short-term and long-term debt obligations issued by commercial banks and savings institutions. The CDs, time deposits, and bankers’ acceptances in which the Fund invest typically are not covered by deposit insurance.
A certificate of deposit is a short-term negotiable certificate issued by a commercial bank against funds deposited in the bank and is either interest-bearing or purchased on a discount basis. A bankers’ acceptance is a short-term draft drawn on a commercial bank by a borrower, usually in connection with an international commercial transaction. The borrower is liable for payment as is the bank, which unconditionally guarantees to pay the draft at its face amount on the maturity date. Fixed time deposits are obligations of branches of U.S. banks or foreign banks that are payable at a stated maturity date and bear a fixed rate of interest. Although fixed time deposits do not have a market, there are no contractual restrictions on the right to transfer a beneficial interest in the deposit to a third party. Deposit notes are notes issued by commercial banks that generally bear fixed rates of interest and typically have original maturities ranging from eighteen months to five years.
Banks are subject to extensive governmental regulations that may limit both the amounts and types of loans and other financial commitments that may be made and the interest rates and fees that may be charged. The profitability of this industry is largely dependent upon the availability and cost of capital, which can fluctuate significantly when interest rates change. Also, general economic conditions, consolidation and competition among banking and savings institutions play an important part in the operations of this industry and exposure to credit losses arising from possible financial difficulties of borrowers might affect a bank’s ability to meet its obligations. Bank obligations may be general obligations of the parent bank or may be limited to the issuing branch by the terms of the specific obligations or by government regulation.
In response to the 2008 financial turmoil, the U.S. Government is taking a variety of measures to increase the regulation of depository institutions and their holding companies.  On July 21, 2010, the President signed into law the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the “Dodd-Frank Act”), which significantly impacts the financial services industry, including more stringent regulation of depository institutions and their holding companies.  Federal regulatory agencies are in the process of developing regulations to implement many of the Dodd-Frank Act’s provisions, so the full impact and compliance burden on the operations and profitability of depository institutions and their holding companies is not yet clear and will not likely be clear for years to come.  Based on the provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act and anticipated implementing regulations, depository institutions and their holding companies are likely to be subject to significantly increased regulatory and compliance obligations.  Accordingly, investments in bank paper may not yield expected returns because the increased regulation may significantly curtail the operations and profitability of depository institutions and their holding companies.

Zero Coupon Securities, Step Coupon Securities, Pay-in-Kind Securities and Discount Obligations. The Fund may invest in zero coupon securities, step coupon securities and pay-in-kind securities. Zero coupon securities and step coupon securities are debt obligations that are issued and traded at a discount from their face amount or par value (known as “original issue discount” or “OID”) and do not entitle the holder to any periodic payment of interest prior to maturity or that specify a future date when the securities begin to pay current interest. The Fund may also acquire
certain debt securities at a discount. These discount obligations involve special risk considerations. OID varies depending on prevailing interest rates, the time remaining until cash payments begin, the liquidity of the security, and the perceived credit quality of the issuer.

Zero coupon securities and step coupon securities are redeemed at face value when they mature. Accrued OID must be included in the Fund’s gross income for federal tax purposes ratably each taxable year prior to the receipt of any actual payments. Pay-in-kind securities pay “interest” through the issuance of additional securities.
Because the Fund must distribute substantially all of its net investment income (including non-cash income attributable to OID and “interest” on pay-in-kind securities) and net realized gains to its stockholders each taxable year to continue to qualify for treatment as a RIC and to minimize or avoid payment of federal income and excise taxes, the Fund may have to dispose of portfolio securities under disadvantageous circumstances to generate cash, or may be required to borrow, to satisfy the distribution requirements. See “Additional Tax Information – Taxation of the Fund.”
The market prices of zero coupon securities, step coupon securities, pay-in-kind securities and discount obligations generally are more volatile than the prices of securities that pay cash interest periodically. Those securities and obligations are likely to respond to changes in interest rates to a greater degree than other types of debt securities having a similar maturity and credit quality.
Convertible Securities. A convertible security is a bond, debenture, note, preferred stock, or other security or debt obligation that may be converted into or exchanged for a prescribed amount of common stock of the same or a different issuer within a particular period of time at a specified price or formula. Convertible securities generally have features of, and risks associated with, both equity and fixed income instruments. As such, the value of most convertible securities will vary with changes in the price of, and will be subject to the risks associated with, the underlying common stock.  Additionally, convertible securities are also subject to the risk that the issuer may not be able to pay principal or interest when due and the value of the convertible security may change based on the issuer’s credit rating.
A convertible security entitles the holder to receive the interest paid or accrued on debt or the dividend paid on preferred stock until the convertible security matures or is redeemed, converted or exchanged. Before conversion, such securities ordinarily provide a stream of income with generally higher yields than common stocks of the same or similar issuers, but lower than the yield on non-convertible debt. Convertible securities are usually subordinated to comparable-tier non-convertible securities and other senior debt obligations of the issuer, but rank senior to common stock in a company’s capital structure. The value of a convertible security is a function of (1) its yield in comparison to the yields of other securities of comparable maturity and quality that do not have a conversion privilege and (2) its worth if converted into the underlying common stock.
The price of a convertible security often reflects variations in the price of the underlying common stock in a way that non-convertible debt may not. Convertible securities may be issued by smaller capitalization companies whose stock prices may be more volatile than larger capitalization companies. A convertible security may have a mandatory conversion feature or a call feature that subjects it to redemption at the option of the issuer at a price established in the security’s governing instrument. If a convertible security held by the Fund is called for redemption, the Fund will be required to convert it into the underlying common stock, sell it to a third party or permit the issuer to
redeem the security. Any of these actions could have an adverse effect on the Fund’s ability to achieve its investment objective.

Inflation-Indexed Securities.  Inflation-indexed bonds are fixed income securities whose principal value or coupon (interest payment) is periodically adjusted according to the rate of inflation. The Fund may invest in inflation-indexed securities issued in any country. Two structures are common. The Treasury Department and some other issuers use a structure that accrues inflation into the principal value of the bond. Other issuers pay out the index based accruals as part of a semiannual coupon. The Fund may invest in Treasury Department securities the principal value of which is adjusted daily in accordance with changes to the Consumer Price Index. Such securities are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. Interest is calculated on the basis of the current adjusted principal value. The principal value of inflation-indexed securities declines in periods of deflation, but holders at maturity receive no less than par. If inflation is lower than expected during the period the Fund holds the security, the Fund may earn less on it than on a conventional bond.

The Fund may invest in Treasury Department inflation-indexed securities, formerly called “U.S. Treasury Inflation Protected Securities” (“U.S. TIPS”), which are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government.  The periodic adjustment of U.S. TIPS is currently tied to the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (“CPI-U”), which is calculated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), which is part of the Labor Department. The CPI-U is a measurement of changes in the cost of living, made up of components such as housing, food, transportation and energy. Inflation-indexed bonds issued by a non-U.S. government are generally adjusted to reflect a comparable inflation index, calculated by that government. There can be no assurance that the CPI-U or any non-U.S. inflation index will accurately measure the real rate of inflation in the prices of goods and services. In addition, there can be no assurance that the rate of inflation in a non-U.S. country will be correlated to the rate of inflation in the United States. The three-month lag in calculating the CPI-U for purposes of adjusting the principal value of U.S. TIPS may give rise to risks under certain circumstances.

Interest is calculated on the basis of the current adjusted principal value. The principal value of inflation-indexed securities declines in periods of deflation, but holders at maturity receive no less than par.  However, if the Fund purchases inflation-indexed securities in the secondary market whose principal values have been adjusted upward due to inflation since issuance, the Fund may experience a loss if there is a subsequent period of deflation.  If inflation is lower than expected during the period the Fund holds the security, the Fund may earn less on it than on a conventional bond. The Fund may also invest in other inflation-related bonds which may or may not provide a guarantee of principal. If a guarantee of principal is not provided, the adjusted principal value of the bond repaid at maturity may be less than the original principal amount.

Because the coupon rate on inflation-indexed securities is lower than fixed-rate Treasury Department securities, the CPI-U would have to rise at least to the amount of the difference between the coupon rate of the fixed-rate Treasury Department issues and the coupon rate of the inflation-indexed securities, assuming all other factors are equal, in order for such securities to match the performance of the fixed-rate Treasury Department securities. Inflation-indexed securities are expected to react primarily to changes in the “real” interest rate (i.e., the nominal (or stated) rate less the rate of inflation), while a typical bond reacts to changes in the nominal interest rate. Accordingly, inflation-indexed securities have characteristics of fixed-rate Treasury Department securities having a
shorter duration. Changes in market interest rates from causes other than inflation will likely affect the market prices of inflation-indexed securities in the same manner as conventional bonds.

Any increase in the principal value of an inflation-indexed security is taxable in the year the increase occurs, even though its holders do not receive cash representing the increase until the security matures. Because the Fund must distribute substantially all of its net investment income (including non-cash income attributable to those principal value increases) and net realized gains to its stockholders each taxable year to continue to qualify for treatment as a RIC and to minimize or avoid payment of federal income and excise taxes, the Fund may have to dispose of other investments under disadvantageous circumstances to generate cash, or may be required to borrow, to satisfy its distribution requirements.

The Treasury Department began issuing inflation-indexed bonds in 1997. Certain non-U.S. governments, such as the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia, have a longer history of issuing inflation-indexed bonds, and there may be a more liquid market in certain of these countries for these securities.

Swap Agreements. The Fund may enter into swap agreements to manage or gain exposure to particular types of investments (including commodities, equity securities, interest rates or indices of equity securities in which the Fund otherwise could not invest efficiently).

Swap agreements historically have been individually negotiated and structured to include exposure to a variety of different types of investments or market factors. Swap agreements are two party contracts entered into primarily by institutional investors. Swap agreements can vary in term like other fixed-income investments. Most swap agreements are currently traded over-the-counter. In a standard “swap” transaction, two parties agree to exchange one or more payments based, for example, on the returns (or differentials in rates of return) earned or realized on particular predetermined investments or instruments (such as securities, indices, or other financial or economic interests). The gross payments to be exchanged (or “swapped”) between the parties are calculated with respect to a notional amount, which is the predetermined dollar principal of the trade representing the hypothetical underlying quantity upon which payment obligations are computed. If a swap agreement provides for payment in different currencies, the parties may agree to exchange the principal amount. A swap also includes an instrument that is dependent on the occurrence, nonoccurrence or the extent of the occurrence of an event or contingency associated with a potential financial, economic or commercial consequence, such as a credit default swap.
Depending on how they are used, swap agreements may increase or decrease the overall volatility of the Fund’s investments and its share price and yield.  Swap agreements are subject to liquidity risk, meaning that the Fund may be unable to sell a swap agreement to a third party at a favorable price.  Swap agreements may involve leverage and may be highly volatile; depending on how they are used, they may have a considerable impact on the Fund’s performance. The risks of swap agreements depend upon the Fund’s ability to terminate its swap agreements or reduce its exposure through offsetting transactions. Swaps are highly specialized instruments that require investment techniques and risk analyses different from those associated with stocks, bonds, and other traditional investments.
Some swaps currently are, and more in the future will be, centrally cleared. Swaps that are centrally cleared are subject to the creditworthiness of the clearing organization involved in the
transaction.  For example, an investor could lose margin payments it has deposited with its futures commission merchant as well as the net amount of gains not yet paid by the clearing organization if the clearing organization becomes insolvent or goes into bankruptcy. In the event of bankruptcy of the clearing organization, the investor may be entitled to the net amount of gains the investor is entitled to receive plus the return of margin owed to it only in proportion to the amount received by the clearing organization’s other customers, potentially resulting in losses to the investor.

To the extent a swap is not centrally cleared, the use of a swap involves the risk that a loss may be sustained as a result of the insolvency or bankruptcy of the counterparty or the failure of the counterparty to make required payments or otherwise comply with the terms of the agreement. If a counterparty’s creditworthiness declines, the value of the swap might decline, potentially resulting in losses to the Fund. Changing conditions in a particular market area, whether or not directly related to the referenced assets that underlie the swap agreement, may have an adverse impact on the creditworthiness of the counterparty. If a default occurs by the counterparty to such a transaction, the Fund may have contractual remedies pursuant to the agreements related to the transaction.
The regulation of the U.S. and non-U.S. swaps markets has undergone substantial change in recent years. Although the CFTC released final rules relating to clearing, reporting, recordkeeping and registration requirements under the legislation, many of the provisions of Dodd-Frank Act are subject to further final rule making or phase-in periods, and thus their ultimate impact remains unclear. New regulations could, among other things, restrict the Fund’s ability to engage in swap transactions (for example, by making certain types of swaps no longer available to the Fund) and/or increase the costs of such swap transactions (for example, by increasing margin or capital requirements), and the Fund might be unable to fully execute its investment strategies as a result. Limits or restrictions applicable to the counterparties with which the Fund engages in swaps also could prevent the Fund from using these instruments or affect the pricing or other factors relating to these instruments, or may change the availability of certain investment.
Regulations adopted by the CFTC, SEC and banking regulators may require the Fund to post margin on OTC swaps, and exchanges will set minimum margin requirements for exchange-traded and cleared swaps. The prudential regulators issued final rules that will require banks subject to their supervision to exchange variation and initial margin in respect of their obligations arising under OTC swap agreements.  The CFTC adopted similar rules that apply to CFTC-registered swap dealers that are not banks.  Such rules generally require the Fund to segregate additional assets in order to meet the new variation and initial margin requirements when they enter into OTC swap agreements.  The European Supervisory Authorities (“ESA”), various national regulators in Europe, the Australian Securities & Investment Commission, the Japanese Financial Services Agency and the Canadian Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions adopted rules and regulations that are similar to that of the Federal Reserve. The variation margin requirements are now effective and the initial margin requirements are being phased-in through 2022 based on average daily aggregate notional amount of covered swaps between swap dealers and swap entities. Due to these regulations, the Fund could be required to engage in greater documentation and recordkeeping with respect to swap agreements.
Separately, on December 8, 2020, the CFTC adopted regulations allowing investment advisers for registered investment companies and other institutional investors to apply a minimum transfer amount (“MTA”) of variation margin based upon the separately managed investment account or sleeve (“Sleeve”) that the adviser is responsible for, rather than having to calculate the MTA across all accounts of the investor. An investment manager must abide by the following conditions: (1) any
such swaps are entered into with the swap dealer by an asset manager on behalf of a Sleeve owned by the legal entity pursuant to authority granted under an investment management agreement; (2) the swaps of such Sleeve are subject to a master netting agreement that does not permit netting of initial or variation margin obligations across Sleeves of the legal entity that have swaps outstanding with the swap dealer; and (3) the swap dealer applies an MTA no greater than $50,000 to the initial and variation margin collection and posting obligations required of such Sleeve.  As of the date of this SAI, the banking regulators have not provided similar relief, although swaps dealers subject to a banking regulator are expected to act in a manner consistent with the relief provided by the CFTC.

Regulations adopted by the prudential regulators require certain banks to include in a range of financial contracts, including swap agreements, terms delaying or restricting default, termination and other rights in the event that the bank and/or its affiliates become subject to certain types of resolution or insolvency proceedings. The regulations could limit the Fund’s ability to exercise a range of cross-default rights if its counterparty, or an affiliate of the counterparty, is subject to bankruptcy or similar proceedings. Such regulations could further negatively impact the Fund’s use of swaps.
Swap agreements can take many different forms and are known by a variety of names including, but not limited to, interest rate swaps, mortgage swaps, total return swaps, inflation swaps, asset swaps (where parties exchange assets, typically a debt security), currency swaps, equity swaps, credit default swaps, commodity-linked swaps, and contracts for differences. The Fund may also write (sell) and purchase options on swaps (swaptions).

Policies and Limitations. In accordance with SEC staff requirements, the Fund will segregate cash or appropriate liquid securities in an amount equal to its obligations under swap agreements; when an agreement provides for netting of the payments by the two parties, the Fund will segregate only the amount of its net obligation, if any.

Interest Rate Swaps, Mortgage Swaps, and Interest Rate “Caps,” “Floors,” and “Collars.” In a typical interest rate swap agreement, one party agrees to make regular payments equal to a floating rate on a specified amount in exchange for payments equal to a fixed rate, or a different floating rate, on the same amount for a specified period. Mortgage swap agreements are similar to interest rate swap agreements, except the notional principal amount is tied to a reference pool of mortgages or index of mortgages.  In an interest rate cap or floor, one party agrees, usually in return for a fee, to make payments under particular circumstances. For example, the purchaser of an interest rate cap has the right to receive payments to the extent a specified interest rate exceeds an agreed level; the purchaser of an interest rate floor has the right to receive payments to the extent a specified interest rate falls below an agreed level. An interest rate collar entitles the purchaser to receive payments to the extent a specified interest rate falls outside an agreed range.

Among other techniques, the Fund may use interest rate swaps to offset declines in the value of fixed income securities held by the Fund.  In such an instance, the Fund may agree with a counterparty to pay a fixed rate (multiplied by a notional amount) and the counterparty to pay a floating rate multiplied by the same notional amount. If long-term interest rates rise, resulting in a diminution in the value of the Fund’s portfolio, the Fund would receive payments under the swap that would offset, in whole or in part, such diminution in value; if interest rates fall, the Fund would likely lose money on the swap transaction. A Fund may also enter into constant maturity swaps, which are a variation of the typical interest rate swap. Constant maturity swaps are exposed to changes in long-term interest rate movements.
Total Return Swaps.  A Fund may enter into total return swaps (“TRS”) to obtain exposure to a security or market without owning or taking physical custody of such security or market.  A Fund may be either a total return receiver or a total return payer. Generally, the total return payer sells to the total return receiver an amount equal to all cash flows and price appreciation on a defined security or asset payable at periodic times during the swap term (i.e., credit risk) in return for a periodic payment from the total return receiver based on a designated index (e.g., the London Interbank Offered Rate, known as LIBOR or the Secured Overnight Financing Rate, known as SOFR) and spread, plus the amount of any price depreciation on the reference security or asset. The total return payer does not need to own the underlying security or asset to enter into a total return swap. The final payment at the end of the swap term includes final settlement of the current market price of the underlying reference security or asset, and payment by the applicable party for any appreciation or depreciation in value. Usually, collateral must be posted by the total return receiver to secure the periodic interest-based and market price depreciation payments depending on the credit quality of the underlying reference security and creditworthiness of the total return receiver, and the collateral amount is marked-to-market daily equal to the market price of the underlying reference security or asset between periodic payment dates.
TRS may effectively add leverage to the Fund’s portfolio because, in addition to its net assets, the Fund would be subject to investment exposure on the notional amount of the swap.  If the Fund is the total return receiver in a TRS, then the credit risk for an underlying asset is transferred to the Fund in exchange for its receipt of the return (appreciation) on that asset. If the Fund is the total return payer, it is hedging the downside risk of an underlying asset but it is obligated to pay the amount of any appreciation on that asset.

Inflation Swaps. In an inflation swap, one party agrees to pay the cumulative percentage increase in a price index, such as the Consumer Price Index, over the term of the swap (with some lag on the referenced inflation index) and the other party agrees to pay a compounded fixed rate. Inflation swaps may be used to protect the Fund’s NAV against an unexpected change in the rate of inflation measured by an inflation index.
Currency Swaps.  A currency swap involves the exchange by the Fund and another party of the cash flows on a notional amount of two or more currencies based on the relative value differential among them, such as exchanging a right to receive a payment in foreign currency for the right to receive U.S. dollars.  A Fund may enter into currency swaps (where the parties exchange their respective rights to make or receive payments in specified currencies). Currency swap agreements may be entered into on a net basis or may involve the delivery of the entire principal value of one designated currency in exchange for the entire principal value of another designated currency. In such cases, the entire principal value of a currency swap is subject to the risk that the counterparty will default on its contractual delivery obligations.
Equity Swaps. Equity swaps are contracts that allow one party to exchange the returns, including any dividend income, on an equity security or group of equity securities for another payment stream.  Under an equity swap, payments may be made at the conclusion of the equity swap or periodically during its term.  A Fund may enter into equity swaps.  An equity swap may be used to invest in a market without owning or taking physical custody of securities in circumstances in which direct investment may be restricted for legal reasons or is otherwise deemed impractical or disadvantageous.   Furthermore, equity swaps may be illiquid and the Fund may be unable to
terminate its obligations when desired.  In addition, the value of some components of an equity swap (such as the dividends on a common stock) may also be sensitive to changes in interest rates.

Credit Default Swaps. In a credit default swap, the credit default protection buyer makes periodic payments, known as premiums, to the credit default protection seller. In return, the credit default protection seller will make a payment to the credit default protection buyer upon the occurrence of a specified credit event. A credit default swap can refer to a single issuer or asset, a basket of issuers or assets or index of assets, each known as the reference entity or underlying asset. The Fund may act as either the buyer or the seller of a credit default swap. The Fund may buy or sell credit default protection on a basket of issuers or assets, even if a number of the underlying assets referenced in the basket are lower-quality debt securities. In an unhedged credit default swap, the Fund buys credit default protection on a single issuer or asset, a basket of issuers or assets or index of assets without owning the underlying asset or debt issued by the reference entity. Credit default swaps involve greater and different risks than investing directly in the referenced asset, because, in addition to market risk, credit default swaps include liquidity, counterparty and operational risk.

Credit default swaps allow the Fund to acquire or reduce credit exposure to a particular issuer, asset or basket of assets. If a swap agreement calls for payments by the Fund, the Fund must be prepared to make such payments when due. If the Fund is the credit default protection seller, the Fund will experience a loss if a credit event occurs and the credit of the reference entity or underlying asset has deteriorated. If the Fund is the credit default protection buyer, the Fund will be required to pay premiums to the credit default protection seller. In the case of a physically settled credit default swap in which the Fund is the protection seller, the Fund must be prepared to pay par for and take possession of debt of a defaulted issuer delivered to the Fund by the credit default protection buyer. Any loss would be offset by the premium payments the Fund receives as the seller of credit default protection. If the Fund sells (writes) a credit default swap, it currently intends to segregate the full notional value of the swap, except if the Fund sells a credit default swap on an index with certain characteristics (i.e., on a broad based index and cash settled) where the Manager believes segregating only the amount out of the money more appropriately represents the Fund’s exposure.

Commodity-Linked Swaps.  Commodity-linked swaps are two party contracts in which the parties agree to exchange the return or interest rate on one instrument for the return of a particular commodity, commodity index or commodity futures or options contract. The payment streams are calculated by reference to an agreed upon notional amount. A one-period swap contract operates in a manner similar to a forward or futures contract because there is an agreement to swap a commodity for cash at only one forward date. A Fund may engage in swap transactions that have more than one period and therefore more than one exchange of payments. A Fund may invest in total return commodity swaps to gain exposure to the overall commodity markets. In a total return commodity swap, the Fund will receive the price appreciation of a commodity index, a portion of the index, or a single commodity in exchange for paying an agreed-upon fee. If a commodity swap is for one period, the Fund will pay a fixed fee, established at the outset of the swap.  However, if the term of a commodity swap is more than one period, with interim swap payments, the Fund will pay an adjustable or floating fee. With “floating” rate, the fee is pegged to a base rate such as LIBOR or SOFR, and is adjusted each period. Therefore, if interest rates increase over the term of the swap contract, the Fund may be required to pay a higher fee at each swap reset date.
Dollar Rolls. In a “dollar roll,” the Fund sells securities for delivery in the current month and simultaneously agrees to repurchase substantially similar (i.e., same type and coupon) securities on a specified future date from the same party. During the period before the repurchase, the Fund forgoes
principal and interest payments on the securities. The Fund is compensated by the difference between the current sales price and the forward price for the future purchase (often referred to as the “drop”), as well as by the interest earned on the cash proceeds of the initial sale. Dollar rolls may increase fluctuations in the Fund’s NAV and may be viewed as a form of leverage. A “covered roll” is a specific type of dollar roll in which the Fund holds an offsetting cash position or a cash-equivalent securities position that matures on or before the forward settlement date of the dollar roll transaction. There is a risk that the counterparty will be unable or unwilling to complete the transaction as scheduled, which may result in losses to the Fund. The Manager monitors the creditworthiness of counterparties to dollar rolls.

Policies and Limitations. Dollar rolls are considered borrowings for purposes of the Fund’s investment policies and limitations concerning borrowings.

Securities of Other Investment Companies.  As indicated above, investments by the Fund in shares of other investment companies are subject to the limitations of the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder. However, pursuant to Rule 12d1-4, the Fund is permitted to invest in shares of certain investment companies beyond the limits contained in the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder if the Fund complies with the adopted framework for fund of funds arrangements under the rule. The Fund may invest in the securities of other investment companies, including open-end management companies, closed-end management companies (including business development companies (“BDCs”)) and unit investment trusts, that are consistent with its investment objective and policies. Such an investment may be the most practical or only manner in which the Fund can invest in certain asset classes or participate in certain markets, such as foreign markets, because of the expenses involved or because other vehicles for investing in those markets may not be available at the time the Fund is ready to make an investment.  When investing in the securities of other investment companies, the Fund will be indirectly exposed to all the risks of such investment companies’ portfolio securities.  In addition, as a shareholder in an investment company, the Fund would indirectly bear its pro rata share of that investment company’s advisory fees and other operating expenses.  Fees and expenses incurred indirectly by the Fund as a result of its investment in shares of one or more other investment companies generally are referred to as “acquired fund fees and expenses” and may appear as a separate line item in the Fund’s Prospectus fee table. For certain investment companies, such as BDCs, these expenses may be significant. The 1940 Act imposes certain restraints upon the operations of a BDC. For example, BDCs are required to invest at least 70% of their total assets primarily in securities of private companies or thinly traded U.S. public companies, cash, cash equivalents, U.S. government securities and high quality debt investments that mature in one year or less. As a result, BDCs generally invest in less mature private companies, which involve greater risk than well-established, publicly-traded companies. In addition, the shares of closed-end management companies may involve the payment of substantial premiums above, while the sale of such securities may be made at substantial discounts from, the value of such issuer’s portfolio securities. Historically, shares of closed-end funds, including BDCs, have frequently traded at a discount to their NAV, which discounts have, on occasion, been substantial and lasted for sustained periods of time.

Certain money market funds that operate in accordance with Rule 2a-7 under the 1940 Act float their NAV while others seek to preserve the value of investments at a stable NAV (typically $1.00 per share). An investment in a money market fund, even an investment in the Fund seeking to maintain a stable NAV per share, is not guaranteed, and it is possible for the Fund to lose money by investing in these and other types of money market funds. If the liquidity of a money market fund’s
portfolio deteriorates below certain levels, the money market fund may suspend redemptions (i.e., impose a redemption gate) and thereby prevent the Fund from selling its investment in the money market fund or impose a fee of up to 2% on amounts the Fund redeems from the money market fund (i.e., impose a liquidity fee).

Policies and Limitations. For cash management purposes, the Fund may invest an unlimited amount of its uninvested cash and cash collateral received in connection with securities lending in shares of money market funds and unregistered funds that operate in compliance with Rule 2a-7 under the 1940 Act, whether or not advised by the Manager or an affiliate, under specified conditions.  See “Cash Management and Temporary Defensive Positions.”

Otherwise, the Fund’s investment in securities of other investment companies is generally limited to (i) 3% of the total voting stock of any one investment company, (ii) 5% of the Fund’s total assets with respect to any one investment company and (iii) 10% of the Fund’s total assets in all investment companies in the aggregate.

Effective January 19, 2022, the SEC rescinded related fund of funds exemptive orders, certain no-action letters related to fund of funds investments, and Rule 12d1-2 under the 1940 Act.  As of that date, fund of funds arrangements must comply with the provisions of the 1940 Act, Rule 12d1-4, or another rule. Pursuant to Rule 12d1-4, the Fund is permitted to exceed the limits of Section 12 of the 1940 Act if the Fund complies with Rule 12d1-4’s conditions, which contain elements from the SEC’s prior exemptive orders permitting fund of funds arrangements, including (i) limits on control and voting; (ii) required evaluations and findings; (iii) required fund of funds investment agreements; and (iv) limits on complex structures.
 
Futures Contracts, Options on Futures Contracts, Options on Securities and Indices, Forward Currency Contracts, Options on Foreign Currencies, and Swap Agreements (collectively, “Financial Instruments”).Financial Instruments are instruments whose value is dependent upon the value of an underlying asset or assets, which may include stocks, bonds, commodities, interest rates, currency exchange rates, or related indices.  As described below, Financial Instruments may be used for "hedging" purposes, meaning that they may be used in an effort to offset a decline in value in the Fund’s other investments, which could result from changes in interest rates, market prices, currency fluctuations, or other market factors.  Financial Instruments may also be used for non-hedging purposes in an effort to implement a cash management strategy, to enhance income or gain, to manage or adjust the risk profile of the Fund or the risk of individual positions, to gain exposure more efficiently than through a direct purchase of the underlying security, or to gain exposure to securities, markets, sectors or geographical areas.
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC”) to establish new regulations with respect to derivatives defined as security-based swaps (e.g., derivatives based on an equity or a narrowly based equity index) and swaps (e.g., derivatives based on a broad-based index or commodity), respectively, and the markets in which these instruments trade. In addition, it subjected all security-based swaps and swaps to SEC and CFTC jurisdiction, respectively.
The SEC adopted Rule 18f-4 under the 1940 Act in November 2020 which will regulate the use of derivatives for certain funds registered under the Investment Company Act (“Rule 18f-4”). Unless the Fund qualifies as a “limited derivatives user” as defined in Rule 18f-4, Rule 18f-4 would,
among other things, require the Fund to establish a comprehensive derivatives risk management program, to comply with certain value-at-risk based leverage limits, to appoint a derivatives risk manager and to provide additional disclosure both publicly and to the SEC regarding its derivatives positions. For funds that qualify as limited derivatives users, Rule 18f-4 requires the fund to have policies and procedures to manage its aggregate derivatives risk. These requirements could have an impact on the Fund, including a potential increase in cost to enter into derivatives transactions. It is not currently expected that Rule 18f-4 will materially impact the Fund’s strategies or investments, but the full impact of Rule 18f-4 on the Fund remains uncertain. In addition, due to the compliance timeline within Rule 18f-4, the Fund will not be required to fully comply with the requirements of Rule 18f-4 until August 2022.

Futures Contracts and Options on Futures Contracts. The Fund may purchase and sell futures contracts (sometimes referred to as “futures”) and options thereon for hedging purposes (i.e., to attempt to offset against changes in the prices of securities or, in the case of foreign currency futures and options thereon, to attempt to offset against changes in prevailing currency exchange rates) or non-hedging purposes.
A “purchase” of a futures contract (or entering into a “long” futures position) entails the buyer’s assumption of a contractual obligation to take delivery of the instrument underlying the contract at a specified price at a specified future time. A “sale” of a futures contract (or entering into a “short” futures position) entails the seller’s assumption of a contractual obligation to make delivery of the instrument underlying the contract at a specified price at a specified future time.
The value of a futures contract tends to increase or decrease in tandem with the value of its underlying instrument. Therefore, purchasing futures contracts will tend to increase the Fund’s exposure to positive and negative price fluctuations in the underlying instrument, much as if the Fund had purchased the underlying instrument directly. The Fund may purchase futures contracts to fix what the Manager believes to be a favorable price for securities the Fund intends to purchase. When the Fund sells a futures contract, by contrast, the value of its futures position will tend to move in a direction contrary to the market for the underlying instrument. Selling futures contracts, therefore, will tend to offset both positive and negative market price changes, much as if the Fund had sold the underlying instrument. The Fund may sell futures contracts to offset a possible decline in the value of its portfolio securities. In addition, the Fund may purchase or sell futures contracts with a greater or lesser value than the securities it wishes to hedge to attempt to compensate for anticipated differences in volatility between positions the Fund may wish to hedge and the standardized futures contracts available to it, although this may not be successful in all cases.  Further, a loss incurred on a particular transaction being used as a hedge does not mean that it failed to achieve its objective, if the goal was to prevent a worse loss that may have resulted had a particular securities or cash market investment suffered a substantial loss and there were no offsetting hedge.

Certain futures, including index futures and futures not calling for the physical delivery or acquisition of the instrument underlying the contract, are settled on a net cash payment basis rather than by the delivery of the underlying instrument.  In addition, although futures contracts by their terms may call for the physical delivery or acquisition of the instrument underlying the contract, in most cases the contractual obligation is extinguished by being closed out before the expiration of the contract. A futures position is closed out by buying (to close out an earlier sale) or selling (to close out an earlier purchase) an identical futures contract calling for delivery in the same month. This may result in a profit or loss. While futures contracts entered into by the Fund will usually be liquidated in
this manner, the Fund may instead make or take delivery of the underlying instrument or utilize the cash settlement process whenever it appears economically advantageous for it to do so.

Because the futures markets may be more liquid than the cash markets, the use of futures contracts permits the Fund to enhance portfolio liquidity and maintain a defensive position without having to sell portfolio securities. For example, (i) futures contracts on single stocks, interest rates and indices (including on narrow-based indices) and options thereon may be used as a maturity or duration management device and/or a device to reduce risk or preserve total return in an adverse environment for the hedged securities, and (ii) foreign currency futures and options thereon may be used as a means of establishing more definitely the effective return on, or the purchase price of, securities denominated in foreign currencies that are held or intended to be acquired by the Fund.

For purposes of managing cash flow, the Fund may use futures and options thereon to increase its exposure to the performance of a recognized securities index.

With respect to currency futures, the Fund may sell a currency futures contract or a call option thereon, or may purchase a put option on a currency futures contract, if the Manager anticipates that exchange rates for a particular currency will fall. Such a transaction will be used as a hedge (or, in the case of a sale of a call option, a partial hedge) against a decrease in the value of portfolio securities denominated in that currency. If the Manager anticipates that exchange rates for a particular currency will rise, the Fund may purchase a currency futures contract or a call option thereon to protect against an increase in the price of securities that are denominated in that currency and that the Fund intends to purchase. The Fund also may purchase a currency futures contract or a call option thereon for non-hedging purposes when the Manager anticipates that a particular currency will appreciate in value, but securities denominated in that currency do not present attractive investment opportunities and are not held in the Fund’s investment portfolio.

“Initial Margin” with respect to a futures contract is the amount of assets that must be deposited by the Fund with, or for the benefit of, a futures commission merchant or broker in order to initiate the Fund’s futures positions.  Initial margin is the margin deposit made by the Fund when it enters into a futures contract; it is intended to assure performance of the contract by the Fund. If the value of the Fund’s futures account declines by a specified amount, the Fund will receive a margin call and be required to post assets sufficient to restore the equity in the account to the initial margin level.  (This is sometimes referred to as “variation margin;” technically, variation margin refers to daily payments that a clearing member firm is required to pay to the clearing organization based upon marking to market of the firm’s portfolio.)  However, if favorable price changes in the futures account cause the margin deposit to exceed the required initial margin level, the excess margin may be transferred to the Fund. The futures commission merchant or clearing member firm through which the Fund enters into and clears futures contracts may require a margin deposit in excess of exchange minimum requirements based upon its assessment of the Fund’s creditworthiness.  In computing its NAV, the Fund will mark to market the value of its open futures positions.  The Fund also must make margin deposits with respect to options on futures that it has written (but not with respect to options on futures that it has purchased, if the Fund has paid the required premium in full at the outset). If the futures commission merchant or broker holding the margin deposit or premium goes bankrupt, the Fund could suffer a delay in recovering excess margin or other funds and could ultimately suffer a loss.

Because of the low margin deposits required, futures trading involves an extremely high degree of leverage; as a result, a relatively small price movement in a futures contract may result in immediate and substantial loss, or gain, to the investor. Losses that may arise from certain futures transactions are potentially unlimited, and may exceed initial margin deposits as well as deposits made in response to subsequent margin calls.

The Fund may enter into futures contracts and options thereon that are traded on exchanges regulated by the CFTC or on non-U.S. exchanges. U.S. futures contracts are traded on exchanges that have been designated as “contract markets” by the CFTC; futures transactions must be executed through a futures commission merchant that is a member of the relevant contract market.  Futures executed on regulated futures exchanges have minimal counterparty risk to the Fund because the exchange’s clearing organization assumes the position of the counterparty in each transaction.   Thus, the Fund is exposed to risk only in connection with the clearing organization and not in connection with the original counterparty to the transaction.  However, if a futures customer defaults on a futures contract and the futures commission merchant carrying that customer’s account cannot cover the defaulting customer’s obligations on its futures contracts, the clearing organization may use any or all of the collateral in the futures commission merchant’s customer omnibus account — including the assets of the futures commission merchant’s other customers, such as the Fund — to meet the defaulting customer’s obligations.  This is sometimes referred to as "fellow customer risk."  Trading on non-U.S. exchanges is subject to the legal requirements of the jurisdiction in which the exchange is located and to the rules of such exchange, and may not involve a clearing mechanism and related guarantees. Funds deposited in connection with such trading may also be subject to the bankruptcy laws of such other jurisdiction, which may result in a delay in recovering such funds in a bankruptcy and could ultimately result in a loss.

An option on a futures contract gives the purchaser the right, in return for the premium paid, to assume a position in the contract (a long position if the option is a call and a short position if the option is a put) at a specified exercise price at any time during the option exercise period. The writer of the option is required upon exercise to assume a short futures position (if the option is a call) or a long futures position (if the option is a put). Upon exercise of the option, the accumulated cash balance in the writer’s futures margin account is delivered to the holder of the option. That balance represents the amount by which the market price of the futures contract at exercise exceeds, in the case of a call, or is less than, in the case of a put, the exercise price of the option. Options on futures have characteristics and risks similar to those of securities options, as discussed herein.

Although the Fund believes that the use of futures contracts and options may benefit it, if the Manager’s judgment about the general direction of the markets or about interest rate or currency exchange rate trends is incorrect, the Fund’s overall return would be lower than if it had not entered into any such contracts. The prices of futures contracts and options are volatile and are influenced by, among other things, actual and anticipated changes in interest or currency exchange rates, which in turn are affected by fiscal and monetary policies and by national and international political and economic events. At best, the correlation between changes in prices of futures contracts or options and of securities being hedged can be only approximate due to differences between the futures and securities markets or differences between the securities or currencies underlying the Fund’s futures or options position and the securities held by or to be purchased for the Fund. The currency futures or options market may be dominated by short-term traders seeking to profit from changes in exchange rates. This would reduce the value of such contracts used for hedging purposes over a short-term period. Such distortions are generally minor and would diminish as the contract approaches maturity.

Under certain circumstances, futures exchanges may limit the amount of fluctuation in the price of a futures contract or option thereon during a single trading day; once the daily limit has been reached, no trades may be made on that day at a price beyond that limit.  Daily limits govern only price movements during a particular trading day, however; they do not limit potential losses.  In fact, a daily limit may increase the risk of loss, because prices can move to the daily limit for several consecutive trading days with little or no trading, thereby preventing liquidation of unfavorable futures and options positions and subjecting traders to substantial losses.  If this were to happen with respect to a position held by the Fund, it could (depending on the size of the position) have an adverse impact on the Fund’s NAV.  In addition, the Fund would continue to be subject to margin calls and might be required to maintain the position being hedged by the futures contract or option thereon or to maintain cash or securities in a segregated account.

Many electronic trading facilities that support futures trading are supported by computer-based component systems for the order, routing, execution, matching, registration or clearing of trades.  The Fund’s ability to recover certain losses may be subject to limits on liability imposed by the system provider, the market, the clearing house or member firms.
Policies and Limitations. The Fund may purchase and sell futures contracts and options thereon in an attempt to hedge against changes in the prices of securities or, in the case of foreign currency futures and options thereon, to hedge against prevailing currency exchange rates. The Fund will not engage in transactions in futures and options on futures for speculation.

Call Options on Securities. The Fund may write (sell) covered call options and purchase call options on securities for hedging purposes (i.e., to attempt to reduce, at least in part, the effect on the Fund’s NAV of price fluctuations of securities held by the Fund) or non-hedging purposes. When writing call options, the Fund writes only “covered” call options. A call option is “covered” if the Fund simultaneously holds an equivalent position in the security underlying the option. Portfolio securities on which the Fund may write and purchase call options are purchased solely on the basis of investment considerations consistent with the Fund’s investment objective.
When the Fund writes a call option, it is obligated to sell a security to a purchaser at a specified price at any time until a certain date if the purchaser decides to exercise the option. The Fund will receive a premium for writing a call option. So long as the obligation of the call option continues the Fund may be assigned an exercise notice, requiring it to deliver the underlying security against payment of the exercise price. The Fund may be obligated to deliver securities underlying an option at less than the market price.

The writing of covered call options is a conservative investment technique that is believed to involve relatively little risk (in contrast to the writing of “naked” or uncovered call options, which the Fund will not do), but is capable of enhancing the Fund’s total return. When writing a covered call option, the Fund, in return for the premium, gives up the opportunity for profit from a price increase in the underlying security above the exercise price, but retains the risk of loss should the price of the security decline.

If a call option that the Fund has written expires unexercised, the Fund will realize a gain in the amount of the premium; however, that gain may be offset by a decline in the market value of the
underlying security during the option period. If a call option that the Fund has written is exercised, the Fund will realize a gain or loss from the sale of the underlying security.

When the Fund purchases a call option, it pays a premium to the writer for the right to purchase a security from the writer for a specified amount at any time until a certain date.  The Fund generally would purchase a call option to offset a previously written call option or to protect itself against an increase in the price of a security it intends to purchase.

Policies and Limitations. The Fund may write covered call options and may purchase call options on securities. The Fund may also write covered call options and may purchase call options in related closing transactions. The Fund writes only “covered” call options on securities it owns (in contrast to the writing of “naked” or uncovered call options, which the Fund will not do).

The Fund would purchase a call option to offset a previously written call option.  The Fund also may purchase a call option to protect against an increase in the price of the securities it intends to purchase.

Put Options on Securities. The Fund may write (sell) and purchase put options on securities for hedging purposes (i.e., to attempt to reduce, at least in part, the effect on the Fund’s NAV of price fluctuations of securities held by the Fund) or non-hedging purposes. Portfolio securities on which the Fund may write and purchase put options are purchased solely on the basis of investment considerations consistent with the Fund’s investment objective.

When the Fund writes a put option, it is obligated to acquire a security at a certain price at any time until a certain date if the purchaser decides to exercise the option. The Fund will receive a premium for writing a put option. When writing a put option, the Fund, in return for the premium, takes the risk that it must purchase the underlying security at a price that may be higher than the current market price of the security. If a put option that the Fund has written expires unexercised, the Fund will realize a gain in the amount of the premium.

When the Fund purchases a put option, it pays a premium to the writer for the right to sell a security to the writer for a specified amount at any time until a certain date. The Fund generally would purchase a put option to protect itself against a decrease in the market value of a security it owns.

Policies and Limitations. The Fund generally writes and purchases put options on securities for hedging purposes (e.g., to reduce, at least in part, the effect of price fluctuations of securities the Fund holds on its NAV).

General Information About Options on Securities. The exercise price of an option may be below, equal to, or above the market value of the underlying security at the time the option is written. Options normally have expiration dates between three and nine months from the date written. American-style options are exercisable at any time prior to their expiration date. European-style options are exercisable only immediately prior to their expiration date. The obligation under any option written by the Fund terminates upon expiration of the option or, at an earlier time, when the Fund offsets the option by entering into a “closing purchase transaction” to purchase an option of the same series. If an option is purchased by the Fund and is never exercised or closed out, the Fund will lose the entire amount of the premium paid.

Options are traded both on U.S. national securities exchanges and in the OTC market. Options also are traded on non-U.S. exchanges. Exchange-traded options are issued by a clearing organization affiliated with the exchange on which the option is listed; the clearing organization in effect guarantees completion of every exchange-traded option. In contrast, OTC options are contracts between the Fund and a counterparty, with no clearing organization guarantee. Thus, when the Fund sells (or purchases) an OTC option, it generally will be able to “close out” the option prior to its expiration only by entering into a closing transaction with the dealer to whom (or from whom) the Fund originally sold (or purchased) the option. There can be no assurance that the Fund would be able to liquidate an OTC option at any time prior to expiration. Unless the Fund is able to effect a closing purchase transaction in a covered OTC call option it has written, it will not be able to liquidate securities used as cover until the option expires or is exercised or until different cover is substituted. In the event of the counterparty’s insolvency, the Fund may be unable to liquidate its options position and the associated cover. The Manager monitors the creditworthiness of dealers with which the Fund may engage in OTC options transactions.

The premium the Fund receives (or pays) when it writes (or purchases) an option is the amount at which the option is currently traded on the applicable market. The premium may reflect, among other things, the current market price of the underlying security, the relationship of the exercise price to the market price, the historical price volatility of the underlying security, the length of the option period, the general supply of and demand for credit, and the interest rate environment. The premium the Fund receives when it writes an option is recorded as a liability on the Fund’s statement of assets and liabilities. This liability is adjusted daily to the option’s current market value.

Closing transactions are effected in order to realize a profit (or minimize a loss) on an outstanding option, to prevent an underlying security from being called, or to permit the sale or the put of the underlying security. Furthermore, effecting a closing transaction permits the Fund to write another call option on the underlying security with a different exercise price or expiration date or both. There is, of course, no assurance that the Fund will be able to effect closing transactions at favorable prices. If the Fund cannot enter into such a transaction, it may be required to hold a security that it might otherwise have sold (or purchase a security that it might otherwise not have bought), in which case it would continue to be at market risk on the security.

The Fund will realize a profit or loss from a closing purchase transaction if the cost of the transaction is less or more than the premium received from writing the call or put option. Because increases in the market price of a call option generally reflect increases in the market price of the underlying security, any loss resulting from the repurchase of a call option is likely to be offset, in whole or in part, by appreciation of the underlying security owned by the Fund; however, the Fund could be in a less advantageous position than if it had not written the call option.

The Fund pays brokerage commissions or spreads in connection with purchasing or writing options, including those used to close out existing positions. From time to time, the Fund may purchase an underlying security for delivery in accordance with an exercise notice of a call option assigned to it, rather than deliver the security from its inventory. In those cases, additional brokerage commissions are incurred.

The hours of trading for options may not conform to the hours during which the underlying securities are traded. To the extent that the options markets close before the markets for the
underlying securities close, significant price and rate movements can take place in the underlying markets that cannot be reflected in the options markets.

Additionally, volatility in the market for equity securities, which can impact a single stock or certain segments of stocks and can happen suddenly, can meaningfully increase the risk of loss associated with options.
Policies and Limitations. The Fund may use options. The assets used as cover (or held in a segregated account) for OTC options written by the Fund will be considered illiquid unless the OTC options are sold to qualified dealers who agree that the Fund may repurchase any OTC option it writes at a maximum price to be calculated by a formula set forth in the option agreement. The cover for an OTC call option written subject to this procedure will be considered illiquid only to the extent that the maximum repurchase price under the formula exceeds the intrinsic value of the option.

Put and Call Options on Securities Indices and Other Financial Indices. The Fund may write (sell) and purchase put and call options on securities indices and other financial indices for hedging or non-hedging purposes. In so doing, the Fund can pursue many of the same objectives it would pursue through the purchase and sale of options on individual securities or other instruments.

Options on securities indices and other financial indices are similar to options on a security or other instrument except that, rather than settling by physical delivery of the underlying instrument, options on indices settle by cash settlement; that is, an option on an index gives the holder the right to receive, upon exercise of the option, an amount of cash if the closing level of the index upon which the option is based is greater than, in the case of a call, or is less than, in the case of a put, the exercise price of the option (except if, in the case of an OTC option, physical delivery is specified). This amount of cash is equal to the difference between the closing price of the index and the exercise price of the option times a specified multiple (multiplier), which determines the total dollar value for each point of such difference. The seller of the option is obligated, in return for the premium received, to make delivery of this amount.

A securities index fluctuates with changes in the market values of the securities included in the index.  The gain or loss on an option on an index depends on price movements in the instruments comprising the market, market segment, industry or other composite on which the underlying index is based, rather than price movements in individual securities, as is the case with respect to options on securities. The risks of investment in options on indices may be greater than the risks of investment in options on securities.

The effectiveness of hedging through the purchase of securities index options will depend upon the extent to which price movements in the securities being hedged correlate with price movements in the selected securities index. Perfect correlation is not possible because the securities held or to be acquired by the Fund will not exactly match the composition of the securities indices on which options are available.

For purposes of managing cash flow, the Fund may purchase put and call options on securities indices to increase its exposure to the performance of a recognized securities index.

Securities index options have characteristics and risks similar to those of securities options, as discussed herein. Certain securities index options are traded in the OTC market and involve liquidity and credit risks that may not be present in the case of exchange-traded securities index options.

Policies and Limitations. For purposes of managing cash flow, the Fund may purchase put and call options on securities indices to increase the Fund’s exposure to the performance of a recognized securities index, such as the S&P 500 Index. All securities index options purchased by the Fund will be listed and traded on an exchange.

Options on Foreign Currencies. The Fund may write (sell) and purchase covered call and put options on foreign currencies for hedging or non-hedging purposes. The Fund may use options on foreign currencies to protect against decreases in the U.S. dollar value of securities held or increases in the U.S. dollar cost of securities to be acquired by the Fund or to protect the U.S. dollar equivalent of dividends, interest, or other payments on those securities. In addition, the Fund may write and purchase covered call and put options on foreign currencies for non-hedging purposes (e.g., when the Manager anticipates that a foreign currency will appreciate or depreciate in value, but securities denominated in that currency do not present attractive investment opportunities and are not held in the Fund’s investment portfolio). The Fund may write covered call and put options on any currency in order to realize greater income than would be realized on portfolio securities alone.

Currency options have characteristics and risks similar to those of securities options, as discussed herein. Certain options on foreign currencies are traded on the OTC market and involve liquidity and credit risks that may not be present in the case of exchange-traded currency options.

Policies and Limitations. The Fund may enter into forward contracts for the purpose of hedging and not for speculation.

Forward Foreign Currency Transactions. The Fund may enter into contracts for the purchase or sale of a specific currency at a future date, which may be any fixed number of days in excess of two days from the date of the contract agreed upon by the parties, at a price set at the time of the contract (“forward currency contracts”) for hedging or non-hedging purposes. The Fund also may engage in foreign currency transactions on a spot basis (i.e., cash transaction that results in actual delivery within two days) at the spot rate prevailing in the foreign currency market.

The Fund may enter into forward currency contracts in an attempt to hedge against changes in prevailing currency exchange rates (i.e., as a means of establishing more definitely the effective return on, or the purchase price of, securities denominated in foreign currencies). The Fund may also enter into forward currency contracts to protect against decreases in the U.S. dollar value of securities held or increases in the U.S. dollar cost of securities to be acquired by the Fund or to protect the U.S. dollar equivalent of dividends, interest, or other payments on those securities. In addition, the Fund may enter into forward currency contracts for non-hedging purposes when the Manager anticipates that a foreign currency will appreciate or depreciate in value, but securities denominated in that currency do not present attractive investment opportunities and are not held in the Fund’s investment portfolio.  The cost to the Fund of engaging in forward currency contracts varies with factors such as the currency involved, the length of the contract period, and the market conditions then prevailing.
Sellers or purchasers of forward currency contracts can enter into offsetting closing transactions, similar to closing transactions on futures, by purchasing or selling, respectively, an
instrument identical to the instrument sold or bought, respectively. Secondary markets generally do not exist for forward currency contracts, however, with the result that closing transactions generally can be made for forward currency contracts only by negotiating directly with the counterparty. Thus, there can be no assurance that the Fund will in fact be able to close out a forward currency contract at a favorable price prior to maturity. In addition, in the event of insolvency of the counterparty, the Fund might be unable to close out a forward currency contract at any time prior to maturity. In either event, the Fund would continue to be subject to market risk with respect to the position, and would continue to be required to maintain a position in the securities or currencies that are the subject of the hedge or to maintain cash or securities.

The precise matching of forward currency contract amounts and the value of the securities involved generally will not be possible because the value of such securities, measured in the foreign currency, will change after the forward currency contract has been established. Thus, the Fund might need to purchase or sell foreign currencies in the spot (cash) market to the extent such foreign currencies are not covered by forward currency contracts. The projection of short-term currency market movements is extremely difficult, and the successful execution of a short-term hedging strategy is highly uncertain.
The Manager believes that the use of foreign currency hedging techniques, including “proxy-hedges,” can provide significant protection of NAV in the event of a general increase or decrease in the value of the U.S. dollar against foreign currencies. For example, the return available from securities denominated in a particular foreign currency would decline if the value of the U.S. dollar increased against that currency. Such a decline could be partially or completely offset by an increase in the value of a hedge involving a forward currency contract to sell that foreign currency or a proxy-hedge involving a forward currency contract to sell a different foreign currency whose behavior is expected to resemble the behavior of the currency in which the securities being hedged are denominated but which is available on more advantageous terms.
However, a hedge or a proxy-hedge cannot protect against exchange rate risks perfectly and, if the Manager is incorrect in its judgment of future exchange rate relationships, the Fund could be in a less advantageous position than if such a hedge had not been established.  If the Fund uses proxy-hedging, it may experience losses on both the currency in which it has invested and the currency used for hedging if the two currencies do not vary with the expected degree of correlation. Using forward currency contracts to protect the value of the Fund’s securities against a decline in the value of a currency does not eliminate fluctuations in the prices of the underlying securities. Because forward currency contracts may not be traded on an exchange, the assets used to cover such contracts may be illiquid. The Fund may experience delays in the settlement of its foreign currency transactions.

Forward currency contracts in which the Fund may engage include foreign exchange forwards. The consummation of a foreign exchange forward requires the actual exchange of the principal amounts of the two currencies in the contract (i.e., settlement on a physical basis).  Because foreign exchange forwards are physically settled through an exchange of currencies, they are traded in the interbank market directly between currency traders (usually large commercial banks) and their customers. A foreign exchange forward generally has no deposit requirement, and no commissions are charged at any stage for trades; foreign exchange dealers realize a profit based on the difference (the spread) between the prices at which they are buying and the prices at which they are selling various currencies.When the Fund enters into a foreign exchange forward, it relies on the counterparty to make or take delivery of the underlying currency at the maturity of the contract. Failure by the counterparty to do so would result in the loss of any expected benefit of the transaction.

The Fund may be required to obtain the currency that it must deliver under the foreign exchange forward through the sale of portfolio securities denominated in such currency or through conversion of other assets of the Fund into such currency. When the Fund engages in foreign currency transactions for hedging purposes, it will not enter into foreign exchange forwards to sell currency or maintain a net exposure to such contracts if their consummation would obligate the Fund to deliver an amount of foreign currency materially in excess of the value of its portfolio securities or other assets denominated in that currency.

Forward currency contracts in which the Fund may engage also include non-deliverable forwards (“NDFs”). NDFs are cash-settled, short-term forward contracts on foreign currencies (each a “Reference Currency”) that are non-convertible and that may be thinly traded or illiquid.  NDFs involve an obligation to pay an amount (the “Settlement Amount”) equal to the difference between the prevailing market exchange rate for the Reference Currency and the agreed upon exchange rate (the “NDF Rate”), with respect to an agreed notional amount.  NDFs have a fixing date and a settlement (delivery) date.  The fixing date is the date and time at which the difference between the prevailing market exchange rate and the agreed upon exchange rate is calculated. The settlement (delivery) date is the date by which the payment of the Settlement Amount is due to the party receiving payment.

Although NDFs are similar to forward exchange forwards, NDFs do not require physical delivery of the Reference Currency on the settlement date. Rather, on the settlement date, the only transfer between the counterparties is the monetary settlement amount representing the difference between the NDF Rate and the prevailing market exchange rate. NDFs typically may have terms from one month up to two years and are settled in U.S. dollars.
NDFs are subject to many of the risks associated with derivatives in general and forward currency transactions, including risks associated with fluctuations in foreign currency and the risk that the counterparty will fail to fulfill its obligations.  Although NDFs have historically been traded OTC, in the future, pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Act, they may be exchange-traded.  Under such circumstances, they may be centrally cleared and a secondary market for them will exist.  With respect to NDFs that are centrally-cleared, an investor could lose margin payments it has deposited with the clearing organization as well as the net amount of gains not yet paid by the clearing organization if the clearing organization breaches its obligations under the NDF, becomes insolvent or goes into bankruptcy. In the event of bankruptcy of the clearing organization, the investor may be entitled to the net amount of gains the investor is entitled to receive plus the return of margin owed to it only in proportion to the amount received by the clearing organization’s other customers, potentially resulting in losses to the investor.  Even if some NDFs remain traded OTC, they will be subject to margin requirements for uncleared swaps and counterparty risk common to other swaps, as discussed below.
The Fund may purchase securities of an issuer domiciled in a country other than the country in whose currency the securities are denominated.

Combined Transactions. The Fund may enter into multiple transactions, which may include multiple options transactions, multiple interest rate transactions and any combination of options and interest rate transactions, instead of a single Financial Instrument, as part of a single or combined strategy when, in the judgment of the Manager, it is in the best interests of the Fund to do so. A
combined transaction will usually contain elements of risk that are present in each of its component transactions. Although the Fund will normally enter into combined transactions based on the Manager’s judgment that the combined transactions will reduce risk or otherwise more effectively achieve the desired portfolio management goal, it is possible that the combined transactions will instead increase risk or hinder achievement of the desired portfolio management goal.

Regulatory Limitations on Using Futures, Options on Futures, and Swaps. The CFTC has adopted regulations that subject registered investment companies and/or their investment advisors to regulation by the CFTC if the registered investment company invests more than a prescribed level of its NAV in commodity futures, options on commodities or commodity futures, swaps, or other financial instruments regulated under the Commodities and Exchange Act, or if the registered investment company is marketed as a vehicle for obtaining exposure to such commodity interests. 

As discussed in more detail below, the Advisor has claimed an exclusion from CPO registration pursuant to CFTC Rule 4.5, with respect to the Fund. To remain eligible for this exclusion, the Fund must comply with certain limitations, including limits on trading in commodity interests, and restrictions on the manner in which the Fund markets its commodity interests trading activities. These limitations may restrict the Fund’s ability to pursue its investment strategy, increase the costs of implementing its strategy, increase its expenses and/or adversely affect its total return.

To qualify for the CFTC Rule 4.5 exclusion, the Fund is permitted to engage in unlimited “bona fide hedging” (as defined by the CFTC), but if the Fund uses commodity interests other than for bona fide hedging purposes, the aggregate initial margin and premiums required to establish these positions, determined at the time the most recent position was established, may not exceed 5% of the Fund’s NAV (after taking into account unrealized profits and unrealized losses on any such positions and excluding the amount by which options that are “in-the-money” at the time of purchase are “in-the-money”) or, alternatively, the aggregate net notional value of non-bona fide hedging commodity interest positions, determined at the time the most recent position was established, may not exceed 100% of the Fund’s NAV (after taking into account unrealized profits and unrealized losses on any such positions). In addition to complying with these de minimis trading limitations, to qualify for the exclusion, the Fund must satisfy a marketing test, which requires, among other things, that the Fund not hold itself out as a vehicle for trading commodity interests.

A Fund may be exposed to commodity interests indirectly in excess of the de minimis trading limitations described above. Such exposure may result from the Fund’s investment in other investment vehicles, such as real estate investment trusts, collateralized loan obligations, collateralized debt obligations and other securitization vehicles that may invest directly in commodity interests. These investment vehicles are referred to collectively as “underlying investment vehicles.” The CFTC treats a fund as a commodity pool whether it invests in commodity interests directly or indirectly through its investments in underlying investment vehicles. The CFTC staff has issued a no-action letter permitting the manager of a fund that invests in such underlying investment vehicles to defer registering as a CPO or claiming the exclusion from the CPO definition until six months from the date on which the CFTC issues additional guidance on the application of the calculation of the de minimis trading limitations in the context of the CPO exemption in CFTC Regulation 4.5 (the "Deadline"). Such guidance is expected to clarify how to calculate compliance with the de minimis trading limitations given a fund’s investments in underlying investment vehicles that may cause the fund to be deemed to be indirectly trading commodity interests. The Manager has filed the required notice to claim this no-action relief with respect to each Fund.  In addition, the Manager has
claimed an exclusion (under CFTC Regulation 4.5) from the CPO definition with respect to each Fund.  As a result, at this time the Manager is not required to register as a CPO with respect to any Fund and need not generally comply with the regulatory requirements otherwise applicable to a registered CPO.  Prior to the Deadline, however, the Manager will determine with respect to each Fund whether it must operate as a registered CPO or whether it can rely on an exemption or exclusion from the CPO definition. If the Manager determines that it can rely on the exclusion in CFTC Regulation 4.5 with respect to the Fund, then the Manager, in its management of that Fund, will comply with one of the two alternative de minimis trading limitations in that regulation. Complying with the de minimis trading limitations may restrict the Manager’s ability to use derivatives as part of the Fund’s investment strategies. Although the Manager believes that it will be able to execute each Fund’s investment strategies within the de minimis trading limitations, the Fund’s performance could be adversely affected. If the Manager determines that it cannot rely on the exclusion in CFTC Regulation 4.5 with respect to the Fund, then the Manager will serve as a registered CPO with respect to that Fund. CPO regulation would increase the regulatory requirements to which the Fund is subject and it is expected that it would increase costs for the Fund.

Pursuant to authority granted under the Dodd-Frank Act, the Treasury Department issued a notice of final determination stating that foreign exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps, as defined in the Dodd-Frank Act and described above, should not be considered swaps for most purposes.  Thus, foreign exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps are not deemed to be commodity interests. Therefore, if the Manager determines that it can rely on the exclusion in CFTC Regulation 4.5 with respect to the Fund, the Fund may enter into foreign exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps without such transactions counting against the de minimis trading limitations discussed above. Notwithstanding the Treasury Department determination, foreign exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps (1) must be reported to swap data repositories, (2) may be subject to business conduct standards, and (3) are subject to antifraud and anti-manipulation proscriptions of swap execution facilities.  In addition, for purposes of determining whether any Fund may be subject to initial margin requirements for uncleared swaps, the average daily aggregate notional amount of a foreign exchange forward or a foreign exchange swap must be included in the calculation of whether such Fund has a “material swaps exposure” as defined in the regulations.

In addition, pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Act and regulations adopted by the CFTC in connection with implementing the Dodd-Frank Act, NDFs are deemed to be commodity interests, including for purposes of amended CFTC Regulation 4.5, and are subject to the full array of regulations under the Dodd-Frank Act.  Therefore, if the Manager determines that it can rely on the exclusion in CFTC Regulation 4.5 with respect to the Fund, the Fund will limit its investment in NDFs as discussed above.

The staff of the CFTC has issued guidance providing that, for purposes of determining compliance with CFTC Regulation 4.5, and the de minimis trading limitations discussed above, swaps that are centrally-cleared on the same clearing organization may be netted where appropriate, but no such netting is permitted for uncleared swaps.  To the extent some NDFs remain traded OTC and are not centrally-cleared, the absolute notional value of all such transactions, rather than the net notional value, would be counted against the de minimis trading limitations discussed above.

Cover for Financial Instruments.  Transactions using Financial Instruments, other than purchased options, expose the Fund to an obligation to another party. The Fund will not enter into any such transactions unless it owns either (1) an offsetting (“covering”) position in securities, currencies
or other options, futures contracts, forward contracts, or swaps, or (2) cash and liquid assets held in a segregated account, or designated on its records as segregated, with a value, marked-to-market daily, sufficient to cover its potential obligations to the extent not covered as provided in (1) above. The Fund will comply with SEC guidelines regarding “cover” for Financial Instruments and, if the guidelines so require, segregate the prescribed amount of cash or appropriate liquid assets.

Assets used as cover or held in a segregated account cannot be sold while the position in the corresponding Financial Instrument is outstanding, unless they are replaced with other suitable assets. As a result, the segregation of a large percentage of the Fund’s assets could impede Fund management or the Fund’s ability to meet redemption requests or other current obligations. The Fund may be unable to promptly dispose of assets that cover, or are segregated with respect to, an illiquid futures, options, forward, or swap position; this inability may result in a loss to the Fund.

Policies and Limitations. The Fund will comply with SEC guidelines regarding “cover” for Financial Instruments and, if the guidelines so require, set aside in a segregated account with its custodian the prescribed amount of cash or appropriate liquid securities. Rule 18f-4, which becomes fully effective in August 2022, will not require the Fund to maintain segregated assets to meet its asset coverage test with respect to swaps and other derivatives transactions, provided the Fund complies with the risk-based limits and other conditions of Rule 18f-4.

General Risks of Financial Instruments. The primary risks in using Financial Instruments are:  (1) imperfect correlation or no correlation between changes in market value of the securities or currencies held or to be acquired by the Fund and the prices of Financial Instruments; (2) possible lack of a liquid secondary market for Financial Instruments and the resulting inability to close out Financial Instruments when desired; (3) the fact that the skills needed to use Financial Instruments are different from those needed to select the Fund’s securities; (4) the fact that, although use of Financial Instruments for hedging purposes can reduce the risk of loss, they also can reduce the opportunity for gain, or even result in losses, by offsetting favorable price movements in hedged investments; (5) the possible inability of the Fund to purchase or sell a portfolio security at a time that would otherwise be favorable for it to do so, or the possible need for the Fund to sell a portfolio security at a disadvantageous time, due to its need to maintain cover or to segregate securities in connection with its use of Financial Instruments; and (6) when traded on non-U.S. exchanges, Financial Instruments may not be regulated as rigorously as in the United States. There can be no assurance that the Fund’s use of Financial Instruments will be successful.

In addition, Financial Instruments may contain leverage to magnify the exposure to the underlying asset or assets.

The Fund’s use of Financial Instruments may be limited by the provisions of the Code and Treasury Department regulations with which it must comply to continue to qualify as a RIC. See “Additional Tax Information.” Financial Instruments may not be available with respect to some currencies, especially those of so-called emerging market countries.

Policies and Limitations. When hedging, the Manager intends to reduce the risk of imperfect correlation by investing only in Financial Instruments whose behavior is expected to resemble or offset that of the Fund’s underlying securities or currency. The Manager intends to reduce the risk that the Fund will be unable to close out Financial Instruments by entering into such transactions only if the Manager believes there will be an active and liquid secondary market.

Accounting Considerations for Financial Instruments. When the Fund writes an option, an amount equal to the premium it receives is included in its Statement of Assets and Liabilities as a liability. The amount of the liability is subsequently marked to market to reflect the current market value of the option written. When the Fund purchases an option, the premium the Fund pays is recorded as an asset in that statement and is subsequently adjusted to the current market value of the option.
 
In the case of a regulated futures contract the Fund purchases or sells, an amount equal to the initial margin deposit is recorded as an asset in its Statement of Assets and Liabilities. The amount of the asset is subsequently adjusted to reflect changes in the amount of the deposit as well as changes in the value of the contract.

Borrowing and Leverage. The Fund is authorized to borrow amounts up to 33 1/3% of its total assets (including the amount borrowed) minus liabilities (other than the amount borrowed). The use of borrowed fund involves the speculative factor known as “leverage.” The Fund uses leverage for investment purposes and has issued Preferred Stock and Notes. The issuance of Preferred Stock permits the Fund to assume leverage in an amount up to 50% of its total assets (taking into account the effect of any outstanding Notes).  The issuance of Notes permits the Fund to assume leverage in an amount up to 33 1/3% of its total assets.  Preferred Stock and Notes have priority on the income and assets of the Fund over the Common Stock and have certain other rights with respect to voting and the election of Directors. In certain circumstances, the net asset value of and distributions payable on Common Stock could be adversely affected by such preferences.  The Fund’s leveraged capital structure creates special risks not associated with unleveraged funds having similar investment objectives and policies.  The Fund utilizes leverage only when there is an expectation that it will benefit the Fund.  To the extent the income or other gain derived from securities purchased with the proceeds of borrowings or preferred stock issuances exceeds the interest or distributions the Fund has to pay thereon, the Fund’s net income or other gain is greater than if leverage had not been used.  Conversely, if the income or other gain from the securities purchased through leverage is not sufficient to cover the cost of such leverage, the Fund’s total return would be less than if leverage had not been used.  If leverage is used, in certain circumstances, the Fund could be required to liquidate securities it would not otherwise sell in order to satisfy distributions or interest obligations.  The Fund may also borrow up to an additional 5% of its total assets for temporary purposes without regard to the foregoing limitations. See “Investment Objective, Policies and Limitations.” This could include, for example, borrowing on a short-term basis in order to facilitate the settlement of portfolio securities transactions.

When-Issued and Delayed-Delivery Securities and Forward Commitments. The Fund may purchase securities on a when-issued or delayed-delivery basis and may purchase or sell securities on a forward commitment basis. These transactions involve a commitment by the Fund to purchase or sell securities at a future date (ordinarily within two months, although the Fund may agree to a longer settlement period). These transactions may involve mortgage-backed securities, such as GNMA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac certificates. The price of the underlying securities (usually expressed in terms of yield) and the date when the securities will be delivered and paid for (the settlement date) are fixed at the time the transaction is negotiated. When-issued and delayed-delivery purchases and forward commitment transactions are negotiated directly with the other party, and such commitments are not traded on exchanges.

When-issued and delayed-delivery purchases and forward commitment transactions enable the Fund to “lock in” what the Manager believes to be an attractive price or yield on a particular security for a period of time, regardless of future changes in interest rates. For instance, in periods of rising interest rates and falling prices, the Fund might sell securities it owns on a forward commitment basis to limit its exposure to falling prices. In periods of falling interest rates and rising prices, the Fund might purchase a security on a when-issued, delayed-delivery or forward commitment basis and sell a similar security to settle such purchase, thereby obtaining the benefit of currently higher yields. When-issued, delayed-delivery and forward commitment transactions are subject to the risk that the counterparty may fail to complete the purchase or sale of the security. If this occurs, the Fund may lose the opportunity to purchase or sell the security at the agreed upon price. To reduce this risk, the Fund will enter into transactions with established counterparties and the Manager will monitor the creditworthiness of such counterparties.

The value of securities purchased on a when-issued, delayed-delivery or forward commitment basis and any subsequent fluctuations in their value are reflected in the computation of the Fund’s NAV starting on the date of the agreement to purchase the securities. Because the Fund has not yet paid for the securities, this produces an effect similar to leverage. The Fund does not earn interest on securities it has committed to purchase until the securities are paid for and delivered on the settlement date. Because the Fund is committed to buying them at a certain price, any change in the value of these securities, even prior to their issuance, affects the value of the Fund’s interests. The purchase of securities on a when-issued or delayed-delivery basis also involves a risk of loss if the value of the security to be purchased declines before the settlement date. When the Fund makes a forward commitment to sell securities it owns, the proceeds to be received upon settlement are included in that Fund’s assets. Fluctuations in the market value of the underlying securities are not reflected in the Fund’s NAV as long as the commitment to sell remains in effect.

When-issued, delayed-delivery and forward commitment transactions may cause the Fund to liquidate positions when it may not be advantageous to do so in order to satisfy its purchase or sale obligations.

The Fund will purchase securities on a when-issued or delayed-delivery basis or purchase or sell securities on a forward commitment basis only with the intention of completing the transaction and actually purchasing or selling the securities. If deemed advisable as a matter of investment strategy, however, the Fund may dispose of or renegotiate a commitment after it has been entered into. The Fund also may sell securities it has committed to purchase before those securities are delivered to the Fund on the settlement date. The Fund may realize capital gains or losses in connection with these transactions.
The Fund may also enter into a TBA agreement and “roll over” such agreement prior to the settlement date by selling the obligation to purchase the pools set forth in the agreement and entering into a new TBA agreement for future delivery of pools of mortgage-backed securities. TBA mortgage-backed securities may increase prepayment risks because the underlying mortgages may be less favorable than anticipated by the Fund.
Policies and Limitations. The Fund will purchase securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis only with the intention of completing the transaction and actually taking delivery of the securities. If deemed advisable as a matter of investment strategy, however, the Fund may dispose of
or renegotiate a commitment after it has been entered into. The Fund also may sell securities it has committed to purchase before those securities are delivered to the Fund on the settlement date. The Fund may realize capital gains or losses in connection with these transactions.

When the Fund purchases securities on a when-issued, delayed-delivery or forward commitment basis, the Fund will deposit in a segregated account with its custodian, or designate on its records as segregated, until payment is made, appropriate liquid securities having a value (determined daily) at least equal to the amount of the Fund’s purchase commitments. In the case of a forward commitment to sell portfolio securities, the portfolio securities will be held in a segregated account, or the portfolio securities will be designated on the Fund’s records as segregated, while the commitment is outstanding.  These procedures are designed to ensure that the Fund maintains sufficient assets at all times to cover its obligations under when-issued and delayed-delivery purchases and forward commitment transactions.
Structured Notes.  The Fund may invest in structured notes, such as participatory notes, credit linked notes and securities (“CLNs”), exchange-traded notes (“ETNs”) and other related instruments. These instruments are notes where the principal and/or interest rate or value of the structured note is determined by reference to the performance of an underlying indicator.  Underlying indicators may include a security or other financial instrument, asset, currency, interest rate, credit rating, commodity, volatility measure or index. Generally, investments in such notes are used as a substitute for positions in underlying indicators. The interest and/or principal payments that may be made on a structured note may vary widely, depending on a variety of factors, including the volatility of the underlying indicator. The performance results of structured notes will not replicate exactly the performance of the underlying indicator that the notes seek to replicate due to transaction costs and other expenses. Issuers of structured notes can vary and may include corporations, banks, broker-dealers and limited purpose trusts or other vehicles.   Structured notes may be exchange traded or traded OTC and privately negotiated.
Investments in structured notes involve many of the same risks associated with a direct investment in the underlying indicator the notes seek to replicate. Structured notes may be considered hybrid instruments as they may exhibit features of both fixed income securities and derivatives. The return on a structured note that is linked to a particular underlying indicator that pays dividends generally is increased to the extent of any dividends paid in connection with the underlying indicator. However, the holder of a structured note typically does not receive voting rights and other rights as it would if it directly owned the underlying indicator. In addition, structured notes are subject to counterparty risk, which is the risk that the issuer of the structured note will not fulfill its contractual obligation to complete the transaction with the Fund. Structured notes constitute general unsecured contractual obligations of the issuer of the note and the Fund is relying on the creditworthiness of such issuer and has no rights under a structured note against the issuer of an underlying indicator. Structured notes involve transaction costs. Structured notes may be considered illiquid and, therefore, structured notes considered illiquid will be subject to the Fund’s percentage limitation on investments in illiquid securities.
CLNs are typically issued by a limited purpose trust or other vehicle (the “CLN trust”) that, in turn, invests in a derivative or basket of derivatives instruments, such as credit default swaps, interest rate swaps and/or other securities, in order to provide exposure to certain high yield, sovereign debt, emerging markets, or other fixed income markets. Generally, investments in CLNs represent the right to receive periodic income payments (in the form of distributions) and payment of principal at the end
of the term of the CLN. However, these payments are conditioned on the CLN trust’s receipt of payments from, and the CLN trust’s potential obligations, to the counterparties to the derivative instruments and other securities in which the CLN trust invests. For example, the CLN trust may sell one or more credit default swaps, under which the CLN trust would receive a stream of payments over the term of the swap agreements provided that no event of default has occurred with respect to the referenced debt obligation upon which the swap is based. If a default were to occur, the stream of payments may stop and the CLN trust would be obligated to pay the counterparty the par (or other agreed upon value) of the referenced debt obligation. This, in turn, would reduce the amount of income and principal that the Fund would receive as an investor in the CLN trust.

The Fund may enter in CLNs to gain access to sovereign debt and securities in emerging markets, particularly in markets where the Fund is not able to purchase securities directly due to domicile restrictions or tax restrictions or tariffs. In such an instance, the issuer of the CLN may purchase the reference security directly and/or gain exposure through a credit default swap or other derivative.

The Fund’s investments in CLNs are subject to the risks associated with the underlying reference obligations and derivative instruments, including, among others, credit risk, default risk, counterparty risk, interest rate risk, leverage risk and management risk.

Structured notes may also include exchange-traded notes (“ETNs”), which are typically unsecured and unsubordinated like other structured notes. ETN returns are based upon the performance of one or more underlying indicators and typically, no periodic coupon payments are distributed and no principal protections exists, even at maturity.  ETNs are listed on an exchange and traded in the secondary market. An ETN can be held until maturity, at which time the issuer pays the investor a cash amount equal to the principal amount, subject to the day’s market benchmark or strategy factor. When the Fund invests in ETNs, it will bear its proportionate share of any fees and expenses borne by the ETN. Because fees reduce the amount of return at maturity or upon redemption, if the value of the underlying indicator decreases or does not increase significantly, the Fund may receive less than the principal amount of its investment at maturity or upon redemption. In addition, the value of an ETN also may be influenced by time to maturity, level of supply and demand for the ETN, volatility and lack of liquidity in underlying indicator, changes in the applicable interest rates, and economic, legal, political, or geographic events that affect the underlying indicator. Some ETNs that use leverage can, at times, be relatively illiquid, and thus they may be difficult to purchase or sell at a fair price. Leveraged ETNs are subject to the same risk as other instruments that use leverage in any form. There may be restrictions on the Fund’s right to redeem its investment in an ETN, which are generally meant to be held until maturity. A decision by the Fund to sell ETN holdings may be limited by the availability of a secondary market. In addition, although an ETN may be listed on an exchange, the issuer may not be required to maintain the listing, and there can be no assurance that a secondary market will exist for an ETN.
Equity Securities.  The Fund may invest, to a limited extent, in equity securities, which may include common stocks, preferred stocks, convertible securities and warrants. Common stocks and preferred stocks represent shares of ownership in a corporation. Preferred stocks usually have specific dividends and rank after bonds and before common stock in claims on assets of the corporation should it be dissolved. Increases and decreases in earnings are usually reflected in a corporation’s stock price. Convertible securities are debt or preferred equity securities convertible into common stock. Usually, convertible securities pay dividends or interest at rates higher than common stock, but lower than
other securities. Convertible securities usually participate to some extent in the appreciation or depreciation of the underlying stock into which they are convertible. Warrants are options to buy a stated number of shares of common stock at a specified price anytime during the life of the warrants.

To the extent the Fund invests in such securities, the value of securities held by the Fund will be affected by changes in the stock markets, which may be the result of domestic or international political or economic news, changes in interest rates or changing investor sentiment. At times, the stock markets can be volatile and stock prices can change substantially. Because some investors purchase equity securities with borrowed money, an increase in interest rates can cause a decline in equity prices. The equity securities of smaller companies are more sensitive to these changes than those of larger companies. This market risk will affect the Fund’s NAV per share, which will fluctuate as the value of the securities held by the Fund changes. Not all stock prices change uniformly or at the same time and not all stock markets move in the same direction at the same time. Other factors affect a particular stock’s prices, such as poor earnings reports by an issuer, loss of major customers, major litigation against an issuer, or changes in governmental regulations affecting an industry. Adverse news affecting one company can sometimes depress the stock prices of all companies in the same industry. Not all factors can be predicted.
Terrorism Risks. The terrorist attacks in the United States on September 11, 2001, had a disruptive effect on the U.S. economy and financial markets. Terrorist attacks and other geopolitical events have led to, and may in the future lead to, increased short-term market volatility and may have long-term effects on U.S. and world economies and financial markets. Those events could also have an acute effect on individual issuers, related groups of issuers, or issuers concentrated in a single geographic area. A similar disruption o f the financial markets or other terrorist attacks could adversely impact interest rates, auctions, secondary trading, ratings, credit risk, inflation and other factors relating to portfolio securities and adversely affect Fund service providers and the Fund’s operations.
Recent Market Conditions. Certain illnesses spread rapidly and have the potential to significantly and adversely affect the global economy. Outbreaks such as the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, or other similarly infectious diseases may have material adverse impacts on a Fund. Epidemics and/or pandemics, such as the coronavirus, have and may further result in, among other things, closing borders, extended quarantines and stay-at-home orders, order cancellations, disruptions to supply chains and customer activity, widespread business closures and layoffs, as well as general concern and uncertainty. The impact of this virus, and other epidemics and/or pandemics that may arise in the future, has negatively affected and may continue to affect the economies of many nations, individual companies and the global securities and commodities markets, including their liquidity, in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen at the present time. Widespread layoffs and job furloughs may negatively affect the value of many mortgage-backed and asset-backed securities. The impact of any outbreak may last for an extended period of time. The current pandemic has accelerated trends toward working remotely and shopping online, which may negatively affect the value of office and commercial real estate. The travel, hospitality and public transit industries may suffer long-term negative effects from the pandemic and resulting changes to public behavior. Governments and central banks have moved to limit these negative economic effects with interventions that are unprecedented in size and scope and may continue to do so, but the ultimate impact of these efforts in many countries is uncertain. Governments’ efforts to limit potential negative economic effects of the pandemic may be altered, delayed, or eliminated at inopportune times for political, policy or other reasons. The impact of infectious diseases may be greater in countries that do not move effectively to control them, which may occur for political reasons or because of a lack of health care or economic resources. Health crises caused by the recent coronavirus outbreak may exacerbate other pre-existing political, social and economic risks in certain countries. Although effective vaccines are now available, it may be many months before vaccinations are sufficiently widespread to allow the restoration of full economic activity. The failure to control the coronavirus in less developed countries may impact the economies of more developed countries.
High public debt in the U.S. and other countries creates ongoing systemic and market risks and policymaking uncertainty and there may be a further increase in the amount of debt due to the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and ensuing economic relief and public health measures. Interest rates have been unusually low in recent years in the U.S. and abroad. It is difficult to predict the impact on various markets of a significant rate increase or other significant policy changes, whether brought about by U.S. policy makers, perhaps in response to increasing indications of inflation, or by dislocations in world markets. For example, because investors may buy equity securities or other investments with borrowed money, a significant increase in interest rates may cause a decline in the markets for those investments. In addition, ongoing inflation pressures from tight labor markets and supply chain disruptions could cause a material increase in interest rates and/or negatively impact companies. Also, regulators have expressed concern that rate increases may cause investors to sell fixed income securities faster than the market can absorb them, contributing to price volatility. Over the longer term, rising interest rates may present a greater risk than has historically been the case due to the current period of relatively low rates and the effect of government fiscal and monetary policy initiatives and potential market reaction to those initiatives or their alteration or cessation.
Russia’s invasion of the Ukraine, and corresponding events in late February 2022, have had, and could continue to have, severe adverse effects on regional and global economic markets for securities and commodities. Following Russia’s actions, various governments, including the United States, have issued broad-ranging economic sanctions against Russia, including, among other actions, a prohibition on doing business with certain Russian companies, large financial institutions, officials and oligarchs; the removal by certain countries and the European Union of selected Russian banks from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications (“SWIFT”), the electronic banking network that connects banks globally; and restrictive measures to prevent the Russian Central Bank from undermining the impact of the sanctions. The current events, including sanctions and the potential for future sanctions, including any impacting Russia’s energy sector, and other actions, and Russia’s retaliatory responses to those sanctions and actions, may continue to adversely impact the Russian and Ukrainian economies and may result in the further decline of the value and liquidity of Russian and Ukrainian securities, a continued weakening of the ruble and hryvnia and continued exchange closures, and may have other adverse consequences on the Russian and Ukrainian economies that could impact the value of these investments and impair the ability of a Fund to buy, sell, receive or deliver those securities. Moreover, those events have, and could continue to have, an adverse effect on global markets performance and liquidity, thereby negatively affecting the value of a Fund’s investments beyond any direct exposure to Russian and Ukrainian issuers. The duration of ongoing hostilities and the vast array of sanctions and related events cannot be predicted. Those events present material uncertainty and risk with respect to markets globally and the performance of a Fund and its investments or operations could be negatively impacted.
During times of market turmoil, investors tend to look to the safety of securities issued or backed by the Treasury Department, causing the prices of these securities to rise and the yield to decline. Reduced liquidity in fixed income and credit markets may negatively affect many issuers worldwide and make it more difficult for borrowers to obtain financing on attractive terms, if at all. Historical patterns of correlation among asset classes may break down in unanticipated ways during times of market turmoil, disrupting investment programs and potentially causing losses. There is no assurance that the U.S. Congress will act to raise the nation’s debt ceiling; a failure to do so could cause market turmoil and substantial investment risks that cannot now be fully predicted.
National economies are substantially interconnected, as are global financial markets, which creates the possibility that conditions in one country or region might adversely impact issuers in a different country or region. A rise in protectionist trade policies, tariff “wars,” changes to some major international trade agreements and the potential for changes to others, and campaigns to “buy American,” could affect international trade and the economies of many nations in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen at the present time.
Markets have been sensitive to the outlook for resolving the U.S.-China “trade war,” a trend that may continue in the future. China’s economy, which has been sustained in recent years largely through a debt-financed housing boom, may be approaching the limits of that strategy and may experience a significant slowdown as a result of debt that cannot be repaid. Due to the size of China’s economy , such a slowdown could impact a number of other countries. Russia’s assertion of its influence in its surrounding region, including potential actions in Ukraine, increases the likelihood of additional sanctions by the U.S. and other countries, which may cause volatility in the markets. In December 2020, the United Kingdom (“UK”) and the European Union (“EU”) signed a Trade and Cooperation Agreement (“TCA”) to delineate the terms on which the UK left the EU. The TCA did little to address financial services and products provided by UK entities to customers in the EU, leaving the future of such services uncertain. Also left uncertain was the long-term future of the UK auto industry, which relies heavily on exports to the EU, although the TCA leaves a long period for issues to be resolved. New trading rules have disrupted the cross-border flow of products and supplies for many businesses; it remains to be seen whether these will be smoothed out with the passage of time or cause long-term damage to affected businesses. There is some uncertainty as to whether dislocations in the UK’s economy are mainly the result of COVID-19 (as the government claims) or the result of the country having left the EU.
Over the past several years, the U.S. has moved away from tighter legislation and industry regulation impacting businesses and the financial services industry. There is a strong potential for materially increased regulation in the future, as well as higher taxes or taxes restructured to incentivize different activities. These changes, should they occur, may impose added costs on the Fund and its service providers and affect the businesses of various portfolio companies, in ways that cannot necessarily be foreseen at the present time. Unexpected political, regulatory and diplomatic events within the U.S. and abroad may affect investor and consumer confidence and may adversely impact financial markets and the broader economy.
Climate Change. There is increasing concern about the potential effects of global climate change on property and security values. A rise in sea levels, a change in weather patterns, including an increase in powerful storms and large wildfires, and/or a climate-driven increase in flooding could cause properties to lose value or become unmarketable altogether. Unlike previous declines in the real estate market, properties in affected zones may not ever recover their value. The U.S. administration appears concerned about the climate change problem and is focusing regulatory and public works projects around those concerns. Regulatory changes and divestment movements tied to concerns about climate change could adversely affect the value of certain land and the viability of industries whose activities or products are seen as accelerating climate change.
Losses relating to climate change could adversely affect corporate issuers and mortgage lenders, the value of mortgage-backed securities, the bonds of municipalities that depend on tax or other revenues and tourist dollars generated by affected properties, and insurers of the property and/or of corporate, municipal or mortgage-backed securities. Since property and security values are driven largely by buyers’ perceptions, it is difficult to know the time period over which these market effects might unfold.
LIBOR Rate Risk. Many debt securities, derivatives and other financial instruments, including some of the Funds’ investments, utilize the London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) as the reference or benchmark rate for variable interest rate calculations. However, concerns have arisen regarding LIBOR’s viability as a benchmark, due to manipulation allegations dating from about 2012 and, subsequently, reduced activity in the financial markets that it measures. In 2017, the UK Financial Conduct Authority announced that after 2021 it would cease its active encouragement of UK banks to provide the quotations needed to sustain LIBOR. Thus, there is a risk that LIBOR may cease to be published after that time or, possibly, before. The ICE Benchmark Administration Limited (the “ICE”), the current administrator of LIBOR, ceased publishing most LIBOR maturities, including some U.S. dollar LIBOR maturities, on December 31, 2021, and the remaining and most liquid U.S. dollar LIBOR maturities will cease to be published after June 30, 2023. The FCA announced on September 29, 2021, that it would compel the ICE to publish synthetic LIBOR values for certain maturities for Pounds Sterling and Japanese Yen throughout 2022.
Also in 2017, the Alternative Reference Rates Committee, a group of large U.S. banks working with the Federal Reserve, announced its selection of a new Secured Overnight Funding Rate (“SOFR”), which is a broad measure of the cost of overnight borrowings secured by Treasury Department securities, as an appropriate replacement for U.S. dollar LIBOR. Bank working groups and regulators in other countries have suggested other alternatives for their markets, including the Sterling Overnight Interbank Average Rate (“SONIA”) in England.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York began publishing SOFR in April, 2018, with the expectation that it could be used on a voluntary basis in new instruments and for new transactions under existing instruments. However, SOFR is fundamentally different from LIBOR. It is a secured, nearly risk-free rate, while LIBOR is an unsecured rate that includes an element of bank credit risk. Also, while SOFR for various maturities is a concept currently under development, SOFR is strictly an overnight rate, while LIBOR historically has been published for various maturities, ranging from overnight to one year. Thus, LIBOR may be expected to be higher than SOFR, and the spread between the two is likely to widen in times of market stress.
Various financial industry groups have begun planning for the transition from LIBOR to SOFR or another new benchmark, but there are obstacles to converting certain longer term securities and transactions. Transition planning is ongoing, and neither the effect of the transition process nor its ultimate success can yet be known. The transition process might lead to increased volatility and illiquidity in markets that currently rely on the LIBOR to determine interest rates. It also could lead to a reduction in the value of some LIBOR-based investments and reduce the effectiveness of new hedges placed against existing LIBOR-based instruments. Since the usefulness of LIBOR as a benchmark could deteriorate during the transition period, these effects could occur prior to June 30, 2023, could occur particularly with respect to synthetic values of LIBOR, or could occur throughout the transition period.
Thermal Coal Policy.

The Fund prohibits investment in securities issued by companies that have more than 25% of revenue derived from thermal coal mining or are expanding new thermal coal power generation, as determined by internal screens.

The investment program described above is speculative and entails substantial risks, and the Fund’s risk management methods may not accurately predict future risk exposures. There can be no assurance that the investment objective of the Fund will be achieved.

PORTFOLIO TRADING AND TURNOVER RATE

The Fund may engage in active and frequent trading. The Fund’s turnover rate is calculated by dividing (1) the lesser of the cost of the securities purchased or the proceeds from the securities sold by the Fund during the fiscal year (other than securities, including options, whose maturity or expiration date at the time of acquisition was one year or less) by (2) the month-end average of the value of such securities owned by the Fund during the fiscal year. The Fund generally does not engage in the trading of securities for the purpose of realizing short-term profits, but it will adjust its portfolio as it deems advisable in view of prevailing or anticipated market conditions to accomplish its investment objective. For example, the Fund may sell portfolio securities in anticipation of a movement in interest rates. Higher turnover rates can result in corresponding increases in the Fund’s transaction costs, which must be borne by the Fund and its stockholders. High portfolio turnover may result in the Fund’s realization of net short-term capital gains that, when distributed to stockholders, will be taxable as ordinary income. Frequency of portfolio turnover will not be a limiting factor if the Fund considers it advantageous to purchase or sell securities.

MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND

Directors and Officers

The Board is responsible for overseeing the management of the business and affairs of the Fund, including general supervision of the duties performed by NBIA. Subject to the provisions of the Fund’s Articles and Maryland law, the Board has all powers necessary and convenient to carry out this responsibility, including the election and removal of the Fund’s officers. Among other things, the Board generally oversees the portfolio management of the Fund and reviews and approves the Fund’s investment management agreement and other principal contracts.

The following tables set forth information concerning the Directors and officers of the Fund. All persons named as Directors and officers also serve in similar capacities for other funds administered or managed by NBIA.

The Board of Directors

Name,
(Year of
Birth),
and
Address(1)
Position(s)
and Length
of Time
Served(2)
Principal
Occupation(s)(3)
Number
of
Portfolios
in
Fund
Complex
Overseen
Other Directorships Held
Outside Fund Complex(3)
Class I
Independent Fund Directors
Marc
Gary
(1952)
Director since 2015
Executive Vice Chancellor and Chief Operating Officer, Jewish Theological Seminary, since 2012; formerly, Executive Vice President and General Counsel, Fidelity Investments, 2007 to 2012; formerly, Executive Vice President and General Counsel, BellSouth Corporation, 2004 to 2007; formerly, Vice President and Associate General Counsel, BellSouth Corporation, 2000 to 2004; formerly, Associate, Partner, and National Litigation Practice Co-Chair, Mayer, Brown LLP, 1981 to 2000; formerly, Associate Independent Counsel, Office of Independent Counsel, 1990 to 1992.
47
Director, UJA Federation of Greater New York, since 2019; Trustee, Jewish Theological Seminary, since 2015; Director, Legility, Inc. (privately held for-profit company), since 2012; Director, Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law (not-for-profit), since 2005; formerly, Director, Equal Justice Works (not-for-profit), 2005 to 2014; formerly, Director, Corporate Counsel Institute, Georgetown University Law Center, 2007 to 2012; formerly, Director, Greater Boston Legal Services (not-for-profit), 2007 to 2012.
Michael
M.
Knetter
(1960)
Director since 2007
President and Chief Executive Officer, University of Wisconsin Foundation, since 2010; formerly, Dean, School of
47
Director, 1 William Street Credit Income Fund, since 2018; Board Member, American Family Insurance (a mutual

 
Name,
(Year of
Birth),
and
Address(1)
 
Position(s)
and Length
of Time
Served(2)
 
Principal
Occupation(s)(3)
Number
of
Portfolios
in
Fund
Complex
Overseen
Other Directorships Held
Outside Fund Complex(3)
    Business, University of Wisconsin - Madison; formerly, Professor of International Economics and Associate Dean, Amos Tuck School of Business - Dartmouth College, 1998 to 2002.   company, not publicly traded), since March 2009; formerly, Trustee, Northwestern Mutual Series Fund, Inc., 2007 to 2011; formerly, Director, Wausau Paper, 2005 to 2011; formerly, Director, Great Wolf Resorts, 2004 to 2009.
Tom D.
Seip
(1950)
Director since 2006; Chairman of the Board since 2008; formerly Lead Independent Director from 2006 to 2008
Formerly, Managing Member, Ridgefield Farm LLC (a private investment vehicle), 2004 to 2016; formerly, President and CEO, Westaff, Inc. (temporary staffing), May 2001 to January 2002; formerly, Senior Executive, The Charles Schwab Corporation, 1983 to 1998, including Chief Executive Officer, Charles Schwab Investment Management, Inc.; Trustee, Schwab Family of Funds and Schwab Investments, 1997 to 1998; and Executive Vice President-Retail Brokerage, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., 1994 to 1997.
47
Formerly, Director, H&R Block, Inc. (tax services company), 2001 to 2018; formerly, Director, Talbot Hospice Inc., 2013 to 2016; formerly, Chairman, Governance and Nominating Committee, H&R Block, Inc., 2011 to 2015; formerly, Chairman, Compensation Committee, H&R Block, Inc., 2006 to 2010; formerly, Director, Forward Management, Inc. (asset management company), 1999 to 2006.

Name,
(Year of
Birth),
and
Address(1)
Position(s)
and Length
of Time
Served(2)
Principal
Occupation(s)(3)
Number
of
Portfolios
in
Fund
Complex
Overseen
Other Directorships Held
Outside Fund Complex(3)
Class II
Independent Fund Directors
Michael J.
Cosgrove
(1949)
Director since 2015
President, Carragh Consulting USA, since 2014; formerly, Executive, General Electric Company, 1970 to 2014, including President, Mutual Funds and Global Investment Programs, GE Asset Management, 2011 to 2014, President and Chief Executive Officer, Mutual Funds and Intermediary Business, GE Asset Management, 2007 to 2011, President, Institutional Sales and Marketing, GE Asset Management, 1998 to 2007, and Chief Financial Officer, GE Asset Management, and Deputy Treasurer, GE Company, 1988 to 1993.
 
47
Director, America Press, Inc. (not-for-profit Jesuit publisher), since 2015; formerly, Director, Fordham University, 2001 to 2018; formerly, Director, The Gabelli Go Anywhere Trust, June 2015 to June 2016; formerly, Director, Skin Cancer Foundation (not-for-profit), 2006 to 2015; formerly, Director, GE Investments Funds, Inc., 1997 to 2014; formerly, Trustee, GE Institutional Funds, 1997 to 2014; formerly, Director, GE Asset Management, 1988 to 2014; formerly, Director, Elfun Trusts, 1988 to 2014; formerly, Trustee, GE Pension & Benefit Plans, 1988 to 2014; formerly, Member of Board of Governors, Investment Company Institute.
Deborah
C. McLean (1954)
Director since 2015
Member, Circle Financial Group (private wealth management membership practice), since 2011;
47
Board member, Norwalk Community College Foundation, since 2014; Dean’s Advisory Council,

Name,
(Year of
Birth),
and
Address(1)
Position(s)
and Length
of Time
Served(2)
Principal
Occupation(s)(3)
Number
of
Portfolios
in
Fund
Complex
Overseen
 Other Directorships Held
Outside Fund Complex(3)


Managing Director, Golden Seeds LLC (an angel investing group), since 2009; Adjunct Professor, Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs, since 2008; formerly, Visiting Assistant Professor, Fairfield University, Dolan School of Business, Fall 2007; formerly, Adjunct Associate Professor of Finance, Richmond, The American International University in London, 1999 to 2007.

Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, since 2014; formerly, Director and Treasurer, At Home in Darien (not-for-profit), 2012 to 2014; formerly, Director, National Executive Service Corps (not-for-profit), 2012 to 2013; formerly, Trustee, Richmond, The American International University in London, 1999 to 2013.
George
W.
Morriss
(1947)
Director since 2007
Adjunct Professor, Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs, since 2012; formerly, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, People’s United Bank, Connecticut (a financial services company), 1991 to 2001.
 
47
Director, 1 William Street Credit Income Fund, since 2018; Director and Chair, Thrivent Church Loan and Income Fund, since 2018; formerly, Trustee, Steben Alternative Investment Funds, Steben Select Multi-Strategy Fund, and Steben Select Multi-Strategy Master Fund, 2013 to 2017; formerly, Treasurer, National Association of Corporate Directors, Connecticut Chapter, 2011 to 2015;

Name,
(Year of
Birth),
and
Address(1)
Position(s)
and Length
of Time
Served(2)
Principal
Occupation(s)(3)
Number
of
Portfolios
in
Fund
Complex
Overseen
Other Directorships Held
Outside Fund Complex(3)
        formerly, Manager, Larch Lane Multi-Strategy Fund complex (which consisted of three funds), 2006 to 2011; formerly, Member, NASDAQ Issuers’ Affairs Committee, 1995 to 2003.
Class III
Independent Fund Directors
Martha C.
Goss
(1949)
Director since 2007
President, Woodhill Enterprises Inc./Chase Hollow Associates LLC (personal investment vehicle), since 2006; formerly, Consultant, Resources Global Professionals (temporary staffing), 2002 to 2006; formerly, Chief Financial Officer, Booz-Allen & Hamilton, Inc., 1995 to 1999; formerly, Enterprise Risk Officer, Prudential Insurance, 1994 to 1995; formerly, President, Prudential Asset Management Company, 1992 to 1994; formerly, President, Prudential Power Funding (investments in electric and gas utilities and alternative energy projects), 1989 to 1992; formerly, Treasurer,
47
Director, American Water (water utility), since 2003; Director, Allianz Life of New York (insurance), since 2005; Director, Berger Group Holdings, Inc. (engineering consulting firm), since 2013; Director, Financial Women’s Association of New York (not-for-profit association), since 2003; Trustee Emerita, Brown University, since 1998; Director, Museum of American Finance (not-for-profit), since 2013; formerly, Non-Executive Chair and Director, Channel Reinsurance (financial guaranty reinsurance), 2006 to 2010; formerly, Director, Ocwen Financial Corporation (mortgage servicing), 2005 to 2010;

 
Name,
(Year of
Birth),
and
Address(1)
 
Position(s)
and Length
of Time
Served(2)
 
Principal
Occupation(s)(3)
Number
of
Portfolios
in
Fund
Complex
Overseen
Other Directorships Held
Outside Fund Complex(3)
    Prudential Insurance Company, 1983 to 1989.   formerly, Director, Claire’s Stores, Inc. (retailer), 2005 to 2007; formerly, Director, Parsons Brinckerhoff Inc. (engineering consulting firm), 2007 to 2010; formerly, Director, Bank Leumi (commercial bank), 2005 to 2007; formerly, Advisory Board Member, Attensity (software developer), 2005 to 2007.
James G. Stavridis (1955)
Director since 2015
Operating Executive, The Carlyle Group, since 2018; Commentator, NBC News, since 2015; formerly, Dean, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, 2013 to 2018; formerly, Admiral, United States Navy, 1976 to 2013, including Supreme Allied Commander, NATO and Commander, European Command, 2009 to 2013, and Commander, United States Southern Command, 2006 to 2009.
47
Director, American Water (water utility), since 2018; Director, NFP Corp. (insurance broker and consultant), since 2017; Director, U.S. Naval Institute, since 2014; Director, Onassis Foundation, since 2014; Director, BMC Software Federal, LLC, since 2014; Director, Vertical Knowledge, LLC, since 2013; formerly, Director, Navy Federal Credit Union, 2000-2002.
 

 
Name,
(Year of
Birth),
and
Address(1)
 
Position(s)
and Length
of Time
Served(2)
 
Principal
Occupation(s)(3)
Number
of
Portfolios
in
Fund
Complex
Overseen
 Other Directorships Held
Outside Fund Complex(3)
Fund Director who is an “Interested Person”
Joseph V. Amato*
(1962)
Chief Executive Officer and President since 2018; Director since 2008
President and Director, Neuberger Berman Group LLC, since 2009; President and Chief Executive Officer, Neuberger Berman BD LLC and Neuberger Berman Holdings LLC (including its predecessor, Neuberger Berman Inc.), since 2007; Chief Investment Officer (Equities) and President (Equities), NBIA (formerly, Neuberger Berman Fixed Income LLC and including predecessor entities), since 2007, and Board Member of NBIA since 2006; formerly, Global Head of Asset Management of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s (“LBHI”) Investment Management Division, 2006 to 2009; formerly, member of LBHI’s Investment Management Division’s Executive Management Committee, 2006 to 2009; formerly, Managing Director, Lehman Brothers Inc. (“LBI”), 2006 to 2008; formerly, Chief Recruiting and
47
Member of Board of Advisors, McDonough School of Business, Georgetown University, since 2001; Member of New York City Board of Advisors, Teach for America, since 2005; Trustee, Montclair Kimberley Academy (private school), since 2007; Member of Board of Regents, Georgetown University, since 2013.
 

 
Name,
(Year of
Birth),
and
Address(1)
 
Position(s)
and Length
of Time
Served(2)
 
Principal
Occupation(s)(3)
Number
of
Portfolios
in
Fund
Complex
Overseen
Other Directorships Held
Outside Fund Complex(3)
   
Development Officer, LBI, 2005 to 2006; formerly, Global Head of LBI’s Equity Sales and a Member of its Equities Division Executive Committee, 2003 to 2005; President and Chief Executive Officer, eleven registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.

   
(1)          The business address of each listed person is 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10104.
(2)          The Board of Directors shall at all times be divided as equally as possible into three classes of Directors designated Class I, Class II and Class III. The terms of office of Class I, Class II and Class III Directors shall expire at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders held in 2024, 2022 and 2023, respectively, and at each third Annual Meeting of Stockholders thereafter.
(3)          Except as otherwise indicated, each individual has held the positions, including directorships, shown for at least the last five years. “Other Directorships” includes directorships held during the past five years by the applicable Director.

*          Indicates a Director who is an “interested person” within the meaning of the 1940 Act. Mr. Amato is an interested person of each Fund by virtue of the fact that he is an officer of NBIA and/or its affiliates.
Information about the Officers of the Fund (other than those listed above)
Name, Address and
(Year of Birth)(1)
Position(s)
and Length of
Time Served(2)
Principal Occupation(s) During Past 5 Years
Claudia A. Brandon
(1956)
Executive Vice President since 2008; Secretary since 2006
Senior Vice President, Neuberger Berman, since 2007 and Employee since 1999; Senior Vice President, NBIA, since 2008 and Assistant Secretary since 2004; formerly, Vice President, Neuberger Berman, 2002 to 2006; formerly, Vice President – Mutual Fund Board Relations, NBIA, 2000 to 2008;  formerly, Vice President, NBIA, 1986 to 1999 and Employee, 1984 to 1999; Executive Vice President and Secretary, thirty-two registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Agnes Diaz (1971)
Vice President since 2013
Senior Vice President, Neuberger Berman, since 2012; Senior Vice President, NBIA, since 2012 and Employee since 1996; formerly, Vice President, Neuberger Berman, 2007 to 2012; Vice President, eleven registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Anthony DiBernardo
(1979)
Assistant Treasurer since 2011
Senior Vice President, Neuberger Berman, since 2014; Senior Vice President, NBIA, since 2014, and Employee since 2003; formerly, Vice President, Neuberger Berman, 2009 to 2014; Assistant Treasurer, eleven registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Savonne L. Ferguson 
(1973)
Chief Compliance Officer since 2018
Senior Vice President, Chief Compliance Officer (Mutual Funds) and Associate General Counsel, NBIA, since November 2018; formerly, Vice President T. Rowe Price Group, Inc. (2018), Vice President and Senior Legal Counsel, T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. (2014-2018), Vice President and Director of Regulatory Fund Administration, PNC Capital Advisors, LLC (2009-2014), Secretary, PNC Funds and PNC Advantage Funds (2010-2014); Chief Compliance Officer, thirty-two registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.

 
Name, Address and
(Year of Birth)(1)
Position(s)
and Length of
Time Served(2)
Principal Occupation(s) During Past 5 Years
Corey A. Issing (1978)
Chief Legal Officer since 2016 (only for purposes of sections 307 and 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002)
General Counsel – Mutual Funds since 2016 and Managing Director, NBIA, since 2017; formerly, Associate General Counsel (2015 to 2016), Counsel (2007 to 2015), Senior Vice President (2013 – 2016); Vice President (2009 – 2013); Chief Legal Officer (only for purposes of sections 307 and 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002), thirty-two registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Sheila R. James (1965)
Assistant Secretary since 2006
Vice President, Neuberger Berman, since 2008 and Employee since 1999; Vice President, NBIA, since 2008; formerly, Assistant Vice President, Neuberger Berman, 2007; Employee, NBIA, 1991 to 1999; Assistant Secretary, thirty-two registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Brian Kerrane (1969)
Chief Operating Officer since 2015; Vice President since 2008
Managing Director, Neuberger Berman, since 2013; Chief Operating Officer – Mutual Funds and Managing Director, NBIA, since 2015; formerly, Senior Vice President, Neuberger Berman, 2006 to 2014; Vice President, NBIA, 2008 to 2015 and Employee since 1991; Chief Operating Officer, ten registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator; Vice President, thirty-two registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Anthony Maltese (1959)
Vice President since 2015
Senior Vice President, Neuberger Berman, since 2014 and Employee since 2000; Senior Vice President, NBIA, since 2014; Vice President, eleven registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Josephine Marone (1963)
Assistant Secretary since 2017
Senior Paralegal, Neuberger Berman, since 2007 and Employee since 2007; Assistant Secretary, thirty-two registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.

Name, Address and
(Year of Birth)(1)
Position(s)
and Length of
Time Served(2)
 
Principal Occupation(s) During Past 5 Years
Owen F. McEntee, Jr. (1961)
Vice President since 2008
Vice President, Neuberger Berman, since 2006; Vice President, NBIA, since 2006 and Employee since 1992; Vice President, eleven registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
John M. McGovern (1970)
Treasurer and Principal Financial and Accounting Officer since 2006
Senior Vice President, Neuberger Berman, since 2007; Senior Vice President, NBIA, since 2007 and Employee since 1993; formerly, Vice President, Neuberger Berman, 2004 to 2006; formerly, Assistant Treasurer, 2002 to 2005; Treasurer and Principal Financial and Accounting Officer, eleven registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Frank Rosato (1971)
Assistant Treasurer since 2006
Vice President, Neuberger Berman, since 2006; Vice President, NBIA, since 2006 and Employee since 1995; Assistant Treasurer, eleven registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.

(1)          The business address of each listed person is 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10104.
(2)          Pursuant to the Bylaws of the Fund each officer elected by the Directors shall hold office until his or her successor shall have been elected and qualified or until his or her earlier death, inability to serve, or resignation. Officers serve at the pleasure of the Directors and may be removed at any time with or without cause.

The Board of Directors
The Board is responsible for managing the business and affairs of the Fund.  Among other things, the Board generally oversees the portfolio management of the Fund and reviews and approves the Fund’s investment management agreement and other principal contracts. It is the Fund’s policy that at least three quarters of the Board shall be comprised of Fund Directors who are not “interested persons” of NBIA (including its affiliates) or the Fund (“Independent Fund Directors”).
The Board has appointed an Independent Director to serve in the role of Chairman of the Board.  The Chair’s primary responsibilities are (i) to participate in the preparation of the agenda for meetings of the Board and in the identification of information to be presented to the Board; (ii) to preside at all meetings of the Board; (iii) to act as the Board’s liaison with management between meetings of the Board; and (iv) to act as the primary contact for board communications.  The Chair may perform such other functions as may be requested by the Board from time to time.  Except for any duties specified herein or pursuant to the Fund’s Articles of Incorporation or Bylaws, the designation as Chair does not impose on such Independent Director any duties, obligations or liability that is greater than the duties, obligations or liability imposed on such person as a member of the Board, generally.
As described below, the Board has an established committee structure through which the Board considers and addresses important matters involving the Fund, including those identified as presenting conflicts or potential conflicts of interest for management.  The Independent Fund Directors also regularly meet outside the presence of management and are advised by experienced independent legal counsel knowledgeable in matters of investment company regulation.  The Board periodically evaluates its structure and composition as well as various aspects of its operations.  The Board believes that its leadership structure, including its Independent Chair and its committee structure, is appropriate in light of, among other factors, the asset size of the fund complex overseen by the Board, the nature and number of funds overseen by the Board, the number of Fund Directors, the range of experience represented on the Board and the Board’s responsibilities.

Additional Information About Directors
In nominating each candidate to serve, the Board is generally aware of each Director’s skills, experience, judgment, integrity, analytical ability, intelligence, common sense, previous profit and not-for-profit board membership and, for each Independent Director, his or her demonstrated willingness to take an independent and questioning stance toward management. For candidates to serve as Independent Directors, independence from the Manager, its affiliates and other principal service providers is critical. Each Director also has considerable familiarity with the funds in the Neuberger Berman fund complex, the Manager, and their operations, as well as the special regulatory requirements governing regulated investment companies and the special responsibilities of investment company directors as a result of his or her substantial prior service as a director of the funds in the Neuberger Berman fund complex. No particular qualification, experience or background establishes the basis for any Director’s position on the Board and the Governance and Nominating Committee and individual Board members may have attributed different weights to the various factors.

In addition to the information set forth in the table above and other relevant qualifications, experience, attributes or skills applicable to a particular Director, the following provides further information about the qualifications and experience of each Director.

Independent Directors

Michael J. Cosgrove:  Mr. Cosgrove is President of an asset management consulting firm.  He has experience as President, Chief Executive Officer, and Chief Financial Officer of the asset management division of a major multinational corporation. He also has experience as a President of institutional sales and marketing for the asset management division of the same corporation, where he was responsible for all distribution, marketing, and development of mutual fund products. He also has served as a member of the boards of various not-for-profit organizations.

Marc Gary: Mr. Gary has legal and investment management experience as executive vice president and general counsel of a major asset management firm. He also has experience as executive vice president and general counsel at a large corporation, and as national litigation practice chair at a large law firm.  He has served as a member of the boards of various profit and not-for-profit organizations. He currently is a trustee and the executive vice chancellor and COO of a religious seminary where he oversees the seminary’s institutional budget.

Martha Clark Goss: Ms. Goss has experience as chief operating and financial officer of an insurance holding company.  She has experience as an investment professional, head of an investment unit and treasurer for a major insurance company, experience as the Chief Financial Officer of two consulting firms, and experience as a lending officer and credit analyst at a major bank.  She has experience managing a personal investment vehicle.  She has served as a member of the boards of various profit and not-for-profit organizations and a university.

Michael M. Knetter:  Dr. Knetter has organizational management experience as a dean of a major university business school and as President and CEO of a university supporting foundation.  He also has responsibility for overseeing management of the university’s endowment.  He has academic experience as a professor of international economics.  He has served as a member of the boards of various public companies and another mutual fund.

Deborah C. McLean: Ms. McLean has experience in the financial services industry. She is currently involved with a high net worth private wealth management membership practice and an angel investing group, where she is active in investment screening and deal leadership and execution. For many years she has been engaged in numerous roles with a variety of not-for-profit and private company boards and has taught corporate finance at the graduate and undergraduate levels. She commenced her professional training at a major financial services corporation, where she was employed for multiple years.

George W. Morriss:  Mr. Morriss has experience in senior management and as chief financial officer of a financial services company.  He has investment management experience as a portfolio manager managing personal and institutional funds.  He has served as a member of a committee of representatives from companies listed on NASDAQ.  He has served on the board of another mutual fund complex.   He has served as a member of the board of funds of hedge funds.  He has an advanced degree in finance.

Tom D. Seip:  Mr. Seip has experience in senior management and as chief executive officer and director of a financial services company overseeing other mutual funds and brokerage.  He has experience as director of an asset management company.  He has experience in management of a
private investment partnership.

James G. Stavridis: Admiral Stavridis has organizational management experience as a dean of a major university school of law and diplomacy.  He also held many leadership roles with the United States Navy over the span of nearly four decades, including serving as NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander Europe and serving at the Pentagon at different periods of time as a strategic and long range planner on the staffs of the chief of Naval Operations, as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and as Commander, U.S. Southern Command.  He has also served as an advisor to private and public companies on geopolitical and cybersecurity matters.

Directors who are “Interested Persons”
Joseph V. Amato:  Mr. Amato has investment management experience as an executive with Neuberger Berman and another financial services firm.  Effective July 1, 2018, Mr. Amato began serving as Chief Executive Officer and President of the Funds and the other funds in the Neuberger Berman Fund Complex. He also serves as Neuberger Berman’s Chief Investment Officer for equity investments.  He has experience in leadership roles within Neuberger Berman and its affiliated entities.  He has served as a member of the board of a major university business school.

Information About Committees

The Fund has established several standing committees to oversee particular aspects of the Fund’s management. The anticipated standing committees of the Board are described below.

Audit Committee. The Audit Committee’s purposes are: (a) in accordance with exchange requirements and Rule 32a-4 under the 1940 Act, to oversee the accounting and financial reporting processes of the Fund and, as the Committee deems appropriate, to inquire into the internal control over financial reporting of service providers; (b) in accordance with exchange requirements and Rule 32a-4 under the 1940 Act, to oversee the quality and integrity of the Fund’s financial statements and the independent audit thereof; (c) in accordance with exchange requirements and Rule 32a-4 under the 1940 Act, to oversee, or, as appropriate, assist Board oversight of, the Fund’s compliance with legal and regulatory requirements that relate to the Fund’s accounting and financial reporting, internal control over financial reporting and independent audits; (d) to approve, prior to appointment by the Board, the engagement of the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm and, in connection therewith, to review and evaluate the qualifications, independence and performance of the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm; (e) to act as a liaison between the Fund’s independent registered public accounting firm and the full Board; (f) to monitor the operation of policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure that each portfolio holding is valued in an appropriate and timely manner, reflecting information known to management about the issuer, current market conditions, and other material factors (“Pricing Procedures”); (g) to consider and evaluate, and recommend to the Board when the Committee deems it appropriate, amendments to the Pricing Procedures proposed by management, counsel, the auditors and others; (h) from time to time, as required or permitted by the Pricing Procedures, to establish or ratify a method of determining the fair value of portfolio securities for which market prices are not readily available or deemed unreliable; and (i) to prepare an audit committee report as required by Item 407(d) of Regulation S-K to be included in proxy statements relating to the election of directors. Its members are Michael J. Cosgrove (Chair), Martha C. Goss (Vice Chair), and Deborah C. McLean. All members are Independent Fund Directors.  During the fiscal year
ended October 31, 2021, the Audit Committee met six times.

Closed-End Funds Committee. The Fund’s Closed-End Funds Committee is responsible for consideration and evaluation of issues specific to the Fund. Its member is George W. Morriss (Chair), who is an Independent Fund Director.  During the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021, the Closed-End Funds Committee met six times.

Contract Review Committee. The Contract Review Committee is responsible for overseeing and guiding the process by which the Independent Fund Directors annually consider whether to renew the Fund’s principal contractual arrangements. Its members are Michael J. Cosgrove, Marc Gary, Deborah C. McLean (Chair), and George W. Morriss (Vice Chair). All members are Independent Fund Directors.  During the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021, the Contract Review Committee met five times.

Ethics and Compliance Committee. The Ethics and Compliance Committee generally: (a) coordinates the Board’s oversight of the Fund’s Chief Compliance Officer (“CCO”) in connection with the implementation of the Fund’s program for compliance with Rule 38a-1 under the 1940 Act and the Fund’s implementation and enforcement of its compliance policies and procedures thereunder that are reasonably designed to ensure compliance by the Fund and its primary service providers with applicable federal securities laws (“Compliance Program”); (b) oversees the compliance with the Fund’s Code of Ethics, which restricts the personal securities transactions, including transactions in Fund shares, of employees, officers, and directors; (c) oversees the activities of management personnel responsible for identifying, prioritizing, and managing compliance risks; (d) oversees the adequacy and fairness of the arrangements for securities lending, if any, in a manner consistent with applicable regulatory requirements, with special emphasis on any arrangements in which the Fund deals with the Manager or any affiliate of the Manager as principal or agent; (e) oversees the program by which the Manager seeks to monitor and improve the quality of execution for portfolio transactions; and (f) oversees the quarterly and annual management reports regarding: internal audit reviews involving compliance matters; contracts with and payments made to third-party intermediaries; and proxy voting policies, guidelines, and procedures. The Committee shall not assume oversight duties to the extent that such duties will be assigned by the Board expressly to another Committee of the Board (such as oversight of internal controls over financial reporting, which the Board anticipates assigning to the Audit Committee.) The Committee’s primary function is oversight. Each investment adviser, principal underwriter, administrator, custodian and transfer agent (collectively, “Service Providers”) will be responsible for its own compliance with the federal securities laws and for devising, implementing, maintaining and updating appropriate policies, procedures and codes of ethics to ensure compliance with applicable laws and regulations and their contracts with the Fund. The CCO is responsible for administering the Fund’s Compliance Program, including devising and implementing appropriate methods of testing compliance by the Fund and its Service Providers. Its members are Marc Gary (Chair), Michael M. Knetter (Vice Chair), Tom D. Seip, and James G. Stavridis.  All members are Independent Fund Directors. The entire Board will receive at least annually a report on the compliance programs of the Fund and service providers and the required annual reports on the administration of the Code of Ethics and the required annual certifications from the Fund and NBIA.  During the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021, the Ethics and Compliance Committee met four times.

Executive Committee. The Executive Committee is responsible for acting in an emergency when a quorum of the Board of Directors is not available; the Committee will have all the powers of the Board of Directors when the Board is not in session to the extent permitted by Maryland law. Its members are Joseph V. Amato (Vice Chair), Michael J. Cosgrove, Marc Gary, Martha C. Goss, Michael M. Knetter, Deborah C. McLean, George W. Morriss, and Tom D. Seip (Chair). All members except for Mr. Amato are Independent Fund Directors.  During the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021, the Executive Committee did not meet.

Governance and Nominating Committee. The Governance and Nominating Committee is responsible for: (a) considering and evaluating the structure, composition and operation of the Board of Directors and each committee thereof, including the operation of the annual self-evaluation by the Board; (b) evaluating and nominating individuals to serve as Fund Directors including as Independent Fund Directors, as members of committees, as Chair of the Board and as officers of the Fund; (c) recommending for Board approval any proposed changes to Committee membership and recommending for Board and Committee approval any proposed changes to the Chair and Vice Chair appointments of any Committee following consultation with members of each such Committee; and (d) considering and making recommendations relating to the compensation of Independent Fund Directors.  Its members are Martha C. Goss (Chair), Michael M. Knetter, Tom D. Seip, and James G. Stavridis (Vice Chair). All members are Independent Fund Directors. The selection and nomination of candidates to serve as independent directors is committed to the discretion of the current Independent Fund Directors.  During the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021, the Governance and Nominating Committee met four times.

Investment Performance Committee. The Investment Performance Committee is responsible for overseeing and guiding the process by which the Board reviews Fund performance and interfacing with management personnel responsible for investment risk management. Each Fund Director is a member of the Committee. Michael M. Knetter and Deborah C. McLean are the Chair and the Vice Chair, respectively, of the Committee. All members except for Mr. Amato are Independent Fund Directors.  During the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021, the Investment Performance Committee met four times.

Risk Management Oversight

As an integral part of its responsibility for oversight of the Fund in the interests of stockholders, the Board oversees risk management of the Fund’s portfolio management, administration and operations. The Board views risk management as an important responsibility of management.

The Fund faces a number of risks, such as investment risk, counterparty risk, valuation risk, liquidity risk, reputational risk, risk of operational failure or lack of business continuity, cybersecurity risk, and legal, compliance and regulatory risk.

Risk management seeks to identify and address risks, i.e., events or circumstances that could have material adverse effects on the business, operations, stockholder services, investment performance or reputation of the Fund. Under the overall supervision of the Board, the Fund, the Manager, and the affiliates of the Manager, or other service providers to the Fund, employ a variety of processes, procedures and controls to identify various of those possible events or circumstances, to lessen the probability of their occurrence and/or to mitigate the effects of such events or circumstances if they do occur. Different processes, procedures and controls are employed with
respect to different types of risks.

The Board exercises oversight of the Manager’s risk management processes primarily through the Board’s committee structure. The various committees, as appropriate, and/or at times the Board, meet periodically with the Chief Risk Officer, head of operational risk, the Chief Information Security Officer, the CCO, the Treasurer, and the Chief Investment Officers for equity, alternative and fixed income, the head of Internal Audit, and the Fund’s independent auditor. The committees, or the Board, as appropriate, review with these individuals, among other things, the design and implementation of risk management strategies in their respective areas, and events and circumstances that have arisen and responses thereto.

The Board recognizes that not all risks that may affect the Fund can be identified, that it may not be practical or cost-effective to eliminate or mitigate certain risks, that it may be necessary to bear certain risks (such as investment-related risks) to achieve the Fund’s goals, and that the processes, procedures and controls employed to address certain risks may be limited in their effectiveness. Moreover, reports received by the Directors as to risk management matters are typically summaries of the relevant information. Furthermore, it is in the very nature of certain risks that they can be evaluated only as probabilities, and not as certainties. As a result of the foregoing and other factors, the Board’s risk management oversight is subject to substantial limitations, and no risk management program can predict the likelihood or seriousness of, or mitigate the effects of, all potential risks.

Compensation and Indemnification

The Fund’s Articles provide that the Fund will indemnify its Fund Directors and officers against liabilities and expenses reasonably incurred in connection with litigation in which they may be involved because of their offices with the Fund, unless it is adjudicated that they (a) engaged in bad faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of their offices, or (b) did not act in good faith in the reasonable belief that their action was in the best interest of the Fund. In the case of settlement, such indemnification will not be provided unless it has been determined (by a court or other body approving the settlement or other disposition, by a majority of disinterested directors based upon a review of readily available facts, or in a written opinion of independent counsel) that such officers or Fund Directors have not engaged in willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of their duties.

Officers and Directors who are interested persons of the Fund, as defined in the 1940 Act, will receive no salary or fees from the Fund.

For serving as a trustee/director of the funds in the Neuberger Berman fund family, each Independent Fund Director receives a combined annual retainer of $180,000, paid quarterly, and a fee of $15,000 for each of the regularly scheduled meetings he or she attends in-person or by telephone. For any additional special in-person or telephonic meeting of the Board, the Governance and Nominating Committee will determine whether a fee is warranted. To compensate for the additional time commitment, the Chair of the Audit Committee and the Chair of the Closed-End Funds Committee each receives $20,000 per year, the Chair of the Contract Review Committee receives $25,000 per year and each Chair of the other Committees receives $15,000 per year. No additional compensation is provided for service on a Board committee. The Chair of the Board who is also an Independent Fund Director receives an additional $70,000 per year.

The Neuberger Berman Funds reimburse Independent Fund Directors for their travel and other out-of-pocket expenses related to attendance at Board meetings. The Independent Fund Director compensation is allocated to each fund in the Neuberger Berman fund family based on a method the Board finds reasonable.

The following table sets forth information concerning the compensation of the Fund Directors. The Fund does not have any retirement plan for the Fund Directors.

TABLE OF COMPENSATION

Name and Position with the
Fund
Aggregate Compensation
from the Fund for the Fiscal
Year Ended October 31,
2021
Total Compensation from
Registered Investment
Companies in the Neuberger
Berman Fund Complex Paid to
Directors for Calendar Year
Ended December 31, 2021
Independent Fund Directors
   
Michael J. Cosgrove
$5,162
$240,000
Marc Gary
$5,054
$235,000
Martha C. Goss
$5,054
$235,000
Michael M. Knetter
$5,054
$235,000
Deborah C. McLean
$5,162
$240,000
George W. Morriss
$5,135
$238,750
Tom D. Seip
$5,653
$267,500
James G. Stavridis
$4,732
$220,000
Candace L. Straight1
$3,242
$150,000
Peter P. Trapp2
$4,732
$220,000
Director who is an “Interested Person”
   
Joseph V. Amato
$0
$0
1   Ms. Straight unexpectedly passed away in June 2021.

2   Mr. Trapp retired from the Board effective December 31, 2021.
Ownership of Securities

Set forth below is the aggregate dollar range of equity securities owned by each Fund Director in all the funds in the fund family overseen by the Fund Director, valued as of December 31, 2021.

Name of Fund Director
Dollar Range of Equity
Securities Held in the
Registrant
Aggregate Dollar Range of
Equity Securities Held in all
Registered Investment
Companies Overseen by
Fund Director in Family
of Investment Companies
Independent Fund Directors
   
Michael J. Cosgrove
A
E
Marc Gary
A
E
Martha C. Goss
A
E
Michael M. Knetter
A
E
Deborah C. McLean
A
E
George W. Morriss
D
E
Tom D. Seip
A
E
James G. Stavridis
A
E
Fund Director who is an “Interested Person”
 
E
Joseph V. Amato
A
E

A = None; B = $1-$10,000; C = $10,001-$50,000; D = $50,001-$100,000; E = over $100,000

Independent Fund Directors’ Ownership of Securities

As of December 31, 2021, no Independent Fund Director (or his/her immediate family members) owned securities of NBIA or securities in an entity controlling, controlled by or under common control with NBIA (not including registered investment companies).

Codes of Ethics

The Fund and NBIA have personal securities trading policies that restrict the personal securities transactions of employees, officers, and Directors. Their primary purpose is to ensure that personal trading by these individuals does not disadvantage any fund managed by NBIA. The portfolio managers and other investment personnel who comply with the policies’ pre-clearance and disclosure procedures may be permitted to purchase, sell or hold certain types of securities which also may be or are held in the funds they advise, but are restricted from trading in close conjunction with the Fund or taking personal advantage of investment opportunities that may belong to the Fund. Text-only versions of the Codes of Ethics can be viewed online or downloaded from the EDGAR Database on the SEC’s internet web site at www.sec.gov. In addition, copies of the Codes of Ethics may be obtained, after mailing the appropriate duplicating fee, by writing to the
SEC’s Public Reference Section, 100 F Street, N.E., Washington, DC 20549-0102 or by e-mail request at publicinfo@sec.gov.

INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION SERVICES

Investment Manager and Administrator

NBIA serves as the investment manager to the Fund pursuant to a management agreement with the Fund, dated as of August 6, 2010 (“Management Agreement”). NBIA also provides investment management and advisory services to private accounts of institutional and individual clients and to mutual funds and other registered investment companies. As of December 31, 2021, NBIA and its affiliates had approximately $460 billion in assets under management. NBIA is located at 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10104-0002.

The Management Agreement provides, in substance, that NBIA will make and implement investment decisions for the Fund in its discretion and will continuously develop an investment program for the Fund’s assets. The Management Agreement permits NBIA to effect securities transactions on behalf of the Fund through associated persons of NBIA. The Management Agreement also specifically permits NBIA to compensate, through higher commissions, brokers and dealers who provide investment research and analysis to the Fund, although NBIA has no current plans to pay a material amount of such compensation.

The Management Agreement provides that NBIA shall not be subject to any liability in connection with the performance of its services thereunder in the absence of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of its obligations and duties. In the event that litigation against NBIA, in connection with its obligations under the Management Agreement or administration agreement (described below), ends with a determination that NBIA acted without culpability, the Fund will reimburse NBIA for reasonable attorney’s fees and other expenses. In the event a matter ends without a court ruling on NBIA’s culpability, any unresolved issue will be determined by a committee of disinterested Directors who were not party to the suit or by an opinion of independent legal counsel. The Fund may advance expenses to NBIA if (1) a committee of non-party disinterested Directors or independent legal counsel determines that NBIA is likely to prevail, and (2) the Fund is adequately assured of repayment in the event of an adverse result.

NBIA provides to the Fund, without separate cost, office space, equipment, and facilities and the personnel necessary to perform executive, administrative, and clerical functions. NBIA will pay all salaries, expenses, and fees of the officers, Directors, and employees of the Fund who are officers, Directors, or employees of NBIA. Director(s) and/or officer(s) of NBIA currently serve as Directors and officers of the Fund. See “Management of the Fund-Directors and Officers.”

Pursuant to the Management Agreement, the Fund agrees to pay NBIA an annual management fee, payable on a monthly basis, at the annual rate of 0.60% of the Fund’s average daily total assets minus liabilities other than the aggregate indebtedness entered into for purposes of leverage (“Managed Assets”). The liquidation preference of the Preferred Stock is not considered a liability or permanent equity.

NBIA provides facilities, services, and personnel as well as accounting, record keeping and other services to the Fund pursuant to an administration agreement with the Fund, dated as of
August 6, 2010 (“Administration Agreement”).  Under the Administration Agreement, NBIA also provides certain stockholder, stockholder-related, and other services that are not furnished by the Fund’s stockholder servicing agent. NBIA provides the direct stockholder services specified in the Administration Agreement and assist the stockholder servicing agent in the development and implementation of specified programs and systems to enhance overall stockholder servicing capabilities. NBIA solicits and gathers stockholder proxies, performs services connected with the Fund’s exchange listing, and furnishes other services the parties agree from time to time should be provided under the Administration Agreement.

For administrative services, the Fund pays NBIA at the annual rate of 0.05% of average daily Managed Assets. With the Fund’s consent, NBIA may subcontract to third parties some of its responsibilities to the Fund under the Administration Agreement. In addition, the Fund may compensate such third parties for accounting and other services.

All fees and expenses are accrued daily and are deducted before payment of distributions to stockholders. The Management Agreement continues until October 31, 2022.  The Management Agreement is renewable thereafter from year to year with respect to the Fund, so long as its continuance is approved at least annually (1) by the vote of a majority of the Independent Fund Directors, cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval, and (2) by the vote of a majority of the Directors or by a 1940 Act majority vote of the outstanding stock of the Fund. The Administration Agreement continues until October 31, 2022. The Administration Agreement is renewable from year to year, so long as its continuance is approved at least annually (1) by the vote of a majority of the Independent Fund Directors, and (2) by the vote of a majority of the Directors or by a 1940 Act majority vote of the outstanding stock in the Fund.

The Management Agreement is terminable, without penalty, on 60 days’ written notice either by the Fund or by NBIA. The Administration Agreement is terminable, without penalty, on 60 days’ written notice either by NBIA or by the Fund. Each Agreement will terminate automatically if it is assigned.

Except as otherwise described in the Prospectus, the Fund will pay, in addition to the investment management fee described above, all expenses not assumed by NBIA, including, without limitation, fees and expenses of Directors who are not “interested persons” of NBIA or the Fund, interest charges, taxes, brokerage commissions, expenses of issue of shares, fees and expenses of registering and qualifying Fund shares for distribution under federal and state laws and regulations, charges of custodians, auditing and legal expenses, expenses of determining NAV of the Fund, reports to stockholders, expenses of meetings of stockholders, expenses of printing and mailing prospectuses, proxy statements and proxies to existing stockholders, and its proportionate share of insurance premiums and professional association dues or assessments. The Fund will also be responsible for such nonrecurring expenses as may arise, including litigation in which the Fund may be a party, and other expenses as determined by the Board. The Fund may have an obligation to indemnify its officers and Directors with respect to such litigation.

The total dollar amounts paid by the Fund to the Adviser for the last three fiscal years ended October 31, 2021, October 31, 2020 and October 31, 2019 are $2,402,397, $2,305,383 and $1,890,500, respectively.

Management and Control of NBIA

NBIA is an indirect subsidiary of Neuberger Berman Group LLC (“NBG,” and together with its consolidated subsidiaries “NB Group”). The directors, officers and/or employees of NBIA who are deemed “control persons,” all of whom have offices at the same address as NBIA are: Joseph Amato and Brad Tank. Mr. Amato is both a Director and an officer of the Fund.

NBG’s voting equity is owned by NBSH Acquisition, LLC (“NBSH”). NBSH is owned by portfolio managers, members of the NBG’s management team, and certain of NBG’s key employees and senior professionals.

Portfolio Manager Information Accounts Managed
 
Russ Covode, (Managing Director of NBIA), Daniel Doyle, CFA (Managing Director of NBIA), Joe Lind, CFA (Managing Director of NBIA), and Chris Kocinski, CFA (Managing Director of NBIA) serve as portfolio managers of the Fund. The table below describes the accounts for which they have day-to-day management responsibility as of October 31, 2021.

Type of Account
Number
of
Accounts
Managed
Total Assets
Managed
($ millions)
Number of
Accounts
Managed for
which Advisory
Fee is
Performance-
Based
Assets Managed for
which Advisory Fee
is Performance-
Based
($ millions)
Russ Covode
       
Registered Investment Companies*
2
$1,993
0
$0
Other Pooled Investment Vehicles**
23
$10,875
0
$0
Other Accounts***
25
$8,892
2
$575
Daniel Doyle
       
Registered Investment Companies*
2
$1,986
0
$0
Other Pooled Investment Vehicles**
22
$10,195
0
$0
Other Accounts***
21
$5,601
2
$575

Joe Lind
       
Registered Investment Companies*
2
$1,933
0
$0
Other Pooled Investment Vehicles**
29
$14,522
0
$0
Other Accounts***
26
$8,892
2
$575
Chris Kocinski
       
Registered Investment Companies*
2
$1,993
0
$0
Other Pooled Investment Vehicles**
29
$14,418
0
$0
Other Accounts***
25
$8,881
2
$575

*
Registered Investment Companies include: Mutual Funds.
**
A portion of certain accounts may be managed by other portfolio managers; however, the total assets of such accounts are included above even though the portfolio manager listed above is not involved in the day-to-day management of the entire account.
***
Other Accounts include: Institutional Separate Accounts, Sub-Advised Accounts and Managed Accounts (WRAP Accounts).

Conflicts of Interest

Actual or apparent conflicts of interest may arise when a portfolio manager has day-to-day management responsibilities with respect to more than one Fund or other account. The management of multiple funds and accounts (including proprietary accounts) may give rise to actual or potential conflicts of interest if the funds and accounts have different or similar objectives, benchmarks, time horizons, and fees, as the portfolio manager must allocate his or her time and investment ideas across multiple funds and accounts. The portfolio manager may execute transactions for another fund or account that may adversely impact the value of securities or instruments held by the Fund, and which may include transactions that are directly contrary to the positions taken by the Fund. For example, a portfolio manager may engage in short sales of securities or instruments for another account that are the same type of securities or instruments in which a fund it manages also invests. In such a case, the portfolio manager could be seen as harming the performance of the Fund for the benefit of the account engaging in short sales if the short sales cause the market value of the securities or instruments to fall. Additionally, if a portfolio manager identifies a limited investment opportunity that may be suitable for more than one fund or other account, the Fund may not be able to take full advantage of that opportunity. There may also be regulatory limitations that prevent the Fund from participating in a transaction that another account or fund managed by the same portfolio manager will invest. For example, the 1940 Act prohibits the Fund from participating in certain transactions with certain of its affiliates and from participating in “joint” transactions alongside certain of its affiliates. The prohibition on “joint” transactions may limit the ability of the
Fund to participate alongside its affiliates in privately negotiated transactions unless the transaction is otherwise permitted under existing regulatory guidance and may reduce the amount of privately negotiated transactions that the Fund may participate. Further, the Manager may take an investment position or action for a fund or account that may be different from, inconsistent with, or have different rights than (e.g., voting rights, dividend or repayment priorities or other features that may conflict with one another), an action or position taken for one or more other funds or accounts, including the Fund, having similar or different objectives. A conflict may also be created by investing in different parts of an issuer’s capital structure (e.g., equity or debt, or different positions in the debt structure). Those positions and actions may adversely impact, or in some instances benefit, one or more affected accounts, including the funds. Potential conflicts may also arise because portfolio decisions and related actions regarding a position held for a fund or another account may not be in the best interests of a position held by another fund or account having similar or different objectives. If one account were to buy or sell portfolio securities or instruments shortly before another account bought or sold the same securities or instruments, it could affect the price paid or received by the second account. Securities selected for funds or accounts other than the Fund may outperform the securities selected for the Fund. Finally, a conflict of interest may arise if the Manager and a portfolio manager have a financial incentive to favor one account over another, such as a performance-based management fee that applies to one account but not all funds or accounts for which the portfolio manager is responsible. In the ordinary course of operations, certain businesses within the Neuberger Berman organization (the “Firm”) will seek access to material nonpublic information. For instance, NBIA portfolio managers may obtain and utilize material non-public information in purchasing loans and other debt instruments and certain privately placed or restricted equity instruments. From time to time, NBIA portfolio managers will be offered the opportunity on behalf of applicable clients to participate on a creditors or other similar committee in connection with restructuring or other “work-out” activity, which participation could provide access to material nonpublic information. The Firm maintains procedures that address the process by which material non-public information may be acquired intentionally by the Firm. When considering whether to acquire material nonpublic information, the Firm will attempt to balance the interests of all clients, taking into consideration relevant factors, including the extent of the prohibition on trading that would occur, the size of the Firm’s existing position in the issuer, if any, and the value of the information as it relates to the investment decision-making process. The acquisition of material non-public information would likely give rise to a conflict of interest since the Firm may be prohibited from rendering investment advice to clients regarding the securities or instruments of such issuer and thereby potentially limiting the universe of securities or instruments that the Firm, including the Fund, may purchase or potentially limiting the ability of the Firm, including the Fund, to sell such securities or instruments. Similarly, where the Firm declines access to (or otherwise does not receive or share within the Firm) material non-public information regarding an issuer, the portfolio managers could potentially base investment decisions with respect to assets of such issuer solely on public information, thereby limiting the amount of information available to the portfolio managers in connection with such investment decisions. In determining whether or not to elect to receive material non-public information, the Firm will endeavor to act fairly to its clients as a whole. The Firm reserves the right to decline access to material nonpublic information, including declining to join a creditors or similar committee. NBIA and the Fund have adopted certain compliance procedures which are designed to address these types of conflicts. However, there is no guarantee that such procedures will detect each and every situation in which a conflict arises.

Compensation of Portfolio Managers by NBIA

Our compensation philosophy is one that focuses on rewarding performance and incentivizing our employees. We are also focused on creating a compensation process that we believe is fair, transparent, and competitive with the market.

Compensation for portfolio managers consists of fixed (salary) and variable (bonus) compensation but is more heavily weighted on the variable portion of total compensation and is paid from a team compensation pool made available to the portfolio management team with which the portfolio manager is associated. The size of the team compensation pool is determined based on a formula that takes into consideration a number of factors including the pre-tax revenue that is generated by that particular portfolio management team, less certain adjustments. The bonus portion of the compensation is discretionary and is determined on the basis of a variety of criteria, including investment performance (including the aggregate multi-year track record), utilization of central resources (including research, sales and operations/support), business building to further the longer term sustainable success of the investment team, effective team/people management, and overall contribution to the success of Neuberger Berman. Certain portfolio managers may manage products other than mutual funds, such as high net worth separate accounts. For the management of these accounts, a portfolio manager may generally receive a percentage of pre-tax revenue determined on a monthly basis less certain deductions. The percentage of revenue a portfolio manager receives pursuant to this arrangement will vary based on certain revenue thresholds.

The terms of our long-term retention incentives are as follows:

Employee-Owned Equity. Certain employees (primarily senior leadership and investment professionals) participated in Neuberger Berman’s equity ownership structure, which was designed to incentivize and retain key personnel. In addition, in prior years certain employees may have elected to have a portion of their compensation delivered in the form of equity. We also offer an equity acquisition program which allows employees a more direct opportunity to invest in Neuberger Berman.

For confidentiality and privacy reasons, we cannot disclose individual equity holdings or program participation.

Contingent Compensation Plan. Certain employees may participate in the Neuberger Berman Group Contingent Compensation Plan (the “CCP”) to serve as a means to further align the interests of our employees with the success of the firm and the interests of our clients, and to reward continued employment. Under the CCP, up to 20% of a participant’s annual total compensation in excess of $500,000 is contingent and subject to vesting. The contingent amounts are maintained in a notional account that is tied to the performance of a portfolio of Neuberger Berman investment strategies as specified by the firm on an employee-by-employee basis. By having a participant’s contingent compensation tied to Neuberger Berman investment strategies, each employee is given further incentive to operate as a prudent risk manager and to collaborate with colleagues to maximize performance across all business areas. In the case of members of investment teams, including portfolio managers, the CCP is currently structured so that such employees have exposure to the investment strategies of their respective teams as well as the broader Neuberger Berman portfolio.

Restrictive Covenants. Most investment professionals, including portfolio managers, are subject to notice periods and restrictive covenants which include employee and client non-solicit restrictions as well as restrictions on the use of confidential information. In addition, depending on participation levels, certain senior professionals who have received equity grants have also agreed to additional notice and transition periods and, in some cases, non-compete restrictions. For confidentiality and privacy reasons, we cannot disclose individual restrictive covenant arrangements

Ownership of Securities

Set forth below is the dollar range of equity securities beneficially owned by the Fund’s Portfolio Managers in the Registrant as of October 31, 2021.

Portfolio Manager
Dollar Range of Equity Securities Owned in the
Registrant
Russ Covode
A
Daniel Doyle
A
Christopher Kocinski
A
Joseph Lind
E
 
A = None
E = $100,001-$500,000
 
B = $1-$10,000
F = $500,001-$1,000,000
 
C = $10,001 - $50,000
G = Over $1,000,000
 
D =$50,001-$100,000
 


PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

Other Investment Companies or Accounts Managed

The investment decisions concerning the Fund and the other registered investment companies managed by NBIA (collectively, “Other NB Funds”) have been and will continue to be made independently of one another. In terms of their investment objectives, most of the Other NB Funds differ from the Fund. Even where the investment objectives are similar, however, the methods used by the Other NB Funds and the Fund to achieve their objectives may differ. The investment results achieved by all of the registered investment companies managed by NBIA have varied from one another in the past and are likely to vary in the future. In addition, NBIA or its affiliates may manage one or more Other NB Funds or other accounts with similar investment objectives and strategies as the Fund that may have risks that are greater or less than the Fund.

There may be occasions when the Fund and one or more of the Other NB Funds or other accounts or funds managed by NBIA are contemporaneously engaged in purchasing or selling the same securities from or to third parties. When this occurs, the transactions may be aggregated to obtain favorable execution to the extent permitted by applicable law and regulations. The transactions will be allocated according to one or more methods designed to ensure that the allocation is equitable to the Fund and accounts involved. Although in some cases this arrangement may have a detrimental effect on the price or volume of the securities as to the Fund, in other cases it is believed that the Fund’s ability to participate in volume transactions may produce better executions for it. In any case, it is the judgment of the Directors and NBIA that the desirability of
the Fund having its advisory arrangements with NBIA outweighs any disadvantages that may result from contemporaneous transactions.

The Fund is subject to certain limitations imposed on all advisory clients of NBIA (including the Fund, the Other NB Funds, and other managed funds or accounts) and personnel of NBIA and its affiliates. These may include, for example, limits that may be imposed in certain industries or by certain companies, and policies of NBIA that limit the aggregate purchases, by all accounts under management, of the outstanding shares of public companies.

Proxy Voting

The Board delegates to NBIA the responsibility to vote proxies related to the securities held in the Fund’s portfolio. Under this authority, NBIA would be required by the Board to vote proxies related to portfolio securities in the best interests of the Fund and its stockholders. The Board would permit NBIA to contract with a third party to obtain proxy voting and related services, including research of current issues.

NBIA has implemented written Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures (“Proxy Voting Policy”) that are designed to reasonably ensure that NBIA votes proxies prudently and in the best interest of its advisory clients for whom NBIA has voting authority, including the Fund. The Proxy Voting Policy also describes how NBIA addresses any conflicts that may arise between its interests and those of its clients with respect to proxy voting.

NBIA’s Governance and Proxy Committee (“Proxy Committee”) is responsible for developing, authorizing, implementing and updating the Proxy Voting Policy, administering and overseeing the proxy voting process and engaging and overseeing any independent third-party vendors as voting delegate to review, monitor and/or vote proxies. In order to apply the Proxy Voting Policy noted above in a timely and consistent manner, NBIA utilizes Glass, Lewis & Co. (“Glass Lewis”) to vote proxies in accordance with NBIA’s voting guidelines or, in instances where a material conflict has been determined to exist, in accordance with the voting recommendations of an independent third party.  NBIA retains final authority and fiduciary responsibility for proxy voting. NBIA believes that this process is reasonably designed to address material conflicts of interest that may arise between NBIA and a client as to how proxies are voted.

In the event that an investment professional at NBIA believes that it is in the best interests of a client or clients to vote proxies in a manner inconsistent with the voting guidelines, the Proxy Committee will review information submitted by the investment professional to determine that there is no material conflict of interest between NBIA and the client with respect to the voting of the proxy in the requested manner.

If the Proxy Committee determines that the voting of a proxy as recommended by the investment professional would not be appropriate, the Proxy Committee shall: (i) take no further action, in which case Glass Lewis shall vote such proxy in accordance with the voting guidelines; (ii) disclose such conflict to the client or clients and obtain written direction from the client as to how to vote the proxy; (iii) suggest that the client or clients engage another party to determine how to vote the proxy; or (iv) engage another independent third party to determine how to vote the proxy.

The Fund may invest in shares of affiliated funds and may own substantial portions of these underlying affiliated funds. When the Fund holds shares of underlying affiliated funds, the Fund will vote proxies of those funds in the same proportion as the vote of all other holders of the fund’s shares, unless the Board otherwise instructs. Information regarding how the Fund voted proxies relating to portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30 will be available by August 31 of each year, without charge, by calling 1-800-877-9700 (toll-free) or by visiting www.nb.com or the website of the SEC, www.sec.gov.

Brokerage and Research Services

Orders for the purchase or sale of portfolio securities are placed on behalf of the Fund by NBIA pursuant to the terms of the advisory agreement. In effecting securities transactions, the Fund seeks to obtain the best price and execution of orders. While affiliates of NBIA are permitted to act as brokers for the Fund in the purchase and sale of its portfolio securities (other than certain securities traded on the OTC market) where such brokers are capable of providing best execution (“Affiliated Brokers”), the Fund generally uses unaffiliated brokers.

For Fund transactions which involve securities traded on the OTC market, the Fund purchases and sells OTC securities in principal transactions with dealers who are the principal market makers for such securities.
 
During the fiscal years ended October 31, 2021, October 31, 2020 and October 31, 2019, the Fund did not pay brokerage commissions. During the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021, the Fund did not acquire or hold any securities of its “regular brokers or dealers” (as defined under the 1940 Act).

The amount of brokerage commissions paid by the Fund may vary significantly from year to year due to a variety of factors, including the types of investments selected by the Manager, investment strategy changes, changing asset levels, and/or portfolio turnover.

Commission rates, being a component of price, are considered along with other relevant factors in evaluating best price and execution. In selecting a broker other than an Affiliated Broker to execute Fund transactions, NBIA generally considers the quality and reliability of brokerage services, including execution capability, speed of execution, overall performance, and financial responsibility, and may consider, among other factors, research and other investment information or services (“research services”) provided by those brokers as well as any expense offset arrangements offered by the brokers.

The Fund may use an Affiliated Broker where, in the judgment of NBIA, that firm is able to obtain a price and execution at least as favorable as other qualified brokers. To the Fund’s knowledge, no affiliate of the Fund receives give-ups or reciprocal business in connection with its securities transactions.

The use of an Affiliated Broker for the Fund is subject to the requirements of Section 11(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “1934 Act”). Section 11(a) prohibits members of national securities exchanges from retaining compensation for executing exchange transactions for accounts which they or their affiliates manage, except where they have the authorization of the persons authorized to transact business for the account and comply with certain
annual reporting requirements. Before an Affiliated Broker is used, the Fund and NBIA expressly authorize the Affiliated Broker to retain such compensation, and the Affiliate Broker would have to agree to comply with the reporting requirements of Section 11(a).

Under the 1940 Act, commissions paid by the Fund to an Affiliated Broker in connection with a purchase or sale of securities on a securities exchange may not exceed the usual and customary broker’s commission. Accordingly, it is the Fund’s policy that the commissions paid an Affiliated Broker will be at least as favorable to the Fund as those that would be charged by other qualified brokers having comparable execution capability in NBIA’s judgment. The Fund does not deem it practicable and in its best interests to solicit competitive bids for commissions on each transaction effected by an Affiliated Broker. However, when an Affiliated Broker is executing portfolio transactions on behalf of the Fund, consideration regularly will be given to information concerning the prevailing level of commissions charged by other brokers on comparable transactions during comparable periods of time. The 1940 Act generally prohibits an Affiliated Broker from acting as principal in the purchase of portfolio securities from, or the sale of portfolio securities to, the Fund unless an appropriate exemption is available.

A committee of Independent Fund Directors from time to time reviews, among other things, information relating to the commissions charged by an Affiliated Broker to the Fund and to their other customers and information concerning the prevailing level of commissions charged by other brokers having comparable execution capability.

To ensure that accounts of all investment clients, including the Fund, are treated fairly in the event that an Affiliated Broker receives transaction instructions regarding the same security for more than one investment account at or about the same time, the Affiliated Broker may combine orders placed on behalf of clients, including advisory accounts in which affiliated persons have an investment interest, for the purpose of negotiating brokerage commissions or obtaining a more favorable price. Where appropriate, securities purchased or sold may be allocated, in terms of amount, to a client according to the proportion that the size of the order placed by that account bears to the aggregate size of orders contemporaneously placed by the other accounts, subject to de minimis exceptions. All participating accounts pay or receive the same price when orders are combined.

Under policies anticipated to be adopted by the Board, an Affiliated Broker may enter into agency cross-trades on behalf of the Fund. An agency cross-trade is a securities transaction in which the same broker acts as agent on both sides of the trade and the broker or an affiliate has discretion over one of the participating accounts. In this situation, the Affiliated Broker would receive brokerage commissions from both participants in the trade. The other account participating in an agency cross-trade with the Fund cannot be an account over which the Affiliated Broker exercises investment discretion. A member of the Board of Directors who will not be affiliated with the Affiliated Broker will review information about each agency cross- -trade that the Fund participates in.

In selecting a broker to execute Fund transactions, the Manager considers the quality and reliability of brokerage services, including execution capability, speed of execution, overall performance, and financial responsibility, and may consider, among other factors, research and other investment information provided by non-affiliated brokers.

A committee comprised of officers of NBIA who are portfolio managers of the Fund and Other NB Funds (collectively, “NB Funds”) and some of NBIA’s managed accounts (“Managed Accounts”) periodically evaluates throughout the year the nature and quality of the brokerage and research services provided by other brokers. Based on this evaluation, the committee establishes a list and projected rankings of preferred brokers for use in determining the relative amounts of commissions to be allocated to those brokers. Ordinarily, the brokers on the list effect a large portion of the brokerage transactions for the NB Funds and the Managed Accounts. However, in any semi-annual period, brokers not on the list may be used, and the relative amounts of brokerage commissions paid to the brokers on the list may vary substantially from the projected rankings. These variations reflect the following factors, among others: (1) brokers not on the list or ranking below other brokers on the list may be selected for particular transactions because they provide better price and/or execution, which is the primary consideration in allocating brokerage; (2) adjustments may be required because of periodic changes in the execution capabilities of or research or other services provided by particular brokers or in the execution or research needs of the NB Funds and/or the Managed Accounts; and (3) the aggregate amount of brokerage commissions generated by transactions for the NB Funds and the Managed Accounts may change substantially from one semi-annual period to the next.

The commissions paid to a broker other than an Affiliated Broker may be higher than the amount another firm might charge if the Manager determines in good faith that the amount of those commissions is reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services provided by the broker. The Manager believes that those research services benefit the Fund by supplementing the information otherwise available to the Manager. That research may also be used by the Manager in servicing Other NB Funds and in servicing Managed Accounts. On the other hand, research received by the Manager from brokers effecting portfolio transactions on behalf of the Other NB Funds and from brokers effecting portfolio transactions on behalf of the Managed Accounts may be used for the Fund’s benefit.

In certain instances, the Manager may specifically allocate brokerage for research services (including research reports on issuers and industries as well as economic and financial data) which may otherwise be purchased for cash. While the receipt of such services has not reduced the Manager’s normal internal research activities, the Manager’s expenses could be materially increased if it were to generate such additional information internally. To the extent such research services are provided by others, the Manager is relieved of expenses it may otherwise incur. In some cases research services are generated by third parties but provided to the Manager by or through broker dealers. Research obtained in this manner may be used in servicing any or all clients of the Manager and may be used in connection with clients other than those client’s whose brokerage commissions are used to acquire the research services described herein. With regard to allocation of brokerage to acquire research services described above the Manager always considers its best execution obligation when deciding which broker to utilize.

Insofar as Fund transactions result from active management of equity securities, and insofar as Fund transactions result from seeking capital appreciation by selling securities whenever sales are deemed advisable without regard to the length of time the securities may have been held, it may be expected that the aggregate brokerage commissions paid by the Fund to brokers (including to Affiliated Brokers) may be greater than if securities were selected solely on a long-term basis.

The Fund may, from time to time, loan portfolio securities to broker-dealers affiliated with
NBIA (“Affiliated Borrowers”) in accordance with the terms and conditions of an order issued by the SEC. The order exempts such transactions from the provisions of the 1940 Act that would otherwise prohibit these transactions, subject to certain conditions. In accordance with the order, securities loans made by the Fund to Affiliated Borrowers are fully secured by cash collateral. Each loan to an Affiliated Borrower by the Fund will be made on terms at least as favorable to the Fund as comparable loans to unaffiliated borrowers, and no loans will be made to an Affiliated Borrower unless the Affiliated Borrower represents that the terms are at least as favorable to the Fund as those it provides to unaffiliated lenders in comparable transactions. All transactions with Affiliated Borrowers will be reviewed periodically by officers of the Fund and reported to the Board.

DISTRIBUTIONS

To permit the Fund to maintain more stable monthly distributions, the Fund may from time to time distribute less than the entire amount of distributable cash flow received as cash distributions from its portfolio securities in a particular period. Such undistributed cash flow would be available to supplement future distributions, including distributions that might otherwise have been reduced by a decrease in the Fund’s net cash flow due to fluctuations in cash distributions received on portfolio securities (or other sources of income) or expenses or due to an increase in the distribution rate or interest rate on the Fund’s borrowings, Preferred Stock or Notes, if any. As a result, the distributions the Fund pays for any particular period may be more or less than the amount of cash flow received as cash distributions from portfolio securities during such period. Undistributed cash flow received as cash distributions from portfolio securities are be included in the Fund’s NAV and, correspondingly, distributions from undistributed cash flow received as cash distributions from portfolio securities will reduce that NAV.

For information relating to the impact of the borrowings or the issuance of Preferred Stock or Notes on the distributions made by the Fund to Common Stockholders, see “Use of Leverage” in the Prospectus.

While any Preferred Stock is outstanding, the Fund may not declare any cash dividend or other distribution on its Common Stock unless at the time of such declaration (1) all accumulated dividends on the Preferred Stock have been paid and (2) the NAV of the Fund’s portfolio (determined after deducting the amount of such dividend or other distribution) is at least 200% of the liquidation value of any outstanding Preferred Stock. While any borrowings or Notes are outstanding, the Fund may not declare any cash dividend or other distribution on its Common Stock unless at the time of such declaration the NAV of the Fund’s portfolio (determined after deducting the amount of such dividend or other distribution) is at least 300% of the principal amount of any borrowings or Notes.

DESCRIPTION OF SHARES
Common Stock

The Articles authorize the issuance of one billion (1,000,000,000) shares. The Common Stock will be issued with a par value of $0.0001 per share. All Common Stock has equal rights as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon liquidation. Common Stock will, when issued, be fully paid and non-assessable, and will have no pre-emptive or conversion rights or rights to cumulative voting. Whenever Preferred Stock is outstanding, Common Stockholders will not be entitled to receive any distributions from the Fund unless all accrued dividends on Preferred
Stock have been paid, and unless asset coverage (as defined in the 1940 Act) with respect to Preferred Stock would be at least 200% after giving effect to such distributions. See “Preferred Stock” below. Whenever Notes are outstanding, Common Stockholders will not be entitled to receive any distributions from the Fund unless asset coverage (as defined in the 1940 Act) with respect to the Notes would be at least 300%.

The Common Stock is listed on the NYSE American.  The Fund intends to hold annual meetings of stockholders so long as the Common Stock is listed on a national securities exchange and such meetings are required as a condition to such listing.

Shares of closed-end investment companies may frequently trade at prices lower than NAV. Shares of closed-end investment companies have during some periods traded at prices higher than NAV and during other periods traded at prices lower than NAV. There can be no assurance that shares of Common Stock or shares of other closed-end funds will trade at a price higher than NAV in the future. NAV generally increases when interest rates decline, and decreases when interest rates rise. Whether investors will realize gains or losses upon the sale of Common Stock will not depend solely upon the Fund’s NAV but will depend entirely upon whether the market price of the Common Stock at the time of sale is above or below the original purchase price for the shares. Since the market price of the Fund’s Common Stock will be determined by factors beyond the control of the Fund, the Fund cannot predict whether the Common Stock will trade at, below, or above NAV or at, below or above the initial public offering price. Accordingly, the Common Stock is designed primarily for long-term investors, and investors in the Common Stock should not view the Fund as a vehicle for trading purposes. See “Repurchase of Common Stock; Tender Offers; Conversion to Open-end Fund” and the Fund’s Prospectus under “Use of Leverage.”

Preferred Stock

The Fund currently has notes and preferred stock outstanding. The Articles authorize the Board to create additional classes of stock. The Preferred Stock may be issued in one or more classes or series, with such rights as determined by action of the Board without the approval of the Common Stockholders.

Although the terms of any Preferred Stock, including their distribution rate, voting rights, liquidation preference and redemption provisions, would be determined by the Board (subject to applicable law and the Articles) if it authorizes a Preferred Stock offering, Preferred Stock would likely pay distributions based on short-term rates. The liquidation preference, preference on distribution, voting rights and redemption provisions of the Preferred Stock may be as stated below.

As used in this SAI, unless otherwise noted, the Fund’s “net assets” include assets of the Fund attributable to any outstanding Common Stock, Preferred Stock and Notes, with no deduction for the liquidation preference of the Preferred Stock or principal amount of the Notes. Solely for financial reporting purposes, however, the Fund is required to exclude the liquidation preference of Preferred Stock from “net assets,” so long as the Preferred Stock has redemption features that are not solely within the control of the Fund. For all regulatory and tax purposes, the Fund’s Preferred Stock will be treated as stock (rather than indebtedness).

Limited Issuance of Preferred Stock. Under the 1940 Act, the Fund could issue Preferred Stock with an aggregate liquidation value of up to one-half of the value of the Fund’s net assets,
measured immediately after issuance of the Preferred Stock. “Liquidation value” means the original purchase price of the shares being liquidated plus any accrued and unpaid dividends. In addition, the Fund is not permitted to declare any cash dividend or other distribution on its Common Stock unless the liquidation value of the Preferred Stock is less than one-half of the value of the Fund’s net assets (determined after deducting the amount of such dividend or distribution) immediately after the distribution. To the extent that the Fund has outstanding any senior securities representing indebtedness (such as through the use of derivative instruments that constitute senior securities), the aggregate amount of such senior securities will be added to the total liquidation value of any outstanding Preferred Stock for purposes of these asset coverage requirements. The Fund intends to purchase or redeem Preferred Stock, if necessary, to keep the liquidation value of the Preferred Stock plus the aggregate amount of other senior securities representing indebtedness at or below one-half of the value of the Fund’s net assets.

Distribution Preference. The Preferred Stock would have complete priority over the Common Stock as to distribution of assets.

Liquidation Preference. In the event of any voluntary or involuntary liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, holders of Preferred Stock (“Preferred Stockholders”) would be entitled to receive a preferential liquidating distribution (expected to equal the original purchase price per share plus accumulated and unpaid dividends thereon, whether or not earned or declared) before any distribution of assets is made to Common Stockholders. After payment of the full amount of the liquidating distribution to which they are entitled, Preferred Stockholders would not be entitled to any further participation in any distribution of assets by the Fund. A consolidation or merger of the Fund with or into any business trust or corporation or a sale of all or substantially all of the assets of the Fund shall not be deemed to be a liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Fund.

Voting Rights. In connection with any issuance of Preferred Stock, the Fund must comply with Section 18(i) of the 1940 Act, which requires, among other things, that Preferred Stock be voting shares. Except as otherwise provided in the Articles or otherwise required by applicable law, Preferred Stockholders would vote together with Common Stockholders as a single class.

In connection with the election of the Fund’s Directors, Preferred Stockholders, voting as a separate class, would also be entitled to elect two of the Fund’s Directors, and the remaining Directors shall be elected by Common Stockholders and Preferred Stockholders, voting together as a single class. In addition, if at any time dividends on the Fund’s outstanding Preferred Stock shall be unpaid in an amount equal to two full years’ dividends thereon, the holders of all outstanding Preferred Stock, voting as a separate class, would be entitled to elect a majority of the Fund’s Directors until all dividends in arrears have been paid or declared and set apart for payment.

The affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the outstanding Preferred Stock, voting as a separate class, shall be required to approve any action requiring a vote of security holders under Section 13(a) of the 1940 Act including, among other things, changes in the Fund’s investment objective, the conversion of the Fund from a closed-end to an open-end company, or changes in the investment restrictions described as fundamental policies under “Investment Objective, Policies and Limitations.” The class or series vote of Preferred Stockholders described above shall in each case be in addition to any separate vote of the requisite percentage of Common Stock and Preferred Stock necessary to authorize the action in question.

Preferred Stockholders would not be entitled to vote on matters placed before stockholders if, at or prior to the time when a vote is required, such shares shall have been (1) redeemed or (2) called for redemption and sufficient funds shall have been deposited in trust to effect such redemption.

Redemption, Purchase and Sale of Preferred Stock by the Fund. The terms of the Preferred Stock may provide that they are redeemable at certain times, in whole or in part, at the original purchase price per share plus accumulated dividends, that the Fund may tender for or purchase Preferred Stock and that the Fund may subsequently resell any shares so tendered for or purchased. Any redemption or purchase of Preferred Stock by the Fund will reduce the leverage applicable to Common Stock, while any resale of shares by the Fund will increase such leverage.

The Fund currently does not intend to issue Preferred Stock. The discussion above describes the possible offering of preferred shares by the Fund. If the Board determines to authorize such an offering, the terms of the Preferred Stock may be the same as, or different from, the terms described above, subject to applicable law and the Articles.

CERTAIN PROVISIONS IN THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

The Fund’s Articles of Incorporation (“Articles”) include provisions that could limit the ability of other entities or persons to acquire control of the Fund or convert the Fund to an open-end fund.

The Articles require a vote by a majority of the Directors, including a majority of the Independent Fund Directors, of the Fund, and holders of at least 75% of the shares of capital stock of the Fund outstanding and entitled to vote, except as described below, to authorize (1) the Fund’s conversion from a closed-end to an open-end investment company; (2) any merger or consolidation or share exchange of the Fund with or into any other company; (3) the dissolution or liquidation of the Fund; (4) any sale, lease or exchange of all or substantially all of the Fund’s assets to any Principal Stockholder (as defined below); (5) a change in the nature of the business of the Fund so that it would cease to be an investment company registered under the 1940 Act; (6) with certain exceptions, the issuance of any securities of the Fund to any Principal Stockholder for cash; or (7) any transfer by the Fund of any securities of the Fund to any Principal Stockholder in exchange for cash, securities or other property having an aggregate fair market value of $1 million ($1,000,000) or more; provided, with respect to (1) through (5), if such action has been authorized by the affirmative vote of 75% of the Directors, including a majority of the Independent Fund Directors, then the affirmative vote of the holders of only a majority of the Fund’s shares of capital stock outstanding and entitled to vote at the time is required; and provided, further, with respect to (6) and (7), if such transaction has been authorized by the affirmative vote of 75% of the Directors, including a majority of the Independent Fund Directors, no stockholder vote is required to authorize such action. The term “Principal Stockholder” means any person, entity or group that holds, directly or indirectly, more than 5% of the outstanding shares of the Fund and includes any associates or affiliates of such person or entity or of any member of the group. None of the foregoing provisions may be amended except by the vote of at least 75% of the outstanding shares of capital stock of the Fund outstanding and entitled to vote thereon. As discussed in the Prospectus, certain of the actions described above also require approval by the holders of the Preferred Shares, tallied separately. Certain of the transactions described above, even if approved by stockholders, may be prohibited by the 1940 Act.

The percentage votes required under these provisions, which are greater than the minimum requirements under Maryland law or the 1940 Act, will make more difficult a change in the Fund’s business or management and may have the effect of depriving Common Stockholders of an opportunity to sell shares at a premium over prevailing market prices by discouraging a third party from seeking to obtain control of the Fund in a tender offer or similar transaction. The Board believes that the provisions of the Articles relating to such higher votes are in the best interest of the Fund and its stockholders.

The Bylaws contain provisions the effect of which is to prevent matters, including nominations of Directors, from being considered at a stockholders’ meeting where the Fund has not received notice of the matters generally at least 120 but no more than 150 days prior to the first anniversary of the date of mailing of the preceding year’s annual meeting of stockholders.

Reference should be made to the Articles and Bylaws on file with the SEC for the full text of these provisions.

REPURCHASE OF COMMON STOCK; TENDER OFFERS;
CONVERSION TO OPEN-END FUND

The Fund is a closed-end management investment company, and as such its stockholders do not have the right to cause the Fund to redeem their shares. Instead, the Fund’s Common Stock trades in the open market at a price that is a function of several factors, including distribution levels (which are in turn affected by expenses), NAV, call protection, distribution stability, portfolio credit quality, relative demand for and supply of such shares in the market, general market and economic conditions and other factors. Shares of a closed-end management investment company may frequently trade at prices lower than NAV. The Board regularly monitors the relationship between the market price and NAV of the Common Stock. If the Common Stock were to trade at a substantial discount to NAV for an extended period of time, the Board may consider the repurchase of its Common Stock on the open market or in private transactions, the making of a tender offer for such shares, or the conversion of the Fund to an open-end management investment company. The Fund cannot assure you that the Board will decide to take or propose any of these actions, or that share repurchases or tender offers will actually reduce market discount.

Notwithstanding the foregoing, at any time when the Fund has Preferred Stock outstanding, the Fund may not purchase, redeem or otherwise acquire any of its Common Stock unless (1) all accrued dividends on Preferred Stock have been paid and (2) at the time of such purchase, redemption or acquisition, the NAV of the Fund’s portfolio (determined after deducting the acquisition price of the Common Stock) is at least 200% of the liquidation value of the outstanding Preferred Stock (expected to equal the original purchase price per share plus any accrued and unpaid dividends thereon).

Subject to its investment limitations, the Fund may borrow to finance the repurchase of shares or to make a tender offer. Interest on any borrowings to finance share repurchase transactions or the accumulation of cash by the Fund in anticipation of share repurchases or tenders will reduce the Fund’s net income. Any share repurchase, tender offer or borrowing that might be approved by the Board would have to comply with the 1934 Act and the 1940 Act and the rules and regulations thereunder.

The Board may also from time to time consider submitting to the holders of the shares of stock of the Fund a proposal to convert the Fund to an open-end investment company. In determining whether to exercise its sole discretion to submit this issue to stockholders, the Board would consider all factors then relevant, including the relationship of the market price of the Common Stock to NAV, the extent to which the Fund’s capital structure is leveraged and the possibility of re-leveraging, the spread, if any, between the yields on securities in the Fund’s portfolio and interest and dividend charges on any Preferred Stock and/or Notes issued by the Fund and general market and economic conditions.

See “Anti-Takeover and Other Provisions in the Articles of Incorporation” in the Prospectus and “Certain Provisions in the Articles of Incorporation” in this SAI for a discussion of voting requirements applicable to conversion of the Fund to an open-end company. If the Fund converted to an open-end management investment company, it would be required to redeem all Preferred Stock and Notes then outstanding (requiring in turn that it liquidate a portion of its investment portfolio), if any, and the Fund’s Common Stock would no longer be listed on the NYSE American. In contrast to a closed-end management investment company, stockholders of an open-end management investment company may require the company to redeem their shares at any time (except in certain circumstances as authorized by or under the 1940 Act) at their NAV, less any redemption charge that is in effect at the time of redemption. In order to avoid maintaining large cash positions or liquidating favorable investments to meet redemptions, open-end companies typically engage in a continuous offering of their common stock. Open-end companies are thus subject to periodic asset in-flows and out-flows that can complicate portfolio management.

The repurchase by the Fund of its shares at prices below NAV will result in an increase in the NAV of those shares that remain outstanding. However, there can be no assurance that share repurchases or tenders at or below NAV will result in the Fund’s shares trading at a price equal to their NAV. Nevertheless, the fact that the Fund’s shares may be the subject of repurchase or tender offers at NAV from time to time, or that the Fund may be converted to an open-end company, may reduce any spread between market price and NAV that might otherwise exist.

In addition, a purchase by the Fund of its Common Stock will decrease the Fund’s total assets. This would likely have the effect of increasing the Fund’s expense ratio. Any purchase by the Fund of its Common Stock at a time when Preferred Stock or Notes are outstanding will increase the leverage applicable to the outstanding Common Stock then remaining. See the Fund’s Prospectus under “Risks – Risks of Leveraged Structure.”

Before deciding whether to take any action if the Fund’s Common Stock trades below NAV, the Board would consider all relevant factors, including the extent and duration of the discount, the liquidity of the Fund’s portfolio, the impact of any action that might be taken on the Fund or its stockholders, market considerations and alternative actions that might be taken. Based on these considerations, even if the Fund’s Common Stock should trade at a discount, the Board may determine that, in the interest of the Fund and its stockholders, that the Fund should not be converted to an open-end structure and, perhaps, that no action should be taken at that time.

TAX MATTERS

The following is a brief general summary of certain material federal tax considerations
affecting the Fund and its stockholders with respect to the purchase, ownership, and disposition of Common Stock. It is based on the Code, the regulations thereunder, judicial authorities, published positions of the IRS, and other applicable authorities, all as in effect on the date hereof and all of which are subject to change or differing interpretations (possibly with retroactive effect); no assurance can be given that future legislation, regulations, court decisions, and/or administrative pronouncements will not significantly change applicable law and materially affect the conclusions expressed herein, and any such change, even though made after an investor has invested in the Fund, could be applied retroactively. Tax matters are complicated, and this discussion does not purport to be complete  or to deal with all aspects of federal income taxation that may be relevant to an investor in light of his, her, or its particular circumstances or to Common Stockholders (such as those enumerated in the Prospectus) who or that are subject to special federal tax rules.

Unless otherwise noted, this discussion applies only to a U.S. Stockholder (as defined in the Prospectus) that holds Common Stock as a capital asset (generally, an asset held for investment). If a partnership holds Common Stock, the federal income tax treatment of a partner in the partnership generally will depend on the partner’s status and the partnership’s activities.

The tax consequences of an investment in and holding Common Stock will depend on the particular facts of each investor’s situation. Prospective investors are advised to consult their own tax advisers with respect to the application to their own circumstances of the general federal income tax rules summarized below, and with respect to other federal, state, local, or foreign tax consequences to them, before making an investment in Common Stock.

Taxation of the Fund

The Fund intends to qualify each taxable year for treatment as a RIC. To qualify for that treatment, the Fund must, among other things:

(a)          derive at least 90% of its gross income each taxable year from interest, dividends, payments with respect to securities loans and gains from the sale or other disposition of securities or foreign currencies, or other income (including gains from options, futures or forward contracts) derived with respect to its business of investing in securities or those currencies and net income derived from an interest in a qualified publicly traded partnership (“QPTP”) (“Income Requirement”);

(b)          distribute with respect to each taxable year at least the sum of 90% of its investment company taxable income (consisting generally of net investment income, the excess, if any, of net short-term capital gain over net long-term capital loss, and net gains from certain foreign currency transactions, if any, all determined without regard to any deduction for dividends paid) and 90% of its net exempt interest, if any, for that year (“Distribution Requirement”); and

(c)          diversify its holdings so that, at the end of each quarter of its taxable year, (1) at least 50% of the value of its total assets is represented by cash and cash items, Government securities, securities of other RICs and other securities limited in respect of any one issuer to a value not greater than 5% of the value of the Fund’s total assets and to not more than 10% of the issuer’s outstanding voting securities, and (2) not more than 25% of the value of the Fund’s total assets is invested in the securities (other than those of the Government or other RICs) of any one issuer or of two or more issuers that the Fund controls and are engaged in the same, similar or
related trades or businesses, or the securities of one or more QPTPs (“Diversification Requirements”).

If the Fund qualifies for treatment as a RIC, it will not be subject to federal income tax on net income and realized gains it timely distributes to its stockholders. If the Fund failed to  qualify for that treatment for any taxable year — either (1) by failing to satisfy the Distribution Requirement, even if it satisfied the Income and Diversification Requirements, or (2) by failing to satisfy the Income Requirement and/or either Diversification Requirement and was unable to, or determined not to, avail itself of Code provisions that enable a RIC to cure a failure to satisfy any of the Income and Diversification Requirements as long as the failure “is due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect” and the RIC pays a deductible tax calculated in accordance with those provisions and meets certain other requirements — then for federal income tax purposes it would be taxed as an ordinary corporation on the full amount of its taxable income for that year without being able to deduct the distributions it makes to its stockholders. In addition, for those purposes the stockholders would treat all those distributions, including distributions of net capital gain (i.e., the excess of net long-term capital gain over net short-term capital loss), as dividends to the extent of the Fund’s earnings and profits, taxable as ordinary income, except that, for individual and certain other non-corporate stockholders (each, an “individual stockholder”), the part thereof that is “qualified dividend income” (“QDI”) would be subject to federal income tax at the rates for net capital gain — a maximum of 15% for a single stockholder with taxable income not exceeding $459,750 ($517,200 for married stockholders filing jointly) and 20% for those individual stockholders with taxable income exceeding those respective amounts (which apply for 2022 and will be adjusted for inflation annually); and all or part of those dividends distributions might be eligible for the  dividends received deduction. Furthermore, the Fund could be required to recognize unrealized gains, pay substantial taxes and interest, and make substantial distributions before requalifying for RIC treatment.

The Fund intends to distribute at least annually to its stockholders all or substantially all of its investment company taxable income. The Fund also will annually (1) distribute its net capital gain or (2) retain all or a portion of its net capital gain for investment. If the Fund retains any such income or gain, it will be subject to tax at regular corporate rates on the retained amount. See “Taxation of the Stockholders” below for a description of the consequences to the Fund’s stockholders of its retention of net capital gain.

To the extent the Fund fails to distribute in a calendar year at least an amount equal to the sum of (1) 98% of its ordinary income for that year plus (2) 98.2% of its capital gain net income for the one-year period ending October 31 of that year plus (3) 100% of any retained amount of either from the prior year, it will be subject to a nondeductible 4% excise tax (“Excise Tax”).  For these purposes, the Fund will be treated as having distributed any amount with respect to which it pays income tax. The Fund intends generally to make distributions sufficient to avoid imposition of the Excise Tax.

If the Fund issues Preferred Stock, then, at any time when Preferred Stock is outstanding, and the Fund’s assets are insufficient to satisfy certain requirements, the Fund will be required to suspend distributions to holders of the Common Stock until those requirements are satisfied. Doing so may prevent the Fund from satisfying the Distribution Requirement and may therefore jeopardize its qualification for treatment as a RIC or cause it to incur an income tax or Excise Tax liability or both.

Taxation of the Stockholders

Distributions on the Fund’s shares to a stockholder are generally subject to federal income tax as described in the Prospectus and below, even though those distributions may economically represent a return of the stockholder’s investment. Such a distribution is likely to occur in respect of shares purchased when the Fund has undistributed income or gains that are either unrealized or realized but not distributed. Those realized gains may be required to be distributed even when the Fund has unrealized losses. Distributions are taxable to a stockholder even if they are paid from net income or gains the Fund earned before the stockholder’s investment (and thus included in the price the stockholder paid).

If the Fund retains any net capital gain, it may designate all or part of the retained amount as undistributed capital gains in a notice to its stockholders. If the Fund makes such a designation, it would be required to pay federal income tax at the rate of 21% on the undistributed gain (“Fund tax”) and each stockholder subject to federal income tax (1) would be required to include in income for federal income tax purposes, as long-term capital gain, his or her proportionate share of the designated gain (which, in the case of an individual stockholder, would be taxed at the rates for net capital gain described above), (2) would be entitled to credit his or her proportionate share of the Fund tax against his or her federal income tax liability, if any, and to claim a refund to the extent the credit exceeds that liability, and (3) would increase the tax basis in his or her Common Stock by an amount equal to the difference between the included gain and that share of the Fund tax.

Distributions of the Fund’s “investment company taxable income” to non-U.S. stockholders (including interest income and the excess of net short-term capital gain over net long-term capital losses) will generally be subject to withholding of federal tax at a 30% rate (or lower rate provided by an applicable treaty) as dividends to the extent of the Fund’s current and accumulated earnings and profits unless the distributions are effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business of the non-U.S. stockholders, and, if an income tax treaty applies, attributable to a permanent establishment in the United States of the non-U.S. stockholders. In the case of such effectively connected income, the distributions will be subject to U.S. federal income tax at the rates applicable to U.S. persons, plus, in certain cases where the Non-U.S. stockholders is a corporation, a branch profits tax at a 30% rate (or lower rate provided by an applicable treaty). Exemptions from the 30% withholding tax are provided for dividends properly designated as interest related dividends or as short-term capital gain dividends paid by the Fund with respect to its qualified net interest income or qualified short-term gain.
Actual or deemed distributions of the Fund’s net capital gains (i.e., net long-term capital gains in excess of short-term capital losses) to a non-U.S. stockholders, and gains realized by a non-U.S. stockholders upon the sale of Fund shares, will not be subject to federal withholding tax and generally will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax unless (a) the distributions or gains are effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business of the non-U.S. stockholder and, if an income tax treaty applies, are attributable to a permanent establishment or fixed base maintained by the non-U.S. stockholder in the United States, or (b) the non-U.S. stockholder is an individual, has been present in the United States for 183 days or more during the taxable, and certain other conditions are satisfied.

If the Fund distributes its net capital gains in the form of deemed rather than actual distributions, a non-U.S. stockholder will be entitled to a U.S. federal income tax credit or tax refund equal to the stockholder’s allocable share of the tax the Fund pays on the capital gains deemed to have been distributed. In order to obtain the refund, the non-U.S. stockholder must obtain a U.S. taxpayer identification number and file a U.S. federal income tax return even if the non-U.S. stockholder would
not otherwise be required to obtain a U.S. taxpayer identification number or file a U.S. federal income tax return. For a corporate non-U.S. stockholder, distributions (both actual and deemed), and gains realized upon the sale of shares that are effectively connected to a U.S. trade or business may, under certain circumstances, be subject to an additional “branch profits tax” at a 30% rate (or at a lower rate if provided for by an applicable treaty).

A non-U.S. stockholder who is a non-resident alien individual, and who is otherwise subject to withholding of federal tax, may be subject to information reporting and backup withholding of U.S. federal income tax on dividends unless the non-U.S. stockholder provides the Fund or the dividend paying agent with an IRS Form W-8BEN (or an acceptable substitute form) or otherwise meets documentary evidence requirements for establishing that it is a non-U.S. stockholder or otherwise establishes an exemption from backup withholding.

Under the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (“FATCA”), “foreign financial institutions” (“FFIs”) or “non-financial foreign entities” (“NFFEs”) that are Fund stockholders may be subject to a generally nonrefundable 30% withholding tax on income dividends the Fund pays.  Proposed regulations (effective while pending) have been issued to eliminate the application of the withholding tax to capital gain distributions and the proceeds from the repurchase of Common Stock that was scheduled to take effect in 2019. As discussed below, the FATCA withholding tax generally can be avoided (a) by an FFI, if it reports certain information regarding direct and indirect ownership of financial accounts U.S. persons hold with the FFI and (b) by an NFFE, if (i) it certifies that it has no substantial U.S. persons as owners or (ii) it does have such owners and reports information relating to them to the withholding agent. The U.S. Treasury Department has negotiated intergovernmental agreements (“IGAs”) with certain countries and is in various stages of negotiations with other foreign countries with respect to one or more alternative approaches to implement FATCA; entities in those countries may be required to comply with the terms of the IGA instead of Treasury regulations.

An FFI can avoid FATCA withholding by becoming a “participating FFI,” which requires the FFI to enter into a tax compliance agreement with the IRS under section 1471(b) of the Code. Under such an agreement, a participating FFI agrees to (1) verify and document whether it has U.S. accountholders, (2) report certain information regarding their accounts to the IRS, and (3) meet certain other specified requirements.

An FFI resident in a country that has entered into a Model I IGA with the United States must report to that country’s government (pursuant to the terms of the applicable IGA and applicable law), which will, in turn, report to the IRS. An FFI resident in a Model II IGA country generally must comply with U.S. regulatory requirements, with certain exceptions, including the treatment of recalcitrant accountholders. An FFI resident in one of those countries that complies with whichever of the foregoing that applies will be exempt from FATCA withholding.

An NFFE that is the beneficial owner of a payment from the Fund can avoid FATCA withholding generally by certifying that it does not have any substantial U.S. owners or by providing the name, address, and taxpayer identification number of each such owner. The NFFE will report to the Fund or other applicable withholding agent, which will, in turn, report information to the IRS.

Those foreign stockholders also may fall into certain exempt, excepted, or deemed
compliant categories established by Treasury regulations, IGAs, and other guidance regarding FATCA. An FFI or NFFE that invests in the Fund will need to provide the Fund with documentation properly certifying the entity’s status under FATCA to avoid FATCA withholding. The requirements imposed by FATCA are different from, and in addition to, the tax certification rules to avoid backup withholding described in the Prospectus. Foreign investors are urged to consult their tax advisers regarding the application of these requirements to their own situation and the impact thereof on their investment in the Fund.

Tax Consequences of Certain Investments

REMICs. The Fund may invest in REITs that (1) hold residual interests in real estate mortgage investment conduits (“REMICs”) or (2) engage in mortgage securitization transactions that cause the REITs to be taxable mortgage pools (“TMPs”) or have a qualified REIT subsidiary that is a TMP. A portion of the net income allocable to REMIC residual interest holders may be an “excess inclusion.” The Code authorizes the issuance of regulations dealing with the taxation and reporting of excess inclusion income of REITs and RICs that hold residual REMIC interests and of REITs, or qualified REIT subsidiaries, that are TMPs. Although those regulations have not yet been issued, the Treasury Department and the IRS issued a notice in 2006 (“Notice”) announcing that, pending the issuance of further guidance (which has not yet been issued), the IRS would apply the principles in the following paragraphs to all excess inclusion income, whether from REMIC residual interests or TMPs.

The Notice provides that a REIT must (1) determine whether it or its qualified REIT subsidiary (or a part of either) is a TMP and, if so, calculate the TMP’s excess inclusion income under a “reasonable method,” (2) allocate its excess inclusion income to its stockholders generally in proportion to dividends paid, (3) inform stockholders that are not “disqualified organizations” (i.e., governmental units and tax-exempt entities that are not subject to tax on their unrelated business taxable income (“UBTI”)) of the amount and character of the excess inclusion income allocated thereto, (4) pay tax (at the highest federal income tax rate imposed on corporations) on the excess inclusion income allocable to its stockholders that are disqualified organizations, and (5) apply the withholding tax provisions with respect to the excess inclusion part of dividends paid to foreign persons without regard to any treaty exception or reduction in tax rate. Excess inclusion income allocated to certain tax-exempt entities (including qualified retirement plans, individual retirement accounts, and public charities) constitutes UBTI to them.

A RIC with excess inclusion income is subject to rules identical to those in clauses (2) through (5) above (substituting “that are nominees” for “that are not ‘disqualified organizations’” in clause (3) and inserting “record” after “its” in clause (4)). The Notice further provides that a RIC is not required to report the amount and character of the excess inclusion income allocated to its stockholders that are not nominees, except that (1) a RIC with excess inclusion income from all sources that exceeds 1% of its gross income must do so and (2) any other RIC must do so by taking into account only excess inclusion income allocated to the RIC from REITs the excess inclusion income of which exceeded 3% of its dividends. The Fund will not invest directly in REMIC residual interests and does not intend to invest in REITs that, to its knowledge, invest in those interests or are TMPs or have a qualified REIT subsidiary that is a TMP.

After calendar year-end, REITs can and often do change the category (e.g., ordinary income dividend, capital gain distribution, or return of capital) of the distributions they have made during that
year, which would result at that time in the Fund’s also having to re-categorize some of the distributions it made to its stockholders. These changes would be reflected in the annual Form 1099, together with other tax information. Those forms generally will be distributed to stockholders in February of each year, although the Fund may, in one or more years, request from the IRS an extension of time to distribute those forms until mid-March to enable it to receive the latest information it can from the REITs in which it invests and thereby accurately report that information to its stockholders on a single form (rather than having to send amended forms).

For taxable years beginning after December 31, 2017 and before January 1, 2026, the Code allows individuals and certain non-corporate entities a deduction for 20% of “qualified REIT dividends.” Treasury Regulations allow a RIC to pass the character of its qualified REIT dividends through to its shareholders, provided they meet certain holding period requirements. As a result, the Fund stockholder will be eligible to receive the benefit of the 20% deduction with respect to the Fund’s REIT-based dividends.

Hedging Transactions. The use of hedging strategies, such as writing (selling) and purchasing options and futures contracts and entering into forward currency contracts, involves complex rules that will determine for income tax purposes the amount, character and timing of recognition of the gains and losses the Fund realizes in connection therewith. Gains from the disposition of foreign currencies (except certain gains that may be excluded by future regulations), and gains from options, futures and forward currency contracts the Fund derives with respect to its business of investing in securities or foreign currencies, will be treated as qualifying income under the Income Requirement. Certain of the Fund’s investment practices are subject to special and complex federal income tax provisions that may, among other things, (1) disallow, suspend or otherwise limit the allowance of certain losses or deductions, (2) convert lower taxed long-term capital gain to higher taxed short-term capital gain or ordinary income, (3) convert an ordinary loss or a deduction to a capital loss (the deductibility of which is more limited), (4) cause the Fund to recognize income or gain without a corresponding receipt of cash, (5) adversely affect the timing as to when a purchase or sale of securities is deemed to occur and (6) adversely alter the characterization of certain complex financial transactions. The Fund will monitor its transactions and may make certain tax elections to mitigate the effect of these rules and prevent its disqualification as a RIC.

Foreign Securities. Interest and dividends the Fund receives, and gains it realizes, on foreign securities may be subject to income, withholding or other taxes imposed by foreign countries and U.S. possessions that would reduce the yield and/or total return on its securities. Tax treaties between certain countries and the United States may reduce or eliminate these taxes, however, and many foreign countries do not impose taxes on capital gains in respect of investments by foreign investors.

The Fund may invest in the stock of “passive foreign investment companies” (“PFICs”). A PFIC is any foreign corporation (with certain exceptions) that, in general, meets either of the following tests for a taxable year: (1) at least 75% of its gross income is passive or (2) an average of at least 50% of its assets produce, or are held for the production of, passive income. Under certain circumstances, if the Fund holds stock of a PFIC, it will be subject to federal income tax on a portion of any “excess distribution” the Fund receives on the stock or of any gain on its disposition of the stock (collectively, “PFIC income”), plus interest thereon, even if the Fund distributes the PFIC income as a taxable dividend to its stockholders. The balance of the PFIC income will be
included in the Fund’s investment company taxable income and, accordingly, will not be taxable to it to the extent it distributes that income to its stockholders. Fund distributions thereof will not be eligible for the 15% and 20% maximum federal income tax rates on individual stockholders’ QDI.

If the Fund invests in a PFIC and elects to treat the PFIC as a “qualified electing fund” (“QEF”), then in lieu of the Fund’s incurring the foregoing tax and interest obligation, it would be required to include in income each year its pro rata share of the QEF’s annual ordinary earnings and net capital gain -- which the Fund most likely would have to distribute to satisfy the Distribution Requirement and avoid imposition of the Excise Tax -- even if the Fund did not receive those earnings and gain from the QEF. In most instances it will be very difficult, if not impossible, to make this election because of certain requirements thereof.

The Fund may elect to “mark-to-market” any stock in a PFIC it owns at the end of its taxable year. “Marking-to-market,” in this context, means including in gross income each taxable year (and treating as ordinary income) the excess, if any, of the fair market value of the stock over the Fund’s adjusted basis therein as of the end of that year. Pursuant to the election, the Fund also may deduct (as an ordinary, not a capital, loss) the excess, if any, of its adjusted basis in PFIC stock over the fair market value thereof as of the taxable year-end, but only to the extent of any net marked-to-market gains with respect to that stock the Fund included in income for prior taxable years under the election. The Fund’s adjusted basis in each PFIC’s stock subject to the election would be adjusted to reflect the amounts of income included and deductions taken thereunder.

Investors should be aware that determining whether a foreign corporation is a PFIC is a fact-intensive determination that is based on various facts and circumstances and thus is subject to change, and the principles and methodology used in determining whether a foreign corporation is a PFIC are subject to interpretation. As a result, the Fund may not be able, at the time it acquires a foreign corporation’s shares, to ascertain whether the corporation is a PFIC and that a foreign corporation may become a PFIC after the Fund acquires shares therein. While the Fund generally will seek to avoid investing in PFIC shares to avoid the tax consequences detailed above, there are no guarantees that it will be able to do so, and it reserves the right to make such investments as a matter of its investment policy.

Securities Issued or Purchased at a Discount. The Fund may acquire zero coupon or other securities issued with original issue discount (“OID”). As a holder of those securities, the Fund must include in gross income the OID that accrues on them during the taxable year, even if it receives no corresponding payment on them during the year. Because the Fund annually must distribute substantially all of its investment company taxable income, including any OID, to satisfy the Distribution Requirement and avoid imposition of the Excise Tax, it may be required in a particular taxable year to distribute as a dividend an amount that is greater than the total amount of cash it actually receives.  Those distributions will be made from the Fund’s cash assets or from the proceeds of sales of its portfolio securities, if necessary. The Fund may realize capital gains or losses from those sales, which would increase or decrease its investment company taxable income and/or net capital gain.

*          *          *

The foregoing is only a general summary of some of the important federal tax considerations generally affecting the Fund and its stockholders. No attempt is made to present a
complete explanation of the federal tax treatment of the Fund’s activities, and this discussion is not intended to be a substitute for careful tax planning. Accordingly, potential investors are urged to consult their own tax advisers for more detailed information and for information regarding any state, local or foreign taxes applicable to the Fund and their purchasing, holding and disposing of Common Stock.

REPORTS TO STOCKHOLDERS

Stockholders of the Fund receive unaudited semi-annual financial statements, as well as year-end financial statements audited by the independent auditors for the Fund. The Fund’s statements show the investments owned by it and the market values thereof and provide other information about the Fund and its operations.

CUSTODIAN, TRANSFER AGENT AND DIVIDEND DISBURSEMENT AGENT

State Street Bank and Trust Company serves as custodian for assets of the Fund. American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC serves as the transfer agent, registrar and distribution disbursement agent for the Common Stock.  American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC serves as agent for the Distribution Reinvestment Plan relating to the Common Stock.

INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

Ernst & Young LLP serves as independent auditors for the Fund. Ernst & Young LLP provides audit services, tax return preparation and assistance and consultation in connection with review of the Fund’s filings with the SEC.

COUNSEL

K&L Gates LLP, 1601 K Street, N.W., Washington D.C. 20006, will pass upon certain legal matters in connection with shares of Common Stock offered by the Fund, and also acts as counsel to the Fund.

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The audited financial statements included in the Fund’s Annual Report on Form N-CSR for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021 (the “Annual Report”), together with the report of Ernst & Young LLP for the Fund’s Annual Report, are incorporated herein by reference to the Fund’s Annual Report.  All other portions of the Annual Report are not incorporated herein by reference and are not part of the registration statement, the SAI, the Prospectus or any Prospectus Supplement.

REGISTRATION STATEMENT

A Registration Statement on Form N-2, including any amendments thereto, relating to the shares of the Fund offered hereby, has been filed by the Fund with the SEC, Washington, D.C. The Fund’s Prospectus and this SAI do not contain all of the information set forth in the Registration Statement, including any exhibits and schedules thereto. For further information with respect to the Fund and the shares offered or to be offered hereby, reference is made to the Fund’s Registration Statement. Statements contained in the Fund’s Prospectus and this SAI as to the contents of any
contract or other document referred to are not necessarily complete and in each instance reference is made to the copy of such contract or other document filed as an exhibit to the Registration Statement, each such statement being qualified in all respects by such reference. Copies of the Registration Statement may be inspected without charge at the SEC’s principal office in Washington, D.C., and copies of all or any part thereof may be obtained from the SEC upon the payment of certain fees prescribed by the SEC.


APPENDIX A RATINGS

Long-Term and Short-Term Debt Securities Rating Descriptions
S&P Global Ratings -- Long-Term Issue Credit Ratings*:
The following descriptions have been published by Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC.

AAA – An obligation rated ‘AAA’ has the highest rating assigned by S&P Global Ratings. The obligor’s capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is extremely strong.

AA – An obligation rated ‘AA’ differs from the highest-rated obligations only to a small degree. The obligor’s capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation 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 obligor’s 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, B, CCC, CC, and C – Obligations rated ‘BB’, ‘B’, ‘CCC’, ‘CC’, and ‘C’ are regarded as having significant speculative characteristics. ‘BB’ indicates the least degree of speculation and ‘C’ the highest. While such obligations will likely have some quality and protective characteristics, these may be outweighed by large uncertainties or major exposures to adverse conditions.

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 obligor’s 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 obligor’s 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 for the obligor 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.  The ‘CC’ rating is used when a default has not yet occurred, but S&P Global Ratings expects default to be a virtual certainty, regardless of the anticipated time to default.

C – An obligation rated ‘C’ is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment, and the obligation is expected to have lower relative seniority or lower ultimate recovery compared to obligations that are
rated higher.

D – An obligation rated ‘D’ is in default or in breach of an imputed promise. For non-hybrid capital instruments, the ‘D’ rating category is used when payments on an obligation are not made on the date due, unless S&P Global Ratings believes that such payments will be made within five business days in the absence of a stated grace period or within the earlier of the stated grace period or 30 calendar days. The ‘D’ rating also will be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of similar action and where default on an obligation is a virtual certainty, for example due to automatic stay provisions. An obligation’s rating is lowered to ‘D’ if it is subject to a distressed exchange offer.

NR – This indicates that no rating has been requested, or that there is insufficient information on which to base a rating, or that S&P Global Ratings does not rate a particular obligation as a matter of policy.

*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.

Moody’s Investors Service, Inc. (“Moody’s”) -- Global Long-Term Rating Scale:

The following descriptions have been published by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc.
Aaa – Obligations rated Aaa are judged to be of the highest quality, subject to the lowest level of credit risk.

Aa – Obligations rated Aa are judged to be of high quality and are subject to very low credit risk.

A – Obligations rated A are judged to be upper-medium grade and are subject to low credit risk.

Baa – Obligations rated Baa are judged to be medium-grade and subject to moderate credit risk and as such may possess certain speculative characteristics.

Ba – Obligations rated Ba are judged to be speculative and are subject to substantial credit risk.

B – Obligations rated B are considered speculative and are subject to high credit risk.

Caa – Obligations rated Caa are judged to be speculative of poor standing and are subject to very high credit risk.

Ca – Obligations rated Ca are highly speculative and are likely in, or very near, default, with some prospect of recovery of principal and interest.
C – Obligations rated C are the lowest rated and are typically in default, with little prospect for recovery of principal or interest.
Note: Moody’s appends numerical modifiers 1, 2, and 3 to each generic rating classification from Aa through Caa. The modifier 1 indicates that the obligation ranks in the higher end of its generic rating category; the modifier 2 indicates a mid-range ranking; and the modifier 3 indicates a ranking in the lower end of that generic rating category.  Additionally, a “(hyb)” indicator is appended to all ratings
of hybrid securities issued by banks, insurers, finance companies, and securities firms.*
* By their terms, hybrid securities allow for the omission of scheduled dividends, interest, or principal payments, which can potentially result in impairment if such an omission occurs.  Hybrid securities may also be subject to contractually allowable write-downs of principal that could result in impairment.  Together with the hybrid indicator, the long-term obligation rating assigned to a hybrid security is an expression of the relative credit risk associated with that security.
Fitch Ratings (“Fitch”) -- Corporate Finance Obligations -- Long-Term Rating Scale:

The following descriptions have been published by Fitch, Inc. and Fitch Ratings Ltd. and its subsidiaries.

AAA – Highest credit quality. ‘AAA’ ratings denote the lowest expectation of credit risk. They are assigned only in cases of exceptionally strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is highly unlikely to be adversely affected by foreseeable events.
AA – Very high credit quality. ‘AA’ ratings denote expectations of very low credit risk. They indicate very strong capacity for payment of financial commitments. This capacity is not significantly vulnerable to foreseeable events.
A – High credit quality. ‘A’ ratings denote expectations of low credit risk. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered strong. This capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to adverse business or economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.
BBB – Good credit quality. BBB’ ratings indicate that expectations of credit risk are currently low. The capacity for payment of financial commitments is considered adequate but adverse business or economic conditions are more likely to impair this capacity.
BB – Speculative. ‘BB’ ratings indicate an elevated vulnerability to credit risk, particularly in the event of adverse changes in business or economic conditions over time; however, business or financial alternatives may be available to allow financial commitments to be met.
B – Highly speculative. ‘B’ ratings indicate that material credit risk is present.  For performing obligations, default risk is commensurate with an Issuer Default Risk (“IDR”) in the ranges ‘BB’ to ‘C’. For issuers with an IDR below ‘B’, the overall credit risk of this obligation is moderated by the expected level of recoveries should a default occur.  For issuers with an IDR above ‘B’, the overall credit risk of this obligation is exacerbated by the expected low level of recoveries should a default occur.  For non-performing obligations, the obligation or issuer is in default, or has deferred payment, but the rated obligation is expected to have extremely high recovery rates consistent with a Recovery Rating of ‘RR1’.
CCC – Substantial credit risk. ‘CCC’ ratings indicate that substantial credit risk is present. For performing obligations, default risk is commensurate with an IDR in the ranges ‘B’ to ‘C’.  For issuers with an IDR below ‘CCC’, the overall credit risk of this obligation is moderated by the expected level of recoveries should a default occur.  For issuers with an IDR above ‘CCC’, the overall credit risk of this obligation is exacerbated by the expected low level of recoveries should a default occur. For non-performing obligations, the obligation or issuer is in default, or has deferred payment, but the rated obligation is expected to have a superior recovery rate consistent with a Recovery Rating of ‘RR2’.
CC – Very high levels of credit risk. ‘CC’ ratings indicate very high levels of credit risk.  For performing obligations, default risk is commensurate with an IDR in the ranges ‘B’ to ‘C’. For issuers with an IDR below ‘CC’, the overall credit risk of this obligation is moderated by the expected level of recoveries should a default occur.  For issuers with an IDR above ‘CC’, the overall credit risk of this obligation is exacerbated by the expected low level of recoveries should a default occur.  For non-performing obligations, the obligation or issuer is in default, or has deferred payment, but the rated obligation is expected to have a good recovery rate consistent with a Recovery Rating
of ‘RR3’.
C – Exceptionally high levels of credit risk. ‘C’ indicates exceptionally high levels of credit risk. For performing obligations, default risk is commensurate with an IDR in the ranges ‘B’ to ‘C’. The overall credit risk of this obligation is exacerbated by the expected low level of recoveries should a default occur. For non-performing obligations, the obligation or issuer is in default, or has deferred payment, and the rated obligation is expected to have an average, below-average or poor recovery rate consistent with a Recovery Rating of ‘RR4’, ‘RR5’ or ‘RR6’.
Defaulted obligations typically are not assigned ‘RD’ or ‘D’ ratings, but are instead rated in the ‘B’ to ‘C’ rating categories, depending upon their recovery prospects and other relevant characteristics. This approach better aligns obligations that have comparable overall expected loss but varying vulnerability to default and loss.
Note: The modifiers “+” or “-” may be appended to a rating to denote relative status within major rating categories. Such suffixes are not added to the ‘AAA’ obligation rating category, or to corporate finance obligation ratings in the categories below ‘CCC’.
DBRS -- Long Term Obligations Rating Scale:
The following descriptions have been published by Dominion Bond Rating Service.
AAA – Highest credit quality. The capacity for the payment of financial obligations is exceptionally high and unlikely to be adversely affected by future events.
AA – Superior credit quality. The capacity for the payment of financial obligations is considered high.  Credit quality differs from AAA only to a small degree. Unlikely to be significantly vulnerable to future events.
A – Good credit quality. The capacity for the payment of financial obligations is substantial, but of lesser credit quality than AA. May be vulnerable to future events, but qualifying negative factors are considered manageable.
BBB – Adequate credit quality. The capacity for the payment of financial obligations is considered acceptable. May be vulnerable to future events.
BB – Speculative, non investment-grade credit quality. The capacity for the payment of financial obligations is uncertain. Vulnerable to future events.
B – Highly speculative credit quality. There is a high level of uncertainty as to the capacity to meet financial obligations.
CCC, CC, C – Very highly speculative credit quality. In danger of defaulting on financial obligations. There is little difference between these three categories, although CC and C ratings are normally applied to obligations that are seen as highly likely to default, or subordinated to obligations rated in the CCC to B range. Obligations in respect of which default has not technically taken place but is considered inevitable may be rated in the C category.
D – When the issuer has filed under any applicable bankruptcy, insolvency or winding up statute or there is a failure to satisfy an obligation after the exhaustion of grace periods, a downgrade to D may occur. DBRS may also use SD (Selective Default) in cases where only some securities are impacted, such as the case of a “distressed exchange.”
All rating categories other than AAA and D also contain subcategories “(high)” and “(low)”. The absence of either a “(high)” or “(low)” designation indicates the rating is in the middle of the category.
S&P Global Ratings -- Short-Term Issue Credit Ratings:
The following descriptions have been published by Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC.
A-1 – A short-term obligation rated ‘A-1’ is rated in the highest category by S&P Global Ratings. The obligor’s 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 obligor’s 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 obligor’s 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 vulnerable and has significant speculative characteristics. The obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitments; however, it faces major ongoing uncertainties which could lead to the obligor’s inadequate capacity to meet its financial commitments.
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 default or in breach of an imputed promise. For non-hybrid capital instruments, the ‘D’ rating category is used when payments on an obligation are not made on the date due, unless S&P Global Ratings believes that such payments will be made within any stated grace period. However, any stated grace period longer than five business days will be treated as five business days. The ‘D’ rating also will be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of a similar action and where default on an obligation is a virtual certainty, for example due to automatic stay provisions.  An obligation’s rating is lowered to ‘D’ if it is subject to a distressed exchange offer.
Dual ratings may be assigned to debt issues that have a put option or demand feature. The first component of the rating addresses the likelihood of repayment of principal and interest as due, and the second component of the rating addresses only the demand feature. The first component of the rating can relate to either a short-term or long-term transaction and accordingly use either short-term or long-term rating symbols. The second component of the rating relates to the put option and is assigned a short-term rating symbol (for example, ‘AAA/A-1+’ or ‘A-1+/A-1’). With U.S. municipal short-term demand debt, the U.S. municipal short-term note rating symbols are used for the first component of the rating (for example, ‘SP-1+/A-1+’).
Moody’s -- Global Short-Term Rating Scale:
The following descriptions have been published by Moody’s Investors Service, Inc.
P-1 - Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-1 have a superior ability to repay short-term debt obligations.
P-2 - Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-2 have a strong ability to repay short-term debt obligations.
P-3 - Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Prime-3 have an acceptable ability to repay short-term obligations.
NP - Issuers (or supporting institutions) rated Not Prime do not fall within any of the Prime rating categories.
 Fitch -- Short-Term Ratings Assigned to Issuers or Obligations in Corporate, Public and Structured Finance:

The following descriptions have been published by Fitch Inc. and Fitch Ratings Ltd. and its subsidiaries.

F1 - Highest short-term credit quality. Indicates the strongest intrinsic capacity for timely payment of financial commitments; may have an added “+” to denote any exceptionally strong credit feature.
F2 - Good short-term credit quality. Good intrinsic capacity for timely payment of financial commitments.
F3 - Fair short-term credit quality. The intrinsic capacity for timely payment of financial commitments is adequate.
BSpeculative short-term credit quality. Minimal capacity for timely payment of financial commitments, plus heightened vulnerability to near term adverse changes in financial and economic conditions.
C - High short-term default risk. Default is a real possibility.
RDRestricted default. Indicates an entity that has defaulted on one or more of its financial commitments, although it continues to meet other financial obligations. Typically applicable to entity ratings only.
DDefault. Indicates a broad-based default event for an entity, or the default of a short-term obligation.

DBRS -- Commercial Paper and Short-Term Debt Rating Scale:
The following descriptions have been published by Dominion Bond Rating Service.
R-1 (high)Highest credit quality. The capacity for the payment of short-term financial obligations as they fall due is exceptionally high. Unlikely to be adversely affected by future events.
R-1 (middle)Superior credit quality. The capacity for the payment of short-term financial obligations as they fall due is very high. Differs from R-1 (high) by a relatively modest degree. Unlikely to be significantly vulnerable to future events.
R-1 (low)Good credit quality. The capacity for the payment of short-term financial obligations as they fall due is substantial. Overall strength is not as favourable as higher rating categories. May be vulnerable to future events, but qualifying negative factors are considered manageable.
R-2 (high)Upper end of adequate credit quality. The capacity for the payment of short-term financial obligations as they fall due is acceptable. May be vulnerable to future events.
R-2 (middle)Adequate credit quality. The capacity for the payment of short-term financial obligations as they fall due is acceptable. May be vulnerable to future events or may be exposed to other factors that could reduce credit quality.
R-2 (low)Lower end of adequate credit quality. The capacity for the payment of short-term financial obligations as they fall due is acceptable. May be vulnerable to future events. A number of challenges are present that could affect the issuer’s ability to meet such obligations.
R-3Lowest end of adequate credit quality. There is a capacity for the payment of short-term financial obligations as they fall due. May be vulnerable to future events and the certainty of meeting such obligations could be impacted by a variety of developments.
R-4Speculative credit quality. The capacity for the payment of short-term financial obligations as they fall due is uncertain.
R-5Highly speculative credit quality. There is a high level of uncertainty as to the capacity to meet short-term financial obligations as they fall due.
DWhen the issuer has filed under any applicable bankruptcy, insolvency or winding up statute or there is a failure to satisfy an obligation after the exhaustion of grace periods, a downgrade to D may occur. DBRS may also use SD (Selective Default) in cases where only some securities are impacted, such as the case of a “distressed exchange.”
A-7

PART C: OTHER INFORMATION

Item 25.
Financial Statements and Exhibits
(1)
Financial Statements
Included in Part A:
Registrant’s Financial Highlights for the fiscal years ended October 31, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013 and 2012 are incorporated in Part A by reference to the Funds’ Annual Report on Form N-CSR for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2016 and Annual Report on Form N-CSR for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021 as filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) via EDGAR Accession No. 0000898432-16-001803 on January 8, 2017 and Accession No. 0000898432-22-000023 on January 5, 2022, respectively.
 
Included in Part B:
Registrant’s Financial Statements are incorporated in Part B by reference to the Fund’s Annual Report on Form N-CSR for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2021 as filed with the SEC via EDGAR Accession No. 0000898432-22-000023 on January 5, 2022.
(2)
Exhibits
(a)
(i)
 
(ii)
 
(iii)
 
(iv)
 
(v)
(b)
(i)
(c)
 
Not applicable.
(d)
(i)
Articles Sixth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh and Thirteenth of the Articles of Incorporation. Incorporated by Reference to Item 2(a) above.
 
(ii)
Articles II, VI and X of the Amended and Restated Bylaws. Incorporated by reference to Item 2(b)(i) above.
(e)
 
(f)
 
Not applicable.
(g)
(i)



 
(ii)
(h)
(i)
Form of Dealer Manager Agreement. (To be filed by amendment.)
(i)
 
Not applicable.
(j)
(i)
 
(ii)
(k)
(i)
 
(ii)
 
(iii)
(l)
 
(m)
 
Not applicable.
(n)

(o)
 
Not applicable.
(p)
 
Not applicable.
(q)
 
Not applicable.
(r)
(i)
Code of Ethics for Registrant, NBIA and NB LLC. Incorporated by Reference to Post-Effective Amendment No. 77 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of Neuberger Berman Advisers Management Trust, File Nos. 002-88566 and 811-04255 (Filed April 22, 2016).
(s)
  Calculation of Filing Fee Tables. (Filed herewith).
(t)
(i)
Power of Attorney for Registrant. Incorporated by Reference to Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form N-2, File No. 333-257996 (Filed July 19, 2021).
  (ii)
Form of Prospectus Supplement Relating to Common Stock. Incorporated by Reference to Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form N-2, File No. 333-257996 (Filed July 19, 2021).
  (iii)
Form of Prospectus Supplement Relating to Subscription Rights to Acquire Shares of Common Stock. (Filed herewith.)



Item 26.
Marketing Arrangements

The information contained under the heading “Plan of Distribution” in the Prospectus is incorporated by reference, and any information concerning any underwriters will be contained in the accompanying prospectus supplement, if any.

Item 27.
Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution

Registration and Filing Fees
 
$
15,000
FINRA Fees
   
12,000
Legal Fees and Expenses
   
275,000
Accounting Fees and Expenses
   
7,800
Miscellaneous Expenses
   
114,120
Total
 
$
423,920(1)


(1)
Estimate is based on the aggregate estimated expenses to be incurred during a three-year shelf offering period.

Item 28.
Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control

None.

Item 29.
Number of Holders of Securities

Set forth below is the number of record holders as of March 15, 2022 of each class of outstanding securities of the Registrant:

Title of Class
Number of
Record
Holders
   
Shares of Common Stock, par value $0.0001 per share
15
Preferred Stock (MRPS Series C)
3


Item 30.
Indemnification

Article Twelfth of the Registrant’s Articles of Incorporation and Article IX of the Registrant's Bylaws provide that the Fund shall indemnify its present and past directors, officers, employees and agents, and persons who are serving or have served at the Fund’s request in similar capacities for, other entities to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law (including Maryland law and the 1940 Act), provided, however, that a transfer agent is not entitled to such indemnification unless specifically approved by the Fund's Board of Directors. Section 2-418(b)

of the Maryland General Corporation Law (“Maryland Code”) permits the Registrant to indemnify its directors unless it is proved that the act or omission of the director was material to the cause of action adjudicated in the proceeding, and (a) the act or omission was committed in bad faith or was the result of active or deliberate dishonesty or (b) the director actually received an improper personal benefit in money, property or services or (c) in the case of a criminal proceeding, the director had reasonable cause to believe the act or omission was unlawful. Indemnification may be made against judgments, penalties, fines, settlements and reasonable expenses incurred in connection with a proceeding, in accordance with the Maryland Code. Pursuant to Section 2-418 of the Maryland Code, the Registrant is permitted to indemnify its officers, employees and agents to the same extent. The provisions set forth above apply insofar as consistent with Section 17(h) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (“1940 Act”), which prohibits indemnification of any director or officer of the Registrant against any liability to the Registrant or its shareholders to which such director or officer otherwise would be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of his office.
 
However, under Maryland law, a Maryland corporation may not indemnify for an adverse judgment in a suit by or in the right of the corporation or for a judgment of liability on the basis that personal benefit was improperly received, unless in either case a court orders indemnification and then only for expenses. In addition, Maryland law permits a corporation to advance reasonable expenses to a director or officer upon the corporation’s receipt of (a) a written affirmation by the director or officer of his good faith belief that he has met the standard of conduct necessary for indemnification by the corporation and (b) a written undertaking by him or on his behalf to repay the amount paid or reimbursed by the corporation if it is ultimately determined that the standard of conduct was not met.
 
Sections 9.1 and 9.2 of the Management Agreement between Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC (“NBIA”) and the Registrant provide that neither NBIA nor any director, officer or employee of NBIA performing services for the Registrant at the direction or request of NBIA in connection with NBIA’s discharge of its obligations under the Management Agreement shall be liable for any error of judgment or mistake of law or for any loss suffered by the Registrant in connection with any matter to which the Management Agreement relates; provided, that nothing herein contained shall be construed (i) to protect NBIA against any liability to the Registrant or its Stockholders to which NBIA would otherwise be subject by reason of NBIA’s misfeasance, bad faith, or gross negligence in the performance of NBIA’s duties, or by reason of NBIA’s reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under the Management Agreement (“disabling conduct”), or (ii) to protect any director, officer or employee of NBIA who is or was a Director or officer of the Registrant against any liability to the Registrant or its Stockholders to which such person would otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of such person’s office with the Registrant. The Registrant will indemnify NBIA against, and hold it harmless from, any and all expenses (including reasonable counsel fees and expenses) incurred investigating or defending against claims for losses or liabilities described above not resulting from

negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under the Management Agreement or disabling conduct by NBIA. Indemnification shall be made only following: (i) a final decision on the merits by a court or other body before whom the proceeding was brought that NBIA was not liable by reason of negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under the Management Agreement or disabling conduct or (ii) in the absence of such a decision, a reasonable determination, based upon a review of the facts, that NBIA was not liable by reason of negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under the Management Agreement or disabling conduct by (a) the vote of a majority of a quorum of directors of the Registrant who are neither “interested persons” of the Registrant nor parties to the proceeding (“disinterested non-party directors”) or (b) an independent legal counsel in a written opinion. NBIA shall be entitled to advances from the Registrant for payment of the reasonable expenses incurred by it in connection with the matter as to which it is seeking indemnification under the Management Agreement in the manner and to the fullest extent permissible under the Maryland General Corporation Law. NBIA shall provide to the Registrant a written affirmation of its good faith belief that the standard of conduct necessary for indemnification by the Registrant has been met and a written undertaking to repay any such advance if it should ultimately be determined that the standard of conduct has not been met. In addition, at least one of the following additional conditions shall be met: (a) NBIA shall provide security in form and amount acceptable to the Registrant for its undertaking; (b) the Registrant is insured against losses arising by reason of the advance; or (c) a majority of a quorum of the full Board of Directors of the Registrant, the members of which majority are disinterested non-party directors, or independent legal counsel, in a written opinion, shall have determined, based on a review of facts readily available to the Registrant at the time the advance is proposed to be made, that there is reason to believe that NBIA will ultimately be found to be entitled to indemnification under the Management Agreement.
  
Sections 11.1 and 11.2 of the Administration Agreement between the Registrant and NBIA provide that neither NBIA nor any director, officer or employee of NBIA performing services for the Registrant at the direction or request of NBIA in connection with NBIA’s discharge of its obligations under the Administration Agreement shall be liable for any error of judgment or mistake of law or for any loss suffered by the Registrant in connection with any matter to which the Administration Agreement relates; provided, that nothing herein contained shall be construed (i) to protect NBIA against any liability to the Registrant or its Stockholders to which NBIA would otherwise be subject by reason of NBIA’s misfeasance, bad faith, or gross negligence in the performance of NBIA’s duties, or by reason of NBIA’s reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under the Administration Agreement (“disabling conduct”), or (ii) to protect any director, officer or employee of NBIA who is or was a Director or officer of the Registrant against any liability to the Registrant or its Stockholders to which such person would otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of such person’s office with the Registrant. The Registrant will indemnify NBIA against, and hold it harmless from, any and all expenses (including reasonable counsel fees and expenses) incurred investigating or defending against claims for losses or liabilities described above not resulting from negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under the Administration Agreement or disabling conduct by NBIA. Indemnification shall be made only following: (i) a final decision on the merits by a court or other body before whom the proceeding was brought that NBIA was not liable by reason of negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under the Administration Agreement or disabling conduct or (ii) in the absence of such a decision, a reasonable determination, based upon a review of the facts, that NBIA was not liable by reason of negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under the Administration Agreement or disabling conduct by (a) the vote of a majority of a quorum of

directors of the Registrant who are neither “interested persons” of the Registrant nor parties to the proceeding (“disinterested non-party directors”) or (b) an independent legal counsel in a written opinion. NBIA shall be entitled to advances from the Registrant for payment of the reasonable expenses incurred by it in connection with the matter as to which it is seeking indemnification under the Administration Agreement in the manner and to the fullest extent permissible under the Maryland General Corporation Law. NBIA shall provide to the Registrant a written affirmation of its good faith belief that the standard of conduct necessary for indemnification by the Registrant has been met and a written undertaking to repay any such advance if it should ultimately be determined that the standard of conduct has not been met. In addition, at least one of the following additional conditions shall be met: (a) NBIA shall provide security in form and amount acceptable to the Registrant for its undertaking; (b) the Registrant is insured against losses arising by reason of the advance; or (c) a majority of a quorum of the full Board of Directors of the Registrant, the members of which majority are disinterested non-party directors, or independent legal counsel, in a written opinion, shall have determined, based on a review of facts readily available to the Registrant at the time the advance is proposed to be made, that there is reason to believe that NBIA will ultimately be found to be entitled to indemnification under the Administration Agreement.
 
Additionally, the Registrant and the other funds in the Neuberger Berman Fund Complex jointly maintain, at their own expense, E&O/D&O insurance policies for the benefit of their Directors, officers and certain affiliated persons. The Registrant will pay a pro rata portion of the premium on such insurance policies.

Insofar as indemnification for liability arising under the 1933 Act, may be permitted to trustees, officers and controlling persons of the registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or otherwise, the registrant has been advised that, in the opinion of the SEC, 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 trustee, officer or controlling person of the registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such trustee, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities 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.

Item 31.
Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser

There is set forth below information as to any other business, profession, vocation or employment of a substantial nature in which each director or officer of Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC (“NBIA”) is, or at any time during the past two years has been, engaged for his or her own account or in the capacity of director, officer, employee, partner or trustee.


NAME
BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
Joseph V. Amato
President – Equities and Chief
Investment Officer – Equities,
NBIA
Chief Executive Officer and President, Neuberger Berman Holdings LLC (including its predecessor, Neuberger Berman Inc.); President and Director of Neuberger Berman Group LLC; Chief Executive Officer and President, NB BD LLC; Trustee/Director, eleven registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator; Chief Executive Officer and President, eleven registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator; Portfolio Manager.
Thanos Bardas
Managing Director, NBIA 
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Ashok Bhatia
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Jennifer Blachford
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Associate Portfolio Manager.
James Bowden
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Managing Director, NB Alternatives Advisers LLC (“NBAA”).
Claudia A. Brandon
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Executive Vice President and Secretary, thirty-two registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Richard N. Bradt
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
David M. Brown
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Chad Bruso
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
John Buser
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; President and Managing Director, NBAA.
Stephen J. Casey
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.



NAME
BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
Brad E. Cetron
Chief Compliance Officer,
Head of Compliance and
Managing Director of
Compliance, NBIA
Chief Compliance Officer and Managing Director, NB BD LLC.
 
Elias Cohen
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
William R. Covode
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Timothy Creedon
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Kai Cui
Senior Vice President
Portfolio Manager.
Robert W. D’Alelio
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Derek Devens
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Daniel Doyle
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Ingrid Dyott
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Steven Eisman
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Rory Ewing
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Savonne L. Ferguson
Chief Compliance Officer –
Mutual Funds, Associate
General Counsel, and Senior
Vice President, NBIA
Chief Compliance Officer, thirty-two registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Michael Foster
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.



NAME
BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
Jacob Gamerman
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Rand W. Gesing
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Jennifer Gorgoll
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Michael C. Greene
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Jeffrey Hunn
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
William Hunter
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Fred Ingham
Managing Director, NBIA
Portfolio Manager.
James L. Iselin
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Corey A. Issing
General Counsel  – Mutual Funds and
Managing Director, NBIA
Chief Legal Officer (only for purposes of sections 307 and 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002), thirty-two registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Brian C. Jones
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Charles Kantor
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Tokufumi Kato
Managing Director, NBIA
Portfolio Manager.
Hakan Kaya
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Brian Kerrane
Chief Operating Officer –
Mutual Funds and Managing
Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Chief Operating Officer, and Vice President, thirty-two registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.



NAME BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
Eric Knutzen
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Multi-Asset Class Chief Investment Officer, Neuberger Berman Group LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Christopher Kocinski
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
David Kupperman
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Managing Director, NBAIM; Portfolio Manager.
Nathan Kush
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Sajjad S. Ladiwala
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Associate Portfolio Manager; Portfolio Manager.
David Levine
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Richard S. Levine
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Joseph Lind
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Brian Lord
Chief Compliance Officer –
Fixed Income and Senior Vice
President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC.
James Lyman
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Joseph P. Lynch
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Jeffrey Majit
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Managing Director, NBAIM; Portfolio Manager.
Jared Mann,
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
James F. McAree
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.



NAME BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
Kevin McCarthy
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Matthew McGinnis
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
S. Blake Miller
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Norman Milner
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Trevor Moreno
Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Richard S. Nackenson
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Benjamin H. Nahum
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Eric J. Pelio
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Alexandra Pomeroy
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Douglas A. Rachlin
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Hari Ramanan
Managing Director, NBIA
Portfolio Manager.
Marc Regenbaum
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Brett S. Reiner
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Associate Portfolio Manager.
Joana Rocha Schaff
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Managing Director, NBAA.



NAME BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
Conrad A. Saldanha
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Eli M. Salzmann
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
John San Marco
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Benjamin E. Segal
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Linda Sharaby
Secretary and Managing
Director, NBIA
Managing Director and Secretary, NB BD LLC; Managing Director and Secretary, Neuberger Berman Holdings LLC.
Steve Shigekawa
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Ronald B. Silvestri
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Jonathan Shofet
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Managing Director, NBAA.
Brian Smith
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Chief Operating Officer and Managing Director, NBAA.
Amit Solomon
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Gregory G. Spiegel
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Associate Portfolio Manager.
David Stonberg
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Managing Director, NBAA.
Robert Surgent
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.



NAME BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS
Brad Tank
President - Fixed Income and
Chief Investment Officer -
Fixed Income, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Jason Tauber
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Shawn Trudeau
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Kenneth J. Turek
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Anthony Tutrone
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director, NBAA.
James Tyre
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Gorky Urquieta
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Judith M. Vale
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Niketh Velamoor
Senior Vice President, and
Associate General Counsel, NBIA
Senior Anti-Corruption and Anti-Money Laundering Officer and Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer, four registered investment companies for which NBIA acts as investment manager and/or administrator.
Leo Anthony Viola
Treasurer and Managing Director, 
NBIA
Treasurer and Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Treasurer, NBAA.
Peter Von Lehe
Managing Director, NBIA
Managing Director, NB BD LLC; Managing Director, NBAA.
David Yi Wan
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.
Eric Zhou
Senior Vice President, NBIA
Senior Vice President, NB BD LLC; Portfolio Manager.


The principal address of NBIA and each of the investment companies named above is 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10104-0002.

Item 32.
Location of Accounts and Records

All accounts, books and other documents required to be maintained by Section 31(a) of the 1940 Act, as amended, and the rules promulgated thereunder with respect to the Registrant are maintained at the offices of State Street Bank and Trust Company, One Lincoln Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02111, except for the Registrant’s Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws, minutes of meetings of the Registrant’s Directors and shareholders and the Registrant’s policies and contracts, which are maintained at the offices of the Registrant, 1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10104-0002.

Item 33.
Management Services

None.

Item 34.
Undertakings

1. The Registrant undertakes to suspend offering of Common Stock until the prospectus is amended if (1) subsequent to the effective date of this Registration Statement, the net asset value declines more than 10 percent from its net asset value as of the effective date of this Registration Statement or (2) the net asset value increases to an amount greater than its net proceeds as stated in the prospectus.

2. Not applicable.

3. The Registrant undertakes:

a. to file, during a period in which offers or sales are being made, a post-effective amendment to this Registration Statement:

(1) to include any prospectus required by Section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act;

(2) to reflect in the prospectus any facts or events after the effective date of the registration statement (or the most recent post- effective amendment thereof) which, individually or in the aggregate, represent a fundamental change in the information set forth in the registration statement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, any increase or decrease in volume of securities offered (if the total dollar value of securities offered would not exceed that which was registered) and any deviation from the low or high end of the estimated maximum offering range may be reflected in the form of prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) if, in the aggregate, the changes in volume and price represent no more than 20% change in the maximum aggregate offering price set forth in the “Calculation of Registration Fee” table in the effective registration statement;


(3) to include any material information with respect to the plan of distribution not previously disclosed in the Registration Statement or any material change to such information in the Registration Statement.

b. that for the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act, each post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof;

c. to remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment any of the securities being registered which remain unsold at the termination of the offering;

d. that, for the purpose of determining liability under the Securities Act to any purchaser:

(1) if the Registrant is subject to Rule 430B:

(A) Each prospectus filed by the Registrant pursuant to Rule 424(b)(3) shall be deemed to be part of the registration statement as of the date the filed prospectus was deemed part of and included in the registration statement; and

(B) Each prospectus required to be filed pursuant to Rule 424(b)(2), (b)(5), or (b)(7) as part of a registration statement in reliance on Rule 430B relating to an offering made pursuant to Rule 415(a)(1)(i), (x), or (xi) for the purpose of providing the information required by Section 10(a) of the Securities Act shall be deemed to be part of and included in the registration statement as of the earlier of the date such form of prospectus is first used after effectiveness or the date of the first contract of sale of securities in the offering described in the prospectus. As provided in Rule 430B, for liability purposes of the issuer and any person that is at that date an underwriter, such date shall be deemed to be a new effective date of the registration statement relating to the securities in the registration statement to which that prospectus relates, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof. Provided, however, that no statement made in a registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement or made in a document incorporated or deemed incorporated by reference into the registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement will, as to a purchaser with a time of contract of sale prior to such effective date, supersede or modify any statement that was made in the registration statement or prospectus that was part of the registration statement or made in any such document immediately prior to such effective date; or

(2) if the Registrant is subject to Rule 430C: each prospectus filed pursuant to Rule 424(b) under the Securities Act as part of a registration statement relating to an offering, other than registration statements relying on Rule 430B or other than prospectuses filed in reliance on Rule 430A, shall be deemed to be part of and included in the registration statement as of the date it is first used after effectiveness. Provided, however, that no statement made in a registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement or made in a document incorporated or deemed incorporated by reference into the registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement will, as to a purchaser with a time of contract of sale

prior to such first use, supersede or modify any statement that was made in the registration statement or prospectus that was part of the registration statement or made in any such document immediately prior to such date of first use.

e. that for the purpose of determining liability of the Registrant under the Securities Act to any purchaser in the initial distribution of securities:

The undersigned Registrant undertakes that in a primary offering of securities of the undersigned Registrant pursuant to this registration statement, regardless of the underwriting method used to sell the securities to the purchaser, if the securities are offered or sold to such purchaser by means of any of the following communications, the undersigned Registrant will be a seller to the purchaser and will be considered to offer or sell such securities to the purchaser:

(1) any preliminary prospectus or prospectus of the undersigned Registrant relating to the offering required to be filed pursuant to Rule 424 under the Securities Act;

(2) free writing prospectus relating to the offering prepared by or on behalf of the undersigned Registrant or used or referred to by the undersigned Registrant;

(3) the portion of any other free writing prospectus or advertisement pursuant to Rule 482 under the Securities Act relating to the offering containing material information about the undersigned Registrant or its securities provided by or on behalf of the undersigned Registrant; and

(4) any other communication that is an offer in the offering made by the undersigned Registrant to the purchaser.

4. The Registrant undertakes that:

a. For the purpose of determining any liability under the 1933 Act, the information omitted from the form of prospectus filed as part of this Registration Statement in reliance upon Rule 430A and contained in the form of prospectus filed by the Registrant pursuant to 497(h) under the 1933 Act shall be deemed to be part of the Registration Statement as of the time it was declared effective; and

b. For the purpose of determining any liability under the 1933 Act, each post-effective amendment that contains a form of prospectus shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.

5. Not applicable.

6. Not applicable.


7.  The Registrant undertakes to send by first class mail or other means designed to ensure equally prompt delivery, within two business days of receipt of a written or oral request, any prospectus or Statement of Additional Information.

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, the Registrant has duly caused this registration statement on Form N-2 to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of New York and State of New York, on the 4th day of April, 2022.


 
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
 
 
     
 
By:
/s/ Joseph V. Amato
 
 
Name:
 Joseph V. Amato
 
Title:
President and Chief Executive Officer
 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, this Registration Statement has been signed below by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

Signature
Title
Date
 
/s/ Joseph V. Amato
President, Chief Executive Officer
and Director
April 4, 2022
Joseph V. Amato
   
/s/ John M. McGovern
Treasurer and Principal Financial and
Accounting Officer
April 4, 2022
John M. McGovern
   
 
/s/ Michael J. Cosgrove
Director
April 4, 2022
Michael J. Cosgrove*
 
/s/ Marc Gary
Director
April 4, 2022
Marc Gary*
   
 
/s/ Martha C. Goss
Director
April 4, 2022
Martha C. Goss*
   
 
/s/ Michael M. Knetter
Director
April 4, 2022
Michael M. Knetter*
   
 
/s/ Deborah C. McLean
Director
April 4, 2022
Deborah C. McLean*
   



 
/s/ George W. Morriss
Director
April 4, 2022
George W. Morriss*
   
 
/s/ Tom D. Seip
 
Chairman of the Board and Director
April 4, 2022
Tom D. Seip*
   
 
/s/ James G. Stavridis
Director
April 4, 2022
James G. Stavridis*
   

*Signatures affixed by Jennifer Gonzalez on April 4, 2022, pursuant to a power of attorney filed herewith.


INDEX TO EXHIBITS

(a)(ii)
(a)(iii)
(a)(v)
(g)(i)
(j)(ii)
(k)(i) Transfer Agency and Registrar Services Agreement.
(k)(ii)
(k)(iii)
(l)
(n)
(s)
Calculation of Filing Fee Tables.
(t)(iii)


EXHIBIT (a)(ii)



















Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.

Articles Supplementary Creating and Fixing the Rights of

Perpetual Preferred Shares

Series A























Table of Contents
  


                   
Section Heading Page
     
Designation

1
     
Definitions

2
Section 1.
Number of Authorized Shares
8
Section 2.
Dividends
9
(a)
Ranking
9
(b)
Cumulative Cash Dividend
9
(c)
Dividends Cumulative from Date of Original Issue
9
(d)
Dividend Payment Dates and Adjustment Thereof
9
(e)
Dividend Rates and Calculation of Dividends
9
(f)
Curing an Overdue Payment Obligation
10
(g)
Dividend Payments by Fund to Holders
10
(h)
Dividends Paid to Holders
10
(i)
Dividends Credited against Earliest Accumulated but Unpaid Dividends
10
(j)
Special Dividends under Amended and Restated Master Securities Agreement
11
Section 3.
Reserved
11
Section 4.
Reserved
11
Section 5.
Voting Rights
11
(a)
One Vote per Preferred Share
11
(b)
Voting for Additional Directors
12
(c)
Holders of Preferred Shares to Vote on Certain Other Matters
13
(d)
Relative Rights and Preferences
14
(e)
Board Actions Under These Articles Supplementary
14
(f)
No Preemptive Rights, Cumulative Voting or Appraisal Rights
15
(g)
Voting for Directors Sole Remedy for Fund’s Failure to Pay Dividends
15
(h)
Holders Entitled to Vote
15
Section 6.
Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio
16
Section 7.
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test
16
Section 8.
Most Favored Investor Status
18
Section 9.
Restrictions on Dividends and Other Distributions
19
(a)
Dividends on Shares other than Preferred Shares
19
(b)
Dividends and Other Distributions with respect to Common Shares under the 1940 Act
19
(c)
Other Restrictions on Dividends and Other Distributions
19
Section 10.
Right of First Refusal
20
Section 11.
Redemption
21

-i-

(a)
Optional Redemption
21
(b)
Mandatory Redemption
21
(c)
Notice of Redemption
22
(d)
No Redemption under Certain Circumstances
23
(e)
Absence of Funds Available for Redemption
23
(f)
Transfer Agent As Trustee of Redemption Payments By Fund
24
(g)
Shares for which Notice of Redemption Has Been Given Are No Longer Outstanding
24
(h)
Compliance with Applicable Law
24
(i)
Reserved
24
(j)
Purchase or Other Acquisition of Preferred Stock
24
Section 12.
Liquidation Rights
25
(a)
Ranking
25
(b)
Distributions upon Liquidation
25
(c)
Pro Rata Distributions
25
(d)
Rights of Junior Shares
25
(e)
Certain Events not Constituting Liquidation
25
Section 13.
Reserved
26
Section 14.
Miscellaneous
26
(a)
Amendment to Add Additional Series
26
(b)
Fractional Shares
26
(c)
Status of Preferred Shares Redeemed, Exchanged or Otherwise Acquired by the Fund
26
(d)
Headings not Determinative
26
(e)
Board May Resolve Ambiguities
26
(f)
Inconsistencies with Articles of Incorporation
26
(g)
Notices
27


-ii-

Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation (the “Fund”), certifies to the State Department of Assessments and Taxation of Maryland that:
First: Pursuant to the authority expressly vested in the Board of Directors of the Fund by Article Sixth of the Fund’s Articles of Incorporation (which, as restated, amended or supplemented from time to time are, together with these Articles Supplementary, herein called the “Charter”), the Board of Directors has, by resolution, reclassified from the unissued common stock of the Fund and authorized the issuance of 1,500 Series A Perpetual Preferred Shares, par value $.0001 per share, liquidation preference $25,000 per share plus an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared).
Second: The preferences, rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends and other distributions, qualifications, and terms and conditions of redemption, and other rights and limitations of the Series A Perpetual Preferred Shares and each other series of Preferred Shares now or hereafter described in these Articles Supplementary are as set forth in these Articles Supplementary.
Third: These Articles Supplementary shall become effective as of 4:59 p.m. EST on August 6, 2010.
Designation
Series A: 1,500 shares of preferred stock, par value $.0001 per share, liquidation preference $25,000 per share plus an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared), are hereby designated Series A Perpetual Preferred Shares (“Series A Shares”).  Each Series A Share shall have a dividend rate equal to the Applicable Rate from time to time.
Each Preferred Share shall have such preferences, rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends, qualifications and terms and conditions of redemption, in addition to those required by applicable law, as are set forth in these Articles Supplementary.  Subject to the provisions of Section 5(c) and Section 10, the Board of Directors of the Fund may, in the future, classify or reclassify additional shares of the Fund’s capital stock as Preferred Shares, with the same preferences, rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends, qualifications and terms and conditions of redemption and other terms herein described, except that the Applicable Rate and any other changes in the terms herein set forth shall be as set forth in an Amendment to these Articles Supplementary or other articles supplementary classifying or reclassifying such shares as Preferred Shares.

Definitions
As used in these Articles Supplementary, the following terms shall have the following meanings (with terms defined in the singular having comparable meanings when used in the plural and vice versa), unless the context otherwise requires:
(a)          “Additional Covenant” shall mean any covenant that measures or tests the financial condition or financial position of the Fund, including, but not limited to, covenants that specify or require the maintenance of certain financial ratios applicable to the Fund, and the default provision related thereto (regardless of whether such provision is labeled or otherwise characterized as a covenant or a default).
(b)          “Affiliate” means, at any time, and with respect to any Person, any other Person that at such time directly or indirectly through one or more intermediaries  Controls, or is controlled by, or is under common  Control with, such first Person.  As used in this definition, “Control” means the possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of a Person, whether through the ownership of voting securities, by contract or otherwise.  Unless the context otherwise clearly requires, any reference to an “Affiliate” is a reference to any Affiliate of the Fund.
(c)          “Agency Discounted Value” means the quotient of the Market Value of an Eligible Asset divided by the applicable Rating Agency Discount Factor, provided that with respect to an Eligible Asset that is currently callable, Agency Discounted Value will be equal to the quotient as calculated above or the call price, whichever is lower, and that with respect to an Eligible Asset that is prepayable, Agency Discounted Value will be equal to the quotient as calculated above or the par value, whichever is lower.
(d)          “Annual Valuation Date” shall mean the last Business Day of July of each year or such other date as may be agreed upon by the Fund, Moody’s, Fitch and S&P, as applicable.
(e)          “Applicable Rate” shall mean the rate set for a series of Preferred Shares; with respect to the Series A Shares, the Applicable Rate shall mean, for any Dividend Period ending on or prior to November 13, 2013, LIBOR for such Dividend Period plus 2.90% (290 basis points) and for any Dividend Period thereafter, LIBOR for such Dividend Period plus 7.90% (790 basis points), plus, in each case, .10% (10 basis points) for any period during which the Preferred Shares are not rated at least Aaa or higher by Moody’s or its equivalent by another Rating Agency.
(f)          “Asset Coverage Ratio” means the ratio of: (x) Total Assets less all indebtedness which does not constitute Senior Securities to (y) the aggregate of Senior Securities constituting indebtedness plus the aggregate of the liquidation preference of all Senior Securities constituting preferred stock of the Fund.
- 2 -

(g)          “Auditor’s Confirmation” shall have the meaning specified in paragraph (c) of Section 7 of these Articles Supplementary.
(h)          “Board of Directors” shall mean the Board of Directors of the Fund or any duly authorized committee thereof.
(i)          “Business Day” means any day other than a Saturday, a Sunday, a day on which commercial banks in New York City are required or authorized to be closed or, other than with respect to determining the date or dates on which any sums are to become due under these Articles Supplementary on the Preferred Shares, a day on which the New York Stock Exchange is required or authorized to be closed.
(j)          “Charter” shall have the meaning specified on the first page of these Articles Supplementary.
(k)          “Code” means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
(l)          “Common Shares” shall mean the outstanding shares of common stock, par value $.0001 per share, of the Fund.
(m)          “Cure Date” shall mean the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio Cure Date or the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date, as the case may be.
(n)          “Date of Original Issue,” with respect to shares of a series of the Preferred Shares, shall mean the date on which the Fund initially issued such shares.
(o)          “Dividend Payment Date,” with respect to shares of a series of Preferred Shares, shall mean any date on which dividends are payable on shares of such series pursuant to the provisions of paragraph (d) of Section 2 of these Articles Supplementary.
(p)          “Dividend Period,” with respect to shares of a series of Preferred Shares, shall mean each period commencing on the Date of Original Issue and continuing to but excluding the first Dividend Payment Date and, thereafter, commencing on a Dividend Payment Date and continuing up to, but not including, the next Dividend Payment Date for shares of such series.
(q)          “Early Redemption Amount” means, in connection with any redemption of the Series A Shares pursuant to Section 11, an amount equal to the applicable percentage of the liquidation value of the Series A Shares or portion thereof to be redeemed as follows:
If Redeemed During the 12 month
period Ending November 13,
Applicable Percentage
2009
4.0%
2010
3.0%

- 3 -

2011
2.0%
2012
2.0%
2013
1.0%
   
(r)          “Eligible Assets” means Moody’s Eligible Assets, Fitch’s Eligible Assets or S&P’s Eligible Assets, whichever is applicable.
(s)          “Exposure Period” shall mean the period commencing on a given Valuation Date and ending 45 days thereafter.
(t)          “Fitch” shall mean Fitch Ratings Inc. and its successors.
(u)          “Fitch Discount Factor” means the discount factors set forth in the Fitch Guidelines for use in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with Fitch’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(v)          “Fitch Eligible Asset” means assets of the Fund set forth in the Fitch Guidelines as eligible for inclusion in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with Fitch’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(w)          “Fitch Guidelines” mean the guidelines provided by Fitch, as may be amended from time to time, in connection with Fitch’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(x)          “Fund” shall mean the entity named on the first page of these Articles Supplementary, which is the issuer of the Preferred Shares. 
(y)          “GAAP” means generally accepted accounting principles as in effect from time to time in the United States of America.
(z)          “Holder” with respect to shares of a series of Preferred Shares, shall mean the registered holder of such shares as the same appears on the record books of the Fund.
(aa)          “Independent Accountant shall mean a nationally recognized accountant, or firm of accountants, that is with respect to the Fund an independent public accountant or firm of independent public accountants under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended from time to time. 
(bb)          “LIBOR” shall mean, for any Dividend Period, the rate per annum (rounded upwards, if necessary, to the next higher one hundred-thousandth of a percentage point) for deposits in U.S. Dollars for a three month period which appears on the Bloomberg Financial Markets Service Page BBAM‑1 (or if such page is not available, the Reuters Screen LIBO Page) as of 11:00 a.m. (London, England time) on the date two (2) Business Days before the commencement of such Dividend Period (or three (3) Business Days prior to the beginning of the first Dividend Period).  “Reuters Screen LIBO Page” means the display designated as the “LIBO” page on the Reuters Monitor Money Rates Service (or such other page as may replace the LIBO page on that service or
- 4 -

such other service as may be nominated by the British Bankers’ Association as the information vendor for the purpose of displaying British Banker’s Association Interest Settlement Rates for U.S. Dollar deposits).
(cc)          Reserved.
(dd)          “Liquidation Preferencewith respect to a given number of Preferred Shares, means $25,000 times that number.
(ee)          “Market Value means with respect to any asset of the Fund as of any date, the market value of such asset as determined by the Fund and used in the calculation of its published net asset value for such date, with such determination to be in compliance with applicable law (including, without limitation, the 1940 Act) as in effect on such date of determination.
(ff)          “Material Preferred Stock Agreements” means one or more agreements with respect to the purchase, acquisition or issuance of preferred stock of the Fund, or one or more articles supplementary or articles of amendment to the Articles of Incorporation classifying or reclassifying preferred stock of the Fund that individually or in the aggregate have a liquidation value in excess of $10,000,000.
(gg)          “Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio Cure Date,” with respect to the failure by the Fund to maintain the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio (as required by Section 6 of these Articles Supplementary) as of the last Business Day of each month, shall mean the ten Business Days following the last day of such month.
(hh)          “Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio” shall mean asset coverage, as defined in Section 18(h) of the 1940 Act (as of the date hereof), of at least 200% with respect to all outstanding senior securities of the Fund which are shares of stock, including all outstanding Preferred Shares.
(ii)          “Moody’s” shall mean Moody’s Investors Service, Inc., a Delaware corporation, and its successors at law.
(jj)          “Moody’s Discount Factor” means the discount factors set forth in the Fund’s Guidelines for use in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with Moody’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(kk)          “Moody’s Eligible Assets” means assets of the Fund set forth in the Moody’s Guidelines as eligible for inclusion in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with Moody’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(ll)          “Moody’s Guidelines” mean the guidelines provided by Moody’s, as may be amended from time to time, in connection with Moody’s ratings of Senior Securities.
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(mm)          “1940 Act” shall mean the Investment Company Act of 1940, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder and all exemptive relief, if any, obtained by the Fund thereunder, as the same may be amended from time to time.
(nn)          “Notice of Redemption” shall mean any notice with respect to the redemption of Preferred Shares pursuant to paragraph (c) of Section 11 of these Articles Supplementary.
(oo)          “Notes” means the Notes issued from time to time under the Note Agreement.
(pp)          “Note Agreement” means that certain Master Note Agreement among the Fund, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and certain affiliates of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company party thereto dated as of August 6, 2010, as amended from time to time.
(qq)          Reserved.
(rr)          “Overdue Payment Obligation,” with respect to Preferred Shares, shall mean a failure by the Fund to pay to the Holders, not later than 12:00 noon, Eastern time, (A) within five Business Days of any Dividend Payment Date for Preferred Shares, in immediately available funds, the full amount of any dividend (whether or not earned or declared) to be paid on such Dividend Payment Date on any Preferred Shares or (B) on any redemption date in immediately available funds on such redemption date for Preferred Shares, the Redemption Price to be paid on such redemption date for any Preferred Shares after a Notice of Redemption is given pursuant to paragraph (c) of Section 11 of these Articles Supplementary; provided, however, that the foregoing clause (B) shall not apply to the Fund’s failure to pay the Redemption Price in respect of Preferred Shares when the related Notice of Redemption provides that redemption of such shares is subject to one or more conditions precedent and any such condition precedent shall not have been satisfied at the time or times and in the manner specified in such Notice of Redemption.
(ss)          “Overdue Rate” means, with respect to shares of a series of Preferred Shares, a dividend rate that is equal to the greater of (i) 2.00% per annum above the Applicable Rate that would otherwise be applicable during any given period or (ii) 2.00% over the rate of interest publicly announced by State Street Bank and Trust Company in Boston, Massachusetts as its “base” or “prime” rate.
(tt)          “Person” shall mean and include an individual, a partnership, a corporation, a trust, an unincorporated association, a joint venture or other entity or a government or any agency or political subdivision thereof.
(uu)          “Preferred Shares” means the Series A Shares and each other series of preferred stock issued hereunder.
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(vv)          “Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount” means the basic maintenance amount required by each Rating Agency under its respective Rating Agency Guidelines, separately determined.
(ww)          “Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test” as of any Valuation Date is the requirement to maintain Eligible Assets with an aggregate Agency Discounted Value equal to at least the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount.  For purposes of determining the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test, Eligible Assets shall include securities lent under the Fund’s Securities Lending Program (to the extent consistent with 1940 Act interpretations, regulations and requirements).
(xx)          “Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date,” with respect to the failure by the Fund to satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount (as required by paragraph (a) of Section 7 of these Articles Supplementary) as of a given Valuation Date, shall mean the tenth Business Day following such Valuation Date.
(yy)          “Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report” shall mean a report signed by the President, Treasurer, Assistant Treasurer, Controller, Assistant Controller or any Executive Vice President or Vice President of the Fund which sets forth, as of the related Valuation Date, the assets of the Fund, the Market Value and the Agency Discounted Value thereof (seriatim and in aggregate), and the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount.
(zz)          “Rating Agency” means each of Fitch (if Fitch is then rating Senior Securities), Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating Senior Securities) and S&P (if S&P is then rating Senior Securities).
(aaa)          “Rating Agency Discount Factor” means the Moody’s Discount Factor (if Moody’s is then rating the Senior Securities), the Fitch Discount Factor (if Fitch is then rating Senior Securities) or the S&P Discount Factor (if S&P is then rating the Senior Securities), whichever is applicable.
(bbb)          “Rating Agency Guidelines” mean Fitch Guidelines (if Fitch is then rating Senior Securities), Moody’s Guidelines (if Moody’s is then rating Senior Securities) and S&P Guidelines (if S&P is then rating Senior Securities).
(ccc)          “Redemption Price” shall mean the applicable redemption price specified in Section 11 of these Articles Supplementary.
(ddd)          “Required Holders” means, at any time, the Holders of more than 50% of the number of Preferred Shares at the time outstanding (exclusive of Preferred Shares then owned by the Fund or any of its Affiliates).
(eee)          “S&P” shall mean Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services and its successors.
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(fff)          “S&P Discount Factor” means the discount factors set forth in the S&P Guidelines for use in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with S&P’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(ggg)          “S&P Eligible Asset” means assets of the Fund set forth in the S&P Guidelines as eligible for inclusion in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with S&P’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(hhh)          “S&P Guidelines” mean the guidelines provided by S&P, as may be amended from time to time, in connection with S&P’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(iii)          “Securities” or “Security” shall have the meaning specified in Section 2(a)(1) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended from time to time, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder from time to time in effect.
(jjj)          “Securities Lending Program” means the Fund’s program to lend its portfolio securities, conducted pursuant to agreements that provide for such loans to be callable at any time and to be continuously secured by segregated collateral equal to no less than the value, marked to market daily, of the loaned securities.
(kkk)          “Senior Securities” means all indebtedness for borrowed money of the Fund, including, without limitation, the Notes, bank borrowings and (without duplication) indebtedness of the Fund with the meaning of Section 18 of the 1940 Act and preferred stock of the Fund.
(lll)          “Series A Shares” shall have the meaning specified on the first page of these Articles Supplementary.
(mmm)          “Total Assets” shall mean the aggregate amount of all assets of the Fund determined in accordance with GAAP applicable to the Fund.  For purposes of determining Total Assets, securities lent under the Fund’s Securities Lending Program shall be included in Total Assets (to the extent consistent with 1940 Act interpretations, regulations and requirements).
(nnn)          “Valuation Date” shall mean each of (i) the fifteenth day of each month or, if such day is not a Business Day, the next preceding Business Day, and (ii) the last business day of each month.
(ooo)          “Voting Period” shall have the meaning specified in paragraph (b) of Section 5 of these Articles Supplementary.
Section 1.          Number of Authorized Shares. 
The number of authorized shares constituting the Series A Shares is 1,500.
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Section 2.          Dividends. 
(a)          Ranking.  The shares of a series of Preferred Shares shall rank on a parity with each other, with shares of any other series of Preferred Shares and with any other series of preferred stock as to the payment of dividends or other distributions by the Fund.
(b)          Cumulative Cash Dividends.  The Holders of a series of Preferred Shares shall be entitled to receive, when, as and if declared by the Board of Directors, out of funds legally available therefor in accordance with the Charter and applicable law, cumulative cash dividends at the Applicable Rate for shares of such series determined as set forth in paragraph (e) of this Section 2, and no more, payable on the Dividend Payment Dates with respect to shares of such series determined pursuant to paragraph (d) of this Section 2.  Holders of Preferred Shares shall not be entitled to any dividend, whether payable in cash, property or shares, in excess of full cumulative dividends, as herein provided, on Preferred Shares.  Except to the extent set forth in subparagraph (e)(i) of this Section 2, no interest, or sum of money in lieu of interest, shall be payable in respect of any dividend payment or payments on Preferred Shares which may be in arrears, and, no additional sum of money shall be payable in respect of any such arrearage.
(c)          Dividends Cumulative from Date of Original Issue.  Dividends on any series of Preferred Shares shall accumulate at the Applicable Rate for shares of such series from the Date of Original Issue thereof.
(d)          Dividend Payment Dates and Adjustment Thereof.  Dividends shall be payable on the Preferred Shares if declared by the Board of Directors (which declaration may be by a single resolution for multiple such dates), on the last day each March, June, September and December in each year (each such date being a “Dividend Payment Date”); provided, however, that if the day on which dividends would otherwise be payable on Preferred Shares is not a Business Day, then such dividends shall be payable on such shares on the first Business Day that falls after such day.
(e)          Dividend Rates and Calculation of Dividends.
(i)          Dividend Rates.  The dividend rate on shares of a series of Preferred Shares shall be equal to the Applicable Rate for each such series; provided, however, that if any Overdue Payment Obligation exists with respect to any Preferred Shares, the rate payable on such Overdue Payment Obligation shall be equal to the Overdue Rate for any period during which such Overdue Payment Obligation is outstanding (including the day such Overdue Payment Obligation occurs and excluding the day such Overdue Payment Obligation is cured).
(ii)          Calculation of Dividends.  The amount of dividends per share payable on shares of a series of Preferred Shares on any date on which dividends on shares of such series shall be payable, shall be computed by multiplying the Applicable Rate for shares of such series in effect for such Dividend Period or Dividend Periods or part thereof for which dividends have not been paid by a fraction, the numerator of which shall be the number of days in such Dividend Period or Dividend Periods or part thereof and the
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denominator of which shall be 360, and applying the rate obtained against $25,000; provided, however, with respect to any Overdue Payment Obligation in respect of shares of a series of Preferred Shares, the amount due thereon shall be computed by multiplying the Overdue Rate for shares of such series in effect for such Dividend Period or Dividend Periods or part thereof for which such Overdue Payment Obligation has not been paid by a fraction, the numerator of which shall be the number of days in such Dividend Period or Dividend Periods or part thereof for which such Overdue Payment Obligation has not been paid and the denominator of which shall be 360, and applying the rate obtained against such Overdue Payment Obligation.
(f)          Curing an Overdue Payment Obligation.  An Overdue Payment Obligation with respect to shares of a series of Preferred Shares shall have been cured if the Fund shall have paid to the Holders (A) all accumulated and unpaid dividends, including amounts due in connection with any Overdue Payment Obligations, on the shares of such series  and (B) without duplication, the Redemption Price for the shares of such series, if any, for which Notice of Redemption has been mailed by the Fund pursuant to paragraph (c) of Section 11 of these Articles Supplementary; provided, however, that the foregoing clause (B) shall not apply to the Fund’s failure to pay the Redemption Price in respect of any shares of a series of Preferred Shares when the related Redemption Notice provides that redemption of the shares of such series is subject to one or more conditions precedent and any such condition precedent shall not have been satisfied at the time or times and in the manner specified in such Notice of Redemption. 
(g)          Dividend Payments by Fund to Holders.  The Fund shall pay to the Holders, not later than 12:00 Noon, Eastern time, on each Dividend Payment Date for shares of a series of Preferred Shares, an aggregate amount of funds available in The City of New York, New York, equal to the dividends to be paid to all Holders of shares of such series on such Dividend Payment Date.
(h)          Dividends Paid to Holders.  Each dividend on Preferred Shares shall be paid on the Dividend Payment Date therefor to the Holders thereof as their names appear on the record books of the Fund on the Business Day next preceding such Dividend Payment Date. 
(i)          Dividends Credited against Earliest Accumulated but Unpaid Dividends.  Any dividend payment made on Preferred Shares shall first be credited against the earliest accumulated but unpaid dividends due with respect to such shares.  Dividends in arrears for any past Dividend Period may be declared and paid at any time, without reference to any regular Dividend Payment Date, to the Holders as their names appear on the record books of the Fund on such date, not exceeding 15 days preceding the payment date thereof, as may be fixed by the Board of Directors.
(j)          Special Dividends under Amended and Restated Master Securities Agreement.  Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary (including paragraph (b) of this Section 2), amounts the Fund pays pursuant to Sections 11(c) and 15.1 of that certain Amended and Restated Master Securities Agreement dated as of August 6, 2010, among the Fund, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and any other affiliates of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company party thereto, as amended from time to time (which sections are incorporated herein by this reference),
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shall be treated for all purposes hereof as dividends paid on the Series A Shares, declared by the Board of Directors on the date of payment thereof (which shall be deemed to be a Dividend Payment Date).  Each such dividend shall be paid (1) to the Holders in accordance with paragraphs (g) and (h) of this Section 2 or (2) if the Incurring Holder (as defined in such agreements) requests in writing that the Fund pay the amount due under any invoice to the Incurring Holder for any costs and expenses described in Sections 11(a) or 15.1 of such agreements directly to the Person entitled to payment thereof in lieu of the Incurring Holder’s paying same (as provided in Section 11(c) of such agreements), to such Person on behalf of and for the benefit of the Holders to whom such dividend otherwise would be payable pursuant to clause (1).
Section 3.          Reserved.
Section 4.          Reserved. 
Section 5.          Voting Rights.
(a)          One Vote per Preferred Share.  Except as otherwise provided in the Charter or as otherwise required by law, (i) each Holder shall be entitled to one vote for each Preferred Share held by such Holder on each matter submitted to a vote of stockholders of the Fund, and (ii) the holders of outstanding shares of preferred stock, including Preferred Shares, and of Common Shares shall vote together as a single class; provided, however, that, at any meeting of the stockholders of the Fund held for the election of Directors, the holders of outstanding shares of preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares, represented in person or by proxy at said meeting, shall be entitled, as a class, to the exclusion of the holders of all other securities and classes of shares of stock of the Fund, to elect two Directors of the Fund (regardless of the total number of Directors serving on the Fund’s Board of Directors), each share of preferred stock, including each Preferred Share, entitling the holder thereof to one vote; provided, further, that if the Board of Directors shall be divided into one or more classes, the Board of Directors shall determine to which class or classes the Directors elected by the holders of preferred stock shall be assigned and the holders of preferred stock shall be entitled to elect the Directors so designated as being elected by the holders of preferred stock only when their term shall have expired; provided, finally, that such Directors appointed by the holders of preferred stock shall be allocated as evenly as possible among the classes of Directors.  Subject to paragraph (b) of this Section 5, the holders of outstanding Common Shares and shares of preferred stock, including Preferred Shares, voting together as a single class, shall elect the balance of the Directors.
(b)          Voting for Additional Directors.
(i)          Voting Period.  Except as otherwise provided in the Charter or as otherwise required by law, during any period in which any one or more of the conditions described in subparagraphs (A) or (B) of this subparagraph (b)(i) shall exist (such period being referred to herein as a “Voting Period”), the number of Directors constituting the Board of Directors shall be automatically increased by the smallest number that, when added to the two Directors elected exclusively by the holders of preferred stock, including
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the Preferred Shares, would constitute a majority of the Board of Directors as so increased by such smallest number; and the holders of shares of preferred stock, including Preferred Shares, shall be entitled, voting as a class on a one‑vote‑per‑share basis (to the exclusion of the holders of all other securities and classes of shares of stock of the Fund), to elect such smallest number of additional Directors, together with the two Directors that such holders are in any event entitled to elect.  A Voting Period shall commence:
(A)          if at the close of business on any dividend payment date accumulated dividends (whether or not earned or declared) on any outstanding preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares, equal to at least two full years’ dividends shall be due and unpaid; or
(B)           if at any time holders of preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares, are entitled under the 1940 Act to elect a majority of the Directors of the Fund.
Upon the termination of a Voting Period, the voting rights described in this subparagraph (b)(i) shall cease, subject always, however, to the revesting of such voting rights in the holders of preferred stock upon the further occurrence of any of the events described in this subparagraph (b)(i). 
(ii)          Notice of Special Meeting.  As soon as practicable after the accrual of any right of the holders of preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares, to elect additional Directors as described in subparagraph (b)(i) of this Section 5, the Fund shall notify the Holders and the Fund shall call a special meeting of such Holders, by mailing a notice of such special meeting to such holders, such meeting to be held not less than 10 nor more than 30 days after the date of mailing of such notice.  If the Fund fails to send such notice to the Holders or if the Fund does not call such a special meeting, it may be called by any such Holder on like notice.  The record date for determining the Holders entitled to notice of and to vote at such special meeting shall be the close of business on the fifth Business Day preceding the day on which such notice is mailed or on such other date as the Fund and the Holders may agree.  At any such special meeting and at each meeting of holders of preferred stock, including Preferred Shares, held during a Voting Period at which Directors are to be elected, such holders, voting together as a class (to the exclusion of the holders of all other securities and classes of shares of stock of the Fund), shall be entitled to elect the number of Directors prescribed in subparagraph (b)(i) of this Section 5 on a one‑vote‑per‑share basis. 
(iii)          Terms of Office of Existing Directors.  The terms of office of all persons who are Directors of the Fund at the time of a special meeting of Holders and holders of other shares of preferred stock of the Fund to elect Directors shall continue, notwithstanding the election at such meeting by the Holders and such other holders of the number of Directors that they are entitled to elect, and the persons so elected by the Holders and such other holders, together with the two incumbent Directors elected by the Holders and such other holders of shares of preferred stock of the Fund and the remaining
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incumbent Directors elected by the holders of the Common Shares and preferred stock, including Preferred Shares, shall constitute the duly elected Directors of the Fund. 
(iv)           Terms of Office of Certain Directors to Terminate upon Termination of Voting Period.  Simultaneously with the termination of a Voting Period, the terms of office of the additional Directors elected by the Holders and holders of other shares of preferred stock of the Fund pursuant to subparagraph (b)(i) of this Section 5 shall terminate, the remaining Directors shall constitute the Directors of the Fund and the voting rights of the Holders and such other holders to elect additional Directors pursuant to subparagraph (b)(i) of this Section 5 shall cease, subject to the provisions of the last sentence of subparagraph (b)(i) of this Section 5.
(c)          Holders of Preferred Shares to Vote on Certain Other Matters.
(i)          Increases in Capitalization.  So long as any Preferred Shares are outstanding, the Fund shall not, without the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of at least a majority of the Preferred Shares outstanding at the time, in person or by proxy, either in writing or at a meeting, voting as a separate class:  (a) authorize, create or issue any class or series of shares ranking prior to or on a parity with Preferred Shares with respect to the payment of dividends or the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, or authorize, create or issue additional shares of any series of Preferred Shares or (b) amend, alter or repeal the provisions of the Charter, or these Articles Supplementary, whether by merger, consolidation or otherwise, so as to affect any preference, right or power of such Preferred Shares or the Holders thereof; provided, however, that (i) a division or split of a  Preferred Share will be deemed to affect such preferences, rights or powers only if the terms of such division adversely affect the Holders and (ii) the authorization, creation and issuance of classes or series of shares ranking junior to Preferred Shares with respect to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, will be deemed to affect such preferences, rights or powers only if Moody’s, Fitch or S&P is then rating Preferred Shares and such issuance would, at the time thereof, cause the Fund not to satisfy the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio or the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount.  So long as any Preferred Shares are outstanding, the Fund shall not, without the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of at least a majority of the Preferred Shares outstanding at the time, in person or by proxy, either in writing or at a meeting, voting as a separate class, file a voluntary application for relief under Federal bankruptcy law or any similar application under state law for so long as the Fund is solvent and does not foresee becoming insolvent.  Each action set forth above shall be voted on exclusively by the holders of preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares.  If any action set forth above would adversely affect the rights of one or more series (the “Affected Series”) of Preferred Shares in a manner different from any other series of Preferred Shares, the Fund will not approve any such action without the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of at least a majority of the shares of each such Affected Series outstanding at the time, in person or by proxy, either in writing or at a meeting (each such Affected Series voting as a separate class). 
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(ii)          1940 Act Matters.  Unless a higher percentage is provided for in the Charter, (A) the affirmative vote of the Holders of a “majority of the outstanding” (as such term is defined in the 1940 Act) preferred stock of the Fund, including Preferred Shares, voting as a separate class, shall be required to approve (A) any plan of reorganization (as such term is used in the 1940 Act) adversely affecting such shares and (B) any action requiring a vote of security holders of the Fund under Section 13(a) of the 1940 Act.  In the event a vote of Holders of Preferred Shares is required pursuant to the provisions of Section 13(a) of the 1940 Act, the Fund shall, not later than ten Business Days prior to the date on which such vote is to be taken, notify Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares), Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) that such vote is to be taken and the nature of the action with respect to which such vote is to be taken.  The Fund shall, not later than ten Business Days after the date on which such vote is taken, notify Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares), Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) of the results of such vote.
(d)          Relative Rights and Preferences.  Unless otherwise required by law or provided elsewhere in the Charter, the Holders shall not have any relative rights or preferences or other special rights other than those specifically set forth herein.
(e)          Board Actions Under These Articles Supplementary.  The Board of Directors may, from time to time, with the consent of the Required Holders (which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed), amend, alter or repeal any or all of the definitions of the terms listed below, or any provision of these Articles Supplementary which a Rating Agency has confirmed is a predicate for any such definition:
Auditor’s Confirmation
Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio Cure Date
Exposure Period
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount Test
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report
Valuation Date
, provided that the Fund shall give prior written notice to the Holders of any such amendment, alteration or repeal reasonably (and in any event not less than 10 Business Days) in advance of the proposed effective date of any such amendment, alteration or repeal, together with any explanation and a description of the proposed amendment, alteration or repeal.  Holders of Common Shares shall not have the right to vote on any such amendment, alteration or repeal.  Any such amendment, alteration or repeal will not be deemed to affect the preferences, rights or powers of the Preferred Shares or the Holders thereof.  Prior to any such amendment, alteration
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or repeal becoming effective, the Board of Directors shall receive confirmation from the Rating Agency that any such amendment, alteration or repeal would not impair the ratings then assigned to the Preferred Shares and the Board of Directors shall confirm (which confirmation may be in the form of an opinion of the Fund’s counsel) that any such amendment, alteration or repeal is consistent with 1940 Act interpretations, regulations and requirements.
In addition, subject to compliance with applicable law, the Board of Directors may amend the definition of Applicable Rate to increase the percentage amount without the vote or consent of the holders of shares of preferred stock, including each series of Preferred Shares, or any other stockholder of the Fund, and without receiving any confirmation from any Rating Agency, provided that immediately following any such increase the Fund would meet the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount Test and any such increase shall be applicable to the shares of each series of Preferred Shares. 
(f)          No Preemptive Rights, Cumulative Voting or Appraisal Rights.  The Holders shall have no preemptive rights, rights to cumulative voting or appraisal rights.  The Holders shall not be entitled to exercise any rights of an objecting stockholder provided for under Title 3, Subtitle 2 of the Maryland General Corporation Law or any successor provision.  For the avoidance of doubt, this provision does not restrict the right of first refusal set forth in Section 10 of this Articles Supplementary. 
(g)          Voting for Directors Sole Remedy for Fund’s Failure to Pay Dividends.  Except as set forth in Section 2(e), in the event that the Fund fails to pay any dividends on the Preferred Shares, the exclusive remedy of the Holders shall be the right to vote for Directors pursuant to the provisions of this Section 5.
(h)          Holders Entitled to Vote.  For purposes of determining any rights of the Holders to vote on any matter, whether such right is created by these Articles Supplementary, by the other provisions of the Charter, by statute or otherwise, no Holder shall be entitled to vote any Preferred Shares and no Preferred Shares shall be deemed to be “outstanding” for the purpose of voting or determining the number of shares required to constitute a quorum if, prior to or concurrently with the time of determination of shares entitled to vote or shares deemed outstanding for quorum purposes, as the case may be, the requisite Notice of Redemption, with respect to such shares shall have been given as provided in paragraph (c) of Section 11.  No Preferred Shares held by the Fund or any affiliate of the Fund shall have any voting rights or be deemed to be outstanding for voting or other purposes.
Section 6.          Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio.
The Fund shall maintain, as of the last Business Day of each month in which any share of a series of Preferred Shares is outstanding, the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio; provided, however, that the mandatory redemption pursuant to Section 11(b) shall be the sole remedy in the event the Fund fails to do so.
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Section 7.          Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test.
(a)          So long as Preferred Shares are outstanding, the Fund shall satisfy, on each Valuation Date, and shall verify to its satisfaction that it is maintaining on such Valuation Date, the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test; provided, however, that the mandatory redemption pursuant to Section 11(b) shall be the sole remedy in the event the Fund fails to do so.
(b)          On or before 5:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the third Business Day after a Valuation Date on which  the Fund fails to satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test, and on the third Business Day after the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date with respect to such Valuation Date, the Fund shall complete and deliver to Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares), Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report as of the date of such failure or such Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date, as the case may be.  The Fund shall also deliver a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report to Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares), Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares), in each case, on or before the seventh Business Day after the last Business Day of each month.  A failure by the Fund to deliver a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report pursuant to the preceding sentence shall be deemed to be delivery of a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report indicating the Agency Discounted Value for all assets of the Fund is less than the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, as of the relevant Valuation Date.
(c)          Within ten Business Days after the date of delivery of a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report in accordance with paragraph (b) of this Section 7 relating to an Annual Valuation Date, the Fund shall cause, if so requested by the Rating Agency, the Independent Accountant to confirm in writing to Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares), Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) (i) the mathematical accuracy of the calculations reflected in such Report, (ii) that, in such Report, the Fund correctly determined in accordance with these Articles Supplementary whether the Fund had, at such Annual Valuation Date, Fitch Eligible Assets (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares) of an aggregate Agency Discounted Value at least equal to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, Moody’s Eligible Assets (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares) of an aggregate Agency Discounted Value at least equal to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount and S&P Eligible Assets (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) of an aggregate Agency Discounted Value at least equal to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, (iii) that, in such Report, the Fund determined whether the Fund had, at such Annual Valuation Date in accordance with these Articles Supplementary, with respect to the Fitch ratings on portfolio securities, the issuer name and issue size and coupon rate listed in such Report, verified by the Independent Accountant by reference to Bloomberg Financial Services or another
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independent source approved by Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares), Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) and the Independent Accountant shall provide a listing in its letter of any differences, (iv) with respect to the Moody’s ratings on portfolio securities, the issuer name, issue size and coupon rate listed in such Report, that such information has been verified by the Independent Accountant by reference to Bloomberg Financial Services or another independent source approved by Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares), Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) and the Independent Accountant shall provide a listing in its letter of any differences, (v) with respect to the S&P ratings on portfolio securities, the issuer name, issue size and coupon rate listed in such Report, that such information has been verified by the Independent Accountant by reference to Bloomberg Financial Services or another independent source approved by Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares), Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) and the Independent Accountant shall provide a listing in its letter of any differences, and (vi) with respect to the bid or mean price (or such alternative permissible factor used in calculating the Market Value) provided by the custodian of the Fund’s assets to the Fund for purposes of valuing securities in the Fund’s portfolio, that the Independent Accountant has traced the price used in such Report to the bid or mean price listed in such Report as provided to the Fund and verified that such information agrees (in the event such information does not agree, the Independent Accountant will provide a listing in its letter of such differences) (such confirmation is herein called the “Auditor’s Confirmation”); provided, however, that the Independent Accountant may base the conclusions related to (ii) through (vi) above on a sample of at least 25 securities (or such other number of securities as the Independent Accountant and Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares), Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) may agree from time to time).
(d)          Within ten Business Days after the date of delivery of a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report in accordance with paragraph (b) of this Section 7 relating to any Valuation Date on which the Fund failed to satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, and relating to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date with respect to such failure to satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, the Fund shall cause, if so requested by the Rating Agency, the Independent Accountant to provide, if so requested, to Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the series in question), Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the series in question) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the series in question) an Auditor’s Confirmation as to such Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report.
(e)          If any Auditor’s Confirmation delivered pursuant to paragraph (c) of this Section 7 shows that an error was made in the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report for a particular Valuation Date for which such Auditor’s Confirmation was required to be delivered, or shows that a lower aggregate Agency Discounted Value for the aggregate of all Fitch Eligible Assets (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares)  or Moody’s Eligible Assets (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares) or S&P Eligible Assets (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares), as the case may be, of the Fund was determined by the Independent Accountant, then in the absence of manifest error the calculation or determination made by such Independent Accountant shall be final and conclusive and shall be binding on the Fund, and the Fund shall accordingly amend and deliver the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report to Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares), Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) promptly following receipt by the Fund of such Auditor’s Confirmation.
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(f)          On or before 5:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the first Business Day after the Date of Original Issue of any Preferred Shares, the Fund shall, if so requested by the Rating Agency, complete and deliver to Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares), Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares) and S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares) a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report as of the close of business on such Date of Original Issue.
(g)          On or before 5:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the seventh Business Day after either (i) the Fund shall have repurchased Common Shares or (ii) the ratio of the Agency Discounted Value of Fitch Eligible Assets, the Agency Discounted Value of Moody’s Eligible Assets or the Agency Discounted Value of S&P Eligible Assets, in each case, to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount on any valuation date is less than or equal to 105% or (iii) whenever requested by Moody’s, Fitch or S&P, the Fund shall complete and deliver to Fitch (if Fitch is then rating the Preferred Shares), Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating the Preferred Shares) or S&P (if S&P is then rating the Preferred Shares), as the case may be, a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report as of the date of any such event.
(h)          Any documents to be provided to Fitch pursuant to this Section 7 shall be delivered to Fitch electronically at the following email address: funds.surveillance@fitchratings.com or such other email address as Fitch and the Fund may agree.
Section 8.          Most Favored Investor Status. 
In the event that the Fund shall at any time after the Date of Original Issue enter into, assume or otherwise become bound by or obligated under one or more Material Preferred Stock Agreements containing one or more Additional Covenants, the terms of these Articles Supplementary shall be amended to include each Additional Covenant contained in such Material Preferred Stock Agreement.  The Fund covenants to promptly execute and deliver at its reasonable expense (including, without limitation, the reasonable fees and expenses of counsel for the Holders) an amendment to these Articles Supplementary in form and substance satisfactory to the Holders evidencing the amendment of these Articles Supplementary to include such Additional Covenants, and to file such amendment with the State Department of Assessments and Taxation of Maryland, all in compliance with the applicable provisions of the Maryland General Corporation Law.
Section 9.          Restrictions on Dividends and Other Distributions.
(a)          Dividends on Shares other than Preferred Shares.  Except as set forth in the next sentence, no dividends shall be declared or paid or set apart for payment on the shares of any class or series of shares of stock of the Fund ranking, as to the payment of dividends, on a parity with Preferred Shares for any period unless full cumulative dividends have been or contemporaneously are declared and paid on the shares of each series of Preferred Shares through its most recent Dividend Payment Date.  When dividends are not paid in full upon the shares of each series of Preferred Shares through its most recent Dividend Payment Date or upon the shares of any other class or series of shares of stock of the Fund ranking on a parity as to the
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payment of dividends with Preferred Shares through their most recent respective dividend payment dates, all dividends declared upon Preferred Shares and any other such class or series of shares of stock ranking on a parity as to the payment of dividends with Preferred Shares shall be declared pro rata so that the amount of dividends declared per share on Preferred Shares and such other class or series of shares of stock shall in all cases bear to each other the same ratio that accumulated dividends per share on the Preferred Shares and such other class or series of shares of stock bear to each other (for purposes of this sentence, the amount of dividends declared per share of Preferred Shares shall be based on the Overdue Rate in accordance with Section 2 for such share for the Dividend Periods during which dividends were not paid in full).
(b)          Dividends and Other Distributions with respect to Common Shares under the 1940 Act.  The Board of Directors shall not declare any dividend (except a dividend payable in Common Shares), or declare any other distribution, upon the Common Shares, or purchase Common Shares, unless in every such case immediately after such transaction the Fund would satisfy the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio after deducting the amount of such dividend, distribution or purchase price, as the case may be.
(c)          Other Restrictions on Dividends and Other Distributions.  For so long as any Preferred Shares are outstanding, and except as set forth in paragraph (a) of this Section 9 and paragraph (c) of Section 12, (A) the Fund shall not declare, pay or set apart for payment any dividend or other distribution (other than a dividend or distribution paid in shares of, or in options, warrants or rights to subscribe for or purchase, Common Shares or other shares, if any, ranking junior to the Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up) in respect of the Common Shares or any other shares of the Fund ranking junior to or on a parity with the Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends or the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up, or call for redemption, redeem, purchase or otherwise acquire for consideration any Common Shares or any other such junior shares (except by conversion into or exchange for shares of the Fund ranking junior to the Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up), or any such parity shares (except by conversion into or exchange for shares of the Fund ranking junior to or on a parity with Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up), unless (i) full cumulative dividends on shares of each series of Preferred Shares through its most recently ended Dividend Period shall have been paid and (ii) the Fund has redeemed the full number of Preferred Shares required to be redeemed by any provision for mandatory redemption pertaining thereto, and (B) the Fund shall not declare, pay or set apart for payment any dividend or other distribution (other than a dividend or distribution paid in shares of, or in options, warrants or rights to subscribe for or purchase, Common Shares or other shares, if any, ranking junior to Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up) in respect of Common Shares or any other shares of the Fund ranking junior to Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends or the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up, or call for redemption, redeem, purchase or otherwise acquire for consideration any Common Shares or any other such junior shares (except by conversion into or exchange for shares of the Fund ranking junior to Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up),
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unless immediately after such transaction the Fund could satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test.
Section 10.          Right of First Refusal.
Each time after the date hereof that the Fund proposes to offer, or intends to accept an offer to purchase, any Securities issued by the Fund, each Holder of Preferred Shares (an “Eligible Holder”), shall have a right to purchase such Securities in accordance with the following provisions:
(a)          The Fund shall deliver a notice (“Notice”) to each Eligible Holder stating (i) its bona fide intention to offer or to accept an offer to purchase shares of such Securities, (ii) the number of such shares of Securities to be offered or sold, (iii) the price, if any, for which it proposes to offer or sell such shares of Securities, and (iv) the terms of such offer or sale.
(b)          Within 15 calendar days after receipt of the Notice, each Eligible Holder may elect to purchase, at the price and on the terms specified in the Notice, the percentage of such Securities that the Preferred Shares then held by said Eligible Holder bears to the total Preferred Shares outstanding on the date of the Notice.
(c)          If any Securities which an Eligible Holder is entitled to purchase pursuant to this Section 10 are not so purchased as provided in Section 10(b), the Fund may, during the 180‑day period following the expiration of the period provided in Section 10(b), offer, or accept an offer to purchase, and sell such Securities to any Person or Persons at a price not less, and upon terms no more favorable to the offeree or purchaser, than the price and terms specified in the Notice.  If the Fund does not enter into an agreement for the sale of the shares of such Securities within such period and if such agreement is not consummated within 180 days after the execution thereof, the right provided hereunder shall be deemed to be revived with respect to any Securities so offered which remain unsold and which the Fund intends to continue to offer for sale.
(d)          The right of first refusal pursuant to this Section 10 shall be transferable and assignable by any Eligible Holder.
Section 11.          Redemption.
(a)          Optional Redemption.
(i)          Preferred Shares may be redeemed, at the option of the Fund, as a whole or from time to time in part, at any time and from time to time, out of funds legally available therefor, at a redemption price per share equal to the sum of $25,000 plus an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared) to
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(but not including) the date fixed for redemption, plus an amount equal to the Early Redemption Amount, if any; provided, however, that shares of a series of Preferred Shares may not be redeemed in part if after such partial redemption fewer than ten (10) shares of such series of Preferred Shares remain outstanding.
(ii)          If fewer than all of the outstanding shares of a series of Preferred Shares are to be redeemed pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph (a), the number of shares of such series of Preferred Shares to be redeemed shall be determined by the Board of Directors, and such shares shall be redeemed pro rata from the Holders in proportion to the number of Preferred Shares of such series held by such Holders or by such other method that the Board of Directors deems fair and equitable.
(iii)          The Fund may not on any date provide a Notice of Redemption pursuant to paragraph (c) of this Section 11 in respect of a redemption contemplated to be effected pursuant to this paragraph (a) unless on such date the Agency Discounted Value of the Eligible Assets would at least equal the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, and would at least equal the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount immediately subsequent to such redemption if such redemption were to occur on such date.  For purposes of determining in the preceding sentence whether the Agency Discounted Value of the Eligible Assets at least equals the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, the Rating Agency Discount Factors applicable to the Eligible Assets shall be determined by reference, if applicable, to the first Exposure Period longer than the Exposure Period then applicable to the Fund, as described in the definition of Rating Agency Discount Factor.
(b)          Mandatory Redemption.  The Fund shall redeem, at a redemption price equal to $25,000 per share plus accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared) to (but not including) the date fixed by the Board of Directors for redemption plus the Early Redemption Amount, if any, certain of the Preferred Shares, if the Fund fails to have Moody’s Eligible Assets with an Agency Discounted Value, Fitch Eligible Assets with a Agency Discounted Value or S&P Eligible Assets with an Agency Discounted Value, in each case, greater than or equal to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, in accordance with the requirements of the rating agency or agencies then rating the Preferred Shares, or fails to maintain the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio and such failure is not cured on or before the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date or the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio Cure Date, as the case may be.  The number of Preferred Shares to be redeemed shall be equal to the lesser of (i) the minimum number of Preferred Shares, together with all other preferred stock subject to redemption or retirement, the redemption of which, if deemed to have occurred immediately prior to the opening of business on the Cure Date, would have resulted in the Fund’s having both Moody’s Eligible Assets with a Agency Discounted Value,  Fitch Eligible Assets with a Agency Discounted Value and S&P Eligible Assets with an Agency Discounted Value, in each case, greater than or equal to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount or maintaining the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio, as the case may be, on such Cure Date (provided, however, that if there is no such minimum number of Preferred Shares and other preferred stock the redemption or retirement of which would have had such result, all Preferred
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Shares then outstanding shall be redeemed), and (ii) the maximum number of Preferred Shares, together with all other shares of preferred stock subject to redemption or retirement, that can be redeemed out of funds expected to be legally available therefor in accordance with the Charter and applicable law.  In determining the Preferred Shares required to be redeemed in accordance with the foregoing, the Fund shall allocate the number required to be redeemed to satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount or the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio, as the case may be, pro rata among Preferred Shares and other preferred stock subject to redemption or retirement (and then, pro rata among each series of Preferred Shares).  The Fund shall effect such redemption on the date fixed by the Fund therefor, which date shall not be earlier than 2 days nor later than 30 days after such Cure Date, except that if the Fund does not have funds legally available for the redemption of all of the required number of Preferred Shares and other preferred stock that are subject to redemption or retirement or the Fund otherwise is unable to effect such redemption on or prior to 30 days after such Cure Date, the Fund shall redeem those Preferred Shares which it was unable to redeem on the earliest practicable date on which it is able to effect such redemption.  If fewer than all of the outstanding shares of a series of Preferred Shares are to be redeemed pursuant to this paragraph (b), the number of shares of such series to be redeemed shall be redeemed pro rata from the Holders of shares of such series in proportion to the number of shares of such series held by such Holders or by such other method that the Board of Directors deems fair and equitable.
(c)          Notice of Redemption.  If the Fund shall determine or be required to redeem shares of a series of Preferred Shares pursuant to paragraph (a) or (b) of this Section 11, either the Fund or the Fund’s transfer agent shall mail a Notice of Redemption with respect to such redemption by recognized overnight delivery service, or by first class mail, postage prepaid, to each Holder of the Preferred Shares to be redeemed, at such Holder’s address as the same appears on the record books of the Fund on the record date established by the Board of Directors.  Such Notice of Redemption shall be so mailed not less than 15 days (or 2 days in the case of any notice of redemption pursuant to paragraph (b) above) nor more than 60 days (or 30 days in the case of any notice pursuant to paragraph (b) above) prior to the date fixed for redemption.  Each such Notice of Redemption shall state: (i) the redemption date; (ii) the number of Preferred Shares to be redeemed and the series thereof; (iii) the CUSIP number for the Preferred Shares; (iv) the Redemption Price; (v) if applicable, the place or places where the certificate(s), if any, for such shares (properly endorsed or assigned for transfer, if the Board of Directors shall so require and the Notice of Redemption shall so state) are to be surrendered for payment of the Redemption Price; (vi) that dividends on the shares to be redeemed will cease to accumulate on such redemption date; and (vii) the provisions of this Section 11 under which such redemption is made.  If fewer than all shares of a series of Preferred Shares held by any Holder are to be redeemed, the Notice of Redemption mailed to such Holder shall also specify the number of shares of such series to be redeemed from such Holder.  The Fund may provide in any Notice of Redemption relating to a redemption contemplated to be effected pursuant to paragraph (a) of this Section 11 that such redemption is subject to one or more conditions precedent and that the Fund shall not be required to effect such redemption unless each such condition shall have been satisfied at the time or times and in the manner specified in such Notice of Redemption.
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(d)          No Redemption under Certain Circumstances.  Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (a) or (b) of this Section 11, if any dividends on shares of a series of Preferred Shares (whether or not earned or declared) are in arrears, no Preferred Shares shall be redeemed unless all outstanding shares of such series of Preferred Shares are simultaneously redeemed, and the Fund shall not purchase or otherwise acquire any shares of such series; provided, however, that the foregoing shall not prevent the purchase or acquisition of all outstanding shares of such series pursuant to the successful completion of an otherwise lawful purchase or exchange offer made on the same terms to, and accepted by, Holders of all outstanding shares of such series of Preferred Shares.
(e)          Absence of Funds Available for Redemption.  To the extent that any redemption for which Notice of Redemption has been mailed is not made by reason of the absence of legally available funds therefor in accordance with the Charter and applicable law, such redemption shall be made as soon as practicable to the extent such funds become available.  A failure to redeem Preferred Shares shall be deemed to exist at any time after the date specified for redemption in a Notice of Redemption when the Fund shall have failed, for any reason whatsoever, to pay to the Holders the Redemption Price on the redemption date with respect to any shares for which such Notice of Redemption has been mailed; provided, however, that the foregoing shall not apply in the case of the Fund’s failure to pay the Redemption Price with respect to any shares where (1) the Notice of Redemption relating to such redemption provided that such redemption was subject to one or more conditions precedent and (2) any such condition precedent shall not have been satisfied at the time or times and in the manner specified in such Notice of Redemption.  Notwithstanding the fact that the Fund may not have redeemed Preferred Shares for which a Notice of Redemption has been mailed, dividends may be declared and paid on Preferred Shares and shall include those Preferred Shares for which a Notice of Redemption has been mailed.
          (f)          Transfer Agent As Trustee of Redemption Payments By Fund. All moneys paid to the Fund’s transfer agent for payment of the Redemption Price of Preferred Shares called for redemption shall be held in trust by the transfer agent for the benefit of Holders of shares so to be redeemed. 
(g)          Shares for which Notice of Redemption Has Been Given Are No Longer Outstanding. Provided a Notice of Redemption has been given pursuant to paragraph (c) of this Section 11, upon deposit with the Fund’s transfer agent (on the Business Day fixed for redemption, in funds available on that Business Day in The City of New York, New York) of funds sufficient to redeem the Preferred Shares that are the subject of such notice, dividends on such shares shall cease to accumulate and such shares shall no longer be deemed to be outstanding for any purpose, and all rights of the Holders of the shares so called for redemption shall cease and terminate, except the right of such Holders to receive the Redemption Price, but without any interest or other additional amount, except as provided in subparagraph (e)(i) of Section 2 and in Section 3.  Upon surrender in accordance with the Notice of Redemption of the certificates, if any, for any shares so redeemed (properly endorsed or assigned for transfer, if the Board of Directors shall so require and the Notice of Redemption shall so state), the Redemption Price shall be paid by the Fund to the Holders of Preferred Shares subject to redemption.  In the case that fewer than all of the shares represented by any such certificate are redeemed, a new
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certificate shall be issued, representing the unredeemed shares, without cost to the Holder thereof.   
(h)          Compliance with Applicable Law.  In effecting any redemption pursuant to this Section 11, the Fund shall use its best efforts to comply with all applicable conditions precedent to effecting such redemption under the 1940 Act and any applicable Maryland law, but shall effect no redemption except in accordance with the 1940 Act and any applicable Maryland law.
(i)          Reserved.
(j)          Purchase or Other Acquisition of Preferred Stock.  In the event that the Fund shall purchase, redeem or otherwise acquire any shares of preferred stock, including, without limitation, any shares of a series of Preferred Shares, the Fund shall, simultaneous with such purchase, redemption or acquisition, redeem Preferred Shares of each series then outstanding pro rata based upon the aggregate liquidation value of each class or series of preferred stock outstanding and subject to purchase, acquisition or redemption.  Such redemption will be made in accordance with the operative provisions of Section 11(a).  Any shares that are purchased, redeemed or otherwise acquired by the Fund shall have no voting rights.  If fewer than all the outstanding Preferred Shares are redeemed or otherwise acquired by the Fund, the Fund shall give notice of such transaction to each Holder, in accordance with the procedures agreed upon by the Board of Directors.
Section 12.          Liquidation Rights.
(a)          Ranking.  The shares of a series of Preferred Shares shall rank on a parity with each other, with shares of any other series of Preferred Shares and with shares of any other series of preferred stock as to the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund.
(b)          Distributions upon Liquidation.  Upon the dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, whether voluntary or involuntary, the Holders of Preferred Shares then outstanding shall be entitled to receive and to be paid out of the assets of the Fund available for distribution to its stockholders, before any payment or distribution shall be made on the Common Shares or on any other class of shares of the Fund ranking junior to the Preferred Shares upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up, an amount equal to the Liquidation Preference with respect to such shares plus an amount equal to all dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared but excluding interest thereon) accumulated but unpaid to (but not including) the date of its final distribution in same day funds.  After the payment to the Holders of the Preferred Shares of the full preferential amounts provided for in this paragraph (b), the Holders of Preferred Shares as such shall have no right or claim to any of the remaining assets of the Fund.
(c)          Pro Rata Distributions.  In the event the assets of the Fund available for distribution to the Holders of Preferred Shares upon any dissolution, liquidation, or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, whether voluntary or involuntary, shall be insufficient to pay in full all amounts to which such Holders are entitled pursuant to paragraph (b) of this Section 12, no such distribution shall be made on account of any shares of any other class or series of preferred stock ranking on a
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parity with the Preferred Shares with respect to the distribution of assets upon such dissolution, liquidation or winding up unless proportionate distributive amounts shall be paid on account of the Preferred Shares, ratably, in proportion to the full distributable amounts for which holders of all such parity shares are respectively entitled upon such dissolution, liquidation or winding up.
(d)          Rights of Junior Shares.  Subject to the rights of the holders of shares of any series or class or classes of shares ranking on a parity with the Preferred Shares with respect to the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, after payment shall have been made in full to the Holders of the Preferred Shares as provided in paragraph (b) of this Section 12, but not prior thereto, any other series or class or classes of shares ranking junior to the Preferred Shares with respect to the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund shall, subject to the respective terms and provisions (if any) applying thereto, be entitled to receive any and all assets remaining to be paid or distributed, and the Holders of the Preferred Shares shall not be entitled to share therein.
(e)          Certain Events not Constituting Liquidation.  Neither the sale of all or substantially all the property or business of the Fund, nor the merger or consolidation of the Fund into or with any corporation nor the merger or consolidation of any corporation into or with the Fund shall be a dissolution, liquidation or winding up, whether voluntary or involuntary, for the purposes of this Section 12.
Section 13.           Reserved.
Section 14.           Miscellaneous.
(a)          Amendment to Add Additional Series.  Subject to the provisions of paragraph (c) of Section 10, the Board of Directors may, by resolution duly adopted, without stockholder approval (except as otherwise provided by these Articles Supplementary or required by applicable law), approve an annex hereto, which shall be filed with the State Department of Assessments and Taxation of Maryland, all in compliance with the applicable provisions of the Maryland General Corporation Law, (1) to reflect any amendments hereto which the Board of Directors is entitled to adopt, pursuant to the terms of these Articles Supplementary without stockholder approval or (2) to classify or reclassify additional series of Preferred Shares or additional shares of a series of Preferred Shares (and terms relating thereto) to the series and Preferred Shares described herein.  Each such additional series and all such additional shares shall be governed by the terms of these Articles Supplementary except as such annex shall otherwise provide.
(b)          Fractional Shares.  Fractional Preferred Shares may be issued. 
(c)          Status of Preferred Shares Redeemed, Exchanged or Otherwise Acquired by the Fund.  Preferred Shares that are redeemed, exchanged or otherwise acquired by the Fund shall return to the status of authorized and unissued Preferred Shares.
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(d)          Headings not Determinative.  The headings contained in these Articles Supplementary are for convenience of reference only and shall not affect the meaning or interpretation of these Articles Supplementary.
(e)          Board May Resolve Ambiguities.  To the extent permitted by applicable law, the Board of Directors may interpret or adjust the provisions of these Articles Supplementary to resolve any inconsistency or ambiguity or to remedy any formal defect; provided, however, in no event shall the Board of Directors interpret or adjust such provisions in a manner which could reasonably be expected to have an adverse effect on any Holder of Preferred Shares or affect any series of Preferred Shares materially differently than any other series of Preferred Shares. 
(f)          Inconsistencies with Articles of Incorporation.  To the extent there is any inconsistency between these Articles Supplementary and the Fund’s Articles of Incorporation, the provisions of the Articles Supplementary shall take precedence to the extent permitted by applicable law.
(g)          Notices.  All notices or communications, unless otherwise specified in the Bylaws of the Fund or these Articles Supplementary, shall be sufficiently given if in writing and delivered in person or by facsimile with a copy mailed by recognized overnight delivery service or mailed by recognized delivery service, postage prepaid.  Notices delivered pursuant to this Section 14 shall be deemed given on the earlier of the date received or the date five days after which such notice is mailed, except as otherwise provided in these Articles Supplementary or by the Maryland General Corporation Law for notices of stockholders’ meetings.

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In Witness Whereof, Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc. has caused these presents to be signed on August 5, 2010 in its name and on its behalf by its President or a Vice President and witnessed by its Secretary or Assistant Secretary.

Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies
Fund Inc.
 
 
 
/s/ Robert Conti                        
 
     Name: Robert Conti
       Title: President
   
Witness:
/s/ Claudia A. Brandon                        
Name: Claudia A. Brandon
Title: Executive Vice President and Secretary

The undersigned President or a Vice President of Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., who executed on behalf of the Fund the foregoing Articles Supplementary of which this Certificate is made a part, hereby acknowledges in the name and on behalf of said Fund the foregoing Articles Supplementary to be the corporate act of the Fund, and states under penalties of perjury that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief the matters and facts set forth therein with respect to the authorization and approval thereof are true in all material respects.

 
/s/ Robert Conti                        
 
     Name: Robert Conti
       Title: President
   





EXHIBIT (a)(iii)


ARTICLES OF TRANSFER

Between

NEUBERGER BERMAN INCOME OPPORTUNITY FUND INC.
(a Maryland Corporation)

and

NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND INC.
(a Maryland Corporation)


Neuberger Berman Income Opportunity Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation having its principal office in Baltimore City, Maryland (which is hereinafter called the “Transferor”), and Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation having its principal office in Baltimore City, Maryland (which is hereinafter called the “Transferee”), hereby certify to the State Department of Assessments and Taxation of Maryland that:
FIRST:           The Transferor agrees to transfer to the Transferee all or substantially all of its property and assets.
SECOND:       The name of the Transferor is Neuberger Berman Income Opportunity Fund Inc.  The Transferor is a corporation incorporated under the laws of the State Maryland.

THIRD:           The name of the Transferee is Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.  The Transferee is a corporation incorporated under the laws of the State of Maryland.
FOURTH:        The address and principal place of business of both the Transferor and the Transferee is:
605 Third Avenue
New York, New York  10158-0180
FIFTH:            The principal office of both the Transferor and the Transferee in the State of Maryland is in Baltimore City:
CSC—Lawyers Incorporating Service Company
7 St. Paul Street, Suite 1660
Baltimore, MD  21202
SIXTH:          Neither Transferor nor the Transferee owns an interest in land located in the State of Maryland.
SEVENTH:       The nature and amount of the consideration to be issued by the Transferee for the assets of the Transferor is (a) the number of full and fractional shares of Transferee common stock (or cash in lieu thereof), determined by dividing the Transferor’s net value attributable to the Transferor common stock by the net asset value of a share of Transferee common stock; (b) the

number of full shares of Transferee preferred stock equal to the number of full shares of Transferor preferred shares outstanding; and (c) the assumption of all of Transferor’s liabilities.
EIGHTH:          (a)  The terms and conditions of the transaction set forth in these Articles of Transfer were advised, authorized, and approved by the Board of Directors of the Transferor and approved by the stockholders of the Transferor in the manner and by the vote required by its charter and the laws of the State of Maryland.
(i)          The Board of Directors of the Transferor at a meeting held on February 17, 2010, adopted resolutions approving the Agreement and Plan of Reorganization dated as of August 6, 2010 (the “Agreement”), among Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund, a Delaware statutory trust, the Transferor and the Transferee, and declaring that the proposed transfer was advisable on substantially the terms and conditions set forth or referred to in the Agreement and directing that the proposed transfer be submitted for consideration at the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Transferor held on June 11, 2010.
(ii)          Notice of the annual meeting of stockholders of the Transferor, which stated that a purpose of the annual meeting was to act on the proposed transfer, was given by the Transferor as required by law to each stockholder of the Transferor entitled to vote on the proposed transfer.
(iii)          The proposed transfer was approved by the stockholders of the Transferor at the annual meeting of stockholders reconvened on July 1, 2010, by the affirmative vote of a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on the matter.
(b)          The terms and conditions of the transaction set forth in these Articles of Transfer were also advised, authorized, and approved by the Board of Directors of the Transferee in the manner and by the vote required by its charter and the laws of the State of Maryland.
(i)          The Board of Directors of the Transferee at a meeting held on June 30, 2010 adopted resolutions declaring that the terms and conditions of the transaction described herein were advised, authorized and approved.

NINTH:          These Articles shall become effective as of 5:01 p.m. EST on August 6, 2010.
2

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, Neuberger Berman Income Opportunity Fund Inc. and Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc. have each caused these Articles of Transfer to be signed as of August 6, 2010 in its name and on its behalf by its President or Vice President and witnessed by its Secretary or Assistant Secretary.


 
NEUBERGER BERMAN INCOME
OPPORTUNITY FUND INC.
 
 
 
By:
/s/ Robert Conti                        
 
 
Name:
Robert Conti
    Title:
President


WITNESS:
 
/s/ Claudia A. Brandon                     
Name:
Claudia A. Brandon
Title:
Secretary


 
NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD
STRATEGIES FUND INC.
 
 
 
By:
/s/ Robert Conti                        
 
 
Name:
Robert Conti
    Title:
President


WITNESS:
 
/s/ Claudia A. Brandon                     
Name:
Claudia A. Brandon
Title:
Secretary




3

The undersigned President or Vice President of Neuberger Berman Income Opportunity Fund Inc., who executed on behalf of said corporation the foregoing Articles of Transfer of which this Certificate is made a part, hereby acknowledges in the name and on behalf of said corporation the foregoing Articles of Transfer to be the corporate act of said corporation, and states under penalties of perjury that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief the matters and facts set forth therein with respect to the authorization and approval thereof are true in all material respects.

 
 
  /s/ Robert Conti                          
  Name:
Robert Conti
  Title:
President





4


The undersigned President or Vice President of Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., who executed on behalf of said corporation the foregoing Articles of Transfer of which this Certificate is made a part, hereby acknowledges in the name and on behalf of said corporation the foregoing Articles of Transfer to be the corporate act of said corporation, and states under penalties of perjury that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief the matters and facts set forth therein with respect to the authorization and approval thereof are true in all material respects.

 
 
  /s/ Robert Conti                          
  Name:
Robert Conti
  Title:
President


5
EXHIBIT (a)(v)

















Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
Articles Supplementary Creating and Fixing the Rights of
Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares
Series C















Table of Contents
          

Section Heading Page
     
Designation

1
     
Definitions

1
     
Section 1.
Number of Authorized Shares
12
     
Section 2.
Dividends
12
(a)
Ranking
12
(b)
Cumulative Cash Dividends
12
(c)
Dividends Cumulative from Date of Original Issue
13
(d)
Dividend Payment Dates and Adjustment Thereof
13
(e)
Dividend Rates and Calculation of Dividends
13
(f)
Curing an Overdue Payment Obligation
14
(g)
Dividend Payments by Fund to Holders
14
(h)
Dividends Paid to Holders
15
(i)
Dividends Credited against Earliest Accumulated but Unpaid Dividends
15
(j)
Special Dividends under Master Securities Agreement
15
     
Section 3.
Reserved
15
     
Section 4.
Reserved
15
     
Section 5.
Voting Rights
15
(a)
One Vote per Preferred Share
15
(b)
Voting for Additional Directors
16
(c)
Holders of Preferred Shares to Vote on Certain Other Matters
17
(d)
Relative Rights and Preferences
18
(e)
Board Actions Under These Articles Supplementary
18
(f)
No Preemptive Rights, Cumulative Voting or Appraisal Rights
19
(g)
Voting for Directors Sole Remedy for Fund’s Failure to Pay Dividends
19
(h)
Holders Entitled to Vote
20
(i)
Exemption from Sections 3-701 to 3-709 of Maryland General Corporation Law
20
     
Section 6.
Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio
20
     
Section 7.
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test
20
     
Section 8.
Minimum Net Asset Value
22

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Section 9.
Indebtedness.
22
     
Section 10.
Maintenance of Status
22
     
Section 11.
Most Favored Investor Status
23
     
Section 12.
Restrictions on Dividends
23
(a)
Dividends on Shares other than Preferred Shares
23
(b)
Other Restrictions on Dividends
23
     
Section 13.
Right of First Refusal
24
     
Section 14.
Redemption
25
(a)
Optional Redemption
25
(b)
Special Optional Redemption
26
(c)
Mandatory Redemption
26
(d)
Notice of Redemption
28
(e)
No Redemption under Certain Circumstances
28
(f)
Absence of Funds Available for Redemption
28
(g)
Transfer Agent As Trustee of Redemption Payments By Fund
29
(h)
Shares for which Notice of Redemption Has Been Given Are No Longer Outstanding
29
(i)
Compliance with Applicable Law
29
(j)
Purchase or Other Acquisition of Preferred Stock
29
     
Section 15.
Liquidation Rights
30
(a)
Ranking
30
(b)
Distributions upon Liquidation
30
(c)
Pro Rata Distributions
30
(d)
Rights of Junior Shares
30
(e)
Certain Events not Constituting Liquidation
31
     
Section 16.
Miscellaneous
31
(a)
Amendment to Add Additional Series
31
(b)
Fractional Shares
31
(c)
Status of Preferred Shares Redeemed, Exchanged or Otherwise Acquired by the Fund
31
(d)
Headings not Determinative
31
(e)
Board May Resolve Ambiguities
31
(f)
Inconsistencies with Articles of Incorporation
31
(g)
Notices
31

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Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation (the “Fund”), certifies to the State Department of Assessments and Taxation of Maryland that:
First: Pursuant to the authority expressly vested in the Board of Directors of the Fund by Article Sixth of the Fund’s Articles of Incorporation (which, as restated, amended or supplemented from time to time are, together with these Articles Supplementary, herein called the “Charter”), the Board of Directors has, by resolution, reclassified from the unissued common stock of the Fund and authorized the issuance of 7,600,000 Series C Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, par value $.0001 per share, liquidation preference $12.50 per share plus an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared).
Second: The preferences, rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends, qualifications, and terms and conditions of redemption, and other rights and limitations of the Series C Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares and each other series of Preferred Shares now or hereafter described in these Articles Supplementary are as set forth in these Articles Supplementary.
Designation
Series C: 7,600,000 shares of preferred stock, par value $.0001 per share, liquidation preference $12.50 per share plus an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared), are hereby designated Series C Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares (“Series C Shares”).  Each Series C Share shall have a dividend rate equal to the Applicable Rate from time to time.
Each Preferred Share shall have such preferences, rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends, qualifications and terms and conditions of redemption, in addition to those required by applicable law, as are set forth in these Articles Supplementary.  Subject to the provisions of Section 5(c) and Section 13, the Board of Directors of the Fund may, in the future, classify or reclassify additional shares of the Fund’s capital stock as Preferred Shares, with the same preferences, rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends, qualifications and terms and conditions of redemption and other terms herein described, except that the Applicable Rate and any other changes in the terms herein set forth shall be as set forth in an Amendment to these Articles Supplementary or other articles supplementary classifying or reclassifying such shares as Preferred Shares.
Definitions
As used in these Articles Supplementary, the following terms shall have the following meanings (with terms defined in the singular having comparable meanings when used in the plural and vice versa), unless the context otherwise requires:
(a)     “Additional Covenant” means any covenant that measures or tests the financial condition or financial position of the Fund, including, but not limited to,

covenants that specify or require the maintenance of certain financial ratios applicable to the Fund, and the default provision related thereto (regardless of whether such provision is labeled or otherwise characterized as a covenant or a default).
(b)     “Affiliate” means, at any time, and with respect to any Person, any other Person that at such time directly or indirectly through one or more intermediaries Controls, or is controlled by, or is under common Control with, such first Person.  As used in this definition, “Control” means the possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of a Person, whether through the ownership of voting securities, by contract or otherwise.  Unless the context otherwise clearly requires, any reference to an “Affiliate” is a reference to any Affiliate of the Fund.
(c)     “Agency Discounted Value” means the quotient of the Market Value of an Eligible Asset divided by the applicable Rating Agency Discount Factor, provided that with respect to an Eligible Asset that is currently callable, Agency Discounted Value will be equal to the quotient as calculated above or the call price, whichever is lower, and that with respect to an Eligible Asset that is prepayable, Agency Discounted Value will be equal to the quotient as calculated above or the par value, whichever is lower.
(d)     “Annual Valuation Date” means the last Business Day of July of each year or such other date as may be agreed upon by the Fund and Moody’s, Fitch, S&P or an Approved NRSRO, as applicable.
(e)     Applicable Rate” means the rate set for a series of Preferred Shares; with respect to the Series C Shares, the Applicable Rate means, for any Dividend Period, LIBOR for such Dividend Period plus 2.05% (205 basis points).
(f)     “Approved NRSRO” means a nationally recognized statistical ratings organization as approved by the Required Holders.
(g)     Approved Replacement NRSRO” means S&P, Moody’s and Kroll.
(h)     Approved NRSRO Discount Factor” means the discount factors set forth in the Approved NRSRO Guidelines for use in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with the Approved NRSRO’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(i)     Approved NRSRO Eligible Asset” means assets of the Fund set forth in the Approved NRSRO Guidelines as eligible for inclusion in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with Approved NRSRO’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(j)     Approved NRSRO Guidelines” means the guidelines reflecting the Approved NRSRO’s rating criteria for the then-current rating of the Senior Securities, as may be amended from time to time.
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(k)     “Auditor’s Confirmation” has the meaning specified in paragraph (c) of Section 7 of these Articles Supplementary.
(l)     Base Rate” means, at any time, the Federal Funds Rate plus 2.05% (205 basis points).
(m)  “Benchmark” means, initially, LIBOR; provided that if a Benchmark Transition Event and its related Benchmark Replacement Date have occurred with respect to LIBOR or the then-current Benchmark, then “Benchmark” means the applicable Benchmark Replacement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, it is agreed that until such Benchmark Replacement is determined by the Fund and approved by the Series C Shares Required Holders, the Base Rate shall automatically (without further action by any Person) apply in lieu of LIBOR for all Series C Shares and any other amounts outstanding with respect to Series C Shares that accrue dividends (or are otherwise calculated) based on LIBOR. 
(n)     “Benchmark Replacement” means the sum of: (a) the alternate benchmark rate (which may include Term SOFR) that has been selected by the Fund, and approved by the Series C Required Holders, giving due consideration to (i) any selection or recommendation of a replacement rate or the mechanism for determining such a rate by the Relevant Governmental Body or (ii) any evolving or then-prevailing market convention for determining a rate of interest as a replacement to LIBOR for any Dollar-denominated preferred share offerings including any mathematical or other adjustments to such benchmark and (b) the Benchmark Replacement Adjustment; provided that, if the Benchmark Replacement as so determined would be less than zero, the Benchmark Replacement will be deemed to be zero for the purposes of this Agreement.
(o)     The “Benchmark Replacement Adjustment” means with respect to any replacement of LIBOR with an Unadjusted Benchmark Replacement for each applicable Dividend Period, the spread adjustment, or method for calculating or determining such spread adjustment (which may be a positive or negative value or zero), that has been selected by the Fund and agreed to by the Series C Required Holders giving due consideration to (i) any selection or recommendation of a spread adjustment, or method for calculating or determining such spread adjustment, for the replacement of the Benchmark with the applicable Unadjusted Benchmark Replacement by the Relevant Governmental Body or (ii) any evolving or then-prevailing market convention for determining a spread adjustment, or method for calculating or determining such spread adjustment, for the replacement of the Benchmark with the applicable Unadjusted Benchmark Replacement for Dollar-denominated preferred share offerings at such time.
(p)     “Benchmark Replacement Conforming Changes” means, with respect to any Benchmark Replacement, any technical, administrative or operational changes (including changes to the definition of “Dividend Period,” timing and frequency of determining rates and making payments of dividends, and other administrative matters) that the Fund and the Series C Required Holders agree may be appropriate to reflect the adoption of such Benchmark Replacement in a manner substantially consistent with
- 3 -

market practice (or, if the Fund and the Series C Required Holders agree that adoption of any portion of such market practice is not administratively feasible or if the Fund and the Series C Required Holders agree that no market practice for use of the Benchmark Replacement exists, in such other manner as the issuer or its designee determines is reasonably necessary).
(q)     “Benchmark Replacement Date” means the earliest to occur of the following events with respect to the then-current Benchmark:
(1)
in the case of clause (1) or (2) of the definition of “Benchmark Transition Event,” the later of (a) the date of the public statement or publication of information referenced therein and (b) the date on which the administrator of the Benchmark permanently or indefinitely ceases to provide the Benchmark; or
(2)
in the case of clause (3) of the definition of “Benchmark Transition Event,” the date of the public statement or publication of information referenced therein.
For the avoidance of doubt, if the event giving rise to the Benchmark Replacement Date occurs on the same day as, but earlier than, the Reference Time in respect of any determination, the Benchmark Replacement Date will be deemed to have occurred prior to the Reference Time for such determination.
(r)     “Benchmark Transition Event” means the occurrence of one or more of the following events with respect to the then-current Benchmark:
(1) a public statement or publication of information by or on behalf of the administrator of the Benchmark announcing that such administrator has ceased or will cease to provide the Benchmark, permanently or indefinitely, provided that, at the time of such statement or publication, there is no successor administrator that will continue to provide the Benchmark;
(2) a public statement or publication of information by the regulatory supervisor for the administrator of the Benchmark, the central bank for the currency of the Benchmark, an insolvency official with jurisdiction over the administrator for the Benchmark, a resolution authority with jurisdiction over the administrator for the Benchmark or a court or an entity with similar insolvency or resolution authority over the administrator for the Benchmark, which states that the administrator of the Benchmark has ceased or will cease to provide the Benchmark permanently or indefinitely, provided that, at the time of such statement or publication, there is no successor administrator that will continue to provide the Benchmark; or
(3) a public statement or publication of information by the regulatory supervisor for the administrator of the Benchmark announcing that the Benchmark is no longer representative.
(s)     “Board of Directors” means the Board of Directors of the Fund or any duly authorized committee thereof.
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(t)     “Business Day” means any day other than a Saturday, a Sunday, a day on which commercial banks in New York City are required or authorized to be closed or, other than with respect to determining the date or dates on which any sums are to become due under these Articles Supplementary on the Preferred Shares, a day on which the New York Stock Exchange is required or authorized to be closed.
(u)     “Charter” has the meaning specified on the first page of these Articles Supplementary.
(v)     “Code” means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
(w)     “Common Shares” means the outstanding shares of common stock, par value $.0001 per share, of the Fund.
(x)     Corresponding Tenor” with respect to a Benchmark Replacement means a tenor (including overnight) having approximately the same length (disregarding business day adjustment) as the applicable tenor for the then-current Benchmark. “Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Website” means the website of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York at http://www.newyorkfed.org, or any successor source.
(y)     “Cure Date” means the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio Cure Date, the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date or the Minimum Net Asset Value Cure Date, as the case may be.
(z)     “Date of Original Issue,” with respect to shares of a series of the Preferred Shares, means the date on which the Fund initially issued such shares.
(aa)     “Dividend” or “dividend” means any “distribution” (as defined in Section 2-301 of Title 2, Subtitle 3 of the Maryland General Corporation Law) declared by the Fund’s Board of Directors.
(bb)     “Dividend Payment Date,” with respect to shares of a series of Preferred Shares, means any date on which dividends are payable on shares of such series pursuant to the provisions of paragraph (d) of Section 2 of these Articles Supplementary.
(cc)     “Dividend Period,” with respect to shares of a series of Preferred Shares, means each period commencing on the Date of Original Issue and continuing to but excluding the first Dividend Payment Date and, thereafter, commencing on a Dividend Payment Date and continuing up to, but not including, the next Dividend Payment Date for shares of such series.
(dd)     “Early Redemption Amount” means, in connection with any redemption of the Series C Shares pursuant to Section 14, an amount equal to the applicable percentage of the Liquidation Preference of the Series C Shares or portion thereof to be redeemed as follows:
- 5 -

If Redeemed During the 12 month
period Ending August 3,
Applicable Percentage
2021
1.0%
2022
0.5%
(ee)     “Eligible Assets” means Moody’s Eligible Assets, Fitch’s Eligible Assets, S&P’s Eligible Assets or Approved NRSRO Eligible Assets, whichever is applicable, if the Rating Agency is rating the Preferred Shares at the Fund’s request.
(ff)     Equity Tender Offer” means a liquidity event for holders of Common Shares and includes, without limitation, a tender offer for Common Shares (pursuant to rule 13e-4 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (or any successor rule thereto) or otherwise), repurchases of Common Shares in the secondary market, and a capital repayment plan.
(gg)     “Exposure Period” means the period commencing on a given Valuation Date and ending 45 days thereafter.
(hh)     Federal Funds Rate” means, for any period, a fluctuating interest rate per annum equal for each day during such period to the weighted average of the rates on overnight Federal funds transactions with members of the Federal Reserve System arranged by Federal funds brokers, as published for such day (or, if such day is not a Business Day, for the immediately preceding Business Day) by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, or, if such rate is not so published for any day which is a Business Day, the average of the quotations for such day on such transactions received by the Fund from three Federal Funds brokers of recognized standing selected by the Fund; provided that the Series C Shares Required Holders shall consent to the brokers selected and shall be provided with such documentation as reasonably requested, such consent not to be unreasonably withheld, delayed or conditioned; provided, further, however, that if the Federal Funds Rate determined as provided above would be less than zero percent (0.0%), then the Federal Funds Rate shall be deemed to be zero percent (0.0%).
(ii)     “Fitch” means Fitch Ratings Inc. and its successors.
(jj)     “Fitch Discount Factor” means the discount factors set forth in the Fitch Guidelines for use in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with Fitch’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(kk)     “Fitch Eligible Asset” means assets of the Fund set forth in the Fitch Guidelines as eligible for inclusion in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with Fitch’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(ll)     “Fitch Guidelines” means the guidelines reflecting Fitch’s rating criteria for the then-current rating of the Senior Securities, as may be amended from time to time.
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(mm)    “Floating Rate Dividend Determination Date” means, with respect to any Dividend Period, the second Business Day before the first day of such Dividend Period (or the third Business Day before the first day of the first Dividend Period).
(nn)     “Fund” means the entity named on the first page of these Articles Supplementary, which is the issuer of the Preferred Shares.
(oo)     “GAAP” means generally accepted accounting principles as in effect from time to time in the United States of America.
(pp)     “Holder” with respect to shares of a series of Preferred Shares, shall mean the registered holder of such shares as the same appears on the record books of the Fund.
(qq)     “Independent Accountant means a nationally recognized accountant, or firm of accountants, that is with respect to the Fund an independent public accountant or firm of independent public accountants under the Securities Act.
(rr)     LIBOR” means, with respect to any Floating Rate Dividend Determination Date, the rate per annum determined on the basis of the rate for United States dollar deposits for delivery on the first (1st) day of each Dividend Period, for a period approximately equal to such Dividend Period, as published by the ICE Benchmark Administration Limited, a United Kingdom company, at approximately 11:00 a.m., London time, two (2) Business Days prior to the first day of the Dividend Period or three (3) Business Days prior to the beginning of the first Dividend Period (or if not so published, then as determined by the Fund with the consent of the Series C Shares Required Holders, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, delayed or conditioned, from another recognized source or interbank quotation); provided, however, that if LIBOR determined as provided above with respect to any Dividend Period would be less than zero percent (0.00%), then LIBOR for such Dividend Period shall be deemed to be zero percent (0.00%).  Notwithstanding the foregoing, it is further agreed that if, at any time, a LIBOR Discontinued Determination shall occur, then LIBOR with respect to the Series C Shares shall be determined as provided in the definition of Benchmark Replacement. 
(ss)     “Liquidation Preferencewith respect to a given number of Preferred Shares, means $12.50 times that number.
(tt)     “Market Value means with respect to any asset of the Fund as of any date, the market value of such asset as determined by the Fund and used in the calculation of its published net asset value for such date, with such determination to be in compliance with applicable law (including, without limitation, the 1940 Act) as in effect on such date of determination.
(uu)     “Material Preferred Stock Agreements” means one or more agreements with respect to the purchase, acquisition or issuance of preferred stock of the Fund, or one or more articles supplementary or articles of amendment to the Articles of
- 7 -

Incorporation classifying or reclassifying preferred stock of the Fund that individually or in the aggregate have a liquidation preference in excess of $10,000,000.
(vv)     “Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio” means asset coverage, as defined in Section 18(h) of the 1940 Act (as of the date hereof), of at least 200% with respect to all outstanding Senior Securities of the Fund which are shares of stock, including all outstanding Preferred Shares.
(ww)     “Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio Cure Date,” with respect to the failure by the Fund to maintain the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio (as required by Section 6 of these Articles Supplementary) as of the last Business Day of each month, means the ten Business Days following the last day of such month.
(xx)     “Minimum Net Asset Value Test” means a Net Asset Value of $75,000,000 on each Valuation Date.
(yy)     “Minimum Net Asset Value Test Cure Date,” with respect to the failure by the Fund to satisfy the Minimum Net Asset Value Test (as required by Section 8 of these Articles Supplementary) as of a given Valuation Date, means the tenth Business Day following such Valuation Date, or such later date as may be agreed or consented to by the Series C Required Holders.
(zz)     “Moody’s” means Moody’s Investors Service, Inc., a Delaware corporation, and its successors at law.
(aaa)   “Moody’s Discount Factor” means the discount factors set forth in the Fund’s Guidelines for use in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with Moody’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(bbb)   “Moody’s Eligible Assets” means assets of the Fund set forth in the Moody’s Guidelines as eligible for inclusion in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with Moody’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(ccc)    “Moody’s Guidelines” mean the guidelines reflecting Moody’s rating criteria, as may be amended from time to time, in connection with Moody’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(ddd)    “1940 Act” means the Investment Company Act of 1940, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder and all exemptive relief, if any, obtained by the Fund thereunder, as the same may be amended from time to time.
(eee)   Net Asset Value” shall be calculated by taking the total value of the Fund’s assets minus the total value of the Fund’s liabilities on each Valuation Date.
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(fff)    “Notice of Redemption” means any notice with respect to the redemption of Preferred Shares pursuant to paragraph (d) of Section 14 of these Articles Supplementary.
(ggg)   “Overdue Payment Obligation,” with respect to Preferred Shares, means a failure by the Fund to pay to the Holders, not later than 12:00 noon, Eastern time, (A) within five Business Days of any Dividend Payment Date for Preferred Shares, in immediately available funds, the full amount of any dividend (whether or not earned or declared) to be paid on such Dividend Payment Date on any Preferred Shares or (B) on any Term Redemption Date, in immediately available funds, the Redemption Price to be paid on such Term Redemption Date or (C) any other redemption date in immediately available funds on such redemption date for Preferred Shares, the Redemption Price to be paid on such redemption date for any Preferred Shares after a Notice of Redemption is given pursuant to paragraph (d) of Section 14 of these Articles Supplementary; provided, however, that the foregoing clause (C) shall not apply to the Fund’s failure to pay the Redemption Price in respect of Preferred Shares when the related Notice of Redemption provides that redemption of such shares is subject to one or more conditions precedent and any such condition precedent shall not have been satisfied at the time or times and in the manner specified in such Notice of Redemption.
(hhh)   “Overdue Rate” means, with respect to shares of a series of Preferred Shares, a dividend rate that is equal to a dividend rate that is equal to the greater of (i) 4.00% per annum above the Applicable Rate that would otherwise be applicable during any given period or (ii) 4.00% over the rate of interest publicly announced by State Street Bank and Trust Company in Boston, Massachusetts as its “base” or “prime” rate.
(iii)     “Person” means and includes an individual, a partnership, a corporation, a trust, an unincorporated association, a joint venture or other entity or a government or any agency or political subdivision thereof.
(jjj)      “Preferred Shares” means the Series C Shares and each other series of preferred stock issued hereunder.
(kkk)    “Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount” means the basic maintenance amount required by each Rating Agency that is rating the Senior Securities at the Fund’s request under its respective Rating Agency Guidelines, separately determined.
(lll)      “Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test” as of any Valuation Date is the requirement to maintain Eligible Assets with an aggregate Agency Discounted Value equal to at least the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount.  For purposes of determining the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test, Eligible Assets shall include securities lent under the Fund’s Securities Lending Program (to the extent consistent with 1940 Act interpretations, regulations and requirements).
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(mmm)   “Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date,” with respect to the failure by the Fund to satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount (as required by paragraph (a) of Section 7 of these Articles Supplementary) as of a given Valuation Date, means the tenth Business Day following such Valuation Date.
(nnn)     “Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report” means a report signed by the President, Treasurer, Assistant Treasurer, Controller, Assistant Controller or any Executive Vice President or Vice President of the Fund which sets forth, as of the related Valuation Date, the assets of the Fund, the Market Value and the Agency Discounted Value thereof (seriatim and in aggregate), and the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount.
(ooo)     “Rating Agency” means each of Fitch (if Fitch is then rating Senior Securities), Moody’s (if Moody’s is then rating Senior Securities), S&P (if S&P is then rating Senior Securities) and each Approved NRSRO (if an Approved NRSRO is then rating Senior Securities).
(ppp)     “Rating Agency Discount Factor” means the Moody’s Discount Factor (if Moody’s is then rating the Senior Securities), the Fitch Discount Factor (if Fitch is then rating Senior Securities), the S&P Discount Factor (if S&P is then rating the Senior Securities) or the Approved NRSRO Discount Factor (if an Approved NRSRO is then rating the Senior Securities), whichever is applicable.
(qqq)     “Rating Agency Guidelines” mean Fitch Guidelines (if Fitch is then rating Senior Securities), Moody’s Guidelines (if Moody’s is then rating Senior Securities), S&P Guidelines (if S&P is then rating Senior Securities), and Approved NRSRO Guidelines (if an Approved NRSRO is then rating Senior Securities).
(rrr)      “Redemption Price” means the applicable redemption price specified in Section 14 of these Articles Supplementary.
(sss)     Reference Time” with respect to any determination of the Benchmark means (1) if the Benchmark is LIBOR, 11:00 a.m. (London time) on the day that is two London banking days preceding the date of such determination, and (2) if the Benchmark is not LIBOR, the time determined by the Fund or its designee with the approval of the Series C Required Holders in accordance with the Benchmark Replacement Conforming Changes.
(ttt)     Relevant Governmental Body” means the Federal Reserve Board and/or the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, or a committee officially endorsed or convened by the Federal Reserve Board and/or the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or any successor thereto.
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(uuu)   “Required Holders” means, at any time, the Holders of more than 50% of the number of Preferred Shares at the time outstanding (exclusive of Preferred Shares then owned by the Fund or any of its Affiliates).
(vvv)    “S&P” means Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services and its successors.
(www)  “S&P Discount Factor” means the discount factors set forth in the S&P Guidelines for use in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with S&P’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(xxx)     “S&P Eligible Asset” means assets of the Fund set forth in the S&P Guidelines as eligible for inclusion in calculating the Agency Discounted Value of the Fund’s assets in connection with S&P’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(yyy)     “S&P Guidelines” mean the guidelines reflecting S&P’s rating criteria, as may be amended from time to time, in connection with S&P’s ratings of Senior Securities.
(zzz)      “SEC” means the Securities and Exchange Commission of the United States, or any successor thereto.
(aaaa)    “Securities” or “Security” shall have the meaning specified in Section 2(a)(1) of the Securities Act.
(bbbb)    “Securities Act” means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended from time to time, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder from time to time in effect.
(cccc)     “Securities Lending Program” means the Fund’s program to lend its portfolio securities, conducted pursuant to agreements that provide for such loans to be callable at any time and to be continuously secured by segregated collateral equal to no less than the value, marked to market daily, of the loaned securities.
(dddd)     “Senior Securities” means all indebtedness for borrowed money of the Fund, including, without limitation, any notes, bank borrowings and (without duplication) indebtedness of the Fund with the meaning of Section 18 of the 1940 Act (as of the date hereof) and preferred stock of the Fund (including the Preferred Shares).
(eeee)     “Series C Shares” has the meaning specified on the first page of these Articles Supplementary.
(ffff)     Series C Shares Required Holders” means, at any time, the Holders of more than 50% of the number of Series C Shares at the time outstanding (exclusive of Series C Shares then owned by the Fund or any of its Affiliates).
(gggg)    SOFR” with respect to any day means the secured overnight financing rate published for such day by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, as the
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administrator of the benchmark, (or a successor administrator) on the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Website.
(hhhh)     “Term Redemption Date” means August 3, 2023.

(iiii)      Term SOFR” means the forward-looking term rate for the applicable Corresponding Tenor based on SOFR that has been selected or recommended by the Relevant Governmental Body.
(jjjj)      “Total Assets” means the aggregate amount of all assets of the Fund determined in accordance with GAAP applicable to the Fund.  For purposes of determining Total Assets, securities lent under the Fund’s Securities Lending Program shall be included in Total Assets (to the extent consistent with 1940 Act interpretations, regulations and requirements).
(kkkk)     “Unadjusted Benchmark Replacement” means the Benchmark Replacement excluding the Benchmark Replacement Adjustment.
(llll)      “Valuation Date” means every other Friday or, if such day is not a Business Day, the next preceding Business Day; provided, however, that the first Valuation Date may occur on any other date established by the Fund; provided, further, however, that such first Valuation Date will not be more than ten days from the date on which Preferred Shares initially are issued.
(mmmm)  “Voting Period” shall have the meaning specified in paragraph (b) of Section 5 of these Articles Supplementary.
Section 1.
Number of Authorized Shares.
The number of authorized shares constituting the Series C Shares is 7,600,000.
Section 2.
Dividends.
(a)     Ranking.  The shares of a series of Preferred Shares shall rank on a parity with each other, with shares of any other series of Preferred Shares and with any other series of preferred stock as to the payment of dividends by the Fund.
(b)     Cumulative Cash Dividends.  The Holders of a series of Preferred Shares shall be entitled to receive, when, as and if declared by the Board of Directors, out of funds legally available therefor in accordance with the Charter and applicable law, cumulative cash dividends at the Applicable Rate for shares of such series determined as set forth in paragraph (e) of this Section 2, and no more, payable on the Dividend Payment Dates with respect to shares of such series determined pursuant to paragraph (d) of this Section 2.  Holders of Preferred Shares shall not be entitled to any dividend, whether payable in cash, property or shares, in excess of full cumulative dividends, as herein provided, on Preferred Shares.  Except to the extent set forth in subparagraph (e)(i) of this Section 2, no interest, or sum of money in lieu of interest, shall be
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payable in respect of any dividend payment or payments on Preferred Shares which may be in arrears, and, no additional sum of money shall be payable in respect of any such arrearage.
(c)     Dividends Cumulative from Date of Original Issue.  Dividends on any series of Preferred Shares shall accumulate at the Applicable Rate for shares of such series from the Date of Original Issue thereof.
(d)     Dividend Payment Dates and Adjustment Thereof.  Dividends shall be payable on the Preferred Shares if declared by the Board of Directors (which declaration may be by a single resolution for multiple such dates), on the 3rd of each February, May, August and November in each year (each such date being a “Dividend Payment Date”); provided, however, that if the day on which dividends would otherwise be payable on Preferred Shares is not a Business Day, then such dividends shall be payable on such shares on the first Business Day that falls after such day.
(e)     Dividend Rates and Calculation of Dividends.
(i)     Dividend Rates.  The dividend rate on the Series C Shares shall be equal to the Applicable Rate so long as Series C Shares are rated on any date no less than “AA-” by Fitch (and no less than an equivalent of such ratings by another Approved NRSRO or Moody’s or S&P if such entity is rating the Senior Securities at the Fund’s request);
provided, however, if the lowest credit rating assigned on any date to the Series C Shares by Fitch (or Moody’s or S&P or another Approved NRSRO if such entity is rating the Senior Securities at the Fund’s request) is equal to one of the ratings set forth in the table below (or its equivalent by Moody’s or S&P or another Approved NRSRO), the dividend rate for the Series C Shares shall be adjusted by adding the respective enhanced dividend amount (which shall not be cumulative) (the “Enhanced Dividend Amount”) set opposite such rating to the Applicable Rate or the Overdue Rate, as the case may be.
Fitch Rating
Enhanced Dividend Amount
“A+” to “A”
0.1%
“A-  “
0.5%
“BBB+” to “BBB‑“
2.0%
“BB+” or below or there is no such rating as described below
4.0%
The Fund shall, at all times, use its reasonable best efforts to cause at least Fitch, Moody’s, S&P or another Approved NRSRO to maintain a current rating on the Series C Shares.  If, notwithstanding the foregoing requirements of this Section, none of Fitch, Moody’s, S&P or another Approved NRSRO is rating the Series C Shares, the dividend rate (so long as no such rating exists) on the Series C Shares shall be equal to the
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Applicable Rate or Overdue Rate, as the case may be, plus 4.0%; provided, however, that if Fitch ceases to provide a rating through no action or inaction of the Fund, then the dividend rate shall be equal to the Applicable Rate or the Overdue Rate, as the case may be, plus the last available Enhanced Dividend Amount rate for a period which commences on the date that Fitch ceased to provide the rating and ends on the earlier of (i) 60 days after Fitch ceased to provide the rating or (ii) the date when an Approved Replacement NRSRO rates the Series C Shares (such period, the “Rating Unavailability Cure Period”).  If any Overdue Payment Obligation exists with respect to any Preferred Shares, the rate payable on such Overdue Payment Obligation shall be equal to the Overdue Rate (as modified by the Enhanced Dividend Amount, if any) for any period during which such Overdue Payment Obligation is outstanding (including the day such Overdue Payment Obligation occurs and excluding the day such Overdue Payment Obligation is cured).
(ii)     Calculation of Dividends.  The amount of dividends per share payable on shares of a series of Preferred Shares on any date on which dividends on shares of such series shall be payable, shall be computed by multiplying the Applicable Rate (as modified by the Enhanced Dividend Amount, if any) for shares of such series in effect for such Dividend Period or Dividend Periods or part thereof for which dividends have not been paid by a fraction, the numerator of which shall be the number of days in such Dividend Period or Dividend Periods or part thereof and the denominator of which shall be 360, and applying the rate obtained against $12.50; provided, however, with respect to any Overdue Payment Obligation in respect of shares of a series of Preferred Shares, the amount due thereon shall be computed by multiplying the Overdue Rate (as modified by the Enhanced Dividend Amount, if any) for shares of such series in effect for such Dividend Period or Dividend Periods or part thereof for which such Overdue Payment Obligation has not been paid by a fraction, the numerator of which shall be the number of days in such Dividend Period or Dividend Periods or part thereof for which such Overdue Payment Obligation has not been paid and the denominator of which shall be 360, and applying the rate obtained against such Overdue Payment Obligation.
(f)     Curing an Overdue Payment Obligation.  An Overdue Payment Obligation with respect to shares of a series of Preferred Shares shall have been cured if the Fund shall have paid to the Holders (A) all accumulated and unpaid dividends, including amounts due in connection with any Overdue Payment Obligations, on the shares of such series and (B) without duplication, the Redemption Price for the shares of such series, if any, for which Notice of Redemption has been given by the Fund pursuant to paragraph (d) of Section 14 of these Articles Supplementary; provided, however, that the foregoing clause (B) shall not apply to the Fund’s failure to pay the Redemption Price in respect of any shares of a series of Preferred Shares when the related Redemption Notice provides that redemption of the shares of such series is subject to one or more conditions precedent and any such condition precedent shall not have been satisfied at the time or times and in the manner specified in such Notice of Redemption.
(g)     Dividend Payments by Fund to Holders.  The Fund shall pay to the Holders, not later than 12:00 Noon, Eastern time, on each Dividend Payment Date for shares of a series of Preferred Shares, an aggregate amount of funds available in The City of New York, New York,
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equal to the dividends to be paid to all Holders of shares of such series on such Dividend Payment Date.
(h)     Dividends Paid to Holders.  Each dividend on Preferred Shares shall be paid on the Dividend Payment Date therefor to the Holders thereof as their names appear on the record books of the Fund on the Business Day next preceding such Dividend Payment Date.
(i)     Dividends Credited against Earliest Accumulated but Unpaid Dividends.  Any dividend payment made on Preferred Shares shall first be credited against the earliest accumulated but unpaid dividends due with respect to such shares.  Dividends in arrears for any past Dividend Period may be declared and paid at any time, without reference to any regular Dividend Payment Date, to the Holders as their names appear on the record books of the Fund on such date, not exceeding 15 days preceding the payment date thereof, as may be fixed by the Board of Directors.
(j)    Special Dividends under Master Securities Agreement.  Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary (including paragraph (b) of this Section 2), amounts the Fund pays pursuant to Sections 11(c) and 15.1 of that certain Master Securities Agreement dated as of August 3, 2020, among the Fund, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and any other affiliates of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company party thereto, as amended from time to time (which sections are incorporated herein by this reference), shall be treated for all purposes hereof as dividends paid on the Series C Shares, declared by the Board of Directors on the date of payment thereof (which shall be deemed to be a Dividend Payment Date).  Each such dividend shall be paid (1) to the Holders in accordance with paragraphs (g) and (h) of this Section 2 or (2) if the Incurring Holder (as defined in such agreements) requests in writing that the Fund pay the amount due under any invoice to the Incurring Holder for any costs and expenses described in Sections 11(a) or 15.1 of such agreements directly to the Person entitled to payment thereof in lieu of the Incurring Holder’s paying same (as provided in Section 14(c) of such agreements), to such Person on behalf of and for the benefit of the Holders to whom such dividend otherwise would be payable pursuant to clause (1).
Section 3.
Reserved.
Section 4.
Reserved.
Section 5.
Voting Rights.
(a)     One Vote per Preferred Share.  Except as otherwise provided in the Charter or as otherwise required by law, (i) each Holder shall be entitled to one vote for each Preferred Share held by such Holder on each matter submitted to a vote of stockholders of the Fund, and (ii) the holders of outstanding shares of preferred stock, including Preferred Shares, and of Common Shares shall vote together as a single class; provided, however, that, at any meeting of the stockholders of the Fund held for the election of Directors, the holders of outstanding shares of preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares, represented in person or by proxy at said meeting, shall be entitled, as a class, to the exclusion of the holders of all other securities and classes of shares of stock of the Fund, to elect two Directors of the Fund (regardless of the total
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number of Directors serving on the Fund’s Board of Directors), each share of preferred stock, including each Preferred Share, entitling the holder thereof to one vote; provided, further, that if the Board of Directors shall be divided into one or more classes, the Board of Directors shall determine to which class or classes the Directors elected by the holders of preferred stock shall be assigned and the holders of preferred stock shall be entitled to elect the Directors so designated as being elected by the holders of preferred stock only when their term shall have expired; provided, finally, that such Directors appointed by the holders of preferred stock shall be allocated as evenly as possible among the classes of Directors.  Subject to paragraph (b) of this Section 5, the holders of outstanding Common Shares and shares of preferred stock, including Preferred Shares, voting together as a single class, shall elect the balance of the Directors.
(b)     Voting for Additional Directors.
(i)     Voting Period.  Except as otherwise provided in the Charter or as otherwise required by law, during any period in which any one or more of the conditions described in subparagraphs (A) or (B) of this subparagraph (b)(i) shall exist (such period being referred to herein as a “Voting Period”), the number of Directors constituting the Board of Directors shall be automatically increased by the smallest number that, when added to the two Directors elected exclusively by the holders of preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares, would constitute a majority of the Board of Directors as so increased by such smallest number; and the holders of shares of preferred stock, including Preferred Shares, shall be entitled, voting as a class on a one‑vote‑per‑share basis (to the exclusion of the holders of all other securities and classes of shares of stock of the Fund), to elect such smallest number of additional Directors, together with the two Directors that such holders are in any event entitled to elect.  A Voting Period shall commence:
(A)   if at the close of business on any dividend payment date accumulated dividends (whether or not earned or declared) on any outstanding preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares, equal to at least two full years’ dividends shall be due and unpaid; or
(B)   if at any time holders of preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares, are entitled under the 1940 Act to elect a majority of the Directors of the Fund.
Upon the termination of a Voting Period, the voting rights described in this subparagraph (b)(i) shall cease, subject always, however, to the revesting of such voting rights in the holders of preferred stock upon the further occurrence of any of the events described in this subparagraph (b)(i).
(ii)     Notice of Special Meeting.  As soon as practicable after the accrual of any right of the holders of preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares, to elect additional Directors as described in subparagraph (b)(i) of this Section 5, the Fund shall notify the Holders and the Fund shall call a special meeting of such Holders, by distributing a notice of such special meeting to such holders, such meeting to be held not less than 10 nor
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more than 30 days after the date of distribution of such notice.  If the Fund fails to send such notice to the Holders or if the Fund does not call such a special meeting, it may be called by any such Holder on like notice.  The record date for determining the Holders entitled to notice of and to vote at such special meeting shall be the close of business on the fifth Business Day preceding the day on which such notice is given or on such other date as the Fund and the Holders may agree.  At any such special meeting and at each meeting of holders of preferred stock, including Preferred Shares, held during a Voting Period at which Directors are to be elected, such holders, voting together as a class (to the exclusion of the holders of all other securities and classes of shares of stock of the Fund), shall be entitled to elect the number of Directors prescribed in subparagraph (b)(i) of this Section 5 on a one‑vote‑per‑share basis.
(iii)     Terms of Office of Existing Directors.  The terms of office of all persons who are Directors of the Fund at the time of a special meeting of Holders and holders of other shares of preferred stock of the Fund to elect Directors shall continue, notwithstanding the election at such meeting by the Holders and such other holders of the number of Directors that they are entitled to elect, and the persons so elected by the Holders and such other holders, together with the two incumbent Directors elected by the Holders and such other holders of shares of preferred stock of the Fund and the remaining incumbent Directors elected by the holders of the Common Shares and preferred stock, including Preferred Shares, shall constitute the duly elected Directors of the Fund.
(iv)     Terms of Office of Certain Directors to Terminate upon Termination of Voting Period.  Simultaneously with the termination of a Voting Period, the terms of office of the additional Directors elected by the Holders and holders of other shares of preferred stock of the Fund pursuant to subparagraph (b)(i) of this Section 5 shall terminate, the remaining Directors shall constitute the Directors of the Fund and the voting rights of the Holders and such other holders to elect additional Directors pursuant to subparagraph (b)(i) of this Section 5 shall cease, subject to the provisions of the last sentence of subparagraph (b)(i) of this Section 5.
(c)     Holders of Preferred Shares to Vote on Certain Other Matters.
(i)     Increases in Capitalization.  So long as any Preferred Shares are outstanding, the Fund shall not, without the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of at least a majority of the Preferred Shares outstanding at the time, in person or by proxy, either in writing or at a meeting, voting as a separate class:  (a) authorize, create or issue any class or series of shares ranking prior to or on a parity with Preferred Shares with respect to the payment of dividends or the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, or authorize, create or issue additional shares of any series of Preferred Shares or (b) amend, alter or repeal the provisions of the Charter, or these Articles Supplementary, whether by merger, consolidation or otherwise, so as to affect any preference, right or power of such Preferred Shares or the Holders thereof; provided, however, that (i) a division or split of a Preferred Share will be deemed to affect such preferences, rights or powers only if the terms of such division adversely affect the Holders and (ii) the authorization, creation and
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issuance of classes or series of shares ranking junior to Preferred Shares with respect to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, will be deemed to affect such preferences, rights or powers only if Moody’s, Fitch, S&P or an Approved NRSRO is then rating Preferred Shares and such issuance would, at the time thereof, cause the Fund not to satisfy the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio, the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test or the Minimum Net Asset Value Test.
So long as any Preferred Shares are outstanding, the Fund shall not, without the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of at least a majority of the Preferred Shares outstanding at the time, in person or by proxy, either in writing or at a meeting, voting as a separate class, file a voluntary application for relief under Federal bankruptcy law or any similar application under state law for so long as the Fund is solvent and does not foresee becoming insolvent.  Each action set forth above shall be voted on exclusively by the holders of preferred stock, including the Preferred Shares.  If any action set forth above would adversely affect the rights of one or more series (the “Affected Series”) of Preferred Shares in a manner different from any other series of Preferred Shares, the Fund will not approve any such action without the affirmative vote or consent of the holders of at least a majority of the shares of each such Affected Series outstanding at the time, in person or by proxy, either in writing or at a meeting (each such Affected Series voting as a separate class).
(ii)     1940 Act Matters.  Unless a higher percentage is provided for in the Charter, (A) the affirmative vote of the Holders of a “majority of the outstanding” (as such term is defined in the 1940 Act) preferred stock of the Fund, including Preferred Shares, voting as a separate class, shall be required to approve (A) any plan of reorganization (as such term is used in the 1940 Act) adversely affecting such shares and (B) any action requiring a vote of security holders of the Fund under Section 13(a) of the 1940 Act.  In the event a vote of Holders of Preferred Shares is required pursuant to the provisions of Section 13(a) of the 1940 Act, the Fund shall, not later than ten Business Days prior to the date on which such vote is to be taken, notify each Rating Agency rating the Preferred Shares at the Fund’s request that such vote is to be taken and the nature of the action with respect to which such vote is to be taken.  The Fund shall, not later than ten Business Days after the date on which such vote is taken, notify each such Rating Agency of the results of such vote.
(d)     Relative Rights and Preferences.  Unless otherwise required by law or provided elsewhere in the Charter, the Holders shall not have any relative rights or preferences or other special rights other than those specifically set forth herein.
(e)     Board Actions Under These Articles Supplementary.  The Board of Directors may, from time to time, with the consent of the Required Holders (which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed), amend, alter or repeal any or all of the definitions of the terms listed below, or any provision of these Articles Supplementary which a Rating Agency has confirmed is a predicate for any such definition:
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Auditor’s Confirmation
Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio Cure Date
Exposure Period
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report
Valuation Date
 
, provided that the Fund shall give prior written notice to the Holders of any such amendment, alteration or repeal reasonably (and in any event not less than 10 Business Days) in advance of the proposed effective date of any such amendment, alteration or repeal, together with any explanation and a description of the proposed amendment, alteration or repeal.  Holders of Common Shares shall not have the right to vote on any such amendment, alteration or repeal.  Any such amendment, alteration or repeal will not be deemed to affect the preferences, rights or powers of the Preferred Shares or the Holders thereof.  Prior to any such amendment, alteration or repeal becoming effective, the Board of Directors shall inform each Rating Agency rating the Preferred Shares at its request that it intends to implement such amendment, alteration or repeal and shall not have received objection or been informed that such amendment, alteration or repeal would impair the ratings then assigned to the Preferred Shares (and 15 Business Days has passed since the Rating Agency has received notification of the proposed action) and the Board of Directors shall confirm (which confirmation may be in the form of an opinion of the Fund’s counsel) that any such amendment, alteration or repeal is consistent with 1940 Act interpretations, regulations and requirements.
In addition, subject to compliance with applicable law, the Board of Directors may amend the definition of Applicable Rate to increase the percentage amount without the vote or consent of the holders of shares of preferred stock, including each series of Preferred Shares, or any other stockholder of the Fund, and without receiving any confirmation from any Rating Agency, provided that immediately following any such increase the Fund would meet the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount Test and any such increase shall be applicable to the shares of each series of Preferred Shares.
(f)     No Preemptive Rights, Cumulative Voting or Appraisal Rights.  The Holders shall have no preemptive rights, rights to cumulative voting or appraisal rights.  The Holders shall not be entitled to exercise any rights of an objecting stockholder provided for under Title 3, Subtitle 2 of the Maryland General Corporation Law or any successor provision.  For the avoidance of doubt, this provision does not restrict the right of first refusal set forth in Section 13 of this Articles Supplementary.
(g)     Voting for Directors Sole Remedy for Fund’s Failure to Pay Dividends.  Except as set forth in Section 2(e), in the event that the Fund fails to pay any dividends on the Preferred
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Shares, the exclusive remedy of the Holders shall be the right to vote for Directors pursuant to the provisions of this Section 5.
(h)     Holders Entitled to Vote.  For purposes of determining any rights of the Holders to vote on any matter, whether such right is created by these Articles Supplementary, by the other provisions of the Charter, by statute or otherwise, no Holder shall be entitled to vote any Preferred Shares and no Preferred Shares shall be deemed to be “outstanding” for the purpose of voting or determining the number of shares required to constitute a quorum if, prior to or concurrently with the time of determination of shares entitled to vote or shares deemed outstanding for quorum purposes, as the case may be, the requisite Notice of Redemption, with respect to such shares shall have been given as provided in paragraph (d) of Section 14.  No Preferred Shares held by the Fund or any affiliate of the Fund shall have any voting rights or be deemed to be outstanding for voting or other purposes.
(i)     Exemption from Sections 3-701 to 3-709 of Maryland General Corporation Law.      The provisions of Sections 3-701 to 3-709 of the Maryland General Corporation Law shall not apply to any acquisition of Preferred Shares issued at the initial closing to the Holders initially party to that certain Master Securities Agreement for Mandatory Redeemable Preferred Shares, Series C, dated as of August 3, 2020 (the “Master Securities Agreement”), or to a subsequent transfer of such Preferred Shares by such Holders to MetLife Affiliates, as such term is defined in such Master Securities Agreement.
Section 6.
Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio.
So long as Preferred Shares are outstanding, the Fund shall satisfy on each Valuation Date, the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio; provided, however, that the mandatory redemption pursuant to Section 14(c) shall be the sole remedy in the event the Fund fails to do so.
Section 7.
Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test.
(a)     So long as Preferred Shares are outstanding, the Fund shall satisfy on each Valuation Date, and shall verify to its satisfaction that it is maintaining on such Valuation Date, the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test; provided, however, that the mandatory redemption pursuant to Section 14(c) shall be the sole remedy in the event the Fund fails to do so.
(b)     On or before 5:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the third Business Day after a Valuation Date on which  the Fund fails to satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test, and on the third Business Day after the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date with respect to such Valuation Date, the Fund shall complete and deliver to the Rating Agency rating the Preferred Shares at the Fund’s request a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report as of the date of such failure or such Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date, as the case may be.  The Fund shall also deliver a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report to such Rating Agency on or before the seventh Business Day after the last Business Day of each month.  A failure by the Fund to deliver a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report pursuant to the preceding sentence shall be deemed to be delivery of a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance
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Test Report indicating the Agency Discounted Value for all assets of the Fund is less than the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, as of the relevant Valuation Date.
(c)     Within ten Business Days after the date of delivery of a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report in accordance with paragraph (b) of this Section 7 relating to an Annual Valuation Date, the Fund shall cause, if so requested by the Rating Agency rating the Preferred Shares at the Fund’s request, the Independent Accountant to confirm in writing to such Rating Agency (i) the mathematical accuracy of the calculations reflected in such Report, (ii) that, in such Report, the Fund correctly determined in accordance with these Articles Supplementary whether the Fund had, at such Annual Valuation Date, such Rating Agency’s Eligible Assets of an aggregate Agency Discounted Value at least equal to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, (iii) that, in such Report, the Fund determined whether the Fund had, at such Annual Valuation Date in accordance with these Articles Supplementary, with respect to the Fitch ratings on portfolio securities, the issuer name and issue size and coupon rate listed in such Report, verified by the Independent Accountant by reference to Bloomberg Financial Services or another independent source approved by such Rating Agency and the Independent Accountant shall provide a listing in its letter of any differences, (iv) with respect to the Moody’s ratings on portfolio securities, the issuer name, issue size and coupon rate listed in such Report, that such information has been verified by the Independent Accountant by reference to Bloomberg Financial Services or another independent source approved by such Rating Agency and the Independent Accountant shall provide a listing in its letter of any differences, (v) with respect to the S&P ratings on portfolio securities, the issuer name, issue size and coupon rate listed in such Report, that such information has been verified by the Independent Accountant by reference to Bloomberg Financial Services or another independent source approved by such Rating Agency and the Independent Accountant shall provide a listing in its letter of any differences, and (vi) with respect to the bid or mean price (or such alternative permissible factor used in calculating the Market Value) provided by the custodian of the Fund’s assets to the Fund for purposes of valuing securities in the Fund’s portfolio, that the Independent Accountant has traced the price used in such Report to the bid or mean price listed in such Report as provided to the Fund and verified that such information agrees (in the event such information does not agree, the Independent Accountant will provide a listing in its letter of such differences) (such confirmation is herein called the “Auditor’s Confirmation”); provided, however, that the Independent Accountant may base the conclusions related to (ii) through (vi) above on a sample of at least 25 securities (or such other number of securities as the Independent Accountant and such Rating Agency may agree from time to time).
(d)     Within ten Business Days after the date of delivery of a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report in accordance with paragraph (b) of this Section 7 relating to any Valuation Date on which the Fund failed to satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Amount, and relating to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date with respect to such failure to satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test, the Fund shall cause, if so requested by the Rating Agency rating the Preferred Shares at the Fund’s request, the Independent Accountant to provide, if so requested, to such Rating Agency an Auditor’s Confirmation as to such Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report.
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(e)     If any Auditor’s Confirmation delivered pursuant to paragraph (c) of this Section 7 shows that an error was made in the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report for a particular Valuation Date for which such Auditor’s Confirmation was required to be delivered, or shows that a lower aggregate Agency Discounted Value for the aggregate of all Eligible Assets of the Fund was determined by the Independent Accountant, then in the absence of manifest error the calculation or determination made by such Independent Accountant shall be final and conclusive and shall be binding on the Fund, and the Fund shall accordingly amend and deliver the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report to the applicable Rating Agency promptly following receipt by the Fund of such Auditor’s Confirmation.
(f)     On or before 5:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the first Business Day after the Date of Original Issue of any Preferred Shares, the Fund shall, if so requested by the Rating Agency rating the Preferred Shares at the Fund’s request, complete and deliver to such Rating Agency a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report as of the close of business on such Date of Original Issue.
(g)     On or before 5:00 p.m., Eastern time, on the seventh Business Day after either (i) the Fund shall have repurchased Common Shares or (ii) the ratio of the Agency Discounted Value of Eligible Assets to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount on any Valuation Date is less than or equal to 105% or (iii) whenever requested by the Rating Agency rating the Preferred Shares at the Fund’s request, the Fund shall complete and deliver to such Rating Agency a Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Report as of the date of any such event.
(h)     Any documents to be provided to Fitch pursuant to this Section 7 shall be delivered to Fitch electronically at the following email address: funds.surveillance@fitchratings.com or such other email address as Fitch and the Fund may agree.
Section 8.
Minimum Net Asset Value.
So long as Preferred Shares are outstanding, the Fund shall satisfy on each Valuation Date, and shall verify to its satisfaction that it is maintaining on such Valuation Date, the Minimum Net Asset Test; provided, however, that the mandatory redemption pursuant to Section 14(c) shall be the sole remedy in the event the Fund fails to do so. 
Section 9.
Reserved.
[Reserved]
Section 10.
Maintenance of Status.
So long as any Preferred Shares are outstanding, the Fund shall remain a closed-end investment company registered with the SEC under the 1940 Act.  The Fund shall also maintain its investment objective of high total return (income plus capital appreciation).  Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC or one of its Affiliates will remain the investment manager of the Fund (collectively, the “Status Covenant”); provided, however, that the mandatory
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redemption pursuant to Section 14(c) shall be the sole remedy in the event the Fund fails to comply with the Status Covenant.
Section 11.
Most Favored Investor Status.
In the event that the Fund shall at any time after the Date of Original Issue enter into, assume or otherwise become bound by or obligated under one or more Material Preferred Stock Agreements containing one or more Additional Covenants, the terms of these Articles Supplementary shall be amended to include each Additional Covenant contained in such Material Preferred Stock Agreement.  The Fund covenants to promptly execute and deliver at its reasonable expense (including, without limitation, the reasonable fees and expenses of counsel for the Holders) an amendment to these Articles Supplementary in form and substance satisfactory to the Holders evidencing the amendment of these Articles Supplementary to include such Additional Covenants, and to file such amendment with the State Department of Assessments and Taxation of Maryland, all in compliance with the applicable provisions of the Maryland General Corporation Law.
Section 12.
Restrictions on Dividends.
(a)     Dividends on Shares other than Preferred Shares.  Except as set forth in the next sentence, no dividends shall be declared or paid or set apart for payment on the shares of any class or series of shares of stock of the Fund ranking, as to the payment of dividends, on a parity with Preferred Shares for any period unless full cumulative dividends have been or contemporaneously are declared and paid on the shares of each series of Preferred Shares through its most recent Dividend Payment Date and the full amount of any redemption price payable with respect to any redemption required hereunder has been paid.  When dividends are not paid in full upon the shares of each series of Preferred Shares through its most recent Dividend Payment Date or upon the shares of any other class or series of shares of stock of the Fund ranking on a parity as to the payment of dividends with Preferred Shares through their most recent respective dividend payment dates, all dividends declared upon Preferred Shares and any other such class or series of shares of stock ranking on a parity as to the payment of dividends with Preferred Shares shall be declared pro rata so that the amount of dividends declared per share on Preferred Shares and such other class or series of shares of stock shall in all cases bear to each other the same ratio that accumulated dividends per share on the Preferred Shares and such other class or series of shares of stock bear to each other (for purposes of this sentence, the amount of dividends declared per share of Preferred Shares shall be based on the Overdue Rate (as modified by the Enhanced Dividend Amount, if any) in accordance with Section 2 for such share for the Dividend Periods during which dividends were not paid in full).
(b)     Other Restrictions on Dividends.  For so long as any Preferred Shares are outstanding, and except as set forth in paragraph (a) of this Section 12 and paragraph (c) of Section 15, (A) the Fund shall not declare, pay or set apart for payment any dividend (other than a dividend paid in shares of, or in options, warrants or rights to subscribe for or purchase, Common Shares or other shares, if any, ranking junior to the Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up) in respect of the Common Shares or any other shares of the Fund ranking junior to or on a parity with the
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Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends or the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up, or call for redemption, redeem, purchase or otherwise acquire for consideration any Common Shares or any other such junior shares (except by conversion into or exchange for shares of the Fund ranking junior to the Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up), or any such parity shares (except by conversion into or exchange for shares of the Fund ranking junior to or on a parity with Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up), unless (i) full cumulative dividends on shares of each series of Preferred Shares through its most recently ended Dividend Period shall have been paid and (ii) the Fund has redeemed the full number of Preferred Shares required to be redeemed by any provision for mandatory redemption pertaining thereto, and (B) the Fund shall not declare, pay or set apart for payment any dividend (other than a dividend paid in shares of, or in options, warrants or rights to subscribe for or purchase, Common Shares or other shares, if any, ranking junior to Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up) in respect of Common Shares or any other shares of the Fund ranking junior to Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends or the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up, or call for redemption, redeem, purchase or otherwise acquire for consideration any Common Shares or any other such junior shares (except by conversion into or exchange for shares of the Fund ranking junior to Preferred Shares as to the payment of dividends and the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up), unless immediately after such transaction the Fund could satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test, the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio and the Minimum Net Asset Value Test, each after deducting the amount of such dividend or purchase price, as the case may be; provided, that if a dividend has previously been declared on Common Stock while the Fund was in compliance with the requirements of this Section (a “Declared Common Stock Dividend”), but the Fund is no longer in compliance with the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio on the date that such Declared Common Stock Dividend shall be paid, the Fund is permitted to pay such Declared Common Stock Dividend so long as the dividend amount does not exceed the amount of the last monthly ordinary course common shares dividend.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, even if the Fund is not in compliance with the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test, the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio and the Minimum Net Asset Value Test, the Fund shall be permitted to pay a dividend on Common Shares in the minimum amount necessary to maintain its Regulated Investment Company status.
Section 13.
Right of First Refusal.
Each time after the date hereof that the Fund proposes to offer, or intends to accept an offer to purchase, any Securities issued by the Fund, each Holder of Preferred Shares (an “Eligible Holder”), shall have a right to purchase such Securities in accordance with the following provisions:
(a)     The Fund shall deliver a notice (“Notice”) to each Eligible Holder stating (i) its bona fide intention to offer or to accept an offer to purchase shares of such Securities, (ii) the number of such shares of Securities to be offered or sold, (iii) the price, if any, for which it proposes to offer or sell such shares of Securities, and (iv) the terms of such offer or sale.
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(b)     Within 15 calendar days after receipt of the Notice, each Eligible Holder may elect to purchase, at the price and on the terms specified in the Notice, the percentage of such Securities that the Preferred Shares then held by said Eligible Holder bears to the total Preferred Shares outstanding on the date of the Notice.
(c)     If any Securities which an Eligible Holder is entitled to purchase pursuant to this Section 13 are not so purchased as provided in Section 13(b), the Fund may, during the 180‑day period following the expiration of the period provided in Section 13(b), offer, or accept an offer to purchase, and sell such Securities to any Person or Persons at a price not less, and upon terms no more favorable to the offeree or purchaser, than the price and terms specified in the Notice.  If the Fund does not enter into an agreement for the sale of the shares of such Securities within such period and if such agreement is not consummated within 180 days after the execution thereof, the right provided hereunder shall be deemed to be revived with respect to any Securities so offered which remain unsold and which the Fund intends to continue to offer for sale.
(d)     The right of first refusal pursuant to this Section 13 shall be transferable and assignable by any Eligible Holder.
Section 14.
Redemption.
(a)     Optional Redemption.
(i)     Preferred Shares may be redeemed, at the option of the Fund, as a whole or from time to time in part, at any time and from time to time, out of funds legally available therefor, at a redemption price per share equal to the sum of $12.50 plus an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared) to (but not including) the date fixed for redemption, plus an amount equal to the Early Redemption Amount, if any; provided, however, that shares of a series of Preferred Shares may not be redeemed in part if after such partial redemption fewer than four hundred thousand (400,000) shares of such series of Preferred Shares remain outstanding.
(ii)     If fewer than all of the outstanding shares of a series of Preferred Shares are to be redeemed pursuant to subparagraph (i) of this paragraph (a), the number of shares of such series of Preferred Shares to be redeemed shall be determined by the Board of Directors, and such shares shall be redeemed pro rata from the Holders in proportion to the number of Preferred Shares of such series held by such Holders or by such other method that the Board of Directors deems fair and equitable.
(iii)     The Fund may not on any date provide a Notice of Redemption pursuant to paragraph (d) of this Section 14 in respect of a redemption contemplated to be effected pursuant to this paragraph (a) unless (x) on such date the Agency Discounted Value of the Eligible Assets would at least equal the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount, and would at least equal the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount immediately subsequent to such redemption if such redemption were to occur on such date, and (y) on such date the Fund would be in compliance with the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio and
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the Minimum Net Asset Value Test immediately subsequent to such redemption if such redemption were to occur on such date, and (z) on such date the Fund would be in compliance with the Indebtedness Test and the Status Covenant.  For purposes of determining in the preceding sentence whether the Agency Discounted Value of the Eligible Assets at least equals the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount, the Rating Agency Discount Factors applicable to the Eligible Assets shall be determined by reference, if applicable, to the first Exposure Period longer than the Exposure Period then applicable to the Fund, as described in the definition of Rating Agency Discount Factor.
(b)     Special Optional Redemption.  In connection with an Equity Tender Offer, the Fund may, at its option, upon notice as provided below, redeem up to 20% of the Series C Shares at a redemption price equal to $12.50 per share plus an amount equal to accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared) to (but not including) the date fixed for redemption, so long as before and after giving effect to such redemption, (x) the Fund is in compliance with the Minimum Asset Coverage ratio, the Minimum Net Asset Value Test, the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test, the Indebtedness Test and the Status Covenant and (y) (i) full cumulative dividends on shares of the Series C Shares through its most recently ended Dividend Period shall have been paid and (ii) the Fund has redeemed the full number of Series C Shares required to be redeemed, if any, by any provision for mandatory redemption pertaining thereto. The Fund will give each Holder of the Series C Shares notice pursuant to this Section 14(b) (“Section 14(b) Notice”) within two Business Days of the commencement of the Equity Tender Offer.  Each such notice shall specify the anticipated period of the Equity Tender Offer and the anticipated maximum number of Series C Shares to be redeemed in connection with the Equity Tender Offer.  The Fund shall provide updated information regarding the Equity Tender Offer upon reasonable request of any Holder of Series C Shares.  In the event of any redemption of Series C Shares under this Section 14(b), the timing of such redemption of Series C Shares shall be provided in a notice under Section 14(d) hereof and, unless otherwise consented to by the Series C Required Holders, such redemption will occur within three Business Days of the end of the period included in the Section 14(b) Notice.
(c)     Mandatory Redemption. The Fund shall redeem, at a redemption price equal to $12.50 per share plus accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared) to (but not including) the date fixed by the Board of Directors for redemption plus the Early Redemption Amount, if any, certain of the Preferred Shares, if the Fund fails to have, as applicable, Moody’s Eligible Assets with an Agency Discounted Value, Fitch Eligible Assets with an Agency Discounted Value, S&P Eligible Assets with an Agency Discounted Value or Approved NRSRO Eligible Assets with an Agency Discounted Value, in each case, greater than or equal to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount, in accordance with the requirements of the Rating Agency or Agencies then rating the Preferred Shares at the Fund’s request and such failure is not cured on or before the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test Cure Date.
The Fund shall redeem, at a redemption price equal to $12.50 per share plus accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared) to (but not including) the date fixed by the Board of Directors for redemption plus the Early Redemption Amount, if any, certain of the Preferred Shares, if the Fund fails to maintain the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio
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and such failure is not cured or waived by the Series C Required Holders on or before the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio Cure Date.
The Fund shall redeem, at a redemption price equal to $12.50 per share plus accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared) to (but not including) the date fixed by the Board of Directors for redemption plus the Early Redemption Amount, if any, certain of the Preferred Shares, if the Fund fails to maintain the Minimum Net Asset Value Test and such failure is not cured or waived by the Series C Required Holders on or before the Minimum Net Asset Value Test Cure Date.
The Fund shall redeem, at a redemption price equal to $12.50 per share plus accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared) to (but not including) the date fixed by the Board of Directors for redemption plus the Early Redemption Amount, if any, all of the Preferred Shares, if the Fund violates the Status Covenant unless such holder of Series C Preferred Shares has voted in favor or, otherwise consented to such change in status under the Status Covenant.
The number of Preferred Shares to be redeemed shall be equal to the minimum number of Preferred Shares, together with all other preferred stock subject to redemption or retirement, the redemption of which, if deemed to have occurred immediately prior to the opening of business on the Cure Date, would have resulted in the Fund’s (i) having Eligible Assets with an Agency Discounted Value greater than or equal to the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Amount or (ii) maintaining the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio or (iii) maintaining the Minimum Net Asset Value, as the case may be, on such Cure Date (provided, however, that if there is no such minimum number of Preferred Shares and other preferred stock the redemption or retirement of which would have had such result, all Preferred Shares then outstanding shall be redeemed).
All Preferred Shares shall be redeemed within 20 Business Days of a violation of the Status Covenant unless such holder of Series C Preferred Shares has voted in favor or, otherwise consented to such change in status under the Status Covenant.
In determining the Preferred Shares required to be redeemed in accordance with the foregoing, the Fund shall allocate the number required to be redeemed to satisfy the Preferred Shares Basic Maintenance Test or the Minimum Asset Coverage Ratio or the Minimum Net Asset Value, as the case may be, pro rata among Preferred Shares and other preferred stock subject to redemption or retirement (and then, pro rata among each series of Preferred Shares).  The Fund shall effect such redemption on the date fixed by the Fund therefor, which date shall not be earlier than 2 days nor later than 30 days after such Cure Date, except that if the Fund does not have funds legally available for the redemption of all of the required number of Preferred Shares and other preferred stock that are subject to redemption or retirement or the Fund otherwise is unable to effect such redemption on or prior to 30 days after such Cure Date, the Fund shall redeem those Preferred Shares which it was unable to redeem on the earliest practicable date on which it is able to effect such redemption.  If fewer than all of the outstanding shares of a series of Preferred Shares are to be redeemed pursuant to this paragraph (b), the number of shares of such series to be redeemed shall be redeemed pro rata from the Holders of
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shares of such series in proportion to the number of shares of such series held by such Holders or by such other method that the Board of Directors deems fair and equitable.
In any event, the Fund shall redeem all outstanding Series C Shares on the Term Redemption Date at the sum of the Liquidation Preference plus accumulated but unpaid dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared by the Fund, but excluding interest thereon), to, but excluding, the Term Redemption Date.
(d)     Notice of Redemption.  If the Fund shall determine or be required to redeem shares of a series of Preferred Shares pursuant to paragraph (a) or (b) or (c) of this Section 14, either the Fund or the Fund’s transfer agent shall distribute a Notice of Redemption with respect to such redemption by recognized overnight delivery service, by first class mail, postage prepaid, or by other acceptable means to each Holder of the Preferred Shares to be redeemed, at such Holder’s address as the same appears on the record books of the Fund on the record date established by the Board of Directors.  Such Notice of Redemption shall be so given (x) within 20 Business Days of a failure to comply with the Status Covenant pursuant to paragraph (c) above and (y) not less than 15 days (or 2 days in the case of any other notice of redemption pursuant to paragraph (c) above), nor more than 60 days (or 30 days in the case of any other notice pursuant to paragraph (c) above) or such lesser or greater numbers as is agreed to by the Series C Required Holders, prior to the date fixed for redemption.  Each such Notice of Redemption shall state: (i) the redemption date; (ii) the number of Preferred Shares to be redeemed and the series thereof; (iii) the CUSIP number for the Preferred Shares; (iv) the Redemption Price; (v) if applicable, the place or places where the certificate(s), if any, for such shares (properly endorsed or assigned for transfer, if the Board of Directors shall so require and the Notice of Redemption shall so state) are to be surrendered for payment of the Redemption Price; (vi) that dividends on the shares to be redeemed will cease to accumulate on such redemption date; and (vii) the provisions of this Section 14 under which such redemption is made.  If fewer than all shares of a series of Preferred Shares held by any Holder are to be redeemed, the Notice of Redemption given to such Holder shall also specify the number of shares of such series to be redeemed from such Holder.  The Fund may provide in any Notice of Redemption relating to a redemption contemplated to be effected pursuant to paragraph (a) of this Section 14 that such redemption is subject to one or more conditions precedent and that the Fund shall not be required to effect such redemption unless each such condition shall have been satisfied at the time or times and in the manner specified in such Notice of Redemption.
(e)     No Redemption under Certain Circumstances.  Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (a) or (b) or (c) of this Section 14, if any dividends on shares of a series of Preferred Shares (whether or not earned or declared) are in arrears, no Preferred Shares shall be redeemed unless all outstanding shares of such series of Preferred Shares are simultaneously redeemed, and the Fund shall not purchase or otherwise acquire any shares of such series; provided, however, that the foregoing shall not prevent the purchase or acquisition of all outstanding shares of such series pursuant to the successful completion of an otherwise lawful purchase or exchange offer made on the same terms to, and accepted by, Holders of all outstanding shares of such series of Preferred Shares.
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(f)     Absence of Funds Available for Redemption.  To the extent that any redemption for which Notice of Redemption has been given is not made by reason of the absence of legally available funds therefor in accordance with the Charter and applicable law, such redemption shall be made as soon as practicable to the extent such funds become available.  A failure to redeem Preferred Shares shall be deemed to exist at any time after the date specified for redemption in a Notice of Redemption when the Fund shall have failed, for any reason whatsoever, to pay to the Holders the Redemption Price on the redemption date with respect to any shares for which such Notice of Redemption has been given; provided, however, that the foregoing shall not apply in the case of the Fund’s failure to pay the Redemption Price with respect to any shares where (1) the Notice of Redemption relating to such redemption provided that such redemption was subject to one or more conditions precedent and (2) any such condition precedent shall not have been satisfied at the time or times and in the manner specified in such Notice of Redemption.  Notwithstanding the fact that the Fund may not have redeemed Preferred Shares for which a Notice of Redemption has been given, dividends may be declared and paid on Preferred Shares and shall include those Preferred Shares for which a Notice of Redemption has been given.
(g)     Transfer Agent As Trustee of Redemption Payments By Fund. All moneys paid to the Fund’s transfer agent for payment of the Redemption Price of Preferred Shares called for redemption shall be held in trust by the transfer agent for the benefit of Holders of shares so to be redeemed.
(h)     Shares for which Notice of Redemption Has Been Given Are No Longer Outstanding. Provided a Notice of Redemption has been given pursuant to paragraph (d) of this Section 14, upon deposit with the Fund’s transfer agent (no later than the Business Day fixed for redemption, in funds available on that Business Day in The City of New York, New York) of funds sufficient to redeem the Preferred Shares that are the subject of such notice, dividends on such shares shall cease to accumulate and such shares shall no longer be deemed to be outstanding for any purpose, and all rights of the Holders of the shares so called for redemption shall cease and terminate, except the right of such Holders to receive the Redemption Price, but without any interest or other additional amount, except as provided in subparagraph (e)(i) of Section 2 and in Section 3.  Upon surrender in accordance with the Notice of Redemption of the certificates, if any, for any shares so redeemed (properly endorsed or assigned for transfer, if the Board of Directors shall so require and the Notice of Redemption shall so state), the Redemption Price shall be paid by the Fund to the Holders of Preferred Shares subject to redemption.  In the case that fewer than all of the shares represented by any such certificate are redeemed, a new certificate shall be issued, representing the unredeemed shares, without cost to the Holder thereof.
(i)     Compliance with Applicable Law.  In effecting any redemption pursuant to this Section 14, the Fund shall use its best efforts to comply with all applicable conditions precedent to effecting such redemption under the 1940 Act and any applicable Maryland law, but shall effect no redemption except in accordance with the 1940 Act and any applicable Maryland law.
(j)     Purchase or Other Acquisition of Preferred Stock.  In the event that the Fund shall purchase, redeem or otherwise acquire any shares of preferred stock, including, without
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limitation, any shares of a series of Preferred Shares, the Fund shall, simultaneous with such purchase, redemption or acquisition, redeem Preferred Shares of each series then outstanding pro rata based upon the aggregate liquidation preference of each class or series of preferred stock outstanding and subject to purchase, acquisition or redemption.  Such redemption will be made in accordance with the operative provisions of Section 14(a).  Any shares that are purchased, redeemed or otherwise acquired by the Fund shall have no voting rights.  If fewer than all the outstanding Preferred Shares are redeemed or otherwise acquired by the Fund, the Fund shall give notice of such transaction to each Holder, in accordance with the procedures agreed upon by the Board of Directors.
Section 15.
Liquidation Rights.
(a)     Ranking.  The shares of a series of Preferred Shares shall rank on a parity with each other, with shares of any other series of Preferred Shares and with shares of any other series of preferred stock as to the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund.
(b)     Distributions upon Liquidation.  Upon the dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, whether voluntary or involuntary, the Holders of Preferred Shares then outstanding shall be entitled to receive and to be paid out of the assets of the Fund available for distribution to its stockholders, before any payment or distribution shall be made on the Common Shares or on any other class of shares of the Fund ranking junior to the Preferred Shares upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up, an amount equal to the Liquidation Preference with respect to such shares plus an amount equal to all dividends thereon (whether or not earned or declared but excluding interest thereon) accumulated but unpaid to (but not including) the date of its final distribution in same day funds.  After the payment to the Holders of the Preferred Shares of the full preferential amounts provided for in this paragraph (b), the Holders of Preferred Shares as such shall have no right or claim to any of the remaining assets of the Fund.
(c)     Pro Rata Distributions.  In the event the assets of the Fund available for distribution to the Holders of Preferred Shares upon any dissolution, liquidation, or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, whether voluntary or involuntary, shall be insufficient to pay in full all amounts to which such Holders are entitled pursuant to paragraph (b) of this Section 15, no such distribution shall be made on account of any shares of any other class or series of preferred stock ranking on a parity with the Preferred Shares with respect to the distribution of assets upon such dissolution, liquidation or winding up unless proportionate distributive amounts shall be paid on account of the Preferred Shares, ratably, in proportion to the full distributable amounts for which holders of all such parity shares are respectively entitled upon such dissolution, liquidation or winding up.
(d)     Rights of Junior Shares.  Subject to the rights of the holders of shares of any series or class or classes of shares ranking on a parity with the Preferred Shares with respect to the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund, after payment shall have been made in full to the Holders of the Preferred Shares as provided in paragraph (b) of this Section 15, but not prior thereto, any other series or class or classes of shares ranking junior to the Preferred Shares with respect to the distribution of assets upon dissolution, liquidation or winding up of the affairs of the Fund shall, subject to the respective
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terms and provisions (if any) applying thereto, be entitled to receive any and all assets remaining to be paid or distributed, and the Holders of the Preferred Shares shall not be entitled to share therein.
(e)     Certain Events not Constituting Liquidation.  Neither the sale of all or substantially all the property or business of the Fund, nor the merger or consolidation of the Fund into or with any corporation nor the merger or consolidation of any corporation into or with the Fund shall be a dissolution, liquidation or winding up, whether voluntary or involuntary, for the purposes of this Section 15.
Section 16.
Miscellaneous.
(a)     Amendment to Add Additional Series.  Subject to the provisions of paragraph (c) of Section 13, the Board of Directors may, by resolution duly adopted, without stockholder approval (except as otherwise provided by these Articles Supplementary or required by applicable law), approve an annex hereto, which shall be filed with the State Department of Assessments and Taxation of Maryland, all in compliance with the applicable provisions of the Maryland General Corporation Law, (1) to reflect any amendments hereto which the Board of Directors is entitled to adopt, pursuant to the terms of these Articles Supplementary without stockholder approval or (2) to classify or reclassify additional series of Preferred Shares or additional shares of a series of Preferred Shares (and terms relating thereto) to the series and Preferred Shares described herein.  Each such additional series and all such additional shares shall be governed by the terms of these Articles Supplementary except as such annex shall otherwise provide.
(b)     Fractional Shares.  Fractional Preferred Shares may be issued.
(c)    Status of Preferred Shares Redeemed, Exchanged or Otherwise Acquired by the Fund.  Preferred Shares that are redeemed, exchanged or otherwise acquired by the Fund shall return to the status of authorized and unissued Preferred Shares.
(d)     Headings not Determinative.  The headings contained in these Articles Supplementary are for convenience of reference only and shall not affect the meaning or interpretation of these Articles Supplementary.
(e)     Board May Resolve Ambiguities.  To the extent permitted by applicable law, the Board of Directors may interpret or adjust the provisions of these Articles Supplementary to resolve any inconsistency or ambiguity or to remedy any formal defect; provided, however, in no event shall the Board of Directors interpret or adjust such provisions in a manner which could reasonably be expected to have an adverse effect on any Holder of Preferred Shares or affect any series of Preferred Shares materially differently than any other series of Preferred Shares.
(f)     Inconsistencies with Articles of Incorporation.  To the extent there is any inconsistency between these Articles Supplementary and the Fund’s Articles of Incorporation, the provisions of the Articles Supplementary shall take precedence to the extent permitted by applicable law.
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(g)     Notices.  All notices or communications, unless otherwise specified in the Bylaws of the Fund or these Articles Supplementary, shall be sufficiently given if in writing and delivered in person or by facsimile, email or other electronic means with a copy mailed by recognized overnight delivery service or mailed by recognized delivery service, postage prepaid.  Notices delivered pursuant to this Section 16 shall be deemed given on the earlier of the date received or the date five days after which such notice is mailed, except as otherwise provided in these Articles Supplementary or by the Maryland General Corporation Law for notices of stockholders’ meetings.

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In Witness Whereof, Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc. has caused these presents to be signed on July 30, 2020 in its name and on its behalf by its President or a Vice President and witnessed by its Secretary or Assistant Secretary.
 
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
 
 
 
 
 
By
/s/ Brian Kerrane                       
    Name: Brian Kerrane
    Title:   Vice President

Witness:

By
/s/ Frank Rosato                      
  Name: Frank Rosato
  Title:   Assistant Treasurer

The undersigned President or a Vice President of Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., who executed on behalf of the Fund the foregoing Articles Supplementary of which this Certificate is made a part, hereby acknowledges in the name and on behalf of said Fund the foregoing Articles Supplementary to be the corporate act of the Fund, and states under penalties of perjury that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief the matters and facts set forth therein with respect to the authorization and approval thereof are true in all material respects.
 
By
/s/ Brian Kerrane                       
    Name: Brian Kerrane
    Title:   Vice President

EXHIBIT (g)(i)
MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT

NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND INC.
This Agreement is made as of August 6, 2010, between Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation (“Fund”), and Neuberger Berman Management LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (“Manager”).

WITNESSETH:

WHEREAS, Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (“1940 Act”), as a closed-end, non-diversified management investment company; and

WHEREAS, Fund desires to retain the Manager as investment adviser to furnish the investment advisory and portfolio management services described herein and the Manager is willing to furnish such services;

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and mutual covenants herein contained, it is agreed between the parties hereto as follows:

1.          Services of the Manager.

1.1          Investment Management Services.  The Manager shall act as the investment adviser to the Fund and, as such, shall (i) obtain and evaluate such information relating to the economy, industries, businesses, securities markets and securities as it may deem necessary or useful in discharging its responsibilities hereunder, (ii) formulate a continuing program for the investment of the assets of the Fund in a manner consistent with its investment objectives, policies and restrictions, and (iii) determine from time to time securities to be purchased, sold, retained or lent by the Fund, and implement those decisions, including the selection of entities with or through which such purchases, sales or loans are to be effected; provided, that the Manager will place orders pursuant to its investment determinations either directly with the issuer or with a broker or dealer, and if with a broker or dealer, (a) will attempt to obtain the best net price and most favorable execution of its orders, and (b) may nevertheless in its discretion purchase and sell portfolio securities from and to brokers and dealers who provide the Manager with research, analysis, advice and similar services and pay such brokers and dealers in return a higher commission or spread than may be charged by other brokers or dealers.

The Fund hereby authorizes any entity or person associated with the Manager which is a member of a national securities exchange to effect or execute any transaction on the exchange for the account of the Fund which is permitted by Section 11(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 11a2-2(T) thereunder, and the Fund hereby consents to the retention of compensation for such transactions in accordance with Rule 11a2-2(T)(a)(2)(iv).

The Manager shall carry out its duties with respect to the Fund’s investments in accordance with applicable law and the investment objectives, policies and restrictions of the Fund adopted by the

directors of Fund (“Directors”), and subject to such further limitations as the Fund may from time to time impose by written notice to the Manager.

1.2          The Manager can use any of the officers and employees of Neuberger Berman LLC to provide any of the non-investment advisory services described herein, and can subcontract to third parties, provided the Manager remains as fully responsible to the Fund under this contract as if the Manager had provided services directly.

2.          Expenses of the Fund.

2.1          Expenses to be Paid by the Manager.  The Manager shall pay all salaries, expenses and fees of the officers, directors and employees of the Fund who are officers, directors or employees of the Manager.

In the event that the Manager pays or assumes any expenses of the Fund not required to be paid or assumed by the Manager under this Agreement, the Manager shall not be obligated hereby to pay or assume the same or any similar expense in the future; provided, that nothing herein contained shall be deemed to relieve the Manager of any obligation to the Fund under any separate agreement or arrangement between the parties.

2.2          Expenses to be Paid by the Fund.  The Fund shall bear the expenses of its operation, except those specifically allocated to the Manager under this Agreement or under any separate agreement between the Fund and the Manager.  Subject to any separate agreement or arrangement between the Fund and the Manager, the expenses hereby allocated to the Fund, and not to the Manager, include, but are not limited to:

2.2.1          Custody.  All charges of depositories, custodians, and other agents for the transfer, receipt, safekeeping, and servicing of its cash, securities, and other property.

2.2.2          Stockholder Servicing.  All expenses of maintaining and servicing Stockholder accounts, including but not limited to the charges of any Stockholder servicing agent, dividend disbursing agent or other agent engaged by the Fund to service Stockholder accounts.

2.2.3          Stockholder Reports.  All expenses of preparing, setting in type, printing and distributing reports and other communications to Stockholders of the Fund.

2.2.4          Pricing and Portfolio Valuation.  All expenses of computing the Fund’s net asset value per share, including any equipment or services obtained for the purpose of pricing shares or valuing the Fund’s investment portfolio.

2.2.5          Communications.  All charges for equipment or services used for communications between the Manager or the Fund and any custodian, Stockholder servicing agent, portfolio accounting services agent, dividend disbursing agent, dividend reinvestment plan agent or other agent engaged by the Fund.

2.2.6          Legal and Accounting Fees.  All charges for services and expenses of the Fund’s legal counsel and independent auditors.

2.2.7          Directors’ Fees and Expenses.  All compensation of Directors other than those affiliated with the Manager, all expenses incurred in connection with such unaffiliated Directors’ services as Directors, and all other expenses of meetings of the Directors or committees thereof.

2.2.8          Stockholder Meetings.  All expenses incidental to holding meetings of Stockholders, including the printing of notices and proxy materials, and proxy solicitation therefor.

2.2.9          Bonding and Insurance.  All expenses of bond, liability, and other insurance coverage required by law or regulation or deemed advisable by the Directors, including, without limitation, such bond, liability and other insurance expense that may from time to time be allocated to the Fund in a manner approved by the Directors.

2.2.10          Brokerage Commissions.  All brokers’ commissions and other charges incident to the purchase, sale or lending of the Fund’s portfolio securities.

2.2.11          Taxes.  All taxes or governmental fees payable by or with respect to the Fund to federal, state or other governmental agencies, domestic or foreign, including stamp or other transfer taxes.

2.2.12          Trade Association Fees.  All fees, dues and other expenses incurred in connection with the Fund’s membership in any trade association or other investment organization.

2.2.13          Nonrecurring and Extraordinary Expenses.  Such nonrecurring and extraordinary expenses as may arise, including the costs of actions, suits, or proceedings to which the Fund is a party and the expenses the Fund may incur as a result of its legal obligation to provide indemnification to Fund’s officers, Directors and agents.

2.2.14          Organizational Expenses and Offering Expenses for Common Stock.  Any and all organizational expenses of the Fund and any and all offering expenses for shares of the Fund’s common stock paid by the Manager shall be reimbursed by the Fund if and at such time or times agreed by the Fund and the Manager.

2.2.15          Expenses of Listing on a National Securities Exchange.  Any and all expenses of listing and maintaining the listing of shares of the Fund’s common stock on any national securities exchange.

2.2.16          Offering Expenses for any Preferred Stock.  Any and all offering expenses (including rating agency fees) for any preferred stock of the Fund paid by the Manager shall be reimbursed by the Fund if and at such time or times agreed by the Fund and the Manager.

2.2.17          Dividend Reinvestment Plan.  Any and all expenses incident to any dividend reinvestment plan.

2.2.18          Interest.  Such interest as may accrue on borrowings of the Fund.


3.          Advisory Fee.

3.1          Fee.  As compensation for all services rendered, facilities provided and expenses paid or assumed by the Manager under this Agreement, the Fund shall pay the Manager an annual fee equal to 0.60% of the Fund’s average daily total assets minus liabilities other than the aggregate indebtedness entered into for purposes of leverage (“Managed Assets”).

3.2          Computation and Payment of Fee.  The advisory fee shall accrue on each calendar day, and shall be payable monthly on the first business day of the next succeeding calendar month.  The daily fee accruals shall be computed by multiplying the fraction of one divided by the number of days in the calendar year by the annual advisory fee rate, and multiplying this product by the Managed Assets of the Fund, determined in the manner established by the Directors, as of the close of business on the last preceding business day on which the Fund’s net asset value was determined.

4.          Ownership of Records.

All records required to be maintained and preserved by the Fund pursuant to the provisions or rules or regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission under Section 31(a) of the 1940 Act and maintained and preserved by the Manager on behalf of the Fund are the property of the Fund and shall be surrendered by the Manager promptly on request by the Fund; provided, that the Manager may at its own expense make and retain copies of any such records.

5.          Reports to Manager.

The Fund shall furnish or otherwise make available to the Manager such copies of the Fund’s financial statements, proxy statements, reports, and other information relating to its business and affairs as the Manager may, at any time or from time to time, reasonably require in order to discharge its obligations under this Agreement.

6.          Reports to the Fund.

The Manager shall prepare and furnish to the Fund such reports, statistical data and other information in such form and at such intervals as the Fund may reasonably request.

7.          Retention of Sub-Adviser.

The Manager may enter into an advisory agreement with an investment adviser, in which the Manager, at its own cost and expense, delegates to the investment adviser any or all of its duties specified in Section 1.1 hereof, provided that the investment adviser agrees to be bound by all duties and conditions to which the Manager is subject hereunder, and provided further that the advisory agreement meets all requirements of the 1940 Act and the rules thereunder.  Retention of an investment adviser shall in no way reduce the responsibilities or obligations of the Manager under this Agreement and the Manager shall be responsible to the Fund for all acts or omissions of the investment adviser in connection with the performance of the Manager’s duties hereunder.


8.          Services to Other Clients.

Nothing herein contained shall limit the freedom of the Manager or any affiliated person of the Manager to render investment management and administrative services to other investment companies, to act as investment adviser or investment counselor to other persons, firms or corporations, or to engage in other business activities.

9.          Limitation of Liability of Manager and its Personnel.

9.1          Neither the Manager nor any director, officer or employee of the Manager performing services for the Fund at the direction or request of the Manager in connection with the Manager’s discharge of its obligations hereunder shall be liable for any error of judgment or mistake of law or for any loss suffered by the Fund in connection with any matter to which this Agreement relates; provided, that nothing herein contained shall be construed (i) to protect the Manager against any liability to the Fund or its Stockholders to which the Manager would otherwise be subject by reason of the Manager’s willful misfeasance, bad faith, or gross negligence in the performance of the Manager’s duties, or by reason of the Manager’s reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under this Agreement (“disabling conduct”), or (ii) to protect any director, officer or employee of the Manager who is or was a Director or officer of the Fund against any liability to the Fund or its Stockholders to which such person would otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of such person’s office with the Fund.


9.2          The Fund will indemnify the Manager against, and hold it harmless from, any and all expenses (including reasonable counsel fees and expenses) incurred investigating or defending against claims for losses or liabilities described in Section 9.1 not resulting from negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under this Agreement or disabling conduct by the Manager.  Indemnification shall be made only following: (i) a final decision on the merits by a court or other body before whom the proceeding was brought that the Manager was not liable by reason of negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under this Agreement or disabling conduct or (ii) in the absence of such a decision, a reasonable determination, based upon a review of the facts, that the Manager was not liable by reason of negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under this Agreement or disabling conduct by (a) the vote of a majority of a quorum of directors of the Fund who are neither “interested persons” of the Fund nor parties to the proceeding (“disinterested non-party directors”) or (b) an independent legal counsel in a written opinion.  The Manager shall be entitled to advances from the Fund for payment of the reasonable expenses incurred by it in connection with the matter as to which it is seeking indemnification hereunder in the manner and to the fullest extent permissible under the Maryland General Corporation Law.  The Manager shall provide to the Fund a written affirmation of its good faith belief that the standard of conduct necessary for indemnification by the Fund has been met and a written undertaking to repay any such advance if it should ultimately be determined that the standard of conduct has not been met.  In addition, at least one of the following additional conditions shall be met: (a) the Manager shall provide security in form and amount acceptable to the Fund for its undertaking; (b) the Fund is insured against losses arising by reason of the advance; or (c) a majority of a quorum of the full Board of Directors of the Fund, the members of which majority

are disinterested non-party directors, or independent legal counsel, in a written opinion, shall have determined, based on a review of facts readily available to the Fund at the time the advance is proposed to be made, that there is reason to believe that the Manager will ultimately be found to be entitled to indemnification hereunder.

10.          Effect of Agreement.

Nothing herein contained shall be deemed to require the Fund to take any action contrary to the Articles of Incorporation or By-Laws of the Fund, any actions of the Directors binding upon the Fund, or any applicable law, regulation or order to which the Fund is subject or by which it is bound, or to relieve or deprive the Directors of their responsibility for and control of the conduct of the business and affairs of the Fund.

11.          Term of Agreement.

The term of this Agreement shall begin on the date first above written and, unless sooner terminated as hereinafter provided, this Agreement shall remain in effect through October 31, 2011.  Thereafter, this Agreement shall continue in effect from year to year, subject to the termination provisions and all other terms and conditions hereof, provided, such continuance is approved at least annually by vote of the holders of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund or by the Directors, provided, that in either event such continuance is also approved annually by the vote, cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval, of a majority of the Directors who are not parties to this Agreement or interested persons of either party hereto; and provided further that the Manager shall not have notified the Fund in writing at least sixty (60) days prior to the first expiration date hereof or at least sixty (60) days prior to any expiration date hereof of any year thereafter that it does not desire such continuation.  The Manager shall furnish to the Fund, promptly upon its request, such information as may reasonably be necessary to evaluate the terms of this Agreement or any extension, renewal or amendment thereof.

12.          Amendment or Assignment of Agreement.

Any amendment to this Agreement shall be in writing signed by the parties hereto; provided, that no such amendment shall be effective unless authorized on behalf of the Fund (i) by resolution of the Directors, including the vote or written consent of a majority of the Directors who are not parties to this Agreement or interested persons of either party hereto, and (ii) by vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund.  This Agreement shall terminate automatically and immediately in the event of its assignment.

13.          Termination of Agreement.

This Agreement may be terminated at any time by either party hereto, without the payment of any penalty, upon sixty (60) days’ prior written notice to the other party; provided, that in the case of termination by the Fund, such action shall have been authorized (i) by resolution of the Directors, including the vote or written consent of a majority of Directors who are not parties to this

Agreement or interested persons’ of either party hereto, or (ii) by vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund.

14.          Name of the Fund.

The Fund hereby agrees that if the Manager shall at any time for any reason cease to serve as investment adviser to the Fund, the Fund shall, if and when requested by the Manager, eliminate from the Fund’s name the name “Neuberger Berman” and thereafter refrain from using the name “Neuberger Berman” or the initials “NB” in connection with its business or activities, and the foregoing agreement of the Fund shall survive any termination of this Agreement and any extension or renewal thereof.

15.          Interpretation and Definition of Terms.

Any question of interpretation of any term or provision of this Agreement having a counterpart in or otherwise derived from a term or provision of the 1940 Act shall be resolved by reference to such term or provision of the 1940 Act and to interpretation thereof, if any, by the United States courts or, in the absence of any controlling decision of any such court, by rules, regulations or orders of the Securities and Exchange Commission validly issued pursuant to the 1940 Act.  Specifically, the terms “vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities,” “interested person,” “assignment” and “affiliated person,” as used in this Agreement shall have the meanings assigned to them by Section 2(a) of the 1940 Act.  In addition, when the effect of a requirement of the 1940 Act reflected in any provision of this Agreement is modified, interpreted or relaxed by a rule, regulation or order of the Securities and Exchange Commission, whether of special or of general application, such provision shall be deemed to incorporate the effect of such rule, regulation or order.

16.          Choice of Law

This Agreement is made and to be principally performed in the State of New York and except insofar as the 1940 Act or other federal laws and regulations may be controlling, this Agreement shall be governed by, and construed and enforced in accordance with, the internal laws of the State of New York.

17.          Captions.

The captions in this Agreement are included for convenience of reference only and in no way define or delineate any of the provisions hereof or otherwise affect their construction or effect.

18.          Execution in Counterparts.

This Agreement may be executed simultaneously in counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original, but all of which together shall constitute one and the same instrument.




IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be signed by their respective officers thereunto duly authorized and their respective seals to be hereunto affixed, as of the day and year first above written.



NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND INC.
/s/ Claudia A. Brandon                                                                                       
Name:  Claudia A. Brandon
Title:  Executive Vice President and Secretary
 
  
NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT LLC
/s/ Robert Conti                                                                                                 
Name:  Robert Conti
Title:  President
Date:  August 6, 2010

EXHIBIT (j)(ii)

ASSIGNMENT, AMENDMENT AND ASSUMPTION AGREEMENT


This ASSIGNMENT, AMENDMENT AND ASSUMPTION AGREEMENT (the “Assignment Agreement”) is entered into as of August 6, 2010, among Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund (formerly Lehman Brothers First Trust Income Opportunity Fund), a statutory trust organized and existing under the laws of Delaware (“Assignor”) and Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Maryland (“Assignee”), and State Street Bank and Trust Company, a Massachusetts trust company (the “State Street”).
RECITALS

A.          Assignor and State Street are parties to a certain Custodian Agreement dated as of March 22, 2007, as amended and supplemented (including all schedules, exhibits, appendices and addenda thereto, the “Custodian Agreement”), pursuant to which State Street performs custodial and related services on behalf of Assignor.
B.          Assignor, Neuberger Berman Income Opportunity Fund Inc., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Maryland (“NOX”), and Assignee are parties to an Agreement and Plan of Reorganization, dated as of August 6, 2010 (the “Agreement and Plan”), pursuant to which both Assignor and NOX will be reorganized into Assignee (the “Reorganization”), following which the Assignee will continue the operations and business of the Assignor and NOX as their successor-in-interest.  In connection with the transactions contemplated by that certain Agreement and Plan, the parties intend for State Street to continue to provide services on behalf of Assignee pursuant to the Custodian Agreement, all on the terms and conditions set forth in this Assignment Agreement.
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing recitals and of the mutual covenants set forth herein and for other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which is hereby acknowledged, the parties agree as follows:
1.          Assignment of Custodian Agreement.  Assignor hereby assigns, conveys, and otherwise transfers to Assignee all of its rights, benefits, title, and interest in, to, under and arising out of the Custodian Agreement; provided, however, that this Assignment Agreement shall only be effective upon the Closing Date (as defined in the Agreement and Plan and communicated in writing to the Custodian by the Assignor) of the Reorganization.
2.          Acceptance and Assumption of Custodian Agreement.  Assignee hereby accepts from Assignor the foregoing assignment of Assignor’s rights, title, and interest in, to and under the Custodian Agreement from Assignor and assumes and agrees to pay, perform, and discharge, from and after the Closing Date, any and all terms, obligations, covenants, conditions and provisions applicable to Assignor under the Custodian Agreement, whenever arising.

3.          Amendments to the Custodian Agreement.  Upon the effectiveness of the assignment and assumption of the Custodian Agreement, the Custodian Agreement is hereby amended as follows:
a.          “Lehman Brothers First Trust Income Opportunity Fund, a statutory trust organized and existing under the laws of Delaware and registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as a diversified, closed-end management investment company” shall be replaced with “Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Maryland and registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as a non-diversified, closed-end management investment company”
b.          The “Board of Trustees” shall be replaced with the “Board of Directors”, the “Declaration of Trust” shall be replaced with the “Articles of Incorporation”, “Trustee” shall be replaced with “Director”, “The National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.” shall be replaced with “Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.”, and “NASD” shall be replaced with “FINRA”.
c.          The notice information for Assignor set forth in Section 20 of the Custodian Agreement shall be replaced with the following:
 To the Fund:
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
605 Third Avenue, 2nd Floor
New York, New York  10158
Attention: Treasurer
Telephone: 212-476-8998
Facsimile: 212-476-8906
4.          Representations and Warranties.  Each of the Assignor and the Assignee hereby represents and warrants that: (a) it has duly executed this Assignment Agreement so as to constitute its valid and binding obligation; and (ii) there is no legal or contractual impediment to the assignment and assumption contemplated hereby.
5.          Amendments.  No provision of this Assignment Agreement may be amended, modified, or waived except by written agreement duly executed by a duly authorized representative of each of the parties hereto.
6.          Consent.  By its signature below, State Street hereby consents to the assignment and assumption of the Custodian Agreement and agrees to be bound by the Custodian Agreement, as assigned, from and after the Closing Date in accordance with the foregoing.
7.          Further Assurances and Cooperation.  Following the date of this Assignment Agreement, and subject to the terms hereof, the parties hereto each agree to execute and deliver such other documents and to take such actions that shall be reasonably requested by a party hereto in order to carry out and effectuate the transactions and actions contemplated by this Assignment Agreement.
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8.          Headings.  The section headings used in this Assignment Agreement are for convenience of reference only and shall not be used or construed to define, interpret, expand, or limit any provision hereof.
9.          Counterparts.  This Assignment Agreement may be executed in separate counterparts, each of which when so executed shall be deemed to be an original and all of which taken together shall constitute one and the same agreement.  Facsimile signatures may be relied upon as originals.
10.          Governing Law.  This Assignment Agreement shall be governed by, and construed and enforced in accordance with, the internal substantive laws of The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, without giving effect to its conflict of law rules.
11.          Entire Agreement.  This Assignment Agreement represents the entire agreement of the parties with respect to the subject matter hereof and supersedes and cancels any prior oral or written agreement, letter of intent or understanding with respect to such subject matter.
12.          Binding Agreement.  This Assignment Agreement shall be binding upon and shall inure to the benefit of the successors and assigns of each of the parties.
13.          Severability.  If any provision or provisions of this Assignment Agreement shall be held to be invalid, unlawful or unenforceable, the validity, legality and enforceability of the remaining provisions shall not in any way be affected or impaired.
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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have executed this Assignment Agreement as of the date first set forth above.

NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND



By: /s/ Robert Conti
Name: Robert Conti
Title:   President


NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND INC.



By: /s/ Robert Conti
Name: Robert Conti
Title:   President


STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY


By: /s/ Michael F. Rogers
Name: Michael F. Rogers
Title: Executive Vice President




EXHIBIT (k)(i)


TRANSFER AGENCY AND REGISTRAR SERVICES AGREEMENT

THIS TRANSFER AGENCY AND REGISTRAR SERVICES AGREEMENT (this “Agreement”), dated as of June 13, 2017 is between the investment companies listed in Exhibit A (as amended from time to time), each, a Maryland corporation (each, a “Company” and collective, the “Companies”) and AMERICAN STOCK TRANSFER & TRUST COMPANY, LLC, a New York limited liability trust company (“AST” or the “Agent”).
1.          Appointment as Transfer Agent.  Each Company hereby appoints AST to act as sole transfer agent, registrar and distribution disbursing agent for the common stock of the Company and for any such other securities as set forth in Exhibit B hereto (which the Company shall update as necessary to keep complete and accurate) and as the Company may request in writing (with respect to each Company, collectively, the “Shares”) in accordance with the terms and conditions hereof, and AST hereby accepts such appointment.In connection with the appointment of AST as transfer agent and registrar for a Company, the Company shall provide AST: (a) should the Company decide to issue stock certificates, specimens of any stock certificates approved by the Company’s board of directors (there being no currently outstanding stock certificates), with a certificate of the secretary of the Company as to such approval; (b) specimens of the signatures of the individuals authorized to sign written instructions and requests and, should the Company decide to issue stock certificates, specimens of the signatures of the officers of the Company authorized to sign stock certificates; (c) a copy of the articles of incorporation and by-laws of the Company and, on a continuing basis, copies of all material amendments to such articles of incorporation or by-laws made after the date of this Agreement (such amendments to be provided promptly after such amendments are made); and (d) should the Company decide to issue stock certificates, a sufficient supply of blank certificates.
2.          Term; Termination.  The initial term of this Agreement shall be one (1) year from the date hereof and the appointment shall automatically be renewed for further one (1) year successive terms without further action of the parties, unless written notice is provided by either party at least sixty (60) days prior to the end of the initial one (1) year period. After the expiration of the initial term, either of the parties hereto may terminate this Agreement at any time for its convenience by giving to the other party a notice in writing specifying the date of such termination, which shall be not less than sixty (60) days after the date of receipt of such notice.
3.          Services.  AST shall perform the services set forth on Exhibit C hereto. Should AST so elect, AST shall be entitled to provide services to reunify shareholders with their assets, provided the Company incurs no additional charge for such services.AST has implemented and will maintain written policies and procedures reasonably designed to prevent violation of the Federal Securities Laws as defined in Rule 38a-1 under the 1940 Act (the “Rule”). In order to assist the Companies in satisfying the requirements of the Rule, AST will provide the Companies’ Chief Compliance Officer with reasonable access to AST’s personnel and records relating to the services provided by it under this Agreement, and will provide quarterly compliance certifications regarding compliance with the Rule and will provide prompt notice of any Material Compliance Matter (as defined in the Rule) involving AST that affects or could affect the Companies.AST agrees to respond to any requests from the Companies’ Chief Compliance Officer within a reasonable period of time.AST may provide further services to, or on behalf of, a Company as may be agreed upon between a Company and AST.

4.          Company Representations and Warranties. Each Company represents and warrants to AST as to itself only that:
(a)          i)          It is a corporation duly organized and validly existing and in good standing under the laws of the state of its incorporation; (ii) it is empowered under applicable laws and governing instruments to enter into and perform this Agreement; and (iii) all corporate proceedings required by such governing instruments and applicable law have been taken to authorize it to enter into and perform this Agreement;
(b)          All securities issued and outstanding as of the date hereof, or to be issued during the term of this appointment, are/shall be duly authorized, validly issued, fully paid and non-assessable. All such securities are (or, in the case of securities that have not yet been issued, will be) duly registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), if so required. Any securities not so registered were or shall be issued or transferred in a  transaction or series of transactions exempt from the registration provisions of the relevant law, and in each such issuance or transfer, the Company was or shall be so advised by its legal counsel and all securities issued or to be issued bear, shall bear, are deemed to bear or shall be deemed to bear all appropriate legends;
(c)          It has paid or caused to be paid all taxes, if any, that were payable upon or in respect of the original issuance of the Shares issued and outstanding on the date hereof;
(d)          This Agreement has been duly authorized, executed and delivered by the Company and is enforceable against the Company in accordance with its terms, except as may be limited by bankruptcy, insolvency, moratorium, reorganization and other similar laws affecting the enforcement of creditors’ rights generally; and
(e)          The Company shall promptly advise AST in writing of any change in the capital structure of the Company, and the Company shall promptly provide AST with board resolutions authorizing any recapitalization of the Shares or change in the number of issued or authorized Shares, provided, however, no such notice shall be provided in connection with shares issued pursuant to the Company’s distribution reinvestment programs.
5.          AST Representations, Warranties and Covenants. AST represents, warrants and covenants to the Companies that:
(a)          AST is a limited liability trust company duly organized and validly existing under the laws of its state of organization;
(b)          AST is, and for the term of this Agreement shall remain, duly registered as a transfer agent under the Exchange Act; and
(c)          Subject to Section 17, during the term of this Agreement, AST shall comply with its obligations as a transfer agent under the Exchange Act and the rules and regulations thereunder in all material respects.
(d)          This Agreement has been duly authorized, executed and delivered by AST and is enforceable against AST in accordance with its terms, except as may be limited by bankruptcy, insolvency, moratorium, reorganization and other similar laws affecting the enforcement of creditors’ rights generally; and
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(e)          AST shall promptly advise the Companies in writing of any material change in the financial condition of AST that could have a material adverse effect on its ability to perform the services under the Agreement.
(f)          AST has adopted and implemented written policies and procedures, as required by Rule 38a-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, which are reasonably designed to prevent violations of federal securities laws by AST, its employees, officers, and agents (“Compliance Procedures”). AST has adopted policies and procedures relating to, without limitation, privacy, business continuity, and information security.

6.
Reliance.
(a)          AST undertakes to perform the duties and only the duties that are specifically set forth in this Agreement, and no implied covenants or obligations shall be read into this Agreement against AST.
(b)          AST may rely upon, and shall be protected in acting or refraining from acting in reliance upon, (i) any communication from a Company, any predecessor transfer agent or co-transfer agent or any registrar (other than AST), predecessor registrar or co-registrar, as appointed in each case by the Company; (ii) any instruction, notice, request, direction, consent, report, certificate, opinion or other instrument, paper, document or electronic transmission reasonably believed by AST to be genuine and to have been signed or given by the Authorized Person (as defined below); (iii) any guaranty of signature by an “eligible guarantor institution” that is a member or participant in the Securities Transfer Agents Medallion Program or other comparable “signature guarantee program” or insurance program in addition to, or in substitution for, the foregoing; (iv) any instructions received through Direct Registration System/Profile; or (v) any law, act, regulation or any interpretation of the same even though such law, act, or regulation may thereafter have been altered, changed, amended or repealed. In addition, AST is authorized to refuse to make any transfer that it determines in good faith not to be in good order until it consults with the applicable Company.
(c)          In connection with any question of law arising in the course of the performance of its duties hereunder, AST may consult with legal counsel (including internal counsel), that AST in good faith believes has the requisite experience to advise on such matters, whose advice shall be full and complete authorization and protection in respect of any action taken, suffered or omitted by AST hereunder in good faith and in reasonable reliance thereon and shall notify the Company of any such action taken or to be taken in reliance on such advice.
(d)          Each Company shall (i) advise AST in writing that it is entitled to act and rely only on written instructions of designated officers and any other authorized persons (each, an “Authorized Person”) of the Company; (ii) furnish AST with an appropriate incumbency certificate for such Authorized Persons and their signatures; and (iii) thereafter keep such designation current with an annual (or more frequent, if requested) incumbency certificate or certificate confirming that the Authorized Persons have not changed. AST may also act and rely on advice, opinions or instructions received from the Company’s legal counsel.
(e)          AST may act and rely on, and shall incur no liability and shall be fully indemnified by a Company from any liability whatsoever in acting in accordance with: (i) any writing or other instruction believed by it in good faith to have been furnished by or on behalf of the Company by an Authorized Person or a holder of one or more Shares of such Company (each, a “Shareholder”) with respect only to such Shareholder’s Shares, including, but not limited to, any certificate, instrument, opinion, notice, letter, stock power, affidavit or other document or security; (ii) on any statement of fact contained in any such writing or instruction which AST in good faith does not believe to be inaccurate; (iii) on the authenticity
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and genuineness of any signature (manual or facsimile) appearing on any writing, including, but not limited to, any certificate, instrument, opinion, notice, letter, stock power, affidavit or other document or security, provided, however, that AST will compare any signature to the incumbency certificate provided by the applicable Company pursuant to sub-section (d) above and will not rely on signatures that do not reasonably appear to match the signature on the incumbency certificate (if an incumbency certificate has been provided); and (iv) on the conformity to original of any copy.AST shall further be entitled to rely on any information, records and documents provided to AST by a former transfer agent or former registrar on behalf of the Company.

7.          Compensation. AST shall be entitled to the fees set forth on Schedule A hereto for all services rendered and shall be reimbursed for all reasonable and documented expenses incurred, including without limitation reasonable legal costs of a single counsel and costs of responding to subpoenas related to a Company’s records (regardless of whether AST is still acting as the Agent) in connection with its obligations hereunder. In the event that a Company requests additional services not contemplated by this Agreement, the parties shall negotiate in good faith to determine reasonable compensation for such additional services. In the event that a Company, without terminating this Agreement in its entirety, retains a third party to provide services that already are being provided by AST in accordance with this Agreement, the Company shall pay to AST a reasonable fee to compensate AST for costs associated with interfacing with such third-party as mutually agreed upon by the Company and AST.


8.
Performance of Services.
(a)          In the event that a Company commits any breach of its material obligations to AST, including non-payment of any amount owing to AST, and such breach remains uncured for more than thirty (30) days after AST provides notice to the Company of the Company’s breach, AST shall have the right to terminate or suspend its services upon 30 days’ notice to the Company. During such time as AST may suspend its services, AST shall have no obligation to act as transfer agent and/or registrar on behalf of the Company and AST shall have no duties to act in such capacity. Such suspension shall not affect AST’s rights under this Agreement. On termination of the appointment of AST for any reason, AST will perform its services in assisting with the transfer of records in a diligent and professional manner.
(b)          A Company may terminate this Agreement if (i) AST breaches any of its material obligations hereunder and such default remains uncured for thirty (30) days after AST’s receipt of notice of such breach from the Company; or (ii) any proceeding in bankruptcy, reorganization, receivership or insolvency is commenced by or against AST, AST shall become insolvent or shall cease paying its obligations as they become due or makes any assignment for the benefit of its creditors.
(c)          Upon termination of this Agreement, all fees earned and expenses incurred by AST up to and including the date of such termination shall be immediately due and payable to AST on or before the effective date of such termination.
(d)          Upon termination of this Agreement, the Company shall pay AST a fee for de-conversion services (e.g., providing shareholder lists and files, producing and shipping records, answering successor agent inquiries). This fee shall be based on AST’s then-current de-conversion fee schedule. AST may withhold the Company’s records and reports pending the Company’s payment in full of all fees and expenses owed to AST under this Agreement.Prior to termination of this Agreement, the Company shall provide AST with written instructions as to the disposition of records, as well as any additional documentation reasonably requested by AST.
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9.
Reserved.
10.          Lost Certificates. In the event that a Company issues Share certificates and so informs AST, AST shall be authorized to issue replacement certificates for stock certificates for Shares of that Company claimed by a Shareholder to have been lost, stolen or mutilated upon receipt of an affidavit of the Shareholder to such effect and receipt of payment from the Shareholder of a premium for an indemnity bond purchased through AST or, at the option of the Shareholder, any surety company reasonably acceptable to AST.
11.          Overissue. In the event that a Company decides to issue Share certificates and so informs AST, if AST receives a stock certificate not reflected in its records, AST will research records, if any, delivered to it upon its appointment as transfer agent from a prior transfer agent (or from the Company). If such records do not exist or if such certificate cannot be reconciled with such records, then AST will notify the Company. If neither the Company nor AST is able to reconcile such certificate with any records (so that the transfer of such certificate on the records maintained by AST would create an overissue), the Company shall within sixty (60) days either: (a) resolve the issue with the party that sent the stock certificate or take other legal action, (b) increase the number of its issued Shares, or (c) acquire and cancel a sufficient number of issued Shares, to correct the overissue.

12.
Confidentiality.
(a)          AST acknowledges that it will acquire information and data from each Company, and such information and data are confidential and proprietary information of each Company (collectively, the “Confidential Information”). AST agrees to treat all records and other information regarding a Company and its prior, present or potential Shareholders in confidence except after prior notification to and approval in writing by the Company (to the extent permitted by law), which approval shall not be unreasonably withheld, when requested to divulge such information by duly constituted authorities, or when so requested by the Company; provided, however, that AST shall not be required to notify, or obtain written approval from, the Company in connection with subpoenas or information requests relating to one or more Shareholders with respect to routine matters including, without limitation, divorce proceeding, tax and probate. Confidential Information with respect to a Company may include, but shall not be limited to, information related to clients, business plans, corporate actions, Shareholders, business processes, and other related data, all in any form whether electronic or otherwise, that AST acquires in connection with this Agreement. Confidential Information will not include, however, any information that (a) was in the possession of AST at the commencement of the services contemplated under this Agreement; (b) became part of the public domain through no fault of AST; (c) became rightfully known  to AST or its affiliates through a third party with no obligation of confidentiality to the Company, or (d) is independently developed by AST.  AST agrees not to disclose the Confidential Information to others (except as required by law) or use it in any way, commercially or otherwise, except in performing services hereunder, and shall not allow any unauthorized person access to the Confidential Information.  AST further agrees to exercise at least the same degree of care as it uses with regard to its own confidential information, but in no event less than commercially reasonable efforts and a reasonable degree of care, in protecting the Confidential Information.
(b)          Notwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary, each party agrees that any Nonpublic Personal Information (“NPI”), as defined under Section 248.3(t) of Regulation S-P (“Regulation S-P”), promulgated under the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (the “GLB Act”) and any such successor regulations (collectively, the “Privacy Laws”), disclosed hereunder is for the specific purpose of permitting AST to perform the services to be provided pursuant to this Agreement, and with respect to such information, it will comply with Privacy Laws. The parties will not disclose any NPI received in connection with this Agreement to any other party, except as necessary to carry out the services set forth herein or as otherwise permitted by Privacy Laws. Furthermore, NPI shall be safeguarded pursuant to
5

procedures adopted under Section 248.30 of Regulation S-P and any applicable state laws and any successor laws or regulation.
(c)          AST represents and warrants that it has implemented and maintains appropriate security measures to protect personal information in compliance with federal and state regulations, including those related to privacy and confidentiality, applicable to AST. AST agrees that it shall promptly notify a Company of any security breach or other incident of which it becomes aware that involves possible unauthorized disclosure of or access to personal information related to the Company or its Shareholders. Without limiting the remedies available to the Companies, should AST fail to report, or take reasonable measures to resolve such a security breach or other incident, one or more Companies may terminate this Agreement. AST agrees that this provision shall cover any of its affiliates, subcontractors or agents that obtains access to personal information related to the Companies or their shareholders under this Agreement.AST will be responsible to the Companies for the compliance by such affiliates, subcontractors or agents  with this provision and their actions generally. This provision will survive termination or expiration of the Agreement for so long as AST continues to possess or have access to personal information related to the Companies or their Shareholders.
13.          Limitations on AST’s Responsibilities.  AST shall not be responsible for the validity of the issuance, presentation or transfer of stock; the genuineness of endorsements; the authority of presenters; or the collection or payment of charges or taxes incident to the issuance or transfer of stock. AST may, however, delay or decline an issuance or transfer if it deems it to be in its or a Company’s best interests to receive evidence or assurance of such validity, authority, collection or payment. AST shall not be responsible for any discrepancies in its records or between its records and those of the Company, if it is a successor transfer agent or successor registrar, unless no discrepancy existed in the records of the Company and any predecessor transfer agent or predecessor registrar. AST shall not be deemed to have notice of, or be required to inquire regarding any provision of, the Company’s charter or by-laws, any court or administrative order, or any other document, unless it is specifically advised of such in a writing from the Company, which writing shall set forth the manner in which it affects the Shares. In no event shall AST be responsible for any transfer or issuance not effected by it.
14.          Limitations on Liability.  In no event shall AST or any Company have any liability for any incidental, special, statutory, indirect or consequential damages, or for any loss of profits, revenue, data or cost of cover. AST’s liability arising out of or in connection with its acting as Agent for the Companies shall not exceed the aggregate amount of all fees (excluding expenses) that would normally be paid under this Agreement in thirty-six (36) month period. There shall be no limit on AST’s liability in the event of willful misconduct, bad faith or gross negligence immediately preceding the date of the first event giving rise to liability.
15.          Indemnity.  Each Company hereby agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Agent and its officers, directors and employees (each, an “Indemnified Person”) from and against any and all losses, claims, damages, liabilities and expenses, joint or several, to which any such Indemnified Person may become subject to arising out of or in connection with this Agreement or any claim, litigation, investigation or proceeding relating to any of the foregoing (each, a “Proceeding”), regardless of whether any such Indemnified Person is a party thereto or whether a Proceeding is brought by a third party or by the Company, or any of its respective affiliates, and to reimburse each such Indemnified Person upon demand for any reasonable, documented legal or other out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with investigating or defending any of the foregoing by one counsel to the Indemnified Persons taken as a whole and, in the case of a conflict of interest, one additional counsel to the affected Indemnified Persons taken as a whole; provided that the foregoing indemnity shall not, as to any Indemnified Person, apply to losses, claims, damages, liabilities or related expenses to the extent they have resulted from the willful misconduct, bad faith or negligence of such Indemnified Person. In the event that an Indemnified Person is requested or required to appear as a witness or is deposed in any action brought by or on behalf of or
6

against the Company or any of its subsidiaries or affiliates in which such Indemnified Person is not named as a defendant, the Company agrees to reimburse such Indemnified Person for all reasonable expenses incurred by it in connection with such Indemnified Person’s appearing and preparing to appear as such a witness, including, without limitation, the reasonable fees and expenses of its legal counsel. To the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, no party hereto shall be liable to any other party hereto on any theory of liability for any special, indirect, consequential or punitive damages (including, without limitation, any loss of profits, business or anticipated savings).In addition, AST will indemnify each Company and its officers, directors and employees against and hold them harmless from any and all losses, claims, damages, liabilities or expenses (including reasonable counsel fees and expenses) resulting from any claim, demand, action or suit resulting from willful misconduct, bad faith or negligence.
16.          The Agent agrees to notify a Company promptly of the assertion of any Proceeding against any Indemnified Person; and the Company agrees to notify the Agent promptly of the assertion of any Proceeding against the Company, or any of its officers, directors, employees, advisors, agents, other representatives and controlling persons in connection with this Agreement, in which event the Agent agrees to assume sole responsibility of promptly notifying any of the relevant Indemnified Person of any such assertion.At the Company’s election, the defense of the Indemnified Persons shall be conducted by the Company’s counsel. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Agent may employ separate counsel to represent it or defend the Agent or an Indemnified Person in such Proceeding, and the Company will pay any reasonable, documented legal or other out-of-pocket expenses of counsel if the Agent or such Indemnified Person reasonably determines, based on the advice of its legal counsel, that there are defenses available to the Agent or such Indemnified Person that are different from, or in addition to, those available to the Company, or if an actual or potential conflict of interest between the Agent or the Indemnified Person and the Company makes representation by the Company’s counsel not advisable; provided that, unless there is an actual or potential conflict of interest, the Company will not be required to pay the fees and expenses of more than one separate counsel for all Indemnified Persons in any jurisdiction in any single Proceeding.In any Proceeding the defense of which the Company assumes, the Indemnified Persons shall be entitled to participate in such Proceeding and retain its own counsel at such Indemnified Person’s own expense.
17.          Force Majeure.  AST is not liable for failure or delay in the performance of its obligations under this Agreement if such failure or delay is due to causes beyond its reasonable control, including but not limited to Acts of God (including fire, flood, earthquake, storm, hurricane or other natural disaster), war, invasion, act of foreign enemies, hostilities (regardless of whether war is declared), civil war, rebellion, revolution, insurrection, military or usurped power or confiscation, terrorist activities, nationalization, government sanction, blockage, embargo, labor dispute, strike, lockout or interruption or failure of electricity or telephone service or any other force majeure event (“Force Majeure Event”). A Company shall not be entitled to terminate this Agreement pursuant to Section 8 upon the occurrence and during the continuance of a Force Majeure Event without the consent of AST, such consent shall not be unreasonably withheld.
18.          Market Data. Each Company acknowledges that AST may provide real-time or delayed quotations and other market information and messages (the “Market Data”), which Market Data is provided to AST by certain national securities exchanges and associations who assert a proprietary interest in Market Data disseminated by them but do not guarantee the timeliness, sequence, accuracy or completeness thereof. Each Company agrees and acknowledges that AST shall not be liable in any way for any loss or damage arising from or occasioned by any inaccuracy, error, delay in, omission of, or interruption in any Market Data or the transmission thereof.
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19.          No Third Party Beneficiaries. The provisions of this Agreement are intended to benefit only AST and the Companies and their respective successors and assigns.No rights shall be granted to any other person by virtue of this Agreement, and there are no third party beneficiaries of this Agreement.
20.          Governing Law; Jurisdiction.  This Agreement shall be construed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the State of New York, without reference to its conflicts of law rules. It is agreed that any litigation arising out of or based upon this Agreement shall be brought in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York or any court of the State of New York of competent jurisdiction located in such District. Service of any process by registered mail addressed to each party at the respective address above shall be effective service of process against such party for the proceeding brought in any such court. Each party hereto (i) waives, to the fullest extent it may legally and effectively do so, any objection which it may now or hereafter have to the laying of venue of any proceeding arising out of or relating to this Agreement in any New York State court or in any such Federal court, (ii) waives, to the fullest extent permitted by law, the defense of an inconvenient forum to the maintenance of such proceeding in any such court, and (iii) agrees that a final judgment in any such proceeding shall be conclusive and may be enforced in other jurisdictions by suit on the judgment or in any other manner provided by law. EACH PARTY HERETO IRREVOCABLY WAIVES THE RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY IN ANY PROCEEDING BROUGHT BY OR ON BEHALF OF ANY PARTY RELATED TO OR ARISING OUT OF THIS AGREEMENT OR THE PERFORMANCE OF ANY SERVICES HEREUNDER.
21.          Assignment. This Agreement shall not be assignable by either party without the prior written consent of the other party, provided, however, that any reorganization, merger, consolidation, or sale of all or substantially all assets, by a party shall not be deemed to constitute an assignment of this Agreement, provided, in the case of AST, that the surviving entity is duly registered as a transfer agent pursuant to Section 17A(c) (2) of the 1934 Act and is qualified to perform all duties required under this Agreement.
22.          Notices. Any notice or communication by the Agent or a Company to the other is duly given if in writing and delivered in person or via first class mail (postage prepaid) or overnight air courier to the other’s address.
If to a Company:
President, Mutual Funds
c/o Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC
1290 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10104

with copy to:

General Counsel, Mutual Funds
Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC
1290 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10104
And
8

Arthur Delibert
K&L Gates LLP
1601 K Street NW
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 778-9042
Email: arthur.delibert@klgates.com

If to the Agent:

American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC
6201 15th Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11219
Attention:  Relationship Manager

with copy to:

American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC
48 Wall Street, 22nd Floor
New York, NY 10005
Attention: Legal Department
Tel: (212) 269.5550
Email: legalteamAST@amstock.com
Each party hereto may designate, by notice to the other party, additional or different addresses for subsequent notices or communications.
23.          Customer Identification ProgramEach Company acknowledges and agrees that, pursuant to the requirements of the USA PATRIOT Act, Title III of Pub. L. 107-56 (signed into law on October 26, 2001) (the “PATRIOT Act”), the Agent is required to obtain, verify and record information that identifies the Company and, if applicable, its affiliates, which information includes names, addresses, tax identification numbers and other information that will allow the Agent to identify the Company and its affiliates in accordance with the PATRIOT Act and other applicable “know your customer” and anti- money laundering rules and regulations. This notice is given in accordance with the requirements of the PATRIOT Act.
[Signature Page Follows.]
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This Agreement has been executed by the parties hereto as of the date first written above.

 
THE INVESTMENT COMPANIES LISTED ON EXHIBIT A HERETO
 
 
 
 
 
By/s/ Brian Kerrane                                                  
 
Name: Brian Kerrane
 
Title: Chief Operating Officer - Funds
Agreed to and accepted by:
AMERICAN STOCK TRANSFER &
TRUST COMPANY, LLC


By /s/ Carlos Pinto                                  
Name: Carlos Pinto
Title: Senior Vice President


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EXHIBIT A
Neuberger Berman California Intermediate Municipal Fund Inc.
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
Neuberger Berman Intermediate Municipal Fund Inc.
Neuberger Berman MLP Income Fund Inc.
Neuberger Berman New York Intermediate Municipal Fund Inc.
Neuberger Berman Real Estate Securities Income Fund Inc.

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EXHIBIT B
The Company is authorized to issue the following securities:

Name of Securities
Class
Par
Value
Number of
Shares
Authorized
Neuberger Berman California Intermediate Municipal Fund Inc.
Common
   
Neuberger Berman California Intermediate Municipal Fund, Inc. Variable Rate Municipal Term Preferred Shares.
Preferred (VMTP)
   
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
Common
   
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund, Inc. Mandatory Redeemable Preferred
Preferred (MRPS)
   
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund, Inc. Floating Rate Senior Notes
Notes
   
Neuberger Berman Intermediate Municipal Fund Inc.
Common
   
Neuberger Berman Intermediate Municipal Fund Inc. Variable Rate Municipal Term Preferred Shares
Preferred (VMTP)
   
Neuberger Berman MLP Income Fund Inc.
Common
   
Neuberger Berman New York Intermediate Municipal Fund Inc.
Common
   
Neuberger Berman New York Intermediate Municipal Fund, Inc. Variable Rate Municipal Term Preferred Shares
Preferred (VMTP)
   
Neuberger Berman Real Estate Securities Income Fund Inc.
Common
   

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EXHIBIT C
ACCOUNT MAINTENANCE AND RECORDKEEPING

Open new accounts, consolidate and close shareholder accounts

Maintain all shareholder accounts

Process address changes, including seasonal addresses

Place, maintain and remove stop transfers

Post all debit and credit certificate transactions

Perform social security solicitation

Handle shareholder and broker inquiries, including internet correspondence

Respond to requests for audit confirmations
REGULATORY COMPLIANCE

Issue audit confirmations to company’s auditors

Perform OFAC searches
STOCK AUDIT / CONTROL BOOK FUNCTIONS

Maintain accurate records of outstanding shares

Respond to requests for audit confirmations

Provide web access to the total outstanding share balances for any date after 1996/ a list of transactions affecting outstanding shares within a specified date range

Track client-specified reserve accounts
CERTIFICATE AND SECURITY ISSUANCE FUNCTIONS

Process all routine transfers

Post all debit and credit certificate transactions

Issue stock certificates

Create book entry DRS positions

Participate in the DRS profile system, allowing broker “sweeps” of registered positions

Interface electronically with DTC/CEDE & CO.

Mail newly-issued certificates/DRS advices to shareholders

Replace lost or stolen certificates

Issue and register all stock certificates

Issue stock options through the DWAC System. Optionee accounts at brokerage houses are credited the same day that instructions are received

Process legal transfers and transactions requiring special handling

Provide e-mail access for the same day issuance of stock options

Provide daily reports of processed transfers
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REPORTING

Email daily of all transfer activity detail to company designated personnel

Furnish unlimited shareholder list, sorted by company-designated criteria

Provide unlimited sets of mailing labels
LISTS AND MAILINGS

Enclose multiple proxy cards to same household in one envelope (when applicable)

Monitor and suppress undeliverable mail until correct address is located

Furnish unlimited shareholder lists, in any sequence

Provide geographical detail reports of all stocks issued/surrendered over a specific period

Provide unlimited sets of mailing labels

WEB-BASED ORIGINAL ISSUANCE (OI) / DWAC SYSTEM 1

Facilitate Deposit/Withdrawal At Custodian (DWAC) and original issuances initiated from the client’s desktop via the internet

Credit (generally) DWACs within one hour of receipt

Facilitate client-entry of data for original issuance, ensuring that information is presented exactly as requested

Allow multiple requests to be submitted on the same form at the same time

Generate instant e-mail notification of submissions

Notify client via email when matching broker instructions have not been received

Provide designated brokers the ability for brokers to log into the system and track the status of company- submitted items

Report daily and monthly transactions via e-mail

Enforce a built-in security procedure
TECHNOLOGY AND INTERNET ACCESS
Shareholders via the Internet

Retrieve account information (including outstanding certificates and checks) 24 hours a day, 7 days a week

Review frequently asked questions, including transfer requirements.

Download forms (e.g., affidavit of domicile, form W8/W9, letters of transmittal, stock power, etc.)

Change account addresses

Replace lost, stolen or non-received checks

Replace lost, stolen or non-received stock certificates

Obtain a duplicate 1099 tax form
______________________________
1 AST does not charge a fee for DWAC processing, your broker may charge your company for fees incurred from receipt of shares.
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Sign up for electronic delivery (for example proxy materials)

Request a certificate for shares held in book-entry or plan form

Enroll to have distributions directed toward purchase of additional shares

Review concise and plain-english descriptions of current corporate actions and other significant company events

Send e-mail inquiries concerning their account, or conduct an online chat session with one of our customer service representatives
  
SHAREHOLDERS VIA THE INTERACTIVE VOICE RESPONSE (IVR)

Obtain account-specific information, including account balance

Execute plan transactions, including sales and certification requests

Request a duplicate 1099 form, with delivery via mail or fax

Request a transfer package via mail or fax

Request forms to effect address changes, check replacements, stock certificate replacements and direct deposit enrollments

Obtain information pertaining to current corporate actions or other significant company events
SHAREHOLDER (INQUIRIES)

Distribute “welcome” material to new shareholders

Provide unlimited assistance to shareholders related to their securities holdings as they initiate account inquiries or perform transactions, including:


Guidance through common transactions


Explanations for transaction rejections and the corrective steps required to complete their request

Provide 24/7 account access via the internet and IVR telephonic system (unlimited)

Provide toll-free 800 number for shareholder-initiated telephone inquiries to our call center

Oversee the fulfillment process for potential investors

Issue replacement checks
CLIENT-DESIGNATED PERSONNEL VIA THE INTERNET

View and download detailed shareholder data, including: name, address of record, account number(s), number of shares held in certificate and book-entry form, historical distribution-related information and cost basis reporting information

Obtain total outstanding share balances for any date after 1996 and/or a list of transactions affecting outstanding shares within a specified date range

Utilize our reporting tool to generate comprehensive reports in a real-time environment, with immediate e-mail delivery

Issue stock options and effect delivery through the DWAC system

Update company profile and corporate information
AST’s Control Books Tracking

-
Access the number of outstanding shares as of any given date

-
Elect to receive daily emails of control books information

-

15


-
Access transactions affecting the number of outstanding shares in a client-specified date range

AST’s Proxy Central


-
Proxy reports (either summary or detail) by proposal

-
Voting status on the fifty largest accounts

-
Shareholders attending your annual meeting

-
DTC position listing

-
Broker voting detail

ANNUAL SHAREHOLDER MEETING 2

Process proxy votes for routine/non-routine meetings

Imprint shareholders’ name on proxy cards

Mail material to shareholders (postage and processing fees will apply)

Prepare and transmit daily proxy tabulation reports to the company via email

Provide certified shareholder list via hard copy per request

Facilitate proxy distribution mailing
DISTRIBUTION DISBURSEMENT

Confirm in writing that the distribution notice was received

Prepare and calculate distribution payments

Coordinate distribution checks and enclosures mailing to the shareholders

Furnish one copy of the distribution register, hard copy or CD-ROM (if requested)

Answer shareholder inquiries relative to distribution payments

Place stop payment orders on reported lost distribution checks

Issue replacement distribution checks/sales checks

Provide copies of paid distribution checks upon request

Reconcile the distribution disbursing accounts maintained by AST

Report annual distribution income to shareholders on IRS form 1099-DIV

File annual tax information electronically to the internal revenue service.

Withhold and remit backup withholding taxes as required by the internal revenue service

Withhold foreign tax and file foreign tax reports as required by the internal revenue service.

Maintain custody and control of all undeliverable checks and forward returned items to shareholders upon notice of a current address

Mail year-end tax information to plan participants and the IRS

Produce all applicable tax forms

-
Mail year-end 1099 forms to shareholders

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Furnish year-end 1099 tax forms to shareholders

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Replace lost 1099 tax forms to shareholders
_________________________________
2 AST Fund Solutions LLC may administer annual shareholder meetings and related services.
16

DISTRIBUTION REINVESTMENT PLAN ADMINISTRATION

Open and maintain participant accounts

Acknowledge and process reinvestment, direct debit and optional cash payments

Mail monthly distribution reinvestment statements within 5 business days of payable date

Correspond with plan participants

Mail proceeds to plan participants liquidating or terminating the plan

Provide periodic investment reports to the company

Process applicable cash distribution payments

Prepare and mailing checks to shareholders

Insert all required enclosures

Handle reinvestment and/or cash investment transactions for all plan participant accounts

Prepare and mail or transmit a year to date detailed distribution reinvestment statement to each plan participant

Maintain plan accounts and establish new participant accounts via internet and mail

Provide for direct debit of shareowner accounts for optional cash, as required

Process book-to-book transfers and partial and full share sales

Process termination and withdrawal requests by internet, mail or telephone

Provide safekeeping for shares in the plan

Handle all plan inquiries

Prepare and mail tax form 1099/1099B/1042 to participants and related filings with the IRS

Mail or transmit prospectus and enrollment package as requested by potential or existing shareholders
Investors Management

Provide complete access to CEFinsight.com

Provide quarterly Ownership Intelligence reports for each Fund serviced


17
EXHIBIT (k)(ii)

ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT

NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND INC.

This Agreement is made as of August 6, 2010, between Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation (“Fund”), and Neuberger Berman Management LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (“Administrator”).

WHEREAS, the Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (“1940 Act”), as a closed-end, non-diversified management investment company;

WHEREAS, the Fund desires to retain the Administrator to furnish administrative services, including stockholder accounting, recordkeeping, and other services to stockholders and the Administrator is willing to furnish such services,

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and mutual covenants herein contained, the parties agree as follows:

1.          Services of the Administrator.

1.1  Administrative Services.  The Administrator shall supervise the business and affairs of the Fund and shall provide such services required for effective administration of the Fund as are not provided by employees or other agents engaged by the Fund; provided, that the Administrator shall not have any obligation to provide under this Agreement any services related to the distribution of the Fund’s shares, or any other services that are the subject of a separate agreement or arrangement between the Fund and the Administrator.  The Administrator can use any of the officers and employees of Neuberger Berman LLC to provide any of the services or reports required under this agreement.  Subject to the foregoing, in providing administrative services hereunder, the Administrator shall:

1.1.1  Office Space, Equipment and Facilities. Furnish without cost to the Fund, or pay the cost of, such office space, office equipment and office facilities as are adequate for the needs of the Fund;

1.1.2  Personnel.  Provide, without remuneration from or other cost to the Fund, the services of individuals competent to perform all of the executive, administrative and clerical functions of the Fund that are not performed by employees or other agents engaged by the Fund or by the Administrator acting in some other capacity pursuant to a separate agreement or arrangement with the Fund;

1.1.3  Agents.  Assist the Fund in selecting and coordinating the activities of the other agents engaged by the Fund, including the Fund’s stockholder servicing agent, dividend disbursing agent, custodian, independent auditors and legal counsel;

1.1.4  Directors and Officers.  Authorize and permit the Administrator’s directors, officers or employees who may be elected or appointed as officers of the Fund or directors of the

Fund (“Directors”) to serve in such capacities, without remuneration from or other cost to the Fund;

1.1.5  Books and Records.  Assure that all financial, accounting and other records required to be maintained and preserved by the Fund are maintained and preserved by it or on its behalf in accordance with applicable laws and regulations; and

1.1.6  Reports and Filings.  Assist in the preparation of (but not pay for) all periodic reports by the Fund to stockholders of the Fund and all reports and filings required to maintain the registration, qualification and listing on a national securities exchange of the Fund and the shares of the Fund, or to meet other regulatory or tax requirements applicable to the Fund or the shares of the Fund, under federal and state securities and tax laws.

1.2  Stockholder and Related Services.  The Administrator shall provide such of the following services as are required by the Fund or its stockholders:

1.2.1          Direct stockholder services, consisting of:

(a)          Responding to telephonic and in-person inquiries from existing stockholders or their representatives requesting information regarding matters such as stockholder account or transaction status, net asset value (“NAV”) of Fund shares, and Fund performance, Fund services, plans and options, Fund investment policies, Fund portfolio holdings, and Fund distributions and classification thereof for tax purposes;

(b)          Dealing with stockholder complaints and correspondence directed to or brought to the attention of the Administrator; and

(c)          Generating or developing and distributing special data, notices, reports, programs and literature required by large stockholders, by stockholders with specialized informational needs, or by stockholders generally in light of developments, such as changes in tax laws.

1.2.2          Soliciting and gathering stockholder proxies.

1.2.3          Such other stockholder and stockholder-related services, whether similar to or different from those described in Subparagraphs 1.2.1 and 1.2.2 of this Paragraph 1.2, as the parties may from time to time agree in writing.

1.3          Blue Sky Services.  The Administrator shall maintain under this Agreement the registration or qualification of the Fund and its shares under state Blue Sky or securities laws and regulations, as necessary; provided that such Fund shall pay all related filing fees and registration or qualification fees.

1.4          Other Services.  The Administrator shall provide such other services required by the Fund as the parties may from time to time agree in writing are appropriate to be provided under this Agreement.
- 2 -


2.          Expenses of the Fund.

2.1  Expenses to be Paid by the Administrator.  The Administrator shall pay all salaries, expenses and fees of the officers, Directors, or employees of the Fund who are officers, directors or employees of the Administrator.  If the Administrator pays or assumes any expenses of the Fund not required to be paid or assumed by the Administrator under this Agreement, the Administrator shall not be obligated hereby to pay or assume the same or any similar expense in the future; provided, that nothing herein contained shall be deemed to relieve the Administrator of any obligation to the Fund under any separate agreement or arrangement between the parties.

2.2  Expenses to be Paid by the Fund.  The Fund shall bear all expenses of its operation, except those specifically allocated to the Administrator under this Agreement or under any separate agreement between the Fund and the Administrator.  Subject to any separate agreement or arrangement between the Fund and the Administrator, the expenses hereby allocated to the Fund, and not to the Administrator, include, but are not limited to:

2.2.1  Custody.  All charges of depositories, custodians, and other agents for the transfer, receipt, safekeeping, and servicing of its cash, securities, and other property;

2.2.2  Stockholder servicing.  All expenses of maintaining and servicing stockholder accounts, including but not limited to the charges of any stockholder servicing agent, dividend disbursing agent, dividend reinvestment plan agent or other agent (other than the Administrator hereunder) engaged by the Fund to service stockholder accounts;

2.2.3  Stockholder Reports.  All expenses of preparing, setting in type, printing and distributing reports and other communications to stockholders of the Fund;

2.2.4  Prospectuses.  All expenses of preparing, setting in type, printing and mailing annual or more frequent revisions of the Fund’s Prospectus and SAI and any supplements thereto and of supplying them to stockholders of the Fund and Account holders;

2.2.5  Pricing and Portfolio Valuation.  All expenses of computing the Fund’s NAV per share, including any equipment or services obtained for the purpose of pricing shares or valuing the Fund’s investment portfolio;

2.2.6  Communications.  All charges for equipment or services used for communications between the Administrator or the Fund and any custodian, stockholder servicing agent, portfolio accounting services agent, or other agent engaged by the Fund;

2.2.7  Legal and Accounting Fees.  All charges for services and expenses of the Fund’s legal counsel and independent auditors;

2.2.8  Directors’ Fees and Expenses.  All compensation of Directors other than those affiliated with the Administrator, all expenses incurred in connection with such unaffiliated
- 3 -

Directors’ services as Directors, and all other expenses of meetings of the Directors or committees thereof;

2.2.9  Stockholder Meetings.  All expenses incidental to holding meetings of stockholders, including the printing of notices and proxy materials, and proxy solicitation therefor;

2.2.10  Federal Registration Fees.  All fees and expenses of registering and maintaining the registration of the Fund under the 1940 Act and the registration of the Fund’s shares under the Securities Act of 1933 (the “1933 Act”), including all fees and expenses incurred in connection with the preparation, setting in type, printing, and filing of any Registration Statement, Prospectus and SAI under the 1933 Act or the 1940 Act, and any amendments or supplements that may be made from time to time;

2.2.11  State Registration Fees.  All fees and expenses of qualifying and maintaining the qualification of the Fund and of the Fund’s shares for sale under securities laws of various states or jurisdictions, and of registration and qualification of the Fund under all other laws applicable to the Fund or its business activities (including registering the Fund as a broker‑dealer, or any officer of the Fund or any person as agent or salesman of the Fund in any state);

2.2.12  Share Certificates.  All expenses of preparing and transmitting the Fund’s share certificates, if any;

2.2.13  Confirmations.  All expenses incurred in connection with the issue and transfer of the Fund’s shares, including the expenses of confirming all share transactions;

2.2.14  Bonding and Insurance.  All expenses of bond, liability, and other insurance coverage required by law or regulation or deemed advisable by the Directors, including, without limitation, such bond, liability and other insurance expense that may from time to time be allocated to the Fund in a manner approved by the Directors;

2.2.15  Brokerage Commissions.  All brokers’ commissions and other charges incident to the purchase, sale or lending of the Fund’s portfolio securities;

2.2.16  Taxes.  All taxes or governmental fees payable by or with respect to the Fund to federal, state or other governmental agencies, domestic or foreign, including stamp or other transfer taxes;

2.2.17  Trade Association Fees.  All fees, dues and other expenses incurred in connection with the Fund’s membership in any trade association or other investment organization;

2.2.18  Nonrecurring and Extraordinary Expenses. Such nonrecurring and extraordinary expenses as may arise, including the costs of actions, suits, or proceedings to which the Fund is a party and the expenses the Fund may incur as a result of its legal obligation to provide indemnification to the Fund’s officers, Directors and agents;
- 4 -


2.2.19  Organizational Expenses and Offering Expenses for Common Stock.  Any and all organizational expenses and any and all offering expenses for shares of the Fund’s common stock paid or assessed by the Administrator, which the Fund shall reimburse to the Administrator if and at such time or times agreed by the Fund and the Administrator; and

2.2.20  Investment Advisory Services.  Any fees and expenses for investment advisory services that may be incurred or contracted for by the Fund.

2.2.21          Expenses of Listing on a National Securities Exchange.  Any and all expenses of listing and maintaining the listing of shares of the Fund’s common stock on any national securities exchange.

2.2.22          Offering Expenses for any Preferred Stock.  Any and all offering expenses (including rating agency fees) for any preferred stock of the Fund paid or assessed by the Administrator shall be reimbursed by the Fund if and at such time or times agreed by the Fund and the Administrator.

2.2.23          Dividend Reinvestment Plan.  Any and all expenses incident to any dividend reinvestment plan.

2.2.24          Interest.  Such interest as may accrue on borrowings of the Fund.

3.          Administration Fee.

3.1  Fee.  As compensation for all services rendered, facilities provided and expenses paid or assumed by the Administrator to or for the Fund under this Agreement, the Fund shall pay the Administrator an annual fee as set out in Schedule A to this Agreement.

3.2  Computation and Payment of Fee.  The administration fee shall accrue on each calendar day, and shall be payable monthly on the first business day of the next succeeding calendar month.  The daily fee accruals for the Fund shall be computed by multiplying the fraction of one divided by the number of days in the calendar year by the applicable annual administration fee rate (as set forth in Schedule A hereto), and multiplying this product by the total assets minus liabilities other than the aggregate indebtedness entered into for purposes of leverage (“Managed Assets”) of the Fund, determined in the manner set forth in the Fund’s Prospectus, as of the close of business on the last preceding business day on which the Fund’s NAV was determined.

4.  Ownership of Records.  All records required to be maintained and preserved by the Fund pursuant to the provisions or rules or regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) under Section 31(a) of the 1940 Act and maintained and preserved by the Administrator on behalf of the Fund are the property of the Fund and shall be surrendered by the Administrator promptly on request by the Fund; provided, that the Administrator may at its own expense make and retain copies of any such records.
- 5 -


5.  Reports to Administrator.  The Fund shall furnish or otherwise make available to the Administrator such copies of the Fund’s Prospectus, SAI, financial statements, proxy statements, reports, and other information relating to its business and affairs as the Administrator may, at any time or from time to time, reasonably require in order to discharge its obligations under this Agreement.

6.  Reports to the Fund.  The Administrator shall prepare and furnish to the Fund such reports, statistical data and other information in such form and at such intervals as the Fund may reasonably request.

7.  Ownership of Software and Related Materials.  All computer programs, written procedures and similar items developed or acquired and used by the Administrator in performing its obligations under this Agreement shall be the property of the Administrator, and the Fund will not acquire any ownership interest therein or property rights with respect thereto.

8.  Confidentiality.  The Administrator agrees, on its own behalf and on behalf of its employees, agents and contractors, to keep confidential any and all records maintained and other information obtained hereunder which relates to the Fund or to any of the Fund’s former, current or prospective stockholders, except that the Administrator may deliver records or divulge information (a) when requested to do so by duly constituted authorities after prior notification to and approval in writing by the Fund (which approval will not be unreasonably withheld and may not be withheld by the Fund where the Administrator advises the Fund that it may be exposed to civil or criminal contempt proceedings or other penalties for failure to comply with such request) or (b) whenever requested in writing to do so by the Fund.

9.  The Administrator’s Actions in Reliance on Fund’s Instructions, Legal Opinions, Etc.; Fund’s Compliance with Laws.

9.1  The Administrator may at any time apply to an officer of the Fund for instructions, and may consult with legal counsel for the Fund or with the Administrator’s own legal counsel, in respect of any matter arising in connection with this Agreement; and the Administrator shall not be liable for any action taken or omitted to be taken in good faith and with due care in accordance with such instructions or with the advice or opinion of such legal counsel.  The Administrator shall be protected in acting upon any such instructions, advice or opinion and upon any other paper or document delivered by the Fund or such legal counsel which the Administrator believes to be genuine and to have been signed by the proper person or persons, and the Administrator shall not be held to have notice of any change of status or authority of any officer or representative of the Fund, until receipt of written notice thereof from the Fund.

9.2  Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement or in any separate agreement between the parties and except for the accuracy of information furnished to the Fund by the Administrator, the Fund assumes full responsibility for the preparation, contents, filing and distribution of its Prospectus and SAI, and full responsibility for other documents or actions required for compliance with all applicable requirements of the 1940 Act, the Securities
- 6 -

Exchange Act of 1934, the 1933 Act, and any other applicable laws, rules and regulations of governmental authorities having jurisdiction over the Fund.

10.  Services to Other Clients.  Nothing herein contained shall limit the freedom of the Administrator or any affiliated person of the Administrator to render administrative or stockholder services to other investment companies, to act as administrator to other persons, firms, or corporations, or to engage in other business activities.

11.1          Liability of the Administrator.  Neither the Administrator nor any director, officer or employee of the Administrator performing services for the Fund at the direction or request of the Administrator in connection with the Administrator’s discharge of its obligations hereunder shall be liable for any error of judgment or mistake of law or for any loss suffered by the Fund in connection with any matter to which this Agreement relates; provided, that nothing herein contained shall be construed (i) to protect the Administrator against any liability to the Fund or its Stockholders to which the Administrator would otherwise be subject by reason of the Administrator’s willful misfeasance, bad faith, or gross negligence in the performance of the Administrator’s duties, or by reason of the Administrator’s reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under this Agreement (“disabling conduct”), or (ii) to protect any director, officer or employee of the Administrator who is or was a Director or officer of the Fund against any liability to the Fund or its Stockholders to which such person would otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of such person’s office with the Fund.

11.2          Indemnification by the Fund.  The Fund will indemnify the Administrator against, and hold it harmless from, any and all expenses (including reasonable counsel fees and expenses) incurred investigating or defending against claims for losses or liabilities described in Section 11.1 not resulting from negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under this Agreement or disabling conduct by the Administrator.  Indemnification shall be made only following: (i) a final decision on the merits by a court or other body before whom the proceeding was brought that the Administrator was not liable by reason of negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under this Agreement or disabling conduct or (ii) in the absence of such a decision, a reasonable determination, based  upon a review of the facts, that the Administrator was not liable by reason of negligence, disregard of its obligations and duties under this Agreement or disabling conduct by (a) the vote of a majority of a  quorum of directors of the Fund who are neither “interested persons” of the Fund nor parties to the proceeding (“disinterested non-party directors”) or (b) an independent legal counsel in a written opinion.  The Administrator shall be entitled to advances from the Fund for payment of the reasonable expenses incurred by it in connection with the matter as to which it is seeking indemnification hereunder in the manner and to the fullest extent permissible under the Maryland General Corporation Law.  The Administrator shall provide to the Fund a written affirmation of its good faith belief that the standard of conduct necessary for indemnification by the Fund has been met and a written undertaking to repay any such advance if it should ultimately be determined that the standard of conduct has not been met.  In addition, at least one of the following additional conditions shall be met: (a) the Administrator shall provide security in form and amount acceptable to the Fund for its undertaking; (b) the Fund is insured against losses arising by reason of the advance; or (c) a majority of a quorum of the full Board of Directors of the Fund, the members of which majority
- 7 -

are disinterested non-party directors, or independent legal counsel, in a written opinion, shall have determined, based on a review of facts readily available to the Fund at the time the advance is proposed to be made, that there is reason to believe that the Administrator will ultimately be found to be entitled to indemnification hereunder. Before confessing any claim against it which may be subject to indemnification by the Fund hereunder, the Administrator shall give the Fund reasonable opportunity to defend against such claim in its own name or in the name of the Administrator.

12.  Indemnification by the Administrator.  The Administrator shall indemnify the Fund and hold it harmless from and against any and all losses, damages and expenses, including reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses, incurred by the Fund which result from: (i) the Administrator’s failure to comply with the terms of this Agreement; or (ii) the Administrator’s lack of good faith in performing its obligations hereunder; or (iii) the Administrator’s negligence or misconduct or that of its employees, agents or contractors in connection herewith.  The Fund shall not be entitled to such indemnification in respect of actions or omissions constituting negligence or misconduct on the part of the Fund or its employees, agents or contractors other than the Administrator unless such negligence or misconduct results from or is accompanied by negligence or misconduct on the part of the Administrator, any affiliated person of the Administrator, or any affiliated person of an affiliated person of the Administrator.  Before confessing any claim against it which may be subject to indemnification hereunder, the Fund shall give the Administrator reasonable opportunity to defend against such claim in its own name or in the name of the Fund.

13.  Effect of Agreement.  Nothing herein contained shall be deemed to require the Fund to take any action contrary to the Articles of Incorporation or By-laws of the Fund or any applicable law, regulation or order to which it is subject or by which it is bound, or to relieve or deprive the Directors of their responsibility for and control of the conduct of the business and affairs of the Fund.

14.  Term of Agreement.  The term of this Agreement shall begin on the date first written above and, unless sooner terminated as hereinafter provided, this Agreement shall remain in effect through October 31, 2010.  Thereafter, this Agreement shall continue in effect from year to year, subject to the termination provisions and all other terms and conditions hereof; provided, such continuance is approved at least annually by vote or written consent of the Directors, including a majority of the Directors who are not interested persons of either party hereto (“Disinterested Directors”); and provided further, that the Administrator shall not have notified the Fund in writing at least sixty days prior to the first expiration date hereof or at least sixty days prior to any expiration date in any year thereafter that it does not desire such continuation.  The Administrator shall furnish the Fund, promptly upon its request, such information as may reasonably be necessary to evaluate the terms of this Agreement or any extension, renewal or amendment thereof.

15.  Amendment or Assignment of Agreement.  Any amendment to this Agreement shall be in writing signed by the parties hereto; provided, that no such amendment shall be effective unless authorized on behalf of any Fund (i) by resolution of the Directors, including the vote or written consent of a majority of the Disinterested Directors, or (ii) by vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund.  This Agreement shall terminate automatically and
- 8 -

immediately in the event of its assignment; provided, that with the consent of the Fund, the Administrator may subcontract to another person any of its responsibilities with respect to the Fund.

16.  Termination of Agreement.  This Agreement may be terminated at any time by either party hereto, without the payment of any penalty, upon at least sixty days’ prior written notice to the other party; provided, that in the case of termination by the Fund, such action shall have been authorized (i) by resolution of the Directors, including the vote or written consent of the Disinterested Directors, or (ii) by vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund.

17.  Name of the Fund.  The Fund hereby agrees that if the Administrator shall at any time for any reason cease to serve as administrator to the Fund, the Fund shall, if and when requested by the Administrator, eliminate from the Fund’s name the name “Neuberger Berman” and thereafter refrain from using the name “Neuberger Berman” or the initials “NB” in connection with its business or activities, and the foregoing agreement of the Fund shall survive any termination of this Agreement and any extension or renewal thereof.

18.  Interpretation and Definition of Terms.  Any question of interpretation of any term or provision of this Agreement having a counterpart in or otherwise derived from a term or provision of the 1940 Act shall be resolved by reference to such term or provision of the 1940 Act and to interpretation thereof, if any, by the United States courts or, in the absence of any controlling decision of any such court, by rules, regulations or orders of the SEC validly issued pursuant to the 1940 Act.  Specifically, the terms “vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities,” “interested persons,” “assignment” and “affiliated person,” as used in this Agreement shall have the meanings assigned to them by Section 2(a) of the 1940 Act.  In addition, when the effect of a requirement of the 1940 Act reflected in any provision of this Agreement is modified, interpreted or relaxed by a rule, regulation or order of the SEC, whether of special or of general application, such provision shall be deemed to incorporate the effect of such rule, regulation or order.

19.  Choice of Law.  This Agreement is made and to be principally performed in the State of New York, and except insofar as the 1940 Act or other federal laws and regulations may be controlling, this Agreement shall be governed by, and construed and enforced in accordance with, the internal laws of the State of New York.

20.  Captions.  The captions in this Agreement are included for convenience of reference only and in no way define or delineate any of the provisions hereof or otherwise affect their construction or effect.

21.  Execution in Counterparts.  This Agreement may be executed simultaneously in counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original, but all of which together shall constitute one and the same instrument.
- 9 -

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be signed by their respective officers thereunto duly authorized and their respective seals to be hereunto affixed, as of the day and year first above written.

 
NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND
INC.


/s/ Claudia A. Brandon                
Name:  Claudia A. Brandon
Title:  Executive Vice President and Secretary


NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT LLC


/s/ Robert Conti                            
Name:  Robert Conti
Title:  President


- 10 -


NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND INC.
ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT

SCHEDULE A


Compensation pursuant to Paragraph 3 of the Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc. Administration Agreement shall be:


(1)
For the services provided to the Fund and its stockholders (including amounts paid to third parties), 0.05% per annum of the average daily Managed Assets of the Fund; plus


(2)
Certain out-of-pocket expenses for technology used for stockholder servicing and stockholder communication, subject to the prior approval of an annual budget by the Fund’s Board of Directors, including a majority of those Directors who are not interested persons of the Fund or of Neuberger Berman Management LLC, and periodic reports to the Board of Directors on actual expenses.



Dated as of: August 6, 2010

EXHIBIT (k)(iii)


NOVATION OF ADMINISTRATION AGREEMENT
NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND INC.
This Novation of Administration Agreement (“Novation”) is entered into as of the 1st day of January, 2016 by and among Neuberger Berman Management LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (“NB Management”), Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (“NBIA”), and Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation (the “Fund”).
WITNESSETH:
WHEREAS, the Fund has retained NB Management pursuant to an Administration Agreement dated [August 6, 2010], by and between NB Management and the Fund (the “Administration Agreement”) to furnish to the Fund and its stockholders the administrative services described in said Administration Agreement;
WHEREAS, NB Management and NBIA desire to effect a novation of the Administration Agreement so that NBIA is substituted for NB Management as a party to such agreement and NB Management is released from its obligations under the Administration Agreement, NBIA desires to accept the novation thereof, and the Fund desires to consent to such novation.
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual covenants contained herein, the parties hereto agree as follows:
1.          Novation and Acceptance. Subject to the terms and conditions contained herein, NB Management hereby effects a novation of the Administration Agreement to substitute NBIA for NB Management as a party to such agreement, and the Fund hereby consents to such Novation and hereby releases NB Management from all of its duties and obligations under the Administration Agreement, and NBIA hereby accepts the Novation and hereby releases NB Management from all of its duties and obligations under the Administration Agreement, and assumes all rights, duties and obligations of NB Management under the Administration Agreement.
2.          Term. The Novation shall become effective as of the date hereof and shall extend for so long as the terms specified in Section [14] of the Administration Agreement are satisfied or until terminated in accordance with the Administration Agreement.
3.          No Termination. The parties agree that the Novation shall not constitute an “assignment” of the Administration Agreement for purposes of Section [15] of the Administration Agreement, and that the Administration Agreement, as so novated, shall remain in full force and effect after the Novation.
4.          Technical Amendment. The parties agree that all references in the Administration Agreement to NB Management shall hereby be changed to NBIA.

5.          Execution in Counterparts. This Novation Agreement may be executed in multiple counterparts and all counterparts so executed will constitute one and the same agreement binding on all of the parties.









IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Novation of Administration Agreement to be signed by their respective officers thereunto authorized, as of the day and year first above written.

 
 
 
 
NEUBERGER BERMAN MANAGEMENT LLC
     
 
By:
/s/ Robert Conti
 
Name:
Robert Conti
 
Title:
President
 
 
 
     
 
NEUBERGER BERMAN INVESTMENT ADVISERS LLC
     
 
By:
/s/ Robert Conti
 
Name:
Robert Conti
 
Title:
Managing Director
 
 
 
     
 
NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES
FUND INC.
     
 
By:
/s/ Brian Kerrane
 
Name:
Brian Kerrane
 
Title:
Chief Operating Officer

EXHIBIT (l)

K&L GATES LLP
1601 K STREET, N.W.
WASHINGTON, DC 20006
T +1 202 778 9000    F +1 202 778 9100  klgates.com


April 4, 2022


Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
1290 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10104

Ladies and Gentlemen:
We have acted as counsel to Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation (the “Fund”), in connection with the filing of the Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 (the “Pre-Effective Amendment”) to the Fund’s Registration Statement on Form N-2 (File Nos. 333-257996; 811-22396) (as amended, the "Registration Statement"), to be filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”) on or about April 4, 2022, relating to possible offerings from time to time of up to an aggregate of $150,000,000 of the following securities of the Fund: (1) shares of common stock, par value $0.0001 per share, of the Fund (“Common Stock”); and (2) rights to purchase Common Stock (“Subscription Rights”). The Common Stock and Subscription Rights are collectively referred to herein as the “Securities.”
  
The Registration Statement provides that the Securities may be offered separately or together, in amounts, at prices and on terms to be set forth in one or more supplements to the prospectus included in the Registration Statement (each, a “Prospectus Supplement”). This opinion letter is being delivered in accordance with the requirements of paragraph 29 of Schedule A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “1933 Act”), and Item 25.2.l of Form N-2 under the 1933 Act and the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “Investment Company Act”).
 
For purposes of this opinion letter, we have examined and relied upon originals or copies, certified or otherwise identified to our satisfaction, of:
 
(i)          the prospectus and statement of additional information (collectively, the “Prospectus”) filed as part of the Registration Statement, as amended by the Pre-Effective Amendment filed with the Commission on or about April 4, 2022;
 
(ii)          the Fund’s charter and bylaws (collectively, the “Organizational Documents”) in effect on the date of this opinion letter; and
 
(iii)          the resolutions adopted by the directors of the Fund relating to the Registration Statement and the Pre-Effective Amendment thereto and the authorization for issuance of the Securities.
 
We have also examined and relied upon certificates of public officials and, as to certain matters of fact that are material to our opinion, we have relied on a certificate of an officer of the Fund.  We have not independently established any of the facts on which we have so relied.

    
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
April 4, 2022
Page 2


For purposes of this opinion letter, we have assumed the accuracy and completeness of each document submitted to us, the genuineness of all signatures, the authenticity of all documents submitted to us as original documents and conformity to original documents of all documents submitted to us as facsimile, electronic, certified, conformed or photostatic copies thereof, the due execution and delivery of all documents where due execution and delivery are prerequisites to the effectiveness thereof. We have further assumed the legal capacity of natural persons, that persons identified to us as officers of the Fund are actually serving in such capacity, and that the representations of officers of the Fund are correct as to matters of fact.   We have not independently verified any of these assumptions.
  
The opinions expressed in this opinion letter are based on the facts in existence and the laws in effect on the date hereof and are limited to the laws of the Maryland General Corporation Law and the provisions of the Investment Company Act that, in our experience, are applicable to equity securities issued by registered closed-end investment companies.  We are not opining on, and we assume no responsibility for, the applicability to or effect on any of the matters covered herein of any other laws.
 
On the basis of the foregoing and subject to the assumptions, qualifications and limitations set forth in this letter, we are of the opinion that:
 
1.
the Common Stock, when (a) duly issued and sold in accordance with the Registration Statement and applicable Prospectus Supplement or upon exercise of Subscription Rights as contemplated by the Registration Statement and applicable Prospectus Supplement and (b) delivered to the purchaser or purchasers thereof against receipt by the Fund of such lawful consideration therefor as the Board of Directors (or an authorized committee thereof) may determine and at a price per share not less than the per share par value of the Common Stock, will be validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable. And
  
2.
The Subscription Rights, when duly issued in accordance with the Registration Statement and applicable Prospectus Supplement and the provisions of any applicable Transaction Document (as hereinafter defined), will be validly issued.
  
The opinions set forth herein are subject to the following assumptions, qualifications, limitations and exceptions being true and correct at or before the time of the delivery of any Securities offered pursuant to the Registration Statement and applicable Prospectus Supplement:
    
(i)
the Board of Directors, including any authorized committee thereof, and/or appropriate officers of the Fund shall have duly (x) established the terms of issuance and sale of the Securities and (y) authorized and taken any other necessary corporate or other action to approve the issuance and sale of the Securities and related matters, and sufficient shares of Common Stock, including any shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of Subscription Rights, shall have been duly reserved for issuance;
 
(ii)
the resolutions authorizing the Fund to register, offer, sell and issue the Securities shall not have been rescinded and shall be unchanged at all times during which the Securities are offered, sold or issued by the Fund;


Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
April 4, 2022
Page 3
 

(iii)
The terms of the issuance and sale of the Securities (x) shall have been duly established in accordance with all applicable law, the Organizational Documents, any underwriting agreement, any subscription agreement and any other relevant agreement relating to the issuance and sale of the Securities (collectively, the “Transaction Documents”) and the authorizing resolutions of the Board of Directors (or any authorized committee thereof), and (y) shall not result in a default under or breach of (nor constitute any event which with notice, lapse of time or both would constitute a default under or result in any breach of) any agreement or instrument binding upon the Fund and so as to comply with any restriction imposed by any court or governmental body having jurisdiction over the Fund;
  
(iv)
the Organizational Documents shall have not been amended after the date hereof in a manner that would affect the validity of any of the opinions rendered herein;

(v)
upon issuance of any Common Stock, including upon exercise of Subscription Rights, the total number of shares of Common Stock issued and outstanding shall not exceed the total number of shares of Common Stock that the Fund is then authorized to issue under its charter;
  
(vi)
the Securities and any certificates representing the Securities have been, as applicable, duly authenticated, executed, countersigned, registered and delivered upon payment of the agreed-upon legal consideration therefor and have been duly issued and sold in accordance with any applicable Transaction Document;
 
(vii)
each Transaction Document complies with the requirements of all applicable law, does not contain any provision inconsistent with the Organizational Documents and has been duly authorized, executed and delivered by, and will constitute a valid and binding obligation of, each party thereto;
 
(viii)
 the Registration Statement, as amended (including all necessary post-effective amendments), and any additional registration statement filed under Rule 462 under the Securities Act, shall be effective under the Securities Act, and such effectiveness shall not have been terminated or rescinded;
 
(ix)
an appropriate Prospectus Supplement shall have been prepared, delivered and filed in compliance with the Securities Act and the applicable rules and regulations thereunder;
 
(x)
the Securities shall be issued and sold in compliance with all U.S. federal and state securities laws and solely in the manner stated in the Registration Statement and the applicable Prospectus Supplement and there shall not have occurred any change in such laws affecting the validity of the opinions rendered herein;
 


Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
April 4, 2022
Page 4
 

(xi)
there shall have been no change in Maryland law applicable to the Securities that would affect the validity of any of the opinions rendered herein;

(xii)
no person shall have been accorded preemptive rights to purchase any Securities, whether pursuant to applicable law, the Organizational Documents or by contract.

This opinion is rendered solely in connection with the filing of the Pre-Effective Amendment. We hereby consent to the filing of this opinion with the Commission as an exhibit to the Registration Statement and to the reference to this firm in the statement of additional information that is being filed as part of the Pre-Effective Amendment.  In giving this consent, we do not thereby admit that we are experts with respect to any part of the Registration Statement or Prospectus within the meaning of the term “expert” as used in Section 11 of the 1933 Act or the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder by the Commission, nor do we admit that we are within the category of persons whose consent is required under Section 7 of the 1933 Act or the rules and regulations of the Commission thereunder.

 
Very truly yours,
/s/ K&L Gates LLP



EXHIBIT (n)

CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM


We consent to the references to our firm under the captions “Financial Highlights” and “Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm” in the Prospectus and "Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm" and "Financial Statements" in the Statement of Additional Information, each dated April 4, 2022, and each included in this Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Registration Statement (Form N-2, File No. 333-257996) of Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc. (the “Registration Statement”).
We also consent to the incorporation by reference of our report dated December 21, 2021, with respect to the financial statements and financial highlights of Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc. included in the Annual Report to Shareholders (Form N-CSR) for the year ended October 31, 2021, into this Registration Statement, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

 
/s/ ERNST & YOUNG LLP


Boston, Massachusetts
April 4, 2022


EXHIBIT (s)
Calculation of Filing Fee Tables
FORM N-2
(Form Type)
NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND INC.
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
Table 1: Newly Registered and Carry Forward Securities
 
Security
Type
Security
Class Title
Fee
Calculation
or Carry
Forward
Rule
Amount
Registered
Proposed
Maximum
Offering Price Per
Unit
Maximum
Aggregate
Offering Price
Fee Rate
Amount of
Registration Fee
Carry
Forward
Form Type
Carry
Forward
File
Number
Carry 
Forward
Initial
effective
date
Filing Fee
Previously Paid
In Connection
With Unsold
Securities to be
Carried Forward
                           
Newly Registered Securities
Fees to Be
Paid
Equity
Common Stock
457(o)
$148,999,992
$92.70
$13,812.30
       
 
Other
Subscription
Rights to
Acquire Shares
of Common
Stock(1)

       
Fees
Previously
Paid
Equity
Common Stock
457(o)
$1,000,008
$109.10
$109.10
       
 
Other
Subscription
Rights to
Acquire Shares
of Common
Stock
       
Carry Forward Securities
Carry
Forward
Securities
                       
                         
Total Offering Amounts
 
$150,000,000
 
$13,921.40
       
Total Fees Previously Paid
     
$109.10
       
Total Fee Offsets
     
       
Net Fee Due
     
$13,812.30
       

(1)
No separate consideration will be received by the Registrant. Any shares issued pursuant to an offering of rights to acquire shares of common stock, including any shares issued pursuant to an over-subscription privilege or a secondary over-subscription privilege, will be shares registered under this Registration Statement.


EXHIBIT (t)(iii)



PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT1
Filed Pursuant to Rule 424(_)(_)
(To Prospectus dated _________, 2022)
Registration Statement No. 333-


Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.

[  ] Rights for [  ] Common Stock
Subscription Rights to Acquire Common Stock

Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc. (the “Fund”) is issuing transferable subscription rights (“Rights”) to its stockholders of record as of the close of business on        (the “Record Date”) entitling the holders of these Rights to subscribe for an aggregate of       shares of common stock, par value $0.0001 per share of common stock (each a “share of Common Stock” and collectively, the “Common Stock”).  The holders of Common Stock (the “Stockholders”) of record on the Record Date (“Record Date Stockholders”) will receive one Right for each outstanding share of Common Stock owned on the Record Date. The Rights entitle the holders to purchase one new share of Common Stock for every       Rights held (1 for      ), and Stockholders of record who fully exercise their Rights will be entitled to subscribe, subject to certain limitations and subject to allotment, for additional Common Stock covered by any unexercised Rights.  Any Record Date Stockholder that owns fewer than     shares of Common Stock as of the close of business on the Record Date is entitled to subscribe for one full shares of Common Stock in an offering under this registration statement.

The Fund is a closed-end, diversified management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”). The Fund’s investment objective is to seek high total return (income plus capital appreciation). Neuberger Berman Investment Advisers LLC (“NBIA” or the “Adviser”) serves as the Fund’s investment adviser.

The Fund’s outstanding Common Stock is, and the shares of Common Stock issued pursuant to the exercise of the Rights will be, listed on the [NYSE American LLC (the “NYSE American”)]. The Fund’s shares of Common Stock trade under the symbol “NHS.” The Rights are transferable and will be admitted for trading on the [  ] under the symbol [“  ”] during the course of the Rights offering. See “Description of the Rights Offering” for a complete discussion of the terms of the Rights offering.


1 In addition to the sections outlined in this form of prospectus supplement, each prospectus supplement actually used in connection with an offering conducted pursuant to the registration statement to which this form of prospectus supplement is attached will be updated to include such other information as may then be required to be disclosed therein pursuant to applicable law or regulation as in effect as of the date of each such prospectus supplement, including, without limitation, information particular to the terms of each security offered thereby and any related risk factors or tax considerations pertaining thereto. This form of prospectus supplement is intended only to provide a rough approximation of the nature and type of disclosure that may appear in any actual prospectus supplement used for the purposes of offering securities pursuant to the registration statement to which this form of prospectus supplement is attached, and is not intended to and does not contain all of the information that would appear in any such actual prospectus supplement, and should not be used or relied upon in connection with any offer or sale of securities.
R-1

On [  ], 2022 (the last trading date prior to the shares of Common Stock trading ex-Rights), the last reported net asset value per share of Common Stock was $[ ] and the last reported sale price per share of Common Stock was $[ ].
 
Investing in the Fund’s Rights and/or Common Stock involves certain risks. You should review the information set forth under “Special Characteristics and Risk of the Rights” below and “Risk Factors” in the accompanying Prospectus before investing in the Fund’s Shares of Common Stock.

In addition, you should consider that a Rights Offering by the Fund:
 
Will substantially dilute the net asset value of shares of Common Stock owned by stockholders who do not fully exercise their rights and purchase additional Common Stock;

Will substantially dilute the voting power of stockholders who do not fully exercise their rights since they will own a smaller proportionate interest in the Fund upon completion of the offering; and

May increase the discount to net asset value of a stockholder’s Common Stock if the Subscription Price is set at a time when the Common Stock is trading at a discount to net asset value.

An investment in the Fund is not appropriate for all investors. There is no assurance that the Fund’s investment objective will be achieved. You should read this Prospectus Supplement and the accompanying Prospectus before deciding whether to invest in the Fund’s Common Stock and retain it for future reference. The Prospectus Supplement and the accompanying Prospectus contain important information about the Fund. Material that has been incorporated by reference and other information about the Fund can be obtained by calling [( )] or from the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (“SEC”) website (http://www.sec.gov). For additional information all holders of Rights should contact the Information Agent, [ ], at [ ].  Stockholders please call toll-free at [ ] (banks and brokers please call [ ]) or please send written requests to [ ].

STOCKHOLDERS WHO DO NOT EXERCISE THEIR RIGHTS MAY, AT THE COMPLETION OF THE OFFERING, OWN A SMALLER PROPORTIONAL INTEREST IN THE FUND THAN IF THEY EXERCISED THEIR RIGHTS. AS A RESULT OF THE OFFERING YOU MAY EXPERIENCE DILUTION OF THE AGGREGATE NET ASSET VALUE OF YOUR SHARES OF COMMON STOCK DEPENDING UPON WHETHER THE FUND’S NET ASSET VALUE PER COMMON SHARE IS ABOVE OR BELOW THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE ON THE EXPIRATION DATE. ALL COSTS OF THE OFFERING WILL BE BORNE BY THE FUND, AND INDIRECTLY BY CURRENT STOCKHOLDERS WHETHER THEY EXERCISE THEIR RIGHTS OR NOT.  RIGHTS EXERCISED BY A STOCKHOLDER ARE IRREVOCABLE.

THE FUND HAS DECLARED A DISTRIBUTION PAYABLE ON ____, WITH A RECORD DATE OF ____, WHICH WILL NOT BE PAYABLE WITH RESPECT TO SHARES OF COMMON STOCK ISSUED PURSUANT TO THE OFFER AFTER SUCH RECORD DATE.

R-2

Neither the SEC nor any state securities commission has approved or disapproved these securities or determined if this Prospectus Supplement is truthful or complete. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

     
Per Share
 
Total (1)
 
 
Estimated subscription price of Common Stock(1)
$
 
$
   
 
Underwriting discounts and commissions(2)
$
 
$
   
 
Estimated proceeds, before expenses, to the Fund(3)
$
 
$
   

(1)
The estimated Subscription Price to the public is based upon [ ]% of the last reported sales price of the Fund’s shares of Common Stock on the NYSE American on [ ], 2022.
(2)
Based on a Dealer Manager solicitation fee of $[  ] per share of Common Stock.
(3)
Before deduction of expenses related to the Rights offering, which are estimated approximately at $[ ].  Any offering expenses are paid indirectly by Stockholders.  Such fees and expenses will immediately reduce the net asset value per share of Common Stock purchased by an investor in the Rights offering.  The indirect expenses of the offering that Stockholders will pay are estimated to be $[ ] in the aggregate and $[ ] per share of Common Stock.  The amount of proceeds to the Fund net of any fees and expenses of the offering are estimated to be $[ ] in the aggregate and $[ ] per share of Common Stock.  Stockholders will not directly bear any offering expenses.

The shares of Common Stock are expected to be ready for delivery in book-entry form through the Depository Trust Company on or about [  ], 2022. If the offering is extended, the shares of Common Stock are expected to be ready for delivery in book-entry form through the Depository Trust Company on or about [ ], 2022.

You should not construe the contents of this Prospectus Supplement and the accompanying Prospectus as legal, tax or financial advice. You should consult with your own professional advisors as to the legal, tax, financial or other matters relevant to the suitability of an investment in the Fund.

The Fund’s shares of Common Stock do not represent a deposit or an obligation of, and are not guaranteed or endorsed by, any bank or other insured depository institution, and are not federally insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve Board or any other government agency.

The date of this Prospectus Supplement is [  ], 2022.
R-3

You should rely only on the information contained or incorporated by reference in this Prospectus Supplement and the accompanying Prospectus. The Fund has not authorized anyone to provide you with different information. The Fund is not making an offer to sell these securities in any jurisdiction where the offer or sale is not permitted. You should not assume that the information contained in this Prospectus Supplement and the accompanying Prospectus is accurate as of any date other than the date of this Prospectus Supplement and the accompanying Prospectus, respectively. The Fund’s business, financial condition, results of operations and prospects may have changed since those dates. In this Prospectus Supplement and in the accompanying Prospectus, unless otherwise indicated, “Fund,” refers to Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Prospectus Supplement

 
Page
SUMMARY OF THE TERMS OF THE RIGHTS OFFERING
[ ]
DESCRIPTION OF THE RIGHTS OFFERING
[ ]
TABLE OF FEES AND EXPENSES
[ ]
USE OF PROCEEDS
[ ]
CAPITALIZATION
[ ]
PRICE RANGE OF SHARES OF COMMON STOCK
[ ]
SPECIAL CHARACTERISTICS AND RISKS OF THE RIGHTS OFFERING
[ ]
TAXATION
[ ]
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
[ ]
LEGAL MATTERS
[ ]

Prospectus
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
R-4

 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]
 
[ ]

Cautionary notice regarding forward-looking statements

This Prospectus Supplement, the accompanying Prospectus and statement of additional information contain “forward-looking statements.” Forward-looking statements can be identified by the words “may,” “will,” “intend,” “expect,” “estimate,” “continue,” “plan,” “anticipate,” and similar terms and the negative of such terms. By their nature, all forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, and actual results could differ materially from those contemplated by the forward-looking statements. Several factors that could materially affect the Fund’s actual results are the performance of the portfolio of securities the Fund holds, the price at which the Fund’s Common Stock will trade in the public markets and other factors discussed in the Fund’s periodic filings with the SEC. Currently known risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the Fund’s expectations include, but are not limited to, the factors described in the “Risk Factors” section of the accompanying Prospectus and “Special Characteristics and Risks of the Rights Offering” in this Prospectus Supplement. The Fund urges you to review carefully that section for a more detailed discussion of the risks of an investment in the Fund’s securities.

Although the Fund believes that the expectations expressed in the Fund’s forward-looking statements are reasonable, actual results could differ materially from those projected or assumed in the Fund’s forward-looking statements. The Fund’s future financial condition and results of operations, as well as any forward-looking statements, are subject to change and are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties, such as those disclosed in the “Risk Factors” section of the accompanying Prospectus and “Special Characteristics and Risks of the Rights Offering” in this Prospectus Supplement. All forward-looking statements contained or incorporated by reference in this Prospectus Supplement or the accompanying Prospectus, or in the SAI, are made as of the date of this Prospectus Supplement or the accompanying Prospectus, as the case may be. Except for the Fund’s ongoing obligations under the federal securities laws, the Fund does not intend, and the Fund undertakes no obligation, to update any forward-looking statement.
R-5

SUMMARY OF THE TERMS OF THE RIGHTS OFFERING

Terms of the Rights Offering
One transferable subscription right (a “Right”) will be issued for each share of Common Stock of the Fund held on the Record Date (as defined below). Rights are expected to trade on the [  ] under the symbol “[ ].” The Rights will allow Stockholders to subscribe for new Common Stock. [ ] shares of Common Stock of the Fund are outstanding as of [ ], 2022. [ ] Rights will be required to purchase one share of  Common Stock. Common Stock of the Fund, as a closed-end fund, can trade at a discount to net asset value (“NAV”). Upon exercise of the Rights offering, shares of Common Stock are expected to be issued at a price below NAV per share of Common Stock. An over-subscription privilege will be offered, subject to the right of the Board of Directors of the Fund (the “Board”) to eliminate the over-subscription privilege. [ ] shares of Common Stock will be issued if all Rights are exercised. See “Terms of the Rights Offering.” Any Common Stock issued as a result of the Rights offering will not be record date stock for the Fund’s monthly distribution to be paid on [ ], 2022 and will not be entitled to receive such distribution. The exercise of Rights by a Stockholder is irrevocable.
 
In this Prospectus Supplement, we use the terms "Stockholder" to refer to any person that holds Common Stock, "Record Date Stockholders" to refer to those Stockholders that held their Common Stock on the Record Date and "Existing Rights Holders" to refer to those persons (i) that are Record Date Stockholders to whom the Rights were issued initially to the extent that a Record Date Stockholder continues to hold Rights and (ii) any subsequent transferees of the Rights that continue to hold the Rights.
Amount Available for Primary Subscription
$[ ]
Title
Subscription Rights to Acquire Shares of Common Stock
Subscription Price
The final subscription price per share of Common Stock (the “Subscription Price”) will be determined based upon a formula equal to [ ]% of the average of the last reported sales price of the Fund’s Common Stock on the NYSE American on the Expiration Date (as defined below) and each of the [four] preceding trading days (the “Formula Price”).  If, however, the Formula Price is less than [ ]% of the net asset value per share of Common Stock at the close of trading on the NYSE American on the Expiration Date, then the Subscription Price will be [ ]% of the Fund’s net asset value per share of Common Stock at the close of trading on the NYSE American on that day. See “Terms of the Rights Offering.”
Record Date
Rights will be issued to Stockholders on [    ], 2022 (the “Record Date”). See Terms of the Rights Offering.”
Number of Rights Issued
Rights will be issued in respect of each share of Common Stock of the Fund outstanding on the Record Date. See Terms of the Rights Offering.”
R-6

Number of Rights Required to Purchase One share of Common Stock
A holder of Rights may purchase [  ] share of Common Stock of the Fund for every [  ] Rights exercised. The number of Rights to be issued to a Stockholder on the Record Date will be rounded up to the nearest number of Rights evenly divisible by [  ]. See Terms of the Rights Offering.”
Over-Subscription Privilege
Record Date Stockholders who fully exercise all Rights initially issued to them (other than those Rights to acquire less than one share of Common Stock, which cannot be exercised) are entitled to subscribe for additional Common Stock which was not subscribed for by other Record Date Stockholders at the same Subscription Price, subject to certain limitations and subject to allotment. This is known as the “over-subscription privilege” (the “Over-Subscription Privilege”). Record Date Stockholders or Existing Rights Holders on the Expiration Date who choose not to exercise their full rights to purchase additional shares will permit stockholders who exercise the Over-Subscription Privilege to purchase additional shares at a discount without furnishing additional rights or providing any compensation to the non-participating stockholders for the dilution of their ownership percentage or voting rights. Investors who are not Record Date Stockholders, but who otherwise acquire Rights to purchase the Fund’s Common Stock pursuant to the Rights offering (e.g., Rights acquired in the secondary market), are not entitled to subscribe for any of the Fund’s Common Stock pursuant to the Over-Subscription Privilege. If sufficient Common Stock is available, all Record Date Stockholders’ over-subscription requests will be honored in full. If these requests for Common Stock exceed the Common Stock available, the available Common Stock will be allocated pro rata among Record Date Stockholders who over-subscribe based on the number of Rights originally issued to them by the Fund.
 
Notwithstanding the above, the Board has the right in its absolute discretion to eliminate the Over-Subscription Privilege if it considers it to be in the best interest of the Fund to do so.  The Board may make that determination at any time, without prior notice to Rights holders or others, up to and including the [fifth] day following the Expiration Date.  See “Over-Subscription Privilege.”
 
Any Common Stock issued pursuant to the Over-Subscription Privilege will be Common Stock registered under the Prospectus.
Distribution Arrangements
[  ] will act as Dealer Manager for the Rights offering. Under the terms and subject to the conditions contained in a Dealer Manager Agreement among the Fund, the Adviser and the Dealer Manager (the "Dealer Manager Agreement"), the Dealer Manager will provide financial structuring services in connection with the Rights offering and will solicit the exercise of Rights and participation in the Over-Subscription Privilege (if any). The Rights offering is not contingent upon any number of Rights being exercised. The Fund has agreed to pay the Dealer Manager a fee for its financial structuring and solicitation services equal to [  ]% of the Subscription Price for each share of
R-7

 
Common Stock issued pursuant to the exercise of Rights (including pursuant to the Over-Subscription Privilege). The Dealer Manager will reallow a part of its fees to other broker-dealers that have assisted in soliciting the exercise of Rights. The Fund has also agreed to pay the Dealer Manager up to $[  ] as a partial reimbursement for its reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with the Rights offering. The Fund will also pay expenses relating to the printing or other production, mailing and delivery expenses incurred in connection with materials related to the Rights offering, including all reasonable out-of-pocket fees and expenses, if any and not to exceed $[  ], incurred by the Dealer Manager, Selling Group Members (as defined below), Soliciting Dealers (as defined below) and other brokers, dealers and financial institutions in connection with their customary mailing and handling of materials related to the Rights offering to their customers. The Fund and the Advisers have also agreed to indemnify the Dealer Manager against certain liabilities, including under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”). The fees paid to the Dealer Manager will be borne by the Fund and indirectly by all of its Stockholders, including those who do not exercise the Rights. All of the costs of the Rights offering will be borne by the Fund and indirectly by the Fund's Stockholders whether or not they exercise their Rights.
 
Prior to the expiration of the Rights offering, the Dealer Manager may purchase or exercise Rights during the Subscription Period at prices determined at the time of such exercise, which are expected to vary from the Subscription Price. See “Plan of Distribution — Distribution Arrangements” and “—Compensation to Dealer Manager.”
Transfer of Rights
The Rights will be transferable. See “Terms of the Rights Offering,” “Sales by Rights Agent” and “Method of Transferring Rights.”
Subscription Period
The Rights may be exercised at any time after issuance and prior to expiration of the Rights (the “Subscription Period”), which will be [5:00 PM Eastern Time] on [ ], 2022 (the “Expiration Date”), unless otherwise extended. See “Terms of the Rights Offering” and “Method of Exercising Rights.” The Rights offering may be terminated [or extended] by the Fund at any time for any reason before the Expiration Date. If the Fund terminates the Rights offering, the Fund will issue a press release announcing such termination and will direct the Rights Agent (defined below) to return, without interest, all subscription proceeds received to such Stockholders who had elected to purchase Common Stock.
Offering Expenses
The expenses of the Rights offering are expected to be approximately $[ ] and will be borne by holders of the Fund’s Common Stock. See Use of Proceeds.”
R-8

Sale of Rights
The Rights are transferable until the completion of the Subscription Period and will be admitted for trading on the [  ] under the symbol “[ ]”.  Although no assurance can be given that a market for the Rights will develop, trading in the Rights on the [  ] is expected to begin two Business Days prior to the Record Date and may be conducted until the close of trading on the last [ ] trading day prior to the Expiration Date.  For purposes of this Prospectus Supplement, a “Business Day” shall mean any day on which trading is conducted on the [  ].
 
The value of the Rights, if any, will be reflected by their market price on the [ ].  Rights may be sold by individual holders through their broker or financial advisor or may be submitted to the Rights Agent (defined below) for sale.  Any Rights submitted to the Rights Agent for sale must be received by the Rights Agent prior to [5:00 PM, Eastern Time], on or before [ ], 2022, [ ] Business Days prior to the Expiration Date (or, if the subscription period is extended, prior to [5:00 PM, Eastern Time], on the [ ] Business Day prior to the extended Expiration Date).
 
Rights that are sold will not confer any right to acquire any Common Stock in any over-subscription, and any Record Date Stockholder who sells any Rights will not be eligible to participate in the Over-Subscription Privilege, if any.
 
Trading of the Rights on the [  ] will be conducted on a when-issued basis until and including the date on which the Subscription Certificates (as defined below) are mailed to Record Date Stockholders of record and thereafter will be conducted on a regular-way basis until and including the last [ ] trading day prior to the completion of the Subscription Period.  The shares of Common Stock are expected to begin trading ex-Rights one Business Day prior to the Record Date.
 
If the Rights Agent receives Rights for sale in a timely manner, the Rights Agent will use its best efforts to sell the Rights on the [ ].  The Rights Agent will also attempt to sell any Rights attributable to Stockholders of record whose addresses are outside the United States, or who have an APO or FPO address.  See “Foreign Restrictions.”  The Rights Agent will attempt to sell such Rights, including by first offering such Rights to the Dealer Manager for purchase by the Dealer Manager at the then-current market price on the [ ].  The Rights Agent will offer Rights to the Dealer Manager before attempting to sell them on the [ ].
 
Any commissions will be paid by the selling Rights holders.  Neither the Fund nor the Rights Agent will be responsible if Rights cannot be sold and neither has guaranteed any minimum sales price for the Rights.  If the Rights can be sold, sales of these Rights will be deemed to have been effected at the weighted average price received by the Rights Agent on the day such Rights are sold, less any applicable brokerage commissions, taxes and other expenses (i.e., costs incidental to the sale of Rights).
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For a discussion of actions that may be taken by [ ] (the “Dealer Manager”) to seek to facilitate the trading market for Rights and the placement of Common Stock pursuant to the exercise of Rights, including the purchase of Rights and the sale during the Subscription Period by the Dealer Manager of Common Stock acquired through the exercise of Rights and the terms on which such sales will be made, see “Plan of Distribution.”
 
Stockholders are urged to obtain a recent trading price for the Rights on the [ ] from their broker, bank, financial advisor or the financial press.
 
Banks, broker-dealers and trust companies that hold Common Stock for the accounts of others are advised to notify those persons that purchase Rights in the secondary market that such Rights will not participate in any Over-Subscription Privilege.  See “Terms of the Rights Offering” and “Sales by Rights Agent.”
Use of Proceeds
The Fund estimates the net proceeds of the Rights offering to be approximately $[ ]. This figure is based on the Subscription Price per share of Common Stock of $[ ]  and assumes all new shares of Common Stock offered are sold and that the expenses related to the Rights offering estimated at approximately $[ ] are paid.
 
NBIA anticipates that investment of the proceeds will be made in accordance with the Fund’s investment objectives and policies as appropriate investment opportunities are identified, which is expected to be substantially completed in approximately [three] months; however, the identification of appropriate investment opportunities pursuant to the Fund’s investment style or changes in market conditions may cause the investment period to extend as long as [six] months. This could occur because market conditions could result in NBIA delaying the investment of proceeds if it believes the risk of making additional investments is not favorable. See “Investment Objectives and Principal Investment Strategy” in the Prospectus. Pending such investment, the proceeds will be held in high quality short term debt securities and instruments. See Use of Proceeds.”
Taxation/ERISA
See “Taxation” and “Employee Benefit Plan and IRA Considerations.”
Rights Agent
[ ]. See “Rights Agent.”
Information Agent
[ ]. See “Information Agent.”
Risks
See “Special Characteristics and Risks of the Rights Offering” below and “Risk Factors” in the accompanying Prospectus for a discussion of the factors you should consider carefully before deciding to invest in the Fund’s Common Stock.
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DESCRIPTION OF THE RIGHTS OFFERING

Terms of the Rights Offering
 
The Fund is issuing to Record Date Stockholders Rights to subscribe for Common Stock of the Fund. Each Record Date Stockholder is being issued one transferable Right for each share of Common Stock owned on the Record Date. The Rights entitle the holder to acquire, at a subscription price per share of Common Stock (the “Subscription Price”) determined based upon a formula equal to [ ]% of the average of the last reported sales price of the Fund’s Common Stock on the NYSE American on the Expiration Date (as defined below) and each of the [four] preceding trading days (the “Formula Price”), [ ] new share of Common Stock for each [ ] Rights held. If, however, the Formula Price is less than [ ]% of the NAV per share of Common Stock at the close of trading on the NYSE American on the Expiration Date, then the Subscription Price will be [ ]% of the Fund’s NAV per share of Common Stock at the close of trading on the NYSE American on that day. The estimated Subscription Price to the public of $[ ] is based upon [ ]% of the last reported sales price of the Fund’s Common Stock on the NYSE American on [ ], 2022. Fractional shares of Common Stock will not be issued upon the exercise of the Rights. Accordingly, Common Stock may be purchased only pursuant to the exercise of Rights in integral multiples of [ ]. The number of Rights to be issued to a Record Date Stockholder will be rounded up to the nearest number of Rights evenly divisible by [ ]. In the case of share of Common Stock held of record by Cede & Co. (“Cede”), as nominee for the Depository Trust Company (“DTC”), or any other depository or nominee, the number of Rights issued to Cede or such other depository or nominee will be adjusted to permit rounding up (to the nearest number of Rights evenly divisible by [ ]) of the Rights to be received by beneficial owners for whom it is the holder of record only if [insert nominee name] or such other depository or nominee provides to the Fund on or before the close of business on [ ], 2022 written representation of the number of Rights required for such rounding. Rights may be exercised at any time during the period (the “Subscription Period”) which commences on [ ], 2022, and ends at [5:00 PM Eastern Time] on [ ], 2022 (the “Expiration Date”), unless otherwise extended. The Common Stock of the Fund, as a closed-end fund, can trade at a discount to NAV. Upon exercise of the Rights in the offering, shares of Common Stock are expected to be issued at a price below NAV per share of Common Stock. The right to purchase one share of Common Stock for each [ ] Rights held during the Subscription Period (or any extension of the Subscription Period) at the Subscription Price will be referred to in the remainder of this Prospectus Supplement as the “Rights offering.” Rights will expire on the Expiration Date and thereafter may not be exercised. Any Common Stock issued as a result of the Rights offering will not be record date stock for purposes of the Fund’s monthly distribution to be paid on [ ], 2022 and will not be entitled to receive such distribution.
 
The Fund has entered into a dealer manager agreement with [ ] (the “Dealer Manager”) that allows the Dealer Manager to take actions to seek to facilitate the trading market for Rights and the placement of Common Stock pursuant to the exercise of Rights. Those actions are expected to involve the Dealer Manager purchasing and exercising Rights during the Subscription Period at prices determined at the time of such exercise, which are expected to vary from the Subscription Price. See “Plan of Distribution” for additional information.
 
Rights may be evidenced by subscription certificates or may be uncertificated and evidenced by other appropriate documentation (i.e., a rights card distributed to registered Stockholders in lieu of a subscription certificate) (“Subscription Certificates”). The number of Rights issued to each holder will be stated on the Subscription Certificate delivered to the holder. The method by which Rights may be exercised and Common Stock paid for is set forth below in “Method of Exercising Rights,” “Payment for Common Stock” and “Plan of Distribution.” A holder of Rights will have no right to rescind a purchase after [ ] (the “Rights Agent”) has received payment. See “Payment for Common Stock.” It is anticipated that the Common Stock issued pursuant to an exercise of Rights will be listed on the [ ].
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[Holders of Rights [who are Record Date Stockholders] are entitled to subscribe for additional Common Stock at the same Subscription Price pursuant to the over-subscription privilege, subject to certain limitations, allotment and the right of the Board to eliminate the over-subscription privilege. See “Over-Subscription Privilege.”
 
For purposes of determining the maximum number of Common Stock that may be acquired pursuant to the Rights offering, broker-dealers, trust companies, banks or others whose shares of Common Stock are held of record by Cede or by any other depository or nominee will be deemed to be the holders of the Rights that are held by Cede or such other depository or nominee on their behalf.
 
The Rights are transferable until the completion of the Subscription Period and will be admitted for trading on the [ ] under the symbol “[ ].” Assuming a market exists for the Rights, the Rights may be purchased and sold through usual brokerage channels and also sold through the Rights Agent. Although no assurance can be given that a market for the Rights will develop, trading in the Rights on the [ ] is expected to begin two Business Days prior to the Record Date and may be conducted until the close of trading on the last [ ] trading day prior to the Expiration Date. Trading of the Rights on the [ ] is expected to be conducted on a when-issued basis until and including the date on which the Subscription Certificates are mailed to Record Date Stockholders of record and thereafter is expected to be conducted on a regular way basis until and including the last [ ] trading day prior to the Expiration Date. The method by which Rights may be transferred is set forth below under “Method of Transferring Rights.” The shares of Common Stock are expected to begin trading ex-Rights one Business Day prior to the Record Date as determined and announced by the [ ]. The Rights offering may be terminated or extended by the Fund at any time for any reason before the Expiration Date. If the Fund terminates the Rights offering, the Fund will issue a press release announcing such termination and will direct the Rights Agent to return, without interest, all subscription proceeds received to such Stockholders who had elected to purchase Common Stock.
 
Nominees who hold the Fund’s Common Stock for the account of others, such as banks, broker-dealers, trustees or depositories for securities, should notify the respective beneficial owners of such Common Stock as soon as possible to ascertain such beneficial owners’ intentions and to obtain instructions with respect to the Rights. If the beneficial owner so instructs, the nominee should complete the Subscription Certificate and submit it to the Rights Agent with proper payment. In addition, beneficial owners of the Common Stock or Rights held through such a nominee should contact the nominee and request the nominee to effect transactions in accordance with such beneficial owner’s instructions.
 
Participants in the Fund’s Distribution Reinvestment Plan (the “Plan”) will be issued Rights in respect of the Common Stock held in their accounts in the Plan. Participants wishing to exercise these Rights must exercise the Rights in accordance with the procedures set forth in “Method of Exercising Rights” and “Payment for Common Stock.”

Conditions of the Rights Offering

This Rights offering will be made in accordance with the 1940 Act. The staff of the SEC has interpreted the 1940 Act as not requiring stockholder approval of a transferable rights offering to purchase common stock at a price below the then current net asset value so long as certain conditions are met, including: (i) a good faith determination by a fund’s board that such offering would result in a net benefit to existing stockholders; (ii) the offering fully protects stockholders’ preemptive rights and does not discriminate among stockholders (except for the possible effect of not offering fractional rights); (iii) management uses its best efforts to ensure an adequate trading market in the rights for use by stockholders who do not exercise such rights; and (iv) the ratio of a transferable rights offering does not exceed one new share for each [ ] rights held.
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Important Dates to Remember
 
[Please note that the dates in the table below may change if the rights offering is extended.]

EVENT
 
DATE
Record Date
 
[●], 2022
Subscription Period
 
[●], 2022 through [●], 2022**
Expiration Date*
 
[●], 2022**
Payment for Guarantees of Delivery Due*
 
[●], 2022**
Issuance Date
 
[●], 2022**
Confirmation Date
 
[●], 2022**

*
A Stockholder exercising Rights must deliver by [  ] Eastern Time on [ ], 2022, either (a) a Subscription Certificate and payment for shares of Common Stock or (b) a notice of guaranteed delivery and payment for shares of Common Stock.
**
[Unless the offer is extended to a date no later than [ ], 2022.]

Subscription Price

[To be provided.]

[Over-Subscription Privilege

The Board has the right in its absolute discretion to eliminate the over-subscription privilege if it considers it to be in the best interest of the Fund to do so. The Board may make that determination at any time, without prior notice to Rights holders or others, up to and including the [fifth] day following the Expiration Date. If the Over-Subscription Privilege is not eliminated, it will operate as set forth below.

Common Stock not subscribed for by Rights holders (the “Excess Common Stock”) will be offered, by means of the Over-Subscription Privilege, to the Record Date Stockholders who have fully exercised the Rights issued to them (other than those Rights that cannot be exercised because they represent the right to acquire less than one share of Common Stock) and who wish to acquire more than the number of shares of Common Stock they are entitled to purchase pursuant to the Primary Subscription. Record Date Stockholders [or Existing Rights Holders on the Expiration Date] who choose not to exercise their full rights to purchase additional shares of Common Stock will permit stockholders who exercise the Over-Subscription Privilege to purchase additional shares of Common Stock at a discount without furnishing additional rights or providing any compensation to the non-participating stockholders for the dilution of their ownership percentage or voting rights. Investors who are not Record Date Stockholders, but who otherwise acquire Rights to purchase the Fund’s Common Stock pursuant to the Rights offering (e.g., Rights acquired in the secondary market), are not entitled to subscribe for any of the Common Stock pursuant to the Over-Subscription Privilege.
 
Record Date Stockholders should indicate on the subscription certificate, which they submit with respect to the exercise of the Rights issued to them, how many Excess Common Stock they are willing to acquire pursuant to the Over-Subscription Privilege. If sufficient Excess Common Stock remains, all such Record Date Stockholders’ over-subscription requests will be honored in full. If requests from such Record Date Stockholders for Common Stock pursuant to the Over-Subscription Privilege exceed the Excess Common Stock available, the available Excess Common Stock will be allocated pro rata among Record Date Stockholders who oversubscribe based on the number of Rights originally issued to such Record Date Stockholders. The percentage of remaining Common Stock each over-subscribing Record Date
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Stockholder may acquire will be rounded down to result in delivery of whole shares of Common Stock. The allocation process may involve a series of allocations to assure that the total number of shares of Common Stock available for over-subscriptions is distributed on a pro rata basis.
The formula to be used in allocating the Excess Common Stock is as follows:

Stockholder’s Record Date Position
  
x Excess Common Stock Remaining
Total Record Date Position of All Over-Subscribers

Banks, broker-dealers, trustees and other nominee holders of Rights will be required to certify to the Subscription Agent, before any Over-Subscription Privilege may be exercised with respect to any particular beneficial owner, as to the aggregate number of Rights exercised pursuant to the Primary Subscription and the number of shares of Common Stock subscribed for pursuant to the Over-Subscription Privilege by such beneficial owner and that such beneficial owner’s Primary Subscription was exercised in full. Nominee Holder Over-Subscription Forms and Beneficial Owner Certification Forms will be distributed to banks, brokers, trustees and other nominee holders of Rights with the subscription certificates. Nominees should also notify holders purchasing Rights in the secondary market that such Rights may not participate in the Over-Subscription Privilege.
 
The Fund will not offer or sell any Common Stock that is not subscribed for pursuant to the Primary Subscription or the Over-Subscription Privilege.]

Sales by Rights Agent

Holders of Rights who are unable or do not wish to exercise any or all of their Rights may instruct the Rights Agent to sell any unexercised Rights. The Subscription Certificates representing the Rights to be sold by the Rights Agent must be received prior to [5:00 PM, Eastern Time], on [ ], 2022, five Business Days prior to the Expiration Date (or, if the Subscription Period is extended, prior to [5:00 PM, Eastern Time], on the fifth Business Day prior to the extended Expiration Date). Upon the timely receipt of the appropriate instructions to sell Rights, the Rights Agent will use its best efforts to complete the sale and will remit the proceeds of sale, net of any commissions, to the holders. The Rights Agent will also attempt to sell any Rights attributable to Stockholders whose record addresses are outside the United States, or who have an APO or FPO address. The selling Rights holder will pay all brokerage commissions incurred by the Rights Agent. These sales may be effected by the Rights Agent. The Rights Agent will automatically attempt to sell any unexercised Rights that remain unclaimed as a result of Subscription Certificates being returned by the postal authorities as undeliverable as of the [fourth] Business Day prior to the Expiration Date. The Rights Agent will attempt to sell such Rights, including by first offering such Rights to the Dealer Manager for purchase by the Dealer Manager at the then-current market price on the [ ]. The Rights Agent will offer Rights to the Dealer Manager before attempting to sell them on the [ ], which may affect the market price for Rights on the [ ] and reduce the number of Rights available for purchase on the [ ], thereby reducing the ability of new investors to participate in the offering. These sales will be made net of commissions, taxes and any other expenses paid on behalf of the nonclaiming holders of Rights. Proceeds from those sales will be held by [American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC] in its capacity as the Fund’s transfer agent, for the account of the nonclaiming holder of Rights until the proceeds are either claimed or escheated. There can be no assurance that the Rights Agent will be able to complete the sale of any of these Rights and neither the Fund nor the Rights Agent has guaranteed any minimum sales price for the Rights. All of these Rights will be sold at the market price, if any, through an exchange or market trading the Rights. If the Rights can be sold, sales of the Rights will be deemed to have been effected at the weighted average price received by the Rights Agent on the day such Rights are sold, less any applicable brokerage commissions, taxes and other expenses.
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Dealer Manager

[ ] (previously defined as the “Dealer Manager”), a registered broker-dealer, may also act on behalf of its clients to purchase or sell Rights in the open market and may receive commissions from its clients for such services. Holders of Rights attempting to sell any unexercised Rights in the open market through a broker-dealer other than the Dealer Manager may be charged a different commission and should consider the commissions and fees charged by the broker-dealer prior to selling their Rights on the open market. The Dealer Manager is not expected to purchase Rights as principal for its own account in order to seek to facilitate the trading market for Rights or otherwise. See “Plan of Distribution” for additional information.
 
Sale of Rights

The Rights are transferable and will be admitted for trading on the [ ] under the symbol “[ ].” Although no assurance can be given that a market for the Rights will develop, trading in the Rights on the [ ] is expected to begin two Business Days prior to the Record Date and may be conducted until the close of trading on the last [ ] trading day prior to the Expiration Date.

The value of the Rights, if any, will be reflected by the market price. Rights may be sold by individual holders through their broker or other financial intermediary. Holders of Rights attempting to sell any unexercised Rights in the open market through their broker or a financial intermediary may be charged a commission or incur other transaction expenses  and should consider the commissions and fees charged prior to selling their Rights on the open market.

Rights that are sold will not confer any right to acquire any Common Stock in any Over-Subscription Privilege, if any, and any Record Date Stockholder who sells any Rights will not be eligible to participate in any Over-Subscription Privilege, if any.

Trading of the Rights on the [ ] will be conducted on a when-issued basis until and including the date on which the Subscription Certificates are mailed to Record Date Stockholders of record and thereafter will be conducted on a regular-way basis until and including the last [ ] trading day prior to the Expiration Date. The shares of Common Stock are expected to begin trading ex-Rights one Business Day prior to the Record Date.

Stockholders are urged to obtain a recent trading price for the Rights on the [ ] from their broker, bank, financial advisor or the financial press.

Method of Transferring Rights

The Rights evidenced by a single Subscription Certificate may be transferred in whole by endorsing the Subscription Certificate for transfer in accordance with the accompanying instructions. A portion of the Rights evidenced by a single Subscription Certificate (but not fractional Rights) may be transferred by delivering to the Rights Agent a Subscription Certificate properly endorsed for transfer, with instructions to register the portion of the Rights evidenced thereby in the name of the transferee (and to issue a new Subscription Certificate to the transferee evidencing the transferred Rights). In this event, a new Subscription Certificate evidencing the balance of the Rights will be issued to the Rights holder or, if the Rights holder so instructs, to an additional transferee.
  
Holders wishing to transfer all or a portion of their Rights (but not fractional Rights) should promptly transfer such Rights to ensure that: (i) the transfer instructions will be received and processed by the Rights Agent, (ii) a new Subscription Certificate will be issued and transmitted to the transferee or
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transferees with respect to transferred Rights, and to the holder with respect to retained Rights, if any, and (iii) the Rights evidenced by the new Subscription Certificates may be exercised or sold by the recipients thereof prior to the Expiration Date. Neither the Fund nor the Rights Agent shall have any liability to a transferee or holder of Rights if Subscription Certificates are not received in time for exercise or sale prior to the Expiration Date.
 
Except for the fees charged by the Rights Agent (which will be paid by the Fund as described below), all commissions, fees and other expenses (including brokerage commissions and transfer taxes) incurred in connection with the purchase, sale, transfer or exercise of Rights will be for the account of the holder of the Rights, and none of these commissions, fees or expenses will be borne by the Fund or the Rights Agent.
 
The Fund anticipates that the Rights will be eligible for transfer through, and that the exercise of the Rights may be effected through, the facilities of [insert depository] (Rights exercised through [insert depository] are referred to as “[insert depository] Exercised Rights”).

Rights Agent

The Rights Agent is [ ]. The Rights Agent will receive from the Fund an amount estimated to be $[ ], comprised of the fee for its services and the reimbursement for certain expenses related to the Rights offering.

Information Agent

INQUIRIES BY ALL HOLDERS OF RIGHTS SHOULD BE DIRECTED TO: THE INFORMATION AGENT, [ ]; HOLDERS MAY ALSO CONSULT THEIR BROKERS OR NOMINEES.

Method of Exercising Rights
 
Rights may be exercised by completing and signing the Subscription Certificate and mailing it in the envelope provided, or otherwise delivering the completed and signed Subscription Certificate to the Rights Agent, together with payment for the Common Stock as described below under “Payment for Common Stock.” Rights may also be exercised through the broker of a holder of Rights, who may charge the holder of Rights a servicing fee in connection with such exercise.

Completed Subscription Certificates and payment must be received by the Rights Agent prior to [5:00 PM Eastern Time], on the Expiration Date (unless payment is effected by means of a notice of guaranteed delivery as described below under “Payment for Common Stock”). Your broker, bank, trust company or other intermediary may impose a deadline for exercising Rights earlier than [5:00 PM, Eastern Time], on the Expiration Date. The Subscription Certificate and payment should be delivered to the Rights Agent at the following address:

If By Mail:
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
[ ]

If By Overnight Courier:
Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.
[ ]
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Payment for Common Stock
 
Holders of Rights who acquire Common Stock in the Subscription may choose between the following methods of payment:
 
(1)
A holder of Rights can send the Subscription Certificate, together with payment in the form of a check for the Common Stock subscribed for in the Rights offering and, if eligible, for any additional Common Stock subscribed for pursuant to the Over-Subscription Privilege, to the Rights Agent based on the Subscription Price of $[ ] per share of Common Stock. To be accepted, the payment, together with the executed Subscription Certificate, must be received by the Rights Agent at the address noted above prior to [5:00 PM Eastern Time] on the Expiration Date. The Rights Agent will deposit all stock purchase checks received by it prior to the final due date into a segregated account pending proration and distribution of Common Stock. The Rights Agent will not accept cash as a means of payment for Common Stock.
 
(2)
Alternatively, a subscription will be accepted by the Rights Agent if, prior to [5:00 PM Eastern Time] on the Expiration Date, the Rights Agent has received a written notice of guaranteed delivery by mail or email from a bank, trust company, or a [NYSE American] member, guaranteeing delivery of a properly completed and executed Subscription Certificate. In order for the notice of guarantee to be valid, full payment for the Common Stock at the Subscription Price must be received with the notice. The Rights Agent will not honor a notice of guaranteed delivery unless a properly completed and executed Subscription Certificate is received by the Rights Agent by the close of business on the [second] Business Day after the Expiration Date. The notice of guaranteed delivery must be emailed to the Rights Agent at [ ] or delivered to the Rights Agent at one of the addresses noted above.
A PAYMENT PURSUANT TO THIS METHOD MUST BE IN UNITED STATES DOLLARS BY CHECK (WHICH MUST INCLUDE THE NAME OF THE STOCKHOLDER ON THE CHECK) DRAWN ON A BANK LOCATED IN THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES, MUST BE PAYABLE TO NEUBERGER BERMAN HIGH YIELD STRATEGIES FUND INC. AND MUST ACCOMPANY AN EXECUTED SUBSCRIPTION CERTIFICATE TO BE ACCEPTED.
The method and timing of payment for Common Stock acquired by the Dealer Manager through the exercise of Rights is described under “Plan of Distribution.”
If a holder of Rights who acquires Common Stock pursuant to the Rights offering does not make payment of all amounts due, the Fund reserves the right to take any or all of the following actions: (i) find other purchasers for such subscribed-for and unpaid-for Common Stock; (ii) apply any payment actually received by it toward the purchase of the greatest whole number of shares of Common Stock which could be acquired by such holder upon exercise of the Rights or the Over-Subscription Privilege; (iii) sell all or a portion of the Common Stock purchased by the holder, in the open market, and apply the proceeds to the amounts owed; and (iv) exercise any and all other rights or remedies to which it may be entitled, including, without limitation, the right to set off against payments actually received by it with respect to such subscribed shares of Common Stock and to enforce the relevant guarantee of payment.

Any payment required from a holder of Rights must be received by the Rights Agent prior to [5:00 PM Eastern Time] on the Expiration Date. Issuance and delivery of the Common Stock purchased are subject to collection of checks.
  
Within [ ] Business Days following the Expiration Date (the “Confirmation Date”), a confirmation will be sent by the Rights Agent to each holder of Rights (or, if the shares of Common Stock are held by Cede or any other depository or nominee, to Cede or such other depository or nominee), showing (i) the number of shares of Common Stock acquired pursuant to the Subscription, (ii) the number of shares of Common
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Stock, if any, acquired pursuant to the Over-Subscription Privilege, and (iii) the per share and total purchase price for the shares of Common Stock. Any payment required from a holder of Rights must be received by the Rights Agent on or prior to the Expiration Date. Any excess payment to be refunded by the Fund to a holder of Rights, or to be paid to a holder of Rights as a result of sales of Rights on its behalf by the Rights Agent, will be mailed by the Rights Agent to the holder within [fifteen] Business Days after the Expiration Date.
  
A holder of Rights will have no right to rescind a purchase after the Rights Agent has received payment either by means of a notice of guaranteed delivery or a check.
  
Holders, such as broker-dealers, trustees or depositories for securities, who hold Common Stock for the account of others, should notify the respective beneficial owners of the Common Stock as soon as possible to ascertain such beneficial owners’ intentions and to obtain instructions with respect to the Rights. If the beneficial owner so instructs, the record holder of the Rights should complete Subscription Certificates and submit them to the Rights Agent with the proper payment. In addition, beneficial owners of Common Stock or Rights held through such a holder should contact the holder and request that the holder effect transactions in accordance with the beneficial owner’s instructions. Banks, broker-dealers, trustees and other nominee holders that hold Common Stock for the accounts of others are advised to notify those persons that purchase Rights in the secondary market that such Rights may not participate in any over-subscription privilege offered.
  
THE INSTRUCTIONS ACCOMPANYING THE SUBSCRIPTION CERTIFICATES SHOULD BE READ CAREFULLY AND FOLLOWED IN DETAIL. DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTION CERTIFICATES TO THE FUND.
 
THE METHOD OF DELIVERY OF SUBSCRIPTION CERTIFICATES AND PAYMENT OF THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE TO THE RIGHTS AGENT WILL BE AT THE ELECTION AND RISK OF THE RIGHTS HOLDERS, BUT IF SENT BY MAIL IT IS RECOMMENDED THAT THE CERTIFICATES AND PAYMENTS BE SENT BY REGISTERED MAIL, PROPERLY INSURED, WITH RETURN RECEIPT REQUESTED, AND THAT A SUFFICIENT NUMBER OF DAYS BE ALLOWED TO ENSURE DELIVERY TO THE RIGHTS AGENT AND CLEARANCE OF PAYMENT PRIOR TO [5:00 PM] EASTERN TIME, ON THE EXPIRATION DATE. BECAUSE UNCERTIFIED PERSONAL CHECKS MAY TAKE AT LEAST FIVE BUSINESS DAYS TO CLEAR, YOU ARE STRONGLY URGED TO PAY, OR ARRANGE FOR PAYMENT, BY MEANS OF A CERTIFIED OR CASHIER’S CHECK, WHICH MUST INCLUDE THE NAME OF THE STOCKHOLDER ON THE CHECK, OR MONEY ORDER.

All questions concerning the timeliness, validity, form and eligibility of any exercise of Rights will be determined by the Fund, whose determinations will be final and binding. The Fund in its sole discretion may waive any defect or irregularity, or permit a defect or irregularity to be corrected within such time as it may determine, or reject the purported exercise of any Right. Subscriptions will not be deemed to have been received or accepted until all irregularities have been waived or cured within such time as the Fund determines in its sole discretion. Neither the Fund nor the Rights Agent will be under any duty to give notification of any defect or irregularity in connection with the submission of Subscription Certificates or incur any liability for failure to give such notification.

Foreign Restrictions

Subscription Certificates will only be mailed to Record Date Stockholders whose addresses are within the United States (other than an APO or FPO address). Because the offering of the Rights will not be
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registered in any jurisdiction other than the United States, the Rights Agent will attempt to sell all of the Rights issued to Stockholders outside of these jurisdictions and remit the net proceeds, if any, to such Stockholders. If the Rights can be sold, sales of these Rights will be deemed to have been effected at the weighted average price received by the Rights Agent on the day the Rights are sold, less any applicable brokerage commissions, taxes and other expenses.

Notice of Net Asset Value Decline

The Fund has, pursuant to the SEC’s regulatory requirements, undertaken to suspend the Rights offering until the Fund amends this Prospectus Supplement if, after [ ], 2022 (the date of this Prospectus Supplement), the NAV of the Common Stock declines more than 10% from the NAV of the Common Stock as of that date. In that event, the Expiration Date will be extended and the Fund will notify Record Date Stockholders of record of any such decline and permit Rights holders to cancel their exercise of Rights.

Employee Benefit Plan and IRA Considerations
 Employee benefit plans that are subject to the fiduciary duty provisions of the U.S. Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (“ERISA”) (including, without limitation, pension and profit-sharing plans) and plans that are subject to Section 4975 of the Code (including, without limitation, IRAs and Keogh plans) (each, a “Plan”), may purchase Common Stock. ERISA, for example, imposes certain responsibilities on persons who are fiduciaries with respect to an ERISA-covered Plan, including, without limitation, the duties of prudence and diversification, as well as the need to avoid non-exempt prohibited transactions. Because the Fund is registered as an investment company under the 1940 Act, the underlying assets of the Fund will not be considered to be “plan assets” of any Plan investing in the Fund for purposes of the fiduciary responsibility and prohibited transaction rules under Title I of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code. Thus, neither the Fund nor the Adviser will be a “fiduciary,” within the meaning of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code with respect to the assets of any Plan that becomes a Stockholder, solely as a result of the Plan’s investment in the Fund.
The provisions of ERISA are subject to extensive and continuing administrative and judicial interpretation and review. The discussion of ERISA contained herein is general in nature and may be affected by future regulations and rulings. Potential investors should consult their legal advisers regarding the consequences under ERISA, the Code or other applicable law of an investment by a Plan in the Fund.

TABLE OF FEES AND EXPENSES

The purpose of the following table and the example below is to help you understand all fees and expenses that you, as a holder of the Fund’s Common Stock, would bear directly or indirectly. Amounts are for the current fiscal year after giving effect to anticipated net proceeds of the offering, assuming that the Fund incurs the estimated offering expenses.

Stockholder Transaction Expenses
Sales Load (as a percentage of offering price)
[ ]%
Offering Expenses Borne by the Fund (as a percentage of offering price)
[ ]%
Distribution Reinvestment Plan Fees
None(1)
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Percentage of
Net Assets
Attributable
to Common
Stock
Annual Expenses
 
Management Fees
%(2)
Interest on Notes
%
Other Expenses
%(3)
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses
%
Distributions on Preferred Stock
%
Total Annual Expenses and Distributions on Preferred Stock
%

(1)
The Plan Agent’s fees for the handling of the reinvestment of distributions will be paid by the Fund. However, you will pay brokerage charges if you direct the Plan Agent to sell your Common Stock held in a distribution reinvestment account. See “Distribution Reinvestment Plan.”
(2)
The Adviser receives a management fee payable on a monthly basis at an annual rate of 0.60% of the Fund’s average daily Managed Assets for investment advisory services. In addition, the Adviser receives a fee payable on a monthly basis at an annual rate of 0.05% of the Fund’s average daily Managed Assets for administrative services.
(3)
“Other Expenses” are based on estimated amounts for the current year assuming completion of the proposed issuances.

Example
 
The following example illustrates the expenses (including the maximum estimated sales load of $[ ] and estimated offering expenses of $[ ] from the issuance of $[ ] million in Common Stock) you would pay on a $1,000 investment in Common Stock, assuming a 5% annual portfolio total return.*
  
 
1 Year
 
3 Year
 
5 Year
 
10 Year
Total Expense Incurred
             

*
The example assumes that the amounts set forth in the Annual Expenses table are accurate and that all distributions are reinvested at net asset value. Actual expenses may be greater or less than those assumed. Moreover, the Fund’s actual rate of return may be greater or less than the hypothetical 5% return shown in the example.  The example should not be considered a representation of future expenses or returns. Actual expenses may be higher or lower than those assumed.

USE OF PROCEEDS

The Fund estimates the net proceeds of the Rights offering to be $[ ], based on the Subscription Price per share of $[ ], assuming all new shares of common stock offered are sold and that the expenses related to the Rights offering estimated at approximately $[ ] are paid and after deduction of the underwriting discounts and commissions. The Fund will invest the net proceeds of any offering in accordance with the Fund’s investment objectives and policies, and may use a portion of such proceeds, depending on market conditions, for other general corporate purposes. NBIA anticipates that the investment of the proceeds will be made in accordance with the Fund’s investment objectives and policies as appropriate investment opportunities are identified, which is expected to substantially be completed within [three] months; however, changes in market conditions could result in the Fund’s anticipated investment period extending to as long as [six] months. This could occur because the market conditions could result in NBIA delaying the investment of proceeds if it believes the risk of making additional
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investments is not favorable. See “Investment Objective and Principal Investment Strategy” in the Prospectus. Pending such investment, the proceeds of the offering will be held in high quality short-term debt securities and instruments.

CAPITALIZATION

[To be provided.]

PRICE RANGE OF SHARES OF COMMON STOCK

The Fund’s Common Stock is publicly held and is listed and traded on the NYSE American under the symbol “NHS”. The following table sets forth for the fiscal quarters indicated the highest and lowest daily prices during the applicable quarter at the close of market on the NYSE American per Share of Common Stock along with (i) the highest and lowest closing NAV and (ii) the highest and lowest premium or discount from NAV represented by such prices at the close of the market on the NYSE American.
 
 
 
NYSE American Market Price(1)
 
NAV on Date of NYSE American Market
Price(1)
 
Market Premium/(Discount) to
NAV on Date of NYSE American Market
Price(1)
 
 
Quarter Ended (2)
 
High
 
Low
 
High
 
Low
 
High
 
Low
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
[  ]
%
[  ]
%
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
[  ]
%
[  ]
%
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
[  ]
%
[  ]
%
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
[  ]
%
[  ]
%
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
[  ]
%
[  ]
%
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
[  ]
%
[  ]
%
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
[  ]
%
[  ]
%
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
[  ]
%
[  ]
%
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
$
[  ]
 
[  ]
%
[  ]
%
 

____________________
(1)         Source: [  ]
(2)         Data presented are with respect to a short period of time and are not indicative of future performance.
 
On [  ], the Fund’s NAV was $[  ] and the last reported sale price of a Share of Common Stock on the NYSE American was $[  ], representing a [premium/discount] to NAV of [  ]%.  The Fund’s Shares of Common Stock have historically traded at [both a premium and discount] to NAV.
 
The shares of Common Stock have traded both at a premium and at a discount to the Fund’s NAV per Common Stock. Although the Common Stock recently has traded at a premium to NAV, there can be no assurance that this will continue after the offering nor that the Common Stock will not trade at a discount in the future. Shares of closed-end investment companies frequently trade at a discount to NAV. The Fund’s NAV will be reduced immediately following an offering of the Common Stock due to the costs of such offering, which will be borne entirely by the Fund. The sale of Common Stock by the Fund (or the perception that such sales may occur) may have an adverse effect on prices of shares of Common Stock in the secondary market. An increase in the number of shares of Common Stock available may
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result in downward pressure on the market price for shares of Common Stock.  See “Risk Factors—Market Premium/Discount Risk” in the Prospectus.

SPECIAL CHARACTERISTICS AND RISKS OF THE RIGHTS OFFERING

Risk is inherent in all investing. Therefore, before investing in the Common Stock you should consider the risks associated with such an investment carefully. See “Risk Factors” in the Prospectus. The following summarizes some of the matters that you should consider before investing in the Fund through the Rights offering:

Dilution Risk.
 
As a result of the Rights offering, it is anticipated that even if you fully exercise your Rights, you should expect to incur immediate economic dilution and, if you do not exercise all of your Rights, you will incur voting dilution because you will own a smaller proportionate interest in the Fund after the Rights offering than you owned prior to the Rights offering. Further, both the sales load and the expenses associated with the Rights offering paid by the Fund will immediately reduce the NAV of each outstanding share of Common Stock. To the extent that the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding after the Rights offering will have increased proportionately more than the increase in the size of the Fund’s net assets, you will, at the completion of the Rights offering, experience immediate dilution of NAV.
 
In addition, if the Subscription Price for the Rights offering is less than the NAV of the Common Stock as of the Expiration Date, you would experience additional immediate dilution of NAV as a result of the Rights offering. If the Subscription Price is substantially less than the current NAV at the expiration of the Rights offering, such dilution could be substantial. It is anticipated that the existing Stockholders will experience immediate dilution even if they fully exercise their Rights. In addition, whether or not you exercise your Rights, you will experience a dilution of NAV of the Common Stock because you will indirectly bear the expenses of this Rights offering, which include, among other items, SEC registration fees, printing expenses and the fees assessed by service providers (including the cost of the Fund’s counsel and independent registered public accounting firm). This dilution of NAV will disproportionately affect Stockholders who do not exercise their Rights.
 
Furthermore, if you do not participate in the Over-Subscription Privilege, if it is available, your percentage ownership may also be diluted. The Fund cannot state precisely the amount of any dilution because it is not known at this time what the NAV per share will be on the Expiration Date or what proportion of the Rights will be exercised. The impact of the Rights offering on NAV per share is shown by the following examples, assuming a $[  ] Subscription Price:

Scenario 1: (assumes net asset value per share is above subscription price)(1)
 
NAV
  
$
[
●]
Subscription Price
  
$
[
●]
Reduction in NAV($)(2)
  
$
[
●]
Reduction in NAV(%)
  
 
[
●]%
Scenario 2: (assumes net asset value per share is below subscription price)(1)
 
NAV
  
$
[
●]
Subscription Price
  
$
[
●]
Increase in NAV($)(2)
  
$
[
●]
Increase in NAV(%)
  
 
[
●]%
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(1)
[Both examples assume the full Over-Subscription Privilege is exercised. Actual amounts may vary due to rounding.
(2)
Assumes $[ ] in estimated offering expenses.
 
If you do not wish to exercise your Rights, you should consider selling them as set forth in this Prospectus Supplement. The fact that the Rights are transferable may reduce the effects of dilution as a result of the Rights offering. Rights holders can transfer or sell their Rights. The cash received from the sale of Rights may be viewed as partial compensation for any possible dilution. There can be no assurances, however, that a market for the Rights will develop or that the Rights will have any value in that market.
  
The Fund’s largest Stockholders could increase their percentage ownership in and control of the Fund through the exercise of the Primary Subscription and Over-Subscription Privilege.
 
Risks of Investing in Rights.
 
Shares of closed-end funds such as the Fund frequently trade at a discount to NAV. Since inception, the Fund’s Common Stock has frequently traded at a discount in relation to NAV. See “Description of Capital Structure” and “Price Range of Shares of Common Stock” in the Prospectus. If the price at which the shares of Common Stock is being offered is less than [  ]% of NAV on the Expiration Date, then the Subscription Price will likely be greater than the market price of a share of Common Stock on that date. In addition, the price at which the shares of Common Stock is being offered, even if above [  ]% of NAV, may still be above the market price of a share of Common Stock on the Expiration Date. If either event occurs, the Rights will have no value, and a person who exercises Rights will experience an immediate loss of value.
 
Increase in Share Price Volatility; Decrease in Share Price. The Rights offering may result in an increase in trading of the Common Stock, which may increase volatility in the market price of the Common Stock. The Rights offering may result in an increase in the number of Stockholders wishing to sell their shares of Common Stock, which would exert downward price pressure on the price of Common Stock.
 
Under-Subscription. It is possible that the Rights offering will not be fully subscribed. Under-subscription of the Rights offering would have an impact on the net proceeds of the Rights offering and whether the Fund achieves any benefits.

Leverage Risk.

Leverage creates a greater risk of loss, as well as a potential for more gain, for the Common Stock than if leverage were not used.  Following the completion of the Rights offering, the Fund’s amount of leverage outstanding will decrease.  The leverage of the Fund as of [ ], 2022 was approximately [ ]% of the Fund’s Managed Assets.  After the completion of the Rights offering, the amount of leverage outstanding is expected to decrease to approximately [ ]% of the Fund’s Managed Assets.  The use of leverage for investment purposes creates opportunities for greater total returns but at the same time increases risk.  When leverage is employed, the net asset value and market price of the Common Stock and the yield to Stockholders may be more volatile.  Any investment income or gains earned with respect to the amounts borrowed in excess of the interest due on the borrowing will augment the Fund’s income.  Conversely, if the investment performance with respect to the amounts borrowed fails to cover the interest on such borrowings, the value of the Fund’s Common Stock may decrease more quickly than would otherwise be the case, and distributions on the Common Stock could be reduced or
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eliminated.  Interest payments and fees incurred in connection with such borrowings will reduce the amount of net income available for distribution to Stockholders.

Because the fee paid to the Adviser is calculated on the basis of the Fund’s Managed Assets, which include the proceeds of leverage, the dollar amount of the management fee paid by the Fund to the Adviser will be higher (and the Adviser will benefit to that extent) when leverage is used.  The Adviser will use leverage only if it believes such action would result in a net benefit to the Fund’s Stockholders after taking into account the higher fees and expenses associated with leverage (including higher management fees). 
  
The Fund’s leveraging strategy may not be successful. 
 
[Additional risks, if any, to be provided.]

TAXATION
  
The following is a general summary of the U.S. federal income tax consequences of the Rights offering to Record Date Shareholders who are U.S. persons for U.S. federal income tax purposes.  The following summary supplements the discussion set forth in the accompanying Prospectus and SAI and is subject to the qualifications and assumptions set forth therein.  The discussion set forth herein does not constitute tax advice and potential investors are urged to consult their own tax advisers to determine the tax consequences of investing in the Fund.
  
Please refer to the “Tax Matters” sections in the Fund’s Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information for a description of the consequences of investing in the Fund’s Common Stock. Special tax considerations relating to this Rights offering are summarized below:
  
 
 
The value of a Right will not be includible in the income of a Stockholder at the time the subscription right is issued.
 
 
The basis of a Right issued to a Stockholder will be zero, and the basis of the share of Common Stock with respect to which the Right was issued (the old share) will remain unchanged, unless either (a) the fair market value of the Right on the date of distribution is at least 15% of the fair market value of the old share of Common Stock, or (b) such Stockholder affirmatively elects (in the manner set out in Treasury regulations under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”)) to allocate to the Right a portion of the basis of the old share of Common Stock. If either (a) or (b) applies, such Stockholder must allocate basis between the old share of Common Stock and the Right in proportion to their fair market values on the date of distribution.
 
 
The basis of a Right purchased in the market will generally be its purchase price.
 
 
The holding period of a Right issued to a Stockholder will include the holding period of the old share of Common Stock.
 
 
No loss will be recognized by a Stockholder if a Right distributed to such Stockholder expires unexercised because the basis of the old share of Common Stock may be allocated to a Right only if the Right is exercised. If a Right that has been purchased in the market expires unexercised, there will be a recognized loss equal to the basis of the Right.
 
 
Any gain or loss on the sale of a Right will be a capital gain or loss if the Right is held as a capital asset (which in the case of a Right issued to Record Date Stockholders will depend on whether the old share of Common Stock is held as a capital asset), and will be a long term capital gain or loss if the holding period is deemed to exceed one year.
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No gain or loss will be recognized by a Stockholder upon the exercise of a Right, and the basis of any share of Common Stock acquired upon exercise (the new share of Common Stock) will equal the sum of the basis, if any, of the Right and the subscription price of the Right for the new share of Common Stock. The holding period for the new share of Common Stock does not include the time during which the Right holder held the unexercised Right and will begin no later than the date following the date when the Right is exercised.
The foregoing is a general and abbreviated summary of the provisions of the Code and the Treasury regulations in effect as they directly govern the taxation of the Fund and its Stockholders, with respect to U.S. federal income taxation only. Other tax issues such as state and local taxation may apply. Investors are urged to consult their own tax advisers to determine the tax consequences of investing in the Fund. These provisions are subject to change by legislative or administrative action, and any such change may be retroactive.

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

[Distribution Arrangements

[                ] will act as Dealer Manager for the Rights offering. Under the terms and subject to the conditions contained in the Dealer Manager Agreement among the Dealer Manager, the Fund and the Adviser, the Dealer Manager will provide financial structuring and solicitation services in connection with the Rights offering and will solicit the exercise of Rights and participation in the Over-Subscription Privilege. The Rights offering is not contingent upon any number of Rights being exercised. The Dealer Manager will also be responsible for forming and managing a group of selling broker-dealers (each a “Selling Group Member” and collectively the “Selling Group Members”), whereby each Selling Group Member will enter into a Selling Group Agreement with the Dealer Manager to solicit the exercise of Rights and to sell Common Stock purchased by the Selling Group Member from the Dealer Manager. In addition, the Dealer Manager will enter into a Soliciting Dealer Agreement with other soliciting broker-dealers (each a “Soliciting Dealer” and collectively the “Soliciting Dealers”) to solicit the exercise of Rights. See “Compensation to Dealer Manager” for a discussion of fees and other compensation to be paid to the Dealer Manager, Selling Group Members and Soliciting Dealers in connection with the Rights offering.
 
The services provided by the Dealer Manager differ from those provided by the Adviser in that the Adviser acts as the investment adviser for the Fund and manages the investment and reinvestment of the Fund’s assets in accordance with the Fund’s investment objectives and policies and limitations, and generally manages the day-to-day business and affairs of the Fund. The Adviser has not been retained by the Fund to manage a rights offering; instead, given the complexities of the transaction, the Fund believes that the retention of the Dealer Manager will be beneficial.
 
The Fund and the Adviser have agreed to indemnify the Dealer Manager for losses arising out of certain liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act. The Dealer Manager Agreement also provides that the Dealer Manager will not be subject to any liability to the Fund in rendering the services contemplated by the Dealer Manager Agreement except for any act of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence of the Dealer Manager or reckless disregard by the Dealer Manager of its obligations and duties under the Dealer Manager Agreement.
 
In order to seek to facilitate the trading market in the Rights for the benefit of non-exercising Stockholders, and the placement of the Common Stock to new or existing investors pursuant to the exercise of the Rights, the Dealer Manager Agreement provides for special arrangements with the Dealer Manager. Under these arrangements, the Dealer Manager is expected to purchase Rights on the [  ]. The
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number of Rights, if any, purchased by the Dealer Manager will be determined by the Dealer Manager in its sole discretion. The Dealer Manager is not obligated to purchase Rights or Common Stock as principal for its own account to facilitate the trading market for Rights or for investment purposes. Rather, its purchases are expected to be closely related to interest in acquiring Common Stock generated by the Dealer Manager through its marketing and soliciting activities. The Dealer Manager intends to exercise Rights purchased by it during the Subscription Period but prior to the Expiration Date. The Dealer Manager may exercise those Rights at its option on one or more dates, which are expected to be prior to the Expiration Date. The subscription price for the Common Stock issued through the exercise of Rights by the Dealer Manager prior to the Expiration Date will be         . The price and timing of these exercises are expected to differ from those described herein for the Rights offering. The Subscription Price will be paid to the Fund and the dealer manager fee with respect to such proceeds will be paid by the Fund on the applicable settlement date(s) of such exercise(s).
 
In connection with the exercise of Rights and receipt of Common Stock, the Dealer Manager intends to offer those shares of Common Stock for sale to the public and/or through Selling Group Members it has established. The Dealer Manager may set the price for those shares of Common Stock at any price that it determines, in its sole discretion. The Dealer Manager has advised that the price at which such shares of Common Stock are offered is expected to be at or slightly below the closing price of the Common Stock on the NYSE American on the date the Dealer Manager exercises Rights. No portion of the amount paid to the Dealer Manager or to a Selling Group Member from the sale of Common Stock in this manner will be paid to the Fund. If the sales price of the Common Stock is greater than the subscription price paid by the Dealer Manager for such shares of Common Stock plus the costs to purchase Rights for the purpose of acquiring those shares of Common Stock, the Dealer Manager will receive a gain.
 
Alternatively, if the sales price of the Common Stock is less than the Subscription Price for such shares of Common Stock plus the costs to purchase Rights for the purpose of acquiring those shares of Common Stock, the Dealer Manager will incur a loss. The Dealer Manager will pay a concession to Selling Group Members in an amount equal to approximately         % of the aggregate price of the Common Stock sold by the respective Selling Group Member. Neither the Fund nor the Advisers has a role in setting the terms, including the sales price, on which the Dealer Manager offers for sale and sells Common Stock it has acquired through purchasing and exercising Rights or the timing of the exercise of Rights or sales of Common Stock by the Dealer Manager. Persons who purchase Common Stock from the Dealer Manager or a Selling Group Member will purchase Common Stock at a price set by the Dealer Manager, which may be more or less than the Subscription Price, based on the price mechanism through which Common Stock will be sold in the Rights offering, and at a time set by the Dealer Manager, which is expected to be prior to the Expiration Date, and will not have the uncertainty of waiting for the determination of the Subscription Price on the Expiration Date.
 
The Dealer Manager may purchase Rights as principal or act as agent on behalf of its clients for the resale of such Rights. The Dealer Manager may realize gains (or losses) in connection with the purchase and sale of Rights and the sale of Common Stock, although such transactions are intended by the Dealer Manager to facilitate the trading market in the Rights and the placement of the Common Stock to new or existing investors pursuant to the exercise of the Rights. Any gains (or losses) realized by the Dealer Manager from the purchase and sale of Rights and the sale of Common Stock are independent of and in addition to its fee as Dealer Manager. The Dealer Manager has advised that any such gains (or losses) are expected to be immaterial relative to its fee as Dealer Manager.
 
Since neither the Dealer Manager nor persons who purchase Common Stock from the Dealer Manager or Selling Group Members were Record Date Stockholders, they would not be able to participate in the Over-Subscription Privilege.
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Persons who purchase Common Stock from the Dealer Manager or the selling group will not purchase shares at the Subscription Price based on the formula price mechanism through which Common Stock will be sold in the Rights offering. Instead, those persons will purchase Common Stock at a price set by the Dealer Manager, which may be more or less than the Subscription Price, and will not have the uncertainty of waiting for the determination of the Subscription Price on the Expiration Date.
 
There is no limit on the number of Rights the Dealer Manager can purchase or exercise. Common Stock acquired by the Dealer Manager pursuant to the exercise of Rights acquired by it will reduce the number of Common Stock available pursuant to the over-subscription privilege, perhaps materially, depending on the number of Rights purchased and exercised by the Dealer Manager.
 
Although the Dealer Manager can seek to facilitate the trading market for Rights as described above, investors can acquire Common Stock at the Subscription Price by acquiring Rights on the [  ] and exercising them in the method described above under “Method of Exercising Rights.”

In the ordinary course of their businesses, the Dealer Manager and/or its affiliates may engage in investment banking or financial transactions with the Fund, the Advisers and their affiliates. In addition, in the ordinary course of their businesses, the Dealer Manager and/or its affiliates may, from time to time, own securities of the Fund or its affiliates.
 
The principal business address of the Dealer Manager is                 .
 
Compensation to Dealer Manager
 
Pursuant to the Dealer Manager Agreement, the Fund has agreed to pay the Dealer Manager a fee for its financial structuring and solicitation services equal to         % of the Subscription Price for each share of Common Stock issued pursuant to the Rights offering, including the Over-Subscription Privilege. The Dealer Manager will reallow to Selling Group Members in the Selling Group to be formed and managed by the Dealer Manager selling fees equal to         % of the Subscription Price for each share of Common Stock issued pursuant to the Rights offering or the Over-Subscription Privilege as a result of their selling efforts. In addition, the Dealer Manager will reallow to Soliciting Dealers that have executed and delivered a Soliciting Dealer Agreement and have solicited the exercise of Rights, solicitation fees equal to         % of the Subscription Price for each share of Common Stock issued pursuant to the exercise of Rights as a result of their soliciting efforts, subject to a maximum fee based on the number of shares of Common Stock held by such Soliciting Dealer through DTC on the Record Date. Fees will be paid to the broker-dealer designated on the applicable portion of the subscription certificates or, in the absence of such designation, to the Dealer Manager.
 
The Fund has also agreed to pay the Dealer Manager up to $         as a partial reimbursement for its reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with the Rights offering.  The Fund will also pay expenses relating to the printing or other production, mailing and delivery expenses incurred in connection with materials related to the Rights offering, including all reasonable out-of-pocket fees and expenses, if any and not to exceed $        , incurred by the Dealer Manager, Selling Group Members, Soliciting Dealers and other brokers, dealers and financial institutions in connection with their customary mailing and handling of materials related to the Rights offering to their customers. No other fees will be payable by the Fund or the Advisers to the Dealer Manager in connection with the Rights offering.]

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LEGAL MATTERS

Certain legal matters will be passed on by K&L Gates LLP, counsel to the Fund in connection with this rights offering.






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Neuberger Berman High Yield Strategies Fund Inc.

Subscription Rights to Acquire Shares of Common Stock

PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT

___________, 2022


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