As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on January 20, 2016

File No. 33-46080

811-06125

 

 

 

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

POST EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 30

TO

Form S-6

FOR REGISTRATION UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 OF

SECURITIES OF UNIT INVESTMENT TRUSTS REGISTERED

ON FORM N-8B-2

 

A. Exact name of Trust:

SPDR S&P 500 ETF TRUST

(formerly known as SPDR TRUST SERIES 1 prior to January 27, 2010)

(I.R.S. Employer Identification Number: 13-3574560)

B. Name of Depositor:

PDR SERVICES LLC

C. Complete address of Depositor’s principal executive office:

PDR SERVICES LLC

c/o NYSE Holdings LLC

11 Wall Street

New York, New York 10005

D. Name and complete address of agent for service:

Sherry J. Sandler, Esq.

PDR SERVICES LLC

c/o NYSE Holdings LLC

11 Wall Street

New York, New York 10005

Copy to:

Nora M. Jordan, Esq.

Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP

450 Lexington Avenue

New York, New York 10017

It is proposed that this filing will become effective:

  [X] immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 485.

 

E. Title of securities being registered:

An indefinite number of Units pursuant to Rule 24f-2 under the Investment Company Act of 1940.

F. Approximate date of proposed public offering:

AS SOON AS PRACTICABLE AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT.

 

  ¨ Check box if it is proposed that this filing will become effective on [date] at [time] pursuant to Rule 487.

 

 

 


SPDR S&P 500 ETF TRUST

Cross Reference Sheet

Pursuant to Regulation C

Under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended

(Form N-8B-2 Items required by Instruction 1

as to Prospectus in Form S-6)

 

Form N-8B-2

 

Form S-6

Item Number

 

Heading in Prospectus

I. Organization and General Information

 

1.

 

(a) Name of Trust

 

Registration Statement Front Cover

 

(b) Title of securities issued

 

Registration Statement Front Cover

2.

 

Name, address and Internal Revenue Service Employer Identification Number of depositor

 

Sponsor

3.

 

Name, address and Internal Revenue Service Employer Identification Number of trustee

 

Trustee

4.

 

Name, address and Internal Revenue Service Employer Identification Number of principal underwriter

 

*

5.

 

State of organization of Trust

 

Organization of the Trust

6.

 

(a) Dates of execution and termination of Trust Agreement

 

Organization of the Trust

 

(b) Dates of execution and termination of Trust Agreement

 

Same as set forth in 6(a)

7.

 

Changes of name

 

*

8.

 

Fiscal Year

 

*

9.

 

Material Litigation

 

*

II. General Description of the Trust and Securities of the Trust

 

10.

 

(a) Registered or bearer securities

 

Summary—Voting Rights; Book-Entry-Only System; Book-Entry-Only System

 

(b) Cumulative or distributive

 

Summary—Dividends; Dividends and Distributions; Additional Information Regarding Dividends and Distributions

 

(c) Rights of holders as to withdrawal or redemption

 

Summary—Redemption of Units; Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units—Redemption

 

(d) Rights of holders as to conversion, transfer, etc.

 

Summary—Redemption of Units; Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units—Redemption; Trust Agreement

 

(e) Lapses or defaults in principal payments with respect to   periodic payment plan certificates

 

*

 

(f) Voting rights

 

Summary—Voting Rights; Book-Entry-Only System; Trust Agreement

 

(g) Notice to holders as to change in:

 
 

(1) Composition of Trust assets

 

*

 

(2) Terms and conditions of Trust’s securities

 

Summary—Amendments to the Trust Agreement; Trust Agreement—Amendments to the Trust Agreement

 

(3) Provisions of Trust Agreement

 

Same as set forth in 10(g)(2)

 

(4) Identity of depositor and trustee

 

Sponsor; Trustee

 

(h) Consent of holders required to change:

 
 

(1) Composition of Trust assets

 

*

 

(2) Terms and conditions of Trust’s securities

 

Summary—Amendments to the Trust Agreement; Trust Agreement—Amendments to the Trust Agreement

 

(3) Provisions of Trust Agreement

 

Same as set forth in 10(h)(2)

 

(4) Identity of depositor and trustee

 

Sponsor; Trustee

 

*

      Not applicable, answer negative or not required.

 

i


Form N-8B-2

  

Form S-6

Item Number

  

Heading in Prospectus

  

(i) Other principal features of the securities

  

Summary—The Trust’s Investments and Portfolio Turnover; Summary—Redemption of Units; Summary—Amendments to the Trust Agreement; Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units; Trust Agreement

11.

  

Type of securities comprising units

  

Summary—The Trust’s Investments and Portfolio Turnover; Portfolio Adjustments

12.

  

Certain information regarding securities comprising periodic payment certificates

  

*

13.

  

(a) Certain information regarding loads, fees, expenses and charges

  

Summary—Fees and Expenses of the Trust; Summary—The Trust’s Investments and Portfolio Turnover; Expenses of the Trust; Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units—Redemption

  

(b) Certain information regarding periodic payment plan certificates

  

*

  

(c) Certain percentages

  

Same as set forth in 13(a)

  

(d) Reasons for certain differences in prices

  

*

  

(e) Certain other loads, fees, or charges payable by holders

  

*

  

(f) Certain profits receivable by depositor, principal underwriters, custodian, trustee or affiliated persons

  

Summary—The Trust’s Investments and Portfolio Turnover; Portfolio Adjustments—Adjustments to the Portfolio Deposit

  

(g) Ratio of annual charges and deductions to income

  

*

14.

  

Issuance of Trust’s securities

  

Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units—Purchase (Creation)

15.

  

Receipt and handling of payments from purchasers

  

Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units

16.

  

Acquisition and disposition of underlying securities

  

Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units;

Portfolio Adjustments; Trust Agreement

17.

  

(a) Withdrawal or redemption by holders

  

Trust Agreement; Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units—Redemption

  

(b) Persons   entitled or required to redeem or repurchase securities

  

Same as set forth in 17(a)

  

(c) Cancellation   or resale of repurchased or redeemed securities

  

Same as set forth in 17(a)

18.

  

(a) Receipt, custody and disposition of income

  

Additional Information Regarding Dividends and Distributions—General Policies

  

(b) Reinvestment of distributions

  

Dividends and Distributions—No Dividend Reinvestment Service

  

(c) Reserves or special funds

  

Same as set forth in 18(a)

  

(d) Schedule of distributions

  

*

19.

  

Records, accounts and reports

  

The S&P 500 Index; Additional Information Regarding Dividends and Distributions—General Policies;

Investments by Investment Companies; Expenses of the Trust

20.

  

Certain miscellaneous provisions of Trust Agreement

  
  

(a) Amendments

  

Trust Agreement—Amendments to the Trust Agreement

  

(b) Extension or termination

  

Trust Agreement—Amendments to the Trust Agreement; Trust Agreement—Termination of the Trust Agreement; Organization of the Trust

  

(c) Removal or resignation of trustee

  

Trustee

  

(d) Successor trustee

  

Same as set forth in 20(c)

  

(e) Removal or resignation of depositor

  

Sponsor

  

(f) Successor depositor

  

Same as set forth in 20(e)

21.

  

Loans to security holders

  

*

22.

  

Limitations on liabilities

  

Trustee; Sponsor

23.

  

Bonding arrangements

  

*

24.

  

Other material provisions of Trust Agreement

  

*

III. Organization, Personnel and Affiliated Persons of Depositor

  

25.

  

Organization of depositor

  

Sponsor

 

*

      Not applicable, answer negative or not required.

 

ii


Form N-8B-2

  

Form S-6

Item Number

  

Heading in Prospectus

26.

    

Fees received by depositor

  

*

27.

    

Business of depositor

  

Sponsor

28.

    

Certain information as to officials and affiliated persons of depositor

  

Sponsor

29.

    

Ownership of voting securities of depositor

  

Sponsor

30.

    

Persons controlling depositor

  

Sponsor

31.

    

Payments by depositor for certain services rendered to Trust

  

*

32.

    

Payments by depositor for certain other services rendered to Trust

  

*

33.

    

Remuneration of employees of depositor for certain services rendered to Trust

  

*

34.

    

Compensation of other persons for certain services rendered to Trust

  

*

IV. Distribution and Redemption of Securities

  

35.

    

Distribution of Trust’s securities in states

  

*

36.

    

Suspension of sales of Trust’s securities

  

*

37.

    

Denial or revocation of authority to distribute

  

*

38.

    

(a) Method of distribution

  

Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units—Purchase (Creation)

    

(b) Underwriting agreements

  

Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units

    

(c) Selling agreements

  

Same as set forth in 38(b)

39.

    

(a) Organization of principal underwriter

  

Distributor

    

(b) NASD membership of principal underwriter

  

Distributor

40.

    

Certain fees received by principal underwriters

  

*

41.

    

(a) Business of principal underwriters

  

Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units; Distributor

    

(b) Branch offices of principal underwriters

  

*

    

(c) Salesmen of principal underwriters

  

*

42.

    

Ownership of Trust’s securities by certain persons

  

*

43.

    

Certain brokerage commissions received by principal underwriters

  

*

44.

    

(a) Method of valuation for determining offering price

  

Portfolio Adjustments; Determination of Net Asset Value

    

(b) Schedule as to components of offering price

  

*

    

(c) Variation in offering price to certain persons

  

*

45.

    

Suspension of redemption rights

  

*

46.

    

(a)Certain information regarding redemption or withdrawal valuation

  

Determination of Net Asset Value; Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units—Redemption

    

(b) Schedule as to components of redemption price

  

*

47.

    

Maintenance of position in underlying securities

  

Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units; Portfolio Adjustments; Determination of Net Asset Value; Additional Information Regarding Dividends and Distributions—General Policies

V. Information Concerning the Trustee or Custodian

  

48.

    

Organization and regulation of trustee

  

Trustee

49.

    

Fees and expenses of trustee

  

Summary—Fees and Expenses of the Trust; Expenses of the Trust; Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units—Redemption

50.

    

Trustee’s lien

  

Expenses of the Trust; Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units—Redemption

VI. Information Concerning Insurance of Holders of Securities

  

51.

    

(a) Name and address of insurance company

  

*

    

(b) Types of policies

  

*

    

(c) Types of risks insured and excluded

  

*

    

(d) Coverage

  

*

    

(e) Beneficiaries

  

*

    

(f) Terms and manner of cancellation

  

*

    

(g) Method of determining premiums

  

*

 

*

      Not applicable, answer negative or not required.

 

iii


Form N-8B-2

  

Form S-6

Item Number

  

Heading in Prospectus

  

(h) Aggregate premiums paid

  

*

  

(i) Recipients of premiums

  

*

  

(j) Other material provisions of Trust Agreement relating to insurance

  

*

VII. Policy of Registrant

  

52.

  

(a) Method of selecting and eliminating securities from the Trust

  

Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units; Portfolio Adjustments; Trust Agreement

  

(b) Elimination of securities from the Trust

  

Portfolio Adjustments

  

(c) Policy of Trust regarding substitution and elimination of securities

  

Portfolio Adjustments; Trust Agreement

  

(d) Description of any other fundamental policy of the Trust

  

*

  

(e) Code of Ethics pursuant to Rule 17j-1 of the 1940 Act

  

Code of Ethics

53.

  

(a) Taxable status of the Trust

  

Federal Income Taxes

  

(b) Qualification of the Trust as a regulated investment company

  

Same as set forth in 53(a)

VIII. Financial and Statistical Information

  

54.

  

Information regarding the Trust’s last ten fiscal years

  

*

55.

  

Certain information regarding periodic payment plan certificates

  

*

56.

  

Certain information regarding periodic payment plan certificates

  

*

57.

  

Certain information regarding periodic payment plan certificates

  

*

58.

  

Certain information regarding periodic payment plan certificates

  

*

59.

  

Financial statements (Instruction 1(c) to Form S-6)

  

*

 

*

      Not applicable, answer negative or not required.

 

iv


Undertaking to File Reports

Subject to the terms and conditions of Section 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the undersigned registrant hereby undertakes to file with the Securities and Exchange Commission such supplementary and periodic information, documents, and reports as may be prescribed by any rule or regulations of the Commission heretofore or hereafter duly adopted pursuant to authority conferred in that section.


LOGO

SPDR ® S&P 500 ® ETF Trust

(“SPY” or the “Trust”)

(A Unit Investment Trust)

Principal U.S. Listing Exchange for SPDR ® S&P 500 ® ETF Trust: NYSE Arca, Inc. under the symbol “SPY”

Prospectus Dated January 20, 2016

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has not approved or disapproved these securities or passed upon the accuracy or adequacy of this prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense. Securities of the Trust (“Units”) are not guaranteed or insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other agency of the U.S. Government, nor are such Units deposits or obligations of any bank. Such Units of the Trust involve investment risks, including the loss of principal.

COPYRIGHT 2016 PDR Services LLC


TABLE OF CONTENTS  
    Page  

Summary

    1   

Investment Objective

    1   

Fees and Expenses of the Trust

    1   

The Trust’s Investments and Portfolio Turnover

    2   

Dividends

    3   

Redemption of Units

    3   

Voting Rights; Book-Entry-Only-System

    3   

Amendments to the Trust Agreement

    3   

Principal Risks of Investing in the Trust

    4   

Trust Performance

    5   

Purchase and Sale Information

    7   

Tax Information

    7   

The S&P 500 Index

    7   

Dividends and Distributions

    9   

Dividends and Capital Gains

    9   

No Dividend Reinvestment Service

    10   

Federal Income Taxes

    10   

Taxation of the Trust

    11   

Tax Consequences to U.S. Holders

    13   

Tax Consequences to Non-U.S. Holders

    16   

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

    18   

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

    19   

Statements of Operations

    20   

Statements of Changes in Net Assets

    21   

Financial Highlights

    22   

Notes to Financial Statements

    23   

Other Information

    32   

Schedule of Investments

    33   

Organization of the Trust

    40   

Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units

    40   

Purchase (Creation)

    40   

Redemption

    44   
TABLE OF CONTENTS  
    Page  

Book-Entry-Only System

    49   

Portfolio Adjustments

    51   

Adjustments to the Portfolio Deposit

    54   

Exchange Listing and Trading

    56   

Secondary Trading on Exchanges

    56   

Trading Prices of Units

    57   

Continuous Offering of Units

    57   

Expenses of the Trust

    58   

Trustee Fee Scale

    60   

Determination of Net Asset Value

    61   

Additional Risk Information

    61   

Additional Information Regarding Dividends and Distributions

    63   

General Policies

    63   

Investment Restrictions

    65   

Investments by Investment Companies

    66   

Annual Reports

    66   

Benefit Plan Investor Considerations

    66   

Index License

    67   

Sponsor

    69   

Trustee

    75   

Depository

    77   

Distributor

    77   

Trust Agreement

    77   

Amendments to the Trust Agreement

    78   

Termination of the Trust Agreement

    78   

Legal Opinion

    80   

Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm and Financial Statements

    80   

Code of Ethics

    80   

Investment by an Undertaking for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities

    80   

Information and Comparisons Relating to Secondary Market Trading and Performance

    80   
 

“Standard & Poor’s ® ”, “S&P ® ”, “S&P 500 ® ”, “Standard & Poor’s 500 ® ”, “500 ® ”, “Standard & Poor’s Depositary Receipts ® ”, “SPDR ® ” and “SPDRs ® ” are trademarks of Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC and have been licensed for use by S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC (“S&P”) and sublicensed for use by State Street Global Markets, LLC. The Trust is permitted to use these trademarks pursuant to a sublicense from State Street Global Markets, LLC. The Trust is not sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by S&P, its affiliates or its third party licensors.

 

i


SUMMARY

Investment Objective

The Trust seeks to provide investment results that, before expenses, correspond generally to the price and yield performance of the S&P 500 ® Index (the “Index”).

Fees and Expenses of the Trust

This table estimates the fees and expenses that the Trust pays on an annual basis, which you therefore pay indirectly when you buy and hold Units. It does not reflect brokerage commissions that you may pay for purchases and sales of Units on the secondary markets.

 

Unitholder Fees:      None   
(fees paid directly from your investment)   

Estimated Annual Trust Ordinary Operating Expenses:

(expenses that you pay each year as a percentage of the value of your investment)

 

Current Estimated Annual Trust Ordinary Operating Expenses

   As a % of
Trust Average Net Assets
 

Trustee’s Fee*

     0.0574

S&P License Fee

     0.0303

Marketing

     0.0200

Other Operating Expenses

     0.0023
  

 

 

 

Total

     0.1100

Trustee Waiver*

     (0.0155 )% 
  

 

 

 

Net Expenses After Waiver

     0.0945
  

 

 

 

Future expense accruals will depend primarily on the level of the Trust’s net assets and the level of expenses.

 

* Until February 1, 2017, State Street Bank and Trust Company, the trustee of the Trust (the “Trustee”), has agreed to waive a portion of its fee to the extent operating expenses exceed 0.0945%. Any fees waived by the Trustee may not be recouped by the Trustee in subsequent periods. After February 1, 2017, the Trustee may discontinue this fee waiver. Therefore, there is no guarantee that the Trust’s ordinary operating expenses will not exceed 0.0945% of the Trust’s daily net asset value. The fee waiver is calculated after taking into consideration the earnings credit to the Trustee with respect to uninvested cash balances of the Trust. The amount of the earnings credit will be equal to the then current Federal Funds Rate, as reported in nationally distributed publications, multiplied by each day’s daily cash balance, if any, in the Trust’s cash account, reduced by the amount of reserves, if any, for that account required by the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.

 

1


Growth of $10,000 Investment Since Inception (1)

 

LOGO

 

(1) Past performance is not necessarily an indication of how the Trust will perform in the future.

 

(2) Effective as of September 30, 1997, the Trust’s fiscal year end changed from December 31 to September 30.

The Trust’s Investments and Portfolio Turnover

The Trust seeks to achieve its investment objective by holding a portfolio of the common stocks that are included in the Index (the “Portfolio”), with the weight of each stock in the Portfolio substantially corresponding to the weight of such stock in the Index.

In this prospectus, the term “Portfolio Securities” refers to the common stocks that are actually held by the Trust and make up the Trust’s Portfolio, while the term “Index Securities” refers to the common stocks that are included in the Index, as determined by the index provider, S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC (“S&P”). At any time, the Portfolio will consist of as many of the Index Securities as is practicable. To maintain the correspondence between the composition and weightings of Portfolio Securities and Index Securities, the Trustee adjusts the Portfolio from time to time to conform to periodic changes made by S&P to the identity and/or relative weightings of Index Securities in the Index. The Trustee aggregates certain of these adjustments and makes changes to the Portfolio at least monthly, or more frequently in the case of significant changes to the Index.

The Trust may pay transaction costs, such as brokerage commissions, when it buys and sells securities (or “turns over” its Portfolio). Such transaction costs may be higher if there are significant rebalancings of Index Securities in the Index, which may also result in higher taxes when Units are held in a taxable account. These costs, which are not reflected in estimated annual Trust ordinary operating expenses, affect the Trust’s performance. During the most recent fiscal year, the Trust’s portfolio turnover rate was 2.77% of the average value of its portfolio. The Trust’s portfolio turnover rate does not include securities received or delivered from processing

 

2


creations or redemptions of Units. Portfolio turnover will be a function of changes to the Index as well as requirements of the Trust Agreement (as defined below in “Organization of the Trust”).

Although the Trust may fail to own certain Index Securities at any particular time, the Trust generally will be substantially invested in Index Securities, which should result in a close correspondence between the performance of the Index and the performance of the Trust. See “The S&P 500 Index” below for more information regarding the Index. The Trust does not hold or trade futures or swaps and is not a commodity pool.

Dividends

Payments of dividends are made quarterly, on the last Business Day (as defined in “Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units — Purchase (Creation)”) of April, July, October and January. See “Dividends and Distributions” and “Additional Information Regarding Dividends and Distributions.”

Redemption of Units

Only certain institutional investors (typically market makers or other broker-dealers) are permitted to purchase or redeem Units directly with the Trust, and they may do so only in large blocks of 50,000 Units known as “Creation Units.” See “Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units — Redemption” and “Trust Agreement” for more information regarding the rights of Beneficial Owners (as defined in “Book-Entry-Only System”).

Voting Rights; Book-Entry-Only-System

Beneficial Owners shall not have the right to vote concerning the Trust, except with respect to termination and as otherwise expressly set forth in the Trust Agreement. See “Trust Agreement.” Units are represented by one or more global securities registered in the name of Cede & Co., as nominee for The Depository Trust Company (“DTC”) and deposited with, or on behalf of, DTC. See “Book-Entry-Only System.”

Amendments to the Trust Agreement

The Trust Agreement (as defined below in “Organization of the Trust”) may be amended from time to time by the Trustee and PDR Services, LLC (the “Sponsor”) without the consent of any Beneficial Owners under certain circumstances described herein. The Trust Agreement may also be amended by the Sponsor and the Trustee with the consent of the Beneficial Owners to modify the rights of Beneficial Owners under certain circumstances. Promptly after the execution of an amendment to the Trust Agreement, the Trustee arranges for written notice to be provided to Beneficial Owners. See “Trust Agreement — Amendments to the Trust Agreement.”

 

3


Principal Risks of Investing in the Trust

As with all investments, there are certain risks of investing in the Trust, and you could lose money on an investment in the Trust. Prospective investors should carefully consider the risk factors described below, as well as the additional risk factors under “Additional Risk Information” and the other information included in this prospectus, before deciding to invest in Units.

Passive Strategy/Index Risk.     The Trust is not actively managed. Rather, the Trust attempts to track the performance of an unmanaged index of securities. This differs from an actively managed fund, which typically seeks to outperform a benchmark index. As a result, the Trust will hold constituent securities of the Index regardless of the current or projected performance of a specific security or a particular industry or market sector. Maintaining investments in securities regardless of market conditions or the performance of individual securities could cause the Trust’s return to be lower than if the Trust employed an active strategy.

Index Tracking Risk.     While the Trust is intended to track the performance of the Index as closely as possible ( i.e., to achieve a high degree of correlation with the Index), the Trust’s return may not match or achieve a high degree of correlation with the return of the Index due to expenses and transaction costs incurred in adjusting the Portfolio. In addition, it is possible that the Trust may not always fully replicate the performance of the Index due to the unavailability of certain Index Securities in the secondary market or due to other extraordinary circumstances ( e.g. , if trading in a security has been halted).

Equity Investing Risk.     An investment in the Trust involves risks similar to those of investing in any fund of equity securities, such as market fluctuations caused by such factors as economic and political developments, changes in interest rates and perceived trends in securities prices.

An investment in the Trust is subject to the risks of any investment in a broadly based portfolio of common stocks, including the risk that the general level of stock prices may decline, thereby adversely affecting the value of such investment. The value of Portfolio Securities may fluctuate in accordance with changes in the financial condition of the issuers of Portfolio Securities, the value of common stocks generally and other factors. The identity and weighting of Index Securities and the Portfolio Securities change from time to time.

The financial condition of issuers of Portfolio Securities may become impaired or the general condition of the stock market may deteriorate, either of which may cause a decrease in the value of the Portfolio and thus in the value of Units. Since the Trust is not actively managed, the adverse financial condition of an issuer will not result in its elimination from the Portfolio unless such issuer is removed from the Index. Common stocks are susceptible to general stock market fluctuations and to volatile increases and decreases in value as market confidence in and perceptions of their issuers change. These investor perceptions are based on various and unpredictable factors including expectations regarding government, economic, monetary and fiscal

 

4


policies, inflation and interest rates, economic expansion or contraction, and global or regional political, economic and banking crises.

Holders of common stocks of any given issuer incur more risk than holders of preferred stocks and debt obligations of the issuer because the rights of common stockholders, as owners of the issuer, generally are subordinate to the rights of creditors of, or holders of debt obligations or preferred stocks issued by, such issuer. Further, unlike debt securities that typically have a stated principal amount payable at maturity, or preferred stocks that typically have a liquidation preference and may have stated optional or mandatory redemption provisions, common stocks have neither a fixed principal amount nor a maturity. Common stock values are subject to market fluctuations as long as the common stock remains outstanding. The value of the Portfolio will fluctuate over the entire life of the Trust.

There can be no assurance that the issuers of Portfolio Securities will pay dividends. Distributions generally depend upon the declaration of dividends by the issuers of Portfolio Securities and the declaration of such dividends generally depends upon various factors, including the financial condition of the issuers and general economic conditions.

Trust Performance

The following bar chart and table provide an indication of the risks of investing in the Trust by showing changes in the Trust’s performance based on net assets from year to year and by showing how the Trust’s average annual return for certain time periods compares with the average annual return of the Index. The Trust’s past performance (before and after taxes) is not necessarily an indication of how the Trust will perform in the future. Updated performance information is available online at http://www.spdrs.com.

The total returns in the bar chart, as well as the total and after-tax returns presented in the table, have been calculated assuming that the reinvested price for the last income distribution made in the last calendar year shown below ( i.e. , 12/18/15) was the net asset value per Unit (“NAV”) on the last Business Day of such year ( i.e. , 12/31/15), rather than the actual reinvestment price for such distribution which was the NAV on the last Business Day of January of the following calendar year ( e.g. , 1/29/16). Therefore, the actual performance calculation for the last calendar year may be different from that shown below in the bar chart and table. No dividend reinvestment services are provided by the Trust (see “Dividends and Distributions”), so investors’ performance may be different from that shown below in the bar chart and table.

 

5


Annual Total Return (years ended 12/31)

 

 

LOGO

Highest Quarterly Return: 15.48% for the quarter ended June 30, 2009.

Lowest Quarterly Return: –21.92% for the quarter ended December 31, 2008.

Average Annual Total Returns (for periods ending December 31, 2015)

The after-tax returns presented in the table are calculated using the highest historical individual federal marginal income tax rates and do not reflect the impact of state and local taxes. Your actual after-tax returns will depend on your specific tax situation and may differ from those shown below. After-tax returns are not relevant to investors who hold Units through tax-deferred arrangements, such as 401(k) plans or individual retirement accounts. The returns after taxes can exceed the return before taxes due to an assumed tax benefit for a holder of Units from realizing a capital loss on a sale of the Units.

 

       Past
One Year
    Past
Five Years
    Past
Ten Years
 

Trust

      

Return Before Taxes

     1.35     12.42     7.21

Return After Taxes on Distributions

     0.83     11.94     6.79

Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale or Redemption of Creation Units

     1.14     9.90     5.80

Index (reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes)

     1.38     12.57     7.31

 

6


PURCHASE AND SALE INFORMATION

Individual Units of the Trust may be purchased and sold on NYSE Arca, Inc. (the “Exchange”), under the market symbol “SPY”, through your broker-dealer at market prices. Units trade at market prices that may be greater than NAV (premium) or less than NAV (discount). Units are also listed and traded on the Singapore Exchange Securities Trading Limited (stock code S27), the Tokyo Stock Exchange (code 1557) and the Australian Securities Exchange. In the future, Units may be listed and traded on other non-U.S. exchanges. Units may be purchased on other trading markets or venues in addition to the Exchange, the Singapore Exchange Securities Trading Limited, the Tokyo Stock Exchange and the Australian Securities Exchange.

Only certain institutional investors (typically market makers or other broker-dealers) are permitted to purchase or redeem Units directly with the Trust, and they may do so only in large blocks of 50,000 Units known as “Creation Units.” Creation Unit transactions are conducted in exchange for the deposit or delivery of in-kind securities and/or cash constituting a substantial replication of the securities included in the Index.

TAX INFORMATION

The Trust will make distributions that are expected to be taxable currently to you as ordinary income and/or capital gains, unless you are investing through a tax-deferred arrangement, such as a 401(k) plan or individual retirement account. See “Federal Income Taxes,” below, for more information.

THE S&P 500 INDEX

The Index includes five hundred (500) selected companies, all of which are listed on national stock exchanges and spans over 25 separate industry groups. As of December 31, 2015, the five largest industry groups represented in the Index were: Software & Services 12.35%; Pharmaceuticals, Biotechnology & Life Sciences 10.16%; Capital Goods 7.25%; Energy 6.50%; and Banks 6.04%. Since 1968, the Index has been a component of the U.S. Commerce Department’s list of Leading Indicators that track key sectors of the U.S. economy. Current information regarding the market value of the Index is available from market information services. The Index is determined, comprised and calculated without regard to the Trust.

S&P is not responsible for and does not participate in the creation or sale of Units or in the determination of the timing, pricing, or quantities and proportions of purchases or sales of Index Securities or Portfolio Securities by the Trust. The information in this prospectus concerning S&P and the Index has been obtained from sources that the Sponsor believes to be reliable, but the Sponsor takes no responsibility for the accuracy of such information.

The following table shows the actual performance of the Index for the years 1960 through 2015. The results shown should not be considered representative of the income yield or capital gain or loss that may be generated by the Index in the future.

 

7


THE RESULTS SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED REPRESENTATIVE OF THE PERFORMANCE OF THE TRUST.

 

Year

   Calendar
Year-End
Index Value*
     Calendar
Year-End Index
Value 1960=100
     Change In
Index  for
Calendar Year
    Calendar
Year-End
Yield**
 

1960

     58.11         100.00             3.47

1961

     71.55         123.13         23.13        2.98   

1962

     63.10         108.59         –11.81        3.37   

1963

     75.02         129.10         18.89        3.17   

1964

     84.75         145.84         12.97        3.01   

1965

     92.43         159.06         9.06        3.00   

1966

     80.33         138.24         –13.09        3.40   

1967

     96.47         166.01         20.09        3.20   

1968

     103.86         178.73         7.66        3.07   

1969

     92.06         158.42         –11.36        3.24   

1970

     92.15         158.58         0.10        3.83   

1971

     102.09         175.68         10.79        3.14   

1972

     118.05         203.15         15.63        2.84   

1973

     97.55         167.87         –17.37        3.06   

1974

     68.56         117.98         –29.72        4.47   

1975

     90.19         155.21         31.55        4.31   

1976

     107.46         184.93         19.15        3.77   

1977

     95.10         163.66         –11.50        4.62   

1978

     96.11         165.39         1.06        5.28   

1979

     107.94         185.75         12.31        5.47   

1980

     135.76         233.63         25.77        5.26   

1981

     122.55         210.89         -9.73        5.20   

1982

     140.64         242.02         14.76        5.81   

1983

     164.93         283.82         17.27        4.40   

1984

     167.24         287.80         1.40        4.64   

1985

     211.28         363.59         26.33        4.25   

1986

     242.17         416.75         14.62        3.49   

1987

     247.08         425.19         2.03        3.08   

1988

     277.72         477.92         12.40        3.64   

1989

     353.40         608.15         27.25        3.45   

1990

     330.22         568.26         –6.56        3.61   

1991

     417.09         717.76         26.31        3.24   

1992

     435.71         749.80         4.46        2.99   

1993

     464.45         802.70         7.06        2.78   

1994

     459.27         790.34         –1.54        2.82   

1995

     615.93         1,059.92         34.11        2.56   

1996

     740.74         1,274.70         20.26        2.19   

1997

     970.43         1,669.99         31.01        1.77   

1998

     1,229.23         2,115.35         26.67        1.49   

 

8


Year

   Calendar
Year-End
Index Value*
     Calendar
Year-End Index
Value 1960=100
     Change In
Index  for
Calendar Year
     Calendar
Year-End
Yield**
 

1999

     1,469.25         2,528.39         19.53         1.14   

2000

     1,320.28         2,272.04         –10.14         1.19   

2001

     1,148.08         1,975.70         –13.04         1.36   

2002

     879.82         1,514.06         –23.37         1.81   

2003

     1,111.92         1,913.47         26.38         1.63   

2004

     1,211.92         2,085.56         8.99         1.72   

2005

     1,248.29         2,148.15         3.00         1.86   

2006

     1,418.30         2,440.72         13.62         1.81   

2007

     1,468.36         2,526.86         3.53         1.89   

2008

     903.25         1,554.38         –38.49         3.14   

2009

     1,115.10         1,918.95         23.45         1.95   

2010

     1,257.64         2,164.24         12.78         1.87   

2011

     1,257.60         2,164.17         –0.003         2.23   

2012

     1,426.19         2,454.29         13.41         2.19   

2013

     1,848.36         3,180.79         29.60         1.89   

2014

     2,058.90         3,543.10         11.39         2.01   

2015

     2,043.94         3,517.36         –00.73         2.20   
* Source: S&P. Reflects no deduction for fees, expenses or taxes.

 

** Source: S&P. Yields are obtained by dividing the aggregate cash dividends by the aggregate market value of the stocks in the Index.

 

DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

Dividends and Capital Gains

Holders of Units receive on the last Business Day of April, July, October and January an amount corresponding to the amount of any cash dividends declared on the Portfolio Securities during the applicable period, net of fees and expenses associated with operation of the Trust, and taxes, if applicable. Because of such fees and expenses, the dividend yield for Units is ordinarily less than that of the Index. Investors should consult their tax advisors regarding tax consequences associated with Trust dividends, as well as those associated with Unit sales or redemptions.

Any capital gain income recognized by the Trust in any taxable year that is not distributed during the year ordinarily is distributed at least annually in January of the following taxable year. The Trust may make additional distributions shortly after the end of the year in order to satisfy certain distribution requirements imposed by the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”). Although all distributions are currently made quarterly, under certain limited circumstances the Trustee may vary the times at which distributions are made. The amount of distributions may vary significantly from period to period. Under limited certain circumstances, special dividend payments also may be made to holders of Units. See “Additional Information Regarding Dividends and Distributions.”

 

9


No Dividend Reinvestment Service

No dividend reinvestment service is provided by the Trust. Broker-dealers, at their own discretion, may offer a dividend reinvestment service under which additional Units are purchased in the secondary market at current market prices. Investors should consult their broker-dealer for further information regarding any dividend reinvestment program offered by such broker-dealer.

Distributions in cash that are reinvested in additional Units through a dividend reinvestment service, if offered by an investor’s broker-dealer, will be taxable dividends to the same extent as if such dividends had been received in cash.

FEDERAL INCOME TAXES

The following is a description of the material U.S. federal income tax consequences of owning and disposing of Units. The discussion below provides general tax information relating to an investment in Units, but it does not purport to be a comprehensive description of all the U.S. federal income tax considerations that may be relevant to a particular person’s decision to invest in Units. This discussion does not describe all of the tax consequences that may be relevant in light of the particular circumstances of a beneficial owner of Units, including alternative minimum tax consequences, Medicare contribution tax consequences and tax consequences applicable to beneficial owners subject to special rules, such as:

 

   

certain financial institutions;

 

   

regulated investment companies;

 

   

real estate investment trusts;

 

   

dealers or traders in securities that use a mark-to-market method of tax accounting;

 

   

persons holding Units as part of a hedging transaction, straddle, wash sale, conversion transaction or integrated transaction or persons entering into a constructive sale with respect to the Units;

 

   

U.S. Holders (as defined below) whose functional currency for U.S. federal income tax purposes is not the U.S. dollar;

 

   

entities classified as partnerships or otherwise treated as pass-through entities for U.S. federal income tax purposes;

 

   

certain former U.S. citizens and residents and expatriated entities;

 

   

tax-exempt entities, including an “individual retirement account” or “Roth IRA”; or

 

   

insurance companies.

 

10


If an entity that is classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes holds Units, the U.S. federal income tax treatment of a partner will generally depend on the status of the partner and the activities of the partnership. Partnerships holding Units and partners in such partnerships should consult their tax advisors as to the particular U.S. federal income tax consequences of holding and disposing of the Units.

The following discussion applies only to an owner of Units that (i) is treated as the beneficial owner of such Units for U.S. federal income tax purposes, (ii) holds such Units as capital assets and (iii) unless otherwise noted, is a U.S. Holder. A “U.S. Holder” is (i) an individual who is a citizen or resident of the United States; (ii) a corporation, or other entity taxable as a corporation, created or organized in or under the laws of the United States, any state therein or the District of Columbia; or (iii) an estate or trust the income of which is subject to U.S. federal income taxation regardless of its source.

This discussion is based on the Code, administrative pronouncements, judicial decisions, and final, temporary and proposed Treasury regulations all as of the date hereof, any of which is subject to change, possibly with retroactive effect.

Prospective purchasers of Units are urged to consult their tax advisors with regard to the application of the U.S. federal income and estate tax laws to their particular situations, as well as any tax consequences arising under the laws of any state, local or foreign taxing jurisdiction.

Taxation of the Trust

The Trust believes that it qualified as a regulated investment company under Subchapter M of the Code (a “RIC”) for its taxable year ended September 30, 2015 and intends to qualify as a RIC in the current and future taxable years. Assuming that the Trust so qualifies and that it satisfies the distribution requirements described below, the Trust generally will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax on income distributed in a timely manner to the holders of its Units (“Unitholders”).

To qualify as a RIC for any taxable year, the Trust must, among other things, satisfy both an income test and an asset diversification test for such taxable year. Specifically, (i) at least 90% of the Trust’s gross income for such taxable year must consist of dividends; interest; payments with respect to certain securities loans; gains from the sale or other disposition of stock, securities or foreign currencies; other income (including, but not limited to, gains from options, futures or forward contracts) derived with respect to its business of investing in such stock, securities or currencies; and net income derived from interests in “qualified publicly traded partnerships” (such income, “Qualifying RIC Income”) and (ii) the Trust’s holdings must be diversified so that, at the end of each quarter of such taxable year, (a) at least 50% of the value of the Trust’s total assets is represented by cash and cash items, securities of other RICs, U.S. government securities and other securities, with such other securities limited, in respect of any one issuer, to an amount not greater than

 

11


5% of the value of the Trust’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 Trust’s total assets is invested (x) in the securities (other than U.S. government securities or securities of other RICs) of any one issuer or of two or more issuers that the Trust controls and that are engaged in the same, similar or related trades or businesses or (y) in the securities of one or more “qualified publicly traded partnerships.” A “qualified publicly traded partnership” is generally defined as an entity that is treated as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes if (i) interests in such entity are traded on an established securities market or are readily tradable on a secondary market or the substantial equivalent thereof and (ii) less than 90% of such entity’s gross income for the relevant taxable year consists of Qualifying RIC Income. The Trust’s share of income derived from a partnership other than a “qualified publicly traded partnership” will be treated as Qualifying RIC Income only to the extent that such income would have constituted Qualifying RIC Income if derived directly by the Trust.

In order to be exempt from U.S. federal income tax on its distributed income, the Trust must distribute to its Unitholders on a timely basis at least 90% of its “investment company taxable income” (determined prior to the deduction for dividends paid by the Trust) and at least 90% of its net tax-exempt interest income for each taxable year. In general, a RIC’s “investment company taxable income” for any taxable year is its taxable income, determined without regard to net capital gain (that is, the excess of net long-term capital gains over net short-term capital losses) and with certain other adjustments. Any taxable income, including any net capital gain, that the Trust does not distribute to its Unitholders in a timely manner will be subject to U.S. federal income tax at regular corporate rates.

A RIC will be subject to a nondeductible 4% excise tax on certain amounts that it fails to distribute during each calendar year. In order to avoid this excise tax, a RIC must distribute during each calendar year an amount at least equal to the sum of (i) 98% of its ordinary taxable income for the calendar year, (ii) 98.2% of its capital gain net income for the one-year period ended on October 31 of the calendar year and (iii) any ordinary income and capital gains for previous years that were not distributed during those years. For purposes of determining whether the Trust has met this distribution requirement, (i) certain ordinary gains and losses that would otherwise be taken into account for the portion of the calendar year after October 31 will be treated as arising on January 1 of the following calendar year and (ii) the Trust will be deemed to have distributed any income or gains on which it has paid U.S. federal income tax.

If the Trust failed to qualify as a RIC or failed to satisfy the 90% distribution requirement in any taxable year, the Trust would be subject to U.S. federal income tax at regular corporate rates on its taxable income, including its net capital gain, even if such income were distributed to its Unitholders, and all distributions out of earnings and profits would be taxable as dividend income. Such distributions generally would be eligible for the dividends-received deduction in the case of

 

12


corporate U.S. Holders and would constitute “qualified dividend income” for individual U.S. Holders. See “Federal Income Taxes — Tax Consequences to U.S. Holders — Distributions.” In addition, the Trust could be required to recognize unrealized gains, pay taxes and make distributions (which could be subject to interest charges) before requalifying for taxation as a RIC. If the Trust fails to satisfy the income test or diversification test described above, however, it may be able to avoid losing its status as a RIC by timely curing such failure, paying a tax and/or providing notice of such failure to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”).

In order to meet the distribution requirements necessary to be exempt from U.S. federal income and excise tax, the Trust may be required to make distributions in excess of the yield performance of the Portfolio Securities and may be required to sell securities.

Tax Consequences to U.S. Holders

Distributions .     Distributions of the Trust’s ordinary income and net short-term capital gains will, except as described below with respect to distributions of “qualified dividend income,” generally be taxable to U.S. Holders as ordinary income to the extent such distributions are paid out of the Trust’s current or accumulated earnings and profits, as determined for U.S. federal income tax purposes. Distributions (or deemed distributions, as described below), if any, of net capital gains will be taxable as long-term capital gains, regardless of the length of time the U.S. Holder has owned Units. A distribution of an amount in excess of the Trust’s current and accumulated earnings and profits will be treated as a return of capital that will be applied against and reduce the U.S. Holder’s basis in its Units. If the amount of any such distribution exceeds the U.S. Holder’s basis in its Units, the excess will be treated as gain from a sale or exchange of the Units.

The ultimate tax characterization of the distributions that the Trust makes during any taxable year cannot be determined until after the end of the taxable year. As a result, it is possible that the Trust will make total distributions during a taxable year in an amount that exceeds its current and accumulated earnings and profits. Return-of-capital distributions may result, for example, if the Trust makes distributions of cash amounts deposited in connection with Portfolio Deposits (as defined below in “Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units — Purchase (Creation)”). Return-of-capital distributions may be more likely to occur in periods during which the number of outstanding Units fluctuates significantly.

Distributions of the Trust’s “qualified dividend income” to an individual or other non-corporate U.S. Holder will be treated as “qualified dividend income” and will therefore be taxed at rates applicable to long-term capital gains, provided that the U.S. Holder meets certain holding period and other requirements with respect to its Units and that the Trust meets certain holding period and other requirements with respect to the underlying shares of stock. “Qualified dividend income” generally includes dividends from domestic corporations and dividends from foreign corporations that meet certain specified criteria.

 

13


Dividends distributed by the Trust to a corporate U.S. Holder will qualify for the dividends-received deduction only to the extent that the dividends consist of distributions of dividends eligible for the dividends-received deduction received by the Trust and the U.S. Holder meets certain holding period and other requirements with respect to the underlying shares of stock. Dividends eligible for the dividends-received deduction generally are dividends from domestic corporations.

The Trust intends to distribute its net capital gains at least annually. If, however, the Trust retains any net capital gains for reinvestment, it may elect to treat such net capital gains as having been distributed to the Unitholders. If the Trust makes such an election, each U.S. Holder will be required to report its share of such undistributed net capital gain as long-term capital gain and will be entitled to claim its share of the U.S. federal income taxes paid by the Trust on such undistributed net capital gain as a credit against its own U.S. federal income tax liability, if any, and to claim a refund on a properly filed U.S. federal income tax return to the extent that the credit exceeds such tax liability. In addition, each U.S. Holder will be entitled to increase the adjusted tax basis of its Units by the difference between its share of such undistributed net capital gain and the related credit and/or refund. There can be no assurance that the Trust will make this election if it retains all or a portion of its net capital gain for a taxable year.

Because the tax treatment of a distribution depends upon the Trust’s current and accumulated earnings and profits, a distribution received shortly after an acquisition of Units may be taxable, even though, as an economic matter, the distribution represents a return of the U.S. Holder’s initial investment. Although dividends generally will be treated as distributed when paid, dividends declared in October, November or December, payable to Unitholders of record on a specified date in one of those months, and paid during the following January, will be treated for U.S. federal income tax purposes as having been distributed by the Trust and received by the Unitholders on December 31 of the year in which declared. Unitholders will be notified annually as to the U.S. federal tax status of distributions.

Sales and Redemptions of Units .     In general, upon the sale or other disposition of Units, a U.S. Holder will recognize capital gain or loss in an amount equal to the difference, if any, between the amount realized on the sale or other disposition and the U.S. Holder’s adjusted tax basis in the relevant Units. Such gain or loss generally will be long-term capital gain or loss if the U.S. Holder’s holding period for the relevant Units was more than one year on the date of the sale or other disposition. Under current law, net capital gain (that is, the excess of net long-term capital gains over net short-term capital losses) recognized by non-corporate U.S. Holders is generally subject to U.S. federal income tax at lower rates than the rates applicable to ordinary income.

Losses recognized by a U.S. Holder on the sale or other disposition of Units held for six months or less will be treated as long-term capital losses to the extent of any distribution of long-term capital gain received (or deemed received, as discussed above) with respect to such Units. In addition, no loss will be allowed on a sale or

 

14


other disposition of Units if the U.S. Holder acquires Units, or enters into a contract or option to acquire Units, within 30 days before or after such sale or other disposition. In such a case, the basis of the Units acquired will be adjusted to reflect the disallowed loss.

If a U.S. Holder receives an in-kind distribution in redemption of Units (which must constitute a Creation Unit, as discussed in “Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units — Redemption”), the U.S. Holder will realize gain or loss in an amount equal to the difference between the aggregate fair market value as of the redemption date of the stocks and cash received in the redemption and the U.S. Holder’s adjusted tax basis in the relevant Units. The U.S. Holder will generally have an initial tax basis in the distributed stocks equal to their respective fair market values on the redemption date. The IRS may assert that any resulting loss may not be recognized on the ground that there has been no material change in the U.S. Holder’s economic position. The Trust will not recognize gain or loss for U.S. federal income tax purposes on an in-kind distribution in redemption of Creation Units.

Under U.S. Treasury regulations, if a U.S. Holder recognizes losses with respect to Units of $2 million or more for an individual U.S. Holder or $10 million or more for a corporate U.S. Holder, the U.S. Holder must file with the IRS a disclosure statement on IRS Form 8886. Direct shareholders of portfolio securities are in many cases exempted from this reporting requirement, but under current guidance, shareholders of a RIC are not exempted. The fact that a loss is reportable under these regulations does not affect the legal determination of whether the U.S. Holder’s treatment of the loss is proper. Certain states may have similar disclosure requirements.

Portfolio Deposits .     Upon the transfer of a Portfolio Deposit (as defined below in “Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units — Purchase (Creation)”) to the Trust, a U.S. Holder will generally realize gain or loss with respect to each stock included in the Portfolio Deposit in an amount equal to the difference, if any, between the amount received with respect to such stock and the U.S. Holder’s basis in the stock. The amount received with respect to each stock included in a Portfolio Deposit is determined by allocating among all of the stocks included in the Portfolio Deposit an amount equal to the fair market value of the Creation Units received (determined as of the date of transfer of the Portfolio Deposit) plus the amount of any cash received from the Trust, reduced by the amount of any cash that the U.S. Holder pays to the Trust. This allocation is made among such stocks in accordance with their relative fair market values as of the date of transfer of the Portfolio Deposit. The IRS may assert that any loss resulting from the transfer of a Portfolio Deposit to the Trust may not be recognized on the ground that there has been no material change in the economic position of the U.S. Holder. The Trust will not recognize gain or loss for U.S. federal income tax purposes on the issuance of Creation Units in exchange for Portfolio Deposits.

Backup Withholding and Information Returns .     Payments on the Units and proceeds from a sale or other disposition of Units will be subject to information

 

15


reporting unless the U.S. Holder is an exempt recipient. A U.S. Holder will be subject to backup withholding on all such amounts unless (i) the U.S. Holder is an exempt recipient or (ii) the U.S. Holder provides its correct taxpayer identification number (generally, on IRS Form W-9) and certifies that it is not subject to backup withholding. Backup withholding is not an additional tax. Any amounts withheld pursuant to the backup withholding rules will be allowed as a credit against the U.S. Holder’s U.S. federal income tax liability and may entitle the U.S. Holder to a refund, provided that the required information is furnished to the IRS on a timely basis.

Tax Consequences to Non-U.S. Holders

A “Non-U.S. Holder” is a person that, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, is a beneficial owner of Units and is a nonresident alien individual, a foreign corporation, a foreign trust or a foreign estate. The discussion below does not apply to a Non-U.S. Holder who is a nonresident alien individual and is present in the United States for 183 days or more during any taxable year. Such Non-U.S. Holders should consult their tax advisors with respect to the particular tax consequences to them of an investment in the Trust. The U.S. federal income taxation of a Non-U.S. Holder depends on whether the income that the Non-U.S. Holder derives from the Trust is “effectively connected” with a trade or business that the Non-U.S. Holder conducts in the United States (and, if required by an applicable tax treaty, is attributable to a U.S. permanent establishment maintained by the Non-U.S. Holder).

If the income that a Non-U.S. Holder derives from the Trust is not “effectively connected” with a U.S. trade or business conducted by such Non-U.S. Holder (or, if an applicable tax treaty so provides, the Non-U.S. Holder does not maintain a permanent establishment in the United States), distributions of “investment company taxable income” to such Non-U.S. Holder will generally be subject to U.S. federal withholding tax at a rate of 30% (or lower rate under an applicable tax treaty). Provided that certain requirements are satisfied, this withholding tax will not be imposed on dividends paid by the Trust to the extent that the underlying income out of which the dividends are paid consists of U.S.-source interest income or short-term capital gains that would not have been subject to U.S. withholding tax if received directly by the Non-U.S. Holder (“interest-related dividends” and “short-term capital gain dividends,” respectively).

A Non-U.S. Holder whose income from the Trust is not “effectively connected” with a U.S. trade or business (or, if an applicable tax treaty so provides, does not maintain a permanent establishment in the United States) will generally be exempt from U.S. federal income tax on capital gain dividends and any amounts retained by the Trust that are designated as undistributed capital gains. In addition, such a Non-U.S. Holder will generally be exempt from U.S. federal income tax on any gains realized upon the sale or exchange of Units.

If the income from the Trust is “effectively connected” with a U.S. trade or business carried on by a Non-U.S. Holder (and, if required by an applicable tax treaty, is

 

16


attributable to a U.S. permanent establishment maintained by the Non-U.S. Holder), any distributions of “investment company taxable income,” any capital gain dividends, any amounts retained by the Trust that are designated as undistributed capital gains and any gains realized upon the sale or exchange of Units will be subject to U.S. federal income tax, on a net income basis, at the rates applicable to U.S. Holders. A Non-U.S. Holder that is a corporation may also be subject to the U.S. branch profits tax.

Information returns will be filed with the IRS in connection with certain payments on the Units and may be filed in connection with payments of the proceeds from a sale or other disposition of Units. A Non-U.S. Holder may be subject to backup withholding on distributions or on the proceeds from a redemption or other disposition of Units if such Non-U.S. Holder does not certify its non-U.S. status under penalties of perjury or otherwise establish an exemption. Backup withholding is not an additional tax. Any amounts withheld pursuant to the backup withholding rules will be allowed as a credit against the Non-U.S. Holder’s U.S. federal income tax liability, if any, and may entitle the Non-U.S. Holder to a refund, provided that the required information is furnished to the IRS on a timely basis.

In order to qualify for the exemption from U.S. withholding on interest-related dividends, to qualify for an exemption from U.S. backup withholding and to qualify for a reduced rate of U.S. withholding tax on Trust distributions pursuant to an income tax treaty, a Non-U.S. Holder must generally deliver to the withholding agent a properly executed IRS form (generally, Form W-8BEN or Form W-8BEN-E, as applicable). In order to claim a refund of any Trust-level taxes imposed on undistributed net capital gain, any withholding taxes or any backup withholding, a Non-U.S. Holder must obtain a U.S. taxpayer identification number and file a U.S. federal income tax return, even if the Non-U.S. Holder would not otherwise be required to obtain a U.S. taxpayer identification number or file a U.S. income tax return.

Under Sections 1471 through 1474 of the Code (“FATCA”), a withholding tax at the rate of 30% will generally be imposed on payments to certain foreign entities (including financial intermediaries) of dividends on Units and, for dispositions after December 31, 2018, on gross proceeds from the sale or other disposition made to a foreign entity unless the foreign entity provides the withholding agent with certifications and other information (which may include information relating to ownership by U.S. persons of interests in, or accounts with, the foreign entity). If FATCA withholding is imposed, a beneficial owner of Units that is not a foreign financial institution generally may obtain a refund of any amounts withheld by filing a U.S. federal income tax return (which may entail significant administrative burden). Non-U.S. Holders should consult their tax advisors regarding the possible implications of FATCA on their investment in Units.

 

17


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

 

 

To the Trustee and Unitholders of SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including the schedule of investments, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust at September 30, 2015, the results of its operations, the changes in its net assets, and the financial highlights for the periods indicated, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as “financial statements”) are the responsibility of the Trustee. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at September 30, 2015 by correspondence with the custodian and the application of alternative auditing procedures where securities purchased had not been received, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

November 25, 2015

 

18


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

September 30, 2015

 

 

Assets

  

Investments in unaffiliated issuers, at value

   $ 165,994,119,819   

Investments in affiliates of the Trustee and the Sponsor, at value

     526,939,716   
  

 

 

 

Total investments

     166,521,059,535   

Cash

     932,164,435   

Dividends receivable — unaffiliated issuers net of withholding tax

     195,965,737   

Dividends receivable — affiliated issuers

     1,388,613   
  

 

 

 

Total Assets

     167,650,578,320   
  

 

 

 

Liabilities

  

Payable for units of fractional undivided interest (“Units”) redeemed in-kind

     180,998   

Income distribution payable

     919,630,875   

Accrued Trustee expense (Note 3)

     5,640,042   

Accrued marketing expense (Note 3)

     16,965,194   

Accrued expenses and other liabilities

     24,260,319   
  

 

 

 

Total Liabilities

     966,677,428   
  

 

 

 

Net Assets

   $ 166,683,900,892   
  

 

 

 

Net Assets Consist of:

  

Paid in Capital (Note 4)

   $ 193,671,312,074   

Distribution in excess of net investment income

     (919,630,875

Accumulated net realized loss on investments

     (5,323,354,476

Net unrealized depreciation on investments

     (20,744,425,831
  

 

 

 

Net Assets

   $ 166,683,900,892   
  

 

 

 

Net Asset Value Per Unit

   $ 191.77   
  

 

 

 

Units outstanding, unlimited units authorized

     869,182,116   
  

 

 

 

Cost of Investments:

  

Unaffiliated issuers

   $ 186,709,316,445   

Affiliates of the Trustee and the Sponsor (Note 3)

     556,168,921   
  

 

 

 

Total Cost of Investments

   $ 187,265,485,366   
  

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

19


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Statements of Operations

 

 

     For the
Year Ended
September 30,

2015
    For the
Year  Ended
September 30,

2014
    For the
Year  Ended
September 30,

2013
 

Investment Income

  

   

Dividend income — unaffiliated issuers

   $ 4,005,208,734      $ 3,282,246,167      $ 2,928,179,277   

Dividend income — affiliates of the Trustee and the Sponsor

     8,629,447        7,737,949        7,182,288   

Foreign taxes withheld

     (400,124     (55,714     (2,155,873
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Investment Income

     4,013,438,057        3,289,928,402        2,933,205,692   

Expenses

      

Trustee expense (Note 3)

     105,581,093        94,051,423        74,263,542   

S&P license fee (Note 3)

     55,780,384        49,409,863        39,725,196   

Marketing expense (Note 3)

     36,786,924        32,539,910        26,083,464   

Legal and audit services

     558,523        31,642        475,897   

Other expenses

     3,771,679        2,594,912        3,081,480   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total Expenses

     202,478,603        178,627,750        143,629,579   

Trustee expense waiver

     (28,513,292     (24,863,548     (20,385,210
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net Expenses

     173,965,311        153,764,202        123,244,369   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

     3,839,472,746        3,136,164,200        2,809,961,323   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

      

Net realized gain (loss) on:

      

Investment transactions — unaffiliated issuers

     20,747,712,041        19,553,859,588        16,411,092,129   

Investment transactions — affiliates of the Trustee and the Sponsor

     50,429,127        71,893,864        75,913,401   

Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on:

      

Investment transactions — unaffiliated issuers

     (25,396,805,455     4,246,483,070        2,965,943,531   

Investment transactions — affiliates of the Trustee and the Sponsor

     (34,779,514     (15,568,822     65,931,190   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

     (4,633,443,801     23,856,667,700        19,518,880,251   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net Increase (Decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

   $ (793,971,055   $ 26,992,831,900      $ 22,328,841,574   
  

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

20


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Statements of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

    For the
Year Ended
September 30,

2015
    For the
Year Ended
September 30,

2014
    For the
Year Ended
September 30,

2013
 

Increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations:

     

Net investment income

  $ 3,839,472,746      $ 3,136,164,200      $ 2,809,961,323   

Net realized gain (loss) on investment transactions

    20,798,141,168        19,625,753,452        16,487,005,530   

Net change in unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investment transactions

    (25,431,584,969     4,230,914,248        3,031,874,721   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations

    (793,971,055     26,992,831,900        22,328,841,574   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net equalization credits and charges

    69,539,438        62,384,940        69,879,138   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Distributions to Unitholders from net investment income

    (3,768,615,848     (3,236,399,773     (2,898,906,428
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Increase (decrease) in net assets from Unit transactions:

     

Proceeds from issuance of Units

    515,823,857,164        384,831,248,199        421,569,465,638   

Cost of Units redeemed

    (524,519,686,326     (373,296,420,608     (414,539,883,142

Net income equalization (Note 2)

    (69,539,438     (62,384,940     (69,879,138
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in net assets from issuance and redemption of units

    (8,765,368,600     11,472,442,651        6,959,703,358   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Contribution by Trustee (Note 3)

    26,920,521                 
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in net assets during the year

    (13,231,495,544     35,291,259,718        26,459,517,642   

Net assets at beginning of year

    179,915,396,436        144,624,136,718        118,164,619,076   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net assets at end of year*

  $ 166,683,900,892      $ 179,915,396,436      $ 144,624,136,718   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Unit transactions:

     

Units sold

    2,537,300,000        2,061,700,000        2,724,700,000   

Units redeemed

    (2,581,500,000     (2,009,400,000     (2,684,200,000
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease)

    (44,200,000     52,300,000        40,500,000   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

*  Includes distributions in excess of net investment income

  $ (919,630,875   $ (804,394,943   $ (704,159,370
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

21


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Financial Highlights

Selected data for a Unit outstanding throughout each year

 

 

    For the
Year Ended
September 30,
2015
    For the
Year Ended
September 30,
2014
    For the
Year Ended
September 30,
2013
    For the
Year Ended
September 30,
2012
    For the
Year Ended
September 30,
2011
 

Net asset value, beginning
of year

  $ 196.98      $ 167.96      $ 144.00      $ 113.12      $ 114.13   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Investment operations:

         

Net investment income (1)

    4.28        3.60        3.36        2.77        2.42   

Net realized and
unrealized gain (loss)
on investments

    (5.47     29.03        23.91        30.80        (1.16
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total from investment operations

    (1.19     32.63        27.27        33.57        1.26   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net equalization credits and charges (1)

    0.08        0.07        0.08        0.16        0.19   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Contribution by Trustee

    0.03 (2)                              
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Less distributions from:

         

Net investment income

    (4.13     (3.68     (3.39     (2.85     (2.46
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Net asset value, end of year

  $ 191.77      $ 196.98      $ 167.96      $ 144.00      $ 113.12   
 

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

   

 

 

 

Total return (3)

    (0.64 )% (4)       19.57     19.09     29.96     1.01

Ratios and supplemental data

         

Ratio to average net assets:

         

Net investment income

    2.09     1.93     2.15     2.08     1.92

Total expenses (5)

    0.09     0.09     0.09     0.09     0.09

Total expenses excluding Trustee earnings credit

    0.11     0.11     0.11     0.11     0.11

Total expenses excluding Trustee earnings credit and fee waivers

    0.11     0.11     0.11     0.11     0.11

Portfolio turnover rate (6)

    2.77     3.54     2.99     3.80     3.72

Net assets, end of year (000’s)

  $ 166,683,901      $ 179,915,396      $ 144,624,137      $ 118,164,619      $ 80,865,260   

 

(1) Per Unit numbers have been calculated using the average shares method, which more appropriately presents per Unit data for the year.
(2) Contribution paid by the Trustee in the amount of $26,920,521. (See Note 3).
(3) Total return is calculated assuming a purchase of Units at net asset value per Unit on the first day and a sale at net asset value per Unit on the last day of each period reported. Distributions are assumed, for the purposes of this calculation, to be reinvested at the net asset value per Unit on the respective payment dates of the Trust. Broker commission charges are not included in this calculation.
(4) Total return would have been lower by 0.01% if the Trustee had not made a contribution. (See Note 3).
(5) Net of expenses waived by the Trustee.
(6) Portfolio turnover rate does not include securities received or delivered from processing creations or redemptions of Units.

 

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

22


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Notes to Financial Statements

September 30, 2015

 

 

Note 1 — Organization

SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (the “Trust”) is a unit investment trust created under the laws of the State of New York and registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended. The Trust was created to provide investors with the opportunity to purchase a security representing a proportionate undivided interest in a portfolio of securities consisting of substantially all of the component common stocks, in substantially the same weighting, which comprise the Standard & Poor’s 500 ® Index (the “S&P 500 Index”). Each unit of fractional undivided interest in the Trust is referred to as a “Unit”. The Trust commenced operations on January 22, 1993 upon the initial issuance of 150,000 Units (equivalent to three “Creation Units” — see Note 4) in exchange for a portfolio of securities assembled to reflect the intended portfolio composition of the Trust.

Under the Amended and Restated Standard Terms and Conditions of the Trust, as amended (the “Trust Agreement”), PDR Services, LLC, as sponsor of the Trust (the “Sponsor”), and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as trustee of the Trust (the “Trustee”), are indemnified against certain liabilities arising out of the performance of their duties to the Trust. Additionally, in the normal course of business, the Trust enters into contracts that contain general indemnification clauses. The Trust’s maximum exposure under these arrangements is unknown as this would involve future claims that may be made against the Trust that have not yet occurred. However, based on experience, the Trustee expects the risk of material loss to be remote.

On November 13, 2013, the Sponsor became an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. (“ICE”), following the acquisition of NYSE Holdings LLC (the parent company of the Sponsor) by ICE. As the parent company, ICE is the publicly-traded entity, trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “ICE.”

Note 2 — Significant Accounting Policies

The following is a summary of significant accounting policies followed by the Trust in the preparation of its financial statements:

The preparation of financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“U.S. GAAP”) requires the Trustee to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Actual results could differ from those estimates. The Trust is an investment company under U.S. GAAP and follows the accounting and reporting guidance applicable to investment companies in Financial Accounting Standards Board Accounting Standards Codification 946, Financial Services Investment Companies.

 

23


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Notes to Financial Statements

September 30, 2015

 

 

Note 2 — Significant Accounting Policies – (continued)

 

Security Valuation

The Trust’s investments are valued at fair value each day that the Trust’s listing exchange is open and, for financial reporting purposes, as of the report date should the reporting period end on a day that the Trust’s listing exchange is not open. Fair value is generally defined as the price a fund would receive to sell an asset or pay to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. By its nature, a fair value price is a good faith estimate of the valuation in a current sale and may not reflect an actual market price. The investments of the Trust are valued pursuant to policies and procedures developed by the oversight committee of the Trustee (the “Committee”). The Committee provides oversight of the valuation of investments for the Trust. Valuation techniques used to value the Trust’s equity investments are as follows:

Equity investments (including preferred stocks) traded on a recognized securities exchange for which market quotations are readily available are valued at the last sale price or official closing price, as applicable, on the primary market or exchange on which they trade. Equity investments traded on a recognized exchange for which there were no sales on that day are valued at the last published sale price or at fair value.

In the event that prices or quotations are not readily available or that the application of these valuation methods results in a price for an investment that is deemed to be not representative of the fair value of such investment, fair value will be determined in good faith by the Committee, in accordance with the valuation policy and procedures approved by the Trustee.

Fair value pricing could result in a difference between the prices used to calculate the Trust’s net asset value and the prices used by the Trust’s underlying index, “S&P 500 Index,” which, in turn, could result in a difference between the Trust’s performance and the performance of the S&P 500 Index.

The Trust values its assets and liabilities at fair value using a hierarchy that prioritizes the inputs to valuation techniques, giving the highest priority to readily available unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1 measurements) and the lowest priority to unobservable inputs (Level 3 measurements) when market prices are not readily available or reliable. The categorization of a value determined for an investment within the hierarchy is based upon the pricing transparency of the investment and is not necessarily an indication of the risk associated with the investment.

 

24


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Notes to Financial Statements

September 30, 2015

 

 

Note 2 — Significant Accounting Policies – (continued)

 

The three levels of the fair value hierarchy are as follows:

 

   

Level 1 — Unadjusted quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities;

 

   

Level 2 — Inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the assets or liabilities, either directly or indirectly, including quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in active markets, quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are not considered to be active, inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the asset or liability (such as exchange rates, financing terms, interest rates, yield curves, volatilities, prepayment speeds, loss severities, credit risks and default rates) or other market-corroborated inputs; and

 

   

Level 3 — Unobservable inputs for the asset or liability, including the Committee’s assumptions used in determining the fair value of investments.

Changes in valuation techniques may result in transfers in or out of an assigned level within the fair value hierarchy. Transfers between different levels of the fair value hierarchy are recognized at the end of the reporting period. The Trust did not hold any investments valued using Level 2 or Level 3 inputs as of September 30, 2015 and did not have any transfers between levels for the year ended September 30, 2015.

Investment Transactions and Income Recognition

Investment transactions are accounted for on the trade date for financial reporting purposes. Dividend income and capital gain distributions, if any, are recognized daily on the ex-dividend date, net of any foreign taxes withheld at source, if any. Non-cash dividends received in the form of stock, if any, are recorded as dividend income at fair value. Distributions received by the Trust may include a return of capital that is estimated by the Trustee. Such amounts are recorded as a reduction of the cost of investments or reclassified to capital gains. The Trust invests in real estate investment trusts (“REITs”). REITs determine the characterization of their income annually and may characterize a portion of their distributions as a return of capital or capital gain. The Trust’s policy is to record all REIT distributions as dividend income initially and re-designate the prior calendar year’s return of capital or capital gain distributions at year end. Realized gains and losses from the sale or disposition of investments are determined using the identified cost method.

Distributions

The Trust declares and distributes dividends from net investment income to its holders of Units (“unitholders”), if any, quarterly. Capital gain distributions, if any, are generally declared and paid annually. Additional distributions may be paid by the

 

25


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Notes to Financial Statements

September 30, 2015

 

 

Note 2 — Significant Accounting Policies – (continued)

 

Trust to avoid imposition of federal income and excise tax on any remaining undistributed net investment income and capital gains. The amount and character of income and gains to be distributed are determined in accordance with federal tax regulations which may differ from net investment income and realized gains recognized for U.S. GAAP purposes.

Equalization

The Trust follows the accounting practice known as “Equalization” by which a portion of the proceeds from sales and costs of reacquiring the Trust’s Units, equivalent on a per Unit basis to the amount of distributable net investment income on the date of the transaction, is credited or charged to undistributed net investment income. As a result, undistributed net investment income per Unit is unaffected by sales or reacquisitions of the Trust’s Units. Amounts related to Equalization can be found on the Statements of Changes in Net Assets.

Federal Income Taxes

For U.S. federal income tax purposes, the Trust has qualified as a “regulated investment company” under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (a “RIC”), and intends to continue to qualify as a RIC. As a RIC, the Trust will generally not be subject to U.S. federal income tax for any taxable year on income, including net capital gains, that it distributes to its Unitholders, provided that it distributes on a timely basis at least 90% of its “investment company taxable income” determined prior to the deduction for dividends paid by the Trust (generally, its taxable income other than net capital gain) for such taxable year. In addition, provided that the Trust distributes substantially all of its ordinary income and capital gains during each calendar year, the Trust will not be subject to U.S. federal excise tax. Income and capital gain distributions are determined in accordance with tax regulations which may differ from U.S. GAAP. These book-tax differences are primarily due to differing treatments for Equalization, in-kind transactions, REITs and losses deferred due to wash sales.

GAAP requires the evaluation of tax positions taken in the course of preparing the Trust’s tax returns to determine whether the tax positions are “more-likely-than-not” to be sustained by the applicable tax authority. The Trust recognizes the tax benefits of uncertain tax positions only when the position is more likely than not to be sustained, assuming examination by tax authorities.

The Trust has reviewed its tax positions for the open tax years as of September 30, 2015 and has determined that no provision for income tax is required in the Trust’s financial statements. The Trust’s federal tax returns for the prior three fiscal years remain subject to examinations by the Trust’s major tax jurisdictions, which include the United States of America, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the State of

 

26


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Notes to Financial Statements

September 30, 2015

 

 

Note 2 — Significant Accounting Policies – (continued)

 

New York. The Trust recognizes interest and penalties, if any, related to tax liabilities as income tax expense in the Statements of Operations. There were no such expenses for the year ending September 30, 2015.

No income tax returns are currently under examination. The Trustee has analyzed the relevant tax laws and regulations and their application to the Trust’s facts and circumstances and does not believe there are any uncertain tax positions that require recognition of any tax liabilities. Any potential tax liability is also subject to ongoing interpretation of laws by taxing authorities. The tax treatment of the Trust’s investments may change over time based on factors including, but not limited to, new tax laws, regulations and interpretations thereof.

During the year ended September 30, 2015, the Trust reclassified $20,994,772,151 of non-taxable security gains realized from the in-kind redemption of Creation Units (Note 4) as an increase to paid in capital in the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

At September 30, 2015, the Trust had the following capital loss carryforwards that may be utilized to offset any net realized gains, expiring September 30:

 

2016

   $ 917,820,735   

2017

     2,553,965,847   

2018

     188,539,023   

Non-Expiring – Short Term

     225,974,901   

Non-Expiring – Long Term

     1,431,208,137   

During the tax year ended September 30, 2015, the Trust utilized capital loss carryforwards of $0 and had $1,056,971,322 of capital loss carryforwards expire.

At September 30, 2015, gross unrealized appreciation and gross unrealized depreciation based on cost for federal income tax purposes were as follows:

 

Tax Cost   

Gross
Unrealized
Appreciation

   Gross
Unrealized
Depreciation
   Net Unrealized
Depreciation
$187,271,331,198    $2,173,839,582    $22,924,111,245    $(20,750,271,663)

The tax character of distributions paid during the years ended September 30, 2015, 2014 and 2013 were as follows:

 

Distributions paid from:

   2015      2014      2013  

Ordinary Income

   $ 3,768,615,848       $ 3,236,399,773       $ 2,898,906,428   

As of September 30, 2015, the components of distributable earnings (excluding unrealized appreciation/(depreciation)) were undistributed ordinary income of $0 and undistributed capital gain of $0.

 

27


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Notes to Financial Statements

September 30, 2015

 

 

Note 3 — Transactions with the Trustee and Sponsor

In accordance with the Trust Agreement, the Trustee maintains the Trust’s accounting records, acts as custodian and transfer agent to the Trust, and provides administrative services, including the filing of certain regulatory reports. The Trustee is also responsible for determining the composition of the portfolio of securities which must be delivered and/or received in exchange for the issuance and/or redemption of Creation Units of the Trust, and for adjusting the composition of the Trust’s portfolio from time to time to conform to changes in the composition and/or weighting structure of the S&P 500 Index. For these services, the Trustee received a fee at the following annual rates for the year ended September 30, 2015:

 

Net asset value of the Trust

  

Fee as a percentage of net asset value of the Trust

$0 - $499,999,999

   0.10% per annum plus or minus the Adjustment Amount

$500,000,000 - $2,499,999,999

   0.08% per annum plus or minus the Adjustment Amount

$2,500,000,000 and above

   0.06% per annum plus or minus the Adjustment Amount

The adjustment amount (the “Adjustment Amount”) is the sum of (a) the excess or deficiency of transaction fees received by the Trustee, less the expenses incurred in processing orders for the creation and redemption of Units and (b) the amounts earned by the Trustee with respect to the cash held by the Trustee for the benefit of the Trust. During the year ended September 30, 2015, the Adjustment Amount reduced the Trustee’s fee by $5,379,678. The Adjustment Amount included an excess of net transaction fees from processing orders of $4,617,041 and a Trustee earnings credit of $762,637.

The Trustee has voluntarily agreed to waive a portion of its fee, as needed, for one year until February 1, 2016, so that the total operating expenses would not exceed 0.0945% per annum of the daily Net Asset Value (“NAV”) of the Trust. The total amount of such waivers by the Trustee for the years ended September 30, 2015, September 30, 2014 and September 30, 2013 are identified in the Statements of Operations. The Trustee has not entered into an agreement with the Trust to recapture waived fees in subsequent periods, and the Trustee may discontinue the voluntary waiver.

In accordance with the Trust Agreement and under the terms of an exemptive order issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission, dated December 30, 1997, the Sponsor is reimbursed by the Trust for certain expenses up to a maximum of 0.20% of the Trust’s net asset value on an annualized basis. The expenses reimbursed to the Sponsor for the years ended October 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013 did not exceed 0.20% per annum.

S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC (“S&P”), per a license from Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC, and State Street Global Markets, LLC (“SSGM” or the

 

28


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Notes to Financial Statements

September 30, 2015

 

 

Note 3 — Transactions with the Trustee and Sponsor – (continued)

 

“Marketing Agent”) have entered into a license agreement (the “License Agreement”). The License Agreement grants SSGM, an affiliate of the Trustee, a license to use the S&P 500 Index and to use certain trade names and trademarks of S&P in connection with the Trust. The S&P 500 Index also serves as the basis for determining the composition of the Trust’s portfolio. The Trustee (on behalf of the Trust), the Sponsor and NYSE Arca, Inc. (“NYSE Arca”) have each received a sublicense from SSGM for the use of the S&P 500 Index and certain trade names and trademarks in connection with their rights and duties with respect to the Trust. The License Agreement may be amended without the consent of any of the owners of beneficial interests of Units. Currently, the License Agreement is scheduled to terminate on December 31, 2017, but its term may be extended without the consent of any of the owners of beneficial interests of Units. Pursuant to such arrangements and in accordance with the Trust Agreement, the Trust reimburses the Sponsor for payment of fees under the License Agreement to S&P equal to 0.03% of the daily size of the Trust (based on Unit closing price and outstanding Units) plus an annual license fee of $600,000.

The Sponsor has entered into an agreement with the Marketing Agent pursuant to which the Marketing Agent has agreed to market and promote the Trust. The Marketing Agent is reimbursed by the Sponsor for the expenses it incurs for providing such services out of amounts that the Trust reimburses the Sponsor. Expenses incurred by the Marketing Agent include, but are not limited to: printing and distribution of marketing materials describing the Trust, associated legal, consulting, advertising and marketing costs and other out-of-pocket expenses.

ALPS Distributors, Inc. (the “Distributor”) serves as the distributor of the Units. The Sponsor pays the Distributor for its services a flat annual fee of $35,000, and the Trust does not reimburse the Sponsor for this fee.

Investments in Affiliates of the Trustee and the Sponsor

The Trust has invested in companies that are considered affiliates of the Trustee (State Street Corp.) and the Sponsor (ICE). Such investments were made according to the representative portion of the S&P 500 Index. The market value of these investments at September 30, 2015 are listed in the Schedule of Investments.

Contribution from the Trustee

On July 20, 2015, the Trustee made a cash contribution to the Trust in connection with the correction of a class action processing error.

 

29


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Notes to Financial Statements

September 30, 2015

 

 

Note 4 — Unitholder Transactions

Units are issued and redeemed by the Trust only in Creation Unit size aggregations of 50,000 Units. Such transactions are only permitted on an in-kind basis, with a separate cash payment that is equivalent to the undistributed net investment income per Unit (income equalization) and a balancing cash component to equate the transaction to the NAV per Unit of the Trust on the transaction date. There is a transaction fee payable to the Trustee in connection with each creation and redemption of Creation Units made through the clearing process (the “Transaction Fee”). The Transaction Fee is non-refundable, regardless of the NAV of the Trust. The Transaction Fee is the lesser of $3,000 or 0.10% (10 basis points) of the value of one Creation Unit at the time of creation per participating party per day, regardless of the number of Creation Units created or redeemed on such day. The Transaction Fee is currently $3,000. For creations and redemptions outside the clearing process, including orders from a participating party restricted from engaging in transactions in one or more of the common stocks that are included in the S&P 500 Index, an additional amount not to exceed three (3) times the Transaction Fee applicable for one Creation Unit is charged per Creation Unit per day.

Note 5 — Investment Transactions

For the year ended September 30, 2015, the Trust had in-kind contributions, in-kind redemptions, purchases and sales of investment securities of $203,381,038,879, $212,149,481,404, $6,238,069,055, and $5,052,074,589, respectively. Net realized gain (loss) on investment transactions in the Statements of Operations includes net gains resulting from in-kind transactions of $20,925,560,095.

Note 6 — Market Risk

In the normal course of business, the Trust invests in securities and enters into transactions where risks exist due to fluctuations in the market (market risk). Due to the level of risk associated with certain investments, it is at least reasonably possible that changes in the values of investment securities will occur in the near term and that such changes could materially affect the amounts reported in the financial statements.

An investment in the Trust involves risks similar to those of investing in any fund of equity securities, such as market fluctuations caused by such factors as economic and political developments, changes in interest rates and perceived trends in stock prices. The value of a Unit will decline, more or less, in correlation with any decline in value of the S&P 500 Index. The values of equity securities could decline generally or

 

30


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Notes to Financial Statements

September 30, 2015

 

 

could underperform other investments. The Trust would not sell an equity security because the security’s issuer was in financial trouble unless that security was removed from the S&P 500 Index.

Note 7 — Subsequent Events

The Trustee has evaluated the impact of all subsequent events of the Trust through the date on which the financial statements were available to be issued and has determined that there were no subsequent events requiring adjustment or disclosure in the financial statements.

 

31


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Other Information

September 30, 2015 (Unaudited)

 

For U.S. federal income tax purposes, the percentage of Trust distributions that qualify for the corporate dividends received deduction for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2015 is 91.69%.

For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2015, certain dividends paid by the Trust may be designated as qualified dividend income for U.S. federal income tax purposes and subject to a maximum U.S. federal income tax rate of 20% in the case of certain non-corporate shareholders that meet applicable holding period requirements with respect to their Units. Complete information will be reported in conjunction with your 2015 Form 1099-DIV.

FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION OF DISCOUNTS AND PREMIUMS

Bid/Ask Price (1) vs Net Asset Value

As of September 30, 2015

 

     Bid/Ask Price Above NAV      Bid/Ask Price Below NAV  
     50 - 99
BASIS
POINTS
     100 - 199
BASIS
POINTS
     > 200
BASIS
POINTS
     50 - 99
BASIS
POINTS
     100 - 199
BASIS
POINTS
     > 200
BASIS
POINTS
 

2015

     0         0         0         0         0         0   

2014

     0         0         0         0         0         0   

2013

     0         0         0         0         0         0   

2012

     0         0         0         0         0         0   

2011

     0         0         0         0         0         0   

Comparison of Total Returns Based on NAV and Bid/Ask Price (1)

The table below is provided to compare the Trust’s total pre-tax return at NAV with the total pre-tax returns based on bid/ask price and the performance of the S&P 500 Index. Past performance is not necessarily an indication of how the Trust will perform in the future. The return based on NAV shown in the table below reflects the impact of a fee waiver and, without this waiver, returns would have been lower.

 

Cumulative Total Return

 
       1 Year        5 Year        10 Year  

SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

              

Return Based on NAV

       – 0.64%           85.73%           91.32%   

Return Based on Bid/Ask Price

       – 0.70%           85.68%           91.22%   

S&P 500 Index

       – 0.61%           87.02%           93.05%   

Average Annual Total Return

 
       1 Year        5 Year        10 Year  

SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

              

Return Based on NAV

       – 0.64%           13.18%           6.70%   

Return Based on Bid/Ask Price

       – 0.70%           13.18%           6.70%   

S&P 500 Index

       – 0.61%           13.34%           6.80%   

 

(1) Currently, the bid/ask price is the midpoint of the best bid and best offer prices on NYSE Arca at the time the Trust’s NAV is calculated, ordinarily 4:00 p.m. Through November 28, 2008, the bid/ask price was the midpoint of the best bid and best offer prices on NYSE Alternext US (formerly the American Stock Exchange and now NYSE MKT) at the close of trading, ordinarily 4:00 p.m.

 

32


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Schedule of Investments

September 30, 2015

 

 

Common Stocks   Shares      Value  

3M Co.

    6,146,658       $ 871,411,705   

Abbott Laboratories

    14,616,689         587,883,232   

AbbVie, Inc.

    16,274,854         885,514,806   

Accenture PLC (Class A)

    6,135,936         602,917,071   

ACE, Ltd.

    3,206,310         331,532,454   

Activision Blizzard, Inc.

    4,881,769         150,797,844   

Adobe Systems, Inc. (a)

    4,905,191         403,304,804   

ADT Corp.

    1,697,783         50,763,712   

Advance Auto Parts, Inc.

    708,973         134,371,653   

AES Corp.

    6,701,167         65,604,425   

Aetna, Inc.

    3,439,449         376,310,115   

Affiliated Managers Group, Inc. (a)

    537,696         91,940,639   

AFLAC, Inc.

    4,238,750         246,398,538   

Agilent Technologies, Inc.

    3,288,756         112,902,993   

AGL Resources, Inc.

    1,151,439         70,283,837   

Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.

    1,897,613         242,097,467   

Airgas, Inc.

    667,036         59,586,326   

Akamai Technologies, Inc. (a)

    1,751,237         120,940,427   

Alcoa, Inc.

    12,854,163         124,171,215   

Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)

    2,226,645         348,225,012   

Allegion PLC

    937,155         54,036,357   

Allergan PLC (a)

    3,875,096         1,053,289,844   

Alliance Data Systems Corp. (a)

    614,537         159,152,792   

Allstate Corp.

    3,938,879         229,400,313   

Alphabet, Inc. (Class A) (a)

    2,854,508         1,822,232,272   

Alphabet, Inc. (Class C) (a)

    2,914,320         1,773,130,574   

Altera Corp.

    2,982,683         149,372,765   

Altria Group, Inc.

    19,328,149         1,051,451,306   

Amazon.com, Inc. (a)

    3,775,672         1,932,728,740   

Ameren Corp.

    2,350,782         99,367,555   

American Airlines Group, Inc.

    6,606,743         256,539,831   

American Electric Power Co., Inc.

    4,810,980         273,552,323   

American Express Co.

    8,371,071         620,547,493   

American International Group, Inc.

    12,724,650         723,014,613   

American Tower Corp.

    4,166,780         366,593,304   

Ameriprise Financial, Inc.

    1,753,132         191,319,295   

AmerisourceBergen Corp.

    2,035,948         193,394,701   

AMETEK, Inc.

    2,395,784         125,347,419   

Amgen, Inc.

    7,466,106         1,032,711,782   

Amphenol Corp. (Class A)

    3,025,360         154,172,346   

Anadarko Petroleum Corp.

    4,986,730         301,148,625   

Analog Devices, Inc.

    3,078,270         173,645,211   

Anthem, Inc.

    2,573,876         360,342,640   

Aon PLC

    2,765,823         245,079,576   

Apache Corp.

    3,685,786         144,335,380   

Apartment Investment & Management Co. (Class A)

    1,530,653         56,664,774   

Apple, Inc.

    56,118,114         6,189,827,974   

Applied Materials, Inc.

    11,809,314         173,478,823   

Archer-Daniels-Midland Co.

    5,990,607         248,310,660   

Assurant, Inc.

    696,137         55,001,784   

AT&T, Inc.

    60,550,045         1,972,720,466   

Autodesk, Inc. (a)

    2,222,837         98,116,025   
Common Stocks   Shares      Value  

Automatic Data Processing, Inc.

    4,609,816       $ 370,444,814   

AutoNation, Inc. (a)

    771,175         44,866,962   

Autozone, Inc. (a)

    303,505         219,686,024   

Avago Technologies, Ltd.

    2,550,811         318,876,883   

AvalonBay Communities, Inc.

    1,308,313         228,719,279   

Avery Dennison Corp.

    891,265         50,418,861   

Baker Hughes, Inc.

    4,249,522         221,145,125   

Ball Corp.

    1,354,977         84,279,569   

Bank of America Corp.

    103,035,485         1,605,292,856   

Bank of New York Mellon Corp.

    10,887,723         426,254,355   

Baxalta, Inc.

    5,314,778         167,468,655   

Baxter International, Inc.

    5,315,006         174,597,947   

BB&T Corp.

    7,627,200         271,528,320   

Becton, Dickinson & Co.

    2,070,124         274,622,650   

Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc. (a)

    1,695,868         96,698,393   

Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. (Class B) (a)

    18,455,872         2,406,645,709   

Best Buy Co., Inc.

    3,025,136         112,293,048   

Biogen, Inc. (a)

    2,309,944         674,064,759   

BlackRock, Inc.

    1,261,380         375,222,709   

Boeing Co.

    6,285,894         823,137,819   

BorgWarner, Inc.

    2,231,351         92,801,888   

Boston Properties, Inc.

    1,506,172         178,330,765   

Boston Scientific Corp. (a)

    13,166,128         216,056,160   

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.

    16,414,738         971,752,490   

Broadcom Corp. (Class A)

    5,507,425         283,246,868   

Brown-Forman Corp. (Class B)

    1,029,647         99,772,794   

C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc.

    1,434,863         97,255,014   

C.R. Bard, Inc.

    728,710         135,765,960   

CA, Inc.

    3,119,973         85,175,263   

Cablevision Systems Corp. (Class A)

    2,164,707         70,288,036   

Cabot Oil & Gas Corp.

    4,079,382         89,175,291   

Cameron International Corp. (a)

    1,933,393         118,555,659   

Campbell Soup Co.

    1,742,441         88,306,910   

Capital One Financial Corp.

    5,338,176         387,124,524   

Cardinal Health, Inc.

    3,246,705         249,411,878   

CarMax, Inc. (a)

    2,056,478         121,990,275   

Carnival Corp.

    4,560,053         226,634,634   

Caterpillar, Inc.

    5,917,996         386,800,219   

CBRE Group, Inc. (Class A) (a)

    2,856,418         91,405,376   

CBS Corp. (Class B)

    4,372,154         174,448,945   

Celgene Corp. (a)

    7,787,536         842,377,769   

CenterPoint Energy, Inc.

    4,152,566         74,912,291   

CenturyLink, Inc.

    5,553,246         139,497,540   

Cerner Corp. (a)

    3,007,090         180,305,116   

CF Industries Holdings, Inc.

    2,346,282         105,348,062   

Charles Schwab Corp.

    11,797,032         336,923,234   

Chesapeake Energy Corp.

    5,066,253         37,135,634   

Chevron Corp.

    18,523,510         1,461,134,469   

Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc. (a)

    303,683         218,727,681   

Chubb Corp.

    2,233,409         273,927,614   
 

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

33


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Schedule of Investments (continued)

September 30, 2015

 

 

Common Stocks   Shares      Value  

CIGNA Corp.

    2,531,250       $ 341,769,375   

Cimarex Energy Co.

    919,821         94,263,256   

Cincinnati Financial Corp.

    1,425,704         76,702,875   

Cintas Corp.

    876,957         75,199,063   

Cisco Systems, Inc.

    50,022,895         1,313,100,994   

Citigroup, Inc.

    29,620,704         1,469,483,125   

Citrix Systems, Inc. (a)

    1,594,494         110,466,544   

Clorox Co.

    1,284,453         148,392,855   

CME Group, Inc.

    3,331,010         308,917,867   

CMS Energy Corp.

    2,691,399         95,060,213   

Coach, Inc.

    2,672,314         77,310,044   

Coca-Cola Co.

    38,491,933         1,544,296,352   

Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.

    2,073,591         100,258,125   

Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. (Class A) (a)

    5,993,750         375,268,688   

Colgate-Palmolive Co.

    8,875,316         563,227,553   

Columbia Pipeline Group, Inc.

    3,098,329         56,668,437   

Comcast Corp. (Class A)

    20,698,102         1,177,308,042   

Comcast Corp. (Special Class A)

    3,734,326         213,752,820   

Comerica, Inc.

    1,761,857         72,412,323   

Computer Sciences Corp.

    1,373,674         84,316,110   

ConAgra Foods, Inc.

    4,251,479         172,227,414   

ConocoPhillips

    12,106,951         580,649,370   

CONSOL Energy, Inc.

    2,206,118         21,619,956   

Consolidated Edison, Inc.

    2,875,433         192,222,696   

Constellation Brands, Inc. (Class A)

    1,693,582         212,053,402   

Corning, Inc.

    12,057,749         206,428,663   

Costco Wholesale Corp.

    4,309,562         623,033,378   

Crown Castle International Corp.

    3,314,151         261,387,089   

CSX Corp.

    9,742,521         262,073,815   

Cummins, Inc.

    1,634,920         177,519,614   

CVS Health Corp.

    10,966,368         1,058,035,185   

D.R. Horton, Inc.

    3,233,591         94,938,232   

Danaher Corp.

    5,847,102         498,231,561   

Darden Restaurants, Inc.

    1,118,757         76,679,605   

DaVita, Inc. (a)

    1,675,778         121,209,023   

Deere & Co.

    3,062,133         226,597,842   

Delphi Automotive PLC

    2,797,870         212,750,035   

Delta Air Lines, Inc.

    7,822,057         350,975,698   

DENTSPLY International, Inc.

    1,378,798         69,725,815   

Devon Energy Corp.

    3,794,788         140,748,687   

Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc.

    677,543         11,721,494   

Discover Financial Services

    4,283,037         222,675,094   

Discovery Communications, Inc. (Class A) (a)

    1,448,211         37,696,932   

Discovery Communications, Inc. (Class C) (a)

    2,659,861         64,608,024   

Dollar General Corp.

    2,899,830         210,063,685   

Dollar Tree, Inc. (a)

    2,313,981         154,249,973   

Dominion Resources, Inc.

    5,828,422         410,204,340   

Dover Corp.

    1,574,428         90,025,793   

Dow Chemical Co.

    11,421,954         484,290,850   

Dr. Pepper Snapple Group, Inc.

    1,905,842         150,656,810   

DTE Energy Co.

    1,761,017         141,532,936   

Duke Energy Corp.

    6,788,494         488,364,258   
Common Stocks   Shares      Value  

Dun & Bradstreet Corp.

    355,163       $ 37,292,115   

E*TRADE Financial Corp. (a)

    2,845,963         74,934,206   

E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.

    8,876,145         427,830,189   

Eastman Chemical Co.

    1,455,507         94,200,413   

Eaton Corp. PLC

    4,632,493         237,646,891   

eBay, Inc. (a)

    11,036,998         269,744,231   

Ecolab, Inc.

    2,623,719         287,874,449   

Edison International

    3,188,720         201,112,570   

Edwards Lifesciences Corp. (a)

    1,055,861         150,111,758   

Electronic Arts, Inc. (a)

    3,046,037         206,369,007   

Eli Lilly & Co.

    9,580,565         801,797,485   

EMC Corp.

    19,064,432         460,596,677   

Emerson Electric Co.

    6,465,196         285,567,707   

Endo International PLC (a)

    2,051,414         142,121,962   

Ensco PLC (Class A)

    2,265,590         31,899,507   

Entergy Corp.

    1,748,352         113,817,715   

EOG Resources, Inc.

    5,389,138         392,329,246   

EQT Corp.

    1,479,487         95,826,373   

Equifax, Inc.

    1,177,112         114,391,744   

Equinix, Inc.

    558,896         152,802,166   

Equity Residential

    3,563,644         267,700,937   

Essex Property Trust, Inc.

    637,406         142,409,249   

Estee Lauder Cos., Inc. (Class A)

    2,199,420         177,449,206   

Eversource Energy

    3,099,293         156,886,212   

Exelon Corp.

    8,457,280         251,181,216   

Expedia, Inc.

    968,692         113,995,675   

Expeditors International of Washington, Inc.

    1,907,585         89,751,874   

Express Scripts Holding Co. (a)

    6,634,323         537,114,790   

Exxon Mobil Corp.

    41,048,358         3,051,945,417   

F5 Networks, Inc. (a)

    721,397         83,537,773   

Facebook, Inc. (Class A) (a)

    22,289,657         2,003,840,164   

Fastenal Co.

    2,861,529         104,760,577   

FedEx Corp.

    2,588,032         372,624,847   

Fidelity National Information Services, Inc.

    2,779,582         186,454,361   

Fifth Third Bancorp

    8,063,821         152,486,855   

First Solar, Inc. (a)

    733,781         31,369,138   

FirstEnergy Corp.

    4,118,727         128,957,342   

Fiserv, Inc. (a)

    2,337,423         202,444,206   

FLIR Systems, Inc.

    1,389,451         38,890,733   

Flowserve Corp.

    1,333,821         54,873,396   

Fluor Corp.

    1,445,435         61,214,172   

FMC Corp.

    1,295,318         43,924,233   

FMC Technologies, Inc. (a)

    2,293,732         71,105,692   

Ford Motor Co.

    38,336,884         520,231,516   

Fossil Group, Inc. (a)

    439,218         24,543,502   

Franklin Resources, Inc.

    3,845,833         143,295,738   

Freeport-McMoRan, Inc.

    11,186,126         108,393,561   

Frontier Communications Corp.

    11,325,941         53,798,220   

GameStop Corp. (Class A)

    1,060,895         43,719,483   

Gap, Inc.

    2,334,045         66,520,283   

Garmin, Ltd.

    1,181,881         42,405,890   

General Dynamics Corp.

    2,983,362         411,554,788   

General Electric Co.

    99,391,401         2,506,651,133   

General Growth Properties, Inc.

    5,740,386         149,077,824   
 

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

34


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Schedule of Investments (continued)

September 30, 2015

 

 

Common Stocks   Shares      Value  

General Mills, Inc.

    5,908,483       $ 331,643,151   

General Motors Co..

    14,216,393         426,776,118   

Genuine Parts Co.

    1,494,343         123,866,091   

Genworth Financial, Inc. (Class A) (a)

    4,793,828         22,147,485   

Gilead Sciences, Inc.

    14,429,169         1,416,800,104   

Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

    3,963,067         688,622,522   

Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.

    2,681,142         78,637,895   

H&R Block, Inc.

    2,702,523         97,831,333   

Halliburton Co.

    8,353,769         295,305,734   

Hanesbrands, Inc.

    3,962,124         114,663,869   

Harley-Davidson, Inc.

    2,026,633         111,262,152   

Harman International Industries, Inc.

    698,725         67,070,613   

Harris Corp.

    1,206,205         88,233,896   

Hartford Financial Services Group, Inc.

    4,124,637         188,825,882   

Hasbro, Inc.

    1,116,069         80,513,218   

HCA Holdings, Inc. (a)

    3,155,826         244,134,699   

HCP, Inc.

    4,532,600         168,839,350   

Helmerich & Payne, Inc.

    1,055,372         49,876,881   

Henry Schein, Inc. (a)

    821,033         108,967,500   

Hershey Co.

    1,453,463         133,544,180   

Hess Corp.

    2,381,229         119,204,324   

Hewlett-Packard Co.

    17,806,135         456,015,117   

Home Depot, Inc.

    12,636,011         1,459,332,910   

Honeywell International, Inc.

    7,695,358         728,673,449   

Hormel Foods Corp.

    1,308,324         82,829,992   

Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc.

    7,341,099         116,062,775   

Hudson City Bancorp, Inc.

    4,612,245         46,906,532   

Humana, Inc.

    1,466,541         262,510,839   

Huntington Bancshares, Inc.

    7,961,417         84,391,020   

Illinois Tool Works, Inc.

    3,240,858         266,755,022   

Ingersoll-Rand PLC

    2,613,513         132,688,055   

Intel Corp.

    46,799,693         1,410,542,747   

Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. (b)

    1,087,396         255,527,186   

International Business Machines Corp.

    8,866,319         1,285,350,265   

International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc.

    790,953         81,673,807   

International Paper Co.

    4,143,494         156,582,638   

Interpublic Group of Cos., Inc.

    4,143,999         79,274,701   

Intuit, Inc.

    2,711,518         240,647,223   

Intuitive Surgical, Inc. (a)

    361,932         166,336,709   

Invesco, Ltd.

    4,214,634         131,623,020   

Iron Mountain, Inc.

    1,889,867         58,623,674   

Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc. (a)

    1,286,957         48,170,801   

JB Hunt Transport Services, Inc.

    912,000         65,116,800   

JM Smucker Co.

    1,014,709         115,768,150   

Johnson & Johnson

    27,235,477         2,542,431,778   

Johnson Controls, Inc.

    6,438,460         266,294,706   

Joy Global, Inc.

    956,376         14,278,694   

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

    36,438,558         2,221,658,881   

Juniper Networks, Inc.

    3,540,177         91,017,951   

Kansas City Southern

    1,071,459         97,374,194   

Kellogg Co.

    2,506,994         166,840,451   

Keurig Green Mountain, Inc.

    1,184,368         61,752,948   
Common Stocks   Shares      Value  

KeyCorp

    8,371,469       $ 108,912,812   

Kimberly-Clark Corp.

    3,580,291         390,394,931   

Kimco Realty Corp.

    4,040,462         98,708,487   

Kinder Morgan, Inc.

    17,711,323         490,249,421   

KLA-Tencor Corp.

    1,550,173         77,508,650   

Kohl’s Corp.

    1,974,554         91,441,596   

Kraft Heinz Co.

    5,850,513         412,929,208   

Kroger Co.

    9,603,563         346,400,517   

L Brands, Inc.

    2,532,487         228,253,053   

L-3 Communications Holdings, Inc.

    808,381         84,491,982   

Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings (a)

    981,530         106,466,559   

Lam Research Corp.

    1,553,765         101,507,467   

Legg Mason, Inc.

    1,083,632         45,089,928   

Leggett & Platt, Inc.

    1,334,306         55,040,123   

Lennar Corp. (Class A)

    1,752,444         84,345,130   

Leucadia National Corp.

    3,326,664         67,398,213   

Level 3 Communications, Inc. (a)

    2,889,083         126,224,036   

Lincoln National Corp.

    2,484,077         117,894,294   

Linear Technology Corp.

    2,306,601         93,071,350   

Lockheed Martin Corp.

    2,628,240         544,860,434   

Loews Corp.

    2,820,493         101,932,617   

Lowe’s Cos., Inc.

    9,105,571         627,555,953   

LyondellBasell Industries NV (Class A)

    3,662,778         305,329,174   

M & T Bank Corp.

    1,292,651         157,638,789   

Macerich Co.

    1,360,508         104,514,225   

Macy’s, Inc.

    3,256,658         167,131,689   

Mallinckrodt PLC (a)

    1,133,978         72,506,553   

Marathon Oil Corp.

    6,563,298         101,074,789   

Marathon Petroleum Corp.

    5,275,724         244,424,293   

Marriott International, Inc. (Class A)

    1,960,777         133,724,991   

Marsh & McLennan Cos., Inc.

    5,214,741         272,313,775   

Martin Marietta Materials, Inc.

    661,055         100,447,307   

Masco Corp.

    3,475,330         87,508,809   

MasterCard, Inc. (Class A)

    9,832,422         886,097,871   

Mattel, Inc.

    3,284,756         69,176,961   

McCormick & Co., Inc.

    1,138,119         93,530,619   

McDonald’s Corp.

    9,265,887         912,967,846   

McGraw-Hill Cos., Inc.

    2,679,163         231,747,600   

McKesson Corp.

    2,280,828         422,021,605   

Mead Johnson Nutrition Co.

    1,982,005         139,533,152   

Medtronic PLC

    13,917,268         931,621,920   

Merck & Co., Inc.

    27,705,806         1,368,389,758   

MetLife, Inc.

    10,947,224         516,161,612   

Michael Kors Holdings, Ltd. (a)

    1,902,645         80,367,725   

Microchip Technology, Inc.

    2,064,991         88,980,462   

Micron Technology, Inc. (a)

    10,497,810         157,257,194   

Microsoft Corp.

    78,701,656         3,483,335,295   

Mohawk Industries, Inc. (a)

    626,213         113,839,261   

Molson Coors Brewing Co. (Class B)

    1,557,838         129,331,711   

Mondelez International, Inc. (Class A)

    15,856,325         663,904,328   

Monsanto Co.

    4,602,858         392,807,902   

Monster Beverage Corp. (a)

    1,498,502         202,507,560   

Moody’s Corp.

    1,742,547         171,118,115   
 

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

35


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Schedule of Investments (continued)

September 30, 2015

 

 

Common Stocks   Shares      Value  

Morgan Stanley

    14,994,074       $ 472,313,331   

Mosaic Co.

    3,327,103         103,506,174   

Motorola Solutions, Inc.

    1,555,044         106,333,909   

Murphy Oil Corp.

    1,625,155         39,328,751   

Mylan NV (a)

    4,042,767         162,761,799   

Nasdaq, Inc.

    1,162,730         62,008,391   

National-Oilwell Varco, Inc.

    3,798,663         143,019,662   

Navient Corp.

    3,817,719         42,911,162   

NetApp, Inc.

    3,048,130         90,224,648   

Netflix, Inc. (a)

    4,193,820         433,053,853   

Newell Rubbermaid, Inc.

    2,673,485         106,164,089   

Newfield Exploration Co. (a)

    1,574,669         51,806,610   

Newmont Mining Corp.

    5,193,195         83,454,644   

News Corp. (Class A)

    3,714,784         46,880,574   

News Corp. (Class B)

    1,093,354         14,016,798   

NextEra Energy, Inc.

    4,535,618         442,449,536   

Nielsen Holdings PLC

    3,627,066         161,295,625   

NIKE, Inc. (Class B)

    6,667,296         819,877,389   

NiSource, Inc.

    3,098,329         57,474,003   

Noble Energy, Inc.

    4,201,075         126,788,444   

Nordstrom, Inc.

    1,388,061         99,537,854   

Norfolk Southern Corp.

    2,965,878         226,593,079   

Northern Trust Corp.

    2,154,972         146,882,892   

Northrop Grumman Corp.

    1,842,505         305,763,705   

NRG Energy, Inc.

    3,286,502         48,804,555   

Nucor Corp.

    3,133,660         117,668,933   

NVIDIA Corp.

    5,020,023         123,743,567   

O’Reilly Automotive, Inc. (a)

    978,001         244,500,250   

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

    7,547,042         499,236,828   

Omnicom Group, Inc.

    2,427,912         159,999,401   

Oneok, Inc.

    2,029,331         65,344,458   

Oracle Corp.

    32,031,448         1,156,975,902   

Owens-Illinois, Inc. (a)

    1,598,822         33,127,592   

PACCAR, Inc.

    3,461,166         180,569,030   

Parker-Hannifin Corp.

    1,361,154         132,440,284   

Patterson Cos., Inc.

    813,951         35,203,381   

Paychex, Inc.

    3,187,850         151,837,296   

PayPal Holdings, Inc. (a)

    10,856,000         336,970,240   

Pentair PLC

    1,786,437         91,179,744   

People’s United Financial, Inc.

    3,079,933         48,447,346   

Pepco Holdings, Inc.

    2,482,120         60,116,946   

PepsiCo, Inc.

    14,457,848         1,363,375,066   

PerkinElmer, Inc.

    1,080,826         49,674,763   

Perrigo Co. PLC

    1,436,983         225,994,316   

Pfizer, Inc.

    60,712,092         1,906,966,810   

PG&E Corp.

    4,818,053         254,393,198   

Philip Morris International, Inc.

    15,249,583         1,209,749,419   

Phillips 66

    4,694,145         360,698,102   

Pinnacle West Capital Corp.

    1,065,703         68,354,190   

Pioneer Natural Resources Co.

    1,465,723         178,290,546   

Pitney Bowes, Inc.

    1,937,121         38,451,852   

Plum Creek Timber Co., Inc.

    1,709,709         67,550,603   

PNC Financial Services Group, Inc.

    5,054,323         450,845,612   

PPG Industries, Inc.

    2,686,093         235,543,495   

PPL Corp.

    6,560,756         215,783,265   

Praxair, Inc.

    2,845,115         289,803,414   

Precision Castparts Corp.

    1,356,810         311,672,825   

priceline.com, Inc. (a)

    498,993         617,184,482   
Common Stocks   Shares      Value  

Principal Financial Group, Inc.

    2,690,592       $ 127,372,625   

Procter & Gamble Co.

    26,701,294         1,920,891,090   

Progressive Corp.

    5,783,172         177,196,390   

ProLogis, Inc.

    5,147,222         200,226,936   

Prudential Financial, Inc.

    4,446,495         338,867,384   

Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.

    4,951,056         208,736,521   

Public Storage, Inc.

    1,447,778         306,393,258   

Pulte Group, Inc.

    3,303,633         62,339,555   

PVH Corp.

    803,363         81,894,824   

Qorvo, Inc. (a)

    1,438,545         64,806,452   

QUALCOMM, Inc.

    15,449,012         830,075,415   

Quanta Services, Inc. (a)

    2,115,877         51,225,382   

Quest Diagnostics, Inc.

    1,414,782         86,966,650   

Ralph Lauren Corp.

    592,160         69,969,626   

Range Resources Corp.

    1,649,062         52,967,871   

Raytheon Co.

    3,015,835         329,510,132   

Realty Income Corp.

    2,284,630         108,268,616   

Red Hat, Inc. (a)

    1,796,549         129,135,942   

Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)

    761,534         354,219,925   

Regions Financial Corp.

    13,151,821         118,497,907   

Republic Services, Inc.

    2,367,266         97,531,359   

Reynolds American, Inc.

    8,163,648         361,404,697   

Robert Half International, Inc.

    1,342,464         68,680,458   

Rockwell Automation, Inc.

    1,328,083         134,760,582   

Rockwell Collins, Inc.

    1,311,327         107,319,002   

Roper Industries, Inc.

    986,949         154,654,908   

Ross Stores, Inc.

    4,099,324         198,694,234   

Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.

    1,690,782         150,631,768   

Ryder System, Inc.

    505,206         37,405,452   

Salesforce.com, Inc. (a)

    6,110,127         424,226,118   

SanDisk Corp.

    2,011,119         109,264,095   

SCANA Corp.

    1,394,488         78,453,895   

Schlumberger, Ltd.

    12,491,412         861,532,686   

Scripps Networks Interactive (Class A)

    953,235         46,889,630   

Seagate Technology PLC

    2,968,738         132,999,462   

Sealed Air Corp.

    2,069,415         97,014,175   

Sempra Energy

    2,318,918         224,285,749   

Sherwin-Williams Co.

    789,594         175,905,751   

Sigma-Aldrich Corp.

    1,172,685         162,909,400   

Signet Jewelers, Ltd.

    792,905         107,938,158   

Simon Property Group, Inc.

    3,056,385         561,519,052   

Skyworks Solutions, Inc.

    1,879,135         158,241,958   

SL Green Realty Corp.

    977,668         105,744,571   

Snap-on, Inc.

    566,870         85,563,358   

Southern Co.

    8,911,409         398,339,982   

Southwest Airlines Co.

    6,487,723         246,792,983   

Southwestern Energy Co. (a)

    3,765,524         47,784,500   

Spectra Energy Corp.

    6,541,109         171,834,933   

St. Jude Medical, Inc.

    2,754,625         173,789,291   

Stanley Black & Decker, Inc.

    1,531,649         148,539,320   

Staples, Inc.

    6,280,707         73,672,693   

Starbucks Corp.

    14,605,187         830,158,829   

Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc.

    1,682,074         111,824,280   

State Street Corp. (c)

    4,038,276         271,412,530   

Stericycle, Inc. (a)

    825,158         114,952,761   
 

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

36


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Schedule of Investments (continued)

September 30, 2015

 

 

Common Stocks   Shares      Value  

Stryker Corp.

    3,118,816       $ 293,480,586   

SunTrust Banks, Inc.

    5,099,152         194,991,572   

Symantec Corp.

    6,741,332         131,253,734   

Sysco Corp.

    5,433,934         211,760,408   

T. Rowe Price Group, Inc.

    2,519,872         175,131,104   

Target Corp.

    6,183,061         486,359,578   

TE Connectivity, Ltd.

    3,975,528         238,094,372   

TECO Energy, Inc.

    2,272,604         59,678,581   

TEGNA, Inc.

    2,206,325         49,399,617   

Tenet Healthcare Corp. (a)

    963,402         35,568,802   

Teradata Corp. (a)

    1,421,315         41,161,282   

Tesoro Corp.

    1,236,457         120,233,079   

Texas Instruments, Inc.

    10,099,394         500,121,991   

Textron, Inc.

    2,723,086         102,496,957   

Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.

    3,908,757         477,962,806   

Tiffany & Co.

    1,103,328         85,198,988   

Time Warner Cable, Inc.

    2,776,084         497,946,187   

Time Warner, Inc.

    8,025,635         551,762,406   

TJX Cos., Inc.

    6,636,235         473,959,904   

Torchmark Corp.

    1,142,591         64,442,132   

Total System Services, Inc.

    1,618,388         73,523,367   

Tractor Supply Co.

    1,341,018         113,074,638   

Transocean, Ltd.

    3,317,816         42,866,183   

Travelers Cos., Inc.

    3,061,172         304,678,449   

TripAdvisor, Inc. (a)

    1,098,999         69,258,917   

Twenty-First Century Fox, Inc. (Class A)

    11,855,009         319,848,143   

Twenty-First Century Fox, Inc. (Class B)

    4,373,316         118,385,664   

Tyco International PLC

    4,133,611         138,310,624   

Tyson Foods, Inc. (Class A)

    2,999,674         129,285,949   

U.S. Bancorp

    16,259,725         666,811,322   

Under Armour, Inc. (Class A) (a)

    1,775,039         171,788,274   

Union Pacific Corp.

    8,538,934         754,927,155   

United Continental Holdings, Inc. (a)

    3,729,148         197,831,301   

United Parcel Service, Inc. (Class B)

    6,876,776         678,669,023   

United Rentals, Inc. (a)

    945,330         56,767,067   

United Technologies Corp.

    8,129,721         723,463,872   

UnitedHealth Group, Inc.

    9,387,035         1,088,989,930   

Universal Health Services, Inc. (Class B)

    895,106         111,718,180   

Unum Group

    2,485,418         79,732,209   

Urban Outfitters, Inc. (a)

    998,086         29,323,767   

V.F. Corp.

    3,357,620         229,023,260   

Valero Energy Corp.

    4,889,717         293,871,992   

Varian Medical Systems, Inc. (a)

    978,532         72,196,091   

Ventas, Inc.

    3,238,934         181,574,640   

VeriSign, Inc. (a)

    981,872         69,280,888   

Verizon Communications, Inc.

    40,040,223         1,742,150,103   
Common Stocks   Shares      Value  

Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (a)

    2,393,973       $ 249,308,348   

Viacom, Inc. (Class B)

    3,417,341         147,458,264   

Visa, Inc. (Class A)

    19,214,193         1,338,460,684   

Vornado Realty Trust

    1,744,703         157,756,045   

Vulcan Materials Co.

    1,288,198         114,907,262   

W.W. Grainger, Inc.

    593,160         127,535,332   

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

    15,534,061         1,007,228,515   

Walgreens Boots Alliance, Inc.

    8,602,156         714,839,164   

Walt Disney Co.

    15,282,843         1,561,906,555   

Waste Management, Inc.

    4,166,146         207,515,732   

Waters Corp. (a)

    824,757         97,494,525   

WEC Energy Group, Inc.

    3,093,693         161,552,648   

Wells Fargo & Co.

    46,011,081         2,362,669,009   

Welltower, Inc.

    3,464,313         234,603,276   

Western Digital Corp.

    2,271,906         180,480,213   

Western Union Co.

    5,110,300         93,825,108   

WestRock Co.

    2,559,689         131,670,402   

Weyerhaeuser Co.

    5,142,969         140,608,772   

Whirlpool Corp.

    771,967         113,679,860   

Whole Foods Market, Inc.

    3,525,609         111,585,525   

Williams Cos., Inc.

    6,718,214         247,566,186   

Wyndham Worldwide Corp.

    1,162,019         83,549,166   

Wynn Resorts, Ltd.

    788,460         41,882,995   

Xcel Energy, Inc.

    4,977,964         176,269,705   

Xerox Corp.

    9,879,502         96,127,554   

Xilinx, Inc.

    2,558,713         108,489,431   

XL Group PLC

    3,010,082         109,326,178   

Xylem, Inc.

    1,786,853         58,698,121   

Yahoo!, Inc. (a)

    8,528,670         246,563,850   

Yum! Brands, Inc.

    4,242,654         339,200,187   

Zimmer Holdings, Inc.

    1,663,814         156,282,049   

Zions Bancorporation

    1,979,867         54,525,537   

Zoetis, Inc.

    4,506,108         185,561,527   
    

 

 

 

Total Common Stocks (d)
(Cost $187,265,485,366)

     $ 166,521,059,535   
    

 

 

 

 

(a) Non-income producing security
(b) Affiliate of the Sponsor. See the table below for more information.
(c) Affiliate of the Trustee. See the table below for more information.
(d) The values of the securities of the Trust are determined based on Level 1 inputs (Note 2).

PLC = Public Limited Company

 

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

37


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Schedule of Investments (continued)

September 30, 2015

 

 

Investments in Affiliates of the Trustee and the Sponsor

SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust has invested in State Street Corp., which is considered an affiliate of the Trustee, and Intercontinental Exchange, Inc., which is considered an affiliate of the Sponsor. Amounts related to these investments at September 30, 2015 and for the year then ended are (Note 3):

 

    Number
of
Shares
Held at
9/30/14
    Cost at

9/30/2014
    Value at

9/30/2014
    Purchased*     Sold*     Number
of
Shares
Held at
9/30/15
    Value at
9/30/15
    Dividend
Income
    Realized
Gain
 
          Cost     Shares     Proceeds     Shares          

State Street Corp.

    4,345,108      $ 304,063,006      $ 319,843,400      $ 353,485,900        4,703,996      $ 373,197,530        5,010,828        4,038,276      $ 271,412,530      $ 5,474,530        $23,501,116   

Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.

    1,163,922        237,253,071        227,022,986        285,683,784        1,269,782        301,548,437        1,346,308        1,087,396        255,527,186        3,154,917        26,928,011   

 

* Purchased and Sold figures include securities received or delivered from processing creations or redemptions of Units.

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

38


SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

Schedule of Investments (continued)

September 30, 2015

 

 

INDUSTRY BREAKDOWN AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 2015*

 

Industry   Percent of
Net Assets**
 

Pharmaceuticals

            6.01

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels

    5.77   

Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals

    4.57   

Insurance

    4.20   

Software

    3.97   

Internet Software & Services

    3.87   

IT Services

    3.77   

Diversified Financial Services

    3.70   

Biotechnology

    3.58   

Media

    3.34   

Banks

    2.82   

Health Care Providers & Services

    2.81   

Specialty Retail

    2.69   

Aerospace & Defense

    2.68   

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)

    2.56   

Food & Staples Retailing

    2.44   

Diversified Telecommunication Services

    2.42   

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment

    2.41   

Industrial Conglomerates

    2.33   

Beverages

    2.28   

Capital Markets

    2.14   

Chemicals

    2.10   

Internet & Catalog Retail

    1.90   

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure

    1.88   

Household Products

    1.81   

Food Products

    1.70   

Health Care Equipment & Supplies

    1.69   

Electric Utilities

    1.68   

Tobacco

    1.57   

Communications Equipment

    1.51   

Multi-Utilities

    1.34   

Machinery

    1.23   

Energy Equipment & Services

    1.11   

Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods

    1.00   

Road & Rail

    0.87   

Consumer Finance

    0.76   

Air Freight & Logistics

    0.74   

Multiline Retail

    0.73   

Automobiles

    0.64   

Airlines

    0.63   

Electrical Equipment

    0.56   

Commercial Services & Supplies

    0.46   

Household Durables

    0.44   

Life Sciences Tools & Services

    0.44   

Auto Components

    0.39   
Industry   Percent of
Net Assets**
 

Electronic Equipment, Instruments & Components

            0.38

Metals & Mining

    0.26   

Professional Services

    0.23   

Containers & Packaging

    0.21   

Trading Companies & Distributors

    0.17   

Construction Materials

    0.13   

Health Care Technology

    0.11   

Personal Products

    0.11   

Construction & Engineering

    0.10   

Paper & Forest Products

    0.09   

Leisure Products

    0.09   

Building Products

    0.09   

Gas Utilities

    0.08   

Distributors

    0.07   

Independent Power & Renewable Electricity Producers

    0.07   

Diversified Consumer Services

    0.06   

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance

    0.06   

Real Estate Management & Development

    0.05   

Other Assets & Liabilities

    0.10   
 

 

 

 

Total

    100.00
 

 

 

 

 

* SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust’s industry breakdown is expressed as a percentage of net assets and may change over time.

 

** Each security is valued based on Level 1 inputs. (Note 2)

REIT = Real Estate Investment Trust

 

See accompanying notes to financial statements.

 

39


ORGANIZATION OF THE TRUST

The Trust is a unit investment trust that issues Units. The Trust is organized under New York law and is governed by an amended and restated trust agreement between the Trustee and the Sponsor, dated as of January 1, 2004 and effective as of January 27, 2004, as amended (the “Trust Agreement”). The Trust is an investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”). Units represent an undivided ownership interest in Portfolio Securities of the Trust.

The Trust has a specified lifetime term. The Trust is scheduled to terminate on the first to occur of (a) January 22, 2118 or (b) the date 20 years after the death of the last survivor of eleven persons named in the Trust Agreement, the oldest of whom was born in 1990 and the youngest of whom was born in 1993. Upon termination, the Trust may be liquidated and pro rata Units of the assets of the Trust, net of certain fees and expenses, distributed to holders of Units.

PURCHASES AND REDEMPTIONS OF CREATION UNITS

The Trust, a registered investment company, is an exchange traded fund or “ETF.” The Trust continuously issues and redeems “in-kind” its Units only in specified large lots of 50,000 Units or multiples thereof, which are referred to as “Creation Units,” at their once-daily NAV. Units are listed individually for trading on the Exchange at prices established throughout the trading day, like any other listed equity security trading on the Exchange in the secondary market.

ALPS Distributors, Inc., the distributor of the Trust (the “Distributor”), acts as underwriter of Units on an agency basis. The Distributor maintains records of the orders placed with it and the confirmations of acceptance and furnishes confirmations of acceptance of the orders to those placing such orders. The Distributor also is responsible for delivering a prospectus to persons creating Units. The Distributor also maintains a record of the delivery instructions in response to orders and may provide certain other administrative services.

Purchase (Creation)

Before trading on the Exchange in the secondary market, Units are created at NAV in Creation Units. All orders for Creation Units must be placed with the Distributor as facilitated through the Trustee. To be eligible to place these orders, an entity or person must be an “Authorized Participant,” which is (a) either a “Participating Party” or a “DTC Participant” and (b) in each case must have executed an agreement with the Distributor and the Trustee (the “Participant Agreement”). The term “Participating Party” means a broker-dealer or other participant in the Clearing Process (as defined below) through the Continuous Net Settlement (“CNS”) System of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (“NSCC”), a clearing agency registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), and the term “DTC Participant” means a participant in DTC. Payment for orders is made by

 

40


deposits with the Trustee of a portfolio of securities, substantially similar in composition and weighting to Index Securities, and a cash payment in an amount equal to the Dividend Equivalent Payment (as defined below), plus or minus the Balancing Amount (as defined below in “Portfolio Adjustments — Adjustments to the Portfolio Deposit”). “Dividend Equivalent Payment” is an amount equal, on a per Creation Unit basis, to the dividends on the Portfolio (with ex-dividend dates within the accumulation period), net of expenses and accrued liabilities for such period (including, without limitation, (i) taxes or other governmental charges against the Trust not previously deducted, if any, (ii) accrued fees of the Trustee and (iii) other expenses of the Trust (including legal and auditing expenses) not previously deducted), calculated as if all of the Portfolio Securities had been held for the entire accumulation period for such distribution. The Dividend Equivalent Payment and the Balancing Amount collectively are referred to as the “Cash Component” and the deposit of a portfolio of securities and the Cash Component collectively are referred to as a “Portfolio Deposit.” Persons placing creation orders must deposit Portfolio Deposits either (i) through the CNS clearing process of NSCC (the “Clearing Process”) or (ii) with the Trustee outside the Clearing Process ( i.e., through the facilities of DTC).

The Distributor will reject any order that is not submitted in proper form. A creation order is deemed received by the Distributor on the date on which it is placed (“Transmittal Date”) if (a) such order is received by the Trustee not later than the Closing Time (as defined below) on such Transmittal Date and (b) all other procedures set forth in the Participant Agreement are properly followed. The Transaction Fee (as defined below) is charged at the time of creation of a Creation Unit, and an additional amount not to exceed three (3) times the Transaction Fee applicable for one Creation Unit is charged for creations outside the Clearing Process, in part due to the increased expense associated with settlement.

The Trustee, at the direction of the Sponsor, may increase, reduce or waive the Transaction Fee (and/or the additional amounts charged in connection with creations and/or redemptions outside the Clearing Process) for certain lot-size creations and/or redemptions of Creation Units. The Sponsor has the right to vary the lot-size of Creation Units subject to such an increase, a reduction or waiver. The existence of any such variation shall be disclosed in the then current prospectus.

The Trustee makes available to NSCC before the commencement of trading on each business day that the New York Stock Exchange LLC (the “NYSE”) is open for business (“Business Day”) a list of the names and required number of shares of each of the Index Securities in the current Portfolio Deposit as well as the amount of the Dividend Equivalent Payment for the previous Business Day. The identity and weightings of the Index Securities to be delivered as part of a Portfolio Deposit are determined daily and reflect the relative weighting of the current Index. The value of such Index Securities, together with the Cash Component, is equal to the net asset value of the Trust on a per Creation Unit basis at the close of business on the day of the creation request. The Sponsor makes available every 15 seconds throughout the

 

41


trading day at the Exchange a number representing, on a per Unit basis, the sum of the Dividend Equivalent Payment effective through and including the previous Business Day, plus the current value of the securities portion of a Portfolio Deposit as in effect on such day (which value occasionally may include a cash-in-lieu amount to compensate for the omission of a particular Index Security from such Portfolio Deposit). Such information is calculated based upon the best information available to the Sponsor and may be calculated by other persons designated to do so by the Sponsor. The inability of the Sponsor to provide such information will not by itself result in a halt in the trading of Units on the Exchange.

If the Trustee determines that one or more Index Securities are likely to be unavailable, or available in insufficient quantity, for delivery upon creation of Creation Units, the Trustee may permit, in lieu thereof, the cash equivalent value of one or more of these Index Securities to be included in the Portfolio Deposit as a part of the Cash Component. If a creator is restricted by regulation or otherwise from investing or engaging in a transaction in one or more Index Securities, the Trustee may permit, in lieu of the inclusion of such Index Securities in the stock portion of the Portfolio Deposit, the cash equivalent value of such Index Securities to be included in the Portfolio Deposit based on the market value of such Index Securities as of the closing time of the regular trading session on the NYSE (the “Closing Time”) (ordinarily 4:00 p.m. New York time) (the “Evaluation Time”) on the date such creation order is deemed received by the Distributor as part of the Cash Component.

Procedures for Purchase of Creation Units.     All creation orders must be placed in Creation Units and must be received by the Trustee by no later than the Closing Time (ordinarily 4:00 p.m. New York time) in each case on the date such order is placed, in order for creation to be effected based on the NAV of the Trust as determined on such date. Orders must be transmitted by telephone, through the Internet or by other transmission method(s) acceptable to the Distributor and the Trustee, pursuant to procedures set forth in the Participant Agreement and/or described in this prospectus. In addition, orders submitted through the Internet must also comply with the terms and provisions of the State Street Fund Connect Buy-Side User Agreement and other applicable agreements and documents, including but not limited to the applicable Fund Connect User Guide or successor documents. State Street Global Markets, LLC (“SSGM”) may assist Authorized Participants in assembling shares to purchase Creation Units (or upon redemption), for which it may receive commissions or other fees from such Authorized Participants. Severe economic or market disruptions or changes, or telephone or other communication failure, may impede the ability to reach the Distributor, the Trustee, a Participating Party or a DTC Participant.

Units may be created in advance of receipt by the Trustee of all or a portion of the Portfolio Deposit. In these circumstances, the initial deposit will have a value greater than the NAV of the Units on the date the order is placed in proper form, because in addition to available Index Securities, cash collateral must be deposited with the Trustee in an amount equal to the sum of (a) the Cash Component, plus (b) 115% of

 

42


the market value of the undelivered Index Securities (“Additional Cash Deposit”). The Trustee holds such Additional Cash Deposit as collateral in an account separate and apart from the Trust. An order will be deemed received on the Business Day on which it is placed so long as (a) the order is placed in proper form before the Closing Time on such Business Day and (b) federal funds in the appropriate amount are deposited with the Trustee by 1:00 p.m. New York time or such other time as designated by the Trustee on settlement date.

If the order is not placed in proper form by the Closing Time or federal funds in the appropriate amount are not received by 1:00 p.m. New York time on settlement date, the order may be deemed to be rejected and the Authorized Participant shall be liable to the Trust for any losses resulting therefrom. An additional amount of cash must be deposited with the Trustee, pending delivery of the missing Index Securities, to the extent necessary to maintain the Additional Cash Deposit with the Trustee in an amount at least equal to 115% of the daily mark-to-market value of the missing Index Securities. If the missing Index Securities are not received by 1:00 p.m. New York time on the prescribed settlement date following the day on which the purchase order is deemed received and if a mark-to-market payment is not made within one (1) Business Day following notification by the Distributor that such payment is required, the Trustee may use the Additional Cash Deposit to purchase the missing Index Securities. The Trustee will return any unused portion of the Additional Cash Deposit only once all of the missing Index Securities of the Portfolio Deposit have been properly received or purchased by the Trustee and deposited into the Trust. In addition, a Transaction Fee will be imposed in an amount not to exceed that charged for creations outside the Clearing Process as disclosed below. The delivery of Creation Units created as described above will occur no later than the prescribed settlement date. The Participant Agreement for any Participating Party intending to follow these procedures contains terms and conditions permitting the Trustee to buy the missing portion(s) of a Portfolio Deposit at any time and will subject the Participating Party to liability for any shortfall between the cost to the Trust of purchasing such stocks and the value of such collateral. The Participating Party is liable to the Trust for the costs incurred by the Trust in connection with any such purchases. The Trust will have no liability for any such shortfall.

Acceptance of Orders of Creation Units.     All questions as to the number of shares of each Index Security, the amount of the Cash Component and the validity, form, eligibility (including time of receipt) and acceptance for deposit of any Index Securities to be delivered are resolved by the Trustee. The Trustee may reject a creation order if (a) the depositor or a group of depositors, upon obtaining the Units ordered, would own 80% or more of the current outstanding Units; (b) the Portfolio Deposit is not in proper form; (c) acceptance of the Portfolio Deposit would have certain adverse tax consequences; (d) the acceptance of the Portfolio Deposit would, in the opinion of counsel, be unlawful; (e) the acceptance of the Portfolio Deposit would otherwise have an adverse effect on the Trust or the rights of Beneficial Owners; or (f) circumstances outside the control of the Trustee make it for all practical purposes impossible to process creations of Units. The Trustee and the

 

43


Sponsor are under no duty to give notification of any defects or irregularities in the delivery of Portfolio Deposits or any component thereof and neither of them will incur any liability for the failure to give any such notification.

Creation Transaction Fee.     The transaction fee payable to the Trustee in connection with each creation and redemption of Creation Units made through the Clearing Process (the “Transaction Fee”) is non-refundable, regardless of the NAV of the Trust. The Transaction Fee is the lesser of $3,000 or 0.10% (10 basis points) of the value of one Creation Unit at the time of creation (“10 Basis Point Limit”) per Participating Party per day, regardless of the number of Creation Units created or redeemed on such day. The Transaction Fee is currently $3,000.

For creations and redemptions outside the Clearing Process, including orders from a Participating Party restricted from engaging in transactions in one or more Index Securities, an additional amount not to exceed three (3) times the Transaction Fee applicable for one Creation Unit is charged per Creation Unit per day.

Placement of Creation Orders Using Clearing Process.     Creation Units created through the Clearing Process must be delivered through a Participating Party that has executed a Participant Agreement. The Participant Agreement authorizes the Trustee to transmit to the Participating Party such trade instructions as are necessary to effect the creation order. Pursuant to the trade instructions from the Trustee to NSCC, the Participating Party agrees to transfer the requisite Index Securities (or contracts to purchase such Index Securities that are expected to be delivered through the Clearing Process in a “regular way” manner by the third day during which NSCC is open for business (each such day, an “NSCC Business Day”)) and the Cash Component to the Trustee, together with such additional information as may be required by the Trustee.

Placement of Creation Orders Outside Clearing Process.     Creation Units created outside the Clearing Process must be delivered through a DTC Participant that has executed a Participant Agreement and has stated in its order that it is not using the Clearing Process and that creation will instead be effected through a transfer of stocks and cash. The requisite number of Index Securities must be delivered through DTC to the account of the Trustee by no later than 1:00 p.m. New York time on settlement date. The Trustee, through the Federal Reserve Bank wire transfer system, must receive the Cash Component no later than 1:00 p.m. New York time on settlement date. If the Trustee does not receive both the requisite Index Securities and the Cash Component in a timely fashion, the order may be cancelled. Upon written notice to the Distributor, the cancelled order may be resubmitted the following Business Day using a Portfolio Deposit as newly constituted to reflect the current NAV of the Trust. The delivery of Units so created will occur no later than the prescribed settlement date.

Redemption

Units may be redeemed in-kind only in Creation Units at their NAV determined after receipt of a redemption request in proper form by the Trustee through the Depository

 

44


and relevant DTC Participant and only on a Business Day. Units are not redeemable for cash. EXCEPT UPON LIQUIDATION OF THE TRUST, THE TRUST WILL NOT REDEEM UNITS IN AMOUNTS LESS THAN CREATION UNITS. Investors must accumulate enough Units in the secondary market to constitute a Creation Unit in order to have such Units redeemed by the Trust, and Units may be redeemed only by or through an Authorized Participant. There can be no assurance, however, that there will be sufficient liquidity in the public trading market at any time to permit assembly of a Creation Unit. Investors should expect to incur brokerage and other costs in connection with assembling a sufficient number of Units to constitute a redeemable Creation Unit.

With respect to the Trust, the Trustee, through NSCC, makes available immediately prior to the commencement of trading on the NYSE (currently 9:30 a.m., Eastern time) on each Business Day, a list of the names and required number of shares of each of the Index Securities and the amount of the Dividend Equivalent Payment for the previous Business Day that will be applicable (subject to possible amendment or correction) to redemption requests received in proper form (as discussed below) on that day. Index Securities received on redemption may not be identical to the stock portion of the Portfolio Deposit which is applicable to purchases of Creation Units.

Redemption Transaction Fee.     The Transaction Fee is non-refundable, regardless of the NAV of the Trust. The Transaction Fee is the lesser of $3,000 or the 10 Basis Point Limit per Participating Party per day, regardless of the number of Creation Units created or redeemed on such day. The Transaction Fee is currently $3,000.

For creations and redemptions outside the Clearing Process, including orders from a Participating Party restricted from engaging in transactions in one or more Index Securities, an additional amount not to exceed three (3) times the Transaction Fee applicable for one Creation Unit is charged per Creation Unit per day.

Procedures for Redemption of Creation Units .    Redemption orders must be placed with a Participating Party (for redemptions through the Clearing Process) or DTC Participant (for redemptions outside the Clearing Process), as applicable, in the form required by such Participating Party or DTC Participant. A particular broker may not have executed a Participant Agreement, and redemption orders may have to be placed by the broker through a Participating Party or DTC Participant who has executed a Participant Agreement. At any given time, there may be only a limited number of broker-dealers that have executed a Participant Agreement. Redeemers should afford sufficient time to permit (a) proper submission of the order by a Participating Party or DTC Participant to the Trustee and (b) the receipt by the Trustee of the Units to be redeemed and any Excess Cash Amounts (as defined below) in a timely manner. Orders for redemption effected outside the Clearing Process are likely to require transmittal by the relevant DTC Participant(s) earlier on the Transmittal Date than orders effected using the Clearing Process. These deadlines vary by institution. Persons redeeming outside the Clearing Process are required to transfer Units through DTC and Excess Cash Amounts, if any, through the Federal Reserve Bank wire transfer system in a timely manner.

 

45


An Authorized Participant submitting a redemption request is deemed to represent to the Trustee that (i) it (or its client) owns outright or has full legal authority and legal beneficial right to tender for redemption the requisite number of shares to be redeemed and can receive the entire proceeds of the redemption, and (ii) the shares to be redeemed have not been loaned or pledged to another party nor are they the subject of a repurchase agreement, securities lending agreement or such other arrangement which would preclude the delivery of such shares to the Trust. The Trustee reserves the right to verify these representations at its discretion, but will typically require verification with respect to a redemption request in connection with higher levels of redemption activity and/or short interest in the Trust. If the Authorized Participant, upon receipt of a verification request, does not provide sufficient verification of its representations as determined by the Trustee, the redemption request will not be considered to have been received in proper form and may be rejected by the Trustee.

Requests for redemption may be made on any Business Day directly to the Trustee (not to the Distributor). In the case of redemptions made through the Clearing Process, the Transaction Fee is deducted from the amount delivered to the redeemer. In the case of redemptions outside the Clearing Process, the Transaction Fee plus an additional amount not to exceed three (3) times the Transaction Fee applicable for one Creation Unit per Creation Unit redeemed, and such amount is deducted from the amount delivered to the redeemer.

The Trustee transfers to the redeeming Beneficial Owner via DTC and the relevant DTC Participant(s) a portfolio of Index Securities (based on NAV of the Trust) for each Creation Unit delivered, generally identical in weighting and composition to the stock portion of a Portfolio Deposit as in effect (a) on the date a request for redemption is deemed received by the Trustee or (b) in the case of the termination of the Trust, on the date that notice of the termination of the Trust is given. The Trustee also transfers via the relevant DTC Participant(s) to the redeeming Beneficial Owner a “Cash Redemption Payment,” which on any given Business Day is an amount identical to the amount of the Cash Component and is equal to a proportional amount of the following: dividends on the Portfolio Securities for the period through the date of redemption, net of expenses and liabilities for such period including, without limitation, (i) taxes or other governmental charges against the Trust not previously deducted, if any, (ii) accrued fees of the Trustee and (iii) other expenses of the Trust (including legal and auditing expenses) not previously deducted, as if the Portfolio Securities had been held for the entire accumulation period for such distribution, plus or minus the Balancing Amount. The redeeming Beneficial Owner must deliver to the Trustee any amount by which the amount payable to the Trust by such Beneficial Owner exceeds the amount of the Cash Redemption Payment (“Excess Cash Amounts”). For redemptions through the Clearing Process, the Trustee effects a transfer of the Cash Redemption Payment and stocks to the redeeming Beneficial Owner by the third (3rd) NSCC Business Day following the date on which request for redemption is deemed received. For redemptions outside the Clearing Process, the Trustee transfers the Cash Redemption Payment and the stocks to the redeeming

 

46


Beneficial Owner by the third (3rd) Business Day following the date on which the request for redemption is deemed received. The Trustee will cancel all Units delivered upon redemption.

If the Trustee determines that an Index Security is likely to be unavailable or available in insufficient quantity for delivery by the Trust upon the redemption of Creation Units, the Trustee may elect, in lieu thereof, to deliver the cash equivalent value of any such Index Securities, based on its market value as of the Evaluation Time on the date such redemption order is deemed received by the Trustee, as a part of the Cash Redemption Payment.

If a redeemer is restricted by regulation or otherwise from investing or engaging in a transaction in one or more Index Securities, the Trustee may elect to deliver the cash equivalent value based on the market value of any such Index Securities as of the Evaluation Time on the date of the redemption as a part of the Cash Redemption Payment in lieu thereof. In such case, the Authorized Participant will pay the Trustee the standard Transaction Fee, and may pay an additional amount equal to the actual amounts incurred in connection with such transaction(s) but in any case not to exceed three (3) times the Transaction Fee applicable for one Creation Unit.

The Trustee, upon the request of a redeeming Authorized Participant, may elect to redeem Creation Units in whole or in part by providing such redeemer with a portfolio of stocks differing in exact composition from Index Securities but not differing in NAV from the then-current Portfolio Deposit. Such a redemption is likely to be made only if it were determined that it would be appropriate in order to maintain the Trust’s correspondence to the composition and weighting of the Index.

The Trustee may sell Portfolio Securities to obtain sufficient cash proceeds to deliver to the redeeming Beneficial Owner. To the extent cash proceeds are received by the Trustee in excess of the required amount, such cash proceeds shall be held by the Trustee and applied in accordance with the guidelines applicable to Misweighting (as defined below under “Portfolio Adjustments”).

All redemption orders must be transmitted to the Trustee by telephone, through the Internet or by other transmission methods acceptable to the Trustee, pursuant to procedures set forth in the Participant Agreement and/or described in this prospectus, so as to be received by the Trustee not later than the Closing Time on the Transmittal Date. In addition, orders submitted through the Internet must also comply with the terms and provisions of the State Street Fund Connect Buy-Side User Agreement and other applicable agreements and documents, including but not limited to the applicable Fund Connect User Guide or successor documents. Severe economic or market disruption or changes, or telephone or other communication failure, may impede the ability to reach the Trustee, a Participating Party, or a DTC Participant.

The calculation of the value of the stocks and the Cash Redemption Payment to be delivered to the redeeming Beneficial Owner is made by the Trustee according to the procedures set forth under “Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units —

 

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Redemption — Procedures for Redemption of Creation Units,” “Portfolio Adjustments — Adjustments to the Portfolio Deposit” and “Determination of Net Asset Value” and is computed as of the Evaluation Time on the Business Day on which a redemption order is deemed received by the Trustee. Therefore, if a redemption order in proper form is submitted to the Trustee by a DTC Participant not later than the Closing Time on the Transmittal Date, and the requisite Units are delivered to the Trustee prior to DTC Cut-Off Time (as defined below in “Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units — Redemption — Placement of Redemption Orders Outside Clearing Process”) on such Transmittal Date, then the value of the stocks and the Cash Redemption Payment to be delivered to the Beneficial Owner will be determined by the Trustee as of the Evaluation Time on such Transmittal Date. If, however, a redemption order is submitted not later than the Closing Time on a Transmittal Date but either (a) the requisite Units are not delivered by DTC Cut-Off Time on the next Business Day immediately following such Transmittal Date or (b) the redemption order is not submitted in proper form, then the redemption order is not deemed received as of such Transmittal Date. In such case, the value of the stocks and the Cash Redemption Payment will be delivered to the Beneficial Owner upon receipt of the requisite Units.

The Trustee may suspend the right of redemption, or postpone the date of payment of the NAV for more than five (5) Business Days following the date on which the request for redemption is deemed received by the Trustee, (a) for any period during which the NYSE is closed, (b) for any period during which an emergency exists as a result of which disposal or evaluation of the Portfolio Securities is not reasonably practicable, or (c) for such other period as the SEC may by order permit for the protection of Beneficial Owners. Neither the Sponsor nor the Trustee is liable to any person or in any way for any loss or damages that may result from any such suspension or postponement.

Placement of Redemption Orders Using Clearing Process.     A redemption order made through the Clearing Process will be deemed received on the Transmittal Date so long as (a) the order is received by the Trustee not later than the Closing Time on such Transmittal Date and (b) all other procedures set forth in the Participant Agreement are properly followed. The order is effected based on the NAV of the Trust as determined as of the Evaluation Time on the Transmittal Date. A redemption order made through the Clearing Process and received by the Trustee after the Closing Time will be deemed received on the next Business Day immediately following the Transmittal Date. The Participant Agreement authorizes the Trustee to transmit to NSCC on behalf of a Participating Party such trade instructions as are necessary to effect the Participating Party’s redemption order. Pursuant to such trade instructions from the Trustee to NSCC, the Trustee will transfer (a) the requisite stocks (or contracts to purchase such stocks which are expected to be delivered in a “regular way” manner) on settlement date, and (b) the Cash Redemption Payment.

Placement of Redemption Orders Outside Clearing Process.     A DTC Participant who wishes to place an order for redemption of Units to be effected outside the

 

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Clearing Process need not be a Participating Party, but its order must state that such DTC Participant is not using the Clearing Process and that redemption will instead be effected through transfer of Units directly through DTC. An order will be deemed received by the Trustee on the Transmittal Date if (a) such order is received by the Trustee not later than the Closing Time on such Transmittal Date, (b) such order is preceded or accompanied by the requisite number of Units specified in such order, which delivery must be made through DTC to the Trustee no later than 1:00 p.m. New York time on the next Business Day immediately following such Transmittal Date (“DTC Cut-Off Time”) and (c) all other procedures set forth in the Participant Agreement are properly followed. Any Excess Cash Amounts owed by the Beneficial Owner must be delivered no later than 1:00 p.m. New York time on settlement date.

The Trustee initiates procedures to transfer the requisite stocks (or contracts to purchase such stocks) that are expected to be delivered on settlement date and the Cash Redemption Payment to the redeeming Beneficial Owner on settlement date.

BOOK-ENTRY-ONLY SYSTEM

DTC acts as securities depository for the Units. Units are represented by one or more global securities, registered in the name of Cede & Co., as nominee for DTC and deposited with, or on behalf of, DTC. Beneficial ownership of Units is shown on the records of DTC or the DTC Participants (owners of such beneficial interests are referred to herein as “Beneficial Owners”).

DTC is a limited-purpose trust company organized under the laws of the State of New York, a member of the Federal Reserve System, a “clearing corporation” within the meaning of the New York Uniform Commercial Code, and a “clearing agency” registered pursuant to the provisions of Section 17A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. DTC was created to hold securities of the DTC Participants and to facilitate the clearance and settlement of securities transactions among the DTC Participants through electronic book-entry changes in their accounts, thereby eliminating the need for physical movement of securities certificates. DTC Participants include securities brokers and dealers, banks, trust companies, clearing corporations, and certain other organizations. Access to the DTC system also is available to others, such as banks, brokers, dealers and trust companies that clear through or maintain a custodial relationship with a DTC Participant, either directly or indirectly (“Indirect Participants”).

Upon the settlement date of any creation, transfer or redemption of Units, DTC credits or debits, on its book-entry registration and transfer system, the amount of Units so created, transferred or redeemed to the accounts of the appropriate DTC Participants. The accounts to be credited and charged are designated by the Trustee to NSCC, in the case of a creation or redemption through the Clearing Process, or by the Trustee and the DTC Participants, in the case of a creation or redemption outside of the Clearing Process. Beneficial ownership of Units is limited to the DTC Participants, Indirect Participants and persons holding interests through the DTC

 

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Participants and Indirect Participants. Ownership of beneficial interests in Units is shown on, and the transfer of ownership is effected only through, records maintained by DTC (with respect to DTC Participants) and on the records of DTC Participants (with respect to Indirect Participants and Beneficial Owners that are not DTC Participants). Beneficial Owners are expected to receive from or through the relevant DTC Participant a written confirmation relating to their purchase of Units. The laws of some jurisdictions may require that certain purchasers of securities take physical delivery of such securities in definitive form. Such laws may impair the ability of certain investors to acquire beneficial interests in Units.

As long as Cede & Co., as nominee of DTC, is the registered owner of Units, references to the registered or record owner of Units shall mean Cede & Co. and shall not mean the Beneficial Owners of Units. Beneficial Owners of Units are not entitled to have Units registered in their names, will not receive or be entitled to receive physical delivery of certificates in definitive form and will not be considered the record or registered holders thereof under the Trust Agreement. Accordingly, each Beneficial Owner must rely on the procedures of DTC, any DTC Participant and Indirect Participant through which such Beneficial Owner holds its interests, to exercise any rights under the Trust Agreement.

The Trustee recognizes DTC or its nominee as the owner of all Units for all purposes except as expressly set forth in the Trust Agreement. Pursuant to the agreement between the Trustee and DTC, DTC is required to make available to the Trustee upon request and for a fee to be charged to the Trust a listing of the Unit holdings of each DTC Participant. The Trustee inquires of each such DTC Participant as to the number of Beneficial Owners holding Units, directly or indirectly, through the relevant DTC Participant. The Trustee provides each such DTC Participant with copies of any notice, statement or other communication, in the form, number and at the place as such DTC Participant may reasonably request, in order that the notice, statement or communication may be transmitted by such DTC Participant, directly or indirectly, to the Beneficial Owners. In addition, the Trust pays to each such DTC Participant a fair and reasonable amount as reimbursement for the expense attendant to such transmittal, all subject to applicable statutory and regulatory requirements. The foregoing interaction between the Trustee and DTC Participants may be direct or indirect (i.e., through a third party.)

Distributions are made to DTC or its nominee. DTC or its nominee, upon receipt of any payment of distributions in respect of Units, is required immediately to credit DTC Participants’ accounts with payments in amounts proportionate to their respective beneficial interests in Units, as shown on the records of DTC or its nominee. Payments by DTC Participants to Indirect Participants and Beneficial Owners of Units held through such DTC Participants will be governed by standing instructions and customary practices, as is now the case with securities held for the accounts of customers in bearer form or registered in a “street name,” and will be the responsibility of such DTC Participants. Neither the Trustee nor the Sponsor has or will have any responsibility or liability for any aspects of the records relating to or

 

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notices to Beneficial Owners, or payments made on account of beneficial ownership interests in Units, or for maintaining, supervising or reviewing any records relating to such beneficial ownership interests or for any other aspect of the relationship between DTC and the DTC Participants or the relationship between such DTC Participants and the Indirect Participants and Beneficial Owners owning through such DTC Participants.

DTC may discontinue providing its service with respect to Units at any time by giving notice to the Trustee and the Sponsor, provided that it discharges its responsibilities with respect thereto in accordance with applicable law. Under such circumstances, the Trustee and the Sponsor shall take action either to find a replacement for DTC to perform its functions at a comparable cost or, if such a replacement is unavailable, to terminate the Trust.

NSCC is an affiliate of DTC and the Trustee and Sponsor, and/or their affiliates, own shares of DTC.

PORTFOLIO ADJUSTMENTS

The Index is a float-adjusted capitalization weighted index of 500 companies calculated under the auspices of the S&P Index Committee of S&P. At any moment in time, the value of the Index equals the aggregate market value of the available float shares outstanding in each of the component 500 Index Securities, evaluated at their respective last sale prices on their respective listing exchange, divided by a scaling factor (“divisor”) which yields a resulting index value in the reported magnitude.

Periodically (typically, several times per quarter), S&P may determine that total shares outstanding have changed in one or more component Index Securities due to secondary offerings, repurchases, conversions or other corporate actions. S&P may also determine that the available float shares of one or more of the Index Securities has changed due to corporate actions, purchases or sales of securities by holders or other events. S&P may periodically (ordinarily, several times per quarter) replace one or more Index Securities due to mergers, acquisitions, bankruptcies, or other market conditions, or if the issuers of such Index Securities fail to meet the criteria for inclusion in the Index. In 2015, there were 28 company changes to the Index. Ordinarily, whenever there is a change in shares outstanding or a change in an Index Security of the Index, S&P adjusts the divisor to ensure that there is no discontinuity in the value of the Index.

The Trustee aggregates certain adjustments and makes conforming changes to the Portfolio at least monthly. The Trustee directs its stock transactions only to brokers or dealers, which may include affiliates of the Trustee, from whom it expects to obtain the most favorable prices for execution of orders. Adjustments are made more frequently in the case of significant changes to the Index. Specifically, the Trustee is required to adjust the composition of the Portfolio whenever there is a change in the identity of any Index Security ( i.e. , a substitution of one security for another) within three (3) Business Days before or after the day on which the change is scheduled to

 

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take effect. If the transaction costs incurred by the Trust in adjusting the Portfolio would exceed the expected variation between the composition of the Portfolio and the Index (“Misweighting”), it may not be efficient identically to replicate the share composition of the Index. Minor Misweighting generally is permitted within the guidelines set forth below. The Trustee is required to adjust the composition of the Portfolio at any time that the weighting of any stock in the Portfolio varies in excess of one hundred and fifty percent (150%) of a specified percentage, which percentage varies from 0.08% to 0.02%, depending on the net asset value of the Trust (in each case, “Misweighting Amount”), from the weighting of the Index Security in the Index. For the year ended September 30, 2015, the Misweighting Amount was 0.02%.

The Trust is not managed and therefore the adverse financial condition of an issuer does not require the sale of stocks from the Portfolio. The Trustee on a non-discretionary basis adjusts the composition of the Portfolio to conform to changes in the composition and/or weighting structure of Index Securities in the Index. To the extent that the method of determining the Index is changed by S&P in a manner that would affect the adjustments provided for herein, the Trustee and the Sponsor have the right to amend the Trust Agreement, without the consent of DTC or Beneficial Owners, to conform the adjustments to such changes and to maintain the objective of tracking the Index.

The Trustee examines each stock in the Portfolio on each Business Day, comparing its weighting to the weighting of the corresponding Index Security, based on prices at the close of the market on the preceding Business Day (a “Weighting Analysis”). If there is a Misweighting in any stock in the Portfolio in excess of one hundred and fifty percent (150%) of the applicable Misweighting Amount, the Trustee calculates an adjustment to the Portfolio in order to bring the Misweighting within the Misweighting Amount, based on prices at the close of the market on the day on which such Misweighting occurs. Also, on a monthly basis, the Trustee performs a Weighting Analysis for each stock in the Portfolio, and in any case where there exists a Misweighting exceeding one hundred percent (100%) of the applicable Misweighting Amount, the Trustee calculates an adjustment to the Portfolio in order to bring the Misweighting within the applicable Misweighting Amount, based on prices at the close of the market on the day on which such Misweighting occurs. In the case of any adjustment to the Portfolio because of a Misweighting, the purchase or sale of stock necessitated by the adjustment is made within three (3) Business Days of the day on which such Misweighting is determined. In addition to the foregoing adjustments, the Trustee may make additional periodic adjustments to Portfolio Securities that may be misweighted by an amount within the applicable Misweighting Amount.

The foregoing guidelines with respect to Misweighting also apply to any Index Security that (a) is likely to be unavailable for delivery or available in insufficient quantity for delivery or (b) cannot be delivered to the Trustee due to restrictions prohibiting a creator from engaging in a transaction involving such Index Security.

 

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Upon receipt of an order for a Creation Unit that involves such an Index Security, the Trustee determines whether the substitution of cash for the stock would cause a Misweighting in the Portfolio. If a Misweighting results, the Trustee will purchase the required number of shares of the Index Security. If a Misweighting does not result and the Trustee does not hold cash in excess of the permitted amounts, the Trustee may hold the cash or, if such excess would result, make the required adjustments to the Portfolio.

As a result of the purchase and sale of stock in accordance with these requirements, or the creation of Creation Units, the Trust may hold some amount of residual cash (other than cash held temporarily due to timing differences between the sale and purchase of stock or cash delivered in lieu of Index Securities or undistributed income or undistributed capital gains). This amount may not exceed for more than two (2) consecutive Business Days 0.5% of the value of the Portfolio. If the Trustee has made all required adjustments and is left with cash in excess of 0.5% of the value of the Portfolio, the Trustee will use such cash to purchase additional Index Securities that are underweighted in the Portfolio as compared to their relative weightings in the Index, such that the Misweighting of such Index Securities will not be in excess of the applicable Misweighting Amount.

All portfolio adjustments are made as described herein unless such adjustments would cause the Trust to lose its status as a “regulated investment company” under Subchapter M of the Code. Additionally, the Trustee is required to adjust the composition of the Portfolio at any time to insure the continued qualification of the Trust as a regulated investment company.

The Trustee relies on industry sources for information as to the composition and weightings of Index Securities. If the Trustee becomes incapable of obtaining or processing such information or NSCC is unable to receive such information from the Trustee on any Business Day, the Trustee shall use the composition and weightings of Index Securities for the most recently effective Portfolio Deposit for the purposes of all adjustments and determinations (including, without limitation, determination of the stock portion of the Portfolio Deposit) until the earlier of (a) such time as current information with respect to Index Securities is available or (b) three (3) consecutive Business Days have elapsed. If such current information is not available and three (3) consecutive Business Days have elapsed, the composition and weightings of Portfolio Securities (as opposed to Index Securities) shall be used for the purposes of all adjustments and determinations (including, without limitation, determination of the stock portion of the Portfolio Deposit) until current information with respect to Index Securities is available.

If the Trustee provides written notice of the termination of the Trust, from and after the date of such notice, the Trustee shall use the composition and weightings of Portfolio Securities as of such notice date for the determination of all redemptions or other purposes.

 

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From time to time S&P may adjust the composition of the Index because of a merger or acquisition involving one or more Index Securities. In such cases, the Trust, as shareholder of an issuer that is the object of such merger or acquisition activity, may receive various offers from would-be acquirors of the issuer. The Trustee is not permitted to accept any such offers until such time as it has been determined that the stocks of the issuer will be removed from the Index. As stocks of an issuer are often removed from the Index only after the consummation of a merger or acquisition of such issuer, in selling the securities of such issuer the Trust may receive, to the extent that market prices do not provide a more attractive alternative, whatever consideration is being offered to the shareholders of such issuer that have not tendered their shares prior to such time. Any cash received in such transactions is reinvested in Index Securities in accordance with the criteria set forth above. Any stocks received as a part of the consideration that are not Index Securities are sold as soon as practicable and the cash proceeds of such sale are reinvested in accordance with the criteria set forth above.

Adjustments to the Portfolio Deposit

On each Business Day (each such day, an “Adjustment Day”), the number of shares and identity of each Index Security required for a Portfolio Deposit are adjusted in accordance with the following procedure. At the close of the market the Trustee calculates the net asset value of the Trust. The net asset value of the Trust is divided by the number of outstanding Units multiplied by 50,000 Units in one Creation Unit, resulting in the net asset value per Creation Unit (“NAV Amount”). The Trustee then calculates the number of shares (without rounding) of each of the component stocks of the Index in a Portfolio Deposit for the following Business Day (“Request Day”), such that (a) the market value at the close of the market on the Adjustment Day of the stocks to be included in the Portfolio Deposit on Request Day, together with the Dividend Equivalent Payment effective for requests to create or redeem on the Adjustment Day, equals the NAV Amount and (b) the identity and weighting of each of the stocks in a Portfolio Deposit mirrors proportionately the identity and weightings of the stocks in the Index, each as in effect on Request Day. For each stock, the number resulting from such calculation is rounded to the nearest whole share, with a fraction of 0.50 being rounded up. The identities and weightings of the stocks so calculated constitute the stock portion of the Portfolio Deposit effective on Request Day and thereafter until the next subsequent Adjustment Day, as well as Portfolio Securities to be delivered by the Trustee in the event of request for redemption on the Request Day and thereafter until the following Adjustment Day.

In addition to the foregoing adjustments, if a corporate action such as a stock split, stock dividend or reverse split occurs with respect to any Index Security that does not result in an adjustment to the Index divisor, the Portfolio Deposit shall be adjusted to take into account the corporate action in each case rounded to the nearest whole share.

 

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On the Request Day and on each day that a request for the creation or redemption is deemed received, the Trustee calculates the market value of the stock portion of the Portfolio Deposit as in effect on the Request Day as of the close of the market and adds to that amount the Dividend Equivalent Payment effective for requests to create or redeem on Request Day (such market value and Dividend Equivalent Payment are collectively referred to herein as “Portfolio Deposit Amount”). The Trustee then calculates the NAV Amount, based on the close of the market on the Request Day. The difference between the NAV Amount so calculated and the Portfolio Deposit Amount is the “Balancing Amount.” The Balancing Amount serves the function of compensating for any differences between the value of the Portfolio Deposit Amount and the NAV Amount at the close of trading on Request Day due to, for example, (a) differences in the market value of the securities in the Portfolio Deposit and the market value of the securities on Request Day and (b) any variances from the proper composition of the Portfolio Deposit.

On any Adjustment Day on which (a) no change in the identity and/or share weighting of any Index Security is scheduled to take effect that would cause the Index divisor to be adjusted after the close of the market on that Business Day, * and (b) no stock split, stock dividend or reverse stock split with respect to any Index Security has been declared to take effect on the corresponding Request Day, the Trustee may forego making any adjustment to the stock portion of the Portfolio Deposit and use the composition and weightings of Index Securities for the most recently effective Portfolio Deposit for the Request Day following such Adjustment Day. In addition, the Trustee may calculate the adjustment to the number of shares and identity of Index Securities in a Portfolio Deposit as described above except that such calculation would be employed two (2) Business Days rather than one (1) Business Day before the Request Day.

The Dividend Equivalent Payment and the Balancing Amount in effect at the close of business on the Request Date are collectively referred to as the Cash Component or the Cash Redemption Payment. If the Balancing Amount is a positive number ( i.e. , if the NAV Amount exceeds the Portfolio Deposit Amount) then, with respect to creation, the Balancing Amount increases the Cash Component of the then-effective Portfolio Deposit transferred to the Trustee by the creator. With respect to redemptions, the Balancing Amount is added to the cash transferred to the redeemer by the Trustee. If the Balancing Amount is a negative number ( i.e. , if the NAV Amount is less than the Portfolio Deposit Amount) then, with respect to creation, this amount decreases the Cash Component of the then-effective Portfolio Deposit to be transferred to the Trustee by the creator or, if such cash portion is less than the Balancing Amount, the difference must be paid by the Trustee to the creator. With respect to redemptions, the Balancing Amount is deducted from the cash transferred to the redeemer or, if such cash is less than the Balancing Amount, the difference must be paid by the redeemer to the Trustee.

 

*  

S&P publicly announces changes in the identity and/or weighting of Index Securities in advance of the actual change. The announcements regarding changes in the index components are made after the close of trading on such day.

 

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If the Trustee has included the cash equivalent value of one or more Index Securities in the Portfolio Deposit because the Trustee has determined that such Index Securities are likely to be unavailable or available in insufficient quantity for delivery, or if a creator or redeemer is restricted from investing or engaging in transactions in one or more of such Index Securities, the Portfolio Deposit so constituted shall determine the Index Securities to be delivered in connection with the creation of Units in Creation Unit size aggregations and upon the redemption of Units until the time the stock portion of the Portfolio Deposit is subsequently adjusted.

EXCHANGE LISTING AND TRADING

The discussion below supplements the Summary with regard to exchange listing and trading matters associated with an investment in the Trust’s Units.

Secondary Trading on Exchanges

The Units are listed for secondary trading on the Exchange and individual Units may only be purchased and sold in the secondary market through a broker-dealer. The secondary markets are closed on weekends and also are generally closed on the following holidays: New Year’s Day, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Presidents’ Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day (observed), Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day. The Exchange may close early on the Business Day before certain holidays and on the day after Thanksgiving Day. Exchange holiday schedules are subject to change. If you buy or sell Units in the secondary market, you will pay the secondary market price for Units. In addition, you may incur customary brokerage commissions and charges and may pay some or all of the spread between the bid and the offered price in the secondary market on each leg of a round trip (purchase and sale) transaction.

There can be no assurance that the requirements of the Exchange necessary to maintain the listing of Units of the Trust will continue to be met or that Units will always be listed on the Exchange. The Trust will be terminated if Units are delisted. Trading in Units may be halted under certain circumstances as set forth in the Exchange rules and procedures. The Exchange will consider the suspension of trading in or removal from listing of Units if: (a) the Trust has more than 60 days remaining until termination and there are fewer than 50 record and/or beneficial holders of Units for 30 or more consecutive trading days; (b) the value of the Index is no longer calculated or available; or (c) such other event occurs or condition exists which, in the opinion of the Exchange, makes further dealings on the Exchange inadvisable. In addition, trading is subject to trading halts caused by extraordinary market volatility pursuant to Exchange “circuit breaker” rules that require trading to be halted for a specified period based on a specified market change. The Exchange also must halt trading if required intraday valuation information is not disseminated for longer than one (1) Business Day.

 

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Units also are listed and traded on the Singapore Exchange Securities Trading Limited, the Tokyo Stock Exchange and the Australian Securities Exchange. In the future, Units may be listed and traded on other non-U.S.  exchanges.

Trading Prices of Units

The trading prices of the Trust’s Units will fluctuate continuously throughout trading hours based on market supply and demand rather than the Trust’s NAV, which is calculated at the end of each Business Day. The Units will trade on the Exchange at prices that may be above ( i.e., at a premium) or below ( i.e., at a discount), to varying degrees, the daily NAV of the Units. While the creation/redemption feature is designed to make it likely that Units normally will trade close to the Trust’s NAV, disruptions to creations and redemptions and/or market volatility may result in trading prices that differ significantly from the Trust’s NAV. See the table “Frequency Distribution of Discounts and Premiums for the Trust: Bid/Ask Price vs. NAV as of 12/31/15” herein.

The market price of a Unit should reflect its share of the dividends accumulated on Portfolio Securities and may be affected by supply and demand, market volatility, sentiment and other factors.

CONTINUOUS OFFERING OF UNITS

Creation Units are offered continuously to the public by the Trust through the Distributor. Persons making Portfolio Deposits and creating Creation Units will receive no fees, commissions or other form of compensation or inducement of any kind from the Sponsor or the Distributor, and no such person has any obligation or responsibility to the Sponsor or Distributor to effect any sale or resale of Units.

Because new Units can be created and issued on an ongoing basis, at any point during the life of the Trust, a “distribution,” as such term is used in the Securities Act of 1933, may be occurring. Broker-dealers and other persons are cautioned that some of their activities may result in their being deemed participants in a distribution in a manner which could render them statutory underwriters and subject them to the prospectus-delivery and liability provisions of the Securities Act of 1933. For example, a broker-dealer firm or its client may be deemed a statutory underwriter if it takes Creation Units after placing a creation order with a distributor, breaks them down into the constituent Units and sells the Units directly to its customers; or if it chooses to couple the creation of a supply of new Units with an active selling effort involving solicitation of secondary market demand for Units. A determination of whether one is an underwriter must take into account all the facts and circumstances pertaining to the activities of the broker-dealer or its client in the particular case, and the examples mentioned above should not be considered a complete description of all the activities that could lead to categorization as an underwriter.

 

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Broker-dealer firms should also note that dealers who are not “underwriters” but are effecting transactions in Units, whether or not participating in the distribution of Units, generally are required to deliver a prospectus. This is because the prospectus delivery exemption in Section 4(3) of the Securities Act of 1933 is not available in respect of such transactions as a result of Section 24(d) of the 1940 Act. As a result, broker-dealer firms should note that dealers who are not “underwriters” but are participating in a distribution (as contrasted with engaging in ordinary secondary market transactions), and thus dealing with the Units that are part of an overallotment within the meaning of Section 4(3)(C) of the Securities Act of 1933 will be unable to take advantage of the prospectus delivery exemption provided by Section 4(3) of the Securities Act of 1933. For delivery of prospectuses to exchange members, the prospectus delivery mechanism of Rule 153 under the Securities Act of 1933 is only available with respect to transactions on a national exchange.

The Sponsor intends to qualify Units in states selected by the Sponsor and through broker-dealers who are members of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (“FINRA”). Persons intending to create or redeem Creation Units in transactions not involving a broker-dealer registered in such person’s state of domicile or residence should consult their legal adviser regarding applicable broker-dealer or securities regulatory requirements under the state securities laws prior to such creation or redemption.

EXPENSES OF THE TRUST

Ordinary operating expenses of the Trust are currently being accrued at an annual rate of 0.0945%. Future accruals will depend primarily on the level of the Trust’s net assets and the level of Trust expenses. The Trustee has agreed to waive a portion of its fee until February 1, 2017 to the extent operating expenses exceed 0.0945% after taking into consideration the earnings credit with respect to uninvested cash balances of the Trust. Thereafter, the Trustee may discontinue this voluntary waiver policy. The Trustee’s fee waiver will be calculated after earnings credits are applied. The amount of the earnings credit will be equal to the then current Federal Funds Rate, as reported in nationally distributed publications, multiplied by each day’s daily cash balance, if any, in the Trust’s cash account, reduced by the amount of reserves, if any, for that account required by the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. Therefore, there is no guarantee that the Trust’s ordinary operating expenses will not exceed 0.0945% of the Trust’s daily net asset value.

Subject to any applicable cap, the Sponsor may charge the Trust a special fee for certain services the Sponsor may provide to the Trust which would otherwise be provided by the Trustee in an amount not to exceed the actual cost of providing such services. The Sponsor or the Trustee from time to time may voluntarily assume some expenses or reimburse the Trust so that total expenses of the Trust are reduced. Neither the Sponsor nor the Trustee is obligated to do so and either one or both parties may discontinue any voluntary assumption of expenses or reimbursement at any time without notice.

 

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The following charges are or may be accrued and paid by the Trust: (a) the Trustee’s fee; (b) fees payable to transfer agents for the provision of transfer agency services; (c) fees of the Trustee for extraordinary services performed under the Trust Agreement; (d) various governmental charges; (e) any taxes, fees and charges payable by the Trustee with respect to Units (whether in Creation Units or otherwise); (f) expenses and costs of any action taken by the Trustee or the Sponsor to protect the Trust and the rights and interests of Beneficial Owners of Units (whether in Creation Units or otherwise); (g) indemnification of the Trustee or the Sponsor for any losses, liabilities or expenses incurred by it in the administration of the Trust; (h) expenses incurred in contacting Beneficial Owners of Units during the life of the Trust and upon termination of the Trust; and (i) other out-of-pocket expenses of the Trust incurred pursuant to actions permitted or required under the Trust Agreement.

In addition, the following expenses are or may be charged to the Trust: (a) reimbursement to the Sponsor of amounts paid by it to S&P in respect of annual licensing fees pursuant to the License Agreement; (b) federal and state annual registration fees for the issuance of Units; and (c) expenses of the Sponsor relating to the printing and distribution of marketing materials describing Units and the Trust (including, but not limited to, associated legal, consulting, advertising, and marketing costs and other out-of-pocket expenses such as printing). Pursuant to the provisions of an exemptive order, the expenses set forth in this paragraph may be charged to the Trust by the Trustee in an amount equal to the actual costs incurred, but in no case shall such charges exceed 0.20% per annum of the daily net asset value of the Trust.

With respect to the marketing expenses described in item (c) above, the Sponsor has entered into an agreement with SSGM, an affiliate of the Trustee, pursuant to which SSGM has agreed to market and promote the Trust. SSGM is reimbursed by the Sponsor for the expenses it incurs for providing such services out of amounts that the Trust reimburses the Sponsor. SSGM separately receives fees from the Trustee for providing on-line creation and redemption functionality to Authorized Participants through its Fund Connect application.

If the income received by the Trust in the form of dividends and other distributions on Portfolio Securities is insufficient to cover Trust expenses, the Trustee may make advances to the Trust to cover such expenses. Otherwise, the Trustee may sell Portfolio Securities in an amount sufficient to pay such expenses. The Trustee may reimburse itself in the amount of any such advance, together with interest thereon at a percentage rate equal to the then current overnight federal funds rate, by deducting such amounts from (a) dividend payments or other income of the Trust when such payments or other income is received, (b) the amounts earned or benefits derived by the Trustee on cash held by the Trustee for the benefit of the Trust, and (c) the sale of Portfolio Securities. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if any advance remains outstanding for more than forty-five (45) Business Days, the Trustee may sell Portfolio Securities to reimburse itself for such advance and any accrued interest thereon. These advances will be secured by a lien on the assets of the Trust in favor of the Trustee. The expenses of the Trust are reflected in the NAV of the Trust.

 

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For services performed under the Trust Agreement, the Trustee is paid a fee at an annual rate of 0.06% to 0.10% of the net asset value of the Trust, as shown below, depending on the net asset value of the Trust, plus or minus the Adjustment Amount (as defined below). The compensation is computed on each Business Day based on the net asset value of the Trust on such day, and the amount thereof is accrued daily and paid monthly. To the extent that the amount of the Trustee’s compensation, before any adjustment in respect of the Adjustment Amount, is less than specified amounts, the Sponsor has agreed to pay the amount of any such shortfall. The Trustee also may waive all or a portion of such fee.

Trustee Fee Scale

 

Net Asset Value of the Trust

  

Fee as a Percentage of

Net Asset Value of the Trust

$0 – $499,999,999

   0.10% per annum plus or minus the Adjustment Amount*

$500,000,000 – $2,499,999,999

   0.08% per annum plus or minus the Adjustment Amount*

$2,500,000,000 and above

   0.06% per annum plus or minus the Adjustment Amount*

 

* The fee indicated applies to that portion of the net asset value of the Trust that falls in the size category indicated.

As of September 30, 2015 and as of December 31, 2015, the net asset value of the Trust was $166,683,900,892 and $181,539,672,991, respectively. No representation is made as to the actual net asset value of the Trust on any future date, as it is subject to change at any time due to fluctuations in the market value of the Portfolio Securities, or to creations or redemptions made in the future. For the fiscal year ended September 30, 2015, the aggregate dollar amount of net fees paid to the Trustee was $77,067,801.

The Adjustment Amount is calculated at the end of each quarter and applied against the Trustee’s fee for the following quarter. “Adjustment Amount” is an amount which is intended, depending upon the circumstances, either to (a) reduce the Trustee’s fee by the amount that the Transaction Fees paid on creation and redemption exceed the costs of those activities, and by the amount of excess earnings on cash held for the benefit of the Trust ** or (b) increase the Trustee’s fee by the amount that the Transaction Fees (plus additional amounts paid in connection with creations or redemptions outside the Clearing Process), paid on creations or redemptions, falls short of the actual costs of these activities. If in any quarter the Adjustment Amount exceeds the fee payable to the Trustee as set forth above, the Trustee uses such excess amount to reduce other Trust expenses, subject to certain federal tax limitations. To the extent that the amount of such excess exceeds the Trust’s expenses for such quarter, any remaining excess is retained by the Trustee as part of its compensation. If in any quarter the costs of processing creations and redemptions exceed the amounts charged as a Transaction Fee (plus the additional amounts paid in connection with creations or redemptions outside the Clearing

 

**   The excess earnings on cash amount is currently calculated, and applied, on a monthly basis.

 

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Process) net of the excess earnings, if any, on cash held for the benefit of the Trust, the Trustee will augment the Trustee’s fee by the resulting Adjustment Amount. The net Adjustment Amount is usually a credit to the Trust. The amount of the earnings credit will be equal to the then current Federal Funds Rate, as reported in nationally distributed publications, multiplied by each day’s daily cash balance in the Trust’s cash account, reduced by the amount of reserves for that account required by the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.

For example, during the year ended September 30, 2015, the Adjustment Amount included an excess of net transaction fees from processing orders of $4,617,041 and a Trustee earnings credit of $762,637. Thus, the Adjustment Amount reduced the Trustee’s fee by $5,379,678.

DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

The net asset value of the Trust is computed as of the Evaluation Time, as shown under “Portfolio Adjustments — Adjustments to the Portfolio Deposit” on each Business Day. The net asset value of the Trust on a per Unit basis is determined by subtracting all liabilities (including accrued expenses and dividends payable) from the total value of the Portfolio and other assets and dividing the result by the total number of outstanding Units. For the most recent net asset value information, please go to www.spdrs.com.

The value of the Portfolio is determined by the Trustee in good faith in the following manner. If Portfolio Securities are listed on one or more national securities exchanges, such evaluation is generally based on the closing sale price on that day (unless the Trustee deems such price inappropriate as a basis for evaluation) on the exchange which is deemed to be the principal market therefor or, if there is no such appropriate closing sale price on such exchange, at the last sale price (unless the Trustee deems such price inappropriate as a basis for evaluation). If the securities are not so listed or, if so listed and the principal market therefor is other than on such exchange or there is no such last sale price available, such evaluation shall generally be made by the Trustee in good faith based on the closing price on the over-the-counter market (unless the Trustee deems such price inappropriate as a basis for evaluation) or if there is no such appropriate closing price, (a) on current bid prices, (b) if bid prices are not available, on the basis of current bid prices for comparable securities, (c) by the Trustee’s appraising the value of the securities in good faith on the bid side of the market, or (d) by any combination thereof.

ADDITIONAL RISK INFORMATION

The following section identifies additional risks. Prospective investors should carefully consider the additional information described below together with the information identified under “Summary — Principal Risks of Investing in the Trust.”

 

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A liquid trading market for certain Portfolio Securities may not exist.     Although all of the Portfolio Securities are listed on a national securities exchange, the existence of a liquid trading market for certain Portfolio Securities may depend on whether dealers will make a market in such stocks. There can be no assurance that a market will be made or maintained for any Portfolio Securities, or that any such market will be or remain liquid. The price at which Portfolio Securities may be sold and the value of the Portfolio will be adversely affected if trading markets for Portfolio Securities are limited or absent.

Asset Category Risk.     The Portfolio Securities may underperform the returns of other securities or indexes that track other industries, groups of industries, markets, asset classes or sectors. Various types of securities or indexes tend to experience cycles of outperformance and underperformance in comparison to the general securities markets.

Trading Issues.     Units are listed for trading on the Exchange under the market symbol “SPY” and are listed or traded on certain non-U.S. stock exchanges other than the Exchange. Trading in Units on the Exchange may be halted due to market conditions or for reasons that, in the view of the Exchange, make trading in Units inadvisable. In addition, trading in Units on the Exchange is subject to trading halts caused by extraordinary market volatility pursuant to Exchange “circuit breaker” rules. There can be no assurance that the requirements of the Exchange necessary to maintain the listing of the Trust will continue to be met or will remain unchanged or that the Units will trade with any volume, or at all, on any stock exchange. Investors are subject to the execution and settlement risks and market standards of the market where they or their broker direct their trades for execution. The Trust will be terminated if the Units are delisted from the Exchange.

Fluctuation of NAV; Unit Premiums and Discounts.     The NAV of the Units will generally fluctuate with changes in the market value of the Trust’s securities holdings. The market prices of Units will generally fluctuate in accordance with changes in the Trust’s NAV and supply and demand of Units on the Exchange or any other exchange on which Units are traded. It cannot be predicted whether Units will trade below, at or above their NAV. Price differences may be due, in large part, to the fact that supply and demand forces at work in the secondary trading market for Units will be closely related to, but not identical to, the same forces influencing the prices of the securities of the Index trading individually or in the aggregate at any point in time. The market prices of Units may deviate significantly from the NAV of the Units during periods of market volatility. While the creation/redemption feature is designed to make it likely that Units normally will trade close to the Trust’s NAV, disruptions to creations and redemptions and/or market volatility may result in trading prices that differ significantly from the Trust’s NAV. If an investor purchases Units at a time when the market price is at a premium to the NAV of the Units or sells at a time when the market price is at a discount to the NAV of the Units, then the investor may sustain losses that are in addition to any losses caused by a decrease in NAV.

 

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Costs of Buying or Selling Units.     Investors buying or selling Units in the secondary market will pay brokerage commissions or other charges imposed by brokers as determined by that broker. Brokerage commissions are often a fixed amount and may be a significant proportional cost for investors seeking to buy or sell relatively small amounts of Units. In addition, secondary market investors will also incur the cost of the difference between the price that an investor is willing to pay for Units (the “bid” price) and the price at which an investor is willing to sell Units (the “ask” price). This difference in bid and ask prices is often referred to as the “spread” or “bid/ask spread.” The bid/ask spread varies over time for Units based on trading volume and market liquidity, and is generally lower if the Trust’s Units have more trading volume and market liquidity and higher if the Trust’s Units have little trading volume and market liquidity. Further, increased market volatility may cause increased bid/ask spreads. Due to the costs of buying or selling Units, including bid/ask spreads, frequent trading of Units may significantly reduce investment results and an investment in Units may not be advisable for investors who anticipate regularly making small investments.

Large Cap Risk .    The Portfolio Securities will generally consist of equity securities of large-capitalization U.S. issuers. Returns on investments in stocks of large U.S. companies could trail the returns on investments in stocks of smaller and mid-sized companies.

Investment in the Trust may have adverse tax consequences .    Investors in the Trust should consider the U.S. federal, state, local and other tax consequences of the ownership and disposition of Units. For a discussion of certain U.S. federal income tax consequences of the ownership and disposition of Units, see “Federal Income Taxes.”

Clearing and settlement of Creation Units may be delayed or fail .    Even if an order is processed through the continuous net settlement clearing process of NSCC, Portfolio Securities or Units, as applicable, may not be delivered on settlement date, due to liquidity or other constraints in the clearing process. Orders expected to settle outside of the continuous net settlement clearing process of NSCC are not covered by NSCC’s guarantee of completion of delivery.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REGARDING DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

The following information supplements and should be read in conjunction with the section included in this prospectus entitled “Dividends and Distributions.”

General Policies

The regular quarterly ex-dividend date for Units is the third (3rd) Friday in each of March, June, September and December, unless such day is not a Business Day, in

 

63


which case the ex-dividend date is the immediately preceding Business Day (“Ex-Dividend Date”). Beneficial Owners reflected on the records of DTC and the DTC Participants on the second (2nd) Business Day following the Ex-Dividend Date (“Record Date”) are entitled to receive an amount representing dividends accumulated on Portfolio Securities through the quarterly dividend period which ends on the Business Day preceding such Ex-Dividend Date (including stocks with ex-dividend dates falling within such quarterly dividend period), net of fees and expenses, accrued daily for such period. For the purposes of all dividend distributions, dividends per Unit are calculated at least to the nearest 1/1000th of $0.01. The payment of dividends is made on the last Business Day in the calendar month following each Ex-Dividend Date (“Dividend Payment Date”). Dividend payments are made through DTC and the DTC Participants to Beneficial Owners then of record with funds received from the Trustee.

Dividends payable to the Trust in respect of Portfolio Securities are credited by the Trustee to a non-interest bearing account as of the date on which the Trust receives such dividends. Other moneys received by the Trustee in respect of the Portfolio, including but not limited to the Cash Component, the Cash Redemption Payment, all moneys realized by the Trustee from the sale of options, warrants or other similar rights received or distributed in respect of Portfolio Securities as dividends or distributions and capital gains resulting from the sale of Portfolio Securities are credited by the Trustee to a non-interest bearing account. All funds collected or received are held by the Trustee without interest until distributed in accordance with the provisions of the Trust Agreement. To the extent the amounts credited to the account generate interest income or an equivalent benefit to the Trustee, such interest income or benefit is used to reduce the Trustee’s annual fee.

Any additional distributions the Trust may need to make so as to qualify for an exemption from tax on its distributed income under the Code and to avoid U.S. federal excise tax would consist of (a) an increase in the distribution scheduled for January to include any amount by which the Trust’s estimated “investment company taxable income” (determined prior to the deduction for dividends paid by the Trust) and net capital gains for the prior taxable and/or calendar year exceeded the amount of Trust taxable income previously distributed with respect to such taxable year and/or calendar year or, if greater, the minimum amount required to avoid imposition of such excise tax, and (b) a distribution soon after the computation of the actual annual “investment company taxable income” (determined prior to the deduction for dividends paid by the Trust) and net capital gain of the Trust of the amount, if any, by which such actual income and gain exceeds the distributions already made. The net asset value of the Trust is reduced in direct proportion to the amount of such additional distributions. The magnitude of the additional distributions, if any, depends upon a number of factors, including the level of redemption activity experienced by the Trust. Because substantially all proceeds from the sale of stocks in connection with adjustments to the Portfolio are used to purchase shares of Index Securities, the Trust may have no cash or insufficient cash with which to pay such additional distributions. In that case, the Trustee will have to sell shares of Portfolio

 

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Securities sufficient to produce the cash required to make such additional distributions. In selecting the stocks to be sold to produce cash for such distributions, the Trustee chooses among the stocks that are over-weighted in the Portfolio relative to their weightings in the Index first and then from among all other stocks in such a manner to maintain the weightings of Portfolio Securities within the applicable Misweighting Amount.

As specified in the Trust Agreement, the Trustee may declare special dividends if the Trustee deems such action necessary or advisable to preserve the status of the Trust as a RIC or to avoid imposition of income or excise taxes on undistributed income or deems such action otherwise advantageous to the Trust. The Trust Agreement also permits the Trustee to vary the frequency with which periodic distributions are made ( e.g. , from quarterly to monthly) if it is determined by the Sponsor and the Trustee that such a variance would be advisable to facilitate compliance with the rules and regulations applicable to RICs or would otherwise be advantageous to the Trust. In addition, the Trust Agreement permits the Trustee to change the regular ex-dividend date for Units to another date within the month or quarter if it is determined by the Sponsor and the Trustee that such a change would be advantageous to the Trust. Notice of any such variance or change shall be provided to Beneficial Owners via DTC and the DTC Participants.

All distributions are made by the Trustee through DTC and the DTC Participants to Beneficial Owners as recorded on the book entry system of DTC and the DTC Participants. With each distribution, the Trustee furnishes for distribution to Beneficial Owners a statement setting forth the amount being distributed, expressed as a dollar amount per Unit.

The settlement date for the creation of Units or the purchase of Units in the secondary market must occur on or before the Record Date in order for such creator or purchaser to receive a distribution on the next Dividend Payment Date. If the settlement date for such creation or a secondary market purchase occurs after the Record Date, the distribution will be made to the prior securityholder or Beneficial Owner as of such Record Date.

As soon as practicable after notice of termination of the Trust, the Trustee will distribute via DTC and the DTC Participants to each Beneficial Owner redeeming Creation Units before the termination date specified in such notice a portion of Portfolio Securities and cash as described above. Otherwise, the Trustee will distribute to each Beneficial Owner (whether in Creation Unit size aggregations or otherwise), as soon as practicable after termination of the Trust, such Beneficial Owner’s pro rata share of the net asset value of the Trust.

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS

The Trust is not actively managed and only holds constituent securities of the Index regardless of the current or projected performance of a specific security or a particular industry or market sector. Therefore, the Trust is not authorized to invest in

 

65


the securities of registered investment companies or any other registered or unregistered funds, lend its portfolio securities or other assets, issue senior securities or borrow money for the purpose of investing in securities, purchase securities on margin, sell securities short or invest in derivative instruments, including, without limitation, futures contracts, options or swaps.

INVESTMENTS BY INVESTMENT COMPANIES

Purchases of Units by investment companies are subject to restrictions pursuant to Section 12(d)(1) of the 1940 Act. The Trust has received an SEC order that permits registered investment companies to invest in Units beyond these limits, subject to certain conditions and terms. One such condition is that registered investment companies relying on the order must enter into a written agreement with the Trust. Registered investment companies wishing to learn more about the order and the agreement should telephone 1-866-732-8673.

The Trust itself is also subject to the restrictions of Section 12(d)(1). This means that, notwithstanding the investment restrictions described above, absent an exemption or SEC relief, (a) the Trust cannot invest in any registered investment company, to the extent that the Trust would own more than 3% of that registered investment company’s outstanding Units, (b) the Trust cannot invest more than 5% of its total assets in the securities of any one registered investment company, and (c) the Trust cannot invest more than 10% of its total assets in the securities of registered investment companies in the aggregate.

ANNUAL REPORTS

Promptly after the end of each fiscal year, the Trustee furnishes to the DTC Participants for distribution to each person who was a Beneficial Owner of Units at the end of such fiscal year, an annual report of the Trust containing financial statements audited by independent accountants of nationally recognized standing and such other information as may be required by applicable laws, rules and regulations.

BENEFIT PLAN INVESTOR CONSIDERATIONS

In considering the advisability of an investment in Units, fiduciaries of pension, profit sharing or other tax-qualified retirement plans and funded welfare plans or entities whose underlying assets include “plan assets” within the meaning of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (“ERISA”) (collectively, “Plans”) subject to the fiduciary responsibility requirements of ERISA, should consider whether an investment in Units (a) is permitted by the documents and instruments governing the Plan, (b) is made solely in the interest of participants and beneficiaries of the Plans, (c) is consistent with the prudence and diversification requirements of ERISA, and that the acquisition and holding of Units does not result in a non-exempt “prohibited transaction” under Section 406 of ERISA or

 

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Section 4975 of the Code. Individual retirement account (“IRA”) investors and certain other investors not subject to ERISA, such as Keogh Plans, should consider that such arrangements may make only such investments as are authorized by the governing instruments and that IRAs, Keogh Plans and certain other types of arrangements are subject to the prohibited transaction rules of Section 4975 of the Code. Employee benefit plans that are government plans (as defined in Section 3(32) of ERISA), certain church plans (as defined in Section 3(33) of ERISA) and non-U.S. plans (as described in Section 4(b)(4) of ERISA) are not subject to the requirements of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code. The fiduciaries of governmental plans should, however, consider the impact of their respective state pension codes or other applicable law, which may include restrictions similar to ERISA and Section 4975 of the Code, on investments in Units and the considerations discussed above, to the extent such considerations apply. Each purchaser and transferee of a Unit who is subject to ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code or any similar laws will be deemed to have represented by its acquisition and holding of each Unit that its acquisition and holding of any Units does not give rise to a non-exempt prohibited transaction under ERISA, the Code or any similar law.

As described in the preceding paragraph, ERISA imposes certain duties on Plan fiduciaries, and ERISA and/or Section 4975 of the Code prohibit certain transactions involving “plan assets” between Plans or IRAs and persons who have certain specified relationships to the Plan or IRA (that is, “parties in interest” as defined in ERISA or “disqualified persons” as defined in the Code). The fiduciary standards and prohibited transaction rules that apply to an investment in Units by a Plan will not apply to transactions involving the Trust’s assets because the Trust is an investment company registered under the 1940 Act. As such, the Trust’s assets are not deemed to be “plan assets” under ERISA and U.S. Department of Labor regulations by virtue of Plan and/or IRA investments in Units.

Each purchaser or transferee should consult legal counsel before purchasing the Units. Nothing herein shall be construed as a representation that an investment in the Units would meet any or all of the relevant legal requirements with respect to investments by, or is appropriate for, an employee benefit plan subject to ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code or a similar law.

INDEX LICENSE

A license agreement (the “License Agreement”) between SSGM, an affiliate of the Trustee, and S&P grants a license to SSGM to use the Index and to use certain trade names and trademarks of S&P in connection with the Trust. The Index also serves as a basis for determining the composition of the Portfolio. The Trustee (on behalf of the Trust), the Sponsor and the Exchange have each received a sublicense from SSGM for the use of the Index and certain trade names and trademarks in connection with their rights and duties with respect to the Trust. The License Agreement may be amended without the consent of any of the Beneficial Owners of Units. Currently, the License Agreement is scheduled to terminate on December 31, 2017, but its term may be extended without the consent of any of the Beneficial Owners of Units.

 

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None of the Trust, the Trustee, the Exchange, the Sponsor, SSGM, the Distributor, DTC, NSCC, any Authorized Participant, any Beneficial Owner of Units or any other person is entitled to use any rights whatsoever under the foregoing licensing arrangements or to use the trademarks “Standard & Poor’s”, “S&P”, “S&P 500”, “Standard & Poor’s 500” or “500” or to use the Index except as specifically described in the License Agreement or sublicenses or as may be specified in the Trust Agreement.

THE TRUST IS NOT SPONSORED, ENDORSED, SOLD OR PROMOTED BY S&P DOW JONES INDICES LLC, ITS AFFILIATES, AND/OR THIRD PARTY LICENSORS (INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, DOW JONES & COMPANY, INC.) (COLLECTIVELY, FOR PURPOSES OF THIS PARAGRAPH AND THE NEXT PARAGRAPH, “S&P”). S&P MAKES NO REPRESENTATION, CONDITION OR WARRANTY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, TO THE OWNERS OF THE TRUST OR ANY MEMBER OF THE PUBLIC REGARDING THE ADVISABILITY OF INVESTING IN SECURITIES GENERALLY OR IN THE TRUST PARTICULARLY OR THE ABILITY OF THE INDEX TO TRACK MARKET PERFORMANCE AND/OR TO ACHIEVE ITS STATED OBJECTIVE AND/OR TO FORM THE BASIS OF A SUCCESSFUL INVESTMENT STRATEGY, AS APPLICABLE. S&P’S ONLY RELATIONSHIP TO THE TRUST IS THE LICENSING OF CERTAIN TRADEMARKS AND TRADE NAMES AND OF THE INDEX WHICH IS DETERMINED, COMPOSED AND CALCULATED BY S&P WITHOUT REGARD TO SSGM OR THE TRUST. S&P HAS NO OBLIGATION TO TAKE THE NEEDS OF THE TRUST OR THE OWNERS OF OR INVESTORS IN THE TRUST INTO CONSIDERATION IN DETERMINING, COMPOSING OR CALCULATING THE INDEX OR ANY DATA INCLUDED THEREIN OR USED TO CALCULATE THE INDEX. S&P DOW JONES INDICES LLC IS NOT AN ADVISOR TO THE TRUST. S&P IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR AND HAS NOT PARTICIPATED IN THE DETERMINATION OF THE PRICES AND AMOUNT OF THE TRUST OR THE TIMING OF THE ISSUANCE OR SALE OF THE TRUST OR IN THE DETERMINATION OR CALCULATION OF THE EQUATION BY WHICH THE UNITS ARE ISSUED OR REDEEMED. S&P HAS NO OBLIGATION OR LIABILITY IN CONNECTION WITH THE ADMINISTRATION, MARKETING, OR TRADING OF THE TRUST.

S&P DOES NOT GUARANTEE THE ACCURACY AND/OR THE COMPLETENESS OF THE INDEX OR ANY DATA INCLUDED THEREIN OR USED TO CALCULATE THE INDEX AND S&P SHALL HAVE NO LIABILITY FOR ANY ERRORS, OMISSIONS, OR INTERRUPTIONS THEREIN. S&P MAKES NO WARRANTY OR CONDITION, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AS TO RESULTS TO BE OBTAINED BY THE SPONSOR, THE TRUSTEE, THE TRUST, OWNERS OF OR INVESTORS IN THE TRUST, OR ANY OTHER PERSON OR ENTITY FROM THE USE OF THE INDEX OR ANY DATA INCLUDED THEREIN OR USED TO CALCULATE THE INDEX. S&P MAKES NO EXPRESS OR IMPLIED REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES OR

 

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CONDITIONS, AND EXPRESSLY DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR USE AND ANY OTHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY OR CONDITION WITH RESPECT TO THE INDEX OR ANY DATA INCLUDED THEREIN. WITHOUT LIMITING ANY OF THE FOREGOING, IN NO EVENT SHALL S&P HAVE ANY LIABILITY FOR ANY SPECIAL, PUNITIVE, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, LOST PROFITS) RESULTING FROM THE USE OF THE INDEX OR ANY DATA INCLUDED THEREIN, EVEN IF NOTIFIED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.

SPDR TRADEMARK. The “SPDR” trademark is used under license from Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC. No financial product offered by the Trust or its affiliates is sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by S&P or its affiliates. S&P makes no representation or warranty, express or implied, to the owners of any financial product or any member of the public regarding the advisability of investing in securities generally or in financial products particularly or the ability of the index on which financial products are based to track general stock market performance. S&P is not responsible for and has not participated in any determination or calculation made with respect to issuance or redemption of financial products. S&P has no obligation or liability in connection with the administration, marketing or trading of financial products. WITHOUT LIMITING ANY OF THE FOREGOING, IN NO EVENT SHALL S&P OR ITS AFFILIATES HAVE ANY LIABILITY FOR ANY SPECIAL, PUNITIVE, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, LOST PROFITS), EVEN IF NOTIFIED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.

SPONSOR

The Sponsor is a Delaware limited liability company incorporated on April 6, 1998 with offices c/o NYSE Holdings LLC, 11 Wall Street, New York, New York 10005. The Sponsor’s Internal Revenue Service Employer Identification Number is 26-4126158. The Sponsor’s sole business activity is to act as the sponsor of the Trust and two other ETFs. On October 1, 2008, the Sponsor became an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of NYSE Holdings following the acquisition by NYSE Holdings of the American Stock Exchange LLC and all of its subsidiaries. On November 13, 2013, the Sponsor became an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. (“ICE”), following the acquisition of NYSE Holdings LLC (the parent company of the Sponsor) by ICE. As the parent company, ICE is the publicly-traded entity, trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “ICE.” NYSE Holdings is a “control person” of the Sponsor as such term is defined in the Securities Act of 1933.

The Sponsor, at its own expense, may from time to time provide additional promotional incentives to brokers who sell Units to the public. In certain instances, these incentives may be provided only to those brokers who meet certain threshold

 

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requirements for participation in a given incentive program, such as selling a significant number of Units within a specified period.

If at any time the Sponsor fails to undertake or perform or becomes incapable of undertaking or performing any of the duties which by the terms of the Trust Agreement are required to be undertaken or performed by it, and such failure is not cured within fifteen (15) Business Days following receipt of notice from the Trustee of such failure, or if the Sponsor resigns, or if the Sponsor is adjudged bankrupt or insolvent, or a receiver of the Sponsor or of its property is appointed, or a trustee or liquidator or any public officer takes charge or control of the Sponsor or of its property or affairs for the purpose of rehabilitation, conservation or liquidation, the Trustee may appoint a successor Sponsor, agree to act as Sponsor itself, or terminate the Trust Agreement and liquidate the Trust. Upon the Trustee’s and a successor Sponsor’s execution of an instrument of appointment and assumption, the successor Sponsor succeeds to all of the rights, powers, duties and obligations of the original Sponsor. The successor Sponsor shall not be under any liability under the Trust Agreement for occurrences or omissions prior to the execution of such instrument. Any successor Sponsor may be compensated at rates deemed by the Trustee to be reasonable, but not exceeding the amounts prescribed by the SEC.

The Sponsor may resign by executing and delivering to the Trustee an instrument of resignation. Such resignation shall become effective upon the appointment of a successor Sponsor and the acceptance of appointment by the successor Sponsor, unless the Trustee either agrees to act as Sponsor or terminates the Trust Agreement and liquidates the Trust. The Trustee shall terminate the Trust Agreement and liquidate the Trust if, within sixty (60) days following the date on which a notice of resignation was delivered by the Sponsor, a successor Sponsor has not been appointed or the Trustee has not agreed to act as Sponsor.

The Trust Agreement provides that the Sponsor is not liable to the Trustee, the Trust or to the Beneficial Owners of Units for taking or refraining from taking any action in good faith, or for errors in judgment, but is liable only for its own gross negligence, bad faith, willful misconduct or willful malfeasance in the performance of its duties or its reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under the Trust Agreement. The Sponsor is not liable or responsible in any way for depreciation or loss incurred by the Trust because of the purchase or sale of any Portfolio Securities. The Trust Agreement further provides that the Sponsor and its directors, shareholders, officers, employees, subsidiaries and affiliates under common control with the Sponsor shall be indemnified from the assets of the Trust and held harmless against any loss, liability or expense incurred without gross negligence, bad faith, willful misconduct or willful malfeasance on the part of any such party arising out of or in connection with the performance of its duties or reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under the Trust Agreement, including the payment of the costs and expenses (including counsel fees) of defending against any claim or liability.

 

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As of January 20, 2016, each of the following persons served as an officer or member of the Sponsor:

 

Name

  

Nature of Relationship or Affiliation with Sponsor

Thomas Farley

   President

Scott Hill

   Chief Financial Officer

Doug Foley

   Senior Vice President

Martin Hunter

   Senior Vice President, Tax & Treasury

Steven Crutchfield

   Vice President

Elizabeth King

   General Counsel & Secretary

Martha Redding

   Assistant Secretary

Andrew Surdykowski

   Assistant Secretary

Sandra Kerr

   Senior Tax Director

David Nevin

   Senior Treasury Director

NYSE MKT, LLC

   Member

The principal business address for each of the officers and members listed above is c/o NYSE Holdings LLC, 11 Wall Street, New York, New York 10005. None of the officers listed above either directly or indirectly owns, controls or holds with power to vote any of the outstanding limited liability company interests of the Sponsor. All of the outstanding limited liability company interests of the Sponsor are owned by NYSE MKT, LLC as the sole member of the Sponsor.

None of the individuals listed above either directly or indirectly owns, controls or holds with power to vote any of the outstanding Units of the Trust.

 

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Other Companies of which Each of the Persons* Named Above

is Presently an Officer, Director or Partner

Person Named Above

  

Name and Principal
Business Address of
such Other Company

  

Nature of Business of
such Other Company

  

Nature of
Affiliation with
such Other
Company

Thomas W. Farley**

  

NYSE Holdings LLC,

11 Wall Street,

New York,

New York 10005

   Global operator of financial markets and provider of trading technologies    Chief Operating Officer

Scott Hill***

  

Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.,

2100 RiverEdge Parkway,

Suite 500,

Atlanta,

Georgia 30328

   Global operator of regulated exchanges and clearing houses for financial and commodity markets    Chief Financial Officer

Doug Foley****

  

Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.,

2100 RiverEdge Parkway, Suite 500,

Atlanta,

Georgia 30328

   Global operator of regulated exchanges and clearing houses for financial and commodity markets    Senior Vice President

Martin Hunter*****

  

Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.,

2100 RiverEdge Parkway, Suite 500,

Atlanta,

Georgia 30328

   Global operator of regulated exchanges and clearing houses for financial and commodity markets    Senior Vice President, Tax & Treasury

Steven Crutchfield******

  

NYSE Holdings LLC,

11 Wall Street,

New York,

New York 10005

   Global operator of financial markets and provider of trading technologies    Vice President

Elizabeth King*******

  

NYSE Holdings LLC,

11 Wall Street,

New York,

New York 10005

   Global operator of financial markets and provider of trading technologies    General Counsel & Secretary

Martha Redding********

  

NYSE Holdings LLC,

11 Wall Street,

New York,

New York 10005

   Global operator of financial markets and provider of trading technologies    Assistant Secretary

Andrew
Surdykowski*********

  

Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.,

2100 RiverEdge Parkway, Suite 500,

Atlanta, Georgia 30328

   Global operator of regulated exchanges and clearing houses for financial and commodity markets    Assistant Secretary

 

72


Other Companies of which Each of the Persons* Named Above

is Presently an Officer, Director or Partner

Person Named Above

  

Name and Principal
Business Address of
such Other Company

  

Nature of Business of
such Other Company

  

Nature of
Affiliation with
such Other
Company

Sandra Kerr**********

  

Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.,

2100 RiverEdge
Parkway, Suite 500,

Atlanta, Georgia 30328

   Global operator of regulated exchanges and clearing houses for financial and commodity markets    Senior Tax Director

David Nevin***********

  

Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.,

2100 RiverEdge
Parkway, Suite 500,

Atlanta, Georgia 30328

   Global operator of regulated exchanges and clearing houses for financial and commodity markets    Senior Treasury Director

 

 

* Exclude persons whose affiliation with the Sponsor arises solely by virtue of stock ownership (as defined under Section 2(a)(3)(A) of the Investment Company Act of 1940).
** In addition to his positions with the Sponsor and NYSE Holdings LLC, Mr. Farley is the Chief Executive Officer of NYSE Group, Inc. and a Director and/or an officer (e.g., President, Chief Executive Officer, Senior Vice President) of 18 other subsidiaries of ICE.
*** In addition to his position with the Sponsor, Mr. Hill is a Director and/or an officer (e.g., Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, Vice President, Manager, President, Managing Director, Secretary) of 92 other subsidiaries of ICE.
**** In addition to his position with the Sponsor, Mr. Foley is a Director and/or an officer (e.g., Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, Vice President, Manager, President, Managing Director, Secretary) of 32 other subsidiaries of ICE.
***** In addition to his position with the Sponsor, Mr. Hunter is a Director and/or an officer (e.g., Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, Vice President, Manager, President, Managing Director, Secretary) of 64 other subsidiaries of ICE.
****** In addition to his positions with the Sponsor and NYSE Holdings LLC, Mr. Crutchfield is a Director and/or an officer (e.g., President, Chief Executive Officer, Senior Vice President) of 6 other subsidiaries of ICE.
******* In addition to her positions with the Sponsor and NYSE Holdings LLC, Ms. King is a Director and/or an officer (e.g., President, Chief Executive Officer, Senior Vice President) of 20 other subsidiaries of ICE.
********

In addition to her positions with the Sponsor and NYSE Holdings LLC, Ms. Redding is a Director and/or an officer (e.g., President, Chief

 

73


  Executive Officer, Senior Vice President) of 20 other subsidiaries of ICE.
********* In addition to his position with the Sponsor, Mr. Surdykowski is a Director and/or an officer (e.g., Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, Vice President, Manager, President, Managing Director, Secretary) of 62 other subsidiaries of ICE.
********** In addition to her positions with the Sponsor, Ms. Kerr is a Director and/or an officer (e.g., President, Chief Executive Officer, Senior Vice President) of 20 other subsidiaries of ICE.
*********** In addition to his position with the Sponsor, Mr. Nevin is a Director and/or an officer (e.g., Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer, Vice President, Manager, President, Managing Director, Secretary) of 20 other subsidiaries of ICE.

Thomas Farley is President of the NYSE Group, which includes the New York Stock Exchange and a diverse range of equity and equity options exchanges, all wholly owned subsidiaries of ICE. Farley joined the NYSE in November of 2013 when ICE acquired NYSE Holdings. He served as the Chief Operating Officer before becoming President in May of 2014. Prior to that, he served as SVP of Financial Markets at ICE where he oversaw the development of several businesses and initiatives across ICE’s markets. Farley joined ICE in 2007 where he served as the President and COO of ICE Futures U.S., formerly the New York Board of Trade.

Scott Hill has served as Chief Financial Officer of ICE since May 2007. He is responsible for all aspects of ICE’s finance and accounting functions, treasury, tax, audit and controls, business development, human resources and investor relations. Hill also oversees ICE’s global clearing operations.

Doug Foley is Senior Vice President of Human Resources & Administration of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. since July 2008 to Present, and has overall global responsibility for Human Resources and Corporate Real Estate (and Corporate Insurance through November 2013).

Martin Hunter is Senior Vice President, Tax & Treasurer of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. since 2013. Previously he was Vice President, Tax & Treasurer from August 2010 to November 2013.

Steven Crutchfield is Vice President and Head of Options Markets, Exchange-Traded Products, and Bonds at the New York Stock Exchange (an Intercontinental Exchange company), where his responsibilities include oversight of the NYSE Amex and NYSE Arca options exchanges and the NYSE Global Index Group. Mr. Crutchfield is also CEO and a member of the Board of Directors of NYSE Amex Options LLC, and sat on the Board of Directors of the Options Clearing Corporation from 2012 to 2014.

Elizabeth King is General Counsel & Secretary of the New York Stock Exchange. Ms. King was Global Head of Regulatory and Government Affairs, GETCO from July 2010 to June 2013 and KCG from July 2013 to February 2014 following KCG’s

 

74


merger. Ms. King also served as Associate Director, Division of Trading & Markets, Securities and Exchange Commission from 2000 to June 2010.

Martha Redding has been with the Legal Department of the NYSE Group since 2011. She is Senior Counsel and Assistant Secretary. Prior to joining the NYSE Group, she was Chief Compliance Officer & Associate General Counsel at Financial Security Assurance (now Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp) from 2004-2009.

Andrew Surdykowski was Vice President, Associate General Counsel and Assistant Corporate Secretary of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc., from 2009-2013. He currently is Senior Vice President, Associate General Counsel and Assistant Corporate Secretary of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. since 2013. Primary responsibilities and activities since 2009 have been general legal matters, corporate law, public filings, mergers & acquisitions, corporate governance and corporate secretary functions.

Sandra Kerr is Senior Tax Director, Tax Compliance & Audits of Intercontinental Exchange Holdings, Inc. in charge of Federal tax compliance and audits from February 2014 to present. Previously she was Tax Director/Consultant of Steele Consulting LLC providing tax services (via contracting work) to various corporate tax departments from June 2005 to February 2014, primarily for Intercontinental Exchange Holdings, Inc. from 2010 to February 2014 and various other companies from June 2005 to 2010.

David Nevin is Senior Director, Treasury, Assistant Treasurer, responsible for ICE/NYSE corporate treasury, cash and liquidity, debt management, rating agency support, global intercompany liquidity, since 2014. Previously, he was Director of Treasury, responsible for ICE corporate treasury, cash and liquidity management and debt servicing from 2011 to 2013. Mr. Nevin also served as Accounting Manager responsible for CDS product accounting and finance from 2008 to 2011 at CDS Brokerage and Clearing.

NYSE MKT, LLC, formerly NYSE Amex and prior to that, the American Stock Exchange, became a wholly-owned subsidiary of NYSE Holdings in 2008.

TRUSTEE

The Trustee is a bank and trust company organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts with its principal place of business at One Lincoln Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02111. The Trustee’s Internal Revenue Service Employer Identification Number is 04-1867445. The Trustee is a member of the Federal Reserve System, its deposits are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) and it is subject to applicable federal and state banking laws and to supervision and examination by the Federal Reserve, as well as by the Massachusetts Commissioner of Banks, the FDIC, and the regulatory authorities of those states and countries in which a branch of the Trustee is located.

 

75


The Trustee may resign and be discharged of the Trust created by the Trust Agreement by executing a notice of resignation in writing and filing such notice with the Sponsor and mailing a copy of the notice of resignation to all DTC Participants reflected on the records of DTC as owning Units for distribution to Beneficial Owners as provided above not less than sixty (60) days before the date such resignation is to take effect. Such resignation becomes effective upon the acceptance of the appointment as Trustee for the Trust by the successor Trustee. The Sponsor, upon receiving notice of such resignation, is obligated to use its best efforts promptly to appoint a successor Trustee in the manner and meeting the qualifications provided in the Trust Agreement. If no successor is appointed within sixty (60) days after the date such notice of resignation is given, the Trustee shall terminate the Trust Agreement and liquidate the Trust.

If the Trustee becomes incapable of acting as such, or fails to undertake or perform or becomes incapable of undertaking or performing any of the duties which by the terms of the Trust Agreement are required to be undertaken or performed by it, and such failure is not be cured within fifteen (15) Business Days following receipt of notice from the Sponsor of such failure, or the Trustee is adjudged bankrupt or insolvent, or a receiver of the Trustee or its property is appointed, or a trustee or liquidator or any public officer takes charge or control of such Trustee or of its property or affairs for the purposes of rehabilitation, conservation or liquidation, then the Sponsor may remove the Trustee and appoint a successor Trustee as provided in the Trust Agreement. The Sponsor shall mail notice of such appointment of a successor Trustee via the DTC Participants to Beneficial Owners. Upon a successor Trustee’s execution of a written acceptance and acknowledgement of an instrument accepting appointment as Trustee for the Trust, the successor Trustee becomes vested with all the rights, powers, duties and obligations of the original Trustee. A successor Trustee must be (a) a bank, trust company, corporation or national banking association organized and doing business under the laws of the United States or any state thereof; (b) authorized under such laws to exercise corporate trust powers; and (c) at all times have an aggregate capital, surplus and undivided profits of not less than $50,000,000.

Beneficial Owners of 51% of the then outstanding Units may at any time remove the Trustee by written instrument(s) delivered to the Trustee and the Sponsor. The Sponsor shall thereupon use its best efforts to appoint a successor Trustee as described above and in the Trust Agreement.

The Trust Agreement limits the Trustee’s liabilities. It provides, among other things, that the Trustee is not liable for (a) any action taken in reasonable reliance on properly executed documents or for the disposition of monies or securities or for the evaluations required to be made thereunder, except by reason of its own gross negligence, bad faith, willful malfeasance, willful misconduct, or reckless disregard of its duties and obligations; (b) depreciation or loss incurred by reason of the sale, or the failure to make a sale, by the Trustee of any Portfolio Securities; (c) any action the Trustee takes where the Sponsor fails to act; and (d) any taxes or other

governmental charges imposed upon or in respect of Portfolio Securities or upon the

 

76


interest thereon or upon it as Trustee or upon or in respect of the Trust which the Trustee may be required to pay under any present or future law of the United States of America or of any other taxing authority having jurisdiction.

The Trustee and its directors, subsidiaries, shareholders, officers, employees, and affiliates under common control with the Trustee will be indemnified from the assets of the Trust and held harmless against any loss, liability or expense incurred without gross negligence, bad faith, willful misconduct, willful malfeasance on the part of such party or reckless disregard of its duties and obligations arising out of or in connection with its acceptance or administration of the Trust, including the costs and expenses (including counsel fees) of defending against any claim or liability.

The Trustee, directly or through Depository Trust Company, has possession of all securities and other property in which the Trust invests, all funds held for such investment, all equalization, redemption, and other special funds of the Trust, and all income upon, accretions to, and proceeds of such property and funds. The Trustee segregates, by recordation on its books and records, all securities and/or property held for the Trust. All cash is held on deposit for the Trust and, to the extent not required for reinvestment or payment of Trust expenses, is distributed periodically to Unitholders.

DEPOSITORY

DTC is a limited purpose trust company and member of the Federal Reserve System.

DISTRIBUTOR

The Distributor is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Colorado and is located at 1290 Broadway, Suite 1100, Denver, CO 80203. The Distributor is a registered broker-dealer and a member of FINRA. The Sponsor pays the Distributor for its services a flat annual fee of $25,000. The Sponsor will not seek reimbursement for such payment from the Trust without obtaining prior exemptive relief from the SEC.

TRUST AGREEMENT

Beneficial Owners shall not (a) have the right to vote concerning the Trust, except with respect to termination and as otherwise expressly set forth in the Trust Agreement, (b) in any manner control the operation and management of the Trust, or (c) be liable to any other person by reason of any action taken by the Sponsor or the Trustee. The Trustee has the exclusive right to vote all of the voting stocks in the Trust. The Trustee votes the voting stocks of each issuer in the same proportionate relationship that all other shares of each such issuer are voted (known as “mirror voting”) to the extent permissible and, if not permitted, abstains from voting. The

 

77


Trustee shall not be liable to any person for any action or failure to take any action with respect to such voting matters.

The death or incapacity of any Beneficial Owner does not operate to terminate the Trust nor entitle such Beneficial Owner’s legal representatives or heirs to claim an accounting or to take any action or proceeding in any court for a partition or winding up of the Trust.

Amendments to the Trust Agreement

The Trust Agreement may be amended from time to time by the Trustee and the Sponsor without the consent of any Beneficial Owners (a) to cure any ambiguity or to correct or supplement any provision that may be defective or inconsistent or to make such other provisions as will not adversely affect the interests of Beneficial Owners; (b) to change any provision as may be required by the SEC; (c) to add or change any provision as may be necessary or advisable for the continuing qualification of the Trust as a “regulated investment company” under the Code; (d) to add or change any provision as may be necessary or advisable if NSCC or DTC is unable or unwilling to continue to perform its functions; and (e) to add or change any provision to conform the adjustments to the Portfolio and the Portfolio Deposit to changes, if any, made by S&P in its method of determining the Index. The Trust Agreement may also be amended by the Sponsor and the Trustee with the consent of the Beneficial Owners of 51% of the outstanding Units to add provisions to, or change or eliminate any of the provisions of, the Trust Agreement or to modify the rights of Beneficial Owners, although the Trust Agreement may not be amended without the consent of the Beneficial Owners of all outstanding Units if such amendment would (a) permit the acquisition of any securities other than those acquired in accordance with the terms and conditions of the Trust Agreement; (b) reduce the interest of any Beneficial Owner in the Trust; or (c) reduce the percentage of Beneficial Owners required to consent to any such amendment.

Promptly after the execution of an amendment, the Trustee inquires of each DTC Participant, either directly or through a third party, as to the number of Beneficial Owners for whom such DTC Participant holds Units, and provides each such DTC Participant or third party with sufficient copies of a written notice of the substance of such amendment for transmittal by each such DTC Participant to Beneficial Owners.

Termination of the Trust Agreement

The Trust Agreement provides that the Sponsor has the discretionary right to direct the Trustee to terminate the Trust if at any time the net asset value of the Trust is less than $350,000,000, as adjusted for inflation in accordance with the CPI-U at the end of each year from (and including) 1997.

The Trust may be terminated (a) by the agreement of the Beneficial Owners of 66 2/3% of outstanding Units; (b) if DTC is unable or unwilling to continue to perform

 

78


its functions as set forth under the Trust Agreement and a comparable replacement is unavailable; (c) if NSCC no longer provides clearance services with respect to Units, or if the Trustee is no longer a participant in NSCC; (d) if S&P ceases publishing the Index; or (e) if the License Agreement is terminated. The Trust will be terminated if Units are delisted from the Exchange. The Trust is scheduled to terminate on the first to occur of (a) January 22, 2118 or (b) the date 20 years after the death of the last survivor of eleven persons named in the Trust Agreement, the oldest of whom was born in 1990 and the youngest of whom was born in 1993.

The Trust will terminate if either the Sponsor or the Trustee resigns and a successor is not appointed. The Trust will also terminate if the Trustee is removed or the Sponsor fails to undertake or perform or becomes incapable of undertaking or performing any of the duties required under the Trust Agreement and a successor is not appointed. The dissolution of the Sponsor or its ceasing to exist as a legal entity for any cause whatsoever, however, will not cause the termination of the Trust Agreement or the Trust unless the Trust is terminated as described above.

Prior written notice of the termination of the Trust must be given at least twenty (20) days before termination of the Trust to all Beneficial Owners. The notice must set forth the date on which the Trust will be terminated, the period during which the assets of the Trust will be liquidated, the date on which Beneficial Owners of Units (whether in Creation Unit size aggregations or otherwise) will receive in cash the NAV of the Units held, and the date upon which the books of the Trust shall be closed. The notice shall further state that, as of the date thereof and thereafter, neither requests to create additional Creation Units nor Portfolio Deposits will be accepted, and that, as of the date thereof, the portfolio of stocks delivered upon redemption shall be identical in composition and weighting to Portfolio Securities as of such date rather than the stock portion of the Portfolio Deposit as in effect on the date request for redemption is deemed received. Beneficial Owners of Creation Units may, in advance of the Termination Date, redeem in kind directly from the Trust.

Within a reasonable period after the Termination Date, the Trustee shall, subject to any applicable provisions of law, sell all of the Portfolio Securities not already distributed to redeeming Beneficial Owners of Creation Units. The Trustee shall not be liable or responsible in any way for depreciation or loss incurred because of any such sale. The Trustee may suspend such sales upon the occurrence of unusual or unforeseen circumstances, including but not limited to a suspension in trading of a stock, the closing or restriction of trading on a stock exchange, the outbreak of hostilities or the collapse of the economy. The Trustee shall deduct from the proceeds of sale its fees and all other expenses and transmit the remaining amount to DTC for distribution, together with a final statement setting forth the computation of the gross amount distributed. Units not redeemed before termination of the Trust will be redeemed in cash at NAV based on the proceeds of the sale of Portfolio Securities, with no minimum aggregation of Units required.

 

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LEGAL OPINION

The legality of the Units offered hereby has been passed upon by Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP, New York, New York.

INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The financial statements as of September 30, 2015 included in this prospectus have been so included in reliance upon the report of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, independent registered public accounting firm, 101 Seaport Boulevard, Suite 500, Boston, Massachusetts, given on the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.

CODE OF ETHICS

The Trust has adopted a code of ethics in compliance with Rule 17j-1 requirements under the 1940 Act. Subject to pre-clearance, reporting, certification and other conditions and standards, the code permits personnel subject to the code, if any, to invest in Index Securities for their own accounts. The code is designed to prevent fraud, deception and misconduct against the Trust and to provide reasonable standards of conduct. The code is on file with the SEC and you may obtain a copy by visiting the SEC at the address listed on the back cover of this prospectus. The code is also available on the SEC’s Internet site at http://www.sec.gov. A copy may be obtained, after paying a duplicating fee, by electronic request at publicinfo@sec.gov, or by writing the SEC at the address listed on the back cover of this prospectus.

INVESTMENT BY AN UNDERTAKING FOR COLLECTIVE INVESTMENT IN TRANSFERABLE SECURITIES

The Trustee has reviewed the investment characteristics and limitations of the Trust and believes that, as of December 30, 2015, the Trust qualifies as an undertaking for collective investment (“UCI”) for purposes of the Luxembourg law of 17 December 2010. However, an Undertaking for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities should consult its own counsel regarding the qualification of the Trust as a UCI before investing in the Trust.

INFORMATION AND COMPARISONS RELATING TO SECONDARY MARKET TRADING AND PERFORMANCE

One important difference between Units and conventional mutual fund shares is that Units are available for purchase or sale on an intraday basis on the Exchange at market prices. In contrast, shares in a conventional mutual fund may be purchased or redeemed only at a price at, or related to, the closing net asset value per share, as determined by the fund. The table below illustrates the distribution relationship of

 

80


bid/ask spreads to NAV for 2015. This table should help investors evaluate some of the advantages and disadvantages of Units relative to mutual fund shares purchased and redeemed at prices at, or related to, the closing net asset value per share. Specifically, the table illustrates in an approximate way the risks of purchasing or selling Units at prices less favorable than closing NAV and, correspondingly, the opportunities to purchase or sell at prices more favorable than closing NAV.

 

 

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Frequency Distribution of Discounts and Premiums for SPDR Trust:

Bid/Ask Price vs. Net Asset Value (NAV) as of 12/31/2015

 

Range   Calendar
Quarter
Ending
3/31/2015
  Calendar
Quarter
Ending
6/30/2015
  Calendar
Quarter
Ending
9/30/2015
  Calendar
Quarter
Ending
12/31/2015
  Calendar
Year
2015

> 200

Basis Points

  0   0   0   0   0
  0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%

150 — 200

Basis Points

  0   0   0   0   0
  0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%

100 — 150

Basis Points

  0   0   0   0   0
  0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%

50 — 100

Basis Points

  0   0   0   0   0
  0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%

25 — 50

Basis Points

  0   0   0   0   0
  0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%

0 — 25

Basis Points

  34   28   18   25   105
  55.7%   44.4%   28.1%   39.1%   41.7%

Total Days

at Premium

  34   28   18   25   105
  55.7%   44.4%   28.1%   39.1%   41.7%

Closing Price

Equal to NAV

  0   2   1   2   5
  0.0%   3.2%   1.6%   3.1%   2.0%

Total Days

at Discount

  27   33   45   37   142
  44.3%   52.4%   70.3%   57.8%   56.3%

0 — – 25

Basis Points

  27   33   45   37   142
  44.3%   52.4%   70.3%   57.8%   56.3%

– 25 — – 50

Basis Points

  0   0   0   0   0
  0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%

– 50 — – 100

Basis Points

  0   0   0   0   0
  0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%

– 100 — – 150

Basis Points

  0   0   0   0   0
  0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%

– 150 — – 200

Basis Points

  0   0   0   0   0
  0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%

< – 200

Basis Points

  0   0   0   0   0
  0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%   0.0%

Close was within 0.25% of NAV better than 92% of the time from 1/29/93 (the first day of trading) through 12/31/2015.

 

Source: NYSE

 

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Comparison of Total Returns Based on NAV and Bid/Ask Price (1)

as of 12/31/15*

The table below is provided to compare the Trust’s total pre-tax returns at NAV with the total pre-tax returns based on bid/ask price and the performance of the Index. Past performance is not necessarily an indication of how the Trust will perform in the future.

Cumulative Total Return

 

     1 Year   5 Year   10 Year

Trust

      

Return Based on NAV (2)(3)(4)(5)

   1.35%   79.57%   100.65%

Return Based on Bid/Ask Price (2)(3)(4)(5)

   1.29%   79.35%   100.75%

Index

   1.38%   80.75%   102.42%

Average Annual Total Return**

 

     1 Year   5 Year   10 Year

Trust

      

Return Based on NAV (2)(3)(4)(5)

   1.35%   12.42%     7.21%

Return Based on Bid/Ask Price (2)(3)(4)(5)

   1.29%   12.39%     7.22%

Index

   1.38%   12.57%     7.31%

 

(1) Currently, the bid/ask price is the midpoint of the best bid and best offer prices on NYSE Arca at the time the Trust’s NAV is calculated, ordinarily 4:00 p.m. Through November 28, 2008, the bid/ask price was the midpoint of the best bid and best offer prices on NYSE Alternext US (formerly the American Stock Exchange and now NYSE MKT) at the close of trading, ordinarily 4:00 p.m.

 

(2) Total return figures have been calculated in the manner described above in “Summary — Trust Performance.”

 

(3) Includes all applicable ordinary operating expenses set forth above in “Summary — Fees and Expenses of the Trust.”

 

(4) Does not include the Transaction Fee which is payable to the Trustee only by persons purchasing and redeeming Creation Units as discussed above in “Purchases and Redemptions of Creation Units.” If these amounts were reflected, returns to such persons would be less than those shown.

 

(5) Does not include brokerage commissions and charges incurred only by persons who make purchases and sales of Units in the secondary market as discussed above in “Exchange Listing and Trading — Secondary Trading on Exchanges.” If these amounts were reflected, returns to such persons would be less than those shown.

 

* Source: NYSE Holdings LLC and State Street Bank and Trust Company.

 

** Total returns assume that dividends and capital gain distributions have been reinvested in the Trust at the NAV.

 

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SPDR S&P 500 ETF TRUST

(“SPY”)

SPONSOR:

PDR SERVICES LLC

 

 

This prospectus does not include all of the information with respect to SPY set forth in its Registration Statement filed with the SEC in Washington, D.C. under the:

 

   

Securities Act of 1933 (File No. 33-46080) and

 

   

Investment Company Act of 1940 (File No. 811-06125).

To obtain copies from the SEC at prescribed rates—

WRITE: Public Reference Section of the SEC

100 F Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. 20549

CALL: 1-800-SEC-0330

VISIT: http://www.sec.gov

 

 

No person is authorized to give any information or make any representation about SPY not contained in this prospectus, and you should not rely on any other information. Read and keep both parts of this prospectus for future reference.

PDR Services LLC has filed a registration statement on Form S-6 and Form N-8B-2 with the SEC covering the Units. While this prospectus is a part of the registration statement on Form S-6, it does not contain all the exhibits filed as part of the registration statement on Form S-6. You should consider reviewing the full text of those exhibits.

 

 

Prospectus dated January 20, 2016


CONTENTS OF REGISTRATION STATEMENT

This amendment to the Registration Statement on Form S-6 comprises the following papers and documents:

The facing sheet.

The cross-reference sheet.

The prospectus.

The undertaking to file reports.

The signatures.

Written consents of the following persons:

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (included in Exhibit 99.C1)

Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP (included in Exhibit 99.2)

The following exhibits:

 

EX-99.2

   — Opinion of Counsel as to legality of securities being registered and consent of Counsel (1)

EX-99.A1(1)

   — Amended and Restated Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust dated as of January 1, 2004 and effective January 27, 2004, between PDR Services LLC, as Sponsor and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (2)

EX-99.A1(2)

   — Amendment No. 1 dated as of November 1, 2004 and effective November 8, 2004 to the Amended and Restated Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust dated as of January 1, 2004 and effective January 27, 2004, between PDR Services LLC, as Sponsor and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (3)

EX-99.A1(3)

   — Amendment No. 2 dated as of February 1, 2009 and effective February 13, 2009 to the Amended and Restated Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust dated as of January 1, 2004 and effective January 27, 2004, as amended, between PDR Services LLC, as Sponsor, and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (4)

EX-99.A1(4)

   — Amendment No. 3 dated as of November 23, 2009 and effective January 27, 2010 to the Amended and Restated Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust dated as of January 1, 2004 and effective January 27, 2004, as amended, between PDR Services LLC, as Sponsor, and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (5)

EX-99.A1(5)

   — Trust Indenture and Agreement dated January 22, 1993 and effective January 22, 1993 between PDR Services Corporation, as Sponsor and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (6)

EX-99.A1(6)

   — Amendment dated as of January 19, 1996 to the Trust Indenture and Agreement dated January 22, 1993 between PDR Services Corporation, as Sponsor and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (7)

EX-99.A1(7)

   — Amendment dated as of September 1, 1997 and effective September 30, 1997 to the Trust Indenture and Agreement dated January 22, 1993 between PDR Services Corporation, as Sponsor, and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (8)

EX-99.A1(8)

   — Amendment dated as of January 1, 1999 and effective January 25, 1999 to the Trust Indenture and Agreement dated January 22, 1993 between PDR Services LLC, as Sponsor and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (9)


  

EX-99.A3

   — Distribution Agreement dated and effective November 1, 2011 (10)

EX-99.A4(1)

   — Form of Global Certificates (5)

EX-99.A4(2)

   — Form of Participant Agreement (11)

EX-99.A4(3)

   — Sublicense Agreement entered into as of November 1, 2005 by and among PDR Services LLC, as Sublicensee, State Street Global Markets, LLC, as Licensee, and Standard & Poor’s (12)

EX-99.A4(4)

   — Sublicense Agreement entered into as of November 1, 2005 by and among State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Sublicensee, State Street Global Markets, LLC, as Licensee, and Standard & Poor’s (12)

EX-99.A6(1)

   — Amended and Restated Certificate of Formation of PDR Services LLC (13)

EX-99.A6(2)

   — Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of PDR Services LLC (13)

EX-99.A9(1)

   — Chief Compliance Officer Services Agreement dated and effective October 5, 2004 (10)

EX-99.A9(2)

   — Addendum to Chief Compliance Officer Services Agreements dated and effective September 1, 2006 (10)

EX-99.A9(3)

   — Amendment to Chief Compliance Officer Services Agreement dated October 1, 2009 (10)

EX-99.A9(4)

   — Depository Agreement among State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee, PDR Services Corporation, as Sponsor and The Depository Trust Company as the Depository, dated January 14, 1993 (6)

EX-99.A9(5)

   — Trustee Fee Waiver Agreement (1)

EX-99.A11

   — Code of Ethics dated January 26, 2012, amended as of December 8, 2015 (1)

EX-99.C1

   — Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (1)

(1) Filed herewith.

(2) Filed on January 28, 2004 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(3) Filed on January 28, 2005 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(4) Filed on February 24, 2009 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(5) Filed on January 27, 2010 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(6) Filed on January 22, 1993 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(7) Filed on January 19, 1996 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(8) Filed on September 30, 1997 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(9) Filed on January 25, 1999 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(10) Filed on January 25, 2012 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(11) Filed on January 26, 2011 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(12) Filed on January 26, 2007 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(13) Filed on January 23, 2013 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.


FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

1. Statement of Financial Condition of the Trust as shown in the current prospectus for this series herewith.

2. Financial Statements of the Depositor:

PDR Services LLC—Financial Statements, as part of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.’s current consolidated financial statements incorporated by reference to Form 10-K dated February 5, 2015.


SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the registrant, SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, certifies that it meets all of the requirements for effectiveness of this Post Effective Amendment to the Registration Statement pursuant to Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly caused this Post Effective Amendment to the Registration Statement 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 20 th day of January, 2016.

 

SPDR S&P 500 ETF TRUST

 

(Registrant)

By:

 

PDR Services LLC

By:

 

/s/ Thomas W. Farley

 

Name: Thomas W. Farley

 

Title: President

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Post Effective Amendment to the Registration Statement has been signed below on behalf of PDR Services LLC, the Depositor, by the following persons in the capacities and on the date indicated.

PDR SERVICES LLC

 

Name

 

Title/Office

 

Date

/s/ Thomas W. Farley

 

President of PDR Services LLC

 

January 20, 2016

Thomas W. Farley

   

/s/ Scott Hill

 

Chief Financial Officer of PDR Services LLC

 

January 20, 2016

Scott Hill

   

/s/ Steven Crutchfield

 

Vice President of PDR Services LLC

 

January 20, 2016

Steven Crutchfield

   


EXHIBIT INDEX

 

EX-99.2   — Opinion of Counsel as to legality of securities being registered and consent of Counsel (1)
EX-99.A1(1)   — Amended and Restated Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust dated as of January 1, 2004 and effective January 27, 2004, between PDR Services LLC, as Sponsor and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (2)
EX-99.A1(2)   — Amendment No. 1 dated as of November 1, 2004 and effective November 8, 2004 to the Amended and Restated Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust dated as of January 1, 2004 and effective January 27, 2004, between PDR Services LLC, as Sponsor and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (3)
EX-99.A1(3)   — Amendment No. 2 dated as of February 1, 2009 and effective February 13, 2009 to the Amended and Restated Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust dated as of January 1, 2004 and effective January 27, 2004, as amended, between PDR Services LLC, as Sponsor, and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (4)
EX-99.A1(4)   — Amendment No. 3 dated as of November 23, 2009 and effective January 27, 2010 to the Amended and Restated Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust dated as of January 1, 2004 and effective January 27, 2004, as amended, between PDR Services LLC, as Sponsor, and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (5)
EX-99.A1(5)   — Trust Indenture and Agreement dated January 22, 1993 and effective January 22, 1993 between PDR Services Corporation, as Sponsor and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (6)
EX-99.A1(6)   — Amendment dated as of January 19, 1996 to the Trust Indenture and Agreement dated January 22, 1993 between PDR Services Corporation, as Sponsor and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (7)
EX-99.A1(7)   — Amendment dated as of September 1, 1997 and effective September 30, 1997 to the Trust Indenture and Agreement dated January 22, 1993 between PDR Services Corporation, as Sponsor, and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (8)
EX-99.A1(8)   — Amendment dated as of January 1, 1999 and effective January 25, 1999 to the Trust Indenture and Agreement dated January 22, 1993 between PDR Services LLC, as Sponsor and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee (9)
EX-99.A3   — Distribution Agreement dated and effective November 1, 2011 (10)
EX-99.A4(1)   — Form of Global Certificates (5)
EX-99.A4(2)   — Form of Participant Agreement (11)
EX-99.A4(3)   — Sublicense Agreement entered into as of November 1, 2005 by and among PDR Services LLC, as Sublicensee, State Street Global Markets, LLC, as Licensee, and Standard & Poor’s (12)
EX-99.A4(4)   — Sublicense Agreement entered into as of November 1, 2005 by and among State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Sublicensee, State Street Global Markets, LLC, as Licensee, and Standard & Poor’s (12)
EX-99.A6(1)   — Amended and Restated Certificate of Formation of PDR Services LLC (13)
EX-99.A6(2)   — Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of PDR Services LLC (13)
EX-99.A9(1)   — Chief Compliance Officer Services Agreement dated and effective October 5, 2004 (10)
EX-99.A9(2)   — Addendum to Chief Compliance Officer Services Agreements dated and effective September 1, 2006 (10)
EX-99.A9(3)   — Amendment to Chief Compliance Officer Services Agreement dated October 1, 2009 (10)
EX-99.A9(4)   — Depository Agreement among State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee, PDR Services Corporation, as Sponsor and The Depository Trust Company as the Depository, dated January 14, 1993 (6)


EX-99.A9(5)   — Trustee Fee Waiver Agreement (1)
EX-99.A11   — Code of Ethics dated January 26, 2012, amended as of December 8, 2015 (1)
EX-99.C1   — Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (1)

(1) Filed herewith.

(2) Filed on January 28, 2004 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(3) Filed on January 28, 2005 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(4) Filed on February 24, 2009 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(5) Filed on January 27, 2010 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(6) Filed on January 22, 1993 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(7) Filed on January 19, 1996 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(8) Filed on September 30, 1997 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(9) Filed on January 25, 1999 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(10) Filed on January 25, 2012 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(11) Filed on January 26, 2011 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(12) Filed on January 26, 2007 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

(13) Filed on January 23, 2013 with registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-6 (File Nos. 33-46080 and 811-06125) and incorporated by reference herein.

Exhibit 99.2

 

LOGO

January 20, 2016

PDR Services LLC

c/o NYSE Holdings LLC

11 Wall Street

New York, New York 10005

Ladies and Gentlemen:

SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, a unit investment trust organized under the laws of the State of New York (the “ Trust ”), is filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “ Commission ”) Post-Effective Amendment No. 30 to the Trust’s registration statement (“ Post-Effective Amendment No. 30 ”) in connection with the continued issuance by the Trust of an indefinite number of units of fractional undivided interest in the Trust (“ Units ”) pursuant to Rule 24f-2 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.

We, as your counsel, have examined such documents and such matters of fact and law that we have deemed necessary for the purpose of rendering the opinion expressed herein. Based on the foregoing, we advise you that, in our opinion, when the Units have been duly issued and delivered against the consideration therefor in accordance with the terms of Trust Documents (as defined below), the Units will be validly issued, fully paid and non-assessable.

In rendering this opinion, we have assumed the due authorization, execution and delivery by PDR Services LLC, as sponsor of the Trust, and State Street Bank and Trust Company, as trustee of the Trust, of (i) the Amended and Restated Standard Terms and Conditions of Trust of the Trust dated as of January 1, 2004 (the “ Standard Terms ”), (ii) the Trust Indenture and Agreement into which the Standard Terms are incorporated (the “ Indenture ”) and (iii) each amendment to the Standard Terms and the Indenture (collectively, the “ Trust Documents ”), in each case in the form filed with the Commission via the Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis and Retrieval System.

We are members of the Bar of the State of New York, and the foregoing opinion is limited to the laws of the State of New York and the federal laws of the United States of America.

This opinion is rendered solely to you in connection with Post-Effective Amendment No. 30. This opinion may not be relied upon by you for any other purpose or relied upon by any other person without our prior written consent.


We hereby represent that Post-Effective Amendment No. 30 does not contain disclosures that would render it ineligible to become effective immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 485 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “ Securities Act ”).

We hereby consent to the filing of this opinion as an exhibit to Post-Effective Amendment No. 30 and further consent to the reference to our name under the caption “Legal Opinion” in the Prospectus which is a part of Post-Effective Amendment No. 30. In giving this consent, we do not admit that we are in the category of persons whose consent is required under Section 7 of the Securities Act.

Very truly yours,

/s/ Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP

Exhibit 99.A9(5)

LOGO

State Street Bank and Trust Company

One Lincoln Street

Boston, MA 02111

January 20, 2016

Trust:

SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (the “Trust”)

c/o State Street Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee

State Street Financial Center

One Lincoln Street

Boston, MA 02111

Trust Sponsor:

PDR Services LLC

11 Wall Street

New York, NY 10005

To Whom It May Concern:

The Trustee of the Trust agrees that it will continue to waive a portion of its Trustee fee, as needed, so that the total annual operating expenses of the Trust will not exceed 0.0945% of the Trust’s daily net asset value. The fee waiver will be calculated after taking into consideration the earnings credit with respect to uninvested cash balances of the Trust. The amount of the earnings credit will be equal to the Federal Funds Rate, as reported in nationally distributed publications and as may be changed from time to time, multiplied by each day’s daily cash balance, if any, in the Trust’s cash account, reduced by the amount of reserves, if any, for that account required by the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. The fee waiver will be in effect until February 1, 2017. Thereafter, the Trustee may discontinue this voluntary waiver policy.

STATE STREET BANK AND TRUST COMPANY,

as Trustee of SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

/s/ Brenda Lyons                        

Brenda Lyons

Executive Vice President

EX-99.A11

17j-1 CODE OF ETHICS

OF

SPDR ® S&P 500 ETF T RUST 1 ;

SPDR ® S&P M ID C AP 400 ETF T RUST 2 ;

AND

SPDR ® D OW J ONES I NDUSTRIAL A VERAGE SM ETF T RUST 3

DATED AS OF

J ANUARY  26, 2012

Amended as of

December 8, 2015

I. Introduction

Each of the SPDR ® S&P 500 ETF Trust, the SPDR ® S&P MidCap 400 ETF Trust and the SPDR ® Dow Jones Industrial Average SM ETF Trust” (collectively, the “Trusts”) is a unit investment trust (“UIT”) that is organized under New York law and is governed by trust agreement (“Trust Agreement”) between a trustee bank (“Trustee”) and PDR Services LLC (“PDR”) as Sponsor. PDR is a Delaware limited liability company incorporated on April 6, 1998 with offices c/o NYSE Holdings LLC, 11 Wall Street, New York, New York 10005. On November 12, 2013, Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. (formerly known as Intercontinental Exchange Group, Inc. (“ICE”) announced the completion of its acquisition of NYSE Holdings LLC (the parent company of the Sponsor, formerly known as NYSE Euronext Holdings LLC) (“NYSE Holdings”). Upon the closing of the acquisition, Intercontinental Exchange Holdings, Inc. (formerly known as Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.) and NYSE Holdings became wholly owned subsidiaries of ICE. As the parent company, ICE is the publicly traded entity, trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “ICE.”

Each of the Trusts is registered as a UIT with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“1940 Act”) and is an “exchange-traded fund” or “ETF” that operates pursuant to an order from the SEC exempting it from certain provisions of the 1940 Act permitting it, among other things, to list individual Units on an exchange for trading at market prices while issuing Units in large lot sizes at net asset value (“NAV”) as described briefly below in the next paragraph. As UITs, none of the Trusts has any directors, officers, employees, general partners or an investment adviser provided however that, in compliance of Rule 38a-1 under the 1940 Act, each Trust has a chief compliance officer. Each Trust is a passive “index” fund that holds the portfolio securities of its financial index (“Index”), plus cash, and is not actively “managed” by traditional methods. Given that each Trust follows a “replication” strategy in order to pursue its objective of providing investment results that, before expenses, generally correspond to the price and yield performance of the Index, each Trust will hold as many of the stocks in its Index as is practicable. Therefore, in order to maintain the correspondence between the composition and weightings of stocks held by each Trust (“Portfolio Securities”) and component stocks of its Index (“Index Securities”) the Trustee, pursuant to the terms of each Trust Agreement, adjusts each Trust’s Portfolio Securities from time to time to conform to periodic changes in the identity and/or relative weightings of the relevant Index Securities.

 

1 Formerly known as the Standard & Poor’s Depositary Receipts (“SPDR”) Trust, Series 1”.
2 Formerly known as the “Standard & Poor’s MidCap 400 Depositary Receipts MidCap SPDR Trust, Series 1”.
3 Formerly known as the DIAMONDS Trust, Series 1”.

 

1


The individual Units of each Trust are listed for trading on NYSE Arca, Inc. (“NYSE Arca”), and are bought and sold in the secondary market like ordinary shares of stock at any time during the trading day. Each Trust issues and redeems its Units only in specified large lots referred to as “Creation Units”. Creation Units are issued by each Trust only to persons called “Authorized Participants” who, after placing a creation order with the distributor specified in each Trust’s statutory prospectus (“Distributor”), deposit with the Trustee a specified portfolio of Index Securities and a specified cash payment.

II. Purpose of the Code of Ethics

This code of ethics (“Code”) is based on the principle that any Access Person (defined below) of the Trusts, will conduct his/her personal investment activities in accordance with:

 

    the duty at all times to place the interests of the Trusts’ Unitholders first;

 

    the requirement that all personal securities transactions be conducted consistent with this Code and in such a manner as to avoid any actual or potential conflict of interest or any abuse of an individual’s position of trust and responsibility; and

 

    the fundamental standard that Access Persons of the Trusts should not take inappropriate advantage of their positions.

This Code does not attempt to identify all possible conflicts of interest, and literal compliance with each of its specific provisions will not shield Access Persons from liability for personal trading or other conduct that violates a fiduciary duty to Trust Unitholders.

III. Legal Requirement

Pursuant to Rule 17j-1(b) of the 1940 Act, it is unlawful for any Access Person to:

 

    employ any device, scheme or artifice to defraud the Trusts;

 

    make any untrue statement of a material fact to the Trusts or fail to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements made to the Trusts, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading;

 

    engage in any act, practice, or course of business which operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon the Trusts; or

 

    engage in any manipulative practice with respect to the Trusts, in connection with the purchase or sale (directly or indirectly) by such Access Person of a security “held or to be acquired” by the Trusts.

 

2


IV. Adoption of the Code and Identification of Access Persons

The Sponsor has adopted this Code on behalf of each of the applicable Trusts to specify a code of conduct for certain types of personal securities transactions which may involve conflicts of interest or an appearance of impropriety and to establish reporting requirements and enforcement procedures. The Sponsor has appointed a chief compliance officer (the “CCO”), who will be responsible for administering this Code. Any tasks assigned to the CCO herein may be carried out by a person or group designated by the CCO.

The policies and procedures of this Code apply to “Access Persons” (as defined below) of the Trusts. The Sponsor, with assistance from the CCO, is responsible for identifying Access Persons on behalf of each Trust, subject to section V. below. The CCO will be responsible for monitoring the status of Access Persons on a quarterly basis. Upon the identification of any Access Person, the CCO will ensure that such Access Person is notified of the requirements of this Code.

V. Requirements Applicable to Distributors and Certain Trustees

The requirements of this Code of Ethics are not applicable to any Access Person of a Trust who is subject to a separate Code of Ethics adopted by the Distributor or the Trustee to such Trust, provided that:

 

    the Distributor or Trustee has certified to the CCO and the Sponsor that such Code of Ethics complies with the requirements of Rule 17j-1 and it has adopted procedures reasonably necessary to prevent such Access Persons from violating such Code of Ethics; and

 

    such Code of Ethics has been approved by the Sponsor.

Any Distributor or Trustee relying upon this section V. shall:

 

    submit to the CCO and the Sponsor a copy of its Code of Ethics adopted pursuant to Rule 17j-1(the “Code”), as well as a certification in such form mutually agreed upon with the CCO and the Sponsor, stating that the Code complies with Rule 17j-1, that it has adopted procedures reasonably designed to prevent Access Persons from violating the Code, and if applicable, identifying any material amendments to such Code;

 

    promptly report to the CCO and the Sponsor in writing any material amendments to such Code, if not contained in a certification as described immediately above;

 

    furnish to the Sponsor upon request (and in any event no less than annually) a written report that:

 

    describes any issues arising under the Code or procedures during the period specified including (but not limited to) information about material violations of the Code or procedures and sanctions imposed in response to material violations; and

 

    certifies that it has adopted procedures reasonably necessary to prevent Access Persons from violating its Code.

 

3


Recordkeeping

The Distributor or the Trustee is responsible for maintaining all records with respect to such separate Code in the manner and to the extent required by Rule 17j-1. Such records will be made available upon request to the CCO. VI. Definitions

Certain defined terms used in this Code will have the same meaning as explained in Rule 17j-1 or Section 2(a) of the 1940 Act and are summarized below.

Access Person means (i) any director, officer, general partner, or employee of the Trusts or of any company in a control relationship to the Trusts who, in connection with his/her regular functions or duties, makes, participates in, or obtains information regarding the purchase or sale of Covered Securities by the Trusts, or whose functions relate to the making of any recommendations with respect to such purchases or sales and (ii) any natural person in a control relationship to any Trust who obtains information concerning recommendations made to such Trust with regard to the purchase or sale of Covered Securities by the Trust.

Automatic Investment Plan means a program in which regular purchases (or withdrawals) are made automatically in (or from) investment accounts in accordance with a predetermined schedule and equity. An Automatic Investment Plan includes a dividend reinvestment plan.

Beneficial Ownership has the same meaning as that set forth in Rule 16a-1(a)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. 4

Control means the power to exercise a controlling influence over the management or policies of a company, unless such power is solely the result of an official position with such company. 5

 

4 Rule 16a-1(a)(2) under the Exchange Act specifies that, to have beneficial ownership, a person must have a direct or indirect pecuniary interest, which in general means the opportunity to profit directly or indirectly from a securities transaction. As a result, an Access Person may be deemed to have beneficial ownership of securities held by members of his or her immediate family who share the same household.
5 The term “control” is defined in Section 2(a)(9) of the 1940 Act. Under Section 2(a)(9), any person who owns beneficially, either directly or through one or more controlled companies, more than 25 per cent of the voting securities of a company is presumed to control such company. Any person who does not so own more than 25 per cent of the voting securities of any company is presumed not to control such company. The presumptions set forth in Section 2(a)(9) continue until a determination to the contrary is made by the Commission (either upon its own motion or application by an interested person).

 

4


Covered Security means a security as defined in Section 2(a)(36) of the 1940 Act except that it does not include:

 

(i) Direct obligations of the Government of the United States;

 

(ii) Bankers’ acceptances, bank certificates of deposit, commercial paper and high quality short-term debt instruments 6 , including repurchase agreements; and

 

(iii) Shares issued by open-end Funds excluding open-end Exchange Traded Funds.

Exchange Traded Fund means a registered open-end management investment company that operates pursuant to an order from the SEC exempting it from certain provisions of the 1940 Act permitting it to issue securities that trade on the secondary market. Examples of Exchange-Traded Funds include, but are not limited to, iShares and PowerShares.

Fund means an investment company registered under the 1940 Act.

Initial Public Offering means an offering of securities registered under the Securities Act of 1933, the issuer of which, immediately before the registration, was not subject to the reporting requirements of Sections 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act.

Limited Offering means an offering that is exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933 pursuant to Section 4(2) or Section 4(6) or pursuant to Rule 504, Rule 505, or Rule 506 under the Securities Act.

Purchase or Sale of a Covered Security includes, among other things, the writing of an option to purchase or sell a Covered Security.

VII. Policies of the Trusts Regarding Personal Securities Transactions

General

Access Persons of the Trusts are prohibited from engaging in any act, practice or course of business that would violate the provisions of Rule 17j-1 as set forth above, or in connection with any personal investment activity, engage in conduct inconsistent with this Code.

Prohibition

Access Persons are not permitted to purchase or sell, directly or indirectly, any security in which he/she has, or by reason of such transaction acquires, any direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership and which he/she knows or should have known at the time of such purchase or sale:

 

6 “High quality short-term debt instrument” has been interpreted to mean any instrument that has a maturity at issuance of less than 366 days and is rated in one of the two highest rating categories by a Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organization.

 

5


    is being considered for purchase or sale by the Trusts; or

 

    is being purchased or sold by the Trusts.

To monitor compliance with this policy, the CCO or a designee will review the quarterly transaction reports (discussed below) of each Access Person and document the results of the review.

Pre-approval of Investments in IPOs and Limited Offerings

Access Persons must obtain approval before directly or indirectly acquiring Beneficial Ownership in any securities in an Initial Public Offering or in a Limited Offering. The Access Person may request approval for an investment in an Initial Public Offering or Limited Offering by submitting the Pre-approval Request Form (Exhibit A) to the CCO or a designee.

Pre-approval for Sale of Trust Units

Access Persons must obtain approval, before directly or indirectly, selling any Units of a Trust. The Access Person may request approval for the sale of Units by submitting the Pre-approval Request Form (Exhibit A) to the CCO or a designee.

VIII. Reporting Procedures

This section of the Code sets forth the personal securities reporting obligations of each Access Person. Note that Access Persons are not required to make a report under this section with respect to transactions effected for, and Covered Securities held in, any account over which the person has no direct or indirect influence or control . To rely on this exception, the Access Person must notify the CCO or a designee of the existence of such an account, and the Access Person will be required to execute a certification that confirms the account in question meets the standard intended by the applicable rule. 7

In order to provide the Supervisory Group (as defined below) with information to enable it to determine with reasonable assurance whether the provisions of this Code are being observed, every Access Person of the Trusts must report to the CCO or a designee the following:

(a) Initial Holdings Reports . Every Access Person must report on Exhibit B attached hereto, no later than 10 days after becoming an Access Person, the following information:

 

    The title, number of shares and principal amount of each Covered Security in which the Access Person had any direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership when the person became an Access Person;

 

7 Note that this exception is intended to be narrowly applied. An example of an account would be a blind trust in which the Access Person or his/her spouse (if she is the beneficiary of the trust) would not have any involvement in or knowledge of the decisions being made for the trust.

 

6


    The name of any broker, dealer or bank with whom the Access Person maintained an account in which any securities were held for the direct or indirect benefit of the Access Person as of the date the person became an Access Person; and

 

    The date that the report is submitted by the Access Person.

This information must be current as of a date no more than 45 days prior to the date the person becomes an Access Person.

(b) Quarterly Transaction Reports . Every Access Person must report on Exhibit C attached hereto, no later than 30 days after the end of a calendar quarter, the following information with respect to any transaction during the quarter in a Covered Security in which the Access Person has, or by virtue of the transaction, acquires any direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership:

 

    The date of the transaction, the title, the interest rate and maturity date (if applicable), the number of shares (for equity securities), and the principal amount (for debt securities) of each Covered Security involved;

 

    The nature of the transaction (i.e., purchase, sale or any other type of acquisition or disposition);

 

    The price of the Covered Security at which the transaction was effected;

 

    The name of the broker, dealer or bank with or through whom the transaction was effected; and

 

    The date that the report is submitted by the Access Person.

If there are no transactions during a quarter, the Access Person must indicate this fact on the quarterly transaction report (Exhibit C). Note that an Access Person need not make a quarterly transaction report with respect to transactions effected pursuant to an Automatic Investment Plan.

Access Persons are required to direct their brokers or other financial institutions to supply to the Sponsor duplicate copies of all confirmations and monthly brokerage statements for all accounts in which Covered Securities that are reportable are held. Access Persons can rely on these confirmations and brokerage statements in lieu of completing the information on Exhibit C so long as the confirmations and statements contain the same information and are supplied within the same 30-day period after the end of each calendar quarter. Access Persons are required to indicate their reliance on this exception on the quarterly transaction report attached hereto as Exhibit C. If you have any questions regarding this exception, you may contact the CCO.

 

7


Note that a Covered Securities transaction may not always be executed through or held in an account with a broker-dealer, and as a result, the transaction will not appear on brokerage statements or be confirmed through a trade confirmation. An example of a “non-brokerage” transaction is the purchase of a Limited Offering, such as an interest in a private investment fund. In such a case, the Access Person must ensure that he/she reports this information on the quarterly transaction report.

With respect to any account established by the Access Person in which any securities were held during the quarter for the direct or indirect benefit of the Access Person, each Access Person must report on Exhibit C attached hereto, no later than 30 days after the end of a calendar quarter the following information:

 

    The name of the broker, dealer or bank with whom the Access Person established the account;

 

    The date the account was established; and

 

    The date that the report is submitted by the Access Person.

(c) Annual Holdings Reports . Every Access Person must report on Exhibit D attached hereto, annually, the following information (which information must be current as of a date no more than 45 days before the report is submitted):

 

    The title, number of shares and principal amount of each Covered Security in which the Access Person had any direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership;

 

    The name of any broker, dealer or bank with whom the Access Person maintains an account in which any securities are held for the direct or indirect benefit of the Access Person; and

 

    The date that the report is submitted by the Access Person.

IX. Review of Reports

The CCO is responsible for ensuring that the reports received are reviewed, maintaining a record of the names of the persons to whom he has delegated the task of reviewing these reports, and as appropriate, comparing the reports with this Code. The CCO will periodically report the result of these reviews to the Sponsor.

 

8


X. Annual Reminder and Certification

The CCO or a designee will notify each person (annually in January of each calendar year) considered to be an Access Person of the Trusts that he/she is subject to the requirements set forth in this Code and will deliver a copy of the Code to each such person.

Each Access Person will be required to certify annually that he/she has read and understood the provisions of this Code and will abide by them. Each Access Person will further certify that he/she has disclosed or reported all personal securities transactions required to be reported under the Code. A form of such certification is attached hereto as Exhibit E .

 

9


EXHIBIT A

REQUEST FOR PRE-APPROVAL

Date of Request:

I,                      (print name), request pre-clearance for the transaction described below (all defined terms are as defined in the Code of Ethics):

Acquisition of Initial Public Offering or Limited Offering

Security:

# of Shares/Aggregate Principal Amount:

Broker:

If the transaction involves a Limited Offering, include a description of the proposed transaction, including your role in the proposed transaction and any business relationship between the entity in which you are investing and the Trusts or PDR or its affiliates:

Disposition of Units in a Trust

Security:

# of Units:

***

Access Person Signature:

Compliance

Approved or Disapproved (circle one)    Date:                     

Notes:

Print Name/Title:

Signature:

 

10


EXHIBIT B

THE TRUSTS

INITIAL HOLDINGS REPORT

To:

From:

Date:

At the time I became an Access Person, I had a direct or indirect beneficial ownership interest in the securities listed below which are required to be reported pursuant to the Code of Ethics of the Trusts:

 

Security

  

Number of Shares

  

Principal Amount

The name of any broker, dealer or bank with whom I maintain an account in which my securities are held for my direct or indirect benefit are as follows:

 

Name of Broker, Dealer or Bank

This report (i) excludes transactions with respect to which I had no direct or indirect influence or control, (ii) excludes other transactions not required to be reported, and (iii) is not an admission that I have or had any direct or indirect beneficial ownership in the securities listed above. I understand that this information must be reported no later than ten (10) days after I became an Access Person.

***

 

11


Date Report Submitted:

Print Name:

Signature:

Title:

Compliance Review

Date Report Reviewed:

Print Name/Title:

Signature:

Notes:

 

12


EXHIBIT C

THE TRUSTS

QUARTERLY TRANSACTION REPORT

For the Calendar Quarter Ended                     

To:

From:

Date:

 

A. Securities Transactions . During the quarter referred to above, the following transactions were effected in securities of which I had, or by reason of such transactions acquired, direct or indirect Beneficial Ownership, and which are required to be reported pursuant to the Code of Ethics of the Trusts. I understand that this information must be reported no later than 30 days after the end of the calendar quarter.

 

Date of
Transaction

 

Title of
Security

 

Ticker
Exchange
Symbol or
CUSIP

number (as
applicable)

   Interest
Rate &
Maturity
Date (if
applicable)
   Number
of Shares
   Principal
Amount of
Transaction
   Nature of
Transaction
(Purchase,
Sale, Other)
   Price    Broker/
Dealer or
Bank
Through
Whom
Effected (if
applicable

Please initial any of the following representations that apply:

                     I hereby represent that the brokerage statements and confirmations that I have instructed my brokers to automatically forward to PDR Services LLC, along with any information provided in the chart above, represent all of my transactions that are required to be reported for the current calendar quarter.

 

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                    I hereby represent that I have no quarterly transactions to report for the current calendar quarter.

* Transactions that are asterisked indicate transactions in a security where I knew at the time of the transaction or, in the ordinary course of fulfilling my official duties as a trustee or officer, should have known that during the 15-day period immediately preceding or after the date of the transaction, such security was purchased or sold, or such security was being considered for purchase or sale by the Trusts.

B. New Brokerage Accounts . During the quarter referred to above, I established the following accounts in which securities were held during the quarter for my direct or indirect benefit:

 

Name of Broker, Dealer or Bank

  

Date Established

C. Other Matters . This report (i) excludes transactions with respect to which I had no direct or indirect influence or control, (ii) excludes other transactions not required to be reported, and (iii) is not an admission that I have or had any direct or indirect beneficial ownership in the securities listed above.

***

Date Report Submitted:

Print Name:

Signature:

Title:

Compliance Review

Date Report Reviewed:

Print Name/Title:

Signature:

Notes:

 

14


EXHIBIT D

THE TRUSTS

ANNUAL HOLDINGS REPORT

For the following period: January 1, 201[    ] — December 31, 201[    ]

To:

From:

Date:

As of the period referred to above, I have a direct or indirect beneficial ownership interest in the securities listed below which are required to be reported pursuant to the Code of Ethics of the Trusts:

 

Security

  

Number of Shares

  

Principal Amount

The name of any broker, dealer or bank with whom I maintain an account in which my securities are held for my direct or indirect benefit are as follows:

 

Name of Broker, Dealer or Bank

This report (i) excludes transactions with respect to which I had no direct or indirect influence or control, (ii) excludes other transactions not required to be reported, and (iii) is not an admission that I have or had any direct or indirect beneficial ownership in the securities listed above.

***

 

15


Date Report Submitted:

Print Name:

Signature:

Title:

Compliance Review

Date Report Reviewed:

Print Name/Title:

Signature:

Notes:

 

16


EXHIBIT E

THE TRUSTS

ANNUAL CERTIFICATE

Pursuant to the requirements of the Code of Ethics of the Trusts, the undersigned hereby certifies as follows:

 

  1. I have read the Trusts’ Code of Ethics.

 

  2. I understand the Code of Ethics and acknowledge that I am subject to it.

 

  3. Since the date of the last Annual Certificate (if any) given pursuant to the Code of Ethics, I have sought any approvals required by the Code and I have reported all personal securities transactions and provided any securities holding reports required to be reported under the requirements of the Code of Ethics.

By:                                                       

Date:

 

17

Exhibit 99.C1

CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

We hereby consent to the use in this Registration Statement on Form S-6 of our report dated November 25, 2015, relating to the financial statements and financial highlights of SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, which appears in such Registration Statement. We also consent to the reference to us under the heading “Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm and Financial Statements” in such Registration Statement.

/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Boston, Massachusetts

January 20, 2016